Lecture III
Clairvoyant Vision Looks at Mineral, Plant, Animal, Man
5th January, 1919
From our considerations
of yesterday you will have seen how easily the whole course of human
evolution can be misunderstood and how it is particularly misunderstood
from many sides today to the detriment of present knowledge as well
as of the present social striving of mankind. (see Z-7.) Today we will
for once call up before our souls some results of Spiritual Science
of such a nature that they can throw light, it may be said, from another
side on what becomes so enigmatical if looked at from the points of
view holding good at present. Now I have told you that man can come
to terms with this present time only if he makes up his mind to find
his real bearings by starting on the path to the spirit. He must decide
to look for a new relation to external nature since the old means to
this end no longer suffice, and also find his way to a new relation
to his fellow men, the old relation no longer being suitable, so that
he sees what impulses are necessary for the modern social structure
of mankind. If we wish to be successful in this, we must earnestly keep
before our souls the following—that as man is placed in the world
today, in earthly existence between birth and death, he sees but the
outer manifestation of his own essential being and enters into actual
relationship with merely the outer manifestation of his fellowmen. Life
takes on a different form for the different epochs of mankind's evolution,
and we exert ourselves really to study these things just in their relation
to men of the present time. For the present age is a very critical one
for men on earth. Up to the fifteenth century, and, since things do
not change in a flash, one might say on into the present time, man is
still actually more or less dominated by inherited concepts and impulses
of the past. This fifth post-Atlantean epoch is indeed in a certain
sense rather out of the ordinary where the evolution of men is concerned.
For you certainly know that taking earthly evolution as a whole it divides
itself into seven great successive epochs, of which the fourth was the
Atlantean epoch and the fifth, our present one, the post-Atlantean.
The sixth and the seventh should then follow.
In the Atlantean period
there was a kind of crisis. For up to that time the whole of the earth's
existence was a recapitulation of the earlier existence of Saturn, Sun
and Moon. During the Atlantean period there was a kind of crisis but
it is true only the beginning of a crisis. There was merely a preparation
of things that were actually to be developed in the following evolution
of the earth. So that up to Atlantean times man was really only what
he had been in his different forms as man on Saturn, Sun and Moon. In
Atlantean times, however, he had only intimations of what he was supposed
actually to become as man of the earth; then he continues on, and now
we are in the fifth post-Atlantean period. In the post-Atlantean period,
throughout the old Indian end old Persian development, and so on, ever
more definite relations were arising. But the Greco-Latin time, the
fourth post-Atlantean period, gives us again even though in another
form merely a kind of repetition of what existed on another level of
existence in Atlantis. It is only now in the fifth post-Atlantean period,
in the time since the fifteenth century, that man stands within his
whole evolution in such a way that new impulses arise—impulses
which are perceptible in his very being. Previously they were not so
noticeable; now they appear in his being noticeably, nevertheless there
are still only intimations of their presence. The terrible, catastrophic
events of our time, the consequences of which—one can already
foresee—will be shattering to mankind, are the expression of how
new relations are making their way into mankind's evolution. I have
already indicated how from a certain aspect these new relations can
be described by pointing to the way in which an on-rolling spiritual
wave is clearly perceived, arising from, as it were, a surging up into
evolution of the Spirits of Personality.
Now we notice it after the
manner of Spiritual Science we keep in mind this particular state of
soul in which modern man is found here on earth, it is markedly noticeable
today, according to the outlook of Spiritual Science, how man when he
perceives or is outwardly active in his willing is really surrounded
only by manifestations of the being of nature, and the being of his
fellow men. He is not surrounded by the real beings into whom he must,
as it were, grow in the course of evolution, into whom he will have
grown at a later stage of evolution. As you know, man's position in
the world is such that—to describe it broadly—he perceives
the surrounding world in the mineral kingdom, plant kingdom, animal
kingdom and in his own human kingdom. This is what is visible around
man. And in the visible human kingdom there is played out what comes
from the will and what should find a certain ordering for the social
structure.
Now people have reflected
a great deal about man's attitude to his environment, though insufficient
thought has gone into their reflections. But the result of these reflections
has been worked into various theories of knowledge. We get very little,
however, from these theories of knowledge. And what in schoolmaster
fashion is given in these theories today to the young people, who are
then supposed to speak to the world as philosophers, is really perfectly
inadequate nonsense. For a true insight into what is really revealed
in man's surroundings, a real insight, can only be gained when the matter
is observed according to the way of Spiritual Science. You see, on one
side man can look upon the mineral kingdom and the plant kingdom; on
the other side he can look on the animal kingdom and the kingdom of
man himself. Both—mineral kingdom and plant kingdom as well as
human kingdom and animal kingdom—unveil themselves to him in such
a way that if now in a theoretical sense he is honest, in this unveiling,
in this revealing, he notices contradictions. He is unable to make anything
of the way in which on the one hand the mineral kingdom and plant kingdom,
and on the other hand the animal kingdom and human kingdom reveal themselves
to him. And when people believe they can succeed in doing so this comes
from a certain dullness. Because they take life too easily they are
unwilling to go into all the doubts which arise from observing the kingdoms
of Nature. But now, when one presses on to knowledge, when one trains
oneself in the direction given in Knowledge of the Higher Worlds,
then to a certain extent a change takes place in our contemplation of
the mineral and plant kingdoms, as well as in our view of the connection
with the animal and human kingdoms. Unconsciously men already have,
to a high degree today, a feeling for this change, even if it does not
enter consciousness. It remains indeed in the unconscious—just
as I told you that today in the natural course of evolution man passes
by the Guardian of the Threshold unconsciously. It is actually a certain
fear of the truth which always unconsciously holds men back from really
pressing on so that they come to this change. I am speaking in Imaginations,
my dear friends, in Imaginations translated into words. In reality these
things cannot be appropriately described in any other way. For when
man brings to life within him what can be made living, when he applies
himself to what is described in Knowledge of the Higher Worlds,
looking at the mineral and plant kingdoms with this transformed power
of cognition, he will always experience something like fear. But you
should not have to shudder nor get gooseflesh at the description of
these conditions. People avoid them because they are afraid. From this
you ought to understand that of course when picturing these conditions
one can indeed get gooseflesh to a certain degree, and on that account
people just get frightened. When such knowledge is acquired, on looking
at the mineral and plant kingdoms, one always experiences something
like the smell of a corpse; there is a corpse-like smell which characterises
as if in a vivid feeling what is living in the mineral and plant kingdoms.
On the contrary, When with transformed cognition we look at the animal
kingdom and the kingdom of man, there is always a sensation that can
be described by saying: actually (you will forgive me, I know, for putting
this Imagination into words) actually so long as they are in a physical
body men remain—even the most advanced of them—where what
in reality is hidden within them is concerned, always children, thorough
children. The simple truth is that far more lies hidden in a man between
birth and death than he can develop outwardly, can bring to manifestation
out of himself.
Therefore, because in supersensible
knowledge there is always a gradual ascent from semblance to actual
reality, you see that when looking at, observing the outer world as
it now is, we actually have to do with semblance alone. For the corpse-like
smell of which I have spoken and, forgive me, the childishness of men,
are veiled. The corpse-like smell finds, if I may say so, too dull a
nose in our physical men, the etheric nose not being sufficiently developed.
And the childishness of men does not allow us to confess its presence
because , as men, we are too conceited to do so. Yet this is how the
matter stands. My explaining what I have just been describing one points
at the same time to there being far more hidden in in man than can be
given practical proof. The question may now be asked: If man does not
perceive the reality in minerals nor plants, if he perceives no reality
in animals either—not even in his own being as man, where then
is his right setting on earth? Strange as it may seem we find him placed
among beings who belong neither to the mineral and plant kingdoms, nor
to the animal and human kingdoms, but lie between them. He bases his
being upon a kind of plant-animal, or animal-plant. were there a being
here on earth neither wholly plant nor wholly animal, but having mere
plant nature where their inner organisation is concerned, and having
the power to go around, to move about at will like the animals—now
this is what I meant were there beings who on being examined anatomically
would not be found to have muscles and blood within them but whose anatomy
would resemble that of the plants, with only their cells and tissue,
but if these beings were able to move at will like the animals, or were
there wandering round our earth animals that on dying left plantlike
corpses, then man in his whole attitude of soul would really belong
among these beings. Here in his earthly existence man would really be
able to comprehend such beings. But again the remarkable thing is that
for their part these beings could not exist on earth, these beings are
only to be found in other worlds. They could not flourish in earth existence.
Thus, we may say that man really lacks the faculty for knowledge—and
this particularly apparent today's—which enables him to penetrate
directly into the being of minerals and plants. and also of animals
and men. And the beings he would directly perceive in their whole constitution
are just these which could not live on the earth. This is the remarkable
position of man where his relation to nature around him is concerned.
But here on earth man stands
also in a strange relation to himself. Man is on the one hand a being
who has conceptions. When, however, he puts this faculty for conceiving,
for having ideas, into action, in the conception he loses his own identity.
And he actually has his identity, that is not able to make an appearance
in the conception, only when something—his will—works up
out of the unconscious. If the will were not to work up and we were
to have no trace of it in us, could we have andy ideas about it. The
whole world would seem to us ghostly. We should have a ghostly world
before us, which about describes the world of scientific concepts; this
would actually constitute our world. Imagine the world looking as it
is described by natural scientists or zoologists; just think of it being
nothing more than what is found in books on Botany and Mineralogy. Real
Botany and Mineralogy contain far more than what we find in books. But
imagine you were taken into a world described in books, where there
was nothing more than what is described in books; it would indeed be
a world of mere apparitions, a proper world of ghosts. The world not
being one of ghosts is amply due to the will having something to say.
Now look! Were you able to fly—I don't mean with a machine but
were you able to fly yourself, if you had no need of earth under your
feet and were you able to move freely without the earth—then you
would come near to perceiving the world in this ghostly fashion. Even
if you could only follow the world with your eyes when awake it would
appear very ghostly, not so much so as when described by the natural
scientist, but all the same it would appear very ghostly. You have a
feeling of the solidity of world existence only because you stand with
your feet on the ground. And this pressure of your feet against the
ground gives you the feeling, akin to the will, but watered-down will,
that you are not in a ghostly world but in one that is solid. Were you
not to have this feeling, should you only see, the world would appear
to you a very ghostly place. You do not tell yourself what is going
on in the subconscious; in the subconscious something is going on that
makes man say (in the subconscious he does say it): Yes, the world looks
very like a ghost! Were it really what is presented by my eyes I should
never be able to stand firm, I should have to sink down; and as I do
not sink, the world is not as presented by my eyes. This conclusion
is constantly being arrived at in the unconscious. The entirely ordinary,
most everyday relation to the world is as complicated as this. It is
always an unconscious conclusion that to a certain extent originates
with the will. Thus in mere conception we actually lack—to use
an erudite expression, a pedantic expression—we lack the subject,
it drops out. That we have a subject and feel ourselves bound up with
the world comes from the will.
Again, when we will, when
we develop the will, the object is actually lacking. The object does
not come into our consciousness at all as something properly solid.
If I want simply to lift this little book from the left side over to
the right, and actually do it—the real object of the will does
not enter consciousness at all. You can see the passage of the book,
the conception which takes its ghostly way into the will, but the actual
object of the will does not enter consciousness. So that man when he
makes conceptions and also when he wills (this again sounds grotesque
because an Imagination is being clothed in words) man as a conceiver
as well as a willer is—if you will forgive me—a cripple.
He conceives in a ghostly way and wills incompletely. What man is in
reality, is actually neither quite within his conception nor his will;
once again it is in the centre between the conception and the will.
But all this goes on in ordinary life without being able to enter consciousness.
In the same way as the plant-animal is unable to enter external nature,
what man actually is cannot enter his consciousness. For this reason
I have often spoken to you of the fact from another point of view by
saying: man perceives the real ego like a hole in life's events. You
see we have to be clear that holes can also be perceived. Man knows
nothing of sleep, he wakes, sleeps; wakes, sleeps; wakes, sleeps. But
reviewing the course of his life he is faced by empty space in his consciousness,
the hole in consciousness, and he sees just as if there were a white
surface before him with black holes where really nothing is to be seen.
Thus he looks at the holes that, during sleep, are there in consciousness.
But it is also the same with our ego in waking life. Our ego is not
in reality brought into consciousness: in the consciousness there is
only a hole for this ego, and perceiving this hole is the only thing
that makes us aware that we really have an ego.
These things, that appear
to the insensitive men of today as sophistry, must gradually become
an elementary consciousness in man. For in the future man will not be
able to found life on dogmatic conceptions, as has been possible for
him in the past owing to the still existing remains and after effects
of atavistic clairvoyance. In future we shall have to base life on grounds
that are easy to detect. It will have to be part of our everyday conceptions
that mineral and plant kingdoms are observed after the manner of Goethe.
For Goethe only examined the phenomenon, and did not believe that in
the phenomenon there was revealed anything but, at best, the basic phenomena,
the archetypal phenomena and that phenomena do not reveal in laws of
nature which can be put thoughts. Goethe never looked for laws of nature,
for this would have seemed to him very fantastic; he wanted to pursue
the phenomena because the external world shows us in the mineral and
plant kingdoms nothing but perceptions, appearances. Thus man has to
look at the external world to become conscious of himself. In the mineral
kingdom, in the plant kingdom I really see only the outer side, and
when confronted by the animal and human kingdoms I actually see only
something like an embryo of the complete being. That also must be so.
For you see, in the mineral and plant kingdoms in reality there exist
beings who, when observed by man, reveal only a certain side of themselves
because it may be said they cannot reveal themselves in any other way.
For in the mineral and plant kingdoms lives something man can only fully
recognise if—please understand me, thoroughly he looks back to
the world from which he came on entering physical existence through
birth. Could you after birth with your thought keep possession of the
consciousness that stretches backward before birth, could you, that
is, look upon being born as an event in your life like—shall we
say—the passing from the fifteenth to the sixteenth year, and
were the backward-running thread of consciousness to remain unbroken—the
consciousness being quite different before birth, before conception—without
more ado you would get a view of mineral and plant kingdoms quite different
from the one you get on looking from the standpoint of life between
birth and death. For you would then say to yourself the followings I
have come from the spiritual world through birth. I have entered this
physical realm. Why should I have done this? Why should I not have remained
in the spiritual realm? Why have I been enticed down to earth at all?
For one may speak here of enticement. Then, if you were able to remember,
you might says I have been enticed to earth for the reason that suddenly
in the course of my development between death and a new birth, it seemed—I
came into a sphere where it seemed—as if certain beings had flown
away, as if they really should be there, were missing—and were
not there. To put it bluntly, in the time just before birth in the spiritual
world one is dogged by the feeling that one misses certain beings which
actually belong there and are not there. Everything goes to show that
these beings are lacking. And if one comes down through birth, these
beings are there in the minerals and in the plants, but as though banished,
as if these beings were banished from the world just left, as if they
could not really flourish, would half die and thus create the corpse-like
smell, would become half dead in the world one has entered. Before birth
we long to know certain exiles. We only know there are banished beings,
but where are they? Then we go into the physical world and perceive
them, but they might be said to be embalmed, mummified. For in the world
we have entered it is only possible for them to be embalmed, mummified,
dried up. It is perfectly right, on being confronted by the mineral
world and the world of the plants, that we should have the feeling we
are looking at beings exiled from the spiritual world, from the regions
in which we were before having to enter physical life.
And when we look at animals
and men end see their childishness, then, if we can develop the power
to see more deeply into being, we remember that these animals and men,
as they actually are here in the world in which we live between birth
and death are never finished, never actually bring to completion the
whole of their life which is conditioned by their inner being. Anyone
looking at animals in the right way, anyone who can look at them with
full inward and living force of knowledge, knows well that animals are
not immortal, but knows too that animals experience in their group souls
the whole tragedy of this not being immortal. The group souls outlast
the individual life of the animal but what there is here on earth of
the animals is—as I recently sale—in reality sick (see Lecture
1), and this is so on account of its deterioration through belonging
to s world from which it is banished. And in his outer physical form
man also is an exile in this world. He therefore remains crippled and
a mere child. Man remains a child, the animal in his general being,
in his physical form, is dried up. For what belongs to animal and man
is found when we go through death and enter directly into the spiritual
world, which then after death we observe. For actually a circle is described
in the life between death and a new birth. What remains hidden here
of animal kingdom and plant kingdom, what causes us to perceive that
animals and men—as far as men's physical forms are concerned—are
exiles from the spiritual world, banished out of the spiritual world,
is first perceived by us when we pass into the spiritual world through
the gate of death. There we go through an evolution and as we approach
ever nearer the cosmic midnight, described in my mystery play, (see
The Soul's Awakening, scene 6) we become clear that something
is missing, that what is missing has run away from the spiritual world;
we pursue it through birth and find it on the physical earth in the
mineral and plant kingdoms. On entering this existence through birth
we are never really surprised about the mineral and plant kingdoms because
they are what we have been expecting. Finding animals on the physical
earth, too, and men with an outer form that recalls that of the animal
though it is more perfect, is astonishing to us in some measure after
being born with our gift of consciousness. We begin ia understand this,
however, when we know that a beginning has been made with this outer
form of animal and man, which only develops in the world we enter through
the gate of death.
Now it might be said: For
the abstract and completely dried up religious conceptions that still
persist (these conceptions were once much more full of life and really
gave men something) for these abstract, dried up conceptions still remaining
in our age of consciousness, all that men perceive here in the physical
world, all that they should conceive as underlying the world experienced
by man between death and a new birth, comes upon them too abruptly.
What man experiences between death and a new birth remains on this account
so problematical for men today, and can so easily be denied by the grossly
material mind, because men in arriving at the age of the consciousness
soul, which means the age of the intellect, lives as I have explained
only in what is reflected into his consciousness. Therefore, he is also
only able to live in reflected images when he goes out beyond the perceptions
to where, if he stands firmly on his feet, the will plays into him in
the way I have previously indicated. If no will plays in however—and
in the immortal life after death no will does play in—when there
is no interplay of the will and man is restricted to placing before
his soul, the reflected images of his conceptions of what the world
is between death and a new birth, then this world will have no certainty
and will be not only ghostly but without certainty. Indeed we can go
as far as to say that if men obstinately cling only to science, if they
fix, their attention only upon the ghostly world given them by science,
then they are quite right in denying any life at all after going through
the gate of death. For what is given by science is only pictures, apparitions.
And even this comes to an end when we pass the gate of death. Science
is unable to contain anything of what we experience in the realm after
death and before birth. For, you see, in books on mineralogy, in books
on botany, in everything connected with Physiology, Geology end so forth,
in any of the conceptions you can absorb about plants and minerals,
you can absorb only about beings who are living in banishment here in
this physical world. Again, you can also perceive in the bodies of animals
and men only what has been banished here—even with all the help
of your books on Zoology and Anthropology, and, if you widen the field
of your thought you can really put all knowledge in the same category—you
are only able to perceive what is living down here in banishment. But
when you reflect that before birth you feel the lack because they really
are not there of just these beings experienced here after birth, that
in animals and men you then experience what does not exist down here,
you will understand that into the conceptual life of science nothing
at all of immortal life can enter, and that since it lives in images
science in its own domain has a perfect right not to trouble itself
about immortal life. It in for this reason that, since the fifteenth
century, in the epoch when the conceptions of science are dominating
the whole of mankind, man has on the one side the robust, crude nature
actually representing for him the whole of reality, and on the other
side a realm that he wishes to reach with only the weakened mirrored
images of the age of the consciousness soul. This comes before him as
though he were saying to himself: Now that I come to see (this happens
in the subconscious, for it is there he comes to doubt immortality)
when I come to see that what I think are only reflected images, then
were I to believe these reflected images would still be there after
my death, including the images of my self, I should be just as stupid
as if I believed that there were coming towards me out of my mirror
here on the wall the men who appear to approach me—that they were
not simply reflected but were actually coming towards me.
It is simply characteristic
of this epoch of the development of the consciousness soul that if man
will not advance to a spiritual comprehension of the world, then connection
with the world into which he will enter once he has passed through the
gate of death will vanish from him more and more. It will also disappear
from his thought life, from his conscious life, but he will not cease
to long for it. And even the most hardened deniers of immortality have
in the depths of their will, where longing is born, the longing to experience
something of the world man enters through the gate of death, the world
from which he comes on passing through the gate of birth. They have
a longing. The present time is sick with this longing. And the many
illnesses of the present time are the expression of this longing holding
sway in man, and of man's inability to find conscious conceptions for
his longing. If anything is living in the sphere of the will which we
are unable to master by conception (again one has to develop very fundamental
concepts to speaker these things) when man cannot overcome by his conception
what is living in the sphere of his will, then he starts to rage. This
is the essence of raging, or frenzy, that something is living in the
realm of the will that man cannot comprehend with his capacity for conception.
And if man refuses to give in and agree to recognise the existence of
the spiritual world, so that through the recognition of the spiritual
world he comprehends what has already taken shape in the sphere of the
will, than this raging will become ever greater and greater in the world;
the raging which indeed presents itself today as the next stage for
men after the—not forthcoming but always hoped for—conclusion
of peace. This is not anything which can be talked about in the way
things ere discussed at a bowling club where, according to the usual
philistine conceptions, people come to an understanding as to the possibility
of getting some kind of relief or redress. No, it is something connected
with the deepest reality of human evolution. Man cannot struggle against
the development in him of what enters the sphere of his will. He has
no power over it. He is able only to make up his mind consciously to
penetrate to the sphere of the spirit so that he learns to understand
what is permeating the region of his will. By this means an ordered
co-operative life for men can be developed in future in place of this
raging.
You see, men turning to
the spiritual world which will be revealed in our time by a special
wave of events, is not an affair only affecting mean subjectively; it
is an objective necessity for man to turn to the spiritual world in
this age of the consciousness soul. For changes have even now entered
human evolution.
Up to the time in the Mystery
of Golgotha took place in earthly life, up to that time, everything
man needed for standing here in the world with some measure of security
came just through sleep. Before the Mystery of Golgotha man slept in
a different way from what he now sleeps, whatever the physiologists
may say. Those prophetic natures like the Hebrew prophets to whom such
sublime things were revealed in dreams, exist no longer, therefore,
in the same form. For today these things are not given to men by God
in sleep. This used to happen. This is just the great crossing point
in evolution. And pictures of the future were not given only to the
prophetic natures but in the time of the Greeks men still had their
thoughts given them during sleep. On waking, man brought his thoughts
back with him. The structure of the human organism was still such that
man could bring back his thoughts. For quite a while this went on working,
for the fact is that men actually became headless in the fifteenth century—you
will forgive mel To become headless means that the head could no longer
he used properly, the head could no longer bring back thoughts out of
sleep.
One of the results arrived
at through Spiritual Science is that we recognise our head as an instrument
to have been really of much less use and much more dried up since the
fifteenth century than it was before that time. But it is only now that
this has become so noticeable; and it will become ever more noticeable
if some means is not found to compensate, s0 that the evaporation of
the head is made good again by the spiritual world. For up to the present,
up to the nineteenth century, the other nature, man's breast nature
has always been accustomed to what the head was still getting from sleep
during the Greco-Latin period. The breast nature was inured to this,
and in their headless condition men were still receiving impulses as
an after effect; they were still in the habit—or I might say men
still had the gesture of the thought, the shadow of the thought. But
this shadow too will pass away and men will have no thoughts at all
if they leave their thinking only to their head. And this is really
how the matter stands; it is shown by men's reluctance to think. They
have less and less will to think. On the one side they want to have
thoughts dictated by nature, for what they like best is merely to make
experiments and let the experiments say what they themselves should
be thinking. But men prefer not to do the thinking themselves. They
even have no proper faith in it, for it is their opinion that what they
think out lacks true reality. It is true that there is no reality if
you take the mere thoughts. We can come to see, however, that thinking,
not the thoughts but the thinking, must become active. And when thinking
is made active, this means the spiritual world is coming into play.
Today when you really begin to think actively, you can do nothing further
than let the spiritual world play a part in you. Otherwise you do not
think; you think as little as the scientist thinks today who prefers
to let his experiments or his investigations dictate everything to him.
Or you think so little as the modern students of sociology who, because
they have no will to be active, because they do not come to grips with
real social impulses which can be grasped only by being active, actually
work with what can be discovered in history, what is inherited from
the past. Think for once how men, because they themselves no longer
have impulses able to create the social structure, have come down to
looking back to the time when thoughts were still formed. The matter
is then seen from only a false point of view. It was Rousseau who held
up to men the natural state, because he had the feeling that in his
day nothing could be gained unless men became active in their pursuit
of knowledge of the higher worlds. Well, and even modern socialism likes
to indulge in a study of mankind's primitive state; it is something
that particularly interests the socialists. They study the original
conditions of mankind, their primitive conditions, they study the most
savage original peoples, primitive peoples, so as to understand how
men are meant to live in social co-operation. This is recognised by
all who are familiar with these things. Everywhere there is a certain
fear of what is making its presence so inevitably felt as the first
dawning of connection with the spiritual world, a certain fear of active
thinking. This is why there is difficulty in understanding my Philosophy
of Spiritual Activity, for example, which makes such demands on
active thinking. In it the thoughts are different from the usual thoughts
of today. And people often stop short when reading this book for the
simple reason that they would like to read it as any other book is read.
But the other books particularly popular today—well, I think you
will agree, they are read in a comfortable easy chair where one can
just let thoughts go by with as little trouble as possible. Many people
do any reading they go in for just like that. Don't delude yourselves
into believing that these men often read newspapers in a different way
(present company, of course, always excluded); it is true that emotions
are mixed up with this reading, and worries too. But even the newspapers
that are devoured so sensationally are also read by letting the pictures
slip by. Ah, but all one has tried to put into The Philosophy of
Spiritual Activity cannot be read just like that. There you have
continually to give yourself a shake to prevent the thoughts sending
you to sleep, my dear friends! For it was not written with the idea
that you would simply sit in an easy chair; naturally you can sit, even
rest your back, but then, just because you are physically at rest, you
have to try with the whole of you to set the inner being of soul and
spirit in motion so that the whole thinking begins to move. Otherwise
you get nowhere but go to sleep. Many indeed do go to sleep and they
are not always the least sincere; the insincere ones are those who read
The Philosophy of Spiritual Activity just like any other book
and then believe they have really followed the thoughts. They have not
followed them, they have on the contrary just jumped over them as if
they were the husks of words; they go on reading the words without taking
in what actually follows from the words as the spark should be produced
by flint and steel. But this is something that must be required of what
has to take hold of the evolution of mankind in the present and the
immediate future, for through it man will gradually raise himself to
the spiritual world in the right way. By active thinking man's inner
relations to the spiritual world will be kindled and then he will make
ever greater progress. Today he can already get very far by carrying
out such things as are described in Knowledge of the Higher Worlds.
But there too it is sufficiently indicated how pre-eminently necessary
it is to develop coherent, connected thinking where there is no broken
thread—when the thread of the thought is carefully followed.
In this longing, today more
or less lacking in clarity and consciousness, to push oneself upward
with unconscious thinking to the sphere of the spirit—and it is
possible to do this—there is mingled a desire from the past, a
weary desire, to go on thinking incoherently. Just recently I have drawn
your attention to how contrary it is to men's sense of comfort to have
to progress step by step in conscious thinking. They would much prefer
to leave things more to the unconscious, and not in thought go on to
the next point and then again to make a further step. Isn't it so? You
see, Spiritual Science as we understand it here and as in a sane way
it reckons with the unbroken sequence of the thoughts in the way you
know—well, it is not that this Spiritual Science cannot be understood
if thinking is made active, but men simply want to understand Spiritual
Science in a different way from how they must understand it; instead
of which they would like the thread to be continually broken. When you
go deeply into what Spiritual Science gives you, when you plunge into
it with real energy (have patience, in the present epoch only faint
indications of this can as yet exist) then, already today, by developing
the power of thought, by following in thought Saturn, Sun and Moon,
as described in my Occult Science, you can follow this evolution
up to where man stands there in the world, and you can press on to your
own life, penetrate this life of yours with the thought which is thus
made vigorous. Then you come to certain conceptions which, although
not as you would like them to appear but entirely in the connection,
in the coherence, of the thinking, enlighten you about their being,
about their nature, about what they are and their character. By bringing
to life what is said about Saturn, Sun, Moon and their corresponding
details, and then about the evolution of the earth, applying all this
to your individual selves, you would be able to progress to your own
being; only you have to go on in your thought to the perception of yourself,
not letting the thoughts be broken but keeping them coherent and connected.
What in this way man begins rightly today enlightens him up to the stage
where he should become clear about his own personal being. In this longing,
still present more or less unconsciously in men, however, something
else is mingled with the broken thread of thought, something calculated!
Man would like to find out something of the kind about his being; what
does he do? He takes old antiquated knowledge of which, it goes without
saying, the venerable nature is certainly not to be disparaged, which,
however, has need of explanation when applied in a new epoch—he
calculates, reckons, breaks the thread of thought at any point, calculates
constellation of the stars, and after that the thread of thought can
break, and quite externally without any sequence in the thought this
being of man as he appears on earth is supposed to develop without any
thinking.
You see, even if the Church,
the Roman Catholic Church as I described it to you yesterday, denies
what today is most necessary of all, this can be made good just by taking
anything like the description of the inner vision of John of the Cross
and living today in the sense of the evolution that conforms with Knowledge
of the Higher Worlds. What is contained in this book follows on
today precisely from what a man such as St. John of the Cross wills;
whereas the Catholic Church denies it and wishes even today to see the
old way of John of the Cross applied to modern man, as indeed it is
to so many people. Because they are too comfort-loving they do not want
a life that is active in spirit, a life that has already reached a stage
of energetic activity when conceptions are accepted such as those given
by Spiritual Science. They would like these to be brought up to date
in a more usual form of thought, preferring to remain with what is old
and hoping that out of this lack of thought there might spring what
should explain present-day mankind. Naturally this is no adverse judgment
about what is venerable, but from every point of view it must be indicated
that one should not venture to deny what is placed as spiritual necessity
into the present evolution of mankind, the evolution beginning with
the age of the consciousness soul. The important thing is for man really
to understand what today is required of mankind in world-evolution.
I believe that out of right feeling for the very things which men find
irksome, and do not want, a better attitude towards Spiritual Science
will be adopted more and more, and only when this better attitude to
Spiritual Science has come about will the social life also be enriched.
At this point man will be able to become clear about the life of mankind
because he will then have the necessary strength of thought to enlighten
himself concerning man's life. For where this enlightenment about man's
life is concerned man of today suffers from a very precarious state
of affairs. Whether you are a follower of Lenin or Trotsky, whether
you are a Marxist or any other kind of thinker about the right form
for the social structure of men, in each of these views there lives
a state of affairs that is precarious and cannot be understood without
the fruitful intervention of Spiritual Science. Doubtless you will admit
that man has now entered the epoch of the consciousness soul. He has
to develop consciously what arises as social structure. Otherwise nothing
will go right. He has to take his place consciously in the world; it
is really necessary that man should be conscious. But he should also
consciously grasp the relation between men, life in society, the social
life. An uncertain state of affairs hinders him in this. The fatal thing
is that man can never have a conception of more than one man. And as
neither two men (I mean physical men) nor two things (physical things)
can be in the same place at the same time—which decides the law
of impermeability—two men cannot be in human consciousness at
the same time, the actual conception cannot be made of two men! simultaneously.
It is very important to take note of this. We cannot live with another
man without making a conception of him, neither can we develop any knowledge
about the social life in common unless we make conceptions about other
men. But today man, because he is able to conceive only of one man,
generally prefers to conceive only of himself, to make a conception
of himself as man. And social thinking is content to demand a co-operative
life in which man's conception is always merely of himself. Man does
not get away from the conception of his own self; he often talks of
doing so, but in reality today he does not easily get rid of himself.
It is only when he makes every effort to fulfil the requirements of
Spiritual Science that he gradually finds it possible in some measure
to get free of himself. For Spiritual Science sows in the world the
seeds of thoughts having a very wide perspective, and this is how man
grows into the habit of getting free from himself. As today, if he becomes
a spiritualist, man grows more egoistic than he was before, if he would
penetrate into the spiritual world on that other path, the path of Spiritual
Science, he becomes more selfless. Spiritual Science, therefore, is
not simply the handing over of knowledge, but spirit-knowledge is actually
something unconditionally necessary for educating modern man in social
life. It is for this reason that no cure will be forthcoming if a start
is not made in this matter, it men do not really give heed to the necessity
for first making a conception. There can be no social reform without
schooling to begin with, without men first being instructed. And when
this is neglected men miss the possibility of receiving concepts that
embrace their longing. And, if I am to get at the root of the matter,
men will became more frenzied than ever.
This is the inner connection,
my dear friends. But it is desirable that this same inner connection
should be perceived. One would wish above all things that this inner
connection should be felt by everyone entering upon Spiritual Science
and wishing to live in it up to some point or other. This is something
that everyone will want to ponder who has the wish to take Spiritual
Science and the Movement of Spiritual Science in earnest. It cannot
well be overlooked, it cannot well remain unnoticed, that when we enter
into relation with Spiritual Science this Spiritual Science makes certain
demands on the human heart and mind to widen the interests beyond narrow,
personal interests. It is really true that in talking of Spiritual Science
one simply speaks of things which, if a right relation is to be established
with them, makes it necessary for man to free himself from his most
narrow interests! He need have no fear of becoming unpractical on that
account: he becomes much more practical. It is just this belief that
he is practical which has gradually been arrived at through being unspiritual.
In reality the practical man of today is terribly unpractical. And these
'practical' men have actually landed us in the present catastrophe.
Herein lies something of tremendous importance which man really must
always take for granted if he wishes rightly to understand what has
to do with Spiritual Science, namely that he must get free from his
narrowest interests. He must rid himself of the immediately personal;
for it does not help matters when people carry their narrow personal
interests into the Anthroposophical Movement. That is always just the
cause of any kind of mischief in the relation taken up towards Spiritual
Science. It is also naturally the reason for what is still such a difficulty
in our Movement, that people although often abstractly in theory, having
the good will to come to Spiritual Science with their own thinking,
feeling and willing, nevertheless do not bring all the necessary strength
really to enter upon selflessness, which indeed must be called upon
for understanding rightly what is said from the standpoint of Spiritual
Science. Thus a kind of spirit-condition not easily found today in the
world, but the opposite of which is prevalent in the modern world, must
be demanded for the health of the Anthroposophical Movement, my dear
friends! For the difference between the sincere presentation of the
knowledge of Spiritual Science and all other knowledge arising at present,
lies in this presentation of Spiritual Science being no personal affair,
no personal opinion. Were I obliged to hold the view that I should lecture
only about merely personal opinions and not concerning what is revealed
today and just what is necessary for mankind, I should prefer to remain
silent. For to uphold personal opinions and personal aspirations in
a Movement that is anthroposophical is something impermissible. That
should not be. A Movement such as is striven for here is justified only
when there is the will to present merely what one is allowed to observe
out of the spiritual world.
When you describe the appearance
of any town you may, according to circumstance, make the description
either interesting or tedious, but what the town looks like does not
depend upon you. You describe something objective. What you yourself
want, what is your own opinion, should come just as little to expression
in Spiritual Science. What must take effect in Spiritual Science according
to modern demands is all that is spiritually observed. Those who are
able actually to will merely what is personal can for that reason only
imperfectly understand what should hold good in a movement for Spiritual
Science. They continually confuse what should hold good in a Movement
such as is meant here with something else drawn, more than ever from
the personal. How many there are who coming to Anthroposophy would like
their own opinion to be justified by Spiritual Science. They are not
always equipped with the open mind necessary for the acceptance of Spiritual
Science. Very often they come to it with something quite different to
this open mind. They would like this or that to be true, then in some
way, while admitting that the investigator of Spiritual science may
know something about the truth, persuade themselves that what one thinks
oneself one says. Then they would be happy. But this fine distinction
must be noticed; it is a fine distinction although a tremendously far-reaching
one; there is a far reaching and important distinction between the one
who wants to accept what is imparted by the spiritual world and the
one who actually wishes only to have confirmation of what it pleases
him to think. Only by the most punctilious self-examination, by conscientious
self-examination, will the distinction be discovered. The distinction
is often unnoticed by those who come to Spiritual Science; it must,
however, be noticed. If it is noticed it will become apparent that through
a Movement for Spiritual Science something of a new stream of life must
flow which was not there before. It is really not possible for an Anthroposophical
Movement to be like a mere soft current of air blowing towards anyone
who brings to Spiritual Science the Philistine tendencies of his earlier
life and then believes he will find what he is only too willing to acknowledge
in Philistinism corroborated by Spiritual Science.
When we proceed in this
matter earnestly, conscientiously, we shall not want merely to find
corroboration of our actual individual opinion; and we shall also come
to understand many things which might be said to be obliged to arise
as new things in a Movement for Spiritual Science of this kind, things
that must do harm if left unnoticed. In a movement in the act of arising
like this Movement for Spiritual Science much can work harmfully that
cannot cause so much harm in old, dried up Movements, no longer of use
or of very little use. We have really to go into these fins points,
my dear friends! You see, connected with the endeavour merely to see
our own opinions, our own aspirations, justified by what is revealed
through Spiritual Science, a remarkable technique of 'touching-up' is
developed concerning what comes forth and comes forth perfectly naturally,
within a movement such as ours. In this movement for Spiritual Science
we must be alive to the fact that phenomena with men cannot be taken
as if in a bowling club or something of the kind where men can reveal
how verbose they have become in the ordinary world where nothing new
is required of them. We must recognise in all earnestness that the aims
of investigation into what is spiritual cannot find expression through
our own conceptions; we must really prepare ourselves to receive the
things. We should picture that something is wishing to flow into the
world, something that should more and more widen itself out, so that
everything should really be received in full consciousness. Many connections
not yet perceived will be perceived later. This willingness to receive
everything as in some sense a preparation, will certainly not be present
in those who carry their personal aspirations into the impulse of Spiritual
Science, for at the first possible moment they will get done with things,
giving them the bent of their ordinary opinions. They do not mould their
opinions in accordance with Spiritual Science, they mould the knowledge
gained through Spiritual Science in accordance with their opinions.
And so we often have given out the kind of thing I would like to describe
in the following way.
Now you know that the Anthroposophist
has to judge the world in a certain way, the world of nature as well
as the world of human beings. Education in Spiritual Science consists
indeed in our learning to judge afresh the surrounding world and our
relation to it and in our learning to look more deeply, into the world.
People very often remark when, let us say, the relation of three men
is in question: The Anthroposophist B. has been criticizing the man
A. And, my dear friends, as soon as we overstep the usual Philistine
sphere, so largely around us today, two standpoints can be put forward
where the formation of judgment between man and man is concerned: one
of these standpoints is that of reason, the second being the standpoint
of sympathy. Thus B's judgment of A may be in accordance with what arises
from an inner necessity at same time to do something or other purely
out of his—B's—sympathy for A. Should it now suit C to be
antipathetic because he does not reflect sufficiently and does not assume
that it may be possible for pure sympathy to come into the matter here,
out of necessity, then, basing his judgment simply on reason he will
say: whatever can he be doing that for? Or this inner necessity may
speak in such a way that it is not sympathy that becomes dominant but,
because of certain factors, reason. Yes, and when it suits the other
better he lets sympathy have its say and gives as his verdict: what
an unsympathetic person! How utterly without feeling the man is and
what a prosy rationalist! He judges purely from the standpoint of reason.
In this way the crudest misunderstandings arise in the case of just
those who bestir themselves to grasp the inner nerve of existence, where
they have at one time to do something based on reason, another time
something just out of sympathy. And when it suits this other man (C)
in accordance with the sympathetic view he condemns what is done from
reason, and what is done out of sympathy he condemns from the point
of view of reason, and he can always condemn or praise as he likes.
By this path we never arrive at what is right, we only arrive at what
is right if we begin by saying: I must consider the case, I must look
into the causes why sympathy or reason have held sway here. It is things
like this out of which the little misunderstandings in life arise which
often grow to very destructive proportions in men's life in common.
It is just this that our education in Spiritual Science should help
us to overcome. For life is such that it expresses itself in a twofold
way. And because it expresses itself in a twofold way one can always
condemn at pleasure one of the two cases. This is very little taken
into account, however, above all not taken into account where the teachings
of Spiritual Science itself is concerned. This, too, must be placed
in the world with definite intention. In an individual case either one
or other of the two standpoints can be chosen according to convenience,
if greater attention is not paid to the deeper grounds out of which
the spiritual seeker is obliged to act. He may often be misunderstood.
And if there is no agreement in what must be done out of inner duty
in accordance with the facts, then it is possible to misunderstand everything,
since the world has this dual form of expression.
You see we can fall into
the following error for example. When anyone is eager to have what suits
him substantiated, he may just fall into the worst form of belief in
authority. Belief in authority can naturally make its influence felt,
and this influence is actually frequent and of wide range in the very
sphere where Spiritual Science also would be active, which wishes to
make man into a perfectly free, self-reliant being. The other pole of
the belief in authority, however, is hatred of authority. And fundamentally
the man who does not feel himself drawn to Spiritual Science through
entering into the facts revealed from the spiritual world, but wishes
to have these truths conveyed to him by authority, wanting to believe
in authority because it is easier than going into things—this
man is terribly apt to spring over from his belief in authority, that
always has in it a certain kind of love of authority, to hatred of authority.
And all manifestations that have arisen in our particular movement of
this leap from blind worship of authority, which sometimes has even
appeared with a certain shamelessness in the moment of passing over
to hatred, this passing from blind worship of authority to hate—all
this is something inwardly present as a danger. It is very important
to keep these connections in mind, for these connections make it terribly
difficult today to create an Anthroposophical Movement so that it will
prosper. It must be created in a successful way for the sake of mankind's
welfare.
Now, my dear friends, in
my life I have found quite a number of people who were spiritual people
and were seeking in all sincerity away into Spiritual Science, into
some kind of Spiritual Science, who were also in a way advanced in their
development. A certain type among them was disillusioned, people who
had been disillusioned by one or other of the modern spiritual movements
and who then in some place or another came across us—how many
are disillusioned today by the Blavatsky Movement, the Besant Movement
or some other Movement. There we do not see the characteristic phenomenon
that takes such curious forms in the Anthroposophical Movement; but
there we have people, for example, who are to a certain extent spiritually
advanced; then after some time one again comes across them but now they
say: You are completely wrong! And these meetings are not infrequent.
Spirituality today is not at all common but there are men indeed who
say to one after a time: You are actually wrong, for, you see, the things
you give out in Spiritual Science—there's no possible sense in
publishing them! But men are not in inclined to accept them; they are
certainly not sufficiently mature. All this can only serve one purpose
to be developed in oneself and then kept to oneself. I have found many
such people who say: It is a definite characteristic of the man who
is really advanced spiritually that it no longer enters his head to
speak about it to his fellowmen; he keeps the matter to himself. There
is indeed no lack of such people in the world. I have never been able
to come to an understanding with these people about what out of a certain
inner ground I learn from the spiritual world. These men do quite useful
work in a spiritual community but they have a hermit tendency, even
when at the same time they remain in association with others. For it
is possible to become a hermit in spite of wearing elegant shoes and
leading an Hotel life. This one sees this double life being led by a
number of people; they are indeed the modern Hotel dwellers; for all
I care they may be well dressed but they lead this life as an outward
mask to hide what is within them; they have their inner life of the
spirit with no wish to share it with their fellow men. This seems to
one to be doing what is not right, to be sinning against mankind. For
one is right in saying that such men have en effect on the spiritual
life, what they experience goes into the spiritual stream. Man is not
a self-contained being, therefore what he experiences has value and
its own significance in the spiritual world, but the question of time
always plays its part there. Men like this who live in such a way nowadays,
as many do whom I have known, bring about something indeed in the spiritual
world which however only comes to maturity after a long time, in the
later epochs of mankind. Then, however, can, and quite certainly would,
were there always only those who as hermits develop their spiritual
being, having no wish to teach what knowledge they have gained from
the spiritual world, what they have developed in themselves—then
by the time the fruits of these men are ripe, people outside would have
so deteriorated that they would no longer be able to receive the knowledge!
Earth evolution would be endangered: connection would be missed. We
live indeed today at a time when certain spiritual truths such as those
of which we have been speaking must unconditionally be imparted to mankind.
Things will not be helped by the attitude expressed, for example, by
one of my acquaintances who in a certain sense was spiritually advanced.
He came to Berlin and I asked him whether he would come to hear a lecture
of mine, just to see how the Movement was run (this is some time ago).
He answered: No, holding lectures and talking to people serves no possible
purpose! To sit together for half-an-hour and have a little talk I find
very pleasant—but let us leave spiritual things alone when we
can; everyone must settle those for himself! To pay a civil visit and
pass the time of day is best for just those people who are seeking the
spiritual. And this attitude is a prevalent one. It would be more comfortable,
my dear friends, to live in accordance with such an attitude. And the
word comfortable certainly does not describe what it is nowadays days
to get up in front of people to impart what one feels impelled to impart
as a duty. In an Anthroposophical Movement it should be borne in mind
that work is done out of inner necessity, and what happens is not a
matter of choice but the punctual observance of a duty.
I have used these words
at the end of our studies today because I have wanted once again to
take the opportunity of calling attention to what is necessary if a
movement for Spiritual Science is to be taken nowadays as earnestly
as it should be taken. For what can be made of an Anthroposophical Movement,
if personal aspirations, personal ambition, is brought in, can cause
much injury must cause much injury. Besides there is still the shadow
side, namely, that whoever thinks to find only what is just personal
corroborated through Spiritual Science cannot discern whether the other
may not be acting also merely from personal ambition. And a terrible
doom is then forthcoming. I wanted to give an indication of these things,
my dear friends. We shall be speaking further next Friday.