Lecture 5
The Members of Man's Being and the
Periods of His Life
Dornach, December 15, 1917
If we wish to
understand what lies at the foundation of the two impulses
that penetrate so deeply into human life — that of the
so-called free will and of the so-called necessity —
then we must add still other thoughts to the various ideas
already gained as a foundation. This I will do today, in
order that tomorrow we may be in a position to draw the
conclusion, or inference, in regard to the concept of free
will and necessity in the social, ethical-moral, and
historical processes of human life. In discussing such things
it becomes more and more evident that people —
especially modern people — strive to embrace the
highest, most important and significant things with the most
primitive kinds of thoughts. It is taken for granted (I have
often mentioned this) that certain things must be known in
order to understand a clock; someone who has not the
slightest idea of how the wheels of a clock work together,
etc., will hardly attempt to explain, on the spur of the
moment, the details of a clock's mechanism. Yet we wish to be
competent judges of free will and necessity in all situations
of life without having learned anything fundamental about
these things. We prefer to remain ignorant concerning the
most important and most essential things, which can only be
understood if we consider their whole relationship to human
nature, and we wish to know and judge everything imaginable
of our own accord. This is particularly the desire of our
times. When it is shown that the human being is a complicated
being, organized in manifold ways, a being that penetrates
deeply, on the one hand, into all that is connected with the
physical plane, and on the other, into all that is connected
with the spiritual world, then people often object that such
things are dry and intellectual, and that the most important
and essential things must be grasped in quite another
way.
The world will
have to learn (perhaps just the present catastrophic events
may teach us something) how much lies hidden in man and in
his relationship with the course of the world's evolution.
For years we have emphasized that we can differentiate
roughly in man what we may call his physical nature, or his
physical body; his etheric body, or the body of formatives
forces, as I have called it; his astral body, which is
already psychic; and the actual ego.
We have
emphasized recently from the most varied points of view that
— in reality — man, as he lives between waking
and sleeping, in his usual waking day-consciousness, has some
knowledge only of the impressions given to him by his senses,
and of his thoughts; but he dreams away the real contents of
his life of feeling, and sleeps away the real contents of his
life of the will. Dream and sleep stretch into the world of
waking life; during our usual waking consciousness, our
feeling life is hardly more than a dream, and the real
contents of our will reach our consciousness just as little
as a dreamless sleep. Through our feelings, through the
contents of our will, we dive down into the world (we have
pointed this out specially during these considerations) in
which we live together with the dead, in the midst of the
Beings of the higher Hierarchies, the Angeloi, the
Archangeloi, Archai, etc. As soon as we live in a feeling
— and we live constantly in feelings — all that
lives in the kingdom of the dead lives with us in the sphere,
or in the realm of feeling.
Now something
else must be added to this. In the life of ordinary waking
consciousness we speak of our ego. But in reality we can only
speak of this ego in a very unreal sense as far as our usual
waking consciousness is concerned. For what is the real
nature and being of this ego? The usual waking consciousness
cannot gain knowledge of this. When the clairvoyant dives
down consciously into the true being of the ego, he will find
that the true ego of man is of a will-like nature. What man
possesses in his everyday consciousness is only an idea of
the ego. This is why it is so easy for the scientific
psychologists to do away entirely with this ego although, on
the other hand, this is really nonsense. These scientists and
psychologists say that the ego develops gradually and that
the human being acquires this ego in the course of his
individual development. In this way he does not acquire the
ego itself, but only the idea of the ego. It is easy to
eliminate the ego, because for the everyday consciousness it
is merely a thought, a reflection of the true, genuine ego.
The real ego lives in the world in which the true reality of
our will also lives. And what we call our astral body, what
we designate as the actual soul life, lives in the same
sphere as our life of feelings. If you bear in mind the
things that we have thus considered, you will see that we
dive down with our ego and our astral body into the same
region that we share with the dead. When we penetrate
clairvoyantly into our true ego, we are also among the egos
of the dead, as well as among the egos of the so-called
living.
We must realize
such things quite clearly, in order to grasp to what an
extent man lives, with his everyday consciousness, in the
so-called world of appearance, or in Maya, as it is called by
a oriental term. We are consciously awake in the world of our
senses, in the world of our thoughts; but the sense impulses
give us only that portion of the world that is spread out as
Nature. And our world of thoughts gives us only that which is
in us and corresponds to our own nature between birth and
death. That which is our eternal nature remains in the world
that we share with the dead. When we enter the life of the
physical plane through incarnation, it remains indeed in the
world in which also the dead live.
In order to
understand these things fully we must grasp thoughts which
are not so easy to digest (but these things must be said
because they are so) — thoughts that cost us an effort
to think out. Man has no such thoughts in the course of his
everyday waking consciousness. He prefers to limit his
knowledge to that which is stretched out in space and that
which takes its course in Time. A frequent pathological
symptom is this one: to imagine even the spiritual world
spatially, although these thoughts may be nebulous, thin and
misty; yet we somehow wish to imagine is spatially; we wish
to think of souls flying about in space, and so on. We must
go beyond the ideas of space and time to more
complicated ideas, if we really wish to penetrate into these
things. Today I wish to draw your attention to something that
is very important for the understanding of the whole of human
life.
Let us bear in
mind once more the fact that — roughly speaking —
we possess this four-fold nature — the physical body,
the body of formative forces or etheric body, the astral
body, and the ego.
Now, when
someone speaks from the standpoint of the usual waking
consciousness, he may ask: — How old is a person
— How old is a certain person A? Someone may give his
age, let us say 35, and he may believe that he has made an
important statement. In stating that a certain person is 35
years old he has, in fact, said something of importance for
the physical plane and for the usual waking consciousness;
but for the spiritual world, in other words, for the etheric
being of man, this implies only a part of the
reality. When you say: I am 35 years old — you only say
this in regard to your physical body. You must say: My
physical body is 35 years old — then this will be
correct. But these words express nothing at all as far as the
etheric body, or the body of formative forces is concerned,
and nothing at all as far as the other members of the human
being are concerned. For it is an illusion, it is indeed
quite fantastic to think that your ego, for instance, is 35
years old, when your physical body is 35 years old. You see,
here we must bear in mind different speeds, different
rapidities in the development of the various members.
The following
figures will make you realize this. A human being is, let us
say, 7 years old; this means nothing less than this:--his
physical body has reached the age of 7 years. His etheric
body, his body of formative forces, is not yet 7 years old,
for his body of formative forces does not maintain the same
speed as the physical body and has not yet reached this age.
We are not aware of such things just because we imagine time
as one continuous stream, and thus we cannot form the thought
that different things maintain different speeds within the
course of time. This physical body that is 7 years old has
developed according to a certain speed. The etheric body
develops more slowly, the astral body still more slowly, and
slowest of all, the ego. The etheric body is only 5 years and
3 months old when the physical body is 7 years old, because
it develops more slowly. The astral body is 3 years and 6
months old, and the ego, 1 year and 9 months. Thus you must
say to yourself — when a child is 7 years old, its ego
is only 1 year and 9 months old. This ego undergoes a slower
development on the physical plane. On the physical plane this
ego develops at a slower pace; it is a slower pace, the same
pace that we find in our life with the dead. Why do we not
grasp what takes place in the stream of the experiences of
the dead? Because we do not grow accustomed to the slower
pace of the dead, and do not admit this into our thoughts and
especially into our feelings, in order to hold them fast.
Hence, if
someone is 28 years old as far as his physical body is
concerned, then his ego is only 7 years old. As far as your
ego is concerned, which is the essential part of your being,
you thus maintain a much slower pace in the course of
development than that of the physical body. You see, the
difficulty consists in the fact that, generally, we consider
speed, or velocities, merely as outer velocities. When things
move one beside another, we say that one thing moves more
quickly and the other one more slowly because we use Time as
a comparison. But here the speed within Time is different.
Without this insight into the fact that the different members
of the human being have different speeds in their
development, it is impossible to grasp the connections with
the true deeper being of man.
From this you
will see how in everyday consciousness people simply throw
together entirely different things contained in human
nature.
Man consists of
this four-fold being, and the four members of this being are
so different from one another that they even have different
ages. But man is under a great illusion in making everything
depend on his physical body. He says something that has
absolutely no meaning whatever for the spiritual world, in
stating that his ego is 28 years old, when he is 28 according
to his physical body. His statement would only have a meaning
if he would say: — My ego is 7 years old — in the
case of the ego, a year is naturally four times as long as in
the case of the physical body. One might also say that the
age of the four different members of the human being must be
reckoned according to four entirely different measurements of
time; for the ego, a year is simply four times as long as for
the physical body.
Pictorially you
might conceive this as a projection from the physical plane
— for instance, one human being may normally become 28
years old, while another child may grow more slowly and after
28 years be like a child of 7. Thus the whole matter appears
at first like an abstract truth. But it is a fundamental
reality in man. Just consider that our ego is the bearer of
what we call our understanding, or our thinking consciousness
of self. When our understanding and our conscious thinking
are within our ego, then this understanding and conscious
thinking are really essentially younger than we ourselves
apparently are, according to our physical body. This is
indeed so.
But this will
show you that when a human being of 28 gives the impression
of one whose understanding has developed to the age of 28,
only one fourth of this understanding is really his own. It
cannot be helped; when we have a certain quantity of
understanding at 28, only a quarter of this is our own; the
rest belongs to the universe, to the world in which we are
submerged through our astral body, through our etheric body,
and through our physical body. But we only know directly
something of these bodies through ideas, through sense
perceptions, in other words, again within the ego. This means
that during our development as human beings between birth and
death we are indeed mere apparitions of a reality. We make
the impression of being four times as clever as we really
are. This is true. All we possess, in addition to this one
fourth, we owe to what holds sway in the historical, social,
and moral processes within that world we dream away and sleep
away. Dream and sleep impulses, which we have in common with
the universe, seethe up, above the horizon of our being and
fructify this fourth part of our understanding and soul, and
make it four times as strong as it really is.
You see at this
point arises the illusion concerning the freedom of man. Man
is a free being; he is, indeed. But only the real, true man
is a free being. That fourth part, of which I have just
spoken, is a free being. Other beings play into the remaining
three fourths; these cannot be free. This gives rise to the
delusion in regard to freedom so that we continually ask:
— Is man free or is he not free? Man is free when he
connects this idea of freedom with the one fourth of his
being, in the sense in which I have just explained it. If the
human being wishes to have this freedom as an impulse of his
own, then he must develop this fourth part in a
corresponding, independent way. In usual life, this fourth
part cannot assert itself, for the simple reason that it is
overpowered by the other three fourths. In the remaining
three fourths is active all that man calls his desires, his
appetites, his emotions and passions. These slay his freedom,
for what is contained in the universe in the form of impulses
works through these desires, emotions and passions.
Now the
question arises: — What shall we do to make this one
fourth of our soul-life, which is a reality within us, really
free? We must place this one fourth in relationship with that
which is independent of the remaining three fourths.
I have tried to
answer this question philosophically in my
The Philosophy of Spiritual Activity,
by attempting to show how man can
only realize the impulse of freedom within himself, when he
places his actions, his deeds, entirely under the influence
of pure thought, when he reaches the point of transforming
impulses of pure thought into impulses of action, into
impulses which are not in any way dependent upon the outer
world for their development. All that which is developed out
of the outer world does not allow us to realize freedom. Only
that which develops in our thinking, independently of the
outer world, as the motive of our actions, enables us to
realize freedom.
Where do such
motives come from? Where does that which does not come from
the outer world come from? It comes out of the spiritual
world. The human being need not be clairvoyantly conscious in
every situation of life of how these impulses come from the
spiritual world; they may nevertheless be within him all the
same. But he will necessarily conceive these impulses in a
somewhat different way than they must be conceived in
reality. When we rise in clairvoyant consciousness to the
first stage of the spiritual world, we come to the
imaginative world; the second stage is the world of
inspiration, as you know; the third stage, the world of
intuition. Instead of allowing the impulses of our will or of
our actions to rise out of our physical body, our astral
body, and etheric body, we can receive them as imaginations,
behind which stand inspirations and intuitions. That is, if
we receive no impulses from our bodies, but only from the
spiritual world. This does not need to be the conscious
clairvoyant perception: “Now I will something
and behind this stand intuition, inspiration, and
imagination.” — but, instead, the result appears
as an idea, as a pure thought, and has the appearance of an
idea created within the element of fantasy. Because this is
so, because such an idea, which lies at the foundation of free
actions must appear to everyday consciousness as an idea created
out of the element of fantasy, I call it moral fantasy in my
The Philosophy of Spiritual Activity.
(That which lies at the foundation of free actions.) What, then,
is this moral fantasy? This moral fantasy is the reverse of a
mirrored reflection. What lies spread out around us as the
outer physical reality is a mirrored reflection; physical
reality sends us reflections of things. Moral fantasy is the
image, through which we do not see. For this reason, things
appear to us as fantasy. Behind them, however, stand the real
impulses — imagination, inspiration,
intuition — which are active. When we do not know that
they are active, but only receive the influences into our
usual consciousness, then this appears as fantasy. And these
results of moral fantasy, these incentives to action, which
do not lie in desires, passions and emotions — are free.
But how can we attain them?
Moral fantasy
can also be developed by a human being who is not
clairvoyant. Everything that implies a real progress for
humanity has always been born out of moral fantasy, insofar
as this progress lay within the ethical sphere. The point in
question is that man first develops a feeling, and then an
enhanced feeling (we shall hear immediately, what is to be
understood exactly by “enhanced feeling”) —
that he is not merely here on this earth in order to
accomplish things which concern him personally, or
individually, but in order to accomplish things through which
the will of the Time Spirits can be realized.
It appears as
if something quite special were implied when one says: Man
must realize the will of the Time Spirits. But a time will
come when people will understand this much better than now.
And a time will come when the contents of human teaching will
not be that of the present. At present only ideas dealing
with nature can be conveyed even to the most educated people;
for what is imparted to people in regard to ethical and
social life is in most cases an unreal, schematic
abstraction; indeed, the greatest abstraction.
In this
connection we have not yet attained what earlier ages already
possessed. Only with great difficulty can a modern man
immerse himself in earlier times. Earlier times possessed
myths — myths that were connected with the vital life
of the people, myths that penetrated into poetry, into art,
into all manner of things. In Greece one spoke of Oedipus, of
Hercules, and of other heroes, one tried to emulate those who
had done things which were exemplary deeds, and first deeds,
and one wished to tread in their footprints. Everyone wished
to tread in these footprints. The thread of ideas, the thread
of thought and feeling, led backwards. One felt at one with
those long dead. What went out as an impulse from those who
had died was told in myths; and these men lived in
experiencing, in becoming one with the impulses of these
myths.
Something
similar must again be created and will be created if the
impulses of spiritual science are rightly understood. Except
that, in the future, souls will gaze forward much more than
backward. The contents of public teaching must be that which
binds human beings together with the creative activity of the
Time, and above all, with the impulses of the Time Spirit,
the corresponding Being from the Hierarchy of the Archai,
concerning whom I have said, in an earlier description, that
the so-called dead, as well as the living, are connected with
him. People will learn in the public teaching of the future
the meaning of such a period of culture as the one that began
in the 15th century and closed the Greco-Latin period; in
this fifth post-Atlantean period people will learn to know
the real intentions of the universal World-All. They will
take up the impulses of this fifth post-Atlantean period and
they will know: — This must be realized between the
15th century and one of the centuries in a coming millennium.
They will know: We belong to our period of culture in such a
way that the impulses of this coming age stream through us.
In future, even the children, as they learn to name the
flowers and the stars (they do this less today — but it
is at least something outwardly real) will learn to take up
the real, spiritual impulses of the period. First they must
be educated to do this. What is told as “history”
today must first cease to be called “history.” In
not too distant a future, instead of speaking of all the
things contained in history as it is told today, people will
speak of the spiritual impulses standing behind the
historical evolution, impulses which are dreamed by human
beings. These are the spiritual impulses that call man to
freedom, and make him free, because they raise him to the
world from which intuition, inspiration, and imagination
come. For what happens outwardly on the physical plane, what
constitutes outer history (I have explained this even in
public lectures) loses its meaning as soon as it has
occurred; in reality it does not justify our saying that the
former event is always the cause of the latter. There is
nothing more senseless than to recount history by describing,
for instance, the deeds of Napoleon at the beginning of the
19th century, and then assuming that the events after
Napoleon's exile are the consequence of Napoleon's actions.
Nothing is more senseless than this! Descriptions of Napoleon
imply exactly the same, as far as reality is concerned, as
the description of a human corpse three days after death, as
far as the dead man's life is concerned. What is now called
“history” is a “corpse-history”
compared with reality, even though this
“corpse-history” has a great importance in the
minds of many people.
What happens
outwardly becomes a reality only when it is revealed in its
development from spiritual impulses. Then it will be seen
clearly that a human being's deeds, let us say, in a certain
decade of a certain century, are the consequence of what he
experienced before entering into his incarnation on earth;
they are in no sense the consequence of events that occurred
in the course of decades of physical experience on the earth,
and so on. Spiritual Science, in the meaning of
Anthroposophy, will have to bring more depth and more life
— especially in regard to historical, social, and moral
life — into the sphere of history above all. When this
knowledge of the spiritual impulses will have become one of
the essential demands of our time — it will then
correspond to the living reality of the myths in ancient
times — it will permeate human beings with impulses
leading them to deeds and actions that will make them free.
These things must first be understood; they will indeed
influence real life when this understanding spreads over an
ever-wider sphere.
But these
considerations will show you something else besides. You will
realize that the impulses of feeling, the impulses of will,
which place us within the same sphere of life as the
so-called dead, are a higher and more intensive reality than
the one we know through our waking consciousness, in the form
of ideas and sense impressions. For this reason, what has
just been brought forward as a demand of our age, as
something that must become an object of public teaching, can
only be truly fruitful when it is grasped not merely with the
understanding, but goes over into the impulses of feeling and
into the impulses of will.
This can only
come about when spiritual science is really seen as a
reality, and not simply as a teaching. spiritual
science is easily looked upon merely as a teaching, as a
theory; but spiritual science is not a mere teaching, a mere
theory, spiritual science is a living Word. For what is given
out as spiritual science is the revelation from the world
which we share with the higher Hierarchies and with the
so-called dead. This very world speaks to us through
spiritual science. And he who really understands spiritual
science knows that the soul music of the spiritual world
continues to resound in spiritual science. What we read, not
from the dead letters, but from the real happenings in the
spiritual world, can indeed permeate our feeling with true
life, when we grasp spiritual science in this sense, as
something which speaks to our inner being from out the
spiritual world. I have emphasized at different times how the
matter stands, when I described how, on the one hand, since
1879, spiritual life has the opportunity of streaming down to
the physical plane in an entirely new way, and how, on the
other hand, it must indeed face an opponent in the Spirits of
Darkness, of whom we have spoken. Everything must still be
achieved, before the content of spiritual science really
enters the life of our feeling and will. And this can be
achieved when certain things change fundamentally, in regard
to which modern man has reached a cultural blind alley.
Something else
must also work its way through; namely, evolution must
develop in such a way that, on the one hand, the events of
history may be compared to a growing tree (I have already
used this picture during these considerations): but when the
leaves have grown as far as the periphery, the tree ceases to
grow. Here the dying process begins. It is the same with
historical events. A certain group of events takes shape
— let us describe it quite schematically: —
Certain historical events have their roots. A definitive
group of historical events may have their roots in the last
third of the 18th century. I shall speak of this more clearly
tomorrow. Other influences are added to these in the course
of the 19th century, and so on. But you see, these historical
events expand and reach their extreme boundaries. In this
case the boundary is not the same as in the case of a tree or
a plant, which does not grow beyond its periphery; but here a
new root of historical events must begin. For decades,
already, we have been living in a time in which such new
historical events must spring out of direct intuition. But in
the historical life of man, illusion can easily spread also
over these things. To be sure, you can watch the growth of a
plant, which grows according to its inner laws until it
reaches a certain periphery and cannot grow beyond it. But
now you can call forth an illusion — you can take
wires, hang paper leaves on them, and give yourself the
illusion that the plant continues to grow up to this
point.
Such wires do
indeed exist where historical events are concerned. While
historical events should long ago have adopted another
course, such wires are there instead; except that in
historical evolution these wires are human prejudices, human
indolence, which continue to maintain, on dead wires, what
has died long ago. Certain people place themselves at the
ends of these dead wires — in other words, at the
outermost ends of human prejudice — and these people
are often considered historical personalities; indeed, the
true historical personalities. And people do not realize to
what an extent these personalities sit on the wires of human
prejudice. One of the most important tasks of the present is
to begin to understand how certain personalities who are
looked upon as “great” are, in reality, merely
hanging on the wires of human prejudice; this is indeed one
of the chief tasks of the present.
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