II
MAN
IN THE LIGHT OF ANTHROPOSOPHY
Had
I not spoken to you yesterday, I could not give you to-day's
lecture in the form in which I intend to give it. This is not
only because this lecture is to be a continuation of
yesterday's lecture, but because the facts concerning man's
true being which are accessible to anthroposophical
research at first appear so paradoxical that it is necessary to
know the sure foundation upon which such truths are based. I
think that I explained to you sufficiently clearly that both in
the direction of a critical attitude and in that of a
conscientious form of investigation, Anthroposophy is
well able to compete with everything which modern people are
accustomed to consider as a scientific method and a scientific
mentality.
The
subject of to-day's lecture is man's true being which, lying at
the foundation of his external physical being, forms and guides
it. Spiritual science above all can show that man's physical
being belongs more than one generally thinks to the development
of the world as such, and this connection with the whole
evolution of the world will form the subject of my next
lecture. Earnest-minded people, and also earnest scientists
have now a different view of man's true being than a few
decades ago, at the height of materialism.
But
the anthroposophical facts which will now be set forth will
perhaps be rejected most strongly of all by those who seek to
approach the element of soul and spirit in man by
adhering, as it were, to the more materialistic aspect of
science.
We
can see that people now begin to take an interest in the causes
which produce certain abnormal soul-conditions in man which
subject him to hallucinations and delusions, to suggestion and
auto-suggestion. People are now specially interested in these
abnormal psychic phenomena, because they can be investigated in
the same way in which physical experiments are carried on,
without the unfolding of the soul's dormant forces, concerning
which I spoke in my last lecture. People with an abnormal
spiritual life are simply approached experimentally, and the
phenomena are investigated in the same way in which one makes
experiments in a laboratory.
Such people, and many who are not a prey of abnormal
soul-conditions, frequently believe that unusual psychic
conditions, visions or hallucinations, constitute some
means of penetrating more deeply into man's true being; they
even think that in these abnormal conditions a kind of
revelation from the real spiritual worlds can be received.
Now
that man's true being can be investigated in the light of
Anthroposophy, it is possible to throw light upon the real
meaning of these abnormal psychic conditions. Yesterday's
critical examination of certain facts may have convinced you
from the very outset that anthroposophical spiritual research
can confront even such abnormal phenomena with a strictly
critical attitude.
Another kind of phenomenon confronts us when it is possible to
perceive certain thoughts of certain people under conditions of
time and of space which must undoubtedly be designated as
abnormal. These cases are now being discussed quite seriously
by modern scientists. Telepathy is a phenomenon of this kind.
During certain psychic conditions, thoughts can be perceived
through telepathy without the ordinary instrument of the
senses; indeed these thoughts can even be perceived at a
distance. One also speaks of telekinesis, or of certain forces
proceeding from the human being which manifest themselves
simply through influences at a distance, without the physical
intermediary of the human being, so that it appears as if it
were possible to unfold will-power and to transmit it into
space without the medium of the body. In scientific circles
experiments have already been made with the application of
scientific methods, experiments falling under the category of
teleplastic, in which phantoms and apparently physical forms
appear in connection with a person, or in his close proximity.
It is clearly evident that these forms consist of a fine
substance, of an etheric substance, and' that plastically they
are permeated by something rooted as plastic force in human
thinking, by something existing inhuman thought.
We
therefore speak of telepathy, telekinesis and teleplastic. When
anthroposophical spiritual science confronts these phenomena,
it must again raise the critical question: Do these phenomena
proceed from that part of the human being which, as explained
yesterday, abandons the physical and the etheric body of man,
at the moment of falling asleep, that sentient and volitional
being which remains outside the body from the moment of falling
asleep to the moment of waking up? Are the phenomena known as
telepathy, telekinesis and teleplastic an activity of
man's eternal soul-spiritual essence, of that part which we
learned to know as his feeling and volitional being, or are
they perhaps simply an activity of that part which remains
behind on the bed during sleep, consisting solely of the
physical and of the etheric body, or the body of formative
forces?
If
these phenomena are merely activities of the latter, they
belong to that part which vanishes when we die, no matter how
wonderful and extraordinary they may appear to us. For
when we die, the part which remains behind on the bed during
sleep, vanishes. What constitutes man's immortal, eternal
being, that which abandons the physical and etheric body during
sleep, as a rule also abandons the physical body when we are
under some hypnotic influence, in the phenomena of
telepathy, telekinesis and teleplastic. We must therefore say:
These so-called wonderful phenomena cannot point to anything
connected with man's eternal being; no matter how abnormal they
are, they are connected with that part of his being which
separates from him when he dies and which connects itself with
the element of the earth. In that case they are only able to
indicate a world which vanishes when the human being passes
through the portal of death.
The
spiritual science of Anthroposophy must therefore raise this
critical objection in regard to certain phenomena which are
widely recognised to-day, in the same way in which such
objections had to be raised in regard to the phenomena
described yesterday. It will be essential to know what
Anthroposophy has to say concerning such phenomena, on the
foundation of its investigations connected with man's true
immortal essence.
Perhaps I may once more draw attention to the fact that through
the exercises of meditation, through the exercises of thought
and of the will mentioned yesterday and in other lectures which
were given here, a condition can be created, particularly in
regard to man's feeling and volitional part, which resembles
the sleeping state, although it is radically different from
sleep.
Yesterday I described to you how the sentient and volitional
being in man, which is ordinarily unconscious and as it were
lifeless, can be filled with inner life, with light and power,
so that it is possible to create a condition in which man's
feeling and volitional parts are outside the physical body as
is the case during sleep, and in which these independent
soul-spiritual parts can be used for anthroposophical research.
In that case we no longer live in a dark world which renders us
unconscious, but we are instead surrounded by a spiritual
world, where the first object upon which we can look back is
our physical body and our body of formative forces. This body
of formative forces supplies to the inner soul-spiritual being,
which has abandoned the physical and etheric body, a mirrored
reflection of the world, in the form of thoughts which are now
perceived as forces. Our thought-world, which was formerly
connected with us, is now thrown back to us as mirrored
reflections by the physical body which we left behind, so that
we obtain an image of the world not because we obtain pictures
of the external world through our sensory organs, for instance
through the eye, which transmits us conscious experiences of
the physical world, but because we now gain an image of the
world's spiritual foundation through the fact that the human
organism becomes as it were a sensory organ, which is now
outside the human being, like any other object.
Through gradual progress in anthroposophical research, and by
growing inwardly stronger and stronger, we can learn to know
this being which is outside. I already explained to you that
this condition in which an anthroposophical investigator lives,
differs from everything which people experience in a visionary
form, through hallucinations or through other psychic
conditions. A spiritual investigator is always able to maintain
a controlled, sound state of consciousness while
investigating the higher world. He is in a condition which can
really be designated as swinging to and fro from the perception
of the spiritual world to that of the physical world. In other
words, he can alternately live outside his physical body and
his sensory perceptions, as already described, and return to
his full consciousness, to his ordinary capacity of
thinking, feeling and willing, so that he can judge his
super-sensible experiences with his everyday thinking, feeling
and willing, with his normal, cool-headed common sense, with
the capacities with which he ordinarily judges life in general.
The results of spiritual-scientific investigations can
therefore be judged quite critically; a strictly critical
attitude can be adopted towards the higher experiences which
confront the soul of a spiritual-scientific investigator.
In
abnormal soul-conditions we do not have this alternating from
one state of consciousness to another. People who have visions
or hallucinations cannot return at will, when they
consider it best, to their ordinary, calm state of mind,
through an effort of the will; that is to say, they cannot
return at will into their physical body. They are led into such
abnormal conditions by an involuntary sub-conscious element
which produces hallucinations and visions, and the total
absence of criticism in regard to their abnormal conditions is
a fact which must be indicated over and over again, whenever
the results of anthroposophical, spiritual-scientific research
are brought into connection with things which have a visionary
or hallucinatory character.
By
swinging to and fro from a higher state of consciousness to the
ordinary way of seeing things and to ordinary consciousness, we
more and more attain the capacity to look back upon our
physical and etheric bodies, which now exist objectively
outside our soul-spiritual kernel; we look back upon the
physical and etheric bodies with forces developed in the
sentient and volitional part of our being. By ascending to the
imaginative state of consciousness, we now really learn to know
what we have before us as a picture of another world. The
important point to be borne in mind is that through the
imaginative and inspirational knowledge described in my last
lectures, we really learn to form a judgment upon the physical
body and the body of formative forces, which we now see from
outside.
To
use a comparison, it is as if we first had before us a picture
and were to learn the corresponding reality which it
represents by gaining a knowledge of the laws of perspective.
But the reality which we gather from an ordinary picture is,
after all, only an inner soul-experience, whereas the larger
perspective in which we objectively look upon the physical body
and the body of formative forces, is a real experience of
facts. For we learn to know that the physical body and the body
of formative forces contain, in an image, what we ourselves
were, before descending into the physical world through birth
or conception.
In
this perspective, something frees itself from what we thus see
before us and leads us back into the spiritual world through
which we passed before we united ourselves through birth or
conception with the physical substance given to us by our
parents and ancestors, and transmitted by the physical
stream of heredity here on earth. We can survey the
soul-spiritual world which surrounds us before we came down
into an earthly existence; it is the world which contains the
forces that became united with our physical form, transmitted
by our parents and forefathers.
We
now learn to know ourselves in our pre-existence, in our
pre-natal condition, and the characteristic fact which rises up
before us is that in this picture representing man's
pre-existent being we actually see the world reversed, in
comparison with a physical perspective. In a physical
perspective we see the nearest objects most clearly of all, and
the further off they lie, the more they grow indistinct; this
characterises the perspective of the spatial world.
But
matters appear reversed in the perspective which now rises up
out of the human being that remained behind. The things most
closely related with our physical life on earth are those which
are most familiar to our present experience; in reality we do
not know our own inner being during our physical life on earth.
Our physical life on earth is something which darkens our
eternal being, our innermost kernel. But when we look into the
pre-existent world, the things which we perceive spiritually
first of all are not those which are most familiar to us in
earthly life, not the closest, nearest things, but we first
perceive the more distant things. If we have ascended through
the three stages which can be developed through exercises as
higher stages of knowledge, in accordance with descriptions
contained in my book Knowledge of the Higher Worlds,
then Imagination, Inspiration and Intuition really enable
us to obtain a complete soul-spiritual picture of the universe,
leading us back to a past life on earth.
Even as a physical perspective is limited in the distance, so
the image which we obtain of a world in which we lived in a
pre-existent condition is limited by a past earthly life which
opens out to us through intuition. The spiritual science of
Anthroposophy does not speak of anything fantastic nor of some
logical inference when it speaks of the repeated lives on
earth, for this knowledge is gained through cognition, it is a
fact which presents itself to the real spiritual vision. But
this spiritual vision, this spiritual perception, must first be
drawn out of the depths of the soul. We then obtain a positive
knowledge of the fact that man's physical body, man's etheric
body or the body of formative forces, plastically contain those
essential forces which lived in the human being during the time
between death and a new birth.
This also explains that we have developed out of a spiritual
world into the physical world. Within the physical body, which
man carries not merely as a covering but as a kind of
instrument, and within the etheric body, containing the living
forces which lie at the foundation of the organs, of metabolism
and growth, within these bodies which appear objectively before
us in spiritual vision, lives the soul's inner kernel, which is
plastically moulded into them, the soul's essential being, as
it has developed in a soul-spiritual world since the last death
until the last birth. When we abandon the physical and etheric
body with our sentient-volitional being, we learn to know what
we thus leave behind us, as the last thing, as it were, to
which we longingly turned on growing old, so to speak, in the
spiritual world; the last thing to which we turned in our
existence between death and a new birth before
“dying” in the spiritual world. Even as we perceive
that our physical body begins to fade at a certain age, on
approaching death through old age, so we perceive that our
soul-spiritual being begins to fade in the spiritual world in
which we then live.
This fading away of our soul-spiritual being reveals itself in
our longing for the physical world, for a corporeal physical
incarnation. Consequently that part which lives in our
physical and etheric body constitutes, as it were, the last
phase of our existence above in the spiritual world. During our
sleep, when we go out of our physical body as
sentient-volitional beings, we leave behind our past.
What do we then take with us? If we realise the fact that we
leave behind our past, we can also realise the fact that what
is ordinarily an unconscious experience from the moment of
falling asleep to the moment of waking up, is that part of
man's being which passes through the portal of death and
re-enters a soul-spiritual world. That part of man's being
which could not dive down into the physical and etheric body,
which remained behind, as it were, that part goes out every
night when we fall asleep, and it also passes again as a being
of feeling and will, through the portal of death. Thus eternity
becomes guaranteed to man through this real
perception.
And
if we now look back to what is striven for without any
understanding by a certain modern scientific direction which
clings to external, superficial facts in order to
investigate phenomena such as telepathy, teleplastic and
telekinesis, we see that these phenomena are really connected
with man's past, with the part which perishes when he dies,
with something which cannot constitute anything pertaining to
the real super-sensible world, but only to forces which are
connected with the human being in the physical realm of the
earth.
If
we vividly imagine that part of our pre-existent being which
descends into a physical embodiment through conception and
birth, we can understand that in its development it absorbs the
forces and substances transmitted by the hereditary stream; it
also takes in forces during the course of earthly existence
which are absorbed through the process of nutrition and
breathing and through everything which the human being receives
from the external world. The human being only exists as a full
reality in that being that descends into physical embodiment
from a pre-existent, pre-natal life. Within the mother's body
it already enters into and envelops itself with physical matter
and later on draws in substance through breathing, nutrition,
and so forth.
Only when the human being is awake, only during this normal
condition of life, the part which man thus incorporates into
himself enters into connection with his true being, with his
sentient and volitional being, through the physical and etheric
bodies. When the human being is awake, there exists a normal
connection between his sentient-volitional being and his
thinking capacity, which is bound up, as we already have seen,
with the etheric body and with the physical body.
Let
us now suppose that in a hypnotic condition man's sentient and
volitional being is drawn out of the physical and the etheric
body. The hypnotised man whom we then have before us, consists
merely of the body of formative forces and of the physical
body, with all the physical substances and forces which he has
absorbed from the external physical world. There are many
reciprocal relationships between these substances and forces
and the environing world, and all this enters the human being.
When the sentient, volitional part of man is outside the
physical and etheric body, it is possible to observe the
influence of these physical substances. Through
anthroposophical investigation, we discover that this does not
pertain to man's immortal essence, to man's inner kernel, but
that it is something which pertains to the external world and
which unites with his immortal part, something which became
incorporated into it in the past.
The
same thing can appear if the person succumbs to some kind of
illness. In a normal condition, a diseased organ can be felt
through pain, sickness, and so forth. This is the case when the
volitional-sentient being is rightly connected with the
physical and etheric body. But if the physical or even the
etheric body is somehow deformed by illness, then through the
disease of some organ, some inner member of the soul and
spirit, the sentient-volitional being in man dives down more
deeply into his animal-physical nature than is the case in a
normal state of consciousness, when the memories are only
thrown back like mirrored reflections. When the physical organs
are sound, the human being dives down into his physical body
only to a certain degree; but if the organs are diseased, if
only one organ is diseased, the soul-spiritual being not
only dives down as far as the point where pain arises in the
normal course of an illness, but it dives down deeper still.
The soul-spiritual being unites with the physical organism.
Whereas in the ordinary course of life man's
sentient-volitional being is normally connected only with the
sensory and with the nervous system, it now becomes connected
with the lower animalic organs and with the vegetative organs,
so that the involuntary conditions of hallucination and of
visionary experience arise. One sees that hallucinations and
visionary experiences, as well as other similar
conditions, are entirely united with man's physical and etheric
bodies, and that therefore, they can only be experiences
which vanish when the human being dies and can throw no light
whatever upon the super-sensible world in which we live between
death and a new birth. There is, however, one phenomenon
attested by sound scientific research, namely that in a
mediumistic condition it is possible to perceive thoughts
of a certain importance, and sometimes one can be amazed at the
very clever thoughts voiced by a medium in trance, i.e. by a
person who is in a kind of hypnotic state, thoughts which would
not be possible to him in a normal state of consciousness.
Does this fact contradict the explanations given above? It does
not contradict them, because not only the physical body, but
also the etheric body can exercise an influence in space,
without the medium of the physical body. Even quite normal
people, particularly those who have a spark of genius in them,
may produce thoughts and phantasies which are not limited to
the body of formative forces, and because these transcend
normal life and even the human being himself, they go out, as
it were, into the universal cosmic ether, which we shall learn
to know in our next lecture.
We
can really say that the artistic thoughts which transcend
normal life continue to swing in the universal cosmic ether,
thoughts which appear — if I may use this expression
— in superhuman artistic creations and experiences. These
thoughts whirr about in the cosmic ether.
People who prepare themselves through exercises of the will and
meditation described yesterday, know that man does not only
produce things physically, by physical deeds. They know that
thoughts which are not required for the maintenance of
individual life (individual life requires thinking forces which
change into forces of growth) are imparted to the universal
cosmic ether. When the etheric body is in some
pathological condition, when it is deformed or when it
becomes mediumistic through trance, then the thoughts which
whirr about in the cosmic ether and which do not enter our
normal consciousness, can penetrate into a person deprived of
his soul-spiritual part and manifesting as a medium. And when,
for instance, the thoughts of a dead person imparted to the
universal ether manifest themselves through a medium, it is
possible to believe that one is really perceiving the thoughts,
the present thoughts of the departed soul, whereas in reality
one only perceives the echo of thoughts rayed out before death,
when that person was still living on the earth.
This is what should always be borne in mind, through a sound,
critical, spiritual-scientific attitude. We should be aware
whether we merely confront thought-echoes, or whether the
development of super-sensible forces really enables us to
penetrate into the super-sensible world to which we belong after
death and before birth. Telepathy is merely an etheric
transmission of thoughts with the exclusion of the senses. In
telekinesis certain forces producing changes in the physical
body through nutrition or through other physical substances,
are stimulated to action in space without a physical
intermediary. The human being only consists of about 10 per
cent of solid substance; he is a liquid column in regard to the
remaining 90 per cent. But he also consists of finer materials,
extending to the etheric. In a pathological condition, when an
organ is diseased, so that the soul-spiritual part dives down
too deeply into the animalic part, it is possible to impart
thoughts with the aid of these finer substances which are
rayed out in a certain way. Teleplastic also arises in this
way. In teleplastic the fine substantiality which is
rayed out can be given form, and these forms moulded by thought
may even be filled with light and radiance. Plastic forms
arise, such as those described in the books of Schrenk-Notzing
and of others. These works are always on a scientific level,
and preclude any idea of swindle or fraud.
But
in all these cases we simply have to do with activities
proceeding from that part of man's being which perishes when he
dies. They do not supply us with anything which can lead us
into the real super-sensible world.
We
penetrate into the real super-sensible world when we are able to
observe things outside the body with the aid of our
sentient-volitional being, through a systematic training and
intensification of our normal soul-capacities and by
maintaining our normal state of consciousness. In that case we
can survey the past which appears in the physical and in the
etheric body, the past which we rayed out from a spiritual
world and which plastically moulded our physical and etheric
substances.
And
since we first perceive most clearly of all, so to speak, the
things which lie further off, and only gradually the things in
closer proximity, we are able to see as far as the point of our
death in a preceding life. As described in my Theosophy
this perception of our pre-existent, pre-natal life, enables us
to give a description of man's experiences after death.
We then describe things, as it were, from a reversed
perspective. And thus all the descriptions which I have given
you on man's conditions and experiences after death, are based
upon that spiritual perception which can be attained in the
manner I described yesterday and again to-day.
One
can say that it is impossible to gain any direct experience of
the higher worlds unless we first acquire it through an earnest
striving after knowledge. Through the strengthening of thought,
as described yesterday, we must create the possibility of
being outside the body in a fully conscious state and of
looking back upon it. This can only be attained by intensifying
our thinking power. But we must also learn to make
distinctions. Everything which comes from a preceding life lies
open to our perception, but everything which pertains to the
future is only accessible to inner experience.
These inner experiences are meagre in comparison with the
mighty super-sensible tableau of pre-existent life which
confronts us, for our prenatal existence can really form
the content of a fully developed science. But anything which we
can gather concerning the future will very much depend upon the
inner strengthening of our sentient-volitional being, when it
is outside the body. This sentient-volitional being can also be
observed in its course of development during the physical life
on earth, as it gradually matures for a higher state of
existence after death. Differences become evident, if we first
observe that part of man which ordinarily abandons him
unconsciously during sleep, in a more youthful stage of life
and then observe it in a maturer stage. The sentient-volitional
being which abandons the body of a younger person during sleep,
is more filled with a reflective, thoughtful element. We
observe that it unconsciously reverberates the thoughts which
the human being harbours. When a person grows older, he no
longer carries out of his physical body so many thoughts when
crossing the portal of sleep, but he takes out with his
sentient-volitional being into the external world, forces of
character, forces contained in his developed impulses of the
will.
We
can therefore say: During our earthly life, we gradually change
from a being in whom thoughts are the predominant element, into
a being who manifests in his soul-spiritual part more the echo
of forces which constitute his character. Essentially speaking,
we do not pass through the portal of sleep with our thoughts,
for we leave them behind when we fall asleep and they shine
forth through the physical body. We leave behind the thoughts
which animated us during our earthly life from birth to death.
We learn to look upon them as external thought-forces of the
world; later on, after death, we learn to know them as an
external world. We pass through the portal of sleep with these
forces which have formed our character, which constitute our
inner moral development. If we wish to interpret rightly every
phase in the perspective which appears to us in the world of
our pre-existent life, we must first gain this capacity through
the development of our normal soul-forces.
In
the previous lecture, I have already described to you that when
a person intensifies his life of thought through meditation and
concentration, so that he can live in thoughts in the
same way in which he ordinarily lives in sensory impressions,
in an inner life of thoughts as powerful, living and
intensive as the life of the soul when it surrenders to sensory
impressions, then he attains to imaginative knowledge. This
inner thought-life intensified to the stage of imaginative
consciousness, now enables him to confront not only the memory
tableau of his past earthly life up to the present moment, but
he surveys everything pertaining to his physical earthly
organism, shaped and moulded by the body of formative forces.
His first super-sensible experience is to look back from the
present moment upon his whole earthly life, as far as
childhood, in the form of a mighty tableau.
I
already mentioned in my last lectures that the tableau which
can thus be experienced, resembles in some points a fact which
even serious scientists discuss to-day, for it is sufficiently
attested that such a picture arises when a person is in mortal
danger, with hardly any hope of escape. A drowning person, for
instance, may experience in a great tableau that which
constitutes the etheric time-body of formative forces; he looks
upon this body.
Supersensible knowledge enables us to obtain this same survey,
which constitutes the first experience after death through the
right interpretation of the perspective described to you
of our pre-existent, pre-natal life.
Then we recognise the fact that when the human being passes
through the portal of death, he perceives for a short time,
lasting only a few days (approximately as long as a person is
able, in accordance with his organisation, to do without sleep
for a few days) a kind of tableau, giving him a survey of his
past earthly life in a kind of thought-web, but consisting of
pictures. We obtain, for a short time, this survey of our
earthly life, when we pass through the portal of death. I might
say, that we face our earthly life without the
participation of our feelings and of our will, purely in
a kind of passive survey; after death, we learn to know this
first condition as I have described it.
We
must first gain this experience through super-sensible
knowledge, through meditation and concentration, etc. But we
require another kind of training if we wish to interpret
rightly in this tableau the connection between our past earthly
life and the life after death.
In
our earthly life, and even in ordinary science, we generally
surrender ourselves passively to the external world with our
thoughts, feelings and will-impulses. We keep pace with the
external world. We experience the Yesterday, then in connection
with it the To-day, and a little later, the To-morrow. And the
inner reflections of our thoughts, feelings and will-impulses,
developed within the soul, are connected with the external
course of time, as a continued natural experience. This, as it
were, gives our ordinary thinking and feeling a kind of
support, but man's thinking cannot reach the required degree of
intensification, enabling it to make super-sensible
investigations, if it passively submits to the external course
of time. Other exercises are now needed; we must try — if
I may use this expression — to think backwards. When the
day is over, we should pass in review all that we have seen
during the day, but we should not do this in the form of
thoughts, nor critically, but in the form of pictures; we
should, as it were, see everything once more, in the same way
in which we see things through our phantasy but from evening to
morning in reversed sequence. We should acquire a certain
practice in this thinking backwards in the form of pictures. It
is relatively easy to think backwards larger portions of
the day, but in order to have a reversed picture of the day's
course, atomistically small portions must also be surveyed
backwards, and this must be practised for a long time.
We
can then advance to other exercises; for instance, we can seek
help by trying to experience a drama backwards, from the Fifth
Act back to the First, try experiencing melodies inwardly, by
hearing, as it were, soul-spiritually. We can thus attain the
capacity of looking upon our life's memories (this is something
different from the life-tableau described above) by conjuring
them up before our soul backwards, in the form of imaginative
pictures, so that our whole life stands before us, from the
present moment back into the past. By making such exercises, we
emancipate our thinking from the external course of time. The
deeply rooted habit of following the course of time with our
thinking and feeling must be overcome. By forcefully thinking
backwards we are gradually enabled to make use of a far greater
and stronger capacity of thinking than that employed for a
merely passive thinking. Our thinking power can be essentially
strengthened just by this way of thinking backwards.
And
we then discover something which undoubtedly seems paradoxical
to the normal consciousness and to the ordinary understanding.
But in the same way in which one looks upon the physical world
with conceptions flowing in the stream of time, so one
gradually comes to look upon the spiritual world, when one's
thinking has been emancipated from its connection with the
external course of time.
This produces a further capacity which enables one to observe
the new experiences and to interpret rightly, from the
perspective already described, the things connected with the
life-tableau which one sees for a few days after death.
After this life-tableau, we can see how man once more passes
through his life, by living through it backwards in very real
and vivid pictures. Man experiences, as it were, the soul-world
before experiencing the spirit world. He lives backwards
through life, from his death to his birth, but more quickly
than during his earthly existence from birth to death. He lives
through this life backwards.
The
capacity to perceive this is acquired by the already mentioned
exercises of thinking backwards. And now we gain a
conception of how after death man experiences in this reversed
course of soul-life everything that he experienced here on
earth in his physical body. But he now experiences all these
things with his soul, and he can see everything that
harmed his progress morally. By this very living backwards
through time, he can now survey from a higher standpoint what
he would like to change in life. For he can see how certain
moral defects handicapped his development towards perfection.
But since he now experiences all this in a living way, it does
not remain in the realm of thought. In this reversed course of
soul-life — I might say, in this soul-life which he
develops backwards, thought does not remain abstract, for
abstract thoughts were left behind with death; thought now
develops as a thinking force. It becomes an impulse
which leads the human being to make amends during his next
earthly life, in some way to experience facts which are
opposite to those which now come before his soul. In the soul
there develops something which in the next life appears in the
form of subconscious longings to approach this or that
experience in life. In this living backwards through our
past life, we develop the desire to experience in our next
earthly life events or facts which counterbalance those
which we have gone through in the past. And so this reversed
course of development contains the seed of something which we
unconsciously bring with us when we are born again,
something which can be described somewhat in the following
way.
This is generally not accessible to the ordinary consciousness;
nevertheless it lives in man. But observe merely with your
plain common sense something which super-sensible research
establishes as a fact — namely, how we approach
some decisive fact in life.
Let
us suppose that during one of our earthly lives we meet another
human being in our 30th or 35th year (I will take a decisive
event) and that he becomes our life-companion with whom we wish
to share our further destiny in life, that we discover that our
souls harmonise. An ordinary materialistic person will say that
this was pure chance. Deeper minds — there are many, and
they can be traced in history — have however reflected a
little over this problem: If we now look back in life from this
decisive event, if we survey what preceded it, what came before
that, and still further back ... we find that the course of our
life tending towards this event followed a definite plan.
Sometimes we discover that an event which we thus experience in
our life, a fact having such an incisive influence upon our
life, appears like the organic conclusion of a well defined
plan.
If
we have first constructed such a plan hypothetically and lead
it back as far as our birth, and if we then survey it with the
aid of cognitive forces developed through meditation,
retrospective thinking, will-exercises, we must really say to
ourselves: This hypothetical plan which you constructed, may
sometimes appear like a mere phantasy, but it is not always so.
Precisely for decisive facts in life, it often reveals itself
as of greatest importance that the human being carries within
him from his birth a subconscious longing, and that guided by
this longing, which he perhaps interprets quite differently in
the various epochs of his life, he makes the first step, the
second step and all the steps which finally lead him to the
event which he formed as a seed during his retrospective
experience after death and which carries him through his new
earthly life as an undefined longing. We thus shape our destiny
ourselves in an unconscious way. This enables us to recognise
what we encounter during our earthly existence, this destiny or
Karma, as it was designated in the ancient, instinctive,
clairvoyant wisdom of the Orient. This destiny, on which
our happiness and unhappiness, our joy and pain in life
depends, we can learn to recognise by looking upon the sequence
of our earthly lives.
A
man will naturally very soon be inclined to say: How do matters
then stand in regard to freedom,? — For if man is
guided by destiny, how do matters stand in regard to human
freedom? — Indeed, a solution of the question of destiny
can only be gained by striving earnestly with the problem of
freedom. At this point allow me to insert something personal,
for it undoubtedly has an objective significance. In the early
nineties of the past century I wrote my Philosophy of
Spiritual Activity. The task of this book was to establish
the experience, the fact of freedom. From man's own inner
experiences I sought to characterise the consciousness of
freedom as an absolute certainty. And the subsequent
explanations which I have tried to give as a partial solution
of the problem of destiny, such as the sketch which I gave you
now, I consider to be in entire harmony with the descriptions
of human freedom. Those who study my book Philosophy of
Spiritual Activity will find however I was obliged to
renounce speaking of freedom of the human will at first, and to
speak instead of a freedom experienced in thought, in pure
thinking emancipated from the senses. In thoughts which
consciously arise in the human soul as an ethical, moral ideal,
in thoughts which have the strength to influence the human will
and to lead it to action, in such thoughts there is freedom. We
can speak of human freedom when we speak of human actions
shaped by man's own free thinking, when he reaches the point,
through a moral self-training, of not allowing his actions to
be influenced by instincts, passions, emotions or by his
temperament, but only by the devoted love for an action.
In this devoted love for an action, can develop something which
proceeds from the ideal strength of pure ethical thinking. This
is a really free action.
Spiritual science now enables us to discover that during sleep
thinking as such, the thinking which lies at the foundation of
free ethical actions, remains behind in the mirroring physical
body. It is thus something that man experiences between birth
and death. Even if human life were not of immense value also
from other aspects, the inclusion of the impulse of
freedom in our experiences between birth and death renders our
life on earth valuable in itself. In our physical existence on
earth we attain freedom by developing thought as such, when
thought loses the plastic force which it still has within the
etheric body and is developed as pure thinking in the
consciousness which we have in ordinary life.
In
the early nineties of the past century I was therefore obliged
to set forth a very daring thought in my Philosophy of
Spiritual Activity. I had to speak of moral impulses in the
form of ethical ideas and had to explain that these do not come
to us from Nature, but through intuition. At that time I spoke
of “moral phantasy.” Why? — In my
Philosophy of Spiritual Activity I explained that
these ethical motives stream into man from the spiritual world,
but at first in the form of pictures. He receives them from the
spiritual world as intuition.
But
we thus come, as it were, to the other pole of what we
experience here, in the physical world. Everywhere in the realm
of Nature we discover necessity, if we look out into it with
our sound common sense and with a scientific mentality.
If we look into the world of moral impulses, then we discover
freedom, but to begin with, freedom in the form of mere
thought, of pure thinking, in the intuition that lives in the
thinking activity. At first we do not know how these moral
forces enter the will, for we perceive ethical intuitions
unconsciously. So we have on the one hand Nature, to which we
belong through our actions, and on the other hand our ethical
experience. Through natural science alone, we should lose the
possibility to ascribe reality and world-creative forces to
these ethical intuitions. We experience Nature as it were, in
its whole dense grossness, in its necessity. And then we
experience freedom, but we experience it in the finely-woven
impulses of thinking which reach the imaginative stage, and
since these do not form part of Nature and can be experienced
in free activity, we know that they come from the spiritual
world, as I have indicated in my Philosophy of Spiritual
Activity.
But
something must now be inserted between these intuitions which
are entirely of a picture-nature and unreal and which only
acquire reality through ethical life, between these intuitions
and the objective cognition of Nature and its laws. It is
imagination and inspiration, which arise in the way I have
described, that now insert themselves. In that case
intuition too undergoes a change. The impulse which first
appeared only in pure thinking, becomes as it were condensed
into a spiritual reality.
In
this newly acquired intuition, gained through imagination and
inspiration, we do not learn to know our present Ego, but the
Ego that passes through repeated lives on earth and that
carries our destiny through these repeated earthly lives. In
passing through these repeated earthly lives which moulded our
destiny, we are not free. Yet we can always insert free actions
into this web of destiny during our different lives on earth.
Just because the imaginative intuition enables us to experience
ethical impulses (not as realities, but as something which we
can freely accept), we can weave freedom into the web of
destiny during a definite earthly life. The fact that destiny
bears us from one earthly life into another, does not render us
less free than the fact that a steamer can carry us from Europe
to America. Our future is determined by the decision to travel
arrived at in Europe; yet within certain limits we are always
free, and we can move about freely while we are in America.
This is how destiny is borne from one earthly life into
another. But to the world of facts which we thus experience
during our repeated lives on earth, we can insert what wells up
out of freedom during a definite life.
And
so we see that those who struggle with the problem of freedom
and see the solution in the contemplation of ethical ideas
which can at first only be grasped through moral phantasy, but
which penetrate from the spiritual world into the physical
world of man, — we see that those who in this way acquire
an understanding for the problem of freedom, have prepared
themselves thereby for the comprehension of destiny,
which enters human life almost like a necessity.
If
we attain this intuition and understand the interweaving of
destiny and freedom and thus intensify still further the forces
acquired through meditation, concentration, retrospective
thought, etc., we are able to contemplate, that is to
interpret further the facts which appear to us in the
spiritual perspective.
What now is attached to this retrospective experience is a life
which takes its course in a purely spiritual sphere in which we
now live towards a subsequent life on earth. In this spiritual
sphere our experience is just the reverse of our experience
during our earthly life. Here on earth, our inner experiences
can, to begin with, only be perceived inwardly, as pictures. We
do not experience our inner being with our ordinary
consciousness, for our waking consciousness makes us experience
the external world. We look out, as it were, from our own
centre into the environing spatial world, into the spatial
sphere, the external world. We are within ourselves and the
external world is outside.
During our existence between death and a new birth this
conception is just reversed: We are now centred in a world
which constituted our external world here on earth, and the
external world on earth now becomes a kind of inner world.
The
inner world of human nature, which was not accessible to us
during our earthly life, can now be experienced as an external
world. And during our life between death and a new birth, our
inner being becomes the world! And the world becomes our
Ego.
And
inasmuch as we experience something which is now higher than
the world which surrounds us here on earth (for man is the
crown of creation, he bears within himself a sphere which is
higher than the surrounding world), we have within us a more
valuable world during our existence between death and a new
birth. The world which we thus experience as our own
environment, but which is actually the mysterious world of
man's inner being, is experienced creatively. In the spiritual
world we experience these forces creatively, in common with
higher spiritual Beings that surround our soul-spiritual being,
in the same way in which the kingdoms of Nature, the plants,
the animals and the minerals, surround our physical being on
earth.
In
communion with these spiritual Beings, we experience the forces
out of which we gradually mould not only our destiny, the seed
of our destiny, but also our prototype in the soul-spiritual
world. This is the real prototype, that soul-spiritual being,
which after a certain time is filled with the longing to
incorporate again, to send down the prototype into a physical
body, the prototype which it first shaped in living thoughts in
the spiritual world. And since it must become united with a
physical body, since it can only reach perfection in a physical
body, this soul-spiritual being is filled with the impulse and
longing to reincarnate here on earth. Out of the spirit comes
that being from an existence lying before birth, or before
conception, and unites with the physical body.
A
true conception of the way in which man develops here on earth
as a physical being (more exact details will be given the day
after tomorrow) can only be gained if we can grasp the fact
that what develops in the mother's body is only something which
receives from a higher world the real being of man.
Natural science has a certain ambition and dream, consisting in
the hope to discover one day the complicated chemical structure
of cells, indeed of the most perfect cells, the reproductive
cells, the germ cells of the human embryo. The spiritual
science of Anthroposophy approaches this same problem, but with
quite different means and from entirely different points of
view. And Anthroposophy is able, in a certain way, to point out
the direction in which to seek that which develops in the
mother's body as germinative cell of the human embryo. Here we
do not come across complicated chemical combinations, but in
reality with a chaotic state of matter. We do not have before
us a highly complicated chemical combination or some molecular
structure, but a chaotic condition, a chaotic vortex of the
ordered structure which exists in a crystal and in a chemical
molecule. In the germinative cell matter is not developed to a
further organisation, but it is pushed down into chaos, and
from the corresponding substance, from the substance which
becomes chaotic, then develops something which can now receive
what comes down to it from above; the super-sensible man coming
from the spiritual worlds.
The
development of physical man will only be grasped if physical
research is brought to the point of being able to see how the
physical human germ by leading matter back to chaos, becomes
capable of receiving the soul-spiritual germ which comes down
from pre-existence. Only in this way it is possible to
understand how the soul-spiritual part descending from the
soul-spiritual world becomes united through conception and up
to birth with what has de-materialised itself in the germ, in
the early embryonic stage. All who carefully study the form and
development of the embryo can find, even in its physical
development, the confirmation of to-day's description, whereas
this embryonic development will always remain a riddle to those
who cannot consider it in this way.
To
be sure, if we really wish to know man's true being we must
receive from super-sensible research what also belongs to man.
On earlier occasions, I have, for instance, pointed out that in
the science dealing with the lower kingdoms, people would
everywhere consider foolish things which are looked upon as
wisdom in the investigation of the human being.
I
already gave you the example of a magnet-needle, with one of
its ends pointing North and the other one South. Now it would
certainly not enter anyone's mind to say that the forces which
it manifests are only contained in the magnet needle, in the
space occupied by that needle. One looks upon the earth itself
as a great magnet which exercises its influence upon the
magnet-needle and which determines its direction. The
magnet-needle is included in the structure of the whole
earth-organism.
In
this case one transcends the single thing, in order to
recognise the great comprehensive whole and its inter-relation
with the single object. Yet in the case of man one seeks to
recognise everything pertaining to man by studying the
development of the germ cell through the microscope and
by contemplating only what is enclosed within the human skin!
Just as little as the forces of the magnet can be explained
through the magnet, just as little is it possible to know what
develops in the human being if one does not bring him in
relation with the whole world, not only with the spatial world,
but also with the world of time; it is not possible to
understand the' human being unless one goes back to his
pre-existent, pre-natal being, revealing itself, as described,
to super-sensible vision. We learn to know this
pre-existent being when man lays aside his physical body here
on earth, when we see his etheric body dissolving in the cosmic
ether — we see this pre-existent being passing once more
through the portal of death in order to begin a new cycle
leading to a further adjustment of life's facts and to a higher
perfection.
This is how man stands within the evolution of the world,
if we look upon his essence as such. What we now receive,
inasmuch as we bear our soul-spiritual being down to earth,
pertains to the evolution of the world and must be included in
the cosmic development, as we shall see in the next lecture.
The human being will only be understood if what has been
explained to-day is at the same time inserted into the being
and becoming, that is, into the whole cosmic development. For
man can only recognise the world by recognising himself.
And what constitutes the universe is reflected in earthly
life, and the human being lives through it after death and
before birth. From this sphere he takes the forces which he
himself incorporates with his physical body at birth or
conception. The universe and man belong together not only
outwardly, but also inwardly. Man bears the world within
himself; the world as a totality forms man's being. The
question which we have raised is therefore partially answered
to-day; it will be fully answered, to the extent allowed to-day
by science, in my next lecture.
In
conclusion let me say a few more words. I want it to be really
understood that the facts explained by the spiritual-scientific
investigator are based upon the development of forces which
ordinarily remain unconscious to the soul, but that from the
anthroposophical standpoint, the spiritual-scientific
investigator proceeds in such a way that he clothes the facts
obtained through super-sensible vision in the thoughts which are
ordinarily used in science. Everywhere he takes his thoughts
with him. For his research-work must always be accompanied by
that pendulum swinging from the super-sensible to the physical
world. He must always stand as his own critic by the side of
his higher being endowed with super-sensible vision.
Consequently even those who have not made such exercises can
really examine and test with their own thinking all the facts
brought forward by the spiritual investigator; they can test
them with their own thinking, if only they follow in an
unprejudiced way their own sound common sense. It is really not
true that only a spiritual investigator could test the facts
brought forward by spiritual research. In the present time, we
have grown too accustomed to the manner of thinking connected
with external matter, with the external sequence of natural
facts, and we find that a spiritual investigator cannot supply
proofs valid for this' way of thinking. But those who penetrate
into all the circumstances, understand the connection existing
between the ordinary sound common sense and the methodically
developed understanding of science, of external science. And
those who think critically, and with sufficient lack of
prejudice test all the facts advanced by the spiritual
investigator, will be able to do this, even though they
themselves are not endowed with super-sensible vision. The
spiritual investigator brings forward everything in such a way
that it can be tested. Those who say that a spiritual
investigator merely relates what he sees through his own
super-sensible vision without supplying any proofs, resembles a
person who is accustomed to think that everything which he
finds on earth stands upon a firm ground, and when someone
explains to him a solar system immediately asks: What then does
that rest upon?
Perhaps he does not perceive that it rests upon itself, that it
is freely borne by its own forces. A person who asks for proofs
resembles one who asks: On what foundation does a solar system
stand then? He resembles such a person if he asks for ordinary
proofs and means such proofs as can only be asked for the
external sensory world, where it is possible to discover,
without any proof, the things which the senses perceive, the
existence of which can be proved through the senses.
But
human thinking does not only exist for this purpose; human
thinking can also rise to things which are demonstrable not
only through sound common sense upon the foundation of sensory
experience, but to things which are carried by their own inner
forces, like a spiritual planetary system. Try to examine in
this way, by applying it to anthroposophical spiritual
investigation, the results obtained by such a self-supporting,
self-demonstrating thinking; you will then find that the facts
advanced by a spiritual investigator are inwardly just as
surely founded — even without the so-called external
supports — as a planetary system supports itself freely
in cosmic space, and that a supporting foundation is only
needed by what is terrestrial and heavy. This however must be
remembered: that thinking must also become really free, it must
become something which can carry itself inwardly, if sound
human intelligence is to find a proof for the facts which
spiritual research advances in connection with the being
of man and the evolution of the world. That from this
standpoint it is possible to prove everything, I shall hope to
develop in my next lecture on the nature of world evolution,
following the explanations now given on the nature of man.
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