Cosmogony, Freedom, Altruism
GA191
Lecture 4 of 15
October 10, 1919
I WANT during the next few evenings to
talk to you about various things in connection with our
present civilisation, which are necessary to right
understanding and action in the world to-day. It is not very
difficult — in view of the many facts that meet one
almost at every turn — to perceive signs of decline
within our civilisation, and that it contains within itself
forces that make for its downfall. Recognising these forces
of decline within our civilisation, we have then to seek out
the quarters whence it may draw fresh sources of strength. If
we survey our present civilisation, we shall see that there
are present in it three main downward forces — three
forces which gradually and inevitably must bring about its
overthrow. All the distressing phenomena we have hitherto
experienced in the course of man's evolution — all
those we have still to go through, for in many respects we
are only just at the beginning — these are only so many
symptoms of a vast process that is going on in our age, and
that, taken as a whole, presents a phenomenon of decline and
fall.
If we look
beyond our own immediate civilisation—beyond what has
taken place in our own times merely, or during the last three
or four centuries — if we take a wide survey of the
whole course of man's evolution, we may observe that earlier
ages had a groundwork for their civilisation, a groundwork
for the habits and thoughts of everyday life, such as we
to-day only believe ourselves to have. These old
civilisations — especially the heathen civilisations
— had something of a scientific character about them
— a scientific character of a sort which made men
realise, that what lived within their own souls was part of
the life of the whole universe. Just think what a vivid
conception the Greeks still possessed of worlds beyond the
bounds of everyday existence, of a world of Gods and Spirits
behind the world of sense. One has but to recall how
living a part was played in everyday life by whatever could
form any sort of link between the people of those elder
civilisations and a spiritual world to which they were no
strangers. In all their daily transactions, these men of old
were conscious of forming part of a creation not exhausted
within the limits of the everyday world, but where spiritual
beings made their workings felt. The commonest everyday
affairs were transacted under the guidance of spiritual
forces. And thus, in the heathen civilisations especially, we
find, when we look back on them, a dominant scientific
character, which is best described by saying: In those days
people had a Cosmogony — that is, they
recognised themselves to be members of the whole universe.
They knew that they were not merely beings who had gone
astray and were wandering over the face of the green earth
like lost sheep, but that they were part and parcel of the
whole wide universe, and had their own function within this
universe. The men of old possessed a Cosmogony.
Our
civilisation possesses no instinct for the creation of a
cosmogony in real life. Our mode of conception is not, in the
strict sense of the term, a genuinely scientific one. We have
tabulated isolated facts, and we have constructed a logical
system of concepts; but we have no real science forming a
practical link between us and the spiritual world. How paltry
is the part played by the science of our day in common life,
compared with what man of old felt pulsing through him from
the forces of the spiritual world! In all his actions he had
a cosmogony; he knew himself a member of the whole vast
universe. When he looked up at the sun and the moon and the
stars, they were not to him strange worlds; for he knew
himself, in his own deepest nature, akin to the sun and moon
and world of stars. Thus, the old civilisations possessed a
cosmogony; but for our civilisation this cosmogony is lost.
Without a cosmogony in life, men cannot be strong.
That is one thing that is bringing about the downfall of our
civilisation.
The second
element leading to the downfall of our civilisation is that
there is no true impulse for Freedom. Our
civilisation lacks the power to ground life upon a broad
basis of general freedom. Only very few people in our day
arrive at any real conception of freedom. There are plenty
who talk about it; but very few to-day arrive at any real
conception of what freedom really is — and fewer still
have any real impulse for it. And so it comes that our
civilisation is gradually sinking into something where it can
find neither strength or support — into
Fatalism. Either we have religious fatalism, in
which men yield themselves up to religious forces of some
kind or another, make these religious forces their master,
and ask nothing better than to be pulled about by strings,
like puppets at a show. Or else we have the fatalism of
natural science. And the effects of such scientific fatalism
are seen in the way people have come to regard all events
caused by natural or economic necessity, and as leaving no
scope for free action on the part of man. And when men feel
themselves fettered to the world of economics or the world of
nature, that is, to all intents and purposes,
fatalism. Or else, again, we have that fatalism
which has come in with the more modern forms of religious
faiths — a fatalism that deliberately precludes
freedom. Just ask yourselves, how many hearts and souls there
are to-day, who consciously yearn to yield themselves up, for
Christ, or a spiritual power of some kind, to do what he
pleases with them. Why it is even an accusation one
frequently hears made against Anthroposophy, that it lays too
little stress on men being redeemed by Christ, not by
themselves. People prefer to be led; they prefer to be
guided; they would really prefer fatalism to be true. How
often lately, in these troublous years, has one not heard
this kind of talk from one person or another: “Why does
not God, why does not Christ, come to the help of this or
that set of people? There must, after all, be a divine
justice somewhere!” People would like this divine
justice ... they would like to have it suspended aloft as a
Fate. They do not want to get to that innate
strength which comes from the impulse of Freedom and
permeates the whole being. A civilisation that does not know
how to foster the impulse of Freedom weakens men and dooms
itself to downfall.
That is the
second thing. — Of the forces that are bringing about
the decline of our civilisation, the first is the lack of a
Cosmogony. And the second is the lack of a genuine
impulse for Freedom.
And the third
thing is, that our civilisation is incapable of evolving
anything that can give fresh fire to religious feeling and
purpose. Our civilisation, in truth, aims at nothing more
than nursing the old religions and fanning their cold ashes.
But to bring new religious impulses into life, for
that our civilisation lacks the strength. And
lacking this, it lacks also the strength for true altruistic
action in life. That is why all the processes of our
civilisation are so egoistic, because it has within itself no
real, no strong, altruistic motive-power, There is nothing
that can supply altruistic motive-power but a spiritual
view of life. Only when a man comes to recognise himself
as a member of the spiritual world does he cease to be so
tremendously interested in himself that the whole world
revolves round him. When he does, then indeed egoistic motives
are replaced by those of Altruism. Our age, however,
is little given to cultivating so great an interest in the
spiritual world. The interest in the spiritual world must be
much further developed before people really feel themselves
members of it.
And so it was
like impulses dropped from on high that the teaching of
Reincarnation and Karma came amongst us and into our
civilisation. But how were these impulses interpreted? At
bottom it was in a very egoistic way that these ideas of
Reincarnation and Karma were understood, even by those who
took them up. For instance, they would say: — Oh, well!
in some life or other everyone has deserved what he gets.
Even otherwise quite intelligent people have been known to
say that the ideas of reincarnation and karma of themselves
sufficiently warranted the existence of human suffering.
There is at bottom no justification for the social question
— so say many otherwise intelligent people — for,
if a man is poor, it is what he deserved in his previous
incarnation, and he has to work off in this incarnation only
what, he deserved in a previous one. Even the ideas of
reincarnation and karma are unable to permeate our
civilisation in any way save one and it gives no stimulus to
the altruistic sense. It is not enough for us merely to
introduce ideas such as those of reincarnation and karma
— the question is, in what way we introduce
them. If they become merely an incentive to egoism, then they
do not raise our civilised life, they only serve to sink it
lower. There is another way again in which reincarnation and
karma become unethical — anti-ethical — ideas.
Many people say: “I must be good, so that I may have a
fortunate incarnation next time.” To act from such a
motive, to be virtuous in order that one may have as pleasant
a time as possible in the next incarnation — this is
not simple egoism, but double egoism. Yet this double egoism
is what many people did actually get out of the ideas of
reincarnation and karma. Our civilisation possesses so little
of any altruistic or religious impulse, that it is incapable
of conceiving even such ideas as those of reincarnation and
karma in the sense that would make them a stimulus to
altruistic, not to egoistic actions and sentiments.
These are the
three things which are acting within our civilisation as
forces of decline and fall: — Lack of a cosmogony, lack
of a sound foundation of freedom, lack of an altruistic
sense. But without a cosmogony, do you see, there is no real
science, or system of knowledge. Then there is no real
knowledge — then all knowledge ultimately becomes a
mere game, in which the worlds and the civilisations of man
are toys. And this is what knowledge has in many respects
become in our age, insofar as it is not merely a utilitarian
incident of external culture, of external technical culture.
Freedom has now become in many respects an empty phrase,
because the force of our civilisation does not lay a broad
foundation of freedom nor spreads abroad the impulse of
freedom. Neither in the economic field have we the
possibility of progressing further in the social direction,
because our civilisation contains no altruistic motive force,
but only egoistic anti-social motive forces, and one cannot
socialise with anti-social forces. For socialising means
creating a social framework such that each man lives and
works for the rest. But just imagine in our present
civilisation each man trying to live and work for the rest!
Why, the whole order of society is so instituted, that each
one can only live and work for himself. All our institutions
are like that.
The question
then arises: — How are we going to surmount
these signs of our civilisation's decline and fall? To gloss
over such signs of decline in our civilisation, my dear
friends, is quite impossible. There is nothing for it, but to
recognise the facts as they have just been stated, to regard
them dispassionately and without reservations, and to harbour
no illusions. One must say to oneself: There they are, these
forces of decline and fall, and one must not imagine that one
can in any way turn them in another direction, or anything of
that sort. No, they are very powerful forces of
decline, and it is necessary to give them their proper name,
and to speak of them as we are doing now. This being so, what
we must do, is to turn to where forces can be found for the
re-ascent, and that is not to be done by theorising.
People in the present day may invent the most beautiful
theories, may have the most lofty principles — but with
theories alone one can do nothing. To do anything in life, it
must be by means of the forces that are actually present in
the world. If our civilisation were through and through as I
have been describing it — I mean, if it were like that
through and through — then there would be
nothing for it but to say to ourselves: “We must just
let our civilisation go to pieces, and ourselves along with
it.” For to attempt in any way to redress the signs of
the times by mere theories or conceptions would be an utter
absurdity.
One can but
ask: Does not the root of the matter perhaps lie really
deeper? It does lie deeper. People to-day are too much bent
upon the “Absolute.” When they ask: “What
is true?” — they mean, “What is true
absolutely?” — not what is true of a particular
age. When they ask, “What is good?” — they
are asking, “What is good absolutely?” —
They are not asking, “What is good for Europe? What is
good for Asia? What is good for the twentieth century? What
is good for the twenty-fifth century?” They are asking
about absolute Goodness and Truth. They are not asking about
what actually exists in the concrete evolution of mankind.
But we must put the question to ourselves in a different way,
for we must look at the actuality of things, and from the
point of view of actuality, questions must be differently put
— very often so put, that the answers seem paradoxical
compared with what one is inclined to assume from a surface
view of things.
We must ask
ourselves: — Is there no possibility of arriving once
more at a mode of conception which is cosmogonical,
which takes on the universe as a whole? Is there no
possibility of arriving at an impulse of freedom which shall
be an actual influence in social life? Is there no
possibility for an impulse which shall be religious and at
the same time an impulse of brotherhood, and therefore the
real basis for an economic social order? And if we put these
questions rightly, then we get real answers. For the point we
have here to remember is this. The various types of people on
the earth to-day are not all adapted to the whole
all-comprehensive universal truth; the various types of men
are only adapted to particular fields of the true Activity.
And we must ask ourselves: — Where in the life
of earth to-day may there perhaps exist the possibility for a
cosmogony to evolve? Where does the possibility exist for a
sweeping impulse of freedom to evolve? And where does the
impulse exist for a communal life among men that is religious
and also, in a social sense, brotherly?
We will take
the last question first, and if we contemplate the state of
affairs on our earth impartially, we shall come to the
conclusion, that the temperament, the mode of thought for an
actual brotherly impulse upon our earth is to be sought
amongst the Asiatic peoples, the peoples of Asia
— especially in the civilisations of Japan and India.
Despite the fact that these civilisations have already fallen
into decadence, and despite the fact that external,
superficial appearances are against it, we find there
enshrined in men's hearts those impulses of generous love
towards all living things which alone can supply the
foundations for religious altruism in the first place, and,
in the second, for an actual, altruistic, industrial form of
civilisation.
But here we are
met by a peculiar fact. The Asiatics have, it is true, the
temperament for altruism, but they have not got the kind of
human existence which would enable them to carry their
altruism into practice. They have merely got the temperament,
but they have no possibility, no gift for creating social
conditions in which altruism could begin to be externally
realised. For thousands of years, the Asiatics have managed
to nurse the instincts of altruism in human nature. And yet,
they brought things to a state in which China and India were
devastated by monster famines That is the peculiar thing
about the Asiatic civilisation, that the temperament is
there, and that this temperament is inwardly
perfectly sincere, but that there exists no gift for
realising this temperament in outer life. That is just the
peculiar thing about Asiatic civilisation, that it contains a
tremendously strong instinct for altruism in men's inner
nature, and no possibility, for the moment, of realising it
externally. On the contrary, if Asia were left to herself
alone, this very fact, that she has this capacity for laying
the inward basis of altruism without any gift for realising
it outwardly, would turn her into an appalling desert of
civilisation.
We may say
then, that of these three things : the impulse for Cosmogony,
the impulse for Freedom, the impulse for Altruism, Asia
possesses more especially the inner temperament for the
third. It is, however, but one third of what is necessary to
bring our civilisation into the ascendant that Asia possesses
— the inward temperament for altruism.
Now Europe. It
is necessary for Europe to solve the social question —
but she has not the temperament to solve the social question.
To solve the social question, she would need to have the
Asiatic temperament. The social necessities of Europe are
such as to supply all the conditions requisite for a solution
of the social question; but the Europeans would first need to
become permeated through and through with the way of thought
that is natural to the Asiatic — only the Asiatic has
no gift for actually perceiving social needs as they exist
externally. Often indeed, he even acquiesces in them. In
Europe, there is every external incentive to do something
about the social question, but the temperament is lacking. On
the other hand there is in Europe, in the very strongest
degree, the talent, the ability which would provide the soil
for freedom — for the impulse of freedom. The strong
point of European talents — specifically European
talents — lies in developing in the very highest degree
the inner sentiment, the inner feeling for freedom. In
effect, the gift for getting to a real idea of freedom is
specifically European. But among these Europeans there are
none who act freely, who could make freedom a reality. Of
freedom as an idea the Europeans can form the loftiest
conception. But just as the Asiatic would be able to set
about doing something if he possessed the clear thought of
the Europeans without their other failings, if he could only
get the clear-cut European idea of freedom, so, the European
may evolve the most beautiful conception of freedom, but
there is no possibility, politically, of realising this idea
of freedom through the direct agency of the European peoples.
For, of the three essentials to civilisation: — the
impulse for Altruism, the impulse for Freedom, the impulse
for Cosmogony — the European possesses only one third
— the impulse for Freedom. The other two he has not
got. So the European also has only got one third of what is
necessary in order really to bring forth a new age. It is
very important that people should at least recognise these
things as being the secrets of our civilisation. In Europe,
we can at least say that we have all the conditions of
thought and feeling requisite for knowing what freedom is,
but without something more, there is no possibility for us to
carry out this freedom. I can assure you that in Germany, for
instance, the most beautiful things were written by various
individuals about freedom, at the time when all Germany was
groaning under the tyranny of Ludendorff and company. Most
beautiful things were written about freedom at that time. In
Europe, a talent undoubtedly exists for conceiving the
impulse of freedom. That is one third, so far, towards the
actual upraising of our civilisation — but not the
whole.
Leaving Europe
and going Westwards — and I take Great Britain and
America together in this connection—passing then to the
Anglo-American world, we find again here one third
of the impulses — just one out of the
three impulses, that are necessary to the upraising
of our civilisation, and that is, the impulse towards a
Cosmogony. Anyone acquainted with the spiritual life of the
Anglo-American world knows, that formalistic and
materialistic as Anglo-American spiritual life is in the
first instance — and though indeed it even tries to get
to what is spiritual in a materialistic fashion — yet
it has in it the makings of a cosmogony. Although this
cosmogony is to-day being sought along altogether erroneous
paths, yet it lies in the Anglo-American nature to seek for
it. Again a third: the search for a cosmogony. The
possibility of bringing this cosmogony into connection with
free, altruistic man does not exist. There is the talent for
treating this cosmogony as an ornamental appendage, for
working it out and giving it shape; but no talent for
incorporating the human being in this cosmogony as a member
of it. Even the Spiritualist Movement, in its early
beginnings in the middle of the nineteenth century (of which
it still preserves some traces) — had, one may say,
something of a cosmogony about it, although it led into the
wilderness. What they were trying to get at, were the forces
that lay behind the sense-forces, only they took a
materialistic road, and used materialistic methods, to find
them. But they were not endeavouring through these means to
arrive at a science of the formalist kind that you get, for
instance, among the Europeans. They were trying to become
acquainted with the real, super-sensible forces.
Only, as I said, they took a wrong road. So, here again, we
have one third of what will have to be there before
our civilisation can re-ascend.
We cannot
to-day arrive at the secrets of our civilisation, my dear
friends, unless we can distinguish how these three impulses
needed for its rise are distributed among the different
members of our earth's surface — unless we know that
the tendency towards Cosmogony is an endowment of
the Anglo-American world, that the tendency towards
Freedom lies in the European world; whilst the
tendency towards Altruism and towards that
temperament which, properly realised, leads to social feeling
is, strictly speaking, peculiar to Asiatic culture. America,
Europe, Asia, each have one third of what must be attained
for any true regeneration, any real reconstruction of our
civilisation.
These are the
fundamental ideas which must inspire the thought and feeling
to-day of anyone who is in earnest and sincere about working
for a reconstruction of our civilisation. One cannot
to-day shut oneself up in one's study, and ponder over which
is the best programme for the coming times. What we must do
is to go out into the world, and search out the impulses
already existing there.
As I said, if
we look at our civilisation and at all that is hurrying it to
its fall, we cannot throw off the impression that it is
impossible to save it. And it cannot be saved, unless people
come to see, that one element is to be found among one
people, a second among another, a third among a third —
unless people all over the earth come together and set to
work on broad lines to give practical recognition to what
neither, singly, can of himself achieve, in the absolute
sense, but that must be achieved by the one who is marked
out, so to speak, by destiny for that particular work. If the
American to-day, besides a cosmogony, wants also to evolve
freedom and socialism, he cannot do it. If the European,
besides founding the impulse for freedom, wants to supply
cosmogony and altruism, he cannot do it. No more can the
Asiatic realise anything save his long-ingrained altruism.
Let this altruism be once taken over by the other groups of
the earth's inhabitants, and saturated with that for which
each has a special talent — then and then only, we
shall really make progress.
We must once
for all admit to ourselves that our civilisation has grown
feeble, and must again find strength. I have expressed this
in a somewhat abstract way, and to make it more concrete I
will put it as follows. The old pre-Christian civilisations
of the East produced, as you know, great cities. We can look
back over a wide spread range of civilisations in the East,
every one of which produced great cities. But these great
cities had, as well, a certain character about them.
All the civilisations of the East had this power to
create, along with the life of great cities, a conception,
that, after all, man's life is a void, a nothing, unless he
penetrates beyond the merely physical into the
superphysical. And so great cities, such as Babylon,
Nineveh, and the rest, were able to develop real forces of
progress, because men were not led to regard what the cities
themselves brought forth as being itself the actual reality,
but rather, what is behind it all. It was in Rome that people
came to make the civilisation of cities a gauge of what was
to be regarded as real. The Greek cities are inconceivable
without the country round them. If history, as we have it,
were not so much conventional fiction — a “fable
convenue” and would only revive past times in their
true aspect, it would show us how the Greek cities
were rooted in the whole countryside. In Rome this was no
longer the case. Indeed, the whole history of Rome consists
in the conversion of an imaginary world into a real world,
the conversion of a world that is unreal into one which is
real. It was in Rome that the “Citizen” first
appears — a ghostly figure beside the living being
Man. For man is a human being; and if he is
a citizen besides, that is a fiction. His citizenship is
something that is entered in the Church Register, or the Town
Register, or something of the kind. That besides being a
human individual endowed with particular faculties, he is
also the owner of assessed property, duly entered in the Land
Register — that is a fiction alongside the reality.
This is thoroughly Roman. But Rome achieved a great deal more
than this. Rome managed to take all that results from the
separation of the town from the country — the real,
actual country — and to give it a fictitious reality.
Rome, for instance, took the old religious concepts, and
introduced into them the Roman legal concepts. If we
go back to the old religious concepts with an open mind, we
do not find anything corresponding to Roman legal concepts
contained in them. Roman jurisprudence simply invaded
religious ethics. All through religious ethics — thanks
to what Rome has made of them—there is at bottom a
conception of the super-sensible world as being a place where
judges sit and pass judgment on human actions — just as
they do on the benches of our Law Courts that are modelled on
the Roman pattern.
So persistent
is the influence of these Roman legal concepts, that, when
there is any talk of Karma, one actually finds that the
majority of people to-day who accept this doctrine, picture
it working as though Justice were sitting over there beyond,
meting out rewards and punishments according to our earthly
notions — reward for good and punishment for evil deeds
— exactly the Roman conception of Law. All the saints
and supernatural beings exist after the fashion of these
Roman legal concepts which have crept into the supernatural
world.
Who to-day, for
instance, understands the grand idea of the Greek
“Fate”? We cannot say that the concepts of Roman
jurisprudence help us much to-day towards the understanding
of the figure of Œdipus. Indeed, owing to the influence
of Roman legal concepts, men seem to have altogether lost the
capacity for comprehending tragic grandeur. These Roman legal
concepts have crept into our modern civilisation; they live
in every part of it; they have become in their very essence a
fictitious reality, something imaginary. It is
absolutely necessary for us clearly to see, that in our whole
way of conceiving things we have lost touch with reality, and
that what we need is to impregnate our conceptions afresh
with reality. It is because men's concepts are, at root,
hollow, that our civilisation still remains unconscious of
the need for the common co-operation of men all over the
round earth. We are never really willing to go to the root of
what is taking place under our eyes ; we are always more or
less anxious to keep on the surface of things. Just to give
you another example of this. — You know, how in the
various parliaments throughout the world in former days, say,
in the first half of the 18th century, or a little later,
party tendencies took shape in two definite directions
— the one Conservative, the other Liberal, and for a
long time they enjoyed considerable respect. The various
other parties that have sprung up since were later accessions
to these two main original groups. There was the party with
conservative tendencies and the party with liberal
tendencies: But it is so very necessary that one should
nowadays get beyond the words to the real thing behind ;
there are many matters about which one must ask, not what
people who stand for a certain thing say about it, but what
is going on subconsciously within the people
themselves. If you do so, you will find that the people who
attach themselves to one or other of the parties of a
conservative tone, are people who in some way are chiefly
connected with agrarian interests, with the care of land and
cultivation of the soil, that is to say, with the primal
element of human civilisation. In some way or other
this will be the case. Of course, on the surface, there may
be all sorts of other circumstances entering in as well. I do
not say that every Conservative is necessarily directly
connected with agriculture! Of course, there is here, as
everywhere else, a fringe of people who adhere to the
catchwords of a cause. It is the main feature that one has to
consider; and the main feature is, that that part of the
population which has an interest in preserving certain forms
of social structure and in keeping things from moving too
fast, is agrarian.
On the other
hand, the more industrial element, drawn from labour that has
been detached from the soil, is liberal, progressive. So that
these two party tendencies have their source in something
that lies deeper; and one must, in every case, try to lift
such things out of the mere phrases into which they have
fallen — to get through the words to the real thing
behind them. But, ultimately, it all tells the same tale
— that the form of civilisation in which we have been
living, is one whose strength lies in words. We must
push forward to a civilisation formed upon real
things, to a civilisation of real things. We must
cease to be imposed upon by phrases, by programmes, by verbal
ideals, and must get to the clear perception of realities.
Above all, we must get to a clear perception of realities of
a kind that lie deeper than forms of civilisation in city or
country, agricultural or industrial. And much deeper than
these are those impulses which to-day are at work in the
various members of the body human distributed over the globe
— of which the American is making towards Cosmogony,
the European towards Freedom, and the Asiatic towards
Altruism — towards a truly social life, in other
words.
At present,
this of course comes out, has and does come out, in a curious
way. Anglo-American civilisation is conquering the world.
But, in conquering the world, it will need to absorb what the
conquered parts of the world have to give — the impulse
to Freedom, the impulse to Altruism; for in itself it has
only the impulse to Cosmogony. Indeed, Anglo-American
civilisation owes its success to a cosmogonic impulse. It
owes it to the circumstance, that people are able to think in
world-thoughts.
To realise the
full meaning of this, it is, I need hardly say, necessary to
get right away from phrases, and pierce to the realities. For
anyone who is tied to phrases, would naturally think : Well,
but who of late has stood out as the representatives of
freedom, if not the Anglo-American world? Why, of course, in
words, yes, to any extent. But what matters about a thing is,
not how it is represented in words, but what it is in
reality. We have had over and over again, as you know,
occasion to refer to the language of “Wilsonism.”
Phraseology of the Wilson type has been gaining ground in
Western countries for a long time past. In October, 1918, it
even laid hold for a time of Central Europe. And over and
over again as the years went on, one had to point out the
futility of all that Woodrow Wilson's name stood for, how
utterly hollow and abstract it all was, for which Woodrow
Wilson's name stood. Now, of course, even in
America, people are apparently beginning to see through
Wilsonism, and how hollow and abstract it all is. Among us,
there was no question of any national feeling of hostility
towards Wilson — there was no question of any
antagonism proceeding from Europe. It was an antagonism
arising from the whole conception of our civilisation and its
forces. It was a question of showing Wilsonism for what it is
— the type of all that is abstract, all that is most
unreal in human thought. It is the Wilson type of thought
which has had such one-sided results, because it has absorbed
the American impulses, without really possessing the
impulse of freedom — for talking about freedom is by no
means a proof that the impulse of freedom itself is really
there — and because it had not the impulse for really
practical Altruism.
The life of
Central Europe, with all that it was, lies in the dust. What
lived in Central Europe is, to a great extent, sunk in a
fearful sleep. At the present moment, the Germans are, one
might say, forced to think of freedom, not as they talked of
it in all manner of fine phrases at the time when they were
groaning under the yoke of Ludendorff — when constraint
of itself engendered an understanding of the idea of freedom.
Now they think of it with crippled powers of soul and body,
in total inability to summon up the energy for real intense
thought. We have in Germany all sorts of attempts at
democratic forms — but no democracy. We have a republic
— but no republicans! And this is in every way a
symptom that has especially manifested itself in Central
Europe, but is characteristic of the European world in
general.
And Eastern
Europe? For years and years the proletariat of the whole
world have been boasting of all that Marxianism was going to
do. Lenin and Trotsky were in a position to put Marxianism
into practice — and it is turning into the wholesale
plunder of civilisation which is identical with the ruin of
civilisation. And these things are only just beginning. Yet,
for all that, there does exist in Europe the capacity for
founding freedom, ideally, spiritually. Only, Europe must
supplement this in an actual practical sense, through the
cooperation of the other peoples on the earth.
In Asia, we can
see the old Asiatic spirit lighting up again in recent years.
Those people who are spiritual leaders in Asia (take for
example the one to whom I have already alluded, Rabindranath
Tagore) — the leading spirits of Asia show by their
very way of speaking, that the altruistic spirit is anything
but dead. But there is still less possibility, now, than
there was even in old days of achieving a civilisation
through this one third only of the impulses that go to the
making of a civilisation.
All this is the
reason why, to-day, there is so much talk about things that
are peculiar to the civilisation that is dying, but which
people talk about as though they stood for something that
could be effective as an ideal. For years, we have had it
proclaimed that: Every nation must have the possibility of
... well, I don't quite know of what — living its own
life in its own way — or something of that sort. Now, I
ask you: For the man of to-day, if he is frank and honest
about it, what is “Nation?” Practically just a
form of words, certainly nothing real. If one talks about the
Spirit of a Nation, in the sense in which we speak of it in
Anthroposophy, then one can talk about a Nation, for then
there is a reality at the back of it — but not when it
merely signifies an abstraction. And it is an abstraction
that people have in mind to-day, when they talk of the
“freedom of nationalities,” and so forth. For
they certainly do not believe in the reality of any sort of
National Being. And herein lies the profound inward falsity
to which men to-day do homage. They do not believe in the
reality of the National Being, yet they talk of the
“Freedom of the Nation.” As if to the
materialistic man of our day, the “Nation” meant
anything at all! What is the German Nation? Just ninety
million of persons, who can be added together and summed up,
A+A+A. That is not a National Being — a self-contained
entity — for men to believe in. It is just the same
with the other Nations. Yet people talk about these things,
and believe that they are talking about realities
— and all the while they are lying to themselves in the
depths of their souls.
But it is with
Realities we are dealing when we say: —
The
Anglo-American Being — a striving towards Cosmogony;
The European
Being — a striving towards Freedom;
The Asiatic
Being — a striving towards Altruism.
And when we
then try to comprehend these three divided forces in a
consciousness that embraces the universe as a whole; when,
from out of this consciousness of the universal whole, we say
to ourselves that the old civilisation is bursting through
its partitions, it is doomed — then to try to save it
in its present form would be to work against one's age, not
with it. We need a new civilisation upon the ruins of the
old. The ruins of the old civilisation will gradually
crumble; and that man alone understands the present times who
has will and courage for one that shall be really
new. But the New must be grounded, neither in a
sense of country as among the Greeks and Romans, nor in a
sense of the earth, as with men of modern times. It must
proceed from a sense of the World — the
world-consciousness of future man, that world-consciousness
which once more turns its eyes away from the earth here, and
looks up to the Cosmos.
Only, we must
arrive at a view of this Cosmos, which shall carry us in
practice beyond the schools of Copernicus and Galileo. My
dear friends, the Europeans have known how to express the
earth's environment in terms of mathematics, but they have
not known, how, from the earth's environment to
extract a real science. For the times in which he lived,
Giordano Bruno was a remarkable figure, a great personality;
but to-day we need to realise, that, where he could only
perceive a mathematical order, there a spiritual
order reigns — reality reigns. The American does not
really believe in this purely mathematical world, in the
purely mathematical Cosmos. His particular civilisation leads
him to reach out to a knowledge of the super-sensible forces
beyond, even though he is, as yet, on the wrong road. In
Europe there was no sort of knowledge that men did not
pursue. And yet, when Goethe, in his own way, really put the
question : “What is scientific knowledge?”
— there was no getting any further, for Europe had not
the power to take what can be learnt from the study, say, of
Man, and widen it into a cosmogony, a science of the
universe, Goethe discovered metamorphosis, the
metamorphosis of plants, the metamorphosis of animals, the
metamorphosis of man. The head, in respect of its system of
bones, is a vertebral column and spinal marrow transformed.
So far, so good; but you need to follow it up and develop it,
until you realise that this head is the transformed man of
the previous incarnation, and that the trunk and limbs are
the man in the initial stage of the coming incarnation. Real
science must be cosmic — otherwise it is not
science. It must be cosmic, must be a cosmogony —
otherwise it cannot give inward human impulses which will
carry man on through life. The man of modern times
cannot live instinctively; he must live consciously.
He needs a cosmogony; and he needs a freedom that is real. He
needs more than vague talk about freedom; more than the mere
verbiage of freedom. He needs that freedom should actually
grow into his immediate life and surroundings. This is only
possible along roads that lead to ethical individualism.
There is a
characteristic incident in connection with this. At the 'time
when my book
The Philosophy of Spiritual Activity
appeared, Eduard von Hartmann was one of the first to receive
a copy, and he wrote to me: “The book ought not to be called
‘The Philosophy of Spiritual Activity’
but
‘A Study in Phenomena connected with the Theory of
Cognition, and an Ethical Individualism.’
” For a title of course that would have been rather long-winded;
but it would not have been bad to have called it “Ethical
Individualism,” for ethical individualism is nothing
but the personal realisation of freedom. The best people were
totally unable to perceive how the actual impulses of the age
were calling for the thing that is discussed in that
book.
Turning now to
Asia. Indeed, my dear friends, Asia and Europe must learn to
understand each other. But if things go on as they have in
the past, then they will never understand each other,
especially as it is necessary that Asia and America should
understand each other as well. The Asiatics look at America,
and see that what they have there is really nothing more than
the machinery of external life, of the State, of politics,
etc. The Asiatic has no taste for all this machinery; his
understanding is all for the things that arise from the
inmost impulses of the human soul. The Europeans have, it is
true, dabbled in this same Asiatic spirit, the spiritual life
of Asia; but it must be confessed that they have not, so far,
given proof of any very profound understanding of it. Nor
have they been in perfect agreement and the kind of
disagreement that arose, plainly showed that they had not
much understanding of how to introduce into European culture
a realisation of the actuating impulses of Asiatic culture.
Just think of Madame Blavatsky. She wanted to introduce into
the civilisation of Europe every kind of thing from the
civilisation of India, of Thibet. Much of it was very dubious
that she tried to introduce. Max Müller tried another
way of bringing Asiatic culture into Europe. One finds a good
deal of Blavatsky that is not in Max Müller; and there
is a good deal in Max Müller that is not in Blavatsky.
But from the criticism Max Müller passed on Blavatsky it
is plain how little insight there was into the subject. In
Max Müller's opinion it was not the real substance of
the Indian spirit that Blavatsky had brought over to England,
but a spurious imitation and he expressed his opinion in a
simile, by saying that if people met a pig that was grunting,
they would not be astonished; if they met a pig talking like
a man, they then would be astonished! In the way Max
Müller used the simile, he can only have meant, that he,
with his Asiatic culture, was the pig that grunted and that
Blavatsky was as if a pig should start talking like a man. To
me, there certainly seems nothing remarkably interesting
about a pig grunting but one would begin to feel rather
interested if a pig suddenly started running about and
talking like a man! Hence the simile of itself shows that the
analogy they found was a very thin one and lies chiefly in
the words. But people do not notice this nowadays and if one
does make bold to point out the absurd side of the matter,
then people think that one ought not to treat
“recognised authorities” like Max Müller in
that kind of way.
The time has
come when one must speak out honestly and straightforwardly.
And if one is to be honest and straightforward, one must
speak out quite plainly about the occult facts of
civilisation in the present day, among them that the
Anglo-American world has the gift for Cosmogony, that Europe
has the gift for Freedom, Asia the gift for Altruism, for
religion, for a social-economic order.
These three
temperaments must be fused together for a complete
humanity. We must become men of all the worlds, and act from
that standpoint, as inhabitants of the universe. Then and
then only can that come about which the age really
demands.
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