The Path of Spiritual Knowledge
Pythic, Prophetic
and Spiritual-Scientific
Schmidt #3002
4th January, 1915
Bn/GA 275
To the impulses necessary for the
transformation of the present age belongs an ever wider and more
comprehensive understanding of the processes of the human soul in
those regions which open to Imaginative, Inspired and Intuitive
observation. For what first makes our world into a whole, raising
us above Maya and leading us into true reality, lies within those
spheres which open to this observation. It must be emphasized again
and again that what we are striving towards as a new spiritual
knowledge cannot consist in any warming-up of the results of an
earlier clairvoyance. It is true that many people aspire to such a
warming-up of an earlier clairvoyance, but the time for this
clairvoyance is past, and only atavistic echoes of it can appear in
certain individuals. However, the stages of human existence that we
must surmount do not disclose themselves through a revival of old
clairvoyance, and thus we will endeavor to consider once again that
which must lie at the basis of the new clairvoyance. We have often
spoken of the principle of this, and today we shall try to do this
again, but from another side.
Let us start once more from something
we all know, from the fact that, during daytime waking
consciousness, man lives with his ego and astral body in his
physical and etheric body. During the last few days I have
emphasized that this waking state of man, from waking until falling
asleep, is not a fully-awake condition, because there is still
something asleep in man. What we experience as our will is
really only partially awake. Our thoughts are awake from waking
until falling asleep, but the will is something which we
exercise quite dreamily. On this account much of the pondering on
the freedom of the will, and on freedom in general, is in vain,
because people have not noticed that what they know of the will in
waking daily life is really only a dream or a tale of will
impulses. When they will, and represent something to themselves
concerning it, they are of course awake. But how the will arises
and passes over into action, of this man can only dream in daily
waking life.
If you lift a piece of chalk and then
think about this action, then you have of course an idea of it in
your mind. But without clairvoyance, how the ego and astral body
flow into the hand — how the will spreads out there — you can
know nothing more of this in ordinary day consciousness than you
know of a dream while you are dreaming. Man only dreams of real
willing during ordinary waking life, and in most things we do not
even dream, we sleep. You can clearly conceive of how you put a
morsel of food on a fork; you can also conceive to a certain extent
of how you bite this morsel; but how you swallow the morsel, this
you do not even dream. For the most part you are quite unconscious
of it, just as you are unconscious of your thoughts when you are
asleep. A great part of the activity of will while man is awake is
similarly performed in a half-sleeping condition.
For instance, if we were not asleep as
regards our powers of desire and the feeling impulses connected
with them, we would develop an extraordinary activity. We would
follow the actions we perform right into the body; everything we
fulfilled as will impulse we would follow inwardly — into our
blood, and into all the blood vessels. This means that if you could
follow the lifting of a piece of chalk with reference to the will
impulse, you would be able to follow what takes place in your hand,
right into all the blood vessels. You would see from within the
activity of the blood and the feelings attached to it, for example,
the gravity of the particles of chalk, and things of that nature,
and would thereby become aware that you were following your
nerve-paths and the etheric fluidity found therein. You would
inwardly experience yourself, along with the activity of blood and
nerves. This would be an inner enjoyment of your own blood and
nerve activity. But during our life on earth this inner enjoyment
of our own blood and nerve activity must be withheld from us,
otherwise we would go through life in such a way that in everything
we did we would experience this inner self enjoyment. But man, as
he has become, may not have this enjoyment, and the secret of why
he may not we again find expressed in a part of the Bible towards
which we should always feel the greatest reverence.
After those things had taken place
which are expressed in the Paradise-Myth, man was permitted to eat
of the Tree of Knowledge but not of the Tree of
Life. Eating of the Tree of Life would mean this inner
gratification, and this must not happen to man. I cannot develop
this motif further here today because it would us lead too far, but
through your own meditation on the motif here touched upon you will
be able to make further discoveries for yourselves. However,
starting from this point, there is something else you can keep in
mind which can be of essential importance for you: we are unable to
eat of the Tree of Life, i.e., enjoy within our inner being our
own blood and nerve
activity — we cannot do this — yet something happens,
especially when observing the world through our senses and our
intellect, which is closely connected with such an inner enjoyment.
In the perception of any object in the outer world, and in
pondering over any object in the outer world, we follow
the senses, that
is, when we follow the eyes, nose, ears and taste nerves, we follow
the path of the blood vessels.
And when we think, we follow the
path of the nerves.
But we cannot perceive what else might have been perceived along
the path of the blood and the nerves. What we might have perceived
in the blood is reflected through the senses; it is as it were
thrown back, and from this, sense impressions arise. And that which
is conducted along the path of the nerves is also reflected and
brought to where the nerve paths reach their end, and is then
reflected as our thoughts.
Just suppose for once that a man
appeared who was in a position not merely to follow along the path
of his blood under the influence of the outer world, and then to
receive reflection of what his blood does; not merely to follow his
nerves, and receive reflected back what his nerves do, but
to experience inwardly what is denied us in regard to the blood and
sense nerves, to experience inwardly what leads to the eye, to
experience inwardly the blood as it tends towards the nerves and
the eyes. This he would enjoy inwardly, at least in regard to those
parts of the blood and nerves. It was in this way that those forms
arose that belong to the old clairvoyance. For what is reflected
back for us are but images, finely filtrated images, as it were, of
what is contained in the blood and nerves. Cosmic mysteries are
contained in our blood and nerves, but such cosmic mysteries as are
already exhausted, because we have developed beyond them. We only
learn to know ourselves when we learn to know the Imaginations
which are revealed to us when we experience ourselves within the
blood extending to the senses; and we only learn to know those
Inspirations destined to up-build us when we live within the nerves
extending to our senses.
A whole inner world is thus built up.
This inner world can consist of a sum of Imaginations, whereas in
perceiving the outer physical world in a way fitted to our earth
evolution we perceive reflections and reflected images of what
takes place in blood and nerves. We are unable, when deeply sunk in
the inner enjoyment of ourselves, to get beyond the senses, but
only reach the point where the blood streams enter the senses. Man
then experiences the Imaginative world so that he seems as it were
to swim in the blood as a fish in water. But this Imaginative world
is in truth no outer world, but a world which lives in our blood.
When a man lives in the nerves which extend to the senses, he
experiences an Inspired world, a world of sphere-tones, and a world
of inward pictures. This is also cosmic, but it is nothing new, it
is merely something which has completed its task in that it has
streamed into our nerve and blood system.
The clairvoyance which thus arises, and
which does not lead man beyond himself, but leads him rather deeper
into himself, is a self-enjoyment, truly a real self-enjoyment.
This is why in a certain sense it produces a higher bliss in people
when they become clairvoyant in this way, that is, when they
experience a new world. This way of becoming clairvoyant is on the
whole a falling back to an earlier stage of evolution. For what I
have just described, the life within ones own sense organs and
blood, did not exist at that time in the form it does now, although
the nervous system was already foreshadowed.
This kind of perception was the normal
kind of perception on the Old Moon, and in what existed at that
time in the tendencies toward the formation of nerves, a man was
inwardly aware of himself. Blood was not yet developed within him,
it was more something which came to him from outside like a warm
breath, as the sun's rays come to us. Therefore what now on earth
is a conscious perception of the inner blood system was on the Moon
the normal perception of the outer world.
If therefore the nerve is here the
boundary between the human inner and outer world, then what is now
nerve was already foreshadowed on the Moon. While following the
nerves a man was able to perceive what revealed itself to him as an
inner, Imaginative world, which was a part of himself. He perceived
how he himself is included in the cosmos. He also was aware
Imaginatively of what came to him as a breath from outside…
not from within. This perception has now fallen from him, what was
outside him on the old Moon has become inward, as the circulation
of the blood in earthly evolution. The old perception is therefore
a going-back to the Old Moon evolution.
It is well to know of such things,
because again and again things arise that are of this kind of
clairvoyance. What appears clairvoyantly in this way has no need of
being developed by those difficult paths of meditation and
concentration described in
How to Attain Knowledge of the Higher Worlds.
This clairvoyance, which arises through
learning to live inwardly in ones nerves and blood — to feel
satisfaction in oneself — is in general but a finer
development of the organic life, a refinement of what a man
experiences when he eats and drinks. When all is said such
clairvoyance is not the task set before man today, but is rather
something that arises as a hothouse plant through our bringing to a
more refined existence that self-enjoyment afforded us by eating,
drinking and similar things. Just as an inner after-effect arises
in an epicure when he has drunk Rhinewine or
Mosel, which of course rises only to an Imagination of taste but does
not work formatively, so in many people a refined inner enjoyment arises,
and this is their clairvoyance.
A great deal of clairvoyance is nothing
else but a refined, rarified, hothouse-like after-enjoyment of
life. Attention must frequently be drawn to these things in our
day. For I may tell you that the last time the secrets concerning
these things were still known, when people still spoke of them in
literature, was really the first half of the 19th century. Then
came the second half of the 19th century, with its so highly-rated
discoveries — highly-rated from their point of view —
when all understanding for these things and for the finer connections
of existence was lost. It may be added parenthetically that people
have not yet lost the enjoyment experienced under the influence of the
coarser, let us say more selfish enjoyment; they can still live with
the after-pleasure of eating and drinking, in fact these have even
been developed to a certain high degree in this materialistic age.
But in such things, man lives in a cyclic,
rhythmic movement. And the materialistic age, because it has
extinguished what was formerly a general feeling — the passing of
self-enjoyment into the senses, nerves, and blood-circulation — can
therefore give itself up ever more thoroughly to the impressions of
eating and drinking. We can easily observe the complete “volt
face” and transformation which has taken place in this
connection within a relatively short time. We have but to look at a
hotel menu card from the 70's, and compare it with one of
today, and we see what strides life has made in refined enjoyment,
in the self-gratification of our own bodies. But such things also
progress in cycles, for everything can only be reached to a certain
degree, and just as a pendulum can only rise to a certain point and
must then return, so mere physical enjoyment must recede when it
has reached a certain point. It will then come to pass that when
the keenest epicures, those who have the greatest longing for
enjoyment, stand before the most daintily prepared repast, they
will not yearn for it, but will say: “Ah! I cannot. All that
is finished for me.” This also will come in time, for it is a
necessity of evolution. Everything passes in cycles.
The other side of life is that which
man experiences during sleep. His life of thought is asleep, and
naturally, entirely different connections make their appearance. I
have already said that in the first half of the 19th century people
still had insight into these things. The clairvoyance which arises
through following ones own blood and nerve paths was still called,
in accord with certain memories, the Pythic
clairvoyance, because it was in fact related to what lay at
the root of the pythic clairvoyance of antiquity.
Other connections are present during
the life of sleep. Man with his ego and astral body is then outside
the physical and etheric body. Ideas from ordinary life are then
suppressed and weakened, but man lives continually from falling
asleep till waking in a state of longing for his physical body.
Sleeping consists essentially in this, that man, from the moment he
begins to sleep, develops longings for his physical body. These
longings increase until a climax is reached when he is forced back
more and more towards his physical body. The longing for ones
physical body becomes ever greater and greater in the state of
sleep. And because longing fills the ego and astral body like a
cloud, the life of thought is dimmed. Perceptions become dim
because desire for the physical body pervades the ego and astral
body like a cloud. Just as we cannot see the trees in a wood if
mist spreads over everything, neither can we ask variance of our
inward life of perception if the mist of our desire spreads over it.
But it may happen that this life of
desire becomes so strong during sleep that man not merely develops
this desire when outside his physical and etheric body, but he
becomes greedy to such an extent that he partially seizes on this
inner part of his physical and etheric body so that he reaches with
his desire to the furthest limits of his blood and nerve paths, he
sinks through as it were from outside into the extremities of the
senses of circulation, and into the ultimate ends of the nerve paths.
In ancient times, when the Gods still
helped man with such experiences, they were entirely regular and
good. The ancient Hebrew Prophets, for example, who did such great
things for their people, performed what they did and received their
prophetic gifts because they applied such infinite love to the blood
and nerve structure of their people, and even in the sleeping state
they did not entirely absent themselves from what lived physically
in this people. These ancient Hebrew prophets were seized by such
longing, filled with such love, that they remained united even in
sleep with the blood of the people to whom they belonged. It was
because of this that they received their prophetic gifts.
This is the physiological origin of
these gifts, and most beautiful and splendid results came from what
has just been told you. The prophets of different peoples were of
such significance to these peoples just because, while outside the
physical body, they still lived with this physical body in the way
described.
As explained, a certain consciousness
of this still existed up to the first half of the 19th century in
the life of mankind. As the first clairvoyance described here was
called Pythic clairvoyance, so the clairvoyance of which I have
just spoken, in which a man dives down into the blood and nerve
paths of the physical body with what otherwise lives outside the
physical and etheric body during sleep, was called
Prophetic clairvoyance.
If you pursue the literature of the
first half of the 19th Century — even if it cannot be described
with the exactitude and precision of modern spiritual science — you
still find descriptions of pythic and prophetic clairvoyance. The
distinction between them is not recognized today, because people
can no longer understand what they read of pythic and prophetic
clairvoyance.
Neither kind of clairvoyance is that
which is really capable of advancing mankind at the present time.
These are the kinds of clairvoyance that were valid for ancient
times. The modern clairvoyance, which must develop more and more
towards the future, can come neither by enjoying what penetrates
our body from within during waking conditions, nor by diving down
into this body from outside in a state of sleep, but from love —
not for ourselves, but for that portion of mankind to which our
body belongs. The earlier forms are stages of development which
have been outgrown.
Modern clairvoyance must develop as a
third kind of clairvoyance that does not involve desire for laying
hold of the physical body from without, nor as enjoyment of the
physical body from within.
That which lives within and is capable
of penetrating our body, enjoying it inwardly, and that which
can seize the body from without, must be detached from the body if
modern clairvoyance is to arise. Neither must enter into any
further connection with the body other than in the [normal]
incarnation between birth and death, so that blood and nerves can
be enjoyed neither from within nor from without; but each must
remain connected with the body in pure renunciation of such
self-enjoyment and such self-love. A connection with the body must
nevertheless remain, for otherwise, death would take place. Man
must remain united with the body which belongs to him during his
physical incarnation on earth, remain united with it through those
members which in a sense stand far, or at least relatively far,
from the activity of blood and nerve. A release from blood and
nerve activity must be attained.
When man no longer finds inward
enjoyment along the paths which lead to his senses, or penetrates
his own being from outside as far as to the senses, but when he can
enter into such union with himself both from within and from
without so as to really lay hold in a living way of that which in
physical existence is the symbol of death, and can unite himself
with that which gives the expectancy of physical death, the
condition we are considering is then reached. For considered
physiologically, we really die because we are capable of developing
a bony system — a skeleton. When we are capable of comprehending
our bones, which through a wonderful intuition people recognize as
the symbol of death — the bony skeleton — and which is so far
removed from the blood and nervous systems, we then attain to
something which is higher than pythic and prophetic clairvoyance,
we come to what we can call the Clairvoyance of Spiritual
Science.
In this spiritual scientific clairvoyance, we no longer grasp only a
part of human nature, we grasp the whole man. And fundamentally, it
is all one whether we grasp it from within or from without, because
this kind of clairvoyance can no longer be an “enjoyment,”
it is no longer a refined pleasure, but a going forth into the divinely
spiritual forces of the All. It
is a becoming-one with the cosmos, an experience no longer of man
and of what is secreted in man, but an experience that is a living
within the deeds of the Beings of the higher Hierarchies, a real
raising of oneself above self-enjoyment and self-love. Just as our
thoughts are members of our souls, so man must become, as it were,
a thought, a member of the higher Hierarchies. To allow oneself to
be thought, pictured, perceived by the higher hierarchies, this is
the principle of the clairvoyance of spiritual science. It is
being taken up, not taking up.
I hope that what I am now saying may
very definitely become the subject of your further meditations, for
precisely those things that I have explained today are capable of
stimulating very much in all of you, and this can serve toward an
ever deeper and more comprehensive penetration to the real impulses
of our spiritual scientific stream. How much earnestness is
necessary for this penetration into our spiritual scientific stream
has been spoken of often in these past days. Something might be
realized of what is — I do not say willed, but what
must be willed — within this
spiritual stream, if as many as possible would resolve to ponder in
a living way this threefold form of knowledge of higher worlds, so
that clearer and ever clearer ideas might arise concerning what we
all desire at bottom, and which is so easily confused with what is
far easier and more comfortable to acquire.
We have in fact worked from cycle to
cycle of lectures for no other purpose than to bring together, ever
more and more, ideas and concepts. It is necessary to study these
ideas and concepts, and in this way we prepare in ourselves those
impulses of soul which lead to real spiritual scientific
clairvoyance. Often because one has sipped a little here or there
of what is imparted within our spiritual scientific stream, and
thereby given some part of our human nature to pythic or prophetic
clairvoyance — because of this one may perhaps become proud and
haughty. When this is the case opinions arise as are often heard
when one or another says: I need not study every detail, I do not
require what is said in this cycle. What I hear I already know, and
so on. The principle of living in a few Imaginations which might be
called blood and nerve Imaginations, still exists in many. Many
think they possess something quite special if they have a few blood
and nerve Imaginations. But this is not what leads us to selfless
labor for human evolution; such a tarrying in blood and nerve
imaginations leads only to a heightening of self-enjoyment, to a
refined egoism. In this event, it may be that a more refined egoism
is cultivated through the pursuit of spiritual science than exists
even in the outside world.
Naturally, in referring to such things,
one never speaks of these matters to those who are present, and
never of the members of the anthroposophical society who are
present. Yet it may be mentioned that societies exist in which
people are to be found who, according to the principles of these
societies, bring themselves to co-operate, not with true
selflessness, but to undertake preferably that which kindles the
blood or nerve Imaginations. They then think they can be excused
from anything else. They attain to such an atavistic clairvoyance —
or perhaps they do not attain to it, but merely to the feelings
which are held to be an accompaniment of the phenomenon of such
Imaginative clairvoyance. These feelings are not a conquest of
egoism, but only a higher blossoming of it. One finds within such
societies — the anthroposophical society being excepted from
politeness — that although their duty is to develop love and
esteem, harmony and compassion, at the profoundest depths of their
souls one finds disharmony, quarrelsomeness, mutual calumniation,
etc, growing more and more from member to member. I venture to
express myself thus, because, as I have said, I always exclude the
members of the anthroposophical. society.
We then see how, that where an
especially strong light should arise, deep shadows are also cast.
It is not so much as if I wished to place blame on such things, or
believed they could be rooted out at once, between today and
tomorrow. That is impossible because they arise naturally. However,
each one can at least work on himself. And it is not good if the
consciousness is not at least directed to such matters.
One can thoroughly understand that just
because a certain stress must be worked out within such societies,
the shadow-sides also make themselves felt, and that what
flourishes outside in life often flourishes all the more vigorously
within such societies. Nevertheless a certain bitter feeling is
evoked when this appears in societies that should naturally
(otherwise the society would have no meaning) develop a certain
brotherliness and unity, and when, with this closer contact,
certain qualities that exist but fleetingly outside are developed
with all the greater intensity. Since the Anthroposophical Society
— being present — is excepted, it is all the more possible
for us to think over these things objectively, as non-participators, so
that we can learn to know them more intimately. And if we find such
things anywhere in the world, we do not regard them as anything
other than what they are. We believe — if anyone thinks he
understands anthroposophy with especial depth, yet reveals certain
qualities which not only show themselves in him as they do in the
world, but more intensely — that these things are not
incomprehensible, but realize that they are comprehensible, yet as
matters we must fight. We can frequently only fight them when we
have really understood them.
This is also something which shows us
how life is connected with the spiritual scientific view, and can
only reach its goal when it is understood as acceptance of life, as
an art of life; when it is carried into all life. How beautiful it
would be if each single relationship of life, let us now say of the
Anthroposophical Society, showed itself to be in such mutual
harmony as is attempted in the forms of our building, where the
separate forms pass over into each other, and all are in harmony
one with another; if it could be in life as it is in the building,
if the whole life of our society could be as we would have it
through the beautiful co-operation of those who are active on the
building; so that this labor which is already something harmonious
and noble, might be a copy of that which finds expression in the
building itself.
Thus the inner meaning of the
life-principle of our building, and the inner meaning of the
co-operation of the souls should ... no, would rather not say that.
Thus the inner meaning of the co-operation in the forms of our
building should find a path outwards into each separate
relationship of the life of our Society — should in its
inward construction stand before us as an ideal. I should like to
assure you that I did not make a slip when I omitted a sentence
just now. I left it out with full intention, and many a
time that also is said which one did not say.
Summing up, what I have put before you
during the last few days is a theme varying in the most diverse
manner, and what I would fain lay on your hearts especially is
this: that you not only place the thoughts and ideas of spiritual
science, the results of spiritual investigation, before your
intellect, before your reason, but that you receive that which
lives in spiritual science into your hearts. For the salvation of
the future progress of mankind really depends upon this. I say this
without presumption, and anyone who attempts to study but a little
the impulses of our evolution and the signs of our time can
recognize this for himself.
With this the series of lectures, what I have permitted myself to
give you at this turning point of the year is concluded.
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