LECTURE 1
Dornach, December 13, 1918
The Transforming of Instinctive into
Conscious Impulses
(Mercantilism and Physiocrats)
My dear friends,
We have been
studying from many points of view the social impulses of the
age, of the present day and of the future. You will have
seen, among the many and varied phenomena which these
impulses bring forth, that there is one apparently
fundamental tendency. Characterizing it to begin with in a
more external manner, we may say: True it is that the most
varied phenomena emerge, and the most varied demands are
being made. Social and antisocial world-conceptions make
their appearance. This or that action is taken, inspired by
these social or antisocial world-conceptions. But if from the
vantage-point now gained we put the question: “What is
it that really underlies these things? What is it that is
trying to work its way out to the surface in human destinies
and human evolution?” Then (as I said, externally to
begin with) we may characterize it as follows: — Man
wants to have a social order, he wants to give the life of
mankind in society a social structure within which, in
harmony with the age of the spiritual soul, he may become
conscious of what he is and knows himself to be as Man
— in his human dignity, in his significance and force
as Man. Within the social order, he wants to find himself as
Man.
Formerly,
impulses that were instinctive guided man to do, to think, to
feel on one thing or another. In the present age — the
age of the spiritual soul, which began in the fifteenth
century and will last into the third millennium
A.D. —
these instinctive impulses are seeking to be transformed into
conscious ones. And man will only be able rightly to
introduce these conscious impulses into his life if in the
course of this age he becomes more and more conscious of what
he as Man is and can be within the social
structure — the structure of Society or of the State or
whatever it may be — in which he lives.
Spiritual
Science, after all, is alone able to penetrate these things
clearly, in the true direction of the age of the spiritual
soul. Yet they emerge — as I have already indicated
— they make their appearance here and there in a more
or less tumultuous form, not only in the thoughts and
opinions but in the events in which the men of the present
day are living. It is characteristic, for example, to see
what comes to expression in a recent speech by Trotsky. If
you consider what I have just said about the desire to place
Man in the very center of our World-conception, such words as
Trotsky uses here will make an overwhelming, shattering
impression upon you. He says: — “The communist or
socialist doctrine has set itself, as one of its most
important tasks, to attain at length on our old sinful Earth
a state of affairs when men will cease to shoot at one
another. Thus it is one of the tasks of Socialism or
Communism to create a social order where for the first time
man will be worthy of the name. We are wont to say with Gorki
that the word Man strikes a proud and lofty note, yet in
reality, looking over these three and three-quarter years of
bloody murder, we would fain cry out: The sound of the word
‘Man’ is shameful and contemptible.”
At all events,
you here see the question: — How can man become
conscious of his human being, his human worth and human
strength? — placed in a tumultuous way in the very
center of attention at the beginning of a political speech.
And, if you observe more closely, you will meet the same
phenomenon in many people. What Spiritual Science realizes in
a clearer way leads a shadowy existence in many human heads.
Now this is a phenomenon which we shall only understand if we
consider many things in the social thinking of the 5th
Post-Atlantean Age which we have not studied closely enough
as yet.
Truly,
infinitely much has become different — quite suddenly
— different since the time of the 15th century when the
fifth Post-Atlantean Age began, following as it did upon the
Fourth which then came to an end. (The Fourth, as you know,
had begun in the 8th century
B.C.).
Men only fail to notice
how radically the constitution of soul in civilized mankind
was changed in the transition, for example from the 13th or
14th to the 15th or 16th century. I have told you of many
phenomena in the realm of Art, in the realm of Thought and in
other realms of life, in which you can recognize the change.
Today we will consider another aspect — an aspect which
is of peculiar importance for the forces which are working
themselves out in the present and in the immediate future. We
may truly say: It is only since the beginning of the 5th
Post-Atlantean Age that men have consciously observed the
public economic and industrial life as to the way it enters
into the social structure. Previously, these things, of which
men think consciously to-day, came forth more or less
instinctively. It is only towards the 16th century that men
begin consciously to raise the question: What is the nature
of the order of political economy? What is the best kind of
economic order? What are the laws that underlie it? It is
from considerations of this kind that the impulses of the
socialistic world-conception have evolved even to our own
day. Formerly these things had been ordered more or less
instinctively, from man to man, from association to
association, from guild to guild, corporation to corporation,
and even from realm to realm. Only since the rise of the
modern form of State which itself dates back, approximately,
to the 16th century, do we see this conscious thinking about
economic questions!
Now when you
turn your attention to such a phenomenon as this, you must
remember the following important fact: So long as a thing
works instinctively, it works with a certain sureness. Call
it what you will, the Divine Order or the order of Nature,
instincts are a force that works through all the evolution of
mankind with a certain sureness, unshaken by thought.
Uncertainty only begins from the moment when the things of
life, in whose sphere the certainty of instincts was working
hitherto, begin to be penetrated by human thought and
reflection, human intellect. And only gradually, having gone
through many and varied errors, does man regain in a
conscious way that sureness and inner certainty which, under
different conditions, he had in former times by instinct.
Of course we
must not make the objection: let us then rather go back to
instinct! The conditions have changed and under the altered
conditions instinct would no longer be the right thing.
Mankind is in the course of evolution, and evolution consists
in passing from instinct to conscious life with respect to
all these things. The demand that we should return to the old
instinct would be no wiser than if someone who had reached
the age of fifty suddenly resolved to return to the age of
twenty.
Thus we see the
beginning of conscious thought on questions of Political
Economy towards and during the 16th century. Men direct their
conscious attention to things that were hitherto experienced
and lived-out instinctively in the social connections of
mankind.
It is
interesting to bring before our souls some at least of the
thoughts and conceptions which men arrived at about the
social order. Thus, to begin with, the Mercantilists, as they
are called, appeared on the scene with certain ideas about
the economic life of society. On closer examination, their
conceptions appear entirely dependent on the legal and
juridical ideas which had already arisen in public life.
Armed with these conceptions they tried to understand the
course and evolution of trade and of modern industry in its
first beginnings. The ideas of the Mercantilists are
dependent above all on the study of trade. But they are also
influenced by other things, influenced by the fact that the
modern, more absolutist form of monarchy, with all its
bureaucratic officialdom, assumed its peculiar configuration
in their time. Again, their conceptions are conditioned by
the fact that large quantities of precious metals were
imported into Europe through the discovery of America; and
that the old form of economy was now replaced by that which
deals in money. Such influences as these determined the ideas
of the earliest Political Economists — the
Mercantilists. It is evident from the ideas that they express
that their effort was to conceive public economic life and
social life on the model of the old forms of private economic
intercourse. And as you know, for the old private economic
intercourse there were the Roman juridical ideas of legal
rights. These ideas, as I said, they are now carried forward.
Within the framework of these legal conceptions they simply
tried to extend the laws of private economic life into the
sphere of public life.
Such ideas give
rise to a peculiar result, and, as I said just now, it is
interesting to trace the several points to which men directed
the main attention of their thoughts as time went on. As a
result of their ideas, the Mercantilists said to themselves:
The essential thing in the economic life of any national
community is to possess as large an equivalent as possible
for the commodities circulating in Trade, and produced by
Industry, within the given territory. In other words, their
desire was to think out a social structure whereby as much
money as possible should find its way into the country for
which they were concerned. They saw the prosperity of the
country in the amount of money it contained. “How then
can we enlarge the prosperity of the country?” (For
then they thought, the prosperity of the individual would
also be enlarged as much as possible.) “How can we
increase the country's prosperity?” By bringing about
as far as possible that inner social economic structure
whereby a large amount of money will circulate within the
country and very little will flow from it to other countries.
As much money as possible was to be concentrated in the given
country.
Against this
conception there then arose another, that of the Physiocrats.
The latter took their start from the idea: Economic
prosperity does not in reality depend on the amount of money
that is kept within the country; it depends on the amount
that is produced out of the land by human labor — on
the quantity of goods produced by exploiting the resources of
Nature. In effect, it is only an apparent prosperity that is
achieved by the circulation of goods in Trade and by the
accumulation of money which does not increase the real
Prosperity. Here you see arising, in two successive theories
of economics, two altogether different points of view. And
this is what I would beg you to observe. For one might well
believe that once one had studied these things, it should be
quite easy to say what it is that conditions prosperity, and
what is the best form of public economic life. But when you
see that the men who think about these things, who even make
it their profession to do so, arrive in course of time at the
very opposite conclusions, you will no longer say that it is
quite so easy.
The
Physiocrats, laying their main stress on the production of
goods by the tillage of the soil and the exploitation of
Nature generally, came to the conclusion that one ought to
leave men to themselves, for they would then be impelled by
free competition to elaborate as much as possible out of the
Nature-basis of existence. While the Mercantilists were more
concerned in erecting Customs barriers and closing the
country, so as to limit the outward flow of money and
increase the national prosperity by keeping the money in the
country, the Physiocrats came to the opposite conclusion.
According to them, free export and import from one country to
another was the very thing to enhance the exploitation of the
soil over the whole Earth, and accordingly, the prosperity of
every single country.
Thus at the
very dawn of conscious thinking on economic matters you see
these opposite and conflicting thoughts arise in manifold
directions. We may now go on and observe the entry of a most
influential theory of political economy, one that had an
extraordinarily powerful influence on legislation, and a
powerful influence too on the thoughts of economists
themselves. I mean the theory of Adam Smith, who placed
before himself this question above all: “How should we
bring about a social structure such as to develop, in the
best possible way, the welfare of the individual and at the
same time the welfare of the community?” I will here
emphasize one characteristic point. Adam Smith arrived at the
idea that an entirely individualistic development of economic
life is the best thing possible. He took his start from the
idea that goods, the commodities we buy and sell —
constituting after all the very substance of the national
economy — are in effect the result of human labor. We
may put it this way. Whenever we buy a thing, the thing we
buy has come into existence through the performance of human
labor. The piece of goods, the commodity is, as it were,
crystallized human labor. And Adam Smith thought: Just
because this was the foundation of economic life, prosperity
will best be brought about if we do not hinder people through
any kind of legislation from producing freely. The individual
will do the best for the community if he does the best for
himself. Roughly speaking, this is Adam Smith's idea: We
shall do the very best for all mankind if we do the very best
for ourselves, for then we shall best be able to deliver the
goods. It will be best both for the individual and mankind to
arrange the economic life in an individualistic way and not
to erect hindrances by legislation or the like.
Such, my dear
friends, is the whole direction of thought in all these
theories of political economy. “What is the best way of
arranging the social structure?” In this connection one
idea may possibly occur to you and if so it may well seem to
you the most important of all. It is a question which was not
really clearly seen even by the Physiocrats. In all the
systems of political economy of which I have spoken hitherto,
they considered what is the best way of arranging and
producing the economic structure of society. But as we follow
up the thoughts that here emerge, we are reminded again and
again that there is also another question, namely this: What
is the essential purpose of this economic life? Its object
cannot merely be to distribute whatever is available. Surely
it must also see to it that something shall be
available; that the necessary material goods shall really be
produced. The point is, after all, to produce the necessary
goods from the Earth. What then is the relation of man to the
goods that are to be derived from the Earth? It was Malthus
who first put forward conscious thoughts upon this question,
and it must be said that his thought took a line which may
well cause humanity considerable misgiving. The cardinal
question which Malthus brings to light, and the view which he
puts forward in answer to it, are by no means quite
unfounded. He says: Let us consider the increase in the human
population of the Earth. He believed, as many modern people
do, that the population of the Earth is always increasing.
Then let us consider the increase in the food-stuffs and
means-of-life that are produced. We shall obtain a certain
ratio. Malthus expresses it somewhat mathematically. He says:
The increase in food-stuffs will take place in arithmetical,
and the increase in population in geometrical, progression. I
may make it clear by a few numbers. Let us assume that the
increase in the food-stuffs produced is in the ratio 1, 2, 3,
4, 5. Then we shall have the corresponding geometrical ratio,
1, 4, 9, 16, 25. In other words, his idea is, the population
will increase much faster than the available food-stuffs.
Mankind in its evolution cannot escape the danger that a
struggle for existence will arise, for in the last resort
there will be far too many people in relation to the increase
in the food-stuff. Thus he conceives the economic evolution of
mankind from quite a different point of view, namely, from
the aspect of the connection of man with the conditions of
the Earth. He comes to the conclusion, or at least his
followers come to the conclusion, that it is against the real
line of evolution to practice much charity and welfare work
for the poor, and the like. For by so doing we only encourage
over-population, and this is harmful to the evolution of
mankind. He even comes to the point of saying: Whosoever is
weak in life, let us leave him unsupplied, unsupported, for
it is necessary that the unfit should be weeded out. And he
conceives other methods of which I will not speak at this
point. I will but indicate their nature. He recommends
especially the two-children system in order to counteract the
natural tendency to over-population. Wars he regards as
something that must necessarily arise in human evolution,
because it is a tendency of nature for the population to
increase far more rapidly than the means of life.
You see, it is
a very pessimistic conception of the economic evolution of
mankind which here appears upon the scene of history, nor can
we say that much attention has been devoted in more recent
times to this question: How is man connected with the
Nature-basis of his economic life? In more recent times there
is not even a clear consciousness that one ought to make
investigations in this direction. For in the subsequent
period attention was directed again and again to the social
structure itself; to the way in which men should distribute
what is available in order to attain the greatest possible
prosperity. The question was not “How shall we derive
as much as possible from the Earth?” It was more a
question of distribution.
Along these
lines of thought many different theories emerge, which is
important to observe, since they prepare the way for the
social and a socialistic thinking of the present day, which
has led mankind already in a high degree into a kind of
social chaos and will do so still more in the future, and
from which it is essential to seek the right way of escape.
One of these things I have just indicated, when I mentioned
how distinctly there emerges, in Adam Smith for example, the
idea: The commodity, the piece of goods that we buy,
represents stored-up labor. Increasingly, as though by an
inevitable process, there arose the thought: That which
appears as a commodity can be regarded in no other way than
as stored-up labor. This idea has dominated man to such an
extent that it is one of the main motive forces in the
proletarian thinking at the present time. For on the economic
premises which I have characterized, there has entered the
minds of the modern proletariat a keen vision of the fact
that such as the economic order, such as the social structure
is today, the labor-power of the worker who has no property,
who can only bring the labor of his hands on to the market,
is a commodity. Just as we buy any other things, so
do we buy his labor-power from the proletarian worker.
Over against
the question: — What am I in reality as Man? —
the modern proletarian feels this as the thing that most
oppresses him, and from this his social demands instinctively
proceed. He does not want any part of him to be bought and
sold. We may say: He appears to himself as though a man could
sell his own hands and arms. This seems to him intolerable.
No matter in what form the feeling finds expression, in
Marxist or in revolutionary thought, or however we may call
it, the underlying feeling is, “Other folk buy and sell
commodities, but I am obliged to sell my labor
power.”
My dear
friends, it would be a simple error to object that other
people too sell their labor. That is not true. In the social
structures of the present day, it is really only the
proletarian worker who sells his labor. For the moment [if] one is
connected in any way at all with property, one ceases to sell
one's labor power. Thus the bourgeois does not sell his
labor, he buys and sells commodities. He may sell the
products of his labor, but that is a different thing from
selling one's labor. The modern proletarian has very keen and
sharp ideas on these things, and if you know the thinking of
the modern proletarian you will know that the significance of
this concept the “proletarian laborer” is that he
is one who sells his labor power. And you will know,
moreover, how strongly this idea works as the real driving
force in the proletarian thinking of today, from its most
moderate to its most radical forms of experience. Anyone who
is unable to read this out of the phenomena themselves,
simply fails to understand this present time. And it is a sad
thing how many people fail to understand it. It is through
this that we go more and more deeply into confusion: men do
not really try to understand their time.
That is the one
thing. The other thing is this: — However modified by
later, albeit somewhat instinctive points of view, a certain
kind of thought has arisen in connection with what I have now
characterized. We find this thought expressed in the idea of
the Law of Wages. It is true that in the modern Proletarian
thinking this idea no longer exists in the same radical form.
Nevertheless we must know the form in which it was held, for
instance, by Lasalle. For only then shall we perceive what
exists in the present-day proletarian as a kind of residue of
this idea. The so-called iron Law of Wages was clearly
formulated by the economist Ricardo, and even in the middle
of the last century Lasalle stood out for it with all energy.
It is somewhat as follows. Under the social structure of
today, with the form that Capital assumes in this social
structure, he who is obliged to work as a proletarian can
never receive beyond a certain maximum of wages for his
labor. His wages will always fluctuate about a certain level.
They cannot rise beyond it, nor can they descend beneath it.
The objective facts make it necessary for a certain level of
wages to be paid in the long run. The level of the worker's
wages cannot rise beyond or descend below the maximum or if
you will the minimum (it does not matter for the present
purpose how we call it). They cannot depart from it to any
considerable extent, and for the following reasons: so
thought Ricardo. He says: let us assume that through some
circumstance — a favorable period in Trade or the like
— there would arise at any time an unusual increase in
wages. What then would happen? The proletariat would suddenly
receive higher wages. Their standard of life would be
improved, they would attain a certain prosperity.
Consequently it would be more attractive to seek for labor as
a proletarian than under the preceding level of wages.
There will
therefore be a larger supply of proletarian labor. Moreover,
owing to their increased prosperity, the workers will
multiply more quickly — and so on. In short, the supply
will be increased. As a result, the laborer will be easier to
obtain; and we shall therefore begin once more to underpay
him. The wages will therefore fall back to their former
level. Through the very rise in wages, phenomena are induced
which causes them to fall again. Or let us assume that wages
fall through any circumstance. Poverty and wretchedness will
be the result and the supply of labor will be reduced.
Workers will die more quickly, or they will get diseases.
They will have fewer children. So the supply of labor power
will be reduced, and this in turn will bring about an
increase in wages. But the increase cannot go on essentially
beyond the level of the iron law.
Of course, my
dear friends, Ricardo, and Lasalle too, in propounding this
iron Law of Wages, were thinking of the determination of
wages in the purely economic process. Today, nay even twenty
or thirty years ago, even proletarians, where one cited the
iron Law of Wages in the history of economic science would
reply: That is incorrect, there Ricardo and Lasalle were
wrong. But this objection too is really incorrect. For
Ricardo and Lasalle could only have meant that if the social
structure is left to itself this iron Law of Wages will begin
to work. It was just in order that it should not work, that
Workers' Associations were founded and that the help and
influence of the State was called into play. As a consequence
the level of the Law of Wages was artificially raised. Thus
whatever goes beyond the iron level is brought about by
legislation or by associations or the like. The objection is
therefore not really valid. You see, it all depends on the
way in which we turn the thought.
Well, these
things might of course be multiplied without limit. I only
wanted to place them before you in order to show how the
conscious thoughts of men on economic questions have
gradually evolved during the age of the Spiritual Soul. The
opinions of men were always dominant in the one direction or
another. Some held the opinion that national prosperity would
be greatest if the economic life were arranged on an
individualistic basis, leaving the individual as free as
possible. Others thought that this would put the weaker at a
disadvantage; the weaker brethren must be supported by the
assistance of the State or the association.
I should have
to go on for a long time if I were to describe all the ideas
that emerged as time went on. In many different regions of
the Earth, i.e., of the civilized world, conceptions of
political economy arose. Fundamentally speaking, it was the
aim of all of them — those that I have characterized
and many others — not only to study the nature of the
social structure that has evolved in the world hitherto, but
also to consider what is the best thing to do to the social
structure in order that men may not have to live in poverty
in order that they may have prosperity, and so forth.
Economic science, in many of its representatives, did after
all set out with the strong desire to better the economic
life of the people. Utopian characters and such characters as
the French Socialists Saint Simon for instance, Auguste
Comte, Louis Blanc and others had this in view. Their thought
was somewhat as follows: Hitherto, Society being left more or
less to itself has evolved in such a way as to produce great
differences between the poor and the rich, the well-to-do and
the unhappy. This state of affairs must now be changed. To
this end they studied the laws of economics and propounded
the many varied ideas with a view to bringing about some kind
of improvement. Naturally, in so doing, many of them set out
entirely the idea that it should be possible to establish
some kind of Paradise on Earth.
In the modern
proletariat, however, the conscious thinking about the social
structure assumes a special form. We have already spoken of
the reason why the proletariat above all was predestined to
develop these ideas. But there is one special aspect on which
I now want to dwell a little further. True it is that what
Karl Marx brought to expression in his book (and those which
he wrote in collaboration with Engels) has been considerably
modified since then. Yet the changes are small compared to
the basic impulses which these thoughts contain. And though
the statement only holds true in a modified form,
nevertheless in general we can say: Throughout the countries
of the civilized Earth, from the extreme West to Russia, the
proletariat are dominated by the Marxist impulses, albeit no
longer explicitly by the precise outlines of the Marxist
thoughts. And the conscious thinking about the social
structure appears in a quite peculiar form in this modern,
Marxist, proletarian thinking.
The thoughts
that we have today unfolded — those therefore which
appear already in the bourgeois Political Economist since the
beginning of the Age of Consciousness — are taken up
into the socialist thinking, which, however, modifies and
recasts them in the direction in which the worker out of the
proletarian class must necessarily think them. And this is
the peculiar thing: — The thought — “Within
the modern capitalistic social structure, Man as a
proletarian is obliged to sell his labor-power” —
this thought however theoretically elaborated, becomes the
driving force of proletarian thinking. And now the thought
emerges: “How is it to be avoided; how is it to be made
absolutely impossible for labor-power to be brought on to the
market and sold like a commodity?” Needless to say this
impulse is strongly influenced by the idea which is clearly
formulated already in Adam Smith and others — the idea
that in the commodity we but have to do with so much
stored-up labor-power. It is an immensely plausible idea, and
one that leads on to the logical conclusion: —
“If this is so, what then can we do? If I buy
a coat, the work that was done by the tailor, or whoever else
took part in bringing the coat into existence, is there in
the coat; it is stored-up labor.” Thus they never put
the question in this way at all: “Can we separate the
labor from the commodity?” But they take it as
axiomatic, as an absolute matter of course, that the labor is
inseparably bound up with the commodity. Hence they look for
a social structure which shall make this inevitable economic
fact, that the labor remains bound up with the product of the
labor, as harmless as possible for the worker.
Under the
influence of such ideas the belief arose that a just
remuneration for labor can only be brought about in a certain
sense, by making the means of production public property,
i.e., by making the community itself in some way the owner of
the means of production — of the machinery, the land
and the means of transport and distribution. The question
simply did not arise: “Can we make the commodity
independent of the remuneration for labor?” but they
put the question thus: “How can we bring about a just
form of remuneration, assuming as an obvious axiom that the
labor flows into the commodity?” That is how they put
the question, and on this everything else depends. Indeed
even the materialistic conception of economic science, the
extreme “Materialist Conception of History”
depends on this way of putting the question. I have already
explained to you the materialistic conception of history,
where the modern proletarian thinks: Everything that works
within the civilization of mankind, all spiritual creation,
all thought, all politics, in a word everything other than
the economic processes themselves — is a mere
super-structure, an ideology erected on the foundation of
that which is worked-out economically. The economic life is
the real thing. The way the human being is placed within the
economic structure — this is the real thing in human
life. The kind of thoughts he has result from his connections
with the economic life. Thoroughly rigorous Marxists, like
Franz Mehring for example, write in this fashion even about
Lessing. (I only give this one example.) They ask:
“What was the nature of the economic life in the second
half of the 18th century? What were the methods of
manufacture? What were the methods of purchase? What was the
relation of the industrial life to the remainder of mankind?
And as a consequence, what was the habit of men's thoughts?
How did such a phenomenon as Lessing arise?” This
individual personality, Lessing, with all the works that he
produced, is explained out of the economic life of the second
half of the 18th century! Kautsky and others like him even
try to explain the appearance of Christianity from this point
of view. They investigate the economic conditions at the
commencement of our era. Certain conditions of production
were holding sway. As a consequence, men began to unfold what
these writers describe as a kind of communistic thinking,
which was then christened by the name of Christ Jesus. The
true, the real thing, was the economic order at the beginning
of our era. Christianity is an ideology, a super-structure, a
reflection as it were, of the economic order. There is
nothing else than the economic order. All other things hover
above it like a Fata Morgana, a mirror-image, an unreality,
or at most (as I explained in earlier lectures) as something
that reacts in turn upon the events of other kinds.
And now, the
two things which I have described work conjointly. First
there is the indignation at the fact that Man must submit to
a part of himself, namely his labor-power, being treated as a
commodity; and this works in conjunction with the
Materialistic Conception, driving to its uttermost extreme,
that the Economic is the only real thing in life.
Of course, men
of today, not all, have given themselves up to this idea. But
among the proletariat, millions and millions are more or less
dominated by it. As to the rest, the non-proletarians, other
customs have become fashionable among them in relation to
these things of life. The things that are done in the
proletariat are of course “not done” in the other
classes. When proletarian workers have worked their eight or
ten or sometimes even more than ten hours a day, they come
together in the evening and discuss these questions, or they
get lecturers and teachers to explain them. There are women's
meetings too. Every individual one of them is seriously
concerned as to the nature of the social structure, and in
their way, they think about it seriously. They see to it that
those who have thought about these things shall tell them
their results. And so forth. In a word, they are
well-informed; albeit in their own way, they are
well-informed. In the next higher level of Society, which we
call the bourgeoisie, you must admit this is not the case.
When “the day's work is done” — let us put
this phrase in inverted commas — they concern
themselves with quite other things. With the proletariat they
will concern themselves at most (and if they do this much,
they make a great fuss about it) by letting it be played
before them on the stage — dished up by some bourgeois
pedant as dramatist or poet. But as to thinking any thoughts
about the economic order of society, they leave this to the
Professors of the Universities, that is their job, they will
see to that all right! Needless to say, the people of this
age are not believers in authority! Still, they swear by what
the University professors have thought about these questions.
What they say must of course be correct, for they are the
experts, they are paid to do so by the proper authorities,
they are the people appointed for the purpose.
Talking of
these Professors, it is a curious school of economics that
has lately been evolved. Nowadays, when they write their
books, they call it the “Historic School.” They
deal with the Mercantilists, the Physiocrats, Adam Smith,
Socialism, Anarchism, and so on. And when they come to their
own idea — well, that is the “Historic
School.” They are more or less of this opinion:
“However shall we arrive at any real thoughts
as to how things should be done?” ... Truth to
tell, they are helpless when they come to this. They cannot
rouse in themselves a sufficient activity of thought: they
cannot rise to ideas as to how we should set about it, to
bring about a structure of society. To a comfortable
bourgeois pedant like Lujo Brentano, or Schmeller, or
Roscher, it simply does not occur to bring his thought into
such activity. Their idea is: We must observe the phenomena
just as the Natural Scientist does. Such a man then lets the
phenomena take their course and studies them. He simply
studies the historic evolution of mankind, or at most, the
historic evolution of the ideas of men about their economic
life. He describes what exists. The most he will do is, like
Lujo Brentano — if he does not find it convenient to
observe these things in his home country — to travel to
a representative country of the economic life, to England,
and make his investigations there. He will then describe what
is the relationship of employer and employed in that country,
and so forth. If there are rich people there he learns to
know how they acquire credit, how Capital works. If there is
poverty there, if there are those devoid of property, some of
whom have more or less nothing to eat, he will describe it as
the result of this or that circumstance. And at last such a
man will say: After all, it is not the task of Science to
show how things ought to evolve, but only to point
out how they do evolve in fact.
Yet after all,
what will become of a Science which deals with the things of
practical life in this way, merely watching and observing how
these things evolve? Truly it is as though I were about to
train an artist and I said to him: You must go to as many
artists as possible and observe — “This one
paints well,” “that one paints badly,” and
so on — but above all things, you yourself must do
nothing at all! In such a sphere the thing becomes absurd at
once. And yet, my dear friends, it is a true comparison. It
is indeed enough to drive one out of one's skin —
forgive the expression — when one begins to study
— I cannot say what is done, but what is wasted and
fooled away nowadays where they claim to apply “the
scientific method” to economics and such things of
life. For the result is absolutely nil, since if we go to the
root of the matter, the very premises from which they start
are abstract and unreal. At most there will arise from among
their ranks the so-called “professional
socialists” whose observation of existing things leads
them to the conclusion: “Something must be done”
and they then make Laws pretending to investigate or remove
this or that distress.
This very
helplessness has done much to bring about the present
situation; and today it would be cowardice if we failed to
point out the facts. Needless to say the public of today
worships no authority at all. But the pretentious nonsense
they believingly accept in this domain of life (and declare
themselves satisfied!) is very largely to blame for the chaos
that has come upon us. These are serious matters, and we must
take hold of them in their true shape and form. For then, my
dear friends, the question will emerge: What is it that is
working still more deeply in all these things? Why
has it all come about in this way? Why are such changing and
wavering ideas at work in a realm of life that is of such
cardinal importance to mankind?
Let us consider
such an idea, illusory as it is but extraordinarily
effective; let us consider the Marxist idea, however modified
— it does not matter. It is in all essentials the idea
of the professional minds of our time. Consider this idea:
Only the economic life, only the economic structure is the
real thing; everything else is ideology, super-structure,
Fata Morgana. Truly, it is an extraordinary thing —
this absolute unbelief in all that Man can produce by way of
spiritual things, evolving out of the thoughts that have
arisen since the dawn of the Age of the Spiritual Soul. Men
are being diverted more and more to the things that are
outwardly known, outwardly and tangibly present to their
senses. All other things they flee from and avoid. The fact
is that not only the social thoughts but the social feelings
and in the last resort the social events of our time have
evolved under the influence of this flight from the spirit,
this avoidance of spiritual things. And they will continue to
evolve under this influence, if the call for a true
spiritual-scientific penetration of the facts is
neglected.
What is the
deeper underlying truth? It is this, my dear friends. We have
entered on the age of the Spiritual Soul; we are in it since
the 15th century. Through the very development of this age of
the Spiritual Soul, through his pressing forward to the
awakening of the Spiritual Soul, man is unavoidably
approaching ever nearer and nearer to a point in his
evolution where, through counter-instincts in his nature, he
would fain take flight. It will be one of the most essential
things for modern man to overcome this instinct of flight. At
all costs he wants to flee from what he must none the less
enter.
The other day,
the last time I spoke to you here, I said: Over the various
national regions, the West, the Middle Countries, and the
East, the way man approached the Guardian of the Threshold,
when he enters into the spiritual world, is differentiated.
Now men are moving towards the conscious experience of such
things, as that these experiences can be undergone
consciously when they meet the Guardian of the Threshold; and
more or less instinctively they must be undergone by human
beings in the course of time, during the Age of the Spiritual
Soul. Men are being pressed and driven to this experience
when they face the Guardian of the Threshold. It is this
which works in a special, albeit external form, like an
impulse, like an instinctive urge, in the men of modern time.
And it is this from which they flee. They are afraid to come
whither they really ought to come.
This is a very
law in the modern evolution of mankind. Take what I said
before as an external characterization of the modern
striving. Man strives to know what he is as Man, what he is
worth as Man, what is his strength and potentiality as Man.
Man strives to see himself as Man, to arrive at a picture of
his own Being. But we cannot arrive at a picture of Man if we
are determined to remain within the world of the senses, for
he is no mere physical being. In times of instinctive
evolution, when one does not ask for a picture of Man, when
one does not ask what is the dignity and strength of Man, one
may overlook this fact — that to know Man one must
transcend the world of the senses and gaze into the spiritual
world. But in our age of consciousness, we must make
acquaintance, at any rate in one form or another, be it only
intellectually, with the super-sensible world. The same thing
that the Initiate has to overcome consciously is working in
our age unconsciously. Unconsciously as yet, there lives in
our contemporaries, and in the men whose social thoughts I
have described today, this fear of the Unknown — the
Unknown which they are nonetheless being driven to observe.
Fear, cowardice, lack of courage, is dominating the humanity
of today. And if it is declared: “Economic life is the
tangible thing which determines all other things,” this
view itself has arisen simply through the fear of the
invisible and the intangible. This they will not approach,
they will avoid it at all costs, and so they lyingly
transform it into an ideology, a Fata Morgana. The modern
world-conception, my dear friends, is born of fear and terror
in relation to those points which I have characterized.
However outwardly courageous some of those within the stream
of the modern social world-conception may show themselves to
be, they are afraid of the Spiritual, which must meet them in
one form or another, and in whose domain, after all, they
long to know the human being. But they are afraid of it; like
cowards, they recoil from it.
The things must
be seen from this point of view. For the modern man must
learn to know three things, inasmuch as he is led quite
naturally to these three — differentiated in West,
Middle and East, as I described last time. Quite naturally,
in one form or another, he is led to these three things.
Though only the Initiate beholds what is present in these
points, yet in the course of time, every human being who
seeks to penetrate and understand the social structure must
feel them, sense them, receive them at least into his
intellect.
In the first
place the modern man must gain a clear feeling, or at least a
clear intellectual conception, of those forces of the
Universe which are the forces of decline and destruction. The
forces to which we are fond of turning our attention (and for
the very fondness, we delude ourselves about them) are of
course the upbuilding forces above all others. We always want
to build and build. But in the world there is not only
evolution or upbuilding, there is also devolution,
demolition. We ourselves bear the process of demolition
within us; our evolved nervous system, our brain system, is
perpetually engaged in demolition or destruction. With these
forces of destruction man must make himself acquainted. With
unprejudiced and open mind he must say to himself: Along the
very path that unfolds in the age when the Spiritual Soul
shall awaken fully, the forces of destruction are most
active. When suddenly they concentrate or consolidate; then
such a thing arises as in the last four and a half years.
Then there appears to mankind in a concentrated form what in
any case is always there. But this must not remain
unconscious and instinctive: it must become a fully conscious
thing, above all in the present age. The destructive forces,
the forces of death, the paralyzing forces — how gladly
would man turn his face away from them! But in so doing he
only blinds himself. In fleeing from the destructive forces
he learns not to cooperate in real evolution.
The second
thing with which man must make himself acquainted and from
which again he flees is this, my dear friends: In the present
age of Intellectual evolution — that is to say, in the
evolution of the Age of the Spiritual Soul, it is absolutely
necessary for man to seek within himself as it were a new
center of gravity of his own being. Instinctive evolution
gave him even in his thought a center of gravity. He imagined
that he stood fast on the views, the opinions, the ideas that
came to him through the blood or through descent or in some
other way. Henceforth man can do this no longer. He must free
himself from these things on which he formerly stood so fast
and firm, which arose in him instinctively. He must take his
stand, as it were, at the edge of the abyss. He must feel
beneath him the void of the abyss. He must find within
himself the central point of his being. Man is afraid to do
this, he recoils from the task.
And the third
thing, my dear friends, is this: Man must learn to recognize
the full power of the impulse of self-seeking, the impulse of
egoism. Our age is destined to make it fully clear to man to
what an extent, if he lets himself go, he is a selfish being.
To overcome egoism, we must first have probed and realized
all the sources of egoism that are there in human nature.
Love only arises as the counterpart to self-love. We must
cross the abyss of selfishness if we would learn to know that
social warmth which has to penetrate the social structure of
the present and the future; if we would learn to know it,
above all, not only in theory but in full practice. And to
approach this feeling — which the Initiate sees with
fully conscious clarity, when face-to-face with the Guardian
of the Threshold as he enters into the sense-world —
this again fills man with fear. But there is no other way of
entering into the age which must necessarily bring forth a
social structure, than by a Love which is not self-love,
which is a true Love for other men and interest in other men.
Men feel this as a burning fire, as something that would
consume them and take their own being from them, inasmuch as
it deprives them of self-love, or the right to self-love.
Even as they flee the super-sensible, of which they are afraid
because it is to them an unknown region, so do they flee from
Love, because it is to them a burning fire. And even as they
bind their eyes and shut their ears to the truth of the
super-sensible, when in the Marxism and in the misguided
proletarian thinking of today they keep repeating that all
things must be based on the tangible and the material —
even as in this domain they go after the very opposite of
that which lies in the real tendency of human evolution
— so do they also in the realm of Love. Even in the
catch-words and slogans this finds expression. They set up
idealism, the very opposite of what really lies in the
evolution of mankind and must be striven after.
Already in
1848, when Karl Marx's Communist Manifesto — the first
and most significant declaration of the modern proletarian
conception of life — was published, we find in it the
words which are now printed as a motto on almost every
socialistic book or pamphlet: “Proletarians of all
lands, unite!” If we have but a little sense for
realities, we are bound to pronounce a precise if strange and
paradoxical judgment upon these words. What does it mean to
say “Proletarians of all lands, unite!” It means,
Work together, work with one another, be brothers, be
comrades one to another! That is nothing else than Love. Let
Love sway among you. Tumultuously the tendency arises —
yet how does it arise? — Proletarians, you must be
conscious that you are a class apart from the rest of
mankind! Proletarians, hate the others who are not
proletarians! Let hate be the impulse of your Union. In a
strange way, wedded together, we here have Love and Hate
— a striving for union out of the impulse of hatred,
the very opposite of union. The people of today only fail to
notice such a thing as this, because they are so far from
connecting their thoughts with reality. Yet in truth this
thought represents the very fear of Love, which Love, though
it is striven for, is at the same time avoided, because they
are afraid and recoil from it as from a consuming fire.
Only through
Spiritual Science can we come to know the realities. Only
through Spiritual Science can we perceive what is really
working in the present time; what we must indeed perceive and
recognize if we would take our place with real consciousness
in this our time. It is by no means a simple matter to
perceive all that is throbbing in the humanity of today. To
do so, Spiritual Science is necessary. This should never be
forgotten. And he alone stands rightly within this our
spiritual movement, who knows how to take these things
sufficiently in earnest.
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