The
Central Question of Economic Life.
Kristiania (Oslo), 30th November 1921.
First of all I wish to thank the honourable chairman for his
warm words and ask you above all to note what I assure you with
equal warmth, that it gives me deep satisfaction to be allowed
to expound here some aspects of the social endeavours to which
I have devoted a great deal of my time. But of course I have to
apologize immediately, because to speak about the social
question to-day is extremely difficult. In a short lecture one
can actually only give a few aspects and perhaps indications,
and I ask you to make allowance for this. Perhaps there could
be the assumption that someone who in the main devotes himself
to the popularisation and spreading of anthroposophical
spiritual science could only talk of otherworldliness, maybe of
phantasies or even utopia when he treads on social ground. But
just what I have learnt from anthroposophical thinking in
regard to the social question differs from much which at
present is talked of in this direction, in that it wants to
engage with practical life and actually doesn't just want to
discuss social theories.
I
myself have during a number of decades gained from various
sources the view about the social question of which I would
like to share some aspects, by direct observation of social
life. From this I have gained the view that our social question
and in particular the economic question is to-day actually a
general human one. It announces itself when one studies it in
real life, not in theory, as a question which throughout
doesn't actually consist of economic aspects, but erupts in
such a volcanic way in the present from purely human causes.
And it will only be possible to tackle this question in a
practical way when one seeks the solution — and of course
there can only be the question of an attempt at a partial
solution — from a purely human aspect. And here I must
characterize something quite different as the central economic
question from what one would normally expect. Indeed, I shall
not even be able - as life is richer than theories and ideas
— somehow to answer this central economic question in a
short sentence, but I shall be able to let it appear as
something that goes like a thread through my observations of
to-day. But if I were after all to mention in the beginning a
very abstract view, it is this, that we live in a time when man
to a great extent alienates himself from life and from economic
life in particular by what he thinks and what he makes his
principles. This view has proved itself especially by working
amongst the proletarian workers as teacher in the most varied
fields of knowledge and instruction in the field of history and
the field of economic questions. I could especially get to know
the modern proletariat in their lives through the fact that I
was privileged to conduct the teaching and exercises with the
workers in free conversation throughout many years. There one
gets to know how the people think, how they feel. And when one
knows that especially the economic question depends on
introducing the proletariat again to the work in a way relating
to the economic needs of humanity, then one will initially be
obliged to look at the economic questions from the point of
view of this human side. And there it became clear to me that
if one tries to create an interest within the proletariat
to-day for this or that, then the actual concrete economic
questions, the comprehension of really practical economic life,
actually awakens no interest in them. The people have no
interest in concrete individual economic questions. To-day
there lives in the proletariat — and in international
life millions of human beings belong to this proletariat of
which I speak — only an economic abstract theory, an
abstract theory however which itself constitutes the content of
life in this proletariat. The proletarian worker is in his
heart actually very aloof towards his work, towards the actual
content of his work. He does not care about what work he does.
He is only interested in how he is treated in his firm, and
when he speaks about this treatment it is still from quite
general abstract points of view. He is interested in the
relation of his wages to the value of the product in the
production of which he partakes, while the quality of his
products is absolutely beyond the scope of his interests. I
have tried, especially in the teaching of workers, to create an
interest in concrete branches of manufacture and industries by
introducing history and natural science. But all this is
something which does not interest the worker as such. He is
interested in the situation of the classes, the class struggle,
he is interested in that — which I don't need to
characterize for you here — which he calls the added
value. He is interested in the development of the economic life
in as much as he ascribes to it the reason for all human
historic life, and he actually speaks of a theoretical region
which exists totally above that in which he is involved from
morning till evening and wants to form the reality from this.
And one may say: What he accepts as his theory about the
economic life again results from a theoretical way of looking
at things. Most proletarians to-day are, as you will know, more
or less modified of original Marxists, that means followers of
a theory which actually doesn't concern itself with the
conditions of economic life as such, but works towards the
direction which I have just described.
This one gets to know within wide circles of the proletariat
through the practical association with this proletariat, by
working amongst the proletariat. But that is in a certain sense
only the reflection of an ever increasing distancing of the
purely human interests from the interests of practical life
during the last centuries. One would like to say: The fact that
our economic life has become more complicated has caused a kind
of stupor, so that one can no longer dive down into the single
complicated areas of economic life with that which one
ethically accepts as the good and with that which one accepts
as the just. But if one does not speak out of practical life
but out of general abstract principles, one hardly touches on
that which comprises the work of the day, the tasks of the day,
with that which one always asserts as demands, as
principles.
Just as I could share this with you out of my own life
experience, so it can also be demonstrated by various examples
from historical life. I would like to tell you a grotesque
example for that which I want to say. It was 1884 when Bismarck
said in the German parliament (Deutsche Reichstag) wanting to
establish a foundation for his further handling of the core
economic question, that he acknowledges the right to work of
every human being. Then he instructed the delegates thus: Let
the community give to every healthy human being the work which
sustains him, make sure that those who are sick or weak are
cared for by the community, that the aged are cared for, and
you can be sure that the proletariat will leave its proletarian
leaders, that the social democratic theories which are being
promulgated will find no followers. — Now, that was
spoken by Bismarck, who though he admitted in his memoirs that
he had had republican sympathies in his youth, but whom you
will surely acknowledge as a monarchist, whom you would surely
not expect to have applauded it, if at a proletarian meeting
the international social democracy had been cheered.
I
would like to draw your attention to another personality who
stated the same with almost the identical words, who however
stood with his whole disposition, his whole human feeling on
another general human standpoint. That is Robespierre.
Robespierre said when he wrote his “human rights”
in1793 almost the same, no, I want to say exactly the same as
what Bismarck said in the German Reichstag in 1884: It is the
obligation of the community to provide work for every healthy
human being, to look after the sick and feeble, to care for the
aged when they can no longer work.
The
same sentences from Robespierre, from Bismarck, definitely from
quite different human perspectives. And now comes the third
thing which is also very interesting: Bismarck, when voicing
his “Robespierre words”, which he definitely hadn't
learnt from Robespierre, argued that these demands were already
part of the Prussian state rights since 1794. Now, one may
surely not conclude from this that the Prussian state
legislation one year after Robespierre had written his
“human rights” adopted these human rights in its
code of law. And surely the world will not think that the
Prussian state had wanted to realize Robespierre's ideas
according to its state laws for almost a hundred years when
Bismarck in 1884 again stated these demands. There the question
arises in view of the historical facts: How is it that two such
different people as Robespierre and Bismarck can say the exact
same words and that without a doubt both imagine that the
social milieu which they want to create with this is a totally
different one?
I
cannot see this in any other way than that we to-day, when we
speak in such strong abstractions about the concrete questions
of life which during the recent centuries has become more
complicated, actually all — Bismarck from the right, from
the extreme right, Robespierre from the extreme left —
harmonize in relation to the general principles. In the general
principles we all agree. But in life we immediately fall into
extreme disharmony, just because our general principles are far
removed from that which we have to do in particular all day
long. Today we have no possibility, just when it comes to
practical life, to really accomplish in particular what we
think in general. And the most abstract is that, which in the
proletarian theory is contained to-day as economic demand, for
the reasons which I have tried to characterize.
This is how things are to-day. And one has to say: Through the
whole development of recent times this state of affairs has
come about. We see how the section of economic life which we
can call the production process has become more and more
manifold through the complexity of technical life. And when I
want to characterize it with a word which has already become a
cliché — but one has to use such words — we
see that the production life has become ever more
collective.
After all, what can an individual accomplish within our social
organism in the life of production? He is connected everywhere
with that which has to be done in community with others. Our
way of production has become so complicated that the individual
is caught up as in a big production mechanism. The production
life has become collective. That is just what appeals to the
proletarian and he imagines in his fatalistic economic view
that the collectivism will become still stronger and stronger,
that the branches of production will amalgamate and that the
time will come when the international proletariat will be able
to take over the production themselves. That is what the
proletarian is waiting for. So he gives himself over to the
great delusion that the collectivism of production is a natural
necessity — for he experiences the economic necessity
almost as a natural necessity — and that this
collectivism must be further established. Above all, that the
proletarian is ordained to then occupy the chairs on which
to-day's producers are sitting and that that, which will have
become collective, will now be administered collectively. How
strongly the proletariat believe in such an idea out of their
economic interest, we can see from the sad results of the
economic experiment in the East, for there, so to say, it was
tried to organize the economic life in this way, albeit not as
the proletarian theorists had dreamed but out of the military
circumstances. One can already see to-day and one will see it
more and more: The experiment will — quite apart from its
ethical or other values, or from the sympathies or antipathies
that one can have for it — by its own inner destruction
forces miserably fail and bring unimaginable disaster to
humanity.
Over against the life of production stands the life of
consumption. But the life of consumption can never become
collective by itself. In consumption the individual actually by
natural necessity stands as an individuality. From the
personality of the human being, from the human individual, the
needs of the total consumption arise. Therefore beside the
collectivism of the production the individualism of consumption
remained. And starker and starker became the abyss, deeper and
deeper became this abyss between the production aiming for
collectivism and the ever more demanding just by contrast ever
more demanding interest of consumption. For one who can look
through to-day's life with unprejudiced eyes it is now no
abstraction, but for him the terrible disharmonies into which
we are placed are founded on the wrong relationship which has
been established to-day between the impulses of production and
the needs of consumption by what has been characterized.
To
be sure, one can only have an idea of the whole misery which in
this regard troubles the deepest feelings of people, if one has
for decades observed, not through study but through practical
life, that which has caused this disharmony in the various
areas of life. And now truly not through any principles, not by
theoretical considerations, but out of these life experiences,
that has emerged which I put down in my book “Essentials
of the social question”. Nothing was further from my
intention than trying to somehow find an utopian solution for
the social question from this life experience. However I had to
experience that contemporary thinking of people spontaneously
leans towards the utopian side. Of course I had to condense
that which I had come to out of the great manifoldness of life,
which I would have preferred to discuss by giving single
concrete examples. I had to condense it into general sentences
which in turn are condensed in the term “Threefolding of
the social organism”. But what these words signify, that
had at least to be explained by some indications. One had to
say how one imagines that these things should be handled. That
is why I have given some examples how the development of
capitalism should proceed, how for instance the labour question
could be regulated and so on. There I have tried to give
concrete particular indications. Well, I have attended many
discussions about these “Essentials of the social
question” and I have always found that people in their
utopian opinion of to-day ask: Now how will this or that be
then in future? They referred to the indications which I have
given about specific things but which I never meant to be
anything but examples. In real life one can demonstrate
something that one is doing, that one arranges to the best of
one's knowledge, but which obviously one could also do
differently. Reality is not like this that a single theory fits
it. Of course one could also do everything differently. But the
utopian wants everything characterized to the last detail. And
in this way the “Essentials of the social question”
have often been understood by others in an utopian sense. They
have often been transformed into utopia, whereas they were not
meant in the least as utopia but have resulted from the
observation of that which emerged from the process of
production as collectivism, from the observation of how for the
production there is a certain necessity to flow into this
collectivism, but how on the other hand all strength of
production depends on the abilities of the human
individual.
In
this way by observing modern production, the eye of the soul
could see with terrible intensity that actually the basic
impulse of all production, the personal ability, was being
absorbed by the collectivism which had been caused by the
economic forces themselves and which continued to be caused by
them. One realized on the one hand the tendency of the economic
life and on the other hand the equally valid demand to let the
individual strength of the single human being assert itself
particularly just within the economic life. And one has to
ponder about the social organism on how this basic demand of
economic progress — the nurturing of individual abilities
— can be safeguarded in the purely through technical
circumstances ever more complicated processes of production. It
is this which on the one hand stands so vividly before one's
soul: The real economic process and the necessary demands on
the economic life so that it may prosper.
On
the other hand that which we call the present social question
doesn't actually arise out of the interests of production. When
collectivism is sought for in the realm of production, then one
finds this actually in the technical possibilities of economic
life, in the technical necessities, as well. What one usually
calls the social question is actually asked totally by
interests of consumption, which again are based totally on the
human individuality. And the strange fact emerges that although
seemingly something else is taking place — the call for
social reform resounds through the world purely from interests
of consumption. One can also see this when one practically
follows up the discussions and life. I have seen this during
the lectures I started giving in April 1919 and which were
given again and again, and in the discussions following them,
how unsympathetic those who are active as producers or
entrepreneurs in practical economic life are towards the
discussion of that which one calls the social question in the
sense of how it is preached out of the interests of
consumption.
On
the other hand one sees how actually everywhere where the call
for socialism appears, only the interest of consumption is
focused on. So that here just in the ideals of socialism the
will impulse of individualism is active. In actual fact, all
those who are socialist strive towards socialism out of purely
individual emotions. And the striving for socialism is actually
only a theory which floats above that which are the individual
emotions. But on the other hand, by a serious observation of
that which has developed more and more in our economic life,
again for centuries, the whole full meaning of that emerges
which is popularly called `sharing of work' in national
economy, in the teaching of economy.
I
am convinced that many clever things have been written and said
about this sharing of work, but I don't believe that it has
already been thought through to its final consequence in its
full significance for the practical economic life. The reason
why I don't believe this is because one would then have to
realize that actually it follows from the principle of labour
sharing that nobody can produce anything for himself in a
social organism in which there is full sharing of work —
and I am purposely saying “can produce”. Even
to-day we still see the last remnants of subsistence farming,
especially looking at the small farms. There we see how he who
produces retains what he and his family need. And what does it
bring about that he can still be a supplier of his own needs?
It brings about that he produces in quite a wrong way within
the social organism which for the rest is based on labour
sharing. Everyone who to-day makes a coat for himself or who
supplies himself with his own food grown on his own land,
actually sustains himself too expensively, because as there is
labour sharing, every product will be cheaper than it can be
when one produces it for oneself. One only has to ponder on
this fact and one will have to realize as its final consequence
that to-day nobody can produce in a way that his work can flow
into the production product, into the product. And yet there is
the strange fact that Karl Marx for instance treats the product
as a crystallized piece of labour. But to-day this is not in
the least the case. The product to-day is in relation to its
value — and that is all that matters in economic life
— least of all determined by labour. It is determined by
its usefulness that is its consumption interests, by the
usefulness with which it exists within the social organism that
depends on labour sharing.
All
this asks of us the great questions of the present time in the
economic realm. And from these questions it became clear to me
that at to-days' time of human development we stand before the
necessity to form the social organism in such a way that it
more and more shows its three inherent parts. And as one of
these three parts I have initially to recognize the spiritual
life, which mainly rests upon the human abilities. When
speaking of the three-folding of the social organism I do not
only include the more or less abstract life of thought or the
religious life in the spiritual realm, but I include everything
which depends on human spiritual or physical abilities. I have
to say this explicitly, otherwise one could completely
misunderstand the demarcation of the spiritual realm within the
three-fold social organism. The one also who only works with
his hands needs a certain skill for this work, he needs various
other things as well, which in this regard does not let the
individual appear as a member of pure economic life but as a
member of the spiritual realm.
The
other realm of the social organism is that of pure economics.
In pure economics one is only concerned with production,
consumption and circulation between production and consumption.
But this means nothing else than that in pure economic life one
is only concerned with the circulation of the produced goods
which, as they are circulating, become merchandise. One is
concerned with the circulation of merchandise. An item which
within the social organism, because it is needed, becomes of a
certain value which is reflected in its price, such an item
becomes, in the sense I must regard it, merchandise.
But
now the following transpires: Of course I can only make
indications of the things which I want to assign to certain
realms, otherwise this lecture would become far too long. It
now appears that all that which is merchandise can have a real
objective value not only in connection with the economic life
but with the whole of social life. Simply by that which a
product means within the life of consumption it attains a
certain value which definitely has an objective significance. I
now must explain what I mean by “objective
significance”. By “objective significance” I
don't mean that one could immediately determine the value of a
product of which I am now speaking through statistics or such
like. For the circumstances by which a product gets its value
are much too complicated, too manifold. But apart from that
which one can immediately know about it, apart from our
perception, every product has a specific value. When a product
has a certain price in the market place, this price can be too
high or too low in relation to its real objective value or it
can coincide with it. But as irrelevant as the price is which
appears to us outwardly because it can be falsified by some
other circumstances, so true it is on the other hand that one
could ascertain the objective value of a product if one could
ascertain all the thousands of single conditions by which it is
produced and consumed. From this it is clear that that which is
merchandise has a very special relationship to economic life.
For what I now call the objective economic value can only be
applied to merchandise. It cannot be applied to anything else
which to-day has a similar relationship to our economic life as
merchandise has. For one cannot apply it to land or to
capital.
I
don't want to be misunderstood. For instance you will never
hear characterizations of capitalism from me as one nowadays
hears them so often and which come from all sorts of
clichés. It is obvious that one does not have to elaborate
on the fact that in to-day's economic life nothing can be
achieved without capital and that polemics against capitalism
is economically amateurish. So it is not that which one can
nowadays hear so often which I now have to say about capital
and about land, but yet something else. If one can state for
every product that its price is above or below a mean which
admittedly cannot be immediately determined but which is
objectively present and which alone is healthy, one cannot
apply it to that which is nowadays treated like merchandise:
land. The price of land, the value of land today is subject to
what one can call human speculation, what one can call anything
but social impulses. There is no objectivity in the
determination of the price or value of land in an economic
sense. That is so because a product once it exists —
never mind whether it is good or bad, if it is good it is
useful, if it is bad then it is not useful — can by
itself determine its objective value by the manner and
intensity in which it is needed.
That cannot be said of land and cannot be said of capital. In
the case of land and capital the manner how it is productive,
how it is positioned within the whole social and economic
structure is absolutely determined by human capabilities. They
are never something finite. If I have to manage land I can only
manage it according to my capabilities and because of this its
value is variable. The same goes for capital that I have to
administer. Someone who practically studies this fact in its
full significance will have to say: This radical difference
between merchandise on the one hand and land and capital on the
other hand definitely exists. And from this can be deduced that
certain symptoms which appear in our economic life and which
clearly seem to us unhealthy symptoms of the social organism,
must be thought of in some connection with that which is caused
in economic life by the fact that in practice one treats with
the same money, that is with the same appreciation of value
that which in actual fact cannot be compared. In other words
one throws together and indirectly through money exchanges with
one another, brings to economic interaction what is quite
different in its intrinsic nature and therefore would have to
be treated differently in economic life.
And
when one further studies practically how the same treatment,
that is the payment with the same money for merchandise, for
consumables, as for land and capital — which has actually
also become an item of commerce as anyone knows who is familiar
with economic life — has entered our social organism, and
when one studies the historical development of humanity, one
can see that to-day three realms of life which come from
totally different origins and only have a connection in social
life through the individual human being, are working together
in our social organism in a way which is not organic. That is
first of all the spiritual realm, the realm of human
capabilities which man brings with him to the earth from
spiritual realms, which comprise his talents, which comprises
that which with his talents he can learn, which are very much
something individual and which are developed more intensely the
more the single human individuality can assert himself in
social life. One may be a materialist or whatever, one will
have to admit: What is achieved in this realm the human being
brings into this world through his birth. It is something which
depends on the single individuality of the human being if it is
to prosper, from the physical skill of the craftsman to the
highest expressions and revelations of the faculty of
invention.
Something else holds good in the realm of economic life. I want
to explain what I want to say about this by a fact. You all
know that at a certain time during the 19th century
here and there the ideal of a universal gold currency arose. If
one follows up on what was said by practical economists, by
economic theorists, by parliamentarians during the time when
here and there, there was a striving for the gold currency
— and I say this definitely without irony — it is
very clever. One is often very taken by the sense that was
spoken and written in parliaments, chambers of commerce and
other associations about the gold currency and its blessings
for economic life. One of the things which was said and what
especially the most prominent people, at least many of the most
prominent people emphasized, was that the gold currency would
result in the blossoming of the economically beneficial free
trade everywhere., that the economically harmful political
boundaries would lose their economic significance. And the
reasons, the arguments which were quoted for such assertions
were very clever. And what has happened in reality? In reality
it has happened that just in the areas where one had expected
that the economic boundaries would fall because of the gold
currency, they were after all to be found necessary or at least
have been declared necessary by many. From economic life the
opposite emerged from that which from theoretical
considerations was predicted precisely by the cleverest
people.
This is a very important historical fact which happened not so
long ago and from which one should draw the necessary
consequences. And what are these necessary consequences? It is
these which one always finds when one looks at the real
practical economic life: that in the realm of actual economic
life, which consists of production, circulation and consumption
of goods — let me say this paradox, I believe it to be
the truth which really is revealed to the unprejudiced observer
— the cleverness of the individual can be of no use to
him. One can be ever so clever, one can have ever such clever
thoughts about economic life, the evidence can be absolutely
sound, but it will not be realized in economic life. Why?
Because economic life can in no way be circumscribed by the
consideration of the individual, because economic experience,
economic perception can only come to valid judgement by he
agreement between persons interested in economic life in
various ways. The individual can never gain a valid judgement,
also not through statistics, how economy should be conducted,
but only by agreement say of consumers and producers who form
associations, where the one tells the other what the needs are
and vice versa the other tells the one what possibilities there
are for the production. Only when a collective decision comes
about by the agreement within the associations of economic
life, a valid decision for the economic life can be found.
To
be sure, we here touch on something where outer economic
perception borders on let me say economic psychology. But life
is a unity and one cannot omit human souls when one really
wishes to speak of practical life. What this means is that a
real economic judgement can only result from the agreement of
those who participate in the economic life from the knowledge
which individuals gather as partial knowledge and which only
becomes valid judgement when the individual knowledge of the
one is modified by the individual knowledge of the other. Only
discussion can lead to a valid judgement in economic life. But
with this we talk of two radically different realms of human
life. And the more practically one regards life, the more one
finds that the two realms differ from one another, and that for
instance production, which requires knowledge about how to
produce, how one works out of human capabilities, needs the
human individual, but that everything to do with merchandise,
with the goods when they have been produced, is subject to the
collective judgement. Between these two realms there is a third
where the individual is not there to unfold his capabilities
which he has brought into life by his birth, nor is the
individual able to associate with others in order to modify his
economic judgement and bring about a collective judgement which
holds good for the practical economic life, but where the
individual faces the other human being in such a way that this
encounter is a purely human one, a relationship from man to
man. And this realm includes all relationships in which the
individual human being directly encounters the individual human
being, not as an economically active being but as man, where he
also has nothing to do with the capabilities with which one was
born or which one has learnt, but where he is concerned with
what he is allowed to do within the social organism or what his
duties are, what his rights are, with that which he signifies
within the social organism by his pure human relationship with
the other man despite his capacities, despite his economic
position. This is the third realm of the social organism.
It
might seem that these three realms were cleverly thought out.
But that is not the case. It seems as though they were not
taken from practical life. But that is just what they are.
Because that which is specific to them is just what is working
in practical life. And when these three realms of the social
organism work together in a wrong way, then damage to the
social organism occurs. In my “Essentials of the social
question” I have used the example of the human organism
— not in order to prove something, I know very well that
one can never prove anything by analogies, but in order to
explain what I had to say — which is definitely a unity
but which, if one analyses it with true physiology, all the
same consists of three realms. We distinguish clearly in the
human organism the nerve-sense organism which, though working
within the whole human being, is mainly situated in the head.
Furthermore there is in the human being the breathing and
circulation rhythm, the rhythm organism as a relatively
independent organism. And as a third organism there is the
metabolism-limbs organism, all that depends either on the inner
functions of metabolism or the consumption of the products of
metabolism by the outer human activity, which starts with the
movement of the human limbs by which metabolism is used.
Indeed, man is a unity, but just because of the fact that these
relatively independent members are working together
harmoniously. And if one were to wish that instead of this
organic working together man should be an abstract unity, then
one would be wishing for something foolish. Each of these
members has its own openings towards the outside world, the
senses, the openings of breathing, the opening of nutrition:
relative independence. And just because of this relative
independence these members work organically harmoniously
together in the right way, in that each member unfolds its own
specific strength and thereby something unified comes about. As
I was saying, I know that one cannot prove anything by an
analogy. And I don't want to prove anything but just to
illustrate something. Because he who observes the social
organism as objectively as in this physiology the threefoldness
of man is observed, will find that by its very own qualities
the social organism demands an independent, a relatively
independent working of the economic organism, the
state-political or rights organism and the spiritual organism
within the boundaries which I have indicated.
Through a misunderstanding of the three-folding of the social
organism it has often been asserted that in the last resort
this separation cannot take place, that for instance the rights
relationships constantly play into the economic life, that the
spiritual relationships play into it too and that it would
therefore be nonsense to wish for a threefoldness of the social
organism.
In
the natural human organism the three members work together as
unity just because each one of them can work in its specific
way, and it is definitely so that the nerve-sense organism is
fed, that it has is specific nutritional needs and that the
nerve-sense organism has also got its importance for the
metabolism. That the three members are still relatively
independent is shown by a healthy physiology.
A
healthy social physiology will also show that the three realms,
the realm of the spirit, the realm where man simply relates to
man, that is to say the legal-state-political realm, and the
economic realm where man has to become a member of
associations, of communities in the indicated way, that these
realms can work together in the right way if they are allowed
to develop their intrinsic qualities relatively independently.
This is by no means an adaptation of for instance the old
platonic threefoldness: teaching, military, economics, for
there people are divided into three classes. In our time there
can be no question of such a structure, but only of a
structuring of the administration, of the external formation of
the three realms of life when we talk of the three-folding of
the social organism.
The
spiritual realm should only be administered out of its
intrinsic principles. For instance those who are teachers
should also be the administrators of the education system, so
that there is no division between pædagogical science on
the one hand and the prescriptions of the political organism on
the other hand for education. All administration in the area of
the spiritual realm must come directly from the spiritual
realm, from that which is pædagogical-didactic science. In
the political-state area everything can be regulated from man
to man in the relevant administrative and constitutional
bodies. In the economic realm associations will have to be
formed in which people will partake as economic entities for
reasons which I explained today. What must these associations
in the economic realm see as their main task? Well, in the
structuring of this task the specific thing which I have tried
to explain in my “Essentials of the Social
Question” can be shown. In these “Essentials of the
Social Question” it was nowhere stated that in this way
or that social structures should come about, this or that would
be the very best. For me that would already signify something
utopian. For whosoever knows today's human life knows that even
when one thinks up the best theories, practical life benefits
very little from these theories. I am even convinced that if
one were to convene twelve or more, or less, not even
particularly clever people, one could get wonderful programs
about everything, for instance for the organisation of the
primary school, programs against which nothing could be said:
point 1, point 2, point 3, — when all that were to become
reality what is asked in point1, point2, point 3, there would
be an ideal school. But it cannot become reality because
although man can think up the most ideal situation, what can be
achieved in reality depends on quite different conditions.
We
have tried to found something as far as is possible in our time
in the Waldorf School in Stuttgart which is not built on
programs but only flows out of pædagogy and didactics. The
Free Waldorf School has a number of teachers. They would, if
they meet together, be able to think up ideal programs for the
school, for which I would not particularly praise them. But
that we don't need. The people, the living human beings
constitute the staff. And what they are able to do, the best
that can be elicited from them, that should be developed. All
ideal programs are dismissed, all prescriptions are dismissed,
everything is placed into the immediate impulse of the
individual ability. No prescription disturbs him who is to act
— and that is just the task of the individual human being
— out of pædagogy and didactic in a certain area of
spiritual life.
Of
course to-day one can only realize such things up to a certain
point. In practical life one can nowhere realize an ideal, but
one must do what is possible in the circumstances of life. In
the same way everything else from my “Essentials of the
Social Question” must be treated. Nowhere has it been
attempted to show how the different institutions should be. Not
as a demand, not as an ideal, but as an observation of that
which the human being in his present historical becoming wants,
it is pointed out that human beings — although they are
just as they happen to be — would be able to act
differently from how they are acting today, if they were
situated in their right place. Therefore I do not give actual
proposals how this or that institution should be but turn
directly to the human beings and say: When human beings work
together in the right way and in the right way find the aspects
from which they have to view the social question, then the best
which can come about will come about. — And I just
believe that the best structuring of the social organism out of
the human being is this that every single person, I should say,
in a separate association thinks and works in the spiritual
realm, in the rights-state or political realm and in the
economic realm. Every person can for instance be active in all
three realms if he has the strength for it — the social
organism is not divided into classes. The point is not that
this or that person is active in this or that realm, but that
objectively, apart from man, these three realms are
administered independently out of their intrinsic conditions,
so that a person can belong to all three or to two or to one,
but administers it out of the principles of that realm. If one
considers how through this the harmony of the three realms
comes about, one will see that in this threefolding it is the
unity with matters, not the separation, as misunderstood
criticism and discussions assert.
And
so it is especially important in the economic realm that
solutions should not be found by some prescriptions let us say
from the study of statistics or the like, but from immediate
life. I will give an example. As everyone knows, an item of
merchandize in the economic circulation becomes too cheap if a
great number of people produce the same thing, when there is
overproduction. And everyone knows, that an item of merchandize
becomes too expensive when it is produced by too few people.
Through this we have a measure where the objective mean is of
which I have spoken. This mean, the objective value, this
objective price cannot be fixed as such. But when associations
come into being which see their activity in practically getting
to know economic life, to study it in every moment, in every
present time, then the main observation can be how prices rise,
how prices fall. And because associations occupy themselves
with this rising and falling of prices, it can be accomplished
by negotiations that a large enough number of people can be
formed for an economic entity, a large enough number of people
is active in a branch of production, that through negotiation
one can bring the right number of people into a branch of
production. This cannot be worked out theoretically, this can
only be determined by people being in their appropriate place,
so that these things are determined by human experience.
Therefore one cannot say: this or that is the objective value.
But when associations work in economic life in such a way that
they make it one of their tasks gradually to eliminate
businesses which make the prices too cheap as is customary, and
to inaugurate others in their place which produce something
else, then enough people will take part in the various branches
of production. This can only be accomplished by a truly
associative life. And then the price for a certain product will
become closer to the objective price. So that we can never say:
Because of such and such conditions the objective price must be
this or that, but we can only say: When the right human
association comes about, then by its work in the immediate life
of the social organism the correct price can gradually emerge.
The point is not to state how institutions should be that the
socially right thing happens, but to bring people into such a
social connection that from the collaboration of the people the
social question can gradually be solved. For whoever
understands the social question rightly cannot see it as one
that has come up once and could be solved by some utopia, but
the social question is a result of modern working together and
will in future be present more and more. But what is needed is
that people observe the social currents from their economic
viewpoint and through associations, in which alone an economic
judgement can be formed, bring the economic life into the right
streams, not by laws but out of immediate life by direct human
negotiation. The social life must be based practically on the
human condition.
Therefore the “Essentials of the Social Question”
are not concerned with describing some social structure, but to
indicate how people can be brought into a relationship in which
they can by their working together do from time to time what is
needed for the social question, not in the way which is
sometimes dreamt about. As one can see from this, these
associations will primarily be concerned with the actual
economic life. In actual economic life merchandize is
circulating. Therefore the associations will primarily have to
further the tendency towards the correct price out of immediate
life, so that everyone actually can purchase what he needs for
his maintenance out of his own producing. I have once tried to
bring into a formula what such a just price would look like.
That does not mean of course that it should be determined
abstractly. It is determined out of real life as I have
indicated. But I have said: Such a price for any product in
social life — that is, for merchandize — is this,
that it makes it possible for a person to provide his keep and
all his needs for himself and his family until he has produced
the same product again.
I
don't state this as a dogma. I don't say this must be so,
because one would never be able to implement this, as one
cannot implant such theories into reality, I only say that that
which will appear as the correct price through the associative
working together will tend towards this direction. So I just
want to state a result. I don't want to draw up a dogma, some
economic dogma. And in my view this is just what is essential
for today's economic thinking, that one bases it everywhere on
human foundations, that one recognizes again in what way the
human being must everywhere be the driving force of economic
life, that one does not think of organizing a social organism
somehow out of institutions that come out of theoretical
thinking, but that one tries to discover how human co-existence
should be so that the right way comes about. I want to
illustrate this still by the following analogy. In the realm of
nature there exists this: that in the conditions which are
created by people there is something which comes out of a basic
human sensing but which doesn't intend to fix something which
comes into being in outer social life. For in recent times
there has been talk of how the human embryonic development
could be influenced so that one could in a certain sense have a
choice of whether to bring boys or girls into the world. Of
course I don't want to discuss this question today in theory,
but I consider it fortunate if this question cannot be
practically solved. For even though human beings cannot
determine abstractly what would be the best distribution of
male and female gender in the world, this does happen more or
less without people being able to influence it. There are
objective laws which take effect when man out of quite
different conditions simply follows his basic impulses. And in
this way, when the associations work in the right way and out
of the experiences of life without dogmatically saying such or
such the just price has to be, this price will appear through
the associative working. I call it associative working, because
the human individuality should be present in associating, that
is, in the combining of the strengths of the one with the
strength of the other the individuality is preserved. In the
coalition, in the unions, the individuality disappears. This is
what in my view can lead to the realistic, not the dogmatic,
economic thinking.
And
one can think of further tasks for these associations. If we
look again at the analogy with the human organism we can say:
by this or that symptom we can notice that the human organism
is sick. Out of a combination of symptoms we can gain knowledge
about the illness, about the process of the illness. It is
quite similar with the social organism. Today we see obvious
symptoms of disease in the social organism. Associations are
the health bearers. Associations work towards the harmonizing
of interests, so that the interests of the producers and the
consumers are harmonized by the working together in the
association, that other interests are harmonized, that above
all the interests between employers and workers are harmonized.
Today we see how out of a diseased economic body the opposite
of associative life is created, we see how passive resistance,
locking out, sabotage and even revolutions come about. No-one
with a healthy mind can deny that all this works in the
opposite direction of the associative principle and that all
this: sabotage, lock-outs, revolution and so on are symptoms of
disease of the social organism that must be overcome through
that which works in a harmonizing way. But for this one needs a
truly meaningful form of the social organism, just as the human
natural threefold organism has a meaningful form.
And
now I come back to what I said, that land and capital cannot be
considered as merchandize, for their value is dependent on
human capability. If we have something abstractly uniform as it
has more and more come to the fore in recent times, but also
bearing within it the described symptoms of disease and others
as well, then it tends to result through this abstract uniform
treatment that land, capital and lastly also labour are treated
as merchandize.
When there is a threefold organism, the forces of the
individuality work in the realm of the spiritual life.
Therefore all that has to do with the unfolding of the
individuality in economic life that is that which is connected
with land and with capital, is actually part of the spiritual
realm of the social organism. That is why I have described how
the management of the capital, the management of the land, have
to be dealt with in the spiritual realm of the social
organism.
He
who criticizes me for tearing the three realms apart is not
aware that — as I described it myself — the
spiritual organism, which is built on the individual strength,
takes on the management of the capital, the management of the
land as a matter of course when people are put at the right
place. But that which is labour in the social organism is a
service which man performs for man. That is something which can
never thrive if it is grounded in economic life alone. That is
why regulation of labour belongs to the realm of rights, to the
political realm. And just because of from a totally different
premise from today, time and measure of work can be regulated
by relationships between man and man — quite apart from
economic agreements which are determined in economic life
through the associations — something will come about
which will be of the utmost importance: The economic life will
be placed on a healthy basis by having nature with its
conditions on the one side and on the other side man with his
conditions.
It
would be strange indeed if today we would sit together with a
small committee to determine how many rainy days there must be
in 1922 in order for the economic matters to proceed according
to our wishes. One has to take nature as it is and only on the
basis of accepted nature the economic life can be structured.
That is the one side. In the threefold social organism man
stands in relationship to man, not as economic object, over
against the independent, relatively autonomous associations,
autonomous even to the structuring of the money side. And as
man he develops the labour laws. And now one will not determine
human labour out of economic conditions, from which only the
prices of the merchandize, the relative values of the
merchandize, i.e. something purely economic must be determined,
just as one cannot determine the productivity of nature out of
economic conditions. But only then one will have based economic
life on purely human as well as on purely natural
conditions.
It
will then however not be possible for Utopia to come about. But
what good would it be to think about how man could be better
constituted than he is? One can only study him as he is.
Therefore it can be said that it would be very nice to talk of
some future worlds in which man would be as well as one could
wish for, but it would be fruitless; for one could think up all
sorts of ideas of how the social organism should be structured.
But that can never be the question. The question can only be
this: How is it possible to structure it? How must its members
work together, not that it is the best, but the one which
through its own strengths is the possible one, which will have
the least of the indicated disease symptoms and can develop in
the most healthy way possible? I think that maybe as time goes
by one will come to an understanding about this cardinal
question of economic life which I have indicated, when one
wants to understand this through a true realization of the
social conditions of life. This cardinal economic question
which has lived in all my deliberations and which I don't want
to lay down in an abstract dogmatic formal way. But to-day our
most terrible battles which assail the economic life lastly
come from the fact that one does not study economic life with
the same good will, does not follow up its conditions within
the social organism as one does for instance in regard to the
natural organism. And only when one will learn to proceed with
regard to the social organism as one does with biology,
physiology and their therapy, one will discover what
possibilities there are, and then it will be possible to ask
the questions which to-day one calls the social questions in
the right way. With this they will be able to be brought back
to the human level. That is why it seems to me to be of the
greatest importance that as many heads and hearts can be won
for an appropriate understanding of the social organism as
possible, for an understanding which can look at the social
organism in respect of health and disease just as natural
science attempts to do with regard to the human organism. And I
believe that today one can realize that indeed it must also be
said with regard to the cardinal question of economic life,
that the three-folding of the social organism can throw light
into the realms of purely economic life, the rights, state or
political life and the spiritual life. For these three realms
should not be separated, but each one should be able to work
harmoniously together with the others by virtue of being able
to develop its strong powers in relative autonomy. And the core
question of economic life is this: How must the political life
and the spiritual life work independently into the purely
economic life in relation to capital, land and measuring and
valuation of human labour, so that in the economic life by the
structuring of the associations not indeed an earthly paradise,
but a possible social organism can be created?
And one can believe that when one thinks in such a true
to nature way about the question, then such a question which
one must call the core question of the economic life, can be
asked in the right, close to life, practical way. And it often
happens in life that the greatest mistakes are made not because
one strives for wrong solutions — usually they are
utopian solutions — but already by asking the wrong
question, that the questions are not asked out of real
observation of life and real knowledge of life. But this seems
to me today the most significant question particularly in
regard to the economic life, that the questions are asked
correctly and that life be structured in such a way that not
theoretical answers are given but that life, the total human
and historical reality itself, gives the answer to the
correctly put questions. The questions will be put out of the
historical background, life must directly truly give answer. No
theory can give this answer, but only the full practical
reality of life.
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