The Social Question as a Problem of Soul Life
The Inner Experience of Language
Lecture II
March 29, 1919 Dornach
If we now
speak a great deal about the social problem that is
disturbing our times, it is because the essential thing for
us — in addition to what is naturally of particular
importance to our contemporaries as such in this problem
— is that really the ultimate practical solution of
this problem is intimately connected with the fundamentals of
Spiritual Science, and therefore those interested in
Spiritual Science have a special inducement to regard this
question from out of a Spiritual Scientific standpoint. For
you see it is urgently necessary that understanding should be
aroused in the widest circles for what are the impulses
behind the social movement. On the other hand, however, these
circles are little prepared to look into the matter
fundamentally, to concentrate their gaze on the fundamentals.
By degrees a certain comprehension must ray out from those
interested in Spiritual Science into the sphere of the social
movement, and for this it is necessary to make ourselves
acquainted with certain fundamental facts without knowledge
of which there can be no real grasp of the social problem.
There can be no doubt that the unconscious and subconscious
play an enormous part in human social life. What is at work
in the social life comes ultimately from what people think
and feel, and, according to the impulses of their characters,
what they will. But in the age of the development of the
consciousness soul this becomes increasingly individual.
People become more and more different in their thinking,
feeling and willing: this is the task of the epoch of the
development of the consciousness soul. Therefore much will
spring from subconscious sources in human relationships to
flow into the social movement which, begun half a century
ago, has today reached a culmination and will spread farther
and farther afield making enormous demands of the people.
What emerges today are primarily chaotic demands. In place of
these, clearer and clearer conceptions and better and better
will impulses must appear. It was because these clear
conceptions and good impulses of will did not exist that
mankind fell into the present catastrophe and this
catastrophe will become immeasurably greater. For one cannot
say that real goodwill exists extensively in regard to this
question. What exists is something like a yielding to what
seems to be inevitable. One would willingly give them a
morsel now and again, for fear that otherwise their mouths
might water. But what must appear in a really deep social
understanding? That must live in the hearts of men and must
become an essential part of our schooling.
Something of
this kind can be attained only when at least a certain number
of people on earth, really out of knowledge of human nature,
out of knowledge of the relation between physical and the
superphysical worlds, cultivate a deeper understanding for
these problems than most people can develop by reason of our
present superficial culture.
Yesterday you
saw how matters stand with what plays its part in the whole
man's life as language. Now just think what part, on the
other hand, language plays in men's international operation
throughout the world. Consider how manifold are the varied
feelings and will impulses depending upon languages. Consider
again how infinitely much that is not clear in such things
prevails among men. Today let us spend a little time on
speech. As I mentioned yesterday we had three periods of
evolution to come in the post-Atlantean period of human
evolution. We live in the fifth, the sixth will follow, to be
followed in turn by the seventh. As we saw yesterday, on
turning our attention to the development of language, till
now we, as earthly men, have developed a certain inclination
to abstract, unimaginative thinking. What must be evolved
before the end of the fifth post-Atlantean epoch is the
imaginative conception, Imagination. It is mankind's special
task in this fifth post-Atlantean period to develop the gift
of Imagination. I beg of you not to confuse what I am
discussing here with those matters set out in the book
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds.
In that book it is
the individual man who is being considered. It is a matter of
the esoteric development of the individual man. What I am now
considering is the social life of people. The folk genius
cultivates imagination. Each one of us must seek his own
Imagination for esoteric development: but the folk genius
cultivates the Imagination from which must come the common
spiritual culture of the future. An imaginative spiritual
culture must be developed in the future. Now we have reached,
so to speak, the culminating point of abstract spiritual
culture, that spiritual culture which everywhere works
towards abstraction; from out of that there must be developed
a culture with imaginative conceptions. Our culture must be
interpenetrated not with thoughts abstractly expressed but
with imagery such as we have for example in our group, the
Representative of mankind between the luciferic as the one
pole and the ahrimanic as the other. And many people will
have to tell themselves, more and more people will have to
tell themselves, that what really has to do with spiritual
life is not to be expressed in abstract thoughts. One should
not always be pondering about abstract thoughts, but it is
right and living in the right way in the human heart to
express oneself through pictures. The life of Imagination in
common is what must come.
In the sixth
post-Atlantean period a kind of Inspiration of the folk
genius should be especially cultivated, out of which should
blossom such ideas of rights as will be felt as a kind of
gift for the life on earth. The life to be developed in the
rights-state is, as I recently pointed out, such a one as is
opposed to all life of the Spirit, indeed it is its opposite.
When earthly life takes its source healthily and not
unhealthily, the principles of rights gradually accepted as
such will be felt as gifts from the spiritual world. They
will be felt as gifts that come down to the folk genius
through Inspiration to rule earthly life, not in a human
arbitrary manner, but in the sense of a great spiritual
leadership. One could say that it is just through this
Inspiration experienced by the folk genius that Ahriman will
been enchained. Otherwise an ahrimanic being would be
developed over the whole earth.
The last
epoch will have to cultivate Intuition. Only under the
influence of this Intuition can the whole economic life be
developed which men can see as their ideal economic life. But
the curious thing is that from now on one cannot so separate
things in the more or less abstract way that I have written
them up on the board:
V Imagination
VI Inspiration
VII Intuition
You see one
can quite well speak of the early Indian epoch, the early
Persian, the Egypto-Chaldean, the Graeco-Latin period, an
periods existing as such with need limits, in each of which
were developed a very distinctive way of life. In the future
that will no longer be possible; than the forces at work in
civilization will be mingled. Thus the Intuition which will
appear in the seventh epoch is already at work in the fifth,
Inspiration is active in the fifth, Imagination is not fully
acquired in the fifth but will reach its final stages only in
the later periods. All these things happen interconnectedly;
they are not so strictly separated. So that it is already
necessary for men to work towards what should be achieved in
the Imaginative life, and in the life of Inspiration and that
of Intuition. But externally man must distinguish between the
things that are forced into overlapping in time. The life of
spirit which has as its prime task for the future to develop
the imagination must be cultivated in the emancipated
spiritual organisation. The life of Inspiration which will
give the folk genius principally the conceptions of rights
must be evolved in the separated state. And the Intuitive
life, strange as it may appear, must be evolved in the
economic life. These spheres must in their externals be kept
separate, as has been shown you from various points of
view.
You will see
deeper into thee different members if you pay attention to
what I have been putting forward in regard to language. You
see, language is apparently something homogeneous. You regard
language as something homogeneous and men feel it to be so.
But it is not so. Language is something quite different with
respect to the soul-spiritual life of mankind from what it is
in respect to social life in the rights state, and again it
different in respect to the economic life.
Let us try to
characterize what is very difficult to describe. In regard to
language think first of poetry. You have often heard the
remark how much the man of every sphere of culture when he is
a poet (and who is there who is not something of a poet!) is
indebted to language. Language is much more creative than is
believed. Language contains great and powerful mysteries; the
genius of language is something tremendously creative. That
is why within the sphere of language the purely humanly
creative so seldom emerges: this is noticed only by those who
with deep devotion study the evolution of the peoples. In one
incarnation men usually remain bound only to a certain
epoch, and so have nothing definite to go upon or passing
judgment rightly on what I am now meaning. We Germans, for
example, nowadays speak now and then with some modifications
of meaning; but in so far as we use the uniform educated, we
all speak differently from what was customary in the 18th
century. Whoever follows attentively the literature of that
century until the last third of the century will soon notice
that. For the language we use in common as ordinary educated
German speech is a result of Goethean creation and of those
who are connected with Goethe's creative work: Lessing,
Herder, Wieland, Goethe, and to a certain degree Schiller
too. A great part of our verbal education did not exist
before the time of these spirits! Take the Adelung
dictionary, written comparatively recently, and hunt therein
for many things which are now current: you will not find
them! To a great extent the period which produced Goetheanism
was created in language and we lived in what was formed in
this way. There you see the individually creative playing
into genius of speech as such. In poets one can even speak at
that time of creation of the highest order: what follows as
epigone is often drawn from the language itself.
So I have
often said that when one sees through these things a facile
language often strikes one, a dressed-up poetic performance
of no distinction. What originally pulses from one's
innermost soul is often much more awkward than what is the
result of no great poetic gift, but produced by a certain
profession of speech, by beautiful verse and the like. It is
the same with the other arts. But one must pay attention to
such things if one wants to have a concept of how there is a
life in the language itself in which we are involved. In
penetrating more deeply into this language the possibility
will open out for an imaginative feeling and perception.
Nowadays there is very much that fights against this learning
of the imaginative from speech, because since languages have
recently become international, men have with a certain
justification acquired many languages, or at least several,
up to a certain point. This acquisition of several languages
has not yet driven the deeper aspect of the matter to the
surface, but actually only the superficial. What the
Imagination then brings about — what has to do with
perception — has not yet been brought to the surface.
Nowadays he who has acquired several languages becomes a
slave to the dictionary for a slave to any other handbook
that has to do with the languages in question. And so one has
to accustom oneself to the horrid unreality that a word in
another language that one finds in a dictionary for, say, a
word from one's own language is taken to mean exactly the
same. In regard to something I shall speak of next, it does
certainly mean the same, but it does not do so where inner
experience is concerned.
Take the
following, for example: in German we say Kopf, in
French tête, in Italian testa, and so
forth. What does this show? Recall the human head and the
head of an animal Kopf for the same reason that we
speak of a cabbage as a Kohlkopf; because of its
roundness, it's spherical form. So he who as a German calls
the head Kopf is: it's so with regard to its form.
Tête and testa signify something which
testifies, which gives testimony. Thus there are quite
different points of view from which one can indicate a member
of the human organism. Fuss (foot) is a German word
which is connected with Furt (ford), with the
Furche (furrow) we make in walking over the ground;
that is the point of view from which we as Germans indicate
that part of the human organism; pied is the setting
down, the indication of something placing itself on the
ground: something quite different! The significance of words
proceeds from various points of view. And this impulse to
describe the same things from different backgrounds is the
impress of a subconscious in the character of peoples that is
not generally noticed.
But now
consider, you have to do it not just with physical human
beings walking about on the physical earth, but with men
altogether; you are studying the whole relation to the dead.
What is actually characteristic in the matter stands out
particularly there. The dead have no sense for this
dictionary interpretation of words, but for what is
imaginative they have the deepest understanding. But should
one form one's thoughts so that one gets the shade of meaning
from the spoken sounds, the dead receive at once the
imaginative form thus produced. When the German word for the
head Kopf is used, the dead have the experience of
roundness. When the same word is used in a Latin language he
has the experience of what is testified. But this
stigmatizing, this mere characterizing, this abstract
relating to some single organ or other is not experienced by
the dead; what he experiences with the deepest significance
passes unnoticed by the man of today with his abstract
thoughts. So that in his soul man has a special relation to
language. The relation the soul has to whine which is
actually far more inward than man's ordinary, everyday
relation to language. The soul inwardly feels a difference
when one describes a foot by being sent on the ground, or by
the fact that a mark, a furrow, is made. The soul feels that;
while externally and in the abstract man experiences only the
relation of the word to the single organ in question. In its
experience of speech the soul is inwardly in much the same
condition as when it is disembodied. And what is generally
experienced as the only meaning of speech in ordinary life
really lies like an outer layer on the surface of speech. A
true poet, for example, is just a man who has a fine feeling
for the inwardness of language, a finer feeling than others.
That man is a real poet who is alive to the imaginative in
language, just as an artist is fundamentally not simply one
who can paint or sculpt but one who can live in color and
form.
These are
matters which we must make our own from now on into the
future. Without them the further progress of mankind in a
favorable way is impossible, for the life of the Spirit would
become barren, and mankind would be able to evolve hardly
more than an animal existence unless an understanding for
such things can be awakened. It is a peculiar fact that when
one follows closely how children are born, how they developed
in the early years, first babbling, then gradually learned to
speak, in the way they learn there mingles into the child's
learning to speak a heritage brought down from the
experiences that have been going through in the spiritual
world before they came down to earth; mingled with it is what
the mother, father or nurse contributes to the child's
learning to speak. He who can bring a fine observation to
bear in this sphere will have surprising experiences from the
child who is learning to speak. He will only be able to
understand these surprising things when he can make the
assumption that a child is actually bringing from the
spiritual world some disposition that it mingles with what
comes to his speech from outside. In the inward experience of
language that human being is living in accordance with what
he brings from the spiritual world. But that is the only
thing in language that is really spiritual. Actually the one
element and language is this inner experience, which we have
because we bring with us certain impulses out of the
spiritual world.
The other is
that language is a mere medium for making oneself understood.
Everything that goes on between men as men comes into
consideration in it as a means of making themselves
understood. We speak with one another so that the one knows
what the other wishes to tell him. They are the inwardness of
speech is not of account — there a certain convention
applies. The point is that we do not think that when someone
speaks of a table he means a chair, or when speaking of a
chair he means a table. For that men here on the earth merely
need a mutual understanding; that deeper, inward feeling for
language does not come into it. At the present time this way
of understanding language in which language is employed
merely as a means of making ourselves mutually understood is
actually all that is really experienced. For present day
mankind language is not much more than the means by which
they understand each other. Today it comes to few to listen
to the mysterious inner impulses behind language so as to
hear the divine powers as they make themselves known through
this very language. There are some personalities today who
have noticed that language has an inner life of its own; but
among all those who have noticed it this perception arises in
a certain whimsical way as, for example, with the poet
Hofmannsthal, even the impudent Karl Kraus in Vienna who
asserts that it is not feed himself who writes his sentences
but that he simply listens to what the language wants to
write. He may indeed listen to what the language which is to
write, but only as men do who feared what comes from the
spiritual world colored by their own emotions, here
one-sidedly and falsely — that is shown by his
dreadfully impudent writing, as language would never have
inspired him. But as we were saying, individuals do already
note this communicating by means of speech comes from other
worlds and that must be cultivated if one is to find the way
to the life of Imagination.
That moment
will be of social significance for it is something binding
men in a social bond. The common speech, which brings a
common imagination, is something that will provide a social
deepening. Language as a means of mutual copper hedging could
also do that at need — but it is then externalized; as
a mere means of communication it depends very much upon
convention. Hence the externalizing of the soul's life
nowadays, so that language is used really just to gossip with
others so that no one knows what the other is thinking. You
can indeed say a good deal against this: since so many do not
think, some of us know when a statement is made what the
other is not thinking! Well now — we understand each
other.
Thus in
language we have something that particularly points to the
life of the Spirit, the life in the spiritual organism:
something in language — that is to say, be nearly
informative in language which alone comes into consideration
today when people take up a dictionary, and because the word
means one thing in one language and in another something
else, it is simply a question of an external understanding,
what lies deeper is not taken into account: whether the one
describes something from this impulse, the other from that!
There is of course an enormous difference in the soul life,
whether by the word Kopf something round, that is
the form, is to be understood, as most noun formations in
German are plastic imagination, or whether, as in Latin
languages, most noun formations originate in the stepping
forth of man, how he places himself into the world, not by
perception that by placing himself into the world. Great
mystery is lie hidden in language.
With regard
to the life of economics, we might be deaf and dumb and yet
ultimately be able to carry on an economic life. The animals
do so. Indeed, in economic life language is so to speak a
stranger, a real stranger: we employ speech in the economic
life because we happened to be speaking human beings; but we
can conduct business in a foreign land, the language of which
we do not know, we can buy anything, do everything possible.
Men do not need the language at all for the life were
language is a complete foreigner. The real inner spiritual
element of language is present in the life of the Spirit, the
element of language is already externalized in the life of
rights — in the economic life everything that language
means to man is utterly lost. Yet the economic life, as I
have already pointed out, is what, fundamentally, can be the
preparation for the life after death. How we conduct
ourselves in the economic life, what feelings we unfold in
that life, whether we are men who willingly helped another in
a brotherly way, or whether we enviously gobble up everything
for ourselves, depends upon the fundamental constitution of
our soul, is essentially the mute preparation for many
impulses which will be developed in the life after death. We
bring with us a heritage from the life before birth which, as
I described, comes to expression in what a child carried into
all that it learns from nurse or mother. We bear with us out
of life a mute element which springs up from the
brotherliness unfolded in the economic life, and which
develops important impulses in the life after death.
It is well
that in the economic life language is such a foreign element
that even if deaf and dumb we could develop the economic
life. For by that means this subconscious soul like is
developed that can be carried further when man has gone
through the gate of death. Should man gave himself up
altogether to what he experiences in his soul, to what can be
expressed between man and man, should we, as men, not be able
to serve one another without having to speak, we should be
able to carry with us little into the world in which we are
to live when we have passed through the gate of death.
On the other
hand, my dear friends, it is extraordinarily difficult to
discuss the pressing demands of the present-day social
movement, for these demands are so many economic concerns for
mankind. And for language for describing the economic
concerns is actually non-existent. Our concepts indeed are
not of the least use for discussing the social question. In
Europe we should perhaps be able to discuss the social
question in quite a different way it in our language we had
with the Oriental has in his. There the decadence comes out
only in the character of the people; that in their language
are spiritual impulses enabling them to show as in gestures
what has to be discussed about the social life —
whereas we Europeans actually feel that every possible thing
should always, as we think, be expressed in plain words. But
this is not possible. We have to acquire the feeling that in
speaking we are simply producing sound-gestures, hinting at
things. Today it is practically only for interjections that
man develops a real inwardness in regard to sound-gestures; a
little, as I showed yesterday, for verbs; a mere touch of it
for adjectives — none for nouns. The latter are
completely abstract; and hence are not understood at all by
the dead. There are blanks for them when we want to make
ourselves understood and express things in language. So it is
necessary, in order to make oneself understood by the dead,
to transform what one has to say into real gestures, into
real pictures, not to try to speak to the dead in words, but
always to think better and better in pictures in the way I
described yesterday.
Now I must
say again and again what an aid to this experiencing in
pictures is that part of eurhythmy that we now wish to bring
back as visible speech. To perform eurhythmy is to transform
what is spoken into the corresponding rhythmical movement,
into gesture, and so on. But we must learn to do the opposite
as well, to regard as a kind of speech what is set visibly
before us. We must learn that what we customarily only looked
at as something to say to us: morning says to us something
different from what the evening says, and midday speaks
differently from the night, and the leaf of a plant
glistening with pearly dew says something different from a
dry plant leaf. We must again learn the language of all
nature. We must learn to penetrate through the abstract
perception of nature to a concrete perception of nature. Our
Christianity must be widened through a permeation, as I said
yesterday, by a healthy paganism. Nature must again become
something to us. It is the peculiarity of human evolution in
the epoch of the fifth post-Atlantean period up to the
present that we have become more and more indifferent towards
nature. Certainly men still have a feeling for nature, they
like being with nature, they are able to appreciate nature
aesthetically, artistically. But they cannot soar to the
heights of experiencing the inward life of nature, so that
nature speaks to them as one man speaks to another. This is
however essential if Intuition is again to play a part in
human life. Before the end of the three epochs of which we
have been speaking, men must, if they are to evolve
healthily, developed a kind of personal relationship to all
the details that connect them with nature. Today we can say
in the abstract that by eating sugar you strengthen your
sense of ego; and by eating less sugar you weaken your sense
of ego; that tea dissipates the thoughts, and is the drink of
diplomats, the dispenser of superficiality; that coffee is
the drink of journalists, setting thoughts logically one
after another — which is why journalists haunt
coffeehouses, diplomats have tea parties, and so on; all this
we can think in the abstract out of the nature of things: but
human beings will come to develop in their way a healthy
relation to everything that gives them such a relation to the
whole of nature as today the animals instinctively possess.
The animals know quite well what they eat; originally in
their naive condition men also knew it; they have forgotten,
unlearned it; and must regain the connection. There are
people today — I have often mentioned it —
curious people who when at the table have scales of which
they weigh out how much meat and so on they should eat,
because the dietitians have calculated the amount! In this
abstract relations that man develops to the world all sound
attitude to the world is lost.we must regain — if you
will allow me to put it so — the experiencing of the
spirit of sugar, tea, coffee, salt, and all those other
things with which we are related through our organism: we
must again learn to have these experiences. In this spirit
today man experiences in the most abstract way. He feels
something when he says “I am a mystic, I am a
Theosophist.” What is that? It is a man feeling the
divine ego with his own ego, feeling the macrocosm in the
microcosm; the divine man within us that can be felt, can be
lived . . . and all that that implies. They are of course the
greyest, the vaguest, of abstractions. But today it is
believed that there is no way out at all from these
abstractions. Men nowadays do not look for this concrete
experiencing with the whole world. What seems a great thing
to men today is the thoughtless chatter of the experience of
the God within. They think it very strange when one tells
them that they should experience the God in sugar, tea, or
coffee, or what not, yet this is really experiencing with the
outer world: for the human experience of the external world
is gross and materialistic unless something spiritual and the
can be foundation of this material existence.
This feeling,
for example, that existed in the second post-Atlantean period
when everyone in the old Persian civilization felt when he
ate anything how much light he took into himself along with
it — son was ready to give up its light and in eating
food light was also eaten — everyone felt how much
light he was taking in: this feeling was an experience in
ancient times which must return at a higher stage of
consciousness. You see, these ideals naturally appear to be
distant; but really they are not so far as people think from
what man today holds to be most essential. For on looking
into these things one approaches nearer and nearer and more
concretely what is common to all mankind. It is just where
there is veneration and penetration of nature that there will
increasingly arise what sets up even the economic life that
seems to us today so material, this dumb economic life, as a
member of the divine world order. We shall then realized that
the social organism, if it is to be sound must be threefold.
It must have the spiritual organization because it is into
this, above all, that we carry what we bring with us from the
life before birth; it must have the economic organization
because in it there must mutely developed what we bear with
us through the gate of death, and what will be our impulses
after death; and separate from both these, it must have the
life of the rights-state because in this sphere above all is
imprinted what is valid for this earthly life. Illustrated
diagrammatically — here is earthly life, and raying
into it, as it were, what we bring with us out of pre-earthly
life (yellow arrows); and again we develop in this life what
we bear out again (yellow). Here where I have drawn a red
line the spiritual is within from the outset, it comes
chiefly through language or the like. And here, where I have
drawn a blue line, after death the spiritual rays out through
the impulses we have absorbed in the economic life (yellow
arrows). This in the middle, drawn in brown, is rayed
through, as it were, laterally by the spiritual (yellow). The
life of rights as such is entirely earthly, but is rayed
through laterally. So that Inspiration, which should restrain
Ahriman, should be active in the life of rights. We must
advance to conceptions of rights, which are really taken from
the life of the spirit, and which are really initiation
conceptions.
But how can
the things of which I have spoken today be straightaway made
understandable to wider circles of present-day mankind? They
cannot. For what the spiritual-scientific element would need
to permeate the whole of the education and culture of the
times. Otherwise it would not continue into the future.
Therefore the healing of our social life is intimately bound
up with the extension of a real understanding for spiritual
knowledge. Certainly on the one hand there will gradually
arise in people who have the goodwill accept social ideas the
urge to receive the spiritual as well. For the most part,
however, there are those who struggle against it, who
preferred to remain fixed in those things of which I had to
say yesterday that they were antipathetic to the children who
for some years have been coming out of the spiritual world
into life on earth. It is indeed pitiful to see how few
people are inclined really to learn from the events;; how
very much men today continue to exhibit ideas that they
formally had before it became evident that the world that
lives in the ideas as driven mankind into the frightful
catastrophes of the time. At this juncture mankind should
acquire a certain feeling of responsibility and an understanding
of these things, and actually also see to the utmost extent
these needs of the time. Just think — and this must be
said of very many — how people today are fixed fast in
egoism and how much cause one might have today to disregard
one's own person and turned one's gaze to the great question
of mankind. They are so overpoweringly great, these questions
of the day, that if one is a sensible person one should
scarcely have time to attend to the most limited personal
destinies if these individual destinies could not be made
fruitful for the great questions for time which already live
in the womb of the evolutionary epochs of mankind. One could
wish that men would take note of the great discrepancy
between the futility of personal destiny today, and they
reality that comes to light in the overpowering human
problems of the day. One cannot understand the spiritual
science in its reality, at least have no understanding of it
at the present time, if one has no comprehension and
accommodating spirit for these great human problems. Much is
now only beginning to unfold: but it is precisely those who
attach themselves to a movement for spiritual knowledge who
should strive for a specially active understanding of what is
being enacted to a wide extent in the social movement of the
present day, and what, as can again be seen from today's
indications, as wider horizons than is generally thought.
Tomorrow the
conclusions
[See: The Social Question (NSL 101)]
be drawn from what has been set before you yesterday and today
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