Lecture 2 of three lectures given at Dornach 31 December
1915 – 2 January 1916 under
“MEDITATIONS ON THE NEW
YEAR”
ON
THE
DUTY
OF
CLEAR,
SOUND
THINKING.
1st January, 1916.
IT seemed well
yesterday, on the last night of the year, to enter deeply into many
of the secrets of existence connected with the great super-sensible
mysteries, such as the annual passing of one year into another
— and of the great cosmic New Year's Eve and New Year. It
seemed good to enter yesterday into those things which speak to the
depths of our souls, mysteries far removed from the outer world; so,
at the beginning of a New Year, it may perhaps be important to let a
few at least of our great and important duties be brought before our
souls.
These duties are connected above all with that which
is made known to us in the course of human evolution, through
Spiritual Science. They are associated with the knowledge of the road
humanity must travel as it advances towards its future. A man cannot
recognise the duties here mentioned, if he does not, in his own way,
keep an open view in many directions. We have again and again
endeavoured to do this in the course of our studies. To call up a few
only of such duties before our souls may perhaps be fitting at this
time, at the opening of a New Year.
It is true, that in view of this material age and all
that it brings in its train, we recognise that Spiritual Science must
form the basis from which we can work in a higher way for the
progress of mankind. It is true, that all that seems to us necessary
is so enormous, so incisive — there is (to put it mildly) so
much to do at the present time, that we cannot believe that with our
feeble powers we should ever be in a position to do much of what has
to be done. One thing at least is important, that we should connect
our interest with what has to be done, that we should acquire ever
more and more interest in those things of which humanity in our time
has need.
As a beginning, a group of people, however small, must
be interested in that of which humanity has need, and gain a clear
insight into those forces which in the evolution of time have a
downward tendency, those that are harmful forces. At the opening of a
New Year it is specially good to turn the interest of our circle
somewhat from our own personal concerns and to direct them to the
great objective interests of the whole of humanity.
To do this requires, as I have said, clear insight
into that which is moving along the downward path in the human
evolution of to-day. We need only carry those very thoughts which
have been ours during the last few days over into the realm of the
actual, there to find many of the things of which the men of the
present day have need.
We have seen how at a certain moment of evolution, a
far-reaching wisdom was actually lost to man; how this wisdom of the
Gnostics perished; and how it is now necessary to work, so that an
understanding of spiritual things may again be established, though of
course in accordance with the progress of the time.
During the past autumn we have considered the deeper
causes of the flood tide of materialism which took place in the
nineteenth century, and I have again and again emphasised that the
view of Spiritual Science in regard to this flood of materialism, in
no way tends to a lack of appreciation, or want of understanding of
the great progress of external, material science. This has always
been recognised by us. But what we must keep specially before us is
this, that the great progress made in the materialistic realms of
natural science during the nineteenth century and on into the present
time, has been accomplished with a falling off in the power of
thought — of clear, precise thinking.
This decline in the power of thinking has taken place
more especially in the domain of science. There — however much
people may disbelieve it — the faith in authority has never
been so strong as in our day, so that want of confidence as
regards the certainty of thinking has spread widely through all the
realms of popular thought. We live in an age of the most careless
thinking and at the same time it is an age of the blindest trust in
authority. People live to-day entirely under the impression that they
must believe in, they must recognise authority, that they must have
the sanction of outside powers. They desire a warrant for this or
that. For the most part men do not consider to-day that it is an
individual concern, that they will eventually have to take up the
matter for themselves! So, they go to whom ‘right and law is
bequeathed like a hereditary sickness’ and accept conclusions
without weighing how those conclusions were reached; for they
consider it right to accept authority blindly.
A man is ill — he takes not the least trouble to
learn the simplest thing about the illness. Why should he? We have
recognised and certified physicians whose business it is to look
after our bodies; we need not trouble in the least about
them!
If information on any subject be desired, people go to
those who ought to know, to the theologian, to the philosopher, to
this one or to that.
Any one following up this line of thought for himself,
will find that on numberless points he himself is sunk in blindest
belief in authority. If he cannot find them — do not take it
ill of me, if I say — that the less he finds of this belief in
authority in himself, the larger the dose he must have
swallowed!
But I would now like to show how a narrow, cramped and
impoverishing mode of thought has slipped even into the finest domain
of spiritual life, all the world over — without distinction of
nation, race or colour; that a certain element of cramped thinking is
to be found where the life of spiritual culture exists in its finest
form. Let us take a philosophical idea and watch how it has
developed. Who is not convinced to-day, on the grounds of a belief in
an authority which has come down to him through very many channels
— who is not convinced that one cannot by any means arrive at
the ‘thing in itself,’ but can only catch the outward
phenomena, the impression on the senses, the impression made on the
soul by the thing. Man can but arrive at the ‘results’ of
things, but not at the ‘thing in itself.’ This is indeed
the fundamental type of the thought of the nineteenth century. I have
described the whole wretched business in that chapter in my book
Riddles of Philosophy,
which is called ‘The World of
Illusion.’ Anyone who studies this chapter will find a
résumé of the whole matter. Man can only perceive
‘effects,’ he cannot attain to ‘the thing in
itself;’ this remains unknown.
The most capable thinkers of the nineteenth century,
if we can speak of them as capable in this connection, are infected
by this necessary ignorance regarding ‘the thing in
itself.’
If we now turn to the trend of thought which is at the
base of what I have just described, it presents itself thus: It is
wrongly insisted on, that the eye can only reflect that which it can
evoke within itself by means of its nervous or other activities. When
an external impression comes, it responds to it in its own specific
way. One only gets as far as the impression — not to that which
causes the impression on the eye. Through his ear a man only gets as
far as the impression made on the ear — not to the thing that
makes the impression, and so on.
It is, therefore, only the impressions of the outer
world that act on the senses of the soul. That which was at first
established as regards a certain realm, that of colour, tone and the
like, has now for a long time been extended to the whole thinking
world — that can receive only the impression or effects of what
is in the world. Is this incorrect? Certainly it is not incorrect,
but the point — as has often been said — is not in the
least whether a matter is correct or not, quite other things come
into consideration. Is it correct that only pictures, only
impressions of things, are called forth by our senses? Certainly it
is correct, that cannot be doubted; but something very different is
connected with this. This I will explain by means of a
comparison.
If someone stands before a mirror and another person
also stands there beside him, it cannot be denied that what is seen
in the mirror is the image of the one man and also of the other. What
is seen in the mirror is without doubt images — merely images.
From this point of view all our sense perceptions are in fact mere
images: for the object must first make an impression on us and our
impression — the reaction as one might say — evokes
consciousness. We can quite correctly compare this with the images
which we see in the mirror; for the impressions are also
images.
Thus in the Lange and Kant train of thought we have a
quite correct assertion — that man is concerned with images and
that therefore, he cannot come into touch with anything real, with
any actual ‘thing in itself.’ Why is this? It is solely
because man cannot think things out further than one
assumption, he remains at one correct assumption. The thought
is not incorrect, but as such it is frozen in — it can go no
further — it is really frozen in. Just consider: The images
that we see in the mirror are true images, but suppose the other
person who stands beside me and looks into the mirror too, gives me a
box on the ear, would I then say (as these are but images I see in
the mirror) that one reflection has given the other reflection a box
on the ear? The action points to something real behind the images!
And so it is. When our thoughts are alive and not frozen, when they
are connected with realities, we know that the Lange-Kantian
hypothesis is correct, that we have everywhere to do with
images; but when the images come in touch with living
conditions, these living conditions reveal what first leads us
to the thing in itself. It is not so much the case here that certain
gentlemen who have thus led thoughts astray, have started from a
wrong hypothesis; the whole matter hangs on the fact that we have to
reckon with thoughts that were frozen, with thoughts which when at
last they are reached, make people say: true, true, true — and
get no further. This unworthy thinking of the nineteenth century is
wanting in flexibility, in vitality. It is frozen in, truly
ice-bound.
Let us take another example. During the past year I
have often communicated certain things to you from a celebrated
thinker — Mauthner, the great critic of language. Kant occupies
himself with Critique of Idea. Mauthner went further, (things
that follow must always go further) — he wrote a Critique of
Speech. You will remember that during the autumn I gave you
examples from the Critique of Speech. Such a man has many
followers at the present day. Before he took up philosophy he was a
journalist. There is an old saw which says: ‘One crow does not
peck out the eyes of another.’ Not only do they not peck out
each other's eyes, but the others even give eyes to the crows that
are blind, especially when these are journalists! And thus this
critic of language — but as I said I wish in no way to raise
any question as regards the honesty of such a thinker, even as
regards his solidity and depth, for I must always insist again and
again that it is incorrect to say that criticism of natural or of any
other science is practised here, its characteristics are only
defined. So I say expressly, that Mauthner is an honourable man,
‘so are they all honourable men’ — but just let us
consider one process of thought which is along the lines of this
Critique of Language. For example it is stated there: Human
knowledge is limited. Limited — why limited according to
Mauthner? Well, because all that man experiences of the world enters
his soul by way of his senses. Certainly there is nothing very
profound in this thought, but yet it is an undeniable fact.
Everything comes to us from the outer world through the senses. But
now the thought came to Mauthner that these senses are merely
accidental-senses, which means that supposing that we had not our
eyes and ears and other senses, we might have other senses instead,
then the world around us would appear quite different. An exceedingly
popular thought, especially among many philosophers of our day! So it
is actually by chance that we have these particular senses, and
therewith our conception of the world about us. Had we different
senses we should have a different world! Accidental senses!
One of the followers of Fritz Mauthner has said
roughly as follows: ‘The world is infinite; but how can man know
anything of this infinite world? He can but gain impressions through
his accidental senses. Through the door of these chance-senses many
things enter our souls and group themselves, while without, the
infinite world goes on, and man can learn nothing of the laws in
accordance with which it progresses. How can man believe, that what
he experiences through these chance-senses of his, can have any
connection with the great cosmic mysteries beyond?’ So speaks a
follower of Mauthner, who did not, however, look upon himself as an
adherent of his, but as a clever man of his day. Yes, so he said. But
you can transpose this line of thought into another. I will
absolutely retain the form and character of the thought, but
translate it into another. I will now state this other
thought.
One cannot form any idea of what such a genius as
Goethe really has given to mankind, for he has no other means of
expressing what he had to say to men, than by the use of twenty-two
or twenty-three chance letters of our alphabet which must be grouped
in accordance with their own laws and set down on paper. This goes
still further. How is it possible to learn anything of the genius of
Goethe, through the chance grouping of letters on paper?
Clever such a man might be who believes that because
Goethe had to express his whole genius by means of twenty-three
letters, A.B.C. and so on, — we could learn nothing of his
genius or of his ideas, — clever he might be who used such an
excuse and still maintained that he had before him nothing but the
twenty-three chance letters grouped in various ways! ‘Away with
your explanations,’ he would say, ‘they are but fancy, I
see nothing before me but letters!’ Clever, in the same way, is
he who says: The world beyond is infinite, we cannot learn anything
of it, for we know only what comes to us through our chance-senses.
The fact is that such inaccurate thinking does not
only exist in the domain of which I am speaking, where it comes very
crudely into evidence, it is present everywhere. It is active in the
profoundly unhappy events of the present day, for these would not be
what they are if the thinking of all humanity was not permeated with
what has been pointed out in a somewhat crude form.
People will never be able to take the right interest
in such things, I mean the things concerned with the true efforts of
man for his real progress — true effort in the, sense of
Spiritual Science — if they have not the will really to enter
into such matters, if they have not the desire to recognise the
things of which man stands in need. Objections are ever being raised
from this side and from that, to the teaching of Spiritual Science,
that it is only accessible to those who have clairvoyant perception
of the spiritual worlds. People will not believe that this is not
true, that what is required is, that by thought they should really be
able to attain understanding of that which the seer is able to bring
forth out of the spiritual world. It is not to be wondered at that
people cannot to-day grasp with their thought what the seer derives
from the spiritual world, when thought is built up in this way I have
described. This kind of thought is ‘trumps’ and rules
life in every department.
It is not because man is unable to understand with his
thoughts all that Spiritual Science teaches, that it fails to be
understood, but because he permits himself to be infected with the
slip-shod thinking of the present day. Spiritual Science should
stimulate us to intensive, courageous thinking; that is what matters:
and it is well able to do this.
Of course, as long as we take Spiritual Science in
such a way that we only talk about the things with which it is
concerned, we shall not advance very much in the establishing of the
thought for the future of humanity, which is exactly the mission of
our movement to establish. When, however, we take the trouble really
to understand — really to grasp the things, the matter taught,
— we shall certainly make progress.
Even the conceptions of Spiritual Science are affected
by the careless thinking of the present day. I have explained to you
how this careless thinking acts; I quoted: ‘results only do we
have in the external world, so we cannot attain to the thing in
itself.’ This thought is as it were immediately frozen in;
people do not wish to go any further, the thought is frozen in, they
no longer see that the living interchanging activity of the reflected
images leads further than to the mere image-character. This method is
then applied to the conceptions of Spiritual Science. Because
people are fully infected by such kind of thoughts, they say: Yes,
what Spiritual Science tells on page a,b,c, are facts of Spiritual
Science; these facts we cannot have before us, if we have not
acquired the seer's gift. Therefore, they do not go on to think
whether in their present attitude to what Spiritual Science teaches
they are not making the same mistake that the whole world makes
to-day. The worst of it is, that this fundamental failing of
contemporary thought is so little recognised. It is dreadful how
little it is recognised. It enters into our everyday thinking, and
makes itself felt there, just as in the more advanced thinking of the
philosophers and scientists. It is but seldom that people recognise
what a really tremendous duty springs from an insight into this fact,
how important it is to be interested in such things, how lacking in
responsibility to permit our interest in them to be
blunted.
The fact is now apparent, that in the course of the
last century purely external sense-observation obtained and gave its
tone to science; people laid the greatest value on the results of
observation in the laboratory, or in the clinic, in the Zoological
Gardens and the like, (the value of which observation must be
recognised, as I have often remarked) but they desired to hold to
these only and go no further. It is true that extraordinary progress
has been made by these methods of natural science, quite
extraordinary progress; but it is just through this progress that
thought has become quite unreliable. Therefore it becomes a
duty not to allow those persons to attain power in the world, who
exercise this power from the standpoint of a purely materialistic
experimental knowledge, — and it is power that such
people want. At the present day we have reached the point, when all
that is non-materialistic learning is to be driven out of the world
by the brutal language of force which is used in materialistic
erudition. It has already become a question of force. Among those who
appeal most eagerly to the external powers to gain their external
privileges, we have to recognise those who stand on the foundation of
material science alone. Therefore, it is our duty to understand that
force rules in the world. It is not enough that we should be
interested only in what concerns ourselves personally, we must
develop interest in the great concerns of the whole of humanity. It
is true that as individuals and even as a small society we cannot do
much to-day, but from small germs like these a beginning must be
made. What is the use of people saying to-day that they have no faith
in doctors; that they have no confidence in the system, and seek by
every other means, something in which they can feel confidence? Nothing
is affected by this, all that is but personal effort for their own
advantage. We should be interested in establishing, alongside the
material medicine of to-day, something in which we can have
confidence. Otherwise things will get worse from day to day. This
does not only mean that those who have no faith in the medical
science of the day should seek out someone whom they can trust; for
this would put the latter in a false position, unless he interests
himself in seeing that he too should be suitably qualified to
interest himself in the progress of the general condition, of
humanity. It is true that to-day and to-morrow we cannot perhaps be
more than interested in the matter, but we must bear in our souls
such interest for the affairs of humanity if we wish to
understand in their true meaning the teaching of Spiritual
Science. We still often think that we understand the great interests
of humanity, because we frequently interpret our personal interests
as if they were the greatest interests of mankind.
We must search deeply, within the profoundest depths
of our soul, if we wish to discover in ourselves how dependent we are
on the blind faith in authority of the present day — how
profoundly we are dependent on it. It is our indolence, our love of
ease that withholds us from being inwardly kindled, and set aflame by
the great needs of humanity.
The best New Year greeting that we can inscribe in our
souls is that we may be enkindled and inspired by the great interests
of the progress of mankind — of the true freedom of humanity.
So long as we allow ourselves to believe that he who blows his
trumpet before the world must also be able to think correctly,
— so long as we hold beliefs derived from the carelessly
organised thinking of the present day, — we have not developed
within ourselves true interests in the great universal cause of
mankind.
What I have just said is in no way directed against
any great man in particular; I know that when such things are said
especially in a public lecture, there are many who say: Natural
Science and the authorities of the day were attacked by Spiritual
Science; and the like. I specially quote instances from those of whom
I can say, on the other hand, that they are great authorities of the
present day, that they are great men, — to show that they
support things which Spiritual Science has to extirpate, root and
branch. Even without being a great man, one can recognise the
careless thinking of great men, which has been so greatly enhanced
just because of the brilliant advance in the experimental science of
the day. One example, one among many, — I choose a book written
by one of the best known men of the day and which is translated into
German. No one can say that greatness is unrecognised by me. I
repeat, I choose a book by a celebrated man of the day, in the domain
of experimental Natural Science. I look up a passage in the
introduction to the second volume, which deals specially with the
question of the cosmology of the day; in which the great man goes
into the history of the development of cosmo-conception. It runs
somewhat as follows: In the times of the ancient Egyptians, the
Greeks and the Romans, men tried to form a picture of the world in
such and such a way; then in the last four hundred years there arose
the Natural Science of to-day, which has at last drawn the great
prize, which has swept all previous ideas aside and has attained to
actual truth, which now has but to be further built up.
I have often laid stress on the fact that it is not so
much the individual assertions that people make, it is the Ahrimanic
or Luciferic characteristics which at once lay hold on people, so
that they become Ahrimanic or Luciferic. Thus at the close of this
introduction we read the following, which is in the highest degree
noteworthy. Take a special note of what is presented to us by one who
is without doubt a great and celebrated man of the day. After
remarking how grand the knowledge of Natural Science is to-day, he
says: ‘The time of sad decline endured until the awakening of
humanity at the beginning of the new age. The new age placed the art
of printing at the service of learning, and contempt of experimental
work disappeared from the minds of educated people. Opposition to old
opinions as expressed in the writings of various investigators,
advanced at first but slowly. These hindering conditions have
since disappeared, and immediately the number of workers and the
means of furthering Natural Science increased in rapid succession.
Hence the extraordinary progress of recent years.’
There then follows the last sentence of this
introduction — ‘We sometimes hear it said that we live in
the best of all possible worlds: there might be some objection raised
to this, but we scientists at least can assert with all certainty,
that we live in the best of times. And we can look forward with
confidence to a still better future. ...’ Now follows what
really is astounding! This author attaches to himself, and to his
age, that which great men have discovered and thought, regarding
nature and the world. Therefore he says: In the firm hope that the
future may be better, we can say with Goethe, — the great
authority on man and nature:
‘Es
ist ein gross Ergotzen
Sich in den Geist der Zeiten zu versetzen,
Zu schauen, wie vor uns ein weiser Mann gedacht,
Und wie wir's dann zuletzt so herrlich weit gebracht.’
[‘It
is a great delight, to enter into the spirit of the age, to see how
wise men thought before our time, and how splendidly we have advanced
things.’]
In all seriousness a great man closes his remarks with
these words, the pronouncement of Goethe, the great authority on
nature and on man; words to which Faust replies, — for it is
Wagner who says:
‘By
your leave it is a great delight,
To enter into the spirit of the age, etc. —’
But Faust answers:
(and perhaps we may accept what Faust says as the thought of Goethe,
the great authority on nature and on man.)
‘O yes! As far as to the stars!’
This is exactly
fitted for a man who can reach as far as to the stars, thus:
‘O
yes! As far as to the stars!
The ages that are past, my Friend,
Are for us a book with seven seals;
What we call the spirit of the age,
Is in fact the spirit of ourselves
In which the times are mirrored.
This is in truth, often but a wail!
Men fly from the first glance of it.
A rubbish heap, a lumber room,
At most some act or state of law
With excellent pragmatic maxims
Such as are put in puppets' mouths!’
And so on. ...
Thus in 1907 wrote
one of the greatest men of the day who had surely got ‘as far
as to the stars,’ and who looking back on all those who had
worked before him had also got so far as to make use of the saying
‘of Goethe, the great authority on man and
nature.’
It
is a great delight
To enter into the spirit of the age.
You smile! One
could wish that this smile always might be directed against those who
are capable at the present day of making such carelessness valid; for
the example I have given shows that it is those who are firmly
established on the ground of the scientific outlook of the day, and
who are associated with progress in this domain, who are able to put
forth such negligent thinking. It just proves that what is called
Natural Science to-day by no means excludes the most superficial
thinking. A man may be a thoroughly careless thinker to-day, and yet
be held to be a great man in the realm of natural science. This has
to be recognised, and in this sense we must approach it. It is a sign
of our time. If this were to continue; if any one is labeled as a
great man, and given out as a great authority and if people put
forward what he says in this or that domain without proof, as of
something of great worth — then we should never surmount the
great misery of our time. I am fully convinced that countless people
pass over the sentence I read out to you to-day, without a smile,
although it shows forth in the most eminent degree, where the
greatest faults of our day lie, which are bringing about the decline
of the evolution of humanity.
We must see clearly where to make a beginning with
those things necessary for man; and also see that in spite of the
immense advance in external natural science, the greatest scientists
of the nineteenth century, even down to our own day, have shown
themselves the worst dilettantists in regard to all questions of
world-outlook. The great fault of our day is, that this is not
recognised — that people do not recognise that the greatest
investigators in natural science in the nineteenth century proved
themselves the worst of dilettantists in the question of
world-outlook, when they entirely left out that which as spirit rules
in the realm of natural science. People blindly followed after these
great persons, not only when they gave out the results of
investigations in the laboratory, or of clinical research, but also
when they asserted things regarding the secrets of the
universe.
So, parallel with the popularising of science which is
useful and beneficial in the highest degree, we have at the same time
a deterioration as regards all questions of wide import and a
heedlessness of thought which is infectious and very harmful, because
it is founded on the very worst kind of dilettantism of great
men.
Here are to be found the tasks with which our
interests must be closely associated, even if we ourselves are not
able to produce anything. We must at least look things in the face,
we must see clearly that it will above all lead to far, far more
unhappy times than we are at present passing through, if mankind does
not realise what has been here pointed out; — if, in place of
careless, inexact thinking, a clear and genuine method of thought be
not established again among men. Everything can be traced back to
this careless thinking. All those external, often very unhappy
phenomena which we encounter would not exist if this inexact,
negligent thought were not there.
It seems to me specially necessary to speak of these
matters at the beginning of a New Year, for they are connected with
the character and attitude of our whole task. For when we accustom
ourselves to consider without prejudice the method and nature of
modern thought, and see how powerful it is in all the varied
conditions of life, we can then form some picture of what we have to
do and of what mankind stands in need. We must in the first place
overcome all tendency to slackness, all love of sloth and laziness,
we must see clearly that a spiritual-scientific movement has duties
other than that of merely listening to lectures or reading
books.
I must continually remind you to make yourselves
acquainted with the necessary ideas. It is clear to all that as a few
individuals, — as a small society — we cannot do much.
But our own thought must move in the right direction; we must know
what is in question, we must not ourselves be exposed to the danger
(to put it trivially) of succumbing to the different conceptions of
the world, of those who are the great men of the day in the external
sciences. Great men, but dilettante thinkers as regards questions of
universal import, found numerous associations of monistic or other
nature without the opposition that would arise if at least it were
realised that, when such societies are founded, it is as if one said:
‘I am letting this man make a coat, because he is a
celebrated cobbler!’
This is foolishness, is it not? But it is just as
foolish when a great chemist or a great psychologist is accepted as
an authority on a conception of the world. We cannot blame them if
they claim it for themselves, for naturally they cannot know how
inadequate they are; but that they are so accepted is connected with
the great evils of the present day. To me it seems as if a thought
for New Year's Eve must ever be associated with our feelings; whereas
it seems to me that that which faces us as the more immediate duty of
the day, must be directly associated with our reflections on New
Year's Day; I thought therefore, that the tone of what has been
said to-day might be fitly associated with what was said
yesterday.
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