The Social Question as a Problem of Soul Life
The Inner Experience of Language
Lecture I
March 28, 1919 Dornach
There are
certain things I have to put before you which apparently have
not much to do with what we are at present discussing, with
our discussions, that is, of the social question. Tomorrow,
however, it will appear that this connection does none the
less exist. Last time I concluded by showing why children
born in recent times, since 1912–13, say, come from
their spiritual life before birth with what one might call a
certain reluctance to merge themselves into the cultural
inheritance they find on earth as a legacy from their
immediate forbears or ancestors of the last century. I told
you that among the actual experiences possible in the
spiritual world a kind of meeting takes place between the
souls of those just dead, who are returning to the spiritual
world through the gate of death, and those souls preparing to
appear again on the earthly stage. Whatever links with the
spiritual world men have had before they die act forcibly
when they have passed through the gate of death. This is of
special significance in our time. In our time if a faint
feeling of the link with the spiritual world still lingers,
it is an atavistic one. After passing through the gate of
death into the world of spirit, man can therefore receive
impulses that they can carry on only if they have consciously
concerned themselves with conceptions of the spiritual world.
Today there already exists a great difference between those
who have died having gained ideas of the spiritual world in
one way or another in true thought-forms and those
personalities who have lived entirely in the conceptions of
our materialistic culture. There is a great difference
between these souls in the life after death, and this
difference is felt particularly strongly by those souls who
are setting about their return into incarnation in an earthly
life.
Now you know
that in the course of recent times, until well into the
twentieth century, the materialistic tendencies,
materialistic thinking and feeling, on the earth became more
and more intensive. Those rising into the spiritual world,
through the gate of death have few impulses which, if I may
put it so, awaken in those about to descend to earth
pleasurable anticipations of their earthly sojourn.
Its
culmination was reached in the second decade of the twentieth
century. So those children born in the second decade came to
earth with a deep spiritual antipathy to the civilization and
learning customary on the earth. This stream of impulses that
came to earth with those children helped in large measure to
call up the inclination on earth to wipe out this old
civilization, to sweep away this culture of capitalistic and
technical times. And he who is in a position to penetrate the
interrelationship between the physical and super-physical
worlds in the right way will not misunderstand when I say
that the desire for a spiritual civilization in the hearts
and souls of our youngest fellow citizens has contributed
essentially to the events on the earth in recent years.
You see, my
dear friends, that is—if I may put it thus—the
bright side of the sad, the terrible events of recent times.
It is a bright side in that it shows that the dreadful things
caused by the decadence of the materialistic age have been
willed by heaven, sent down as messages in the subconscious
of recently-born children. It is an expression of soul which
in the most recently born children is something quite
different from that in children born in the nineteenth or
early twentieth century. It is now essential that mankind
should direct finer powers of perception to such things. In
these days mankind is proud of being practical: where,
however, this practical sense should be most active in
observation of actual life, people pass lightly over all
these things in their seeing, speaking and thinking. The
melancholy expression seen in our youngest children, in their
countenances, until their fifth or sixth year is little
noticed. Should it be noticed, that in itself would awaken an
impulse that must cause a powerful social movement to take
place.
But one must
acquire the sense for the expression, the physiognomy, of
human beings in their earliest years; one must indeed develop
such a sense, it is quite essential. Much of the sense for
these things can be cultivated (however strange that may
sound to many today) by allowing oneself to enter into the
aims of Eurhythmy, not just superficially seeking sensation,
but with one's whole soul. You will soon see why this is
so.
Whoever is in
a position, through his occult experiences, to communicate
with the dead will readily notice that many thoughts (for it
is by means of thoughts that one does communicate with the
dead) by which one wishes to have a mutual understanding with
the dead are not understood by them. Many thoughts that men
have here on earth, customary thoughts, sound to the dead
(naturally you must take this in the right way, I am speaking
of interchange of thought with the dead) as a foreign
incomprehensible language. Probing further into this
situation, one finds particularly that verbs, prepositions,
and above all interjections, are relatively easily understood
by the dead — I repeat relatively easily — but
nouns hardly at all. These leave a kind of gap in their grasp
of the languages used. The dead never understand if one
speaks to them chiefly in nouns. It to noticeable that when a
noun is turned into a verb they begin to understand. Speak to
the dead, for example, of the germ of something; the word
germ in most cases will not be understood. It is as though
they had heard nothing. Change the noun into a verb and speak
of something germinating and the dead will begin to
understand.
Wherein lies
the cause? You realise that it lies not in the dead but in
ourselves, in those, that is, who speak with the dead. And
this is because since the middle of the fifteenth century, at
any rate for all mid- and west-European languages—and
the more is the farther west one goes—the living
feeling for the picture expressed by the noun has been so
lost that, when nouns are used, they sound nebulous, echoing
only in the mind; indeed few people think of anything actual
and real when using nouns. When obliged to turn nouns into
verbs they are forced by an inner compulsion to think more
concretely. To speak of a germ does not generally mean that a
concrete conception of the germ of a plant, say a germinating
bean, exists as an image in the mind, especially if the talk
is abstract. A picture arises of something vague and
nebulous, as it might in the case of some principle. When you
say “what germinates” or “that which
germinates,” because you have used the verbal form you
are at least found to think of something growing, that is,
something that moves; which means that you go from the
abstract to the concrete. Then because you yourself go from
the abstract to the concrete the dead begin to understand
you. But, for reasons I have often explained here, because
the living connection between those alive on the earth and
those who have passed through the gate of death, the
discarnate souls, must become increasingly closer, because
impulses coming from the dead must work more and more
effectively into the earth, then will of necessity take
gradually into their language, into their speaking into their
thinking something written over from the abstract to the
concrete. It must again become an aim of mankind to think
imaginatively, pictorially, when they speak.
Now I ask you
how many people think concretely when, let us say, they read
of legal proceedings, where there were judges who judged,
pronounced judgment; to have judged, to pass
sentence—that is, to exercise the judicial function.
[Translator's note: The argument here
is based on the customary use of the german words
richten, Richter, das Recht,
and rechten, meaning “to judge”,
“a judge”, “the right” or
“justice”, and “to go to law”,
and the root from which they all sprint.]
Where then is the concrete thinking,
or where in the whole world is there any concrete thinking,
when the noun. the right or justice is uttered? Just take
this very vague abstraction that is in mind when the right,
justice, is spoken of, when going to law, the right thing, is
expressed in speech. What then is the right really, taken
purely from the point of view of language? We have in these
days often said that the state should be above all a
rights-state — what then is the right considered purely
in itself? For most people it remains quite a. shadowy
conception, a conception that traffics in the dreariest
abstractions. How then is one to arrive at a concrete
conception of the right? Let us examine the matter by taking
a single case.
You will have
heard, my dear friends, certain people called clumsy
(literally “left-handed”). What are clumsy
people? You see, what we try to do with the left hand when we
are not naturally left-handed we usually do awkwardly, not
being skilful. at it. When anyone conducts his whole life in
the same way as one behaves when doing something with the
left hand then he is clumsy. The basis of the description
clumsy is the completely concrete conception “he does
everything as I myself do when I use my left hand”; no
dreary abstraction. but the wholly concrete “he behaves
as I do when I use my left hand.” From that arises,
apprehended concretely, a contrast in feeling between the
left-handed and the right-handed, what is done with the right
hand and. what with the left. And what is right-handed
(skilful) is contained in the noun “the right”.
The right is originally simply what is performed as
skillfully for real life as what is done with the right, and
not with the left hand.
There you
have indeed brought something concrete into the matter. But
now picture to yourselves . . . you need only picture it with
a clock, but there are numerous other cases in which. one
could do something similar as a rule, when you have to
regulate a clock, you will not wind with the left hand, but
with the right; that is how you regulate a clock. This
winding from left to right accomplished with the right hand
is the concrete regulating, righting, setting right. One even
says “to set right”. There you have the concrete
conception of the circular movement from left to right, the
putting right. That is to judge, to right. One who has
strayed towards the left where he should not be is net right
by the judge.
It is by
means of such things that one can succeed in linking concrete
formative conceptions with the word. You see, such image
conceptions were still linked with the words till right into
the fifteenth century. But this thinking in imagery has been
thrown overboard. We must once more cultivate this making of
imaginative conceptions. For the dead understand only what
resounds formatively in speech. Everything no longer
resounding in imagery—as is generally the case in
modern speech—everything that does not produce a
picture, which is not formulated in pictures to produce an
Imaginative conception in the people concerned is
incomprehensible to the dead.
When you
consider the matter further you will see that in the
transformations into vivid imagery but now is the first to
go. Then everything passes into verb form, or at least passes
into something that compels one to develop picture
conceptions. You see when one cultivates such a style today
that picture conceptions underlie it, then as a rule one gets
the response that people do not understand this, it is very
hard to understand. But he who faces our times honestly will
consciously strive to put things in such a form as can be
conceived entirely in pictures. In the pamphlet which was
published on the social question—where one is forded
into abstractions because at present wherever the social
question is discussed we get for the most part mere
abstractions—in that pamphlet itself I strove as far as
possible for a style in which the matter could be presented
in picture form. It is especially in the present-day
discussions over the social question that the capacity for
being abstract is driven to its furthest extent. People have
gradually become accustomed to accepting the words as a sort
of verbal currency with which they no longer think in any
concrete pictures at all. Today, to read a social pamphlet or
book you find you must have been for years accustomed to what
is meant in order to come to terms with the book at all. The
whole meaning of such discussions depends upon the
conventional use of words. Who today in speaking of
“possessing” deals that the word has a certain
connection with “to be possessed”? Yet the genius
of speech as I have often remarked is very much more
significant than what the single individual can think and
speak; it creates innumerable connections that only need to
be discovered by the individual for a return into a certain
spiritual life. It is just when we tried to find the verb
behind every noun and make it a practice not always to speak
of light and sound, but to speak of what illumines, of what
sounds, and then find ourselves obliged to penetrate more and
more into the reality of things in contrast to the
non-realities, that then we arrive at a path that can lead to
healing.
Even the
adjective is much better than the noun. I'm speaking much
more concretely when I say “he who is diligent”
than when I say “The diligent”. But “the
diligent” is indeed much more concrete than what I call
up the dreadful specter (for the dead really feel it a
dreadful specter), the dreadful specter
“diligence”. When you speak of “the
how”, “the what”—Goethe once claimed
the apt phrase “I ponder the What, I should rather
ponder the How” (Das was bedenke, mehr bedenke
Wie)—it is for the dead a speech full of life
because they themselves need to feel concretely when you use
such words as what and how as now. Today when you talk about
a principle—“I take a certain standpoint on
principle”—you have for the dead called up to
specters, first the “principle”, were generally
no one now thinks of a principal at something concrete,
secondly “standpoint”. Consider this ghost of a
“standpoint”. It has generated greatly already in
our language and in all West European languages,, so that in
speaking of it for the most part, everything significant is
left out. Sometimes the compositor even corrects one! When in
the manuscript I write “when one sees something from
out of a certain standpoint” then the compositor
generally cross out the “out”, and one has to
insert it again in one's revision; for people have become
accustomed to utter the nonsense “When one sees
something from a standpoint”. To speak in concrete
terms one has to say “to see something from out of a
standpoint”, and thereby say something concrete but
when one speaks of seeing a thing from a standpoint—for
one speaking concretely the only possible conception is that
one sees something from a point on which he stands; a little
piece of a point! Now, a little piece of a point is surely a
bit difficult to think of.
You see, such
things are extraordinarily important and significant, for
they give an intimation of the relation between the sense
world and the world of the spirit. These things give a
conception about this relation between the sensible and the
supersensible much more than what it is today often so
impressively given in abstract words. And as for the
methods—my dear friends, just look through the
literature of spiritual science which I have tried to put
into writing, and test the method there—it is a test
which apparently few have carried out; the method always is
to explain one thing by another, so that the matters are
mutually clarified. And a real understanding of the spirit
can be arrived at in no other way than by one thing referring
to another. Take for example the one word spirit! Anyone who
wants to avoid the materialistic thinks that he must for ever
be speaking of spirit, spirit, spirit. Take the word
Geist in the German language. In Latin it has a
still more concrete character: Spiritus, which is
something which for most people does not clearly indicate
what they understand by our word geist, and on
further consideration it all becomes very abstract because
you cannot conceive a Spiritus, can you? That is the
fundamental concrete conception. But “Spirit
Self” (Geistselbst), “spirit”
(Geist), what is that? What is its actual concrete
significance? Do not most people imagine the spirit—as
I have often complained—as something materially very
tenuous, absolutely thin, like a thin mist, and if they want
to speak of spirit, they speak of vibrations. At theosophical
gatherings, at least at their teas, I have so often heard
people speak of “such good vibrations”! I do not
know what they mean by these vibrations, in any case they
were conjuring a very material process into the room. These
worth Geist, Gischt, Geischt,
Geschti, and so on, a sort of vapour issuing from
some opening: this would be the concrete conception. In our
time, however, the fifth post-Atlantean age of civilization,
one cannot arrive in this way at a concrete idea of
Geist, spirit: it is impossible. For you either
remain in some shadowy abstraction that you connect with the
word “spirit” (Geist) or you are obliged
to think of Spiritus, spirits of wine: in thinking
of an inspired (begeistert) man you then arrive at a
very curious picture. Or else you are obliged to think of
something welling up, spurting out of a crevice, a vent hole,
and thus arrive at a concrete conception.
Now in the
method as carried out here in the anthroposophical
prosecution of spiritual Science the attempt is made, by
means of many-sided conditions of the conceptions in
question, gradually to lead over into the concrete. Just
think, if from one side only it is mentioned that the human
being is divided into physical body, etheric body, astral
body, sentient soul, intellectual soul, consciousness soul,
spirit self . . . and here “spirit” comes in
— spirit-self, life spirit, spirit man. It can only
take effect with full consciousness, for most people who hear
the matter can come to no concrete conception of it at all.
But then it soon follows that the people will be told —
“Look at the course of human life: from birth to the
seventh year, to the change of teeth, the physical body comes
principally into activity, then till the fourteenth year the
etheric body, then the sentient-body, then from the
twenty-first to the twenty-eighth year the sentient soul,
then in the thirties the intellectual soul,” and so on.
With that people are told: “Observe the concrete man
from the outside developing through the course of his life
and the differences that appear. If at the beginning of his
twenties you look at a man with his special characteristics,
these characteristics will be symptoms for what you pictured
when the expression “sentient soul” is employed.
If you look at a child with his characteristic of doing
everything that his elders do, of doing everything through
his physical body, then in the way the child behaves you will
get an idea of what one understands by “physical
body.” And if you look at an old man with his gray hair
and wrinkled countenance, with the flesh noticeably withering
and observe him in his movements, the way he acts, you no
longer see as in the child, how whatever is in him is acting
chiefly through the sheaths, instead you see in the old man,
indeed, what is beginning to free itself from the physical
body. Observing the old man, you will gradually get an idea
of the spirit from his gestures, his way of behavior.
Comparing an old man with a child and comparing the gestures
of the old with those imitated by the young, there is
awakened in your soul a feeling of the difference between
spirit and matter. Think how in that way the pictorial power
in imaginative ideas is helped, my dear friends. It is an
indication that one should. think concretely of the course of
human life, and then gain an experience of filling your
onetime abstract words with concrete content.
Again we try
in every way possible to show how, for example, mankind
itself has become younger and younger — how we are now
twenty-seven years old, that is—we have in our
civilization arrived as mankind at our twenty-seventh. year.
When you compare what you can know of early
civilisation-periods with what you hope of later periods that
will again support imaginative thinking. Through forming
conceptions by way of comparing and relating them you
progress from the abstract to the concrete, and strive to
prevent the abstract from having any longer a value in
itself, but to lead over to the concrete, to discover the
genius of speech.
In this the
school must come to the help of what is a great task of
civilization. In the school this creation of concrete ideas
should be made a practice so that in speaking one begins to
feel oneself into the speech, to feel oneself in the world in
speaking. Take as an example that I have written something on
the black-board. Someone says “I do not understand
it”. . . Think of the confused abstractions you
sometimes have in mind when you say “I do not
understand”. They would become concrete if you would
picture to yourself that you want to grasp it, take it in,
comprehend it. But you do not grasp it, you remain
aloof—you do not get into touch with the matter. But
you must think with your very hands. Try with the most
important words. What will you be doing? You will in fact be
doing eurhythmy in spirit! When indeed you speak concretely
you do eurhythmy in spirit. You cannot do anything else than
eurhythmy in spirit. He who is actively alive in sea things
finds most men of today—if you will allow me to say
so—sluggards, men who go round with their hands in
their pockets and then want to talk without any feeling. For,
spiritually considered, abstract thinking is putting the feet
together and the hands in the pockets, and withdrawing
everything as far into oneself as possible. This is how the
man of today speaks. To leave out the concrete from one's
thinking is just to be slovenly. But most men are that today.
People must become more mobile inwardly, that is, they must
feel with the world. Even those who do this often do so
unconsciously. One knows people who place their finger on
their nose when considering anything. They are quite
unconscious of the fact that this is an actual concrete
eurhythmic expression of the strong feeling of self when
deciding on something. People today do not even consider why
they have a left and a right hand, or two eyes. And in
learned books the most foolish things—which explain
nothing—are said of the seeing with two eyes. If we did
not possess two hands so that we can grip one with the other
we would not be able to have any clear idea of our own self,
our “I”. It is only because we can grasp the one
hand with the other, the like with like, that the conception
“I” is attainable in the right way. And just as
we can cross the left hand with the right, as we experience
ourselves, and are astonished at this experience, at
experiencing ourselves, we also cross the axis of sight in
our eyes, although this crossing is not so visible as that of
the hands. And we have two eyes which we can cross for the
same reason as we have two arms and two heads.
If we wish to
keep in sight the deeper essentials of human development from
the present into the future we must bear in mind the
necessity of taking up into our speech what the speech of
today lacks. Because of its lack man is shut off from the
whole world in which he is between death and a new birth.
Hence we are exhorted, when we would establish a connection
with a dead person, not simply to speak with him in verbal
conceptions, for that achieves little, but to think of some
concrete situation—you have stood near him in some
particular way, have heard his voice, have shared an
experience—to think quite concretely of the situation
and everything that happened in relation to it that makes a
connection with the dead. Today man uses language in a sense
which shuts him off completely from the world of the dead;
the genius of speech has died to a greet extent, and must be
reanimated. Much that is customary today in the use of
language should be dropped. A very great deal depends upon
this, my dear friends. For it is only by actually trying to
listen to the genius of speech lying behind the concrete
words that we shell come back to imaginative conception
(which I have already mentioned here as essential for future
evolution). Then we shall gradually free ourselves altogether
from distorted abstractions.
Something
else is involved in this. A man feels an enormous
satisfaction today in thinking in abstractions, free from the
reality that the senses bring him. But he simply comes
thereby into gaps in his conceptions; at least they are gaps
for the dead. Today when people repeat spirit, spirit,
spirit, the words are just so many blanks for nothing
concrete is called forth. Most present-day thoughts are
abstractions. The farther east one goes, say Europeans the
more pictorial speech becomes. And that is just the reason
why speech is more nearly related to spiritual things the
farther east one goes; because it is more in the form of
pictures. Speaking in abstractions should not lead away at
all from the concrete sense-conception, but should simply
illuminate it. Just think how many of you, my dear friends,
thought concretely of the sentence I have just spoken: the
sense-conception that have reality should be illumined by the
abstractions? You may imagine the concrete sense-conception
as a darkness which is illumined by the abstraction. So when
we utter the sentence “into our concrete conceptions
abstractions enter to illumine them” we think of rays
of light falling into a dark room which is blue-black except
where the yellow rays stream in. So when I state “into
our concrete sense-conceptions the abstractions send their
light” I have in mind a dark room into which fall
bright rays of light. For how many people is it the case
today that they really have such a picture in mind? They say
aloud the word illumine without having any of the actual
concrete conception in what you would call a spiritual sense.
But the important thing is that when we pass over into
abstraction, we do not only have a different picture of the
concrete, of the physical, that we experience the change in
conception. We can make this experience our own on watching
eurhythmy; for then through another, less over-worked,
medium, through the medium of gesture, what lies within the
words comes to expression. And men can find their way back to
imagery in ideas.
Few men are
conscious that a hand outstretched is an actual
“I”, for they do not know that in uttering
“I” and connecting it with a concrete conception
that they are extending a part of their etheric body. But
gradually they realise that they are extending something of
their etheric body in uttering “I” by watching
the same movement in eurhythmy. It is no arbitrary matter
that is introduced here, but actually something connected
very strongly, very powerfully with the development of our
civilization.
It is
important to grasp this. Our period now is the fifth
post-Atlantean, that is one, then we have the sixth and
seventh ahead of us leading to a great break in human
development. During this fifth post-Atlantean period speech
must again recover its concrete character, and conceptions
become pictures again. Only in this way can we fulfil the
task of this fifth post-Atlantean period. Now speech will
return less and lees to picture-conceptions the more the
state gains control of the spiritual life. The more schools,
and spiritual activities have come under state control in the
last centuries the more abstract has all life become. Only
the spiritual life based on itself will be able to call up
this necessary symbolization of man's spiritual being which
must be evoked. In the course of the fifth post-Atlantean
period things will appear which will act most disturbingly on
the spiritual strivings. During this period everyone will
only rightly experience himself who can imagine himself in
the following situation: “You are in the world, you
must be conscious that on the one side you are constantly
approaching luciferic beings, and on the other
ahrimanic.” This living feeling of standing an man
within this trinity must impress itself more and more on
mankind in this fifth post-Atlantean period, thereby
overcoming the great dangers of the period. The most varied
human characters will appear in this fifth post-Atlantean
period: idealists will be present, and materialists. But the
danger for the idealists will always be that of entering
luciferic regions in their conceptions, of becoming fanatics,
visionaries, passionate enthusiasts, Lenins, Trotskys,
without ground, real actual ground, under their feet, with
their wills they can easily become ahrimanic, despotic,
tyrannical. What real difference is there between a Czar and
a Lenin? In their idea materialists easily become luciferic,
prosaic, pedantic, dry, bourgeois; and in their wills become
luciferic: greedy, animal, nervous, sensitive, hysterical. I
will write this up on the boards:
Idealists: Ideas can easily become luciferic:
fanatical, visionary, passionately enthusiastic. Wills can
easily become ahrimanic: despotic, tyrannical.
Materialists: Ideas can easily become ahrimanic,
prosaic, pedantic, bourgeois. Wills can easily become
luciferic: animal, greedy, nervous, hysterical,
You see,
idealists and materialists are exposed to similar dangers
from different sides in this fifth post-Atlantean
period—the idealists to both the luciferic and the
ahrimanic: only from the side of ideas to the luciferic, from
the side of will to the ahrimanic while materialists are
exposed to the ahrimanic more, in their ideas., and to the
luciferic more in their wills, The various characters that
arise will have this in very different degrees. That is where
the difficulty of bringing mankind forward will lie: for all
that will be a source of error. Whether he be idealist or
materialist, man will never be able to progress aright unless
he has the good will to penetrate into material reality in
full understanding, and on the other hand also letting the
spirit enlighten him in the right way, that is, when he is
not one-sided. One should not become one-sided where the most
concrete outlooks on life are concerned, in particular not
there.
Whoever likes
only children faces the danger that very strong ahrimanic
influences affect him; whoever prefers the old is in danger
of being affected by the strongest luciferic influences,
Many-sided interests will be essential for men if they wish
to help civilization to evolve fruitfully towards the future.
That is the foremost task of this fifth post-Atlantean
period.
But these
three consecutive periods will encroach upon each other
considerably. What comes two expression in the sixth, and
even what the seventh expresses, must already be unfolding in
the fifth. There will not be so much differentiation in the
future as there has been in the past. In the sixth period it
will above all be necessary for men to cause the ahrimanic to
be fettered, that is to come to terms with reality. How does
one come to term with reality? For this it is essential in
the first place that the life of rights that has separated
from the cultural and economic spheres, that this life of
rights in which men must live together democratically must
now become as conscious in a higher way as it was unconscious
in the Egypto-Chaldaic period. In everything that goes on
between man and man, men must learn to experience significant
processes on a higher level. Such ideas must become as living
as they are presented in my last mystery play, in the
Egyptian scene, where Capesius says that what takes place
there in little has significance for the whole of world
events. When men once more realise that no one can lie
without a mighty uproar being made in the spiritual world,
then things will be fulfilled as they must be in the sixth
post-Atlantean period. And when we arrive once more at the
possibility of a wise paganism alongside Christianity then
what must come to pass in the seventh period, but is even now
particularly essential, will be realised. Humanity has lost
its relationship to nature. The gestures of nature no longer
speak to man. How many can have any clear idea today when one
says: in summer the earth is asleep, in winter awake? It
seems a mere abstraction. But it is no abstraction. Such a
relation to the whole of nature must be gained so that man
can feel once more his identity with all nature.
These are
matters that are essential for the inner life of the soul. Of
how it is connected with all that we call social impulse we
shall speak further tomorrow.
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