Lecture III
FROM
the previous lecture you will have been able to see that the very
form of man's body is a result of the co-operation of Luciferic and
Ahrimanic powers.
It is particularly important in the present age for man to recognize
this co-operation between Luciferic and Ahrimanic powers; for only by
such recognition can he gradually learn to understand the forces that
are at work behind the external phantasmagoria of existence. We know
very well that we have no occasion either to hate Ahriman or to
fear Lucifer, since their powers are inimical only when they are
working outside the realm where they belong. We spoke on this subject at some
length in Munich last year
[
see
Secrets of the Threshold,
by Rudolf Steiner.
];
and we have also given indications in
this direction in lectures here in Dornach.
When we saw last time how the physical spatial body of man owes its
form to the interaction of Luciferic and Ahrimanic powers, we were
dealing with the most external element of human life in which Lucifer
and Ahriman play a part. We come a little nearer to the inner nature
of man when we pass from the physical to the etheric body. The etheric
body may be regarded as the shaper of the physical body. At the
foundation of our physical organism — and embedded at the same time
in the whole etheric world — lies this etheric organism, in perpetual
inner movement. Luciferic and Ahrimanic powers are active here too, as
well as in the physical body. Man as etheric being — and it is
important to recognize the fact — is also placed into the counterplay
of these forces.
In order to give focus to our study of this question, let us now turn
our attention to the three fundamental activities of the human being
in so far as he is not physical human being. I refer to the activities
of Willing, Feeling and Thinking.
So long as we regard man in respect of his physical body alone, we do
not of course see this willing, feeling and thinking. Only in its
physiognomy or in the performance of certain gestures or the like,
does the physical body give us any indication of what is in man's
inner nature. The etheric body, however, which is in perpetual
movement, is continually giving expression to man's thinking, feeling
and willing.
A purely external science finds itself in difficulties when it comes
to consider these activities of the human soul. If you will study the
various philosophies you will find that one gives pre-eminence to the
will, another to thought; and there are again others which consider
feeling as the most important force in man. But as to how thinking,
feeling and willing unite in man to form a whole — to that problem
none of the philosophies of modern times can offer a solution. This
inability to form a correct idea of the relationship between thinking,
feeling and willing in the life of the soul is not unlike the
difficulty someone might experience who, in order to relate himself
rightly to the world around him, set out to form a clear conception of
man as he appears in the external world. We do not know — so say the
philosophers — whether the human soul in its essential nature has
more the character of willing or feeling or thinking. It is exactly as
if someone were to say: “I have no idea what a ‘man’ really
is. One person brings me a five-year-old child and says: There is a man for
you! Then another person comes along and points me out a much taller
being, who is what is called ‘middle-aged.’ Finally a third person
comes and shows me an entirely different being, with wrinkled
countenance and grey hair. And now I am really at a loss to know what
the being called ‘man’ is, for I have been shown three totally
different beings with this name.” Of course the true answer is that
they are all of them “man.” The one is very young, the second
somewhat older and the third quite old; they are very different in appearance.
But by taking all three ages together we acquire a knowledge of
“man.” It is the same with willing, feeling and thinking. The
difference there too is one of age. Willing is the same soul-activity as
thinking, but willing is still a child. When it grows a little older,
it becomes feeling, and when it is quite old it is thinking. The
matter is made difficult by the fact that the different ages live
together in our soul in these three activities.
We have explained on other occasions (and you may read of it in my book
The Threshold of the Spiritual World)
that when we leave the
physical world we come into a world where the law of change prevails
instead of the law of persistence or fixity. There all is in constant
change; what is old can suddenly grow young again and vice versa.
Hence in that world the three activities can and actually do appear at
one and the same time. Willing shows itself contemporaneously as young
willing, as older willing (i.e., feeling) and at the same time also as
quite old willing (i.e., thinking). The different ages are in that
world intermingled, everything is mobile. This is how it is with the
etheric body of man.
These changes cannot, however, simply come about of themselves. To
begin with, a uniform and single action of the soul does not come to
consciousness at all in ordinary life, we are quite incapable of
bringing such a thing into consciousness. If we think of the etheric
body in the likeness of a flowing stream — for it is in the etheric
body that we have to make our observations — then we are obliged to
say that this stream of soul-activity does not come to consciousness at
all in our life; but into this stream, into this perpetual movement of
the etheric body that flows in the current of time, Luciferic — and
again Ahrimanic — activity enters. Luciferic activity has the result
of making the will young. When the activity of our soul is streamed
through by Luciferic activity the result is will. When the Luciferic
influence predominates, when Lucifer makes his forces felt in the
soul, then will is active in us. Lucifer has a juvenating influence on
the whole stream of our soul-activity.
When, on the other hand, Ahriman brings his influence to bear on our
soul-activity, he hardens it, it becomes old, and thinking is the
result. Thinking, the having and holding of thoughts, is quite
impossible in ordinary life unless Ahriman exerts his influence within
our etheric body. We cannot get on in our life of soul, in so far as
this comes to expression in the etheric body, without Ahriman and
Lucifer. If Lucifer were to withdraw entirely from our etheric body,
we would have nothing to fire our will. If Ahriman were to withdraw
entirely from our etheric body, we would never be able to attain cool
thinking. In between stands a region where Lucifer and Ahriman are in
conflict. Here they interpenetrate; their activities play into one
another. It is the region of feeling. The etheric body has actually
this appearance; one can perceive in it Luciferic light and Ahrimanic
hardness. If you could look at it, you would not of course see it as
we might try to show it in a drawing; you would see it all in
movement. But there are places where the etheric body seems to be
quite untransparent, as if it had ice tracings in it. Forms and
figures show themselves which resemble the patterns made by ice on a
window pane. These are hardenings in the etheric body, and they are
the result in it of the life of thought. This freezing of the etheric
body at certain places is due to Ahriman; his forces have found entry
there by means of thought. There are also places which seem to be full
of light. Here the etheric body is transparent and gleams and glows
with light. It is Lucifer who sends his rays into the etheric body of
man and makes there centers of will. Then there are regions in
between, where the etheric body is in perpetual movement and activity.
Here you see at one moment hardness — and then suddenly the hardness
is caught by a ray of light and melts right away. Hardening and
dissolving, in perpetual alternation — such is the expression of the
activity of feeling in the etheric body.
Not only, therefore, is the form of the physical body of man called
into being by the interplay of Luciferic and Ahrimanic forces — now
creating a balance, now disturbing it again — but in the whole
etheric body too, Luciferic and Ahrimanic forces are continually
active. When the Ahrimanic forces gain the upper hand, we have an
expression of thinking; when the Luciferic forces are in ascendance,
we have an expression of willing; and when they are in mutual conflict
one with the other, we have an expression of feeling. Thus do
Luciferic and Ahrimanic forces play into one another in the etheric
body of man. We human beings are as it were ourselves the resultant of
these forces, we are placed into their midst.
Now we must not imagine that we are present in this interplay with our
full Ego. Our earthly Ego, the Ego that we have acquired in the course
of earth evolution, can only come to its full consciousness in the
physical body. Not until the time of Jupiter will the Ego be able to
unfold itself completely within the etheric body. In all that takes
place within the etheric body the real Ego of the human being has no
immediate part. Had the progress of world evolution gone on without
the intervention of Luciferic and Ahrimanic forces, then man would
have been an altogether different being. He would, for example, have
been able to have perceptions in his physical body, but he would not
have been able to have thoughts. The capacity to have thoughts he owes
to the fact that Ahriman can acquire influence over his etheric body.
And he has impulses of will because Luciferic forces can acquire
influence over his etheric body. These forces are therefore necessary
for man, they must needs be present.
We have said that with our earthly consciousness we cannot descend
fully into the etheric body. Only in the physical body can we
experience our full Ego-consciousness. With the etheric body we enter
a world with which we cannot fully identify ourselves. And it is so,
that when Ahriman enters into our etheric body, something more enters
in with him besides the thoughts he forms there. Nor is it only
impulses of will that enter our etheric body with Lucifer. And the
same must be said of the feelings, the realm where the two are in
conflict. In so far as Ahriman lives in our etheric body we dive down
with our etheric body into the sphere of the elementary Nature spirits
— the Earth, Water, Air and Fire spirits. We are not cognizant of the
fact because we are not able to descend fully into our etheric body
with our Ego. Nevertheless it is always so. Within this etheric body
not only does there live the power of the thoughts that we ourselves
think, but the influences also of the Nature spirits; these enter in
and make themselves felt. When a man has met with these Nature spirits
he is able afterwards to tell of some experience he has had which he
did not have in his ordinary Ego-consciousness. For it is when he, is
in an abnormal condition that man meets the Nature spirits, namely,
when the etheric body is to some extent loosened from the physical body.
How can such a thing happen? It can happen in the following way. The
etheric body of man is in communion with the whole surrounding etheric
world, therefore also with the whole sphere of the Nature spirits. Let
us imagine, to take a simple case, that a man is walking along a road.
When he is walking along a road in the daytime with his ordinary
consciousness, his etheric body is properly in his physical body and
he perceives with his Ego-consciousness what one is normally able to
perceive with the Ego-consciousness. But now suppose that he is
walking along a path by night. When we walk along a path by night, it
is generally dark, and this fact will of itself produce in many
persons a “creepy” feeling. And just because he gets into this
condition, then the peculiar sensations that he experiences enable
Lucifer to seize hold of him. His etheric body becomes loosened from
the physical body, and then this emancipated etheric body can enter
into relation with the surrounding etheric world.
Now let us suppose that the man comes into the vicinity of a
churchyard where etheric bodies are still present over the graves of
recently deceased persons. In the condition in which he is, with his
etheric body loosened, he is perhaps able to perceive something of the
thoughts which are still remaining in the etheric bodies of the dead
persons. Suppose someone has died only a short time ago leaving debts
behind him; he died with the thought that he has incurred debts. Then
it can be that this thought is still present in the etheric body of
the person after he has died. We do not of course ordinarily perceive
the thoughts in the etheric body of a dead human being. But for a man
who has come into the condition I have described it might well be
possible. He could enter into relation with the etheric body of the
other and perceive within it the thought: “I have incurred debts.”
And then because this experience strengthens the Luciferic power in him,
there arises in him the feeling: “I must pay the debt for him.” He
experiences in this way in his etheric body something he would never
experience in the physical body in normal life. Such an experience
does not happen to us in ordinary human life, and when it comes it
makes an extraordinary impression upon our consciousness. For it
arouses the knowledge: “I have had a strange and singular experience.
I have not had this experience within the body, nor can I ever have it
within the body.” We have the feeling quite distinctly that we are
somewhere else than in our body, and that is a strange, an
unaccustomed feeling. We experience at the same time an overpowering
desire to return once more into the body, we long for help to return
again into the body.
This feeling of longing to return attracts to us certain elementary
Nature spirits for whom this very feeling in us is food and
nourishment. They come, because they are attracted by the feeling, “I
want to be drawn into my physical body,” and they help us to find the
way back to it. If one is asleep in the ordinary way, one finds the
way back quite easily. But when one has undergone an experience such
as I have described, it is difficult to find the way back. You must
not of course imagine that we see the situation as we perceive things
in the physical body; no, we see it imaginatively, in pictures.
Someone comes to us — it is really a Nature spirit, appearing perhaps
in the guise of a shepherd, and gives us the advice: “Go to a certain
castle, I will take you there in my wagon,” — or some similar
words. The situation may even be still further developed. The body which we
have left and outside of which we have had the experience, may assume
the appearance of an enchanted castle from which we have to release
someone when we return into it. So do we “imaginate” in pictures
the longing for the physical body and the help that the Nature spirits
bring to us. And then we come back into the physical body — that is
to say, we wake up.
People who have had such experiences will tell us that they feel they
have in actual reality come into contact in this way with the thoughts
of a dead man. They say to themselves: “That feeling I had was not
something that was merely in myself, it was no mere dream that I
dreamed, it was a feeling that communicated to me something that was
taking place in the world outside. It is of course all expressed in
pictures, but it does truly correspond to an event.” I will now read
to you such a picture, where a man narrates what he has experienced.
As you will see, it was an experience somewhat similar to the one of
which I have spoken. He describes it as follows. “When I had taken
leave of the soldiers I met three men. They wanted to exhume a dead
person who owed them three marks. I was filled with compassion and at
once absolved the debt, in order that the dead man might rest in peace
and not be disturbed in his grave. I walked on a little further. A
strange man with pale countenance accosted me, invited me to mount a
leaden carriage, and persuaded me to go with him to a castle. In the
castle, he said, dwelt a princess, who had declared she would marry
only a man who came to her on a carriage of lead. He turned to the
driver and said: ‘Drive in the direction of the sunrise.’
Then came a shepherd who said: ‘I am the Count of Ravensburg.’
He ordered the driver to drive faster. We came to a door and we could hear
a tumult within. The door was opened. The princess asked the man whence he
came and how it had been possible for him to drive in company with that old
man — and behold, I saw that he who had led me thither was a spirit.
Then I entered in at the door and took possession of the castle.”
That is to say, he came back into his body. There you have the
description of just such an experience as I have been speaking of.
And what is such an event, when it happens to someone who then tells
others of it? It is a Märchen
(a fairy-tale
[
see
Goethe's Standard of the Soul,
by Rudolf Steiner.
]).
You must not imagine that an experience of this nature is the only way
in which man comes into relationship with the external etheric world
through his etheric body. There is another. And that is, in an
activity which is only half conscious, an activity in which the Ego
only half participates — namely, the act of Speech. Our speaking
is not so conscious as our thinking. It is not the case that speaking
is something which belongs to us and which we have in our power. In
speech live etheric Powers, and a good part of our speaking is
unconscious. The Ego does not reach fully down into speech. When we
speak we are in communication through our etheric body with the
surrounding etheric world. We learn to think as individuals, but not
to speak. We are taught to speak through the fact that our Karma
places us into a particular set of circumstances in life. We have
already seen how we may come into relation with the Nature spirits in
abnormal conditions when the etheric body is loosened, and now we find
that inasmuch as we speak and do not merely think silently, we come
into relation with the Folk Spirits. The Folk Spirits enter our
etheric body and live there — without our being aware of it. This
life of the Folk Spirit within the human being really belongs just as little
to his fully conscious Ego activity as does the “Märchen”
of which I have told you. So much, then, for the activity of Lucifer and
Ahriman in man's etheric body.
The Luciferic and Ahrimanic forces enter also into the astral body.
When we come to study the astral body of man, we must turn our
attention to what is the distinguishing mark of the astral human being
as he is on earth — namely, consciousness. In the physical body
form and force are the essentials, in the etheric body,
movement and life: in the astral body, consciousness.
Now in the body of man we have not
only one consciousness, but two; the ordinary waking state and the
state of sleep. But, strange to say, neither of these two states is
entirely natural to us. Natural would be for us an intermediate state
between the two, a state which, as a matter of fact, we never really
consciously have.
If we were perpetually awake we would scarcely be able to develop in a
proper, orderly manner through the various ages of life. Something is
always present in us which is less awake than we are in our
day-consciousness, and only by virtue of this are we in a position to
evolve and develop. Ask yourselves, how much do you expect to be able
to evolve through all that you experience and receive in ordinary
life? For the most part, we merely satisfy thereby our desire, our
curiosity, or our need of sensation. It is not often we act with
deliberate intent to place what we experience in waking day life in
the service of our development. The truth is, development takes place
through the fact that something is continually sleeping in us, even in
the daytime. I am not alluding to the habit of dropping off to sleep
in the daytime! But when man is wide awake by day, something still
remains fast asleep in him, and this it is which brings it about that
he does not remain for ever a child, but evolves further.
The ordinary waking state is what comes to consciousness through our
astral body. In this ordinary waking state we are, however, too
strongly awake, we are too intensely given up to the external world;
we are, in fact, quite lost in it. How does this come about?
The reason is that the waking consciousness lives under the influence
of Ahriman. Ahriman has great power over our waking consciousness. It
is quite different in the case of the sleep consciousness. In sleep
consciousness we are too little awake. We are too engrossed in
our own evolution; we are so completely and so powerfully within ourselves
that all consciousness is obliterated. In sleep consciousness, Lucifer
has the upper hand.
This is then how the matter stands with our astral body. When we are
awake, Ahriman has the upper hand over Lucifer, and when we are asleep
Lucifer has the upper hand over Ahriman. They are in equilibrium only
when we dream; there they pull with equal force, they strike a balance
between them. The ideas which are called forth by Ahriman in day
consciousness and which he causes to harden and crystallize, are
dissolved and made to disappear under the influence of Lucifer;
everything becomes pictures when Ahriman is no longer busy fixing them
in rigid ideas. They melt and become mobile in themselves. A state of
equilibrium is induced in a pair of scales by having both scale-pans
equally laden; we have, then, not a state of rest but a state of
equilibrium. It is the same with the life of man. We have not in man a
state of rest, but a state of equilibrium; and the two forces which
hold the scales and each of which at certain times brings extra weight
to bear, are Lucifer and Ahriman. In waking consciousness Ahriman's
side sinks down, in sleep consciousness Lucifer's. Only in the
intermediate state, where we dream, are the two scale-pans held in
poise, not at rest, but delicately poised in equilibrium.
We can go on to carry our study into still higher regions of human
life. Here too we shall find evidence of how Lucifer and Ahriman fill
the world with their inter-working. Two ideas play a great part in
human life. One is the idea of duty. We might also say, when we
consider it from a religious point of view, the idea of commandment or
behest. We speak sometimes, do we not, of the “behest of duty.”
The other idea, which can be placed over against it, is the idea of right
(or rights).
If you will reflect a little on the part played in human life by these
two ideas of duty and of right — I mean, the
“right” one has to do this or that — you will very soon
realize that they are polar opposites, and that men's inclinations are
turned now more in the direction of duty, and now again in the direction
of right. We live certainly in an age when people are more ready to speak
of right than duty. All possible spheres of life claim their rights. We
have Workers' Rights, Women's Rights, and so on and so on.
Duty is the opposite idea of right. Our age will be followed by an age
when duties will be more regarded than rights, and this will be
directly attributable to the influence of the anthroposophical
spiritual world-conception. In the future — certainly, in a rather
distant future — we shall have movements where less and less emphasis
will be laid on the demand for rights and people will inquire more and
more as to their duty. The question will rather be: What is our duty
as man, as woman, e.g., in this or that situation of life? The present
epoch that demands rights will be succeeded by an epoch that asks
after duties.
We said that right and duty play into life like two polar opposites.
Whenever a man turns his thought and attention to duty, he looks right
away from himself. Kant has given great and grand expression to this
fact. He pictures duty as a lofty goddess, to whom man looks up:
“Duty, thou great and exalted Name, thou has nought to do with
fondness nor with favor; all that thou requirest is to submit thyself
and serve.” Man beholds duty, so to say, raying down upon him from
regions of the spiritual world. In a religious sense, he feels duty as
an impulse laid upon him by the Beings of the higher Hierarchies. And
when man surrenders himself to duty, he goes right out of himself. It
is in this going-out-of-himself in the feeling of duty, that man can
begin to learn how to get beyond his ordinary self.
There is, however, a danger to man in all such going-out-of his
ordinary self, in all such endeavor after spiritualization. If man
were to give himself up entirely to this, he would lose the ground
from under his feet, he would lose his feeling of gravity. Therefore
he must endeavor, when he surrenders himself to duty, to find within
himself at the same time something that shall give him weight, so that
he may keep his sense of gravity. Schiller expressed it very
beautifully when he said that man has the best relation to duty when
he learns to love duty.
This is really saying a great deal. When a man speaks of learning to
love duty he no longer merely surrenders himself to duty; he rises out
of himself, taking with him the love with which otherwise he loves
himself. The love that lives in his body, in his egoism — this love
he takes out of himself, and loves with it duty. So long as it is
self-love, so long is it a Luciferic force. But when man takes this
self-love out of himself and loves duty in the way that otherwise he
loves only himself, he releases Lucifer. He takes Lucifer into the
realm of duty and gives him, so to say, a justified existence in the
impulse and feeling of duty.
If, on the other hand, a man cannot do this, if he cannot draw forth
the love out of himself and offer it to duty, then he will continue to
love only himself; and since he cannot love duty, he is obliged to
subject himself to her, he becomes a slave to duty, he becomes,
as we say, a man who “does his duty,” — hard and cold
and uninspired. He hardens in an Ahrimanic sense, notwithstanding that
he follows duty devotedly.
You see how duty stands, as it were, in a midway position. If we
surrender ourselves to her, she annuls our freedom, we become her
slaves, because Ahriman draws near on the one hand with his impulses.
But if we bring ourselves — if we bring all our power of self-love
— as an offering and offer it up to duty, bringing thus to duty the
Luciferic warmth of love, then the result is that, through the state
of balance induced in this way between Lucifer and Ahriman, we find a
right relation to duty.
Thus we are truly, in a certain connection, redeemers of Lucifer. When
we begin to be able to love our duty, then the moment has come when we
can help towards the redemption and release of the Luciferic powers;
we set free the Lucifer forces which are held in us as by a charm, and
lead them forth to fight with Ahriman. We release the imprisoned
Lucifer (imprisoned in self-love) when we learn to love our duty.
Schiller sets himself this very question in his
“Aesthetic Letters”:
How is it possible to rise above slavery to duty and attain to love of
duty? Of course he does not use the expressions “Lucifer” and
“Ahriman,” because he does not see the problem in its cosmic
aspect. Nevertheless these wonderful letters of Schiller on the
Aesthetic Education of Man
are directly translatable into Spiritual Science.
Right, on the other hand, immediately shows that it is united with
Lucifer. Man does not need to learn to love his right, he loves it
already! It is perfectly natural that he should do so. It is natural
for Lucifer to be connected with right in man's feeling — man
feels that this or that is his right. Everywhere that right
asserts itself, Lucifer is speaking there too. It is very often only
too evident how Lucifer makes his voice heard in the demand of some
right. Here it is a question of calling in something that can be set
over against right. We have to call in Ahriman to create a polarity
to Lucifer. And this we can do by cultivating the polar opposite of love.
Love is inner fire, its opposite is calmness — the quiet acceptance
of what happens in the world. As soon as we approach our right with
this quiet and calm interest we call in Ahriman. It is not easy to
recognize him here, for we set him free from his merely external
existence, we summon him into ourselves and warm him with the love
that is already united with right. Calm and peace of mind have the
coldness of Ahriman; in the quiet understanding of what is in the
world, we unite our warmth and our understanding love with the
coldness that is in the world outside. And then we release Ahriman,
when we meet what has come about with understanding, when we do not
merely demand our rights out of self-love but understand what has come
about in the world. This is the eternal battle that is waged between
Lucifer and Ahriman. On the one hand man learns in a conservative way
to understand the conditions that are in the world, he learns to
understand how they have come about from cosmic, karmic necessity.
That is one aspect of the matter. The other aspect is that he feels in
his heart the urge to make new conditions possible, continually to let
the old give place to the new. This is the revolutionary current in
human life. In the revolutionary stream lives Lucifer, in the
conservative stream Ahriman, and man in his life of right lives in the
midst between these two poles.
Thus we see how right and duty show each of them a state of
equilibrium between Lucifer and Ahriman. We only learn to understand
how the physical body, the etheric body and the astral body manifest
in life, or how duty and right come to expression in the life of duty
and the life of right, when we learn to recognize the interplay of
great spiritual Powers, above all of those spiritual Powers who bring
about the state of equilibrium.
For just as what is in the external world stands under the influence
of the spiritual forces that bring about balance, so does our moral
life too belong in a world of polar opposites. The whole morale of
human conduct, the whole ethical life of man with its poles of right
and duty, only become comprehensible when we take into account the
instreaming forces of Lucifer and Ahriman. And when we look at the
life of man in history, that takes its course in an alternation
between, on the one hand, revolutionary and warlike — that is to say,
Luciferic — movements, and on the other hand, conservative — that
is, Ahrimanic — movements, there too we find a condition of balance
between Lucifer and Ahriman. In no other way is the world to be
understood than by recognizing in it these opposite forces and
influences.
What we behold in the world outside is dualistic, it shows itself to
us in opposites. And in this connection Manichaeism, correctly
understood, has its complete justification. How Manichaeism is fully
justified even within a spiritual monism — of that we shall have more
to say in the future. The object I have had in view in these lectures
is to show you how the whole world is a result of the working of
balance.
Particularly evident is the result of the working of balance in the
life of art. With this as our starting-point we will go on in later
lectures to consider the arts and their evolution in the world, and
the part that has been taken by different spiritual Powers in the
evolution of the life of art among mankind.
|