ON THE REALITY OF HIGHER WORLDS
Let me first of all express regret that I am unable to speak to you
in your own language. As this is not possible, I must ask to be
allowed to deliver the lecture in German.
To begin with, I want to express my heart-felt thanks for the cordial
and friendly words of greeting. I only hope that I shall be able, in
some measure, to fulfil the task which lies in front of me. I am
sincerely grateful for the opportunity given me by the students here
to say something about anthroposophical Spiritual Science. [This
lecture was given in answer to an invitation from an association of
students in Christiania. It was held in the largest hall the
Missionhaus in Christiania, seating some 2,000 people.]
After many long years of work in this domain of knowledge, I know
well how difficult it is to make Spiritual Science to some extent
intelligible to modern civilisation and culture, and I know, too, how
easily misunderstandings arise. For these reasons I want to express
very special gratitude to the students by whom the invitation was
issued. I attach great importance to the fact that here too, as in
other countries, students are beginning to pay some attention to
anthroposophical Spiritual Science.
The wish was expressed that this lecture should deal with the theme
of the reality of the higher worlds. As all my writings for many,
many years have been concerned with answering this very question, you
will realise that one brief lecture is foredoomed to be both
inadequate and incomplete. My endeavour must be to indicate by
certain guiding lines, how the higher worlds can become a reality.
Obviously I shall be unable to-day it may be possible to
speak more fully elsewhere during the next few days (Cp.: Paths to
Knowledge of Higher Worlds 26th November, 1921) to
bring before you anything in the nature of convincing proof; all that
I can do is to indicate the lines and directions along which proof
may be found. Anthroposophical Spiritual Science cannot speak of the
reality of higher worlds without pointing to the paths leading to
this reality, and there is no desire whatever to set these paths in
opposition to what has been achieved in so admirable a way by the
scientific strivings, the scientific spirit of the last few
centuries.
It is the conviction of anthroposophical Spiritual Science that
doubts cast from one side or another upon the scientific exactitude
of its research are based entirely upon misunderstanding.
Anthroposophy does not wish to be a matter of amateurish talk but a
path of knowledge along which the higher, super-sensible worlds are
approached with the same scientific exactitude the same methodical
and disciplined thought with which natural science has for so long
approached the laws of Nature.
If, however, the aim is to reach the super-sensible worlds with the
same strict exactitude with which natural science reaches its
results, it is necessary both in regard to the results themselves and
the methods of investigation, to go beyond what is universally
recognised as scientific today. Anthroposophical
Spiritual Science is founded upon the same fundamental principles
which have helped to make modern science great. Modern science has
achieved greatness through scrupulous observation of the material
world, through experiment, through the reasoned deliberation of what
is yielded by sense-observation and experiment. While going beyond
the results as well as the actual modus operandi of authentic
scientific research today, anthroposophical Spiritual Science wishes
to proceed hand-in-hand with everything that can be learnt from
modern research.
This going beyond is founded primarily upon the
knowledge that mans power of investigation, in so far as it
has developed in the sphere of natural science, comes up against
certain boundaries. Every scientific researcher is aware that the
great problem concerning the eternal nature of the soul it is
usually known as the problem of immortality, of destiny, in the
widest sense, therefore, as the problem of the higher worlds
every scientific researcher is aware that this problem lies beyond
the boundaries of modern science. Moreover it is recognised that the
whole mode of thinking, the faculty of cognition, the power of
knowledge itself, have all been evolved from investigation of the
material world of sense and that at a certain point an impassable
barrier is reached. Anthroposophy is in complete accord with modern
scientists when it is a matter of affirming that these boundaries do
indeed exist, so far as the everyday consciousness of man is
concerned.
In the realm of philosophy, of course, many endeavours have been made
to overstep these boundaries. But nothing that the intellect or the
human heart can conjecture about what lies on yonder side of the
world of the senses can stand the test of searching examination; the
inadequacies of such conjectures are betrayed above all in that they
reach into a void. The intellect feels that it is dependent upon what
the senses communicate and that whenever it would like to pierce
through the tapestry of the material world, no content remains in the
field of ordinary consciousness.
Men of deep feeling, who try to justify their needs of soul and
spirit before the tribunal of science, who are not content to resign
themselves to mere belief but who want to have knowledge of things
transcending the temporal such men are very often apt today
to take refuge in a kind of mysticism. They believe that what
external science is unable to give them is to be found by plunging
into the depths of the life of soul. They believe that evidence of
the eternal significance of the human soul, of the links connecting
the soul with the world of Divine Spirit can stream up from the deep
places of the heart.
But with this kind of mysticism no really profound science of the
soul can concur, cognisant as it is of all the hidden paths of the
human faculty of remembrance, of memory. The ordinary consciousness
has, of course, its stores of memories which it calls up again and
again because this is necessary for a healthy life of soul. But deep
down, mingling with these memories and remembrances, lie many factors
which, in their real nature, cannot be surveyed by the ordinary
consciousness. Many a mystic unearths from the depths of the soul,
things which he regards as revelations from higher worlds, whereas to
one possessed of real knowledge they may be merely impressions made
upon a long past childhood by the material world of sense.
A genuine investigator knows that what is absorbed unconsciously in
early childhood undergoes many metamorphoses and that it can reappear
in later life in a different form. Many a man believes that in
mystical experience he has discovered a spark of the Divine within
him, whereas what he has drawn up from the depths of his soul is
nothing else than stimuli received during childhood, appearing in a
different form.
These are the two pitfalls lying ahead of us when, in our longing to
find the reality of the higher worlds, we embark upon serious and
genuine investigation. The true investigator must be on his guard on
the one side against a philosophy which tries merely by intellectual
deduction and speculation to pierce through the external world of
sense to a kind of Beyond, and, on the other, against a
form of mysticism which simply calls up memories in a different garb
from the depths of the human heart. In both directions he comes up
against insurmountable barriers: on the one side the material world
of sense which ordinary consciousness cannot break through, and on
the other, the human side, the storehouse of memories which must be
present in any healthy life of soul and which forms a boundary
interiorly a boundary which again the ordinary consciousness
cannot cross except it be through illusions and fantasies.
The aim of anthroposophical research is to avoid both these pitfalls
and to attain true and genuine knowledge of the higher, super-sensible
worlds. Hence in all honesty and frankness it asserts that the
faculties of cognition operating in ordinary life and ordinary
science will inevitably come up against these boundaries and are
incapable of penetrating through them into the higher worlds.
Anthroposophical Spiritual Science therefore sets out to awaken
faculties slumbering in the soul of which the ordinary consciousness
is unaware, and to embark upon investigation into the reality of
higher worlds only when these faculties have undergone due
development. This kind of investigation into the things of the Spirit
does not take its start from anything that is nebulous or mystical;
it takes its start from faculties of ordinary life, but transforms
them, makes them essentially different.
The first faculty to which the attention of the bona fide spiritual
investigator must be directed is that of remembrance, of memory,
within those boundaries and limits of which mention has been made.
This faculty of remembrance enables us to call up, either
involuntarily or at will, pictures of our life since birth, or rather
since a point of time shortly after birth. Unlike ordinary
psychology, Anthroposophy takes full account of all the implications
here and tries by deliberate efforts of will to bring ideas,
mental pictures, concepts, thought-content, into the centre of the
consciousness which, in other circumstances, occurs only by
the exercise of the faculty of memory and recollection. Anthroposophy
sets out to develop a first, elementary faculty of higher knowledge
in this way, by means of certain exercises carried out by the faculty
of thinking. Anthroposophy does not, however, content itself with the
faculty of thinking which comes to expression in ordinary memory, but
goes on beyond this not to the arbitrary meditation often
cited by nebulous mysticism, but to inwardly disciplined, systematic
meditation.
My task today is to indicate the principles of this subject: fuller
and more precise details are to be found in my books,
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds and Its Attainment,
An Outline Of Occult Science,
and others. It is only possible now to indicate certain
fundamental guiding-lines for a study which will have to be pursued
for many years. The point of importance is that the faculty of
thinking in man is developed to a greater strength and intensity than
it possesses in ordinary life and in ordinary science.
When in some piece of work a muscle has to be constantly exerted, its
power is strengthened. The would-be spiritual investigator proceeds
in the same way with respect to the forces of the soul. He places
some mental picture, idea or set of ideas of which he can maintain a
complete survey, deliberately and as a free act of will at the centre
of his consciousness, and dwells upon it for a certain length of
time. Some people will require more time, others less, according to
their faculties and their capacity for concentration.
Please note for it is a very important point that I
am speaking of pictures of which a complete survey can be maintained.
If anything from our store of ordinary memories were to be brought up
into this meditation or these exercises of thinking, we should be led
astray. For the storehouse of thought contains many reminiscences,
many unconscious impressions received from life which would have
their effect during the exercises. Nothing whatever must be allowed
to work from the Unconscious into true anthroposophical meditation; a
complete survey must be maintained and everything must be subject to
conscious deliberation. Therefore the demand is sometimes made, and
with good reason, that one who aims at becoming an actual
investigator in Spiritual Science shall ask already experienced
investigators to recommend certain exercises. When such exercises are
practised we may have evolved them ourselves or they may have
been given to us they enter the consciousness as something
new like a sense-experience that is not recollected
but enters the soul as something quite new. The point of importance
is not that we acquire anything from the actual content of the
picture or combination of pictures, but that it comes into our
consciousness with all the newness and freshness of a
sense-experience and that we dwell upon it with our forces of soul.
Just as we execute some piece of work by using a muscle, so do we
exert the forces of the soul when we dwell upon the picture or idea
with sustained and deliberate concentration. If care is taken to
observe all the details of the exercises described in my books, there
will be no danger of succumbing to anything in the nature of
suggestion or auto-suggestion; every moment of the exercise will be
filled with a conscious activity of will and after a time we shall
feel that the powers of our soul are being strengthened and enhanced.
It is not necessary to devote a great deal of time each day to these
exercises but they must be repeated over and over again. One person
will need a lengthy period, another may achieve considerable success
in a few months; others again will need years. The principle,
however, is the same throughout: the forces of soul, the forces of
thought, are inwardly strengthened by the exercises, until finally a
point is reached where the advance is made to Imaginative
Thinking, Imagination.
I have called this development Imaginative Thinking
because one becomes aware by degrees that thought is getting free
from the abstraction and intellectualism with which it is fraught in
ordinary life and ordinary science. Pure thought begins gradually to
be lit by a picture-content, warmed through by glowing life, as real
in every respect as the pictures and inner vitality produced by
external sense-impressions.
It is very important to remember this, for we all of us know that
when our attention is directed to external sense-impressions,
everything teems, is saturated, has great intensity; our whole being
is given up to these sense-impressions. But if, having turned our
attention away from these outer sense-impressions, we engage in the
kind of thinking that is usual in ordinary life and science, this
thought is colourless, has little warmth. There is good reason for
speaking of the colourlessness, the pale cast of
abstract thought. And nearly all the thinking that goes on in
ordinary life and science is abstract. Only those thoughts which
arise in moments when we are caught up in the outer reality of the
world of sense only those thoughts teem with content. The
glowing life and teeming content in what is, at first, a purely
inward experience, however, can only be reached by the exercising and
strengthening of thought in the way I have indicated. Then we begin,
in very truth, to think in pictures, in Imaginations.
But one point must be quite clear. In this Imaginative Thinking we
have at first nothing either before us or within us that amounts to
external, spiritual reality. The objective significance of this
Imaginative Thinking is gradually brought home to us, however,
when we grasp the following:
Everyone knows how in a tiny child the brain develops by degrees into
the marvellous organ it eventually becomes in the course of life. It
can be said with truth that, to begin with, the brain is a plastic
organ, allowing the formative forces of the soul to express
themselves in its whole structure, its convolutions and so forth.
This process is at work during earliest childhood; it comes to a halt
at a certain point a point reached as a result of natural
development and ordinary education. With what has thus been acquired,
we try to meet the demands of every-day life, and to make progress in
ordinary science. But in that, as children, we have developed from
year to year, we have acquired greater and greater capacities.
In striving for Imaginative Knowledge we again become aware of this
increasing capacity. We realise that through the activity which
consists in the exercising of thought, something that is now plastic
within us is being worked upon, elaborated. But we feel, too, that
what is thus being worked upon as it were ploughed and
furrowed in the life of soul-and-spirit just like the physical brain
in the child we feel that this is something super-sensible,
something of the nature of soul-and-spirit within the human being
which transcends the physical body. After a time we feel that the
outer and inner boundaries of knowledge can now be faced in an
entirely different way. As a spiritual scientist one has to admit
that those who speak of such boundaries do so with good reason, but
one also feels that little by little these boundaries of knowledge
can actually be crossed with the help of newly developed faculties.
When a man has reached this stage, when he actually feels: now I no
longer need to come to a halt within the material world of sense, for
now, by means of this living, pictorial thinking, I experience
something real when I pierce through the material world and also when
I gaze into my own being; I experience something that is beyond the
range of natural science and that mysticism can only call up in
illusory form ... When a man has this experience as a result of
genuine inner development, he may be sure that he is treading a path
which will lead him to the reality of the higher worlds.
To begin with, nothing that can be said to be an external reality
lies before the soul; the old forces have simply been strengthened,
intensified. But before long it will be noticed that something very
significant is happening in the field of consciousness. An inner
tableau arises, encompassing the whole of life since birth. This,
indeed, is the first super-sensible reality to be experienced: a mans
own inner life since birth is presented in a tableau of which
complete survey can be maintained. And the result is that the
relation of the thinking to what is now an objective perception is
different from the relation it previously bore both to external
actuality and to inner experiences. In everyday life the human being
unfolds the activity of thinking. He thinks about something or other;
the thoughts themselves are within the soul they are
subjective. The object is outside. A man feels that his thoughts are
separated from what is outside. He now has before him the tableau of
his own life of soul since birth. But his thoughts enter as it were
into the very tissue of which the tableau is woven; he feels himself
to be in and part of it. He feels: now for the first time I am
beginning to grasp the reality of my own being; I must yield up my
thinking to what thus arises objectively before my consciousness.
This, to begin with, constitutes an experience that is fraught with
pain; but such experiences are essential and the Spiritual Scientist
must not be afraid of having to endure them. I shall speak of this
again, in a different connection.
To begin with, this tableau of life causes us to feel our innermost
Self under a kind of oppression; the lightness and ease with which,
in other circumstances, thoughts, ideas, feelings, impulses of will,
wishes and the like, arise, seems to have departed and we feel our
own being as it were under a load, constricted. But to put it
briefly: in this very experience of oppression we begin to be aware
of reality. If there is no sense of oppression, we have merely a
thought-edifice, not reality at all. But if we bring into the sphere
of this oppression all that was previously within us in the form of
freely unfolding thought, we are protected from the danger of
illusions, visionary experiences or hallucinations in our Imaginative
Knowledge.
It is often said that the exercises recommended by anthroposophical
Spiritual Science produce nothing but visions and hallucinations,
that they simply bring suppressed nerve-forces to the surface, and
that nobody can prove the reality of these higher worlds of which
Spiritual Science speaks. Yet anyone who pays attention merely to
what I have said to-day, will realise that the path taken by
anthroposophical Spiritual Science is the antithesis of all the paths
which lead to visions, hallucinations, or mediumship.
Everything that leads to mediumship, to hallucinations or visions,
proceeds, fundamentally, from diseased bodily organs which as it were
breathe their psycho-spiritual content into the consciousness in a
pathological way. All these things lie below the level of
sense-experience. Imaginative Knowledge, on the contrary, lies in a
realm transcending sense-perception and is developed from
objectivity, not from pathological inner conditions.
To describe as pathological the methods of anthroposophical research
denotes complete misunderstanding, for the very reverse is the truth.
Because Imaginative Knowledge is attained in full and free
consciousness, it is possible to recognise hallucinations and
manifestations of mediumship for what they really are. Nobody will
reject these psychopathic manifestations more strongly than one who
has not, like the visionary, submerged his life of soul in the body,
but who has made it free of the body through the efforts described
and who is able to survey his own life back to birth, to begin with,
in the tableau of which I have spoken.
In this tableau as I have said, it is a reality
we know that we have something consisting, not merely of thoughts,
but of the living forces which have been working at the upbuilding of
our organism since the beginning of earthly life. The Imagination
that has here taken shape is actually the sum-total of the forces by
means of which we grow, the sum-total of the forces which work, also,
in the process of nourishment.
To what is here discovered as an active, super-sensible reality in the
being of man, anthroposophical Spiritual Science gives the name of
the ether body, or the body of formative forces.
As you see, a higher member of mans being, a super-sensible
member which works at the forming of the earthly body, is discovered
methodically and systematically. And because in the tableau that has
arisen, our thoughts do not roam hither and thither in the wonted
fashion but the oppression makes us feel the reality because
of this we realise that what we are there beholding inwardly is none
other than the forces working actively in the organism in
other circumstances, unconsciously.
The super-sensible ether-body or life-body spoken of by
anthroposophical Spiritual Science is not an artificial creation of
fantasy; neither is it the antiquated and hypothetical life-force
which scientific thought has rightly abandoned. The ether-body is a
reality to the now strengthened and enhanced power of thinking
it is a reality just as the external world of sense is reality. And
we are led to it, not by any kind of nebulous mysticism but by a
strengthening and energising of the normal faculty of thinking which
has been enhanced to the level of a free I. Such is the
development which brings this first reality before the soul.
But as at this first stage we are simply surveying a tableau of our
own earthly life through the flow of time, further progress must be
made along the path to the super-sensible worlds. This is achieved
through exercises whereby yet other powers slumbering in the soul are
brought into operation. You all know that in human life, as well as
the faculty of remembrance, the capacity to retain ideas and mental
pictures, there also exists the capacity to forget. In ordinary life,
to our sorrow, forgetting often comes very easily to us. But a man
who lives a great deal in the world of thought knows only too well
that thoughts can also torment, that effort is needed to get rid of
them. This demands very great efforts in the systematic meditation
here described, when we are trying to develop deep, inward thinking.
When the consciousness is focused upon certain images and the forces
of this mental presentation are strengthened, the images are loathe
to take their departure. They press in upon us and allow themselves
to be eliminated only when we train ourselves systematically and
consciously to do this. If I may speak rather paradoxically, we must
as it were train ourselves in a deliberate forgetting, a deliberate
elimination of images which want to remain.
In the books mentioned I have described in detail many exercises for
strengthening the power of eliminating mental images. When these
exercises have been practised for a long time, the point is reached
where, in full waking alertness, we can empty our consciousness
entirely.
What has here been said is by no means as unessential as might
appear. In ordinary life it is the case that efforts to empty the
consciousness altogether send most people to sleep after a short
time. Now it is even more difficult to empty the consciousness when,
as the result of meditation, it has been filled with intensified
images. Nevertheless this must be practised. Thereby we succeed
little by little in suppressing not only single images, in emptying
them out of our consciousness, but, after sustained effort, in
effacing the whole tableau of life of which I have spoken.
Practically the whole of our life is presented to us in a tableau, as
it were in space that has become time, or time that has become space.
The exercises gradually give us the power to eliminate the whole of
this tableau from our consciousness; it was there before us but we
are able now to empty our consciousness and yet to be fully awake and
alert.
This is a very important step on the path to the reality of the
higher worlds. For when the consciousness, having first been filled
with the tableau of life, with perception of the ether-body, has been
completely emptied, we are not confronting a void. True, we recognise
that the material world of sense is no longer around us ... it is no
more around us than it is in deep, dreamless, sleep ... but a world
we have not previously known, a world of super-sensible beings and
super-sensible happenings springs up before us. This is what happens
after the life-tableau has been eliminated from our consciousness. It
is absurd to say that what springs into view after all these efforts
may simply be reminiscences of life, or illusions. Anyone who
genuinely experiences it knows that reality is before him as surely
as he knows that the external, material world is reality.
The essential point, however, is that when a man becomes prone to
hallucinations and visions he loses his ordinary, normal
consciousness; he lives in his hallucinations and his powers of
thoughtful deliberation have departed. A man who has developed his
faculties in the way I have described loses nothing at all of his
healthy human reason, none of his powers of thoughtful deliberation.
All the faculties that were formerly his, remain, and he can at any
moment turn his gaze from the vista of the super-sensible worlds
before him. Just as he can look back upon a memory, so he can at any
moment, and at will, look back to what formed part of his
consciousness in ordinary life or in ordinary science. Therefore a
man who is developing in this way can fill his whole perception of
the super-sensible world with conscious thinking, with his thinking
that is now permeated with will. He can speak of the super-sensible
world with the same reasoned clarity and intelligibility with which
ordinary science speaks of the material world. And because he
describes these higher worlds with normal reasoning powers and
scientific method, anyone who exercises the faculty of healthy human
intelligence can follow what is said, even if he is not himself an
investigator in the anthroposophical sense of the word. This is not
necessary, because the true anthroposophical investigator brings the
faculty of healthy human reason into play in whatever knowledge he
unfolds of the higher worlds. The knowledge he communicates must be
in a form that is intelligible at every point to ordinary healthy
human reason and discrimination. This holds good not only at the
stage of Imaginative Thinking, through which, to begin with, the
tableau of earthly life is all that rises up, but it also holds good
at the further stage of knowledge of which I have just spoken and
have called in my books, Knowledge through Inspiration, or
Inspired Knowledge.
I would ask you not to allow these terms to be a stumbling block.
They contain no element of superstition or antiquated tradition, but
are used purely in connection with what I have been describing. I
speak of Inspired Knowledge because just as the air
from the outer world enters the breathing organs as a reality, so
does the super-sensible world now flow into the world of the soul.
Equipped with this Inspired Knowledge, the spiritual investigator is
in the following position. He starts out with a normal content and
constitution of soul; having once acquired the faculty of emptying
his consciousness, it is possible for him to do so again, at will, no
matter where he stands, in time or in space, no matter what the
content of his consciousness happens to be.
Something is then revealed of the beings and the happenings of the
super-sensible world. It is like an in-breathing, it is an
Inspiration. The spiritual world is breathed into the ordinary world.
Again we must be capable of re-asserting normal consciousness, to
judge this spiritual world with normal consciousness. There is a
continual out-breathing and in-breathing of the spiritual world, and
ever and again the return to ordinary consciousness which enables a
man to exercise thoughtful judgment in respect, also, of these
spiritual worlds.
What I am now going to say merely by way of comparison, may suggest
to you that the use of the term Inspiration is justified. The
spiritual investigator of today is not in a position to press onward
to the super-sensible worlds in the way that was possible during
earlier, prehistoric epochs in the evolution of humanity. The methods
by which oriental peoples attained access to the higher worlds in
olden times have persisted through tradition and even today are still
practised over in Asia as a decadent form of Yoga, by men whose
bodily constitution differs from ours in the West. Nothing of this
kind could be beneficial to the West. It all takes places
instinctively, unconsciously, whereas what I have been describing is
carried out in full waking consciousness, under complete control of
the will.
In a certain respect, nevertheless, something can be learnt from the
way in which men strove, in those early epochs of instinctive
consciousness, to gain access to the higher worlds and their
workings. In the practise of Yoga, the man of ancient India set out
to regulate his breathing to breathe, not in the ordinary
way, but deliberately and systematically; he transformed the ordinary
mode of breathing, strove all the time to be fully conscious in and
with his breathing, whereas of course ordinary breathing is an
unconscious, purely organic process. In that he experienced this
rhythm: In-breathing Out-breathing ... In-breathing
Out-breathing ... the pupil of Yoga in olden times was transported
into the rhythm of the worlds, of the Cosmos and in the
physical rhythm of the breath he made himself one with the spiritual
rhythm of that in-breathing and out-breathing of the spiritual worlds
which I have here described in the form in which it is suitable for
the West.
In very truth we enter as it were into unison with a rhythm. Our
existence as men of Earth can be inspired again and again,
continuously, by a higher, super-sensible world. What is this
super-sensible world, in reality?
Through Imaginative Cognition we have learnt to know the ether-body,
the body of formative forces working in us during earthly
existence. This body of formative forces has now been suppressed and
a new world discovered. The world of sense is no longer immediately
present it is only a remembrance. In this new world, a higher
reality is discovered, that higher reality which permeates and works
in and through the ether-body or body of formative forces, just as
the ether-body in turn permeates the physical body.
Again as the result of deliberate and systematic steps taken along
the path to the higher realities and not of any play of fantasy,
anthroposophical Spiritual Science speaks of the astral body of
man which is thus discovered and which permeates the body of
formative forces although its life lies in other worlds. And when we
examine the worlds in which this astral body lives with the I
just as man lives as a corporeal being among the things of
the material world we discover the world of soul-and-spirit
from which the human being descends when through birth or conception,
he unites with the physical substance provided by the father and
mother. In direct perception which, as I have said, will
stand the test of healthy human reason the eternal, immortal
core of mans being is discovered.
Many people take offence today when instead of speaking in
generalisations like the pantheists, of an undefined, all-pervading
world of Spirit, specific description is given of a world of
soul-and-spirit whence man has descended into physical existence
through birth and whither he returns on passing through the Gate of
Death a world that is discovered as a reality, not through
speculation or nebulous, mystical feeling, but through a strictly
disciplined mode of perception. Offence is caused when these worlds
are described as I have described them, for example, in my
Outline Of Occult Science.
Let me try to explain by means of a simple
comparison how it is actually possible to describe these worlds.
Think of your ordinary memory, of your remembrance. What are
you experiencing there? One thing or another has happened to you in
the course of life. What has long since become the past, has long ago
ceased to be an external reality, stands before you in a
memory-picture. From this picture you reconstruct the experience. It
passed into you, as it were, from the external world, has become part
of the content of your soul. Out of the content of the soul it is
possible at any moment to reconstruct the whole world of
remembrances, the whole world of external experiences with which
existence is interwoven. The inner world is laid hold of, comprised
within the life of thought, of feeling, of will. In laying hold of
the inner life, the world of external experiences is conjured up
before the soul. But what is it that is grasped by means of
Imagination and Inspiration?
With Imagination and Inspiration we comprehend not merely what has
been absorbed during earthly life, but we comprehend man in his whole
being. We learn to know how the body of formative forces,
remaining as a unity through the whole of life, works in the human
organs; how in a world of soul-and-spirit before birth or conception,
the astral body bears the eternal core of our being, how this astral
body penetrates into and works within us. The whole nature and being
of man becomes clearly perceptible. His physical nature is recognised
as the product of the Spiritual. Just as we look into our store of
remembrances and reconstruct earthly life in pictures, so, when we
now look still more deeply inwards, grasping not merely the
psycho-spiritual content implanted in the course of ordinary life,
but recognising how our organs have been created, how ether-body,
astral and I are woven into the physical body
then we can transfer ourselves with opened eyes of soul, into the
great arena of cosmic experiences, cosmic happenings, just as
remembrances bear us into our ether-body. For man was always present
in whatever has come to pass in the universe with which his being is
united, be it in the realm of spirit, of soul, or in the physical
sphere. And when, in the way described, he beholds himself in his own
true being and nature, he can recognise the events whereby his
evolution through history and within the Cosmos has been made
possible.
Those who grasp the full import of these thoughts will no longer
consider it peculiar when, in my
Outline Of Occult Science,
they find descriptions of how the human being, in his primeval forms, was
connected not only with the Earth but with planetary worlds which, as
earlier metamorphoses, preceded the Earth, and how the very make-up
and constitution of the human being points to future transformations
of the Earth into other planetary conditions; how it is possible
really to penetrate into higher worlds and to recognise the kingdoms
around us as men of Earth as the product of higher, spiritual worlds,
super-sensible worlds.
It is only right that the strenuous efforts which anthroposophical
Spiritual Science must make to achieve these results should be known
and understood. There is a very prevalent opinion that what spiritual
research says about the reality of higher worlds is merely the result
of some form of inspiration, so-called, or of
subjective, intellectual deduction, or even of pure fantasy. Indeed
it is not so. Clinical research, astronomical research, for example,
demands specialised and difficult work. But what is acquired inwardly
in the way described, learnt as it were from mans own being by
inner experimentation in order to unfold perception of higher worlds
this is an even more difficult task, demanding greater
devotion, greater care, greater exactitude and methodical
perseverance. What is here described in all seriousness as Spiritual
Science is fundamentally different from current forms of Occultism,
Mysticism and the like. As science stands in contrast with
superstition, so does anthroposophical Spiritual Science stand in
contrast with current forms of Occultism which try to acquire
knowledge through mediums or by compiling external, sensational data
in amateurish fashion. This particular brand of modern superstition
is vanquished by nothing more decisively than by genuine spiritual
research, with its absolutely scrupulous and exact methods.
When, having acquired Knowledge through Inspiration, a man is able to
gaze into the world he left at birth or conception and will enter
again after death, he experiences something which in its reflection
in the ordinary consciousness seems to be a kind of pessimism.
In the realm of ordinary consciousness, after all, anything
super-sensible assumes the form of indefinite, inchoate feelings and
the like. The experiences which come to the spiritual
investigator through Inspiration seem to take the form of pessimism.
Why pessimism? Because it is actually the case that when the
spiritual investigator enters the higher worlds, he experiences
something like deep pain, universal privation.
By means of the exercises indicated in my books, we must be armed
against this pain, be ready to bear it valiantly and resolutely.
What, then, is this pain that is experienced in all reality? It is
actually a deep and intense longing, it is none other than experience
of that force whereby the soul passes from the spiritual worlds
through birth into physical existence. The soul has been living in
spiritual worlds, and the last period of this life, before the
descent through birth into physical existence, is experienced as a
yearning for the physical world. This yearning subsequently becomes
the pain experienced by the spiritual investigator. And precisely
because experiences in the realm of Spiritual Science are not
abstract or theoretical and because the whole being of man is
involved, including his feeling and willing, this pain is an
essential part of the path leading into the higher worlds.
Theorising is by no means sufficient when it is a matter of treading
the anthroposophical path into the spiritual worlds. The experiences
which accompany the methods employed by genuine investigation demand,
at every stage, due moral preparation. And there is really no better
preparation for the moral strengthening of man in body, soul and
spirit, than practise of the exercises leading to knowledge of the
reality of the higher worlds. They will never reveal themselves to
one who merely theorises, but only to one who devotes his whole
manhood to quickening in the soul all his faculties of good feeling,
of appreciation of beauty in the world, his power of reverent
contemplation of the secrets of the Universe. Only he who makes love
of men and love of worlds into forces of inner, all-permeating
warmth, achieves the moral strength that is necessary in order to
press forward to the reality of higher worlds.
Many will admit, therefore, that the exercises I describe for the
path to the higher worlds taken by Spiritual Science, have a moral
side that is genuinely worthy of recognition. This will be admitted,
too, by those who fall away and are not willing to tread the actual
path to knowledge of the higher worlds. Yet it is this path alone
which, in face of the modern longing for science, can lead into these
worlds.
Through Imagination and Inspiration a man reaches his innermost Self.
But this innermost Self must also surrender itself to the world
around. I have already explained that thinking, even at the stage of
Imagination, must flow outwards, into what is objective. Thinking,
deliberate and disciplined thinking, is always in operation in our
discovery of higher worlds; but we must also be aware that our whole
being has, as it were, to be given over to this reality of the
super-sensible worlds. After the attainment of Inspiration, however,
through the efforts made and the experiences undergone, we become
aware of the I, the central core of our being, in all
intensity. And this is the point at which the harmony, the union
between the experience of freedom and that of nature-necessity can be
realised and known.
In ordinary life we are enclosed in the web of this nature-necessity.
How often we feel that what is living in our impulses of will surges
up from subconscious depths, from instincts and natural urges, even
when it has worked itself a little way out of the sinful in the
direction of the good. It is almost as impossible to survey what is
working in the urges and impulses of the will as it is to survey the
experiences undergone during sleep. And after all, in the urges and
impulses of the will, there is contained much that plays into our
life of conscious, moral responsibility.
A man who has achieved Inspiration and Imagination however, has been
strengthened by his efforts and exertions. He experiences the I
in far greater intensity given over to the world, it is true,
yet restored to his keeping. Such a man will not say with those who
adhere to prejudiced scientific views: the same nature-necessity
which causes the stone to fall to the ground, the stone in turn to be
warmed by the sun, the nature-necessity which inheres in electricity,
in magnetism, in acoustic and optical phenomena that same
necessity is at work when, as a human being, I act and unfold my
impulses of will. Indeed in ordinary science and everyday life men
cannot get rid of the gnawing doubts which assail them in connection
with this problem.
On the one side there is the reality of human freedom. But the
conviction is prevalent that this freedom must be renounced if one is
a scientist in the modern sense, believing in the conservation of
energy and matter and holding the view that no impulse of the human
will, no human action can emanate from free will, since man, in
common with all other creatures in the kingdoms of nature, must be
subject to the domination of nature-necessity.
But with his true I before him in greater strength and
intensity, man acquires a kind of knowledge still higher than
Inspiration and Imagination. I have called this still higher form of
knowledge, true Intuition, for it denotes complete emergence
in spiritual reality. At this stage, the fact of mans repeated
earthly lives spoken of by Anthroposophy is filled with meaning. The
necessity which seems to be implicit in a mans actions, in his
will, is recognised as the consequence of preceding lives on Earth.
Mans eternal core of being passes through repeated earthly
lives, and between these lives that is to say, between death
and a new birth leads an existence in worlds of soul and
spirit. And now comes the knowledge: flowing from life to life there
is the factor which entails subjection of the I
together with its impulses of will ... not, however, to
external, nature-necessity but to the necessity which runs through
the chain of earthly lives.
To begin with, this necessity is hidden from ordinary thinking. But
when truly free, sense-free thinking as described in my
Philosophy of Spiritual Activity
is unfolded in a single earth-existence
with this kind of thinking we have the real foundation of our
freedom, our free spiritual activity. In that we rise, as man, to
these moral impulses which are seized by the free power of thought,
we become free human beings here on the Earth. And what inheres in
our existence in the form of necessity, living itself out as destiny
this is not nature-necessity but the necessity which runs
through repeated earthly lives.
This too is revealed to Intuition, the third stage of
super-sensible knowledge. There before us, presented in wonderful
harmony, is the freedom inherent in a single earthly life, and what
we feel to be the necessity of destiny which is not external,
nature-necessity, nor due to the normal constitution of the human
body, but which streams in from earlier earthly lives. This no more
makes us unfree than does a change of the stage on which our life
takes its course, when circumstances are such as to make us still
dependent upon the connection between this new life and the old.
If for example, we emigrate from Europe to America, the ship takes us
thither and our life proceeds in a new setting. This is destiny; but
in spite of having crossed from Europe to America, we remain free
beings. Necessity and freedom can be differentiated when we perceive
on the one side the necessity inhering in repeated earthly lives and,
on the other, the freedom which is implicit in each single earthly
life.
To look upwards into the higher worlds gives us security and
confidence inasmuch as the purpose and meaning of earthly life become
clear. We no longer merely yearn for higher worlds although
that too is necessary for any sense of security on the Earth. Earthly
life becomes insecure if we lose our connection with the
Divine-Spiritual within us.
True anthroposophical knowledge of the reality of higher worlds does
not estrange us from the affairs of the Earth: we know that the
descent to the Earth must be made over and over again in order that
freedom may become an integral part of mans estate. Conscious
realisation of freedom permeates us in spite of our realisation of
the problems of destiny, for we have learnt to understand these
problems in their spiritual aspect, in the light of the reality of
the higher worlds.
It has only been possible to give a very bare outline of this
subject. Abundant literature exists today and is at the disposal of
everybody. In one brief lecture I have only been able to indicate
certain guiding lines, but what has been said will to some extent
show you that anthroposophical knowledge of the super-sensible worlds
has not the slightest tendency to be remote from the world, to be
unpractical. It does not wish to lead human beings in their egotism
into vapid castles in the air; on the contrary, it holds that to
alienate a man from the world would be to sin against the Spiritual.
The Spirit is only truly within our grasp when the flow of its power
makes us practical and capable human beings.
The Spirit is creative; the mission of the Spirit is to
permeate, not to escape from material existence. Anthroposophical
knowledge of the super-sensible worlds is therefore at the same time a
power in practical life. Hence as I shall show in other
lectures here in Christiania Anthroposophy strives to enrich
the several sciences, the life of art, as well the domains of
practical life, with all that knowledge of the reality of higher
worlds can add to the things of the material world.
As we have heard, Imaginative Knowledge reveals the ether-body, the
body of formative forces. When, in the light of this knowledge, we
understand the nature of the human bodily organisation, when we
understand how the astral body which has descended from worlds of
soul-and-spirit, works in man as an earthly being, in lung, liver,
stomach, brain, and so forth ... then we understand the nature of
health and illness. When this point is reached, our realisation of
the higher worlds will have succeeded not merely in satisfying a need
of knowledge, but actually in enriching medicine and therapy. In
Stuttgart and in Dornach we already have clinics and institutes
engaged in the practical application of the contributions which
anthroposophical knowledge can make to medicine, to therapy
especially to therapy but also to pathology. Anthroposophy
strives, too, to make this knowledge of higher worlds bear fruit in
the realm of art.
In the Goetheanum Building at Dornach, in the High School for
Spiritual Science, a new style of architecture was created [See:
Ways to a New Style in Architecture (with 12 illustrations of
the first Goetheanum), by Rudolf Steiner.], out of
anthroposophical principles. This new style of architecture has no
sort of tendency towards the symbolic or the allegoric. Not a single
symbol, not a single allegorical form will be found there; everything
is the product of creative art in the truest sense. Spiritual Science
is not theory, it is not a matter merely of the intellect. The
element of intellect dragged down into art would produce nothing but
barren, allegorical symbolism, Spiritual Science leads to actual
perception, to concrete understanding of the spiritual world. The
content of the spiritual world can then be woven into the material
world. In the highest degree we strive to fulfil Goethes
demand, namely, that Art should be a manifestation of secret laws of
Nature which, without her, could never bear fruit. And we are also
endeavouring to develop an art of movement founded on the reality of
the formative forces working supersensibly within the human being.
This is Eurhythmy, a performance of which is to be given here next
Sunday.
Eurhythmy is not an art of dancing, nor anything in the nature of
mime; it is an art that has been brought down from the super-sensible
into the material domain of mans being; it gives expression to
the intimate connection of the human being with the Cosmos and its
laws, showing how in a visible speech, secrets of the
life of soul and spirit can be made manifest, as well as in audible
speech or song.
Similarly, Spiritual Science can flow into the social life, the moral
and ethical life. I have tried to show this in my book,
The Threefold Commonwealth.
The problems of the social life of men
can never be adequately solved by Marxian or other materialistic
theories. In his innermost existence man is a spiritual,
super-sensible being, and as a social being, too, it is his task to
give expression to the super-sensible in the domain of his social
life. Failing this, the burning social questions of our time can
never be fruitfully solved.
Finally, the path to higher worlds which anthroposophical Spiritual
Science strives to tread by means of genuine research and not through
mere belief this path is connected with mans deepest
and most inward quest, with the bonds he tries in devotion and piety
to forge with the Divine-Spiritual foundations of the Universe. In
short, Spiritual Science is bound up with the deepest religious
feelings arising in the human heart, with the religious life that
must unfold if the true dignity of manhood is to be attained. And so
anthroposophical knowledge of the super-sensible worlds is at the same
time a quickening, an enrichment of the religious life, of which, as
every unprejudiced mind will admit, we stand in dire need to-day.
It is well-nigh incomprehensible to me that again, quite recently,
anthroposophical Spiritual Science should have been accused by
theological circles of destroying the religious life. It has been
said, for example: the life of Anthroposophy betokens the death of
religion! Now the life of Anthroposophy is indissolubly bound up with
that life of the soul in which the very deepest forces of religion
unfold. This search for super-sensible realities cannot betoken the
death of religion at most it might betoken the end of
something that is merely regarded as religion and is already dead.
If, indeed, this is what has happened to religion, Anthroposophy
would simply be opening up a vista of death. By its very nature,
however, being a living path to the super-sensible realities,
Anthroposophy is a means whereby the religious feelings, the
whole-hearted devotion of men to the super-sensible worlds may be
enhanced, quickened, pervaded with warmth. [Compare:
Jesus or Christ,
a lecture given by invitation in the Theolog.
Verein, Christiania, 29th November, 1921.]
The goal of Anthroposophy is to work fruitfully in all the different
spheres of life, from the secular to the most sacred. In the noblest
sense however far off achievement still lies today
the goal and ideal of Anthroposophy is to promote and be a real
factor in the advancing evolution of mankind. And every unprejudiced
person who has passed with alert consciousness through the
catastrophic period of the second decade of the twentieth century,
will admit that many, many spheres of existence today are calling out
for new and vitalising impulses.
What I have put before you in such brief outline is connected with
the eternal concerns of human life. Anthroposophy can be cultivated
in the forum of life, where man does not always seem to demand that
inner security which can only be found in consciousness of his
eternal being; and it can be cultivated in quietude, away from the
hubbub of the forum of life. The human being of every epoch must be
in contact with the Eternal within him, if he would be truly Man.
Thus Anthroposophy is of universal, vital interest to all men because
it concerns the things that are Eternal in human existence. In our
days, when the signs of decline are to be seen on every hand, it must
surely be admitted, too, that there is need to counter the forces of
decline with impulses for the ennobling of Western civilisation.
Anthroposophy is worthy of attention today not only because it pays
heed to the Eternal but also because of the difficult tasks
confronting our times.
In conclusion, let me say this. Unlike the current tendency
to lead the human being to mystical castles in the air and thus to
estrangement from the world, the aim of Anthroposophy is to lead him
to the reality of the super-sensible worlds in such a way that having
seized the Spirit he may take a real hand in the affairs of practical
and material life. In very truth man must lay hold of the Spirit, for
the reason that if his life is to rest upon sure foundations, contact
with the super-sensible worlds and with the Eternal part of his being
is all-essential. And nowadays, above all, man needs the Spirit for
the solving of the hard and heavy problems which surround him in
these catastrophic times.
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