III
WORLD
DEVELOPMENT IN THE LIGHT OF ANTHROPOSOPHY.
The
thoughts which I have been putting before you, will show you
that the acquisition of real super-sensible knowledge entails
above all, with the aid of the exercises already described,
that the two sides of human nature which are usually inexactly
designated as man's inner and outer being should be distinctly
separated. Perhaps it may be pointed out that in ordinary
consciousness one does not make an exact distinction between
man's inner and outer being, when speaking of these. The way in
which I characterised the going out of man's sentient and
volitional being during sleep and the becoming conscious in
super-sensible knowledge outside the physical body, shows us
that just this super-sensible knowledge enables us to separate
distinctly those parts which are usually described vaguely in
ordinary consciousness as man's outer and inner being.
I
might say that by this separation man's inner world becomes his
outer world, and what we usually consider as his outer world
becomes his inner world.
What takes place in that case? During sleep, man's sentient and
volitional being abandons what we have called his physical body
and etheric body, or the body of formative forces, and then
this sentient-volitional being looks back upon the physical
body and the etheric body as if they were objects. We showed
that in this retrospection the whole web of thought appears
outside man's inner being. The world of thought which fills our
ordinary consciousness and which reflects the external world,
does not go out with man's true inner being in falling asleep,
but remains behind with the physical body, as the true forces
of the etheric body. In this way we were able to grasp that
during our waking state of consciousness we cannot grow
conscious of that part which goes out during sleep and which
remains unconscious for the ordinary consciousness.
(Self-observation can easily convince us that during our
ordinary waking consciousness the world of thoughts produces
this waking state of consciousness).
In
that part of the human being which goes out of the physical and
the etheric bodies during sleep, there is a dull twilight-life,
and we only learn to know this inner being of man when
super-sensible knowledge fills it, as it were, with light and
with warmth, when we are just as conscious within this inner
being as we are ordinarily conscious within our physical body.
But we also learn to know why we have an unconscious life
during our ordinary sleeping condition. Consciousness arises
when we dive down into our physical and etheric bodies at the
moment of waking up. And by diving down into the physical body,
we make use of the senses which connect us with the external
world. As a result, the sensory world awakes and we thus grow
conscious in it.
In
the same way we dive down into our etheric or life-body, that
is to say, into our world of thoughts, and we grow conscious
within our thoughts. Ordinary consciousness is therefore based
upon the fact that we use the instruments of our physical body,
and that we make use, so to speak, of the etheric body's web of
formative forces. In ordinary life, man's true inner being,
woven out of feeling and will, is not in a position to attain
consciousness, because it has no organs. By making the thought-
and will-exercises of which I have spoken, we endow the soul
itself with organs. This soul-element, which is at first
indistinct in our ordinary consciousness, acquires plastic
form, even as our physical body and our etheric body acquire
plastic form in the senses and in the organs of thought. Man's
real soul-spiritual being therefore obtains a plastic form.
In
the same measure in which it is moulded plastically and
acquires (if I may use this paradoxical expression)
soul-spiritual sense-organs, the world of soul and spirit rises
up round our inner being. That part of our being which
ordinarily lives in a dull twilight existence and which can
only perceive an environing world, namely the physical world,
when it uses the physical and etheric organs of perception,
thus acquires plastic form and enters into connection with a
world which always surrounds us, even in our ordinary life,
though we are not aware of it, a world in which we lived before
descending into our physical being through birth or conception,
as described the day before yesterday; a world in which we
shall live again when we pass through the portal of death, for
then we shall recognise it as a world which belongs to us and
which is not limited by birth and death. But there is one thing
which rises up before us when we enter the spiritual world. We
cannot enter this world in the same abstract theoretic manner
with which we can live in the physical world and in the world
of thoughts or of the intellect. In the physical world and in
the world of thoughts we use ideas and thoughts, which as such,
leave us cold. With a little self-observation anyone can
discover that when he ascends to the sphere of pure thinking,
when he surrenders to the external sensory world without any
special interest or a close connection with it, the external
physical world, as well as the world of ideas, really leaves
him cold. We must learn to know this in detail from particular
examples in life. We should note, for instance, how
different are the inner feelings with which we consider
our home, from those with which we look upon any other strange
country which is indifferent to us. This will show us that in
order to have a living interest for the environing world, our
feeling and our will must first be drawn in through special
circumstances. Feeling will indeed always dive down into the
physical world when we awake, obtaining from this physical
world a connection with the senses and the understanding. The
fact that love or perhaps hate are kindled in us when we
encounter certain people in the physical world, the fact that
we feel induced to do certain things for them out of
compassion, all this demands the inclusion of our feelings and
of everything which constitutes our inner being, when we come
across such things in the external physical world. How
conscious we are of the fact that our inner life grows cold,
when we rise up to spheres which are generally called the
spheres of pale, dry thought and of theoretic study!
The
being which lives in a dull twilight state from the moment of
falling asleep to the moment of waking up, must, as it were,
connect itself during the waking daytime condition with
thoughts and with sensory experiences through an inner
participation in these processes, thus giving rise to the whole
wealth of interest in the external world.
And
so we recognise that in life itself feeling and will must first
be drawn into the sense world and into the world of thoughts.
But we perceive this in the fullest meaning of the word only
when through super-sensible knowledge, we become free from the
physical and etheric bodies, and have experiences outside them
within our sentient-volitional being.
And
hence it is evident that we must begin to speak of the world in
a different way from how we speak in ordinary life, in ordinary
consciousness. The dry ideas, the laws of Nature which we are
accustomed to find in science and which interest us
theoretically, though they leave us inwardly cold, these should
be permeated with certain nuances and expressions which
characterise the external world differently from the way in
which we usually characterize it.
Our
inner life acquires greater intensity through super-sensible
knowledge. We penetrate more intensively into the life of the
external world. When we try to gain knowledge, we are then no
longer able to submit coldly to inner ideas. No doubt one is
then exposed to the reproach that the objectivity may suffer
through a certain inner warmth, through the awakening of
feeling and of a subjective sense. But this objection is only
raised by those who are not acquainted with the
circumstances.
The
things perceived through super-sensible knowledge make us speak
differently of the super-sensible objects of knowledge. These do
not change, they do not become less objective, for in fact they
are objective. When I look upon a wonderfully painted picture,
it does not change through the fact that I look upon it with
fire and enthusiasm; I should be a cold prosaic person if I
were to face one of Raphael's Madonnas or one of Leonardo's
paintings with a purely analytical artistic understanding,
quite coldly and without any enthusiasm. It is the same when
the spiritual worlds rise up in super-sensible knowledge. Their
content does not change through the fact that we connect
ourselves with these worlds with inner feelings, far stronger
than those which usually connect us with the external world and
its objects.
When speaking from a knowledge of the higher worlds, many
things will therefore have to be said differently, the
descriptions will have to be different from those which we are
accustomed to hear in ordinary life. But this does not render
these worlds less objective. On the contrary, one could say:
The subjective element which now breaks forth from the physical
and etheric bodies becomes more objective, more selfless in its
whole experience. And so the first experience which we have
when going out of the physical body and experiencing our inner
being consciously (whereas otherwise we always experience it
unconsciously) is a feeling of absolute loneliness.
In
our ordinary consciousness we never have the feeling that by
dwelling only within our inner self, independently of anything
in the world pertaining to us, complete loneliness fills our
soul, that we ourselves, with everything which now constitutes
our soul-spiritual content, must rely entirely upon
ourselves.
The
feeling of loneliness which sometimes arises in the physical
world, but only as a reflection of the real feeling, though it
is painful enough for many people, becomes immeasurably
intensified when we thus penetrate into the super-sensible
world. But we then look back upon that which reflects itself as
the spiritual environment in the mirror of the physical and
etheric body which we left behind. We grow aware, on the one
hand, of a complete feeling of loneliness, which alone enables
us to maintain our Ego in this world ... for we should melt
away in this world of the spirit, if loneliness would not give
us this Ego-feeling in the spiritual world, in the same way in
which our body, our bodily sensation, gives us our Ego-feeling
here on earth. To this loneliness we owe the maintenance of the
Ego in the spiritual world. We then learn to know this
spiritual world as our environment. But we know that we can
only learn to know it through the inner soul-spiritual eye,
even as we see the physical world through our physical
eyes.
It
is the same when the human being abandons his physical and
etheric bodies by passing through the portal of death, and in
this connection I shall enlarge the explanations already given
yesterday. It is true that in this case the physical body is
given over to the elements of the earth and that the etheric
body dissolves, as I described, in the universal cosmic ether.
But what we learned to know as our physical world, through our
feeling and will, the world in which we experienced ourselves
through the ordinary consciousness between birth and death,
this world remains to man. The physical body filled with
substance and the body of formative forces permeated by etheric
forces, are laid aside with death, but what we experienced
within them remains as a mirroring element.
From the spiritual world we look back through death, through
which we have passed, into our last earthly life. Just because
we have before us this last earthly life as a firm resistance
which mirrors everything, just because of this, everything
which surrounds us as we pass through the soul-spiritual world
between death and a new birth, can also reflect itself. Through
these experiences we perceive everything rising up in a far
more intensive life than the one which we learned to know here
in the physical world. And we first perceive as a
soul-spiritual being everything with which we were in some way
connected through our destiny, through our Karma. The people we
loved, stand before us as souls. In our super-sensible vision we
see all that we experienced together with them.
Those who acquire spiritual, super-sensible knowledge, already
acquire imaginative vision here in the physical world, through
everything which I described to you. Those who pass through the
portal of death in the ordinary way, acquire this faculty,
though it is somewhat different from spiritual vision on earth,
they acquire it after having passed through the portal of
death. From the sheaths of the physical and etheric bodies
which were laid aside, emerges everything with which we were
connected by destiny, or otherwise, in this earthly life
— it undoubtedly arises in a different way when those
whom we left behind still live on the earth, where the
connection with them is more difficult, but when they follow us
through death, this connection exists in the free,
soul-spiritual life. Everything in our environment with which
we were connected as human beings rises up before us. To
super-sensible knowledge, the fact that people (if I may
now express myself in words of the ordinary consciousness) who
belonged together here in the physical world find each other
again in the soul-spiritual world, after having passed through
the portal of death, is not a belief to be accepted as a vague
premonition, but it is a certainty, a fact just as certain as
the results of physics or chemistry. And this is in fact
something which the spiritual science of Anthroposophy can add
to the acquisitions of modern culture.
People have grown accustomed to a certain feeling of certainty
through the gradual popularisation of a scientific
consciousness. They strive to gain some knowledge of the
super-sensible worlds, but no longer in the form of the old
presentiments handed down traditionally in the religious
beliefs, for they have been trained to accept that certainty
which the external world can offer. In regard to that which
lies beyond birth and death the spiritual science of
Anthroposophy seeks to pave the way to this same kind of
certainty. It can really do this. Only those who tread the path
already described, the path leading into the spiritual worlds,
can carry the knowledge acquired in physics or chemistry
further, out into the worlds which we enter when we pass
through the portal of death.
Not
everything of course, appears to us in this way when we look
back upon our physical body through super-sensible knowledge
outside the body. There is one thing which then appears to us
very enigmatic, and this enigma can show us best of all that
the spiritual science of Anthroposophy does not translate
the truths which it includes in its spheres of knowledge into a
prosaic, dry rationalism. It leads us to spiritual vision, or
by communicating its truth it speaks of things which can be
perceived through spiritual vision. But in being led to
spiritual vision, we do not lose full reverence towards the
mysteries contained in the universe, towards everything in the
universe which inspires reverence and which can now be clearly
perceived, whereas otherwise they are at the most felt darkly.
This enigmatic something which I mean and which appears to us,
is that we now learn to know man's relationship with the earth,
particularly his relationship with the physical mineral
earth.
I
have already explained to you from many different aspects how
our web of thoughts, which is connected with the physical body,
remains behind, and in addition to what has been described to
you, in addition to what reflects itself and leads us to a
knowledge of man's eternal being, we can also recognise the
nature of this mirror itself which we have before us.
One
might say: Even as in the physical world we face a mirror and
in this mirror the environing world appears simultaneously with
our own self, so in super-sensible knowledge the spiritual world
appears through this mirror. But just as we can touch the
material mirror with its foil and investigate its composition,
so we can also investigate this mirror of the super-sensible
— namely, our physical body and our etheric body —
when we are outside with our real soul-spiritual being.
And
there one can see that during his earthly life man constantly
takes in substances from the external world, in order to grow
and to sustain his whole life. We certainly absorb substances
from the animal and vegetable kingdoms, but all these
substances which we absorb from the animal and vegetable
kingdoms also contain mineral substances. Plants contain
mineral substances, for the plant builds itself up from mineral
substances. By taking in vegetable nourishment we therefore
build up our own body out of mineral substances.
By
looking back upon our physical body from outside, we can now
perceive the true significance of the mineral substances which
we absorb. For now spiritual vision reveals something of
which our ordinary consciousness has not the faintest inkling,
namely the activity of thinking. We have, as you know, left
behind our thinking. Our thoughts continue, as it were, to
glimmer and to shine within the physical body. Thus we can now
observe the effects of thoughts in the physical body from
outside, as something objective. And we perceive that the
effect of thoughts upon man's physical body is a dissolution of
its physical substances, which fall asunder, as it were, into
nothing.
I
know that this apparently contradicts the law of the
conservation of energy, but there is no time now to explain
more fully its full harmony with this law. The nature of my
subject obliges me to express myself in somewhat popular terms.
But it is possible to understand that the purely mineral in
man, what he bears within him as purely mineral substances,
must be within him because it must be dissolved by his
thoughts. For otherwise his thoughts could not exist —
this is the condition for their existence — his thoughts
could not exist if they did not dissolve mineral, earthly
substances, a fact also revealed by the spiritual sciences of
earlier times, based more on intuitive feeling. This
dissolution, this destruction of physical substances
constitutes the physical instrumentality of thinking.
When our sentient-volitional part, our true inner being, lives
within the physical body and within the etheric body and is
filled by the activity of thinking, we now learn to recognise
that this activity takes its course through the fact that
physical substance is continually destroyed. We now learn to
recognise how our ordinary consciousness really arises.
We are not conscious because forces of growth hold sway in us,
forces which develop in the rest of the organism through
nutrition. For in the same measure in which the forces of
growth are active within us, thinking is dulled. When we wake
up, thinking must, so to speak, have a free hand to dissolve
physical substances, to eliminate them from the physical body.
To the spiritual science of Anthroposophy, the nervous system
appears as that organ which mediates this secretion of
mineral-physical substances throughout the whole body.
And in this secretion of the mineral-physical develops just
that thought-activity which we ordinarily carry with us through
the world.
You
therefore see that the spiritual science of Anthroposophy not
only enables us to recognise the eternal in man, but also to
know of the way in which this eternal works within the physical
body; that, for instance, thought can only exist through the
fact that man continually develops within himself the mineral
substances, that is, something dead.
And
so we can say: If we learn to know man from this aspect, we
also learn to know death from another aspect. Ordinarily death
confronts us as the end of life, as a moment in life, as an
experience in itself. But when we throw light upon man's
physical and etheric body in this way we learn to know the
gradual course of death, or the separation of physical-mineral
substance, — for death in fact, is nothing but the
complete liberator of man's mineral-physical substance —
we learn to know the continuous secretion of a dead,
corpse-like element within us.
We
recognise that from birth onwards, we are really always dying
and only when with the whole body we accomplish that which we
ordinarily accomplish through the nervous system, in a small
part of the body, only then do we die.
We
therefore learn to contemplate the moment of death by seeing it
on a small scale in the activity of thinking in the human
organism. And throughout the whole time that we pass
through after death, we can only look back upon our physical
body because the following fact exists: Whenever a thought
lights up within you during your ordinary life, this is always
accompanied by the fact that physical matter is secreted in the
physical body, in the same way in which, for instance, physical
substance separates from a precipitated salt-solution. This
lighting up of thought you owe as it were, to this opaqueness,
to this separating off of physical mineral substances.
Inasmuch as you abandon the physical body, there is
summed up in a comparatively brief space of time what lives in
the continual stream of your thoughts. You confront the fact
that in death you see lighting up as if all at once that which
slowly glimmered and shone throughout your whole earthly life,
from birth to death.
And
through this powerful impression, in which the life of thoughts
illuminates the soul like a mighty flash of lightning, man
acquires the memory of his physical lives on earth. The
physical body may be cast off, the etheric body may dissolve
completely in the universal ether, but through the fact that we
obtain in one experience this powerful thought-impression (to
mathematicians I might say: this thought-integral in comparison
with thought-differentials, from birth to death), we always
have before us, throughout the time after death, as a
mirroring element, our physical life on earth, even though we
have laid aside our physical and etheric parts. And this
mirroring element reveals everything which we experience when
the human beings with whom we were connected by destiny in love
or in hate, gradually come up, when the spiritual Beings who
live in the spiritual world and do not descend to the earth,
whose company we also now share, rise up before us.
The
spiritual investigator may state this with a calm conscience,
for he knows that he does not speak on the foundation of
illusionary pictures; he knows instead that to super-sensible
vision, when super-sensible vision arises through the organ of
the physical and etheric bodies which are now outside, these
things are just as real, can be seen just as really as physical
colours are ordinarily perceived through physical eyes, or
physical sounds through physical ears.
This is how the evolution of humanity forms part of the
evolution of the world. If we study the development of the
world, for instance, the mineral life on earth, we understand
why there should be mineral, earthly laws. They exist so that
they might also exist within us, and thinking is therefore
bound up with the earth. But in perceiving how the Beings who
have bound their thinking with the earth emerge from that which
produces their thought, we also learn to recognise how man in
his true being lifts himself above the merely earthly. This is
what connects the development of the world with the development
of humanity and unites them.
We
learn to know the human being and at the same time we learn to
know the universe. If we learn to know man's physical body and
its mineralization through thinking, we also learn to know
through man's physical body the lifeless mineralised earth.
This created a foundation for a knowledge of the evolution of
the world from its spiritual aspect also.
When we thus learn to know man's inner being, we can consider
the development of the world in the light of the ordinary
earthly experiences through which we have passed since our
birth.
If
you draw out of your memory-store an experience which you had
ten years ago, a past event which you have gone through rises
up before your soul as an image. You know exactly from the
circumstances of life that it rises up as a picture. Yet this
picture conveys a knowledge of something which really existed
ten years ago.
How
does this arise? Through the fact that in your organism certain
processes remained behind which now summon up the picture.
Certain processes have remained behind in your organism and
these summon up in you the picture enabling you to re-construct
what you experienced ten years ago. But super-sensible knowledge
leads us deeper into man's inner nature. We can perceive, for
instance, that the physical body becomes mineralised during the
thinking process; we perceive this in the same way in which we
learn to know some past experience of our earthly life through
the traces which it left behind within us.
In
the same way the development of the earth can be understood
from the development of man; through the activity of the
mineral in man we learn to know the task of the mineral kingdom
within the development of the earth. And if, as already set
forth, we learn similarly to know (I can only mention this, for
a detailed description would lead us too far) how the vegetable
kingdom is connected with man, and how the animal kingdom is
connected with him (for this too can be recognised), then the
development of the world can be grasped by setting out
from the human being.
And
within the development of the world we can then see something
which is again of the same importance to those who are
interested in modern civilisation, as are the facts which I
explained in connection with a knowledge of the human being, of
the eternal inner kernel of man.
We
know that modern civilisation has succeeded, at least up to a
certain point, in so regarding man's relationship to the
development of the world as to attach him to the evolution of
the animals, — even though the corresponding theories, or
the hypotheses, as some people say, still contain much that is
unclear, requiring completion and modification. We follow the
development of the simplest organic beings up to the higher
animals, and if we continue this line of observation we come
indeed to the point of placing man at the summit of animal
development. One person does it in this way, and the other in
that way, one more idealistically, and the other more
materialistically in accordance with Darwin's theory of
evolutionary descent, but methodically, it can hardly be denied
that if we wish to study man's physical nature according to
natural-scientific methods, we must rank him with the animal
kingdom, — as has been done for some time.
We
must investigate how his head has changed in comparison with
the heads of the different animal-species; we must investigate
his limbs, etc., and we thus obtain what is known as
comparative anatomy, comparative morphology, comparative
physiology, and we then also form concepts as to how man's
physical form has gradually developed out of lower beings in
the course of the world's evolution. But in so doing we always
remain in the physical sphere. On the one hand people take it
amiss to-day if the anthroposophical spiritual investigator
speaks of the spiritual world as I have taken upon myself to do
in this lecture; from many sides this is viewed as pure
fantasy, and although many people believe that it is well-meant
... they nevertheless look upon it as something visionary
and fanciful.
Those who become acquainted to some extent with what I have
described, those who at least try to understand it, will see
that the preparations and preliminary conditions for it are
just as serious as, for instance, the preparations for the
study of mathematics, so that it is out of the question to
speak of sailing into some sort of fanciful domain. But just as
on the one hand people take it amiss if one describes the
spiritual world as a real visible world, so they take it amiss
on the other hand if in regard to man's physical development
one fully accepts those who follow man's development
Darwinistically, with a natural-scientific discipline, along
the animal line of descent, as far as man. No speculations
should enter the observations made in the physical sphere and
all sorts of things sought for there, as is done for instance,
to-day in Neo-vitalism. This is full of speculations; the old
vitalism was also full of speculative elements. But whenever we
consider the physical world, we must keep to the physical
facts.
For
this reason, the anthroposophical spiritual investigator who on
the one hand ventures to speak in a certain way of the
conditions after death and before birth, as I have done, does
not consider it as a reproach (i.e. he is not affected by it)
when people tell him that his description of the physical world
is completely that of a modern natural scientist. He does not
bring any dreams into the sphere which constitutes the physical
world. Even though people may call him a materialist when he
describes the physical world, this reproach does not touch him,
because he strictly separates the spiritual world, which can
only be observed with the aid of a spiritual method, from the
physical-sensory world, which has to be observed with the
orderly disciplined methods of modern natural science.
A
serious spiritual-scientific investigator must therefore feel
particularly hurt and pained at reproaches made to him with
regard to certain followers of spiritual science who sometimes
rebuke natural science out of a certain pride in their
spiritual-scientific knowledge and out of their undoubtedly
shallow knowledge of natural science. They think that they have
the right to speak negatively of science and of scientific
achievements but the spiritual investigator can only feel
deeply hurt at their amateurish, dilettantish behaviour. This
is however not in keeping with spiritual science. The spiritual
science of Anthroposophy is characterised by the fact that it
deals just as strictly and scientifically with the external
physical world, as with the spiritual world, and vice
versa.
With this preliminary condition, the anthroposophical spiritual
investigator stands entirely upon the ground of strictest
natural-scientific observation in regard to the study of the
world's development, but at the same time he turns his gaze
towards the soul-spiritual world. And even as he knows that not
only a physical process is connected with man's individual
embryonic origin in the physical world, but that a
soul-spiritual element unites with the human embryo, with the
human germ, so he also knows that in the whole development of
the world — though to the physical body it appears as a
tapestry of sensory objects, and though it manifests itself to
the web of thoughts, i.e. to the etheric body, in laws of
Nature — he also knows that the physical world is
permeated and guided in its whole development by spiritual
forces, under the sway of spiritual Beings, that can be known
through the methods I have described.
The
anthroposophical investigator therefore knows that when he
contemplates the external physical world in the sense of
genuine science, he comes to the right boundary, where he may
then begin with his spiritual investigation.
If
we have conscientiously traced evolutionary development through
the animal kingdom up to man, as Darwin or other Darwinians or
Haeckel did, and if we have gone into its scientific
justification we can then continue this in a
spiritual-scientific direction, after having reached the
boundary to which we are led by natural science.
We
now discover that contemplation of the form into which
we penetrate through super-sensible knowledge, shows us the
whole significance of forms, as they appear in the
kingdom of man on the one hand, and in the animal-kingdom on
the other; we discover the whole significance of these
forms.
Equipped with the knowledge supplied by super-sensible research,
we see how the animal (this is at least the case with most
animals, and exceptions can be easily explained) stands upon
the ground with its four limbs, how its spine is horizontal,
parallel with the surface of the earth, and how in regard to
the spine, the head develops in an entirely different position
from that of man. We learn to know the animal's whole form, as
it were, from within, as a complex of forces, and also in
relationship with the whole universe. And we thus learn to make
a comparison: We perceive the transformation, the metamorphosis
in the human form, in the human being whom we see standing upon
his two legs, at right angles, so to speak, with the animal's
spine, with his own spine set vertically to the surface of the
earth and his head developing in accordance with this position
of the spine.
By
penetrating into the inner art of Nature's creative process, we
learn to distinguish the human form from the animal form; we
recognise this by entering into the artistic creative process
of the cosmos. And we penetrate into the development of the
world by rising from otherwise abstract constructive thoughts
to thoughts which are inwardly filled with life, which form
themselves artistically in the spirit.
The
important thing to be borne in mind is that when it seeks to
know the development of the world, anthroposophical
spiritual research changes from the abstract understanding
ordinarily described — and justly so — as dry,
prosaic, systematic thought, or combining thought, into more
concrete, real thought. Not for the higher spiritual world, in
which concepts must penetrate by the methods described, but for
the physical world, the forms in world-development should first
be grasped through a kind of artistic comprehension, which in
addition develops upon the foundation of super-sensible
knowledge.
By
thus indicating how science should change into art, we must of
course encounter the objection raised by those who are
accustomed to think in accordance with modern ideas: “But
science must not become an art!” Now this can always be
said, as a human requirement. People can say: Now I forbid the
logic of the universe to become an art, for we only learn to
know reality by linking up thought with thought and by thus
approaching reality. Yes, if the world were as people imagine
it to be, one could refuse to ascend to art, to an artistic
comprehension of forms; but if the world is formed in such a
way that it can only be comprehended through an artistic
comprehension, it is necessary to advance to such an
artistic comprehension. This is how matters stand. That is why
those people who were earnestly seeking to grasp the organic in
the world-development really came to an inner development of
the thinking ordinarily looked upon as scientific thinking,
they came to an artistic comprehension of the world. And as
soon as we observe with an artistic-intuitive eye the
development of the world, beginning with the point where the
ordinary Darwinistic theory comes to a standstill, we perceive
that man, grasped as a whole, cannot simply be looked upon by
saying that once there were lower animals in the world, from
which higher animals developed, that then still higher animals
developed out of these, and so forth, until finally man
arose.
If
we study embryology in an unprejudiced way, it really
contradicts this conception. Although modern scientists set up
the fundamental law of biogenetics and compare embryology with
phylogeny, they do not interpret rightly what appears outwardly
even in human embryology, because they do not rise to this
artistic comprehension of the world's development. If we
observe in a human embryo how the limbs develop out of organs
which at first have a stunted aspect, how everything is at
first actually head, we already obtain the first elements of
what is revealed by the artistic comprehension of the human
form as I meant it. It is not possible to range the whole human
being with the animals. One cannot say: The human being, such
as he stands before us to-day, is a descendant of the whole
animal species. No, this is not the case. Just those who
penetrate with genuine scientific conscientiousness into
scientific Darwinism and its modern description of the
development of the world, will discover that through a higher
understanding it is simply impossible to place man at the
end, or at the summit of the animal-chain of development; they
must instead study the human head as such, the head of the
human beings. This human head alone descends from the whole
animal kingdom. Though it may sound strange and paradoxical,
the part which is generally considered as man's most perfect
part, is a transformation from the animal kingdom.
Let
us approach the human head with this idea and let us study it
carefully. Observe with a certain morphological-artistic sense
how the lower maxillary bones are transformed limbs, how also
the upper maxillary bones are transformed limbs, how
everything in the head is an enhanced development of the animal
form; you will then recognise in the human head that upon a
higher stage it reveals everything which has been developed in
the animal under so many different forms. You will then also
understand why it is so.
When you observe the animal, you can see that its head hangs
upon one extremity of the spine and that in the typical animal
it is entirely subjected to the law of gravity. Observe instead
the human head, observe how the human being stands within the
cosmos. The human head is set upon a spine which has a vertical
direction. It rests upon the remaining body in such a way that
the rest of man protects the head, as it were, against being
subjected to the force of gravity alone. The human head is
really something which rests upon the remaining organism with
comparative independence. And we come to understand that
through the fact that the human head is carried by the
remaining body, it really travels along like a person using a
coach; for it is the rest of the body which carries the human
head through the world. The human head has its transformed
limbs which have become shrivelled, as it were, and it is set
upon the rest of the organism. This remaining organism is
related to the human head in the same way in which the whole
earth with its force of gravity is related to the animal. In
regard to the head, the human being is “membered”
into his whole remaining body in the same way in which the
whole animal is “membered” into the earth.
We
now begin to understand the human being through the development
of the world. And if we proceed in this knowledge of the human
form with an artistic sense and understanding, we finally
comprehend how the human head is the continuation of the
animal-series and how the remaining body of man developed
later, out of the earth, and was attached to the human head.
Only in this way we gradually learn to understand man's
development.
If
we go back into earlier times of the past, we can only transfer
into these primordial epochs that part of man which lies at the
foundation of his present head-development. We must not seek
the development of his limbs or of his thorax in those early
ages, for these developed later. But if we observe the
development of the world by setting out, as I described, from
the human being, if we observe it in the same way in which we
look upon some past experience through memory, we find that the
human being had already begun his development in the world at a
time when our higher animals, for instance, did not as yet
exist. There were however other animal forms present at that
time from which the human head has developed, but the higher
animals of to-day were not in existence.
We
can therefore say: (let us now take a later epoch of the earth)
In the further course of his development, man developed his
head out of earlier animal-beings through the fact that his
spiritual essence animated him. That is why he could bring his
head to a higher stage of development. He then added his
limbs, which developed out of the regular forces of the earth.
The animals which followed, could only develop to the extent to
which man had developed with the exclusion of his head. They
began their development later, so that they have not come as
far as the human development of the head; they remain connected
with the earth, while the human being separates himself from
it.
This proves that it has a real meaning to say: Man is organised
into the development of the universe in such a way that while
he is connected with the animal kingdom, he rises above
it through his spiritual development. The animals which
followed man in their development could only develop as much as
man had developed in his limbs and thorax ... the head remained
stunted, because a longer time of development should have
preceded it, such as that of man, in order that the real head
might develop.
Through an artistic contemplation of the forms in the world's
development, the conscientiously accepted Darwinistic
theory is transformed, in so far as it is scientifically
justified to-day. And we recognise that in the development of
the world the human being has behind him a longer time of
development than the animals, — that the animals
develop as their chief form that part which man merely adds to
his head. In this way man reaches the point of lifting one part
of his being out of the force of gravity, whereas the animals
are entirely subjected to it. Everything which constituted our
head with its sense-organs, is raised above the force of
gravity, so that it does not turn towards heavy ponderable
matter, but towards the ether, which fills the sensory world.
This is the case above all with the senses; we should see this,
if we were to study them more closely. In this way, for
instance, the human organ of hearing depends upon an etheric
structure, not only upon the air structure.
Through all this, the human being forms part not only of the
material world, of the ponderable physical world, but he forms
part of the etheric outer world. Through the etheric world he
perceives, for instance, what the light conjures up
before him in the world of colours, etc., etc. Even through his
external form he rises above heavy matter, up to the free
ether, and for this reason we see the development of the world
in a different way when we ascend from natural science to
spiritual science.
But
when we rise up to an artistic conception, we also perceive the
activity of the soul-spiritual in man, and we must rise up to
such a conception if we wish to understand the human being. We
should, for instance, be able to say: In regard to his
soul-spiritual, sentient-volitional being, we must speak of
loneliness and of a life in common with others, as if these
were theoretical concepts, as I described to-day; we must rise
up to the moral world and finally we come to the religious
world. These worlds are interwoven and form a whole.
If
we study the human being in accordance with a
natural-scientific mentality and in the sense of modern
civilisation, we find on the one hand the rigid scientific
necessity of Nature into which the human being is also
inserted, and on the other hand, we find that man can only be
conscious of his dignity and can only say: I am truly man, if
he can feel within him the moral-religious impulses. But if we
honestly stand upon the foundation of natural science, we have
pure hypotheses as to the beginning and the end of the earth,
hypotheses which speak of the Kant-Laplace nebula for the
beginning of the earth and of a heat-death for the end of the
earth.
If
in the face of the natural-scientific demands we now consider,
in the sense of modern civilisation, the moral-religious world
which reveals itself intuitively (I have shown this in my
Philosophy of Spiritual Activity), if we consider this
world we must say: We really delude ourselves, we conjure up
before us a fog. Is it possible to believe that when the earth
passes through the death by heat, that there should still exist
anything else in the sense of natural science than the death
too of all ideals?
At
this point spiritual science, or Anthroposophy steps in, and
shows that the soul-spiritual is a reality, that it is working
upon the physical and that it has placed man in the human form,
into the evolution of the world. It shows that we should look
back upon animal-beings which are entirely different from the
present animals, that it is possible to adhere to the methods
of modern science, but that other results are obtained.
Anthroposophy thus inserts the moral element into the science
of religion, and Anthroposophy thus becomes moral-religious
knowledge.
Now
we no longer merely look towards the Kant-Laplace nebula, but
we look at the same time to an original spiritual element, out
of which the soul-spiritual world described in Anthroposophy
has just as much developed as the physical world has developed
out of a physical-earthly origin. And we also look towards the
end of the earth and since the laws of entropy are fully
justified, we can show that the earth will end through a kind
of death by heat. But we look towards the end just as from the
anthroposophical standpoint we can view the end of the single
human being: his corpse is handed over to the elements, the
human being himself passes over into a spiritual world. This is
how we envisage the end of the earth. The scientific results do
not disturb us, for we know that everything of a soul-spiritual
nature which men have developed will pass through the earth's
portal of death when the earth no longer exists; it will pass
over into a new world-development, even as the human being
passes over into a new world-development when he passes through
death.
By
surveying the development of the earth in this way, we perceive
in the middle of its development the event of Golgotha.
We see how this event of Golgotha is placed in the middle of
the earth's development, because formerly, there only existed
forces which would have led man to a kind of paralysis of his
forces. We really learn to recognise (I can only allude to this
at the end of my lecture) that in the same way in which through
the vegetable and animal fertilization a special element enters
the fertilised organism, so the Mystery of Golgotha brought
something into the evolution of the world from spiritual worlds
outside the earth, and this continues to live, it accompanies
the souls, until at the end of the earth, they pass on to new
metamorphoses of earthly life. I should have to describe whole
volumes were I to show the path leading in a strictly
conscientious scientific way from what I have described to you
to-day in connection with the evolution of humanity and of the
universe, to the mystery of Golgotha, to the appearance of the
Christ-Being within earthly existence.
But
through a spiritual-scientific deepening many passages in the
Gospel will appear in an entirely new light, in a different way
from what it has hitherto been possible for Western
consciousness. Let us consider only the following fact:
If we take our stand fully upon a natural-scientific
foundation, we must envisage the physical end of the earth. And
those who continue to stand upon this scientific foundation,
will also find that finally the starry world surrounding the
earth will fall away; they will look upon a future in which
this earth below will no longer exist and the stars above will
no longer exist. But spiritual science gives us the certainty
that just as an eternal being goes out of the physical and
etheric body every evening and returns into them every morning,
so an eternal being will continue to live on when its
individual body falls away. When the whole earth falls away
from all the human soul-spiritual beings, this eternal part
will continue to live and it will pass over to new planetary
phases of world evolution.
Now
Christ's words in the Gospels resound to us in a new and
wonderful way: Heaven and earth shall pass away, but My
words shall not pass away, and connected with these words
are those of St. Paul: Not I, but Christ in me. If a
Christian really grasps these words, if one who really
understands Christianity inwardly and who says, “Not I,
but Christ in me,” understands Christ's words,
“Heaven and earth shall pass away, but My words shall not
pass away,” that is, what lives within my everlasting
Being shall not pass away, — these words will shine forth
from the Gospel in a remarkable way, with a magic that calls
forth reverence, but if one is really honest they cannot be
directly understood without further effort.
If
we approach such words and others, with the aid of spiritual
science and in the anthroposophical sense, if we approach many
other sayings which come to us out of the spiritual darkness of
the world-development, of the development of the earth and of
humanity, a light will ray on to them. Indeed, it is as if
light were to fall upon such words as “Heaven and earth
shall pass away, but My words shall not pass away”
— light falls upon them, if we hear them resounding from
that region where the Mystery of Golgotha took place, that
event through which the whole development of the earth first
acquires its true meaning.
Thus we see that spiritual science in the sense of
Anthroposophy strives above all after a conscientious
observation of the strict methods of the physical world, but at
the same time it seeks to continue these strict scientific
methods into regions where our true eternal being shines out
towards us, regions where also the spiritual being of the
world-development rays out its light towards us, a light in
which the world-development itself with its spiritual forces
and Beings appears in its spiritual-divine character.
At
the conclusion of my lecture let me express the following fact:
Spiritual-scientific Anthroposophy can fully understand
that modern humanity, particularly conscientious,
scientifically-minded men, have grown accustomed to
consider as real and certain the results of causal
natural-scientific knowledge, the results of external
sense-observation, intellectual combinations of these sensory
observations, and experiments. And by acquiring this certainty,
they acquired a certain feeling in general towards that which
can be “certain.” Up to now no attempt has been
made to study super-sensible things in the same way in which
physical things are studied. This certainty could therefore not
be carried into super-sensible regions. To-day people still
believe that they must halt with a mere faith at the
thresh-hold of the super-sensible worlds, that feelings full of
reverence suffice, because otherwise they would lose the
mystery, and the super-sensible world would be rationalised. But
spiritual science does not seek to rationalise the mystery, to
dispel the reverent feeling which one has towards the mystery:
it leads man to these mysteries through sight. Anthroposophy
leaves the mystery its mystery-character, but it sets it into
the evolution of the world in the same way in which sensory
things exist in the sphere of world-evolution.
And
it must be true that men also need certainty for the spheres
transcending mere Nature. To the extent in which they will feel
that through spiritual science in the sense of
Anthroposophy they do not hear some vague amateurish and
indistinct talk about the spiritual worlds, but something which
is filled by the same spirit which comes to expression in
modern science, to this same extent humanity will also feel
that the certainty which it acquired, the certainty which it is
accustomed to have through the physical world, can also be led
over into the spiritual worlds. People will feel: If certainty
exists only in regard to the physical world, of what use is
this certainty, since the physical world passes away? Man needs
an eternal element, for he himself wants to be rooted in an
eternal element. He cannot admit that this certainty should
only be valid for the transient, perishable world. Certainty,
the certainty of knowledge, must also be gained in regard to
the imperishable world.
This is the aim pursued in greatest modesty (those who follow
the spiritual science of Anthroposophy know this) by
Anthroposophy. Its aim is that through his natural certainty
man should not lose his knowledge of the imperishable; through
his certainty in regard to perishable things he should not lose
the certainty in regard to imperishable things. Certainty
in regard to the imperishable, that is to say, certainty
in regard to the riddle of birth and death, the riddle of
immortality, the riddle of the spiritual world-evolutions, this
is what Anthroposophy seeks to bring into our civilisation.
Anthroposophy believes that this can be its contribution to
modern civilisation. For in the same measure in which people
courageously recognise that certainty must be gained also in
regard to imperishable things, and not only in regard to
perishable things, in the same measure they will grow
accustomed to look upon Anthroposophy no longer as
something fantastic and as an idle individual hobby, but as
something which must enter our whole spiritual culture, like
all the other branches of science, and thereby our civilisation
in general.
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