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Rudolf Steiner e.Lib
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Cosmic Forces in Man
Rudolf Steiner e.Lib Document
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Lecture:
S-4669:
27th November, 1921
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Cosmic Forces in Man
Schmidt Number: S-4669
On-line since: 28th May, 2002
Oslo, November 27th, 1921
We have heard how in accordance with anthroposophical knowledge, the
being of man must be viewed in relation to the whole universe. We
considered the human form and figure and its relation to the fixed
stars, or rather to the representative of the fixed stars — the
Zodiac. We heard how certain forces proceed from the constellations of
these stars when combined with the Sun forces, and how the shape and
structure of the human head and the organs connected with it, are
related to the upper constellations of the Zodiac: Aries, Taurus,
Gemini, Cancer. The structure of the human chest-organisation is
connected with the middle constellations; Leo, Virgo, Libra, Scorpio.
Finally the metabolic-and-limb system is connected with the lower
constellations: Sagittarius, Capricorn, Aquarius, Pisces — that
is to say with their forces when they are, in a sense, covered by the
Earth. So that we can say: The fixed stars — for the Zodiac is
only the representative of the fixed stars — work upon the human
form and structure.
The planetary spheres work upon man's stages or forms of life.
It must indeed be quite clear to us that man has various kinds of
life in him. We should not be able to think, the head would not be an
organ of thought, if life were as rampant there as it is in the
metabolic system, for example. When metabolism becomes too strong in
the head, consciousness is extinguished; we lose our consciousness of
self.
From this it may be concluded that for consciousness, for mental
presentation, a damped-down, suppressed life, a declining life is
necessary; while a thriving life, vehement and intense, is necessary
for what works more from out of the unconscious, to become
will.
We have therefore among the various stages of life some which tend
towards self-extinction, and some in which strong, intense organic
activity manifests, as in a child, in whom thought is not yet
operating. We have this child-like life continually within us; but
into this child-like life, the life that is involved in a gradual
process of death, inserts itself.
These different stages of life are connected with the planetary
spheres. Whereas the fixed stars work in man through his physical
forces, the planetary spheres work through his etheric forces.
The planetary spheres, therefore, work upon man in a more delicate
way. But the human physical body has already received its form, its
shape from the fixed stars, not from anything earthly; and its stages
of life from the planetary spheres.
We have thus considered the form of man's physical body, the
life-stages of his ether-body. We can now proceed to consider
his life of soul-and-spirit. But here our mode of study must be
different. What is it that our physical and our ether-body provide for
us in waking life? They provide what we perceive through our senses
and what we can work over in our thoughts. We are only really awake
in our acts of sense-perception and when we work over them in
thought.
On the other hand, consider the life of feeling. It is obvious,
even to superficial study, that feeling does not indicate a state of
awakeness as complete as that of thinking and sense-perception. When
we wake in the morning and become aware of the colours and sounds of
the outside world, when we are conscious of the conditions of warmth
around us, we are fully awake and then, in our thoughts, we work over
what is transmitted by the senses. But when feelings rise up from the
soul, it cannot be said that we are conscious in them to the
same extent. Feelings link themselves with sense-perceptions. One
sense-impression pleases us, another displeases us. Feelings also
intermingle with our thoughts. But if we compare the pictures we
experience in dreams with what we experience in our feelings, then the
connection between dream-life and the life of feeling is clearly
noticeable.
Dreams have to be grasped by the waking life of thought if they are to
be valued and understood aright. But feelings too must be observed, as
it were, by our thought-life if we are to understand them. In our
feelings we are, in reality, dreaming. When we dream, we dream
in pictures. When we are awake, we dream in our feelings. And in our
will we are asleep, even when fully awake. When we raise an
arm, when we do this or that, we can perceive what movements
the arm or hand is making, but we do not know how the power of
the will operates in the organism. We know as little about that as
about the conditions prevailing from the time we fall asleep until we
wake up. In our willing, in our actions, we are asleep, while in our
sense-perceptions and our thoughts, we are awake. So we are not only
asleep during the night; we are asleep, in part of our being, during
waking life too. In our will we are asleep and in our feelings we
dream. What we experience during actual sleep is withdrawn from our
consciousness. But in essence, the same is true of feeling and
willing. It is therefore obviously important to realise what it is
that the human being experiences in these realms of which ordinary
life is quite unaware.
You know from many anthroposophical lectures that from the time of
going to sleep until that of waking, the Ego and astral body are
outside the physical body and the ether-body. Now it may be of very
great importance to learn about just those experiences which the Ego
and the astral body pass through from the time of falling asleep to
that of waking up. When we are awake, we are confronted by
sense-perceptions of the material world. To a certain extent we reach
out and encounter them; but with our sense-perceptions, our waking
thoughts, we reach no further than the surface of things.
Of course someone may object, saying that he can get further
than the surface of things, that if he cuts a piece of wood which is
there before him as a sense-perception, then he has penetrated inside
it. That is a fallacy, however, for if you cut a piece of wood, you
have again only a surface, and if you cut the two pieces again, still
you have only surfaces; and if you were to get right to the molecules
and atoms, again you would have only surfaces. You do not reach what
may be called the inner essence of things, for that lies beyond the
realm of sense-perception. Sense-perceptions can be conceived as a
tapestry spread out around us. What lies this side of the tapestry we
perceive with our senses; what lies on the other side of the tapestry
we do not perceive with the senses. We are in this world of sense from
the time we wake up until we fall asleep. Our soul is filled with the
impressions made upon us by this world of sense. Now when we pass into
sleep, we are not in the world this side of the senses, we are then in
reality inside things, we are on the other side of the
tapestry of sense-perceptions. But in his earthly consciousness, man
knows nothing of this and he dreams of all sorts of things lying
beyond the realm of sense-perception. He dreams of molecules, of
atoms; but they are only dreams — dreams of his waking
consciousness. He invents molecules, atoms and the like, and believes
them to be realities. But study any description of atoms, even the
most recent... you will find nothing but minute objects which are
described according to the pattern of what is experienced from the
surface of things. It is all a tissue woven from the experiences of
waking consciousness on this side of the tapestry of sense.
But when we fall asleep, we emerge from the world of sense and
penetrate to the other side. And whereas we experience Nature here
with our waking thoughts, in yonder world, from the time of falling
asleep until the time of waking, we live in the world of Spirit, that
world of Spirit through which we also pass before birth and after
death. In his earthly development, however, man is so constituted that
his consciousness is extinguished when he passes beyond the world of
sense; his consciousness is not forceful enough to penetrate to the
spiritual world. But what Spiritual Science calls Imagination,
Inspiration, Intuition — these three forms of super-sensible
cognition — give us knowledge of what lies on the other side of
the tapestry of sense. And what we discover first, is the lowest stage
of the world of the Hierarchies.
When we wake from sleep we pass over into the world of animals,
plants, minerals — the three kingdoms of Nature belonging to the
world of sense. When we fall asleep, we pass beyond the world of
sense, we are transported into the realm of the first rank of Beings
above man — the Angels. And from the time of falling asleep until
waking, we are connected with the Being who is allotted to man as his
own Angel, just as through our eyes and ears we are connected with the
three kingdoms of Nature here in the world of sense. Even if at first
we have no consciousness of this connection with the world of the
Angels, it is nevertheless there. This connection extends into our
astral body.
If, living in our astral body during sleep, we were suddenly to wake
up, we should contact the world of the Angels, in the first place the
Angel who is connected with our own life, just as here in the earthly
world we are in contact with animals, plants, and minerals.
Now even in the earthly world, in the world of sense, if a man is
attentive and deliberately trains his thinking, he sees much more than
when he is unobservant and hasty. His connection with the three
kingdoms of Nature can be intimate or superficial. And it is the same
with regard to the world of spiritual Beings. But in the world of
spiritual Beings, different conditions prevail.
A man whose thoughts are entirely engrossed in the material world, who
never desires to rise above it, or to acquaint himself with moral
ideas extending beyond the merely utilitarian, who has no desire to
experience true human love, who in his waking life has no devotion to
the Divine-Spiritual world — on falling asleep, such a man has no
forces which enable him to come into contact with his Angel. Whenever
we fall asleep, this Angel is waiting as it were for the idealistic
feelings and thoughts which come with us, and the more we bring, the
more intimate becomes our relation to the Angel while we are asleep.
And so throughout our life, by means of what we cultivate over and
above material interests, we garner, in our waking life, forces
whereby our relation to the Angel becomes more and more intimate.
When we die, all sense-perceptions fall away. The outer world can no
longer make any impression upon us, for this must be done via the
senses, and the senses pass away with the body. In like manner, the
thinking that is connected with sense-perception is extinguished, for
its realm is the ether-body. This ether-body only remains with us for
a few days after death. We see it at first as a tableau — a
tableau which under certain circumstances can be glimpsed during life
but which will inevitably arise before us after death.
This ether-tissue dissolves away into the universe, just as the
ordinary thoughts acquired from the world of sense pass away from us.
They do not remain. All purely utilitarian thoughts, all thoughts
connected with the material world, drift away from us when we pass
through the Gate of Death. But the idealistic thoughts and feelings,
the pure human love, the religious feelings which have arisen in our
waking life and have united us with our Angel, these accompany us when
we pass through death.
This has a very important consequence during the period lying between
death and a new birth. Even during earthly life we are connected with
the higher Hierarchies and it is correct to say that when we fall
asleep and our idealistic experiences reach to the Angel, this Angel
is in turn connected with the Archangels, the Archangels with the
Archai, and so on. Our existence continues in a rich and abundant
world of Spirit. But this spiritual world has no special significance
for us between birth and death. This world of the higher Hierarchies
acquires its real significance for us when it becomes our environment
between death and a new birth. The more we have delivered over to our
Angel, the more conscious life is this Angel able to infuse
into us after death when we are beings of soul-and-spirit, the more
gifts are bestowed by the Hierarchies upon the conscious life of soul.
What our Angel unfolds, together with the higher Hierarchies (that is
to say, what the Beings of the First Hierarchy unfold together with
higher Hierarchies through our Angel) is for our consciousness
in the spiritual world between death and rebirth what our eyes and
ears are in the physical world. And the more idealistic thoughts and
feelings, human love and piety we have brought to our Angel, the
clearer does our consciousness become.
Now between death and a new birth there comes a time when the Angel
has a definite task in connection with us. The Angel has now to
achieve a more intimate relation with the hierarchy of the Archangels
than was formerly the case. I have described the time through which
man lives between death and a new birth from many different points of
view, notably in the Lecture-Course given in Vienna in 1914, entitled
The Inner Nature of Man and the Life between Death and a new Birth.
I will now describe certain other aspects.
When a somewhat lengthy period has elapsed after death, the important
moment comes when the Angel must as it were deliver up to the
Archangels what he has received from us through the ‘idealistic’
experiences described. It is as though man were placed before the
world of the Archangels, who can then receive these experiences he has
unfolded in his soul and Spirit during his life between birth and
death. There are great differences among human souls living between
death and a new birth. In our epoch there are persons who have brought
very little in the way of idealistic thoughts and feelings, of human
love, of piety, when the time comes for the Angel to pass on to the
Archangel for the purposes of cosmic evolution, what has been carried
through death. This activity which unfolds between the Angel and the
Archangel must, under all circumstances, take place. But there is a
great difference, dependent upon whether we are able to follow
consciously, by means of the experiences described, what takes place
between the Angels and the Archangels or whether we only live through
it in a dull, dim state, as must be the lot of human beings whose
consciousness has been purely materialistic. It is not quite accurate
to say that the experiences of such human beings are dull or dim. It
is perhaps better to say: they experience these happenings in such a
way that they feel continually rejected by a world into which they
ought to be received, they feel continually chilled by a world which
should receive them with warmth. For man should be received with
loving sympathy into the world of the Archangels at this important
moment of time; he should be received with warmth. And then he will be
led in the right way towards what I have called in one of my Mystery
Plays: “The Midnight Hour of Existence.”
Man is led by the Archangels to the realm of the Archai where his life
is interwoven with that of all the higher Hierarchies, for through the
Archai he is brought into relation with all the higher Hierarchies and
receives from their realms the impulse to descend to the Earth once
again. The power is given him to work as a being of soul-and-spirit,
to work in what is provided, later on, in material form, by the stream
of heredity.
Before the Midnight Hour of Existence man has become more and more
estranged from earthly existence, he has been growing more and more
into the spiritual world — either being received lovingly (in the
sense described above) by the spiritual world, being drawn to it with
warmth, or being repelled, chilled by it. But when the Midnight Hour
of Existence has passed, man begins gradually to long for earthly life
and once again, during the second part of his journey, he encounters
the world of the Archangels. It is really so: Between death and a new
birth, man ascends, first to the world of the Angels, Archangels,
Archai, and then once again descends; and after the world of the
Archai his most important contact is with the world of the Archangels.
And now comes another important point in the life between death and a
new birth. In a man who has brought through death no idealistic
thoughts or feelings, no human love or true piety, something of the
soul-and-spirit has perished as a result of the antipathy and chilling
reception meted out by the higher world. A man who now again
approaches the realm of the Archangels in the right way has received
into him the power to work effectively in his subsequent life on
Earth, to make proper use of his body; a man who has not brought such
experiences with him will be imbued by the Angels with a longing for
earthly life which remains more unconscious. A very great deal depends
upon this. Upon it depends to what people, to what language —
mother-tongue — the man descends in his forthcoming earthly
existence. This urge towards a particular people, a particular
mother-tongue may have been implanted in him deeply and inwardly or
more superficially. So that on his descent a man is either permeated
with deep and inward love for what will become his mother-tongue, or
he enters more automatically into what he will have to express later
on through his organs of speech.
It makes a great difference in which of these two ways a man has been
destined for the language that will be his in the coming earthly life.
He who before his earthly life, during his second passage through the
realm of the Angels, can be permeated with a really inward love for
his mother-tongue, assimilates it as though it were part of his very
being. He becomes one with it. This love is absolutely natural to him;
it is a love born of the soul; he grows into his language and race as
into a natural home. If however a man has grown into it the other way
during the descent to his next earthly life, he will arrive on the
Earth loving his language merely out of instinct and lower impulses.
Lacking the true, inward love for his language and his people, he will
be prone to an aggressive patriotism connected with his bodily
existence. It makes a great difference whether we grow into race and
language with the tranquil, pure love of one who unites himself
inwardly with his folk and language, or whether we grow into them more
automatically, and out of passions and instincts express love for our
folk and our language. The former conditions never come to expression
in chauvinism or a superficial and aggressive form of patriotism. A
true and inward love for race and language expresses itself naturally,
and is thoroughly consistent with real and universal human love.
Feeling for internationalism or cosmopolitanism is never stultified by
this inner love for a language and people. When, however, a man grows
into his language more automatically, when through his instincts and
impulses he develops an over-fervid, organic, animal-like love for
language and people, false nationalism and chauvinism arise, with
their external emphasis upon race and nationality.
At the present time especially, it is necessary to study from the
standpoint of life between death and a new birth what we encounter in
the outer world in our life between birth and death. For the way we
come down into race and language through the stream of heredity,
through birth, depends upon how we encounter, for the second time, the
realm of the Archangels.
Those who try to understand life to-day from the spiritual
vantage-point, know that the experience arising in the period between
death and a new birth when man comes for the second time into the
realm of the Angels, is very important. All over the Earth to-day the
peoples are adopting a false attitude to nationality, race and
language, and much of what has arisen in the catastrophe of the second
decade of the twentieth century in the evolution of the Western
people, is only explicable when studied from such points of view. He
who studies life to-day in the light of anthroposophical Spiritual
Science must assume that in former earthly lives many men became more
and more deeply entangled in materialism. You all know that, normally,
the period between death and a new birth is lengthy. But especially in
the present phase of evolution, there are many men whose life between
their last death and their present birth was only short, and in their
former earthly life they had little human love or idealism. Already in
the former earthly life their interests were merely utilitarian. And
as a result, in their second contact with the realm of the Angels
between death and a new birth, the seeds were laid for all that arises
to-day in such an evil form in the life of the West.
We shall have realised that man can only be understood as a spatial
being when it is known that his form and structure derive from the
realm of the fixed stars and his life-stages from the planetary
spheres. As a spatial being, man draws the forces that are active in
him, not only from the Earth but from the whole Cosmos. Now just as it
is necessary to go beyond what is earthly in order to understand man
as a spatial being, so it is necessary to go beyond life between birth
and death in order to understand social life, racial life on the
Earth.
When we carefully observe the life of to-day we find that although men
claim their right to freedom so vociferously, they are, in reality,
inwardly unfree. There is no truly free life in the activities which
nowadays manifest such obvious forces of decline; instincts and lower
impulses are the cause of the misery in social life. And when this is
perceived we are called upon to understand it.
Just as a second meeting with the Archangels takes place, so when man
once again approaches earthly life, he enters into a more intimate
union with his Angel. But at first he is somewhat withdrawn from the
realm of the Angels. As long as he is in the realm of the Archangels,
his Angel too is more strongly bound with this realm. Man lives as it
were among the higher Hierarchies and as he draws near to a new birth
he is entrusted more and more to the realm of the Angels who then lead
him through the world of the Elements, through fire, air, water and
earth, to the stream of heredity. His Angel, leads him to physical
existence on Earth. His Angel can make him into a man who is in a
position to act freely, out of the depths of his soul-and-spirit, if
all the conditions described have been fulfilled by the achievements
of a former earthly life.
But, the Angel is not able to lead a man to a truly free life, if he
has had to be united automatically with his language and his race. In
such a case the individual life also becomes unfree. This lack of
freedom shows itself in the following way. Instead of forming free
concepts, such a man merely thinks words. He becomes unfree
because all his thinking is absorbed in words. This is a fundamental
characteristic of modern men.
Earthly life in its historical development, especially in its present
state, cannot be understood unless we also turn with the eyes of soul,
to the life which runs its course between death and a new birth, to
the world of soul-and-spirit.
To understand the human form, we must turn to the heaven of the
fixed stars; to understand the stages of life in man we must
turn to the planetary spheres. If we wish to understand man's life of
soul-and-spirit, we must not confine our attention to the life
between birth and death, for as we have seen, this life of
soul-and-spirit is rooted in the world of the higher Hierarchies and
belongs to the higher Hierarchies just as the physical body and
ether-body of man belong to the physical and etheric worlds.
Again, if we wish to understand thinking, feeling and willing, then we
must not merely confine our attention to man's relation to the world
of sense. Thinking, feeling and willing are the forces through which
the soul develops. We are carried as it were through the Gate
of Death by our idealistic thoughts — by what love and religious
devotion have implanted in these thoughts. Our first meeting with the
Archangels depends upon how we have ennobled our thinking and
permeated it with idealism. But when we have passed through the
Midnight Hour of Existence, our thinking dies away. It is this
thinking which now, after the Midnight Hour of Existence, is
re-moulded and elaborated for the next earthly life. And the forces
which permeate our physical organs of thinking in the coming earthly
life are shaped by our former thinking. The forces working in the
human head are not merely forces of the present life. They are the
forces which have worked over into this life from thinking as it was
in the last life, and give rise to the form of the brain.
On the other hand, it is the will which, at the second meeting
with the Archangels, plays its special part in man's life of
soul-and-spirit. And it is the will which then, in the next life on
Earth, lays hold of the limb-and-metabolic organism. When we enter
through birth into earthly life, it is the will which determines the
fitness or inadequacy of the limbs and the metabolic processes.
Within the head we really have a physical mirror-image of the thoughts
evolved in the previous life. In the forces of the metabolism and
limbs we have the working of the newly acquired forces of will which,
at the second meeting with the Archangels, are incorporated into us as
I have described — either in such a way that they are inwardly
active in the life of soul, or operate automatically.
Those who realise how this present life which generates such forces of
decline in humanity of the West, has taken shape, will look with the
greatest interest towards what was active in man between death and a
new birth during the period of existence preceding this present
earthly life. And what they can learn from this will fill them with
the impulse — now that the dire consequences of materialism are
becoming apparent in the life of the peoples — to give men who
already in their last incarnation were too materialistic, that
stimulus which can lead once again to a deepening of inner life, to
free spiritual activity, to a really intimate, and natural relation to
language and race which does not in any way run counter to
internationalism or cosmopolitanism.
But first and foremost our thinking must be permeated with real
spirituality. In the Spirit of modern man, there are, in reality, only
thoughts. When man speaks to-day of his Spirit, he is actually
speaking only of his thoughts, of his more or less abstract thinking.
What we need is to be filled with Spirit, the living Spirit belonging
to the world lying between death and a new birth. In respect of his
form, his stages of life, his nature of soul-and-spirit, man must
regard himself as belonging to a world which lies outside the
earthly sphere; then he will be able to bring what is right and good
into earthly life.
We know how the Spiritual in man is gradually absorbed by other
domains of earthly existence, by political life, by economic life.
What is needed is a free and independent spiritual life; only
thereby can man be permeated with real spirituality, with spiritual
substance, not merely with thoughts about this or that. Anthroposophy
must therefore be prepared to work for the liberation of the spiritual
life. If this spiritual life does not stand upon its own foundations,
man will become more and more a dealer in abstractions, He will not be
able to permeate his being with living Spirit, but only with abstract
Spirit.
When a man here, in physical life, passes through the Gate of Death,
his corpse is committed to the Earth, or to the Elements. His true
being is no longer within this physical corpse. When a man passes
through birth in such a way that through the processes described he
has become an ‘automaton’ in his relation to his nation, language and
conduct — then his living thinking, his living will, his living
nature of soul-and-spirit die when he is born into the physical
world and within physical existence become the corpse of the Divine
Being of soul-and-spirit.
Our abstract, rationalistic thinking is verily a corpse of the
soul-and-spirit. Just as the real human being is no longer within the
physical corpse, so we have in abstract thinking, a life of soul that
is devoid of Spirit — really only the corpse of the
Divine-spiritual. Man stands to-day at a critical point where he must
resolve to receive the spiritual world once again, in order that he
may pour new life into the abstract thinking that is a corpse of the
Divine-Spiritual, opening the way for instincts, impulses and
automatism.
What I said at the end of my lecture to students here (On the
Reality of Higher Worlds. 25th November, 1921.) is deeply true: If
he is to pass from a decline to a real ascent, man must overcome the
abstraction which, like a corpse of the soul is present in the
intellectualistic and rationalistic thinking of to-day.
An awakening of the soul and spirit — that is what is needed! The
social life of the present day points clearly to the necessity for
such an awakening. Anthroposophy has indeed an eternal task in regard
to that living principle in man which must continue beyond all epochs
of time. But Anthroposophy has also a task to fulfil for the present
age, namely to wean man from externalisation, from the tendency to
paralyse and kill the Divine-Spiritual within him. Anthroposophy must
bring back this Divine-Spiritual life. Man must learn to regard
himself not merely as an earthly but as a heavenly being, realising
that his earthly life can only be conducted aright if the forces of
heavenly existence, of the existence between death and a new birth,
are brought down into this earthly life.
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