Lecture 6
New Spiritual Impulses in History
Their Rejection by the Materialistic World Conception
Result of the Catastrophic Events of the Great War
Dornach, December 16, 1917
In the
background of all these considerations stands a question
which is looked upon in the present age in the light of
materialism, and which is far more materialistic in its
fundamental conceptions than can be imagined. This question
refers to the origin of certain historical events. People
speak of historical necessity; namely, that the events which
took place, for instance, in the past year, were historically
the result, as it were, of events which took place in the
preceding years.
What I
characterize here as “historical” reaches, of
course, into everything that proceeds out of human actions
— that is, into social life and civilized life in
general. The materialistic conception does not only consist
in leading spiritual phenomena back to the sphere of natural
science or to a material cause, but it also consists in many
other things. The materialistic conception would like to
investigate the idea of free will in a full light. It would
also like to interpret the events taking place in the course
of history in the same way in which it contemplates
scientific matters; namely, that a preceding cause always
produces, with a certain necessity, something which follows
it as an effect. Then people say, and believe they are
thinking very clearly when they say this, that all events,
also those that have broken into our world-happenings with
such a catastrophic force, are a necessity.
In this sense,
that is, in the meaning of scientific necessity, this is
perfect nonsense, although the expression — all events
are a necessity — is justified in other directions. If
you consider the things that passed before our souls
yesterday — namely, the complicated organization of
human nature, you will gain an insight, not only with your
understanding but also with your feeling, into the depths of
the universal order of laws. You will also gradually lose the
habit of thinking that this reality can be embraced in
abstract scientific ideas limited to strict laws. Then your
gaze will fall on certain phenomena in Nature that reveal
many things, if they are looked upon in their true light. For
instance, a phenomenon like the following one: Every year a
great number of life-germs develop in the ocean, germs which
do not become living beings. The life-germs, or eggs, are
laid — and perish. Only a small part of these grow into
real living beings. This, of course, does not only happen in
the wide ocean, but in the whole of Nature. Consider how many
life-germs are supposed to become living beings, even in the
short space of one year! How much is meant to become alive
and does not attain life, when eggs are laid which do not
develop! Must we not say that all these germs of life contain
causes that do not produce effects? Indeed, anyone who does
not consider Nature with theoretical prejudices, especially
not with the precise theoretical opinion that every cause has
its effect and every effect has its cause — anyone who
considers Nature in an unprejudiced way will find that there
are countless things in Nature which must be designated, in
the fullest meaning of the word, as causes, although they do
not produce effects such as should be the case if the causes
would live themselves out completely. There are countless
instances where life is interrupted, as it were, and does not
attain its goal.
This is
something that you can see outside in physical Nature. If the
spiritual investigator asks himself what corresponds to this
in the spiritual world — he will find something very
strange. He will find something which corresponds, in a
certain sense, exactly to this standing still of life in
Nature, but in the way in which spiritual things correspond
to things in Nature. Many considerations have shown us that
often, not always, the spiritual must be characterized as
follows: — Its qualities are the exact opposite of the
qualities to be found in Nature — they are the exact
opposite. Just as we have seen natural causes that bring
about no results — that is, the process is interrupted
and what is inherent in the cause (“inherent” is
one of the worst possible words for the comprehension of
reality) does not develop further — so spiritual
investigation shows us that effects arise in the spiritual
world; we can say just as little that these are determined by
causes, as in the cases which we have just characterized. Yet
here we have effects.
Let us ask
concretely: — What does the spiritual investigator see
when the eye of his soul sees such repressed processes of
life? The physical eye sees that eggs, or germs, perish in
this case, but the eye of the soul, or of the spirit, sees
that where such eggs apparently perish, something endowed
with being arises in an earlier stage, in a stage which is
not as yet material. If we wish to investigate what really
happens in such a case in which material causes have, as it
were, no results, then we must dream in a cosmic sense, if I
may use this expression. In our usual consciousness we can
only dream egoistically. When we dream at night, our dreams
are connected with the organism; in our dreams we are not
connected with the surroundings. If we are connected with the
surroundings and develop the same forces that we develop
otherwise in dreams, we experience in the form of
imaginations. What is kept back in the processes of Nature
and does not reach the stage of physical living beings,
becomes something which can very well be experienced in the
consciousness of imaginative thought. Beings arise from such
repressed life-germs that are only accessible to imaginative
thought.
If we would not
dream as human beings, but as beings belonging to the
Hierarchy of the Angeloi, we could dream of them. In fact, if
I may use ttii.s expression, the Angeloi dream of the beings
that rise up every year in great numbers from the sea and
from the earth, as elementary forms; these are nothing but
the products of the life-germs that have apparently
perished.
If you try to
picture this very vividly, you can see a kind of elementary
life rising out of the earth; in this elementary life we
ourselves are embedded with our own soul. But we are in this
elementary life more intensely still, for we take part in the
process I have just mentioned. As human beings we participate
very intensely in this process, and also the animals take
part in this. How? Well, there is no difference between that
which happens when a certain quantity of fish eggs are laid
in the sea — eggs that do not develop and only give
rise to elementary existence — and that which happens
when we see the seeds growing out of the earth, let us say
wheat. How many grains of wheat are predestined to become
wheat halms
[haulm: stems of beans and peas and potatoes and grasses collectively as used for thatching and bedding.],
and yet they do not grow into halms because we eat them! In this case we
ourselves and our processes are linked up with the universe;
we connect ourselves with what arises as elementary
existence.
In the grains
of wheat and in other products that we use for our food, we
interrupt the progressive process. We do not allow the life
germs to become real beings, but through our own existence we
cause that, which was destined for something else, to become
an elementary process, which can be seen only through
imagination. But the reality that lies at the foundation of
this imaginative life takes place because we ourselves are
placed into the process and participate in it. From the
grains of wheat or rye, from everything else in Nature which
we consume in this way, from all this, an elementary life
arises. This elementary life permeates us. We take up this
elementary life and are placed within it.
You have here
the foundation of elementary life. We can, as it were, exist
only because we interrupt another progressive process and
spiritualize it. Even when we eat, we spiritualize a process
that would otherwise take a purely material course.
The opposite is
to be found in the spiritual world. There we find effects
which have no causes, for instance, like a moving billiard
ball which moves because another one hits it these effects
exist as it were without a cause, no cause can be indicated
in their case; when we contemplate such things, the idea of
cause and effect loses its meaning. Effects arise in the life
of our soul and spirit, effects from the spiritual world, of
which we cannot say that they have been caused. We face the
elementary results (which arise as it were in the form of
vapor from the processes just described) with desires arising
from necessities of life. We must eat; hence we must spin
ourselves into these elementary processes. Just as we face
such elementary processes with a certain lust, or desire, so
we face spiritual effects, which are in a certain sense
devoid of causes, with antipathy, inasmuch as we are human
beings on the physical plane. Inasmuch as we are physical
human beings, we strive to prevent these effects from the
spiritual world from entering into us.
If you try to
grasp this somewhat subtle thought, you will see that we are,
as it were, surrounded by a spiritual will, which strives to
enter into us; at first we do not face it with desire; we are
not even inclined to accept it. It is as if will
motions were constantly floating around us in the air,
motions which we reject. When the clairvoyant consciousness
develops, it soon comes into the insight that imaginative
things surround us and that we are hindered by inner
obstacles from taking up this imaginative element.
Let us consider
this imaginative element as a reality. Just as here on the
earth a certain number of life-germs perish every year, so do
spiritual imaginative things live in the world that always
surrounds us as a spiritual world; they can indeed be reached
through imagination, but through our human disposition we
place obstacles in the way. These obstacles are not to be
looked upon in an abstract way, or in general; they must be
grasped as concrete and differentiated obstacles. What
develops every year from physical life as an ascending
elementary life, develops spiritually at some other time.
Then it descends and becomes something that we reject in
another period. These periods of time are not very regular,
for there are times in which the spiritual life surges around
us very strongly and many things wish to come to us. There
are other times in which the spiritual air around us is not
so full. We may take up a more or less receptive attitude,
although generally speaking we do not feel inclined to take
up this imaginative kind of existence that can be reached
only through imagination. But certain conditions may enable
us to take up a receptive attitude — we shall still
speak of this — or we may take up an entirely rejecting
attitude.
Let us suppose
that in a certain period of time many such Beings are there,
Beings who wish, as it were, to approach man in a spiritual
way, and that man is disinclined to accept them. What will
happen? It then happens that by rejecting these spiritual
beings who wish to come to him, man creates the possibility
(he creates the opportunity within mankind itself) for a
continuation of the old processes within him, processes that
have withered, and continue to spin their dry threads, so
that they produce dead results instead of bringing about a
living result. It is just the same as if a plant that has
reached the end of its life were not taken away, but were to
continue as a dried-up, lifeless plant to the damage of its
surroundings.
In the course
of historical events this takes place in the following way:
— An age approaches — the beginning of the 20th
century was essentially such an age — in which
spiritual Beings wait, as it were, to approach man, an age in
which man is called upon in every way to open his soul to new
revelations. Yet he does not take up these new revelations,
but rejects them. Then the old continues to spin beyond its
limits, for this old needs to be fertilized anew through man.
This does not happen. What has not been fertilized continues
to spin on in a dry and barren way and this causes such
events as the present catastrophic one.
One of the most
important causes to be found in the spiritual world is the
fact that, as the 20th century approached, evolution took a
course that made human beings oppose the new revelation, for
reasons which we shall still discuss. One might say that the
spiritual world was full of all that was offered to mankind
in the form of new spiritual knowledge, new spiritual
impulses, yet mankind rejected this. Why? Undoubtedly such
things are connected with conditions of human evolution. We
know that the materialistic age had to come — it has
its good qualities from certain other aspects. The
materialistic age came, and one of its consequences was that
man formed ideas which were connected only with one side of
human nature. Think of what we discussed yesterday.
Yesterday we
said that the human being, consisting of four members,
physical, etheric, and astral body and ego (roughly speaking)
is really of a different age, as far as each one of these
members is concerned. When a human being is 28 years old, he
is 28 only as far as his physical body is concerned (I said
this yesterday); as far as his so-called etheric body is
concerned he is 21; as far as the astral body is concerned,
14; and as far as the ego is concerned only 7 years old.
Yesterday's considerations can very well show you this. A
human being of 28, is really 28 years old only as a physical
human being. The ego lives in him, for instance (without
considering the other members) and lives more slowly, so that
it is still a child of 7 years when the human being has
reached the age of 28. When a man is 28 years old according
to his physical body, this child of 7 is indeed connected
with quite different worlds from the one where scientific
necessity is to be found. But in the materialistic age man
has become accustomed to form only those ideas that can be
applied to the relationship of the physical body with its
surroundings, and everything is judged according to this. The
human being, such as he stands in the world, is really a
complicated being, as we have seen yesterday from many
aspects. What a human being believes that he knows about
himself, what he says about himself in our materialistic age,
is only a quarter of all that concerns man. It is only that
part which concerns the physical body. We can speak of a
scientific necessity only in regard to the relationship of
the physical body with its surroundings. Of what must we
speak when we consider, for instance, what is contained, as a
child of 7, in a man of 28 (without taking into consideration
the other members)? Here we must speak of something quite
different, something from which this illuminated age, this
infinitely clever age, has turned away completely. Strange as
it may sound to a modern human being, we must speak in this
case of wonders, of miracles. Wonders in the sense in which
people often imagine them, or as they are imagined by people
who like to go to spiritistic séances, are things which
cannot be considered by a real spiritual science. Wonders lie
in entirely different spheres; wonders lie in spiritual
happenings. Just as necessities lie in the outer events of
Nature, so do wonders lie in spiritual events. No human being
who enters the physical world from the spiritual world, and
proceeds to a physical incarnation, is a physical necessity.
He is a necessity only inasmuch as he himself determines this
necessity, because he has taken the superconscious decision
in the spiritual world to connect himself with a certain
hereditary stream. The cause need not lie in father and
mother; they merely provide an opportunity. The appearance of
every human being in the physical world is a miracle, a
wonder. The entrance into the physical world of the human
being that is 7 years old when the physical body is 28 is
always a true wonder, and in respect to this, every question
from a scientific point of view concerning the "cause" is
nonsense. It is nonsense to ascribe to heredity that part in
us which lives so slowly that it is only 7 years old, when we
are 28. If we really want to find out its origin, and ask
whence comes that which is only 7 years old when we are 28,
we reach the spiritual world, the world that we share with
the so-called dead, and in which we lived before descending
to our body. Men who were able to think in an unprejudiced
way could, indeed, form thoughts concerning such things, even
though with great difficulty in our materialistic age.
Think how much
Goethe occupied himself with scientific thoughts and how
exemplary his scientific thoughts are. He had, as you know a
constant longing to go to Italy before he ever saw Italy. And
when he finally saw the great works of art in Italy which
gave him a conception of the creative artistic activity of
the Greek, he wrote to his friends at Weimar: “Here is
necessity — here is God.” He wrote of a necessity
that is not the one of natural science. His previous
scientific thoughts gave him an inkling of the other
necessity — the necessity that shines from the
spiritual world and is the same as wonder, or miracle. This
is what he felt when he saw Italy.
But our age is
an illuminated one; our contemporaries are very clever. For
this reason they have not only rejected the unjustified
conception of “wonder,” but have banished wonder
as such even from the spiritual world. But to banish wonder
from the spiritual world implies nothing less than to do
everything possible in order to misunderstand the spiritual
world thoroughly. For the things coming from the spiritual
world appear to us only as effects; if we look for the causes
we cannot find them. For a spiritual investigator, this is an
unquestionable truth. At the end of the 19th century men had
no feelings of wonder and reverence for that which sought to
come to them as a revelation from the spiritual world; this
lack of feeling had increased to such an extent that there
was an aversion to such revelations. For these revelations
come to man in the same measure in which he develops
reverence for all that is profound in the world.
That which can
enter into the world's order of laws as wonders may also not
take place — not be there. This dulling of human
feelings in respect to wonder is the consequence of the
omissions in the age approaching the 20th century. If we wish
to speak of the causes of our present catastrophic events, we
will find that these causes are not things done by human
beings. Instead these causes are sins of omission. This is
the essential point.
In lectures
which I have held repeatedly in past years, I have pointed
out that an excellent philosopher lived in the middle of the
19th century, Karl Christian Planck. In many places I have
seized the opportunity of drawing attention to Karl Christian
Planck, because he wrote a book that is, as it were, his
philosophical, literary testament. This book sketches the
details, even the spiritual details, of the present world
catastrophe. Indeed, one may say that he describes them in
advance. The book was written in 1880. Why? Because Karl
Christian Planck belongs to those spirits who saw at the
right time what was taking place. If you have a house that
begins to grow dilapidated, it must be repaired in time. If
you wait until it cannot be repaired any more, it falls
together and the catastrophe occurs. Our present catastrophe
is nothing but a collapse. If we look at it from a real
aspect it is a collapse. The right time to bring about what
might have taken place instead was during the decades 1870,
1880 of the past century. Men like Karl Christian Planck, who
pointed out what was bound to come, never become — as
we all know — leading personalities in outer life. When
a leading personality is sought, when a statesman or someone
similar must be found, one does not naturally turn to those
who know something in the sense of Karl Christian Planck!
These cannot be used — is it not so? Instead one
chooses others, who very often can do nothing to repair and
support the falling house. If we only look into the
backgrounds of life, it can be proved historically (Karl
Christian Planck is not the only one, there are many others)
that the revelations from the spiritual world were given to
many men at the right moment — the revelation of the
event which mankind was facing. There might still have been
time to avert the course of such an event. Of course, no one
listened to Karl Christian Planck, and even now, who listens
to those who speak of what must be said years before the
catastrophe takes place, if this is to be averted?
Unfortunately
we must say that the way in which humanity has lived through
this catastrophic event up to now clearly shows that if it
lasts another four years, human beings will have grown
accustomed to it and will accept it as they accept normal
life. Indeed, this has progressed to a high degree. He who
understand the times, however, asks today: — What must
take place? For, if something does not take place,
the consequences will necessarily arise after decades,
because something was left undone at the right time.
But what should
take place according to the present conditions of time cannot
be discovered in the surrounding physical world. If we wish
to hear the right things it is, indeed, necessary today to
listen to those who are able to speak out of the spiritual
world. Of course, in less important things, events take place
more quickly. One may say, in five years perhaps, human
beings will recognize that they ought to have listened to
many things, and they might already have known many things,
if they had listened at the right moment. But they do not
like to hear these things. They only like to hear things that
show visible signs in the outer physical world. But this
physical world has no significance for the historical course
of events. It does not show the impulse, the motive force
behind events. That which is to be the starting point and
impulse for events in the social and ethical life must come
from the spiritual world.
In our age
humanity should be educated to understand a very great event
in the course of human evolution, namely, to believe in free
will also in historical evolution. At a certain point of
spiritual life humanity today should be led with the greatest
force to believe in freedom or free will — and wonder
is identical with this. This point lies in the conception of
the Christ impulse, of the Mystery of Golgotha. In earlier
times humanity took an entirely different attitude toward the
Mystery of Golgotha, and the more we go back in history the
greater we find this difference. We have often spoken of
this. Today it is not possible for human beings —
especially for those human beings who are most advanced in
the sense of the spirit of the age — to understand the
Event of Golgotha as an historical event resembling other
historical events. As a foundation for the argument to be
dealt with here, I only need to point out that the
significance of the Gospels as historical documents has, as
you know, been shaken. We cannot consider the Gospels as
historical documents in the same way in which we consider the
documents concerning Socrates, Plato, Alcibiades, or Caesar
as historical documents. We cannot, according to methods of
historical research, consider the Gospels or the other
writings in the New Testament dealing with the Event of
Golgotha, as documents in the same sense. The way of thinking
adopted in modern historical research loses every possibility
of considering the Gospels as historical documents and of
looking upon the Event of Golgotha, described in the Gospels,
as an historical event, in the sense in which other
historical events and facts are historically proved. It is
not possible to speak of Christ Jesus as an historical
personality in the same way in which one speaks of
Charlemagne as an historical personality, according to
so-called historical sources.
He who sees
through such things will realize that the time has come in
which those who love truth and try to understand things
through truth must say that what used to be considered as
historical sources for the Mystery of Golgotha has been
shaken, owing to the attitude adopted by modern historical
investigation. One must, indeed, be very dull — for
instance like Adolph Harnack, the famous theologian, to stand
up again and again and state that what can be asserted
concerning Christ Jesus on a quarto page constitutes an
historical document in the meaning of modern history! Of
course, these things standing on a quarto page are just as
little historical documents as the Gospels — according
toe Harnack — are historical documents. But an attempt
like the one of Harnack (to which hundreds and hundreds of
others may be added) is connected with the lack of
truthfulness of our age in regard to such things; it is never
willing to draw radical conclusions, nevertheless just these
are the right conclusions.
The conclusion
which must be drawn is that, in accordance with what lies
before us, we must confess that it is impossible to find
Christ Jesus if we seek him in an outward historical way; we
cannot find him in this way. We must find him through
spiritual investigation. But in this way we shall surely find
him. We shall find the historical event of Golgotha. Why?
Because the historical event of Golgotha occurred in human
evolution through freedom — freedom of will, in a much
higher sense than in the case of other historical events; and
because this free event must approach the human being in our
age in such a way that nothing compels him to accept it as
valid; instead he must accept its validity through inner
freedom. Events that can be proved historically cannot be
accepted freely. Events for which there is no outer
historical proof are accepted for spiritual reasons, and on a
spiritual foundation we are free. One becomes Christian
through freedom, and in our modern age we must understand,
above all, that one can be a Christian in a real sense only
through complete freedom and not through the compulsion of
historical documents. The task destined for our age is that
Christianity shall gain the truth through which it will
become the great impulse for the human understanding of
freedom. That this shall be understood belongs to the
fundamental truths of our age — then an insight must be
gained into the fact that the evidence for Christianity must
be sought in the spiritual world.
If this insight
becomes as intense in human nature as it should become it
will produce further insight — it will give rise to
other things. What it should produce first of all is that man
should learn to answer for himself this question: — How
shall I make myself more receptive for the recognition of
that which is not forced upon me from the physical world,
against which I may at first even feel an aversion, an
antipathy? What makes me more inclined toward this?
I am not led by
personal vanity or conceit, but only because I wish to bring
a concrete example. I have pointed out again and again, on
similar occasions, that I began my literary career by
refraining, at first, from setting forth my own opinions;
instead everything which I set forth was connected with
Goethe's spirit, in a conscious retrospect of a spirit who
ascended to the spiritual kingdom of the so-called dead,
already in the year 1832. But read what I wrote in connection
with Goethe, in the time that preceded my
The Philosophy of Spiritual Activity.
The so-called Goethe investigators
study these books chiefly with respect to the question,
whether or not they render Goethe's opinions. They find
Goethe-opinions only if the writer is a literary "ruminant,"
in other words, if he ruminates what Goethe said during his
incarnation up to 1832. I was always of the opinion that
schoolmasters, and also I myself, really need not repeat what
Goethe said, for Goethe himself said far better what he
wished to say. It is always better to read Goethe's own works
than the opinions of schoolmasters, even when they are such
excellent schoolmasters as, for instance, Lewes, who wrote
the famous Goethebiography. What I tried to write is based on
the inspiration of a Goethe who is no longer on the earth
— It is the continuation of his ideas in a certain
sphere after death. I wrote what could be written out of a
certain feeling of a living relationship with so-called
deceased souls. I mention this as an example and indeed not
out of conceit and vanity, but because it is connected with
the question as to what human beings must do in order to
become more receptive for that which comes out of the
spiritual world.
Human beings
must seek a connection with the dead; they must find the way
into the worlds where the dead live, but in a sensible, sound
way, in a really fitting way and not spiritistically. The
dead continue to speak after their death and we have seen
that what they say, and what they send down as impulses, is
alive. It is alive, not in the experiences we gain through
our sense and not in our thoughts, but in our feelings, and
in the reality of the impulses of our will. This is where it
lives. But then we must also find within us that which
inclines us to approach the spiritual world. Antipathy for
imaginations is connected with unbelief in the possibility of
being able to approach the spiritual world — antipathy
for imaginations which wish to enter from the spiritual world
in the form of impulses permeating our actions, and wish to
enter also the social events and the moral, ethical events in
human evolution. They alone can make human beings free.
Two things are
needed in our age: To realize that the acknowledgement of the
Mystery of Golgotha must be a free deed of the human soul and
to penetrate wholly into this truth. And then, to seek in a
real way the bridge to the dead, not merely in an abstract
way, or in an abstract faith. In our age there is a great
aversion also to this. People do not see at once through all
that speaks against it. What ideal have human beings today,
as far as social life is concerned? They think: “We are
clever people; we were born and went to school — and
that is why we are so clever; we are clever human beings, and
consequently we know very well what must happen in social
life. We call together meetings, elect officers, councilors,
parliaments, and whatever all the rest may be called. There
people discuss what must happen in social life. Naturally,
for we are clever; and when such clever people as those of
the present age come together, the right things must
result” — This is the idea, but it is based on an
assumption which is not correct — namely, that people
know right away what is right.
Have you met
anyone who knows what is the right thing for the year 1917
(the year of this lecture)? Not those who are now twenty
years old, and love to sit in Parliament in order to talk and
determine what is the right thing for 1917! Those who died
long ago know this best of all. We should ask them
what attitude we should adopt. This answers to a great extent
the question as to how we can improve our social life —
When we learn to consult the dead.
As physical
human beings up to the end of our life, we know as a rule
only what is convenient to us personally. Only when we are
dead does our knowledge become really mature. Then it is
mature to such an extent that it can really be applied to
social life. But one must not think that the dead can have a
direct influence, as it were, physically in the course of
events, more or less like physical human beings. The dead
know more than the living what must happen socially, but
human beings must listen to them. And the human beings living
on the physical plane must be the instruments carrying out
the knowledge of the dead. Modern human beings must learn
above all to become instruments. But — let us use this
expression even though it is an unpleasant one —
parliaments where human being will strive to let the dead be
heard also will not exist for a long time to come. But no
well-being can come in certain spheres unless the dead are
consulted, unless social life is spiritualized also from this
direction. Before believing that the knowledge gained here on
earth through birth, surroundings, and schooling is ripe for
social impulses, we should penetrate into that which has
really become ripe for social impulses — the wisdom of
those who have already laid aside the physical body, a wisdom
which can reveal significant points of view if we really
investigate it. Just imagine how much deeper the life of
feeling becomes, what a deepening the human soul experiences,
when that which I have now expressed in the form of thoughts
becomes feeling, and when the ancient myths which connected
human beings with their ancestors are replaced by the link
which I have mentioned — when a concrete spiritual life
will again permeate our spiritual atmosphere, and what can
thus be grasped through spiritual science, in the form of
thoughts, passes into the soul and feelings, and human beings
will really live in this!
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