Three Lectures on
THE THREEFOLD SOCIAL ORDER
by
Dr. Rudolf Steiner
Lecture 2
The
Religious, Economic and Political Impulses
Dornach, October 11th, 1919.
The
hour is so late, that I shall make this lecture a short one,
and leave over till to-morrow the main substance of what I have
to say in these three lectures. To-morrow the Eurhythmies are
put earlier, so that it will be possible to have a longer
lecture.
I
pointed out yesterday that in order to master the conditions of
our present declining civilisation, one needs to differentiate,
— so to differentiate between the various groups of
peoples massed together over the face of the earth, that one's
attention is actually directed to what is living and working in
each of the separate groups, in particular among the
Anglo-American peoples, among the peoples of what is properly
Europe, and among the peoples of the East. And we have seen
that the aptitude for founding a cosmogony suited to the new
age is to be found pre-eminently among the Anglo- American
peoples, — the faculty for developing the idea of
freedom, amongst the peoples of Europe, whilst that for
developing the impulse of altruism, the religious impulse with
all that it connotes by way of human brotherhood, is to be
found amongst the population of the East. There is no other way
in which a new civilisation can be founded than by making it
possible hereafter for man, all the world over, to work
together in real co-operation. But, my dear friends, in order
that this may be possible, in order that any such real
co-operation may be possible, several things are necessary. It
Is necessary to recognise, dispassionately and as a matter of
fact, how much our present civilisation lacks, and how strong
the forces of decline in this present civilisation are. When
one considers the forces present in our civilisation, one
cannot say: “It is altogether bad;” that is not the
way to look at it; in the first place, it would be an
unhistoric point of view; in the second place, it could lead to
nothing positive. The impulses that reside in our civilisation
were, in some age, and in some place, justified. But everything
that in the historic course of mankind's evolution leads to
ruin, leads to ruin for the very reason that something which
has a rightful title in one age and one place has been passed
on to another age and another place, and because men, from
various Ahrimanic and Luciferic motives, cling to whatever they
have grown accustomed to, and are not ready to join in with
that actual forward movement which the whole cosmic order
requires.
Our
age prides itself on being a scientific one. And, at bottom, it
is from this, its scientific character, that the great social
errors and perversions of the age proceed. That is why it is so
imperative that the light should shine in upon our whole life
of thought and action, inasmuch as the activities of modern
times are entirely dependent on the modern system of thought.
We noticed yesterday, in the general survey into which we were
led, how the collective civilisation of the earth was made up
of a scientific civilisation, a political civilisation tending
towards freedom, and of an altruistic economic civilisation
that really is derived from the altruistic religious
element.
People nowadays, — as I said before, yesterday, —
when they consider the forces actually at work in our social
structure, remain on the surface of things; they are not
willing to penetrate deeper. The lectures in our class-rooms
teach what professes to pass for economic wisdom, drawn from
the natural science methods of the present day; but what lives
in men, and what stirs the minds and the being of men, —
that is regarded as a sort of unappetising stew. No attention
is paid to what are really its true features.
Let
us turn first to the civilisation of Europe. What is the
pre-eminent trait of this European civilisation? If one follows
up this trait of European civilisation, one finds that one has
to go a long way back in order to understand it. One has to
form a clear idea of how, out of the ancient primal impulses of
the original Celtic population, which still really lies at the
base of our European life and being, there gradually grew up,
by admixture with the various later strata of peoples, our
present European population, with all its religious, political,
economic and scientific tendencies. In Europe, in
contradistinction to America on the West and Asia on the East,
— in Europe a certain intellectual strain was always
predominant. Romanism — all that I Indicated yesterday as
the specifically Roman element — could never have so got
the upper hand, unless intellectualism had been a radical
feature of European civilisation. Now there are two things
peculiar to intellectualism. In the first place, it never can
rouse Itself to make a clean sweep of the religious impulses
within it. Religious impulses always acquire an abstract
character under the influence of intellectualism. Nor can
intellectualism ever really find the energy for grappling with
questions of practical economics. The experiments now being
carried out in Russia will hereafter show how incapable
European intellectualism is of introducing order into the world
of economics, of industry. What Leninism is shaping is nothing
hut unadulterated intellectualism. It is all reasoned out; an
order of society built up by thought alone. And they are
attempting the experiment of propping up this brain spun
communal system upon the actual conditions prevailing amongst
men. Time will show — and very terribly — how
impossible it is to prop up a piece of intellectual reasoning
upon a human social edifice.
But
these things are what people to-day refuse as yet to recognise
in all their full force. There is unquestionably among the
population of Europe this alarming trait, this
sleepiness, this inability to throw the whole man into the
stream so needed to permeate the social life of Europe. But the
thing that above all others must be recognised is the source
from which our European civilisation is fed, — whence
this European civilisation is, at bottom, derived. Of itself,
of its own proper nature, European civilisation has only
produced a form of culture that is intellectual, a
thought-culture. Prosaicness and aridity of thought dominate
our science and our social institutions.
For
many, many years, we have suffered from this intellectualism in
the parliaments of Europe. If people could but feel how the
parliaments of Europe have been pervaded by the
intellectualist, utilitarian attitude, by this element that can
never soar above the ground, that lacks the energy for any
religious impulse, that lacks the energy for any sort of
economic impulse! As for our religious life, just think how we
came by it. The whole history of the introduction and spread of
this religious life in Europe goes to show that Europe, within
herself, had no religious impulses. Just think, how flat and
dull the world was, how interminably flat and dull —
prosaic to the excess at the time of the expansion of the Roman
Empire. Yet that was only the beginning of it. Just conceive
what Europe would have become if Roman civilisation in all its
flat prosaicness had gone on without the impulse that
came over from the Asiatic East, and which was religious,
Christian, — what it would have been without the
Christian impulse, which sprang from the p lap of the East,
which could only spring from the lap of the East, never from
that of Europe. The religious impulse was taken over as a wave
of culture, of civilisation, from the East. The first and the
only thing Europe did was to cram this religious impulse, that
came over from the East, with the concepts of Roman law, thread
this Eastern impulse through and through with bald, abstract,
intellectualist, legal forms.
But
this religious impulse from the East was, at bottom, alien to
the life of Europe, and remained alien to it. It never
completely amalgamated with the being of Europe. And
Protestantism acted in a most remarkable way as what I might
call a test-tube, in which they separated out. It is
«just like watching two substances separating out
from one another in a test-tube, to watch how European
civilisation reacted with respect to its religious element. In
the seventh, in the sixth, seventh, eighth, ninth, tenth
centuries a kind of experiment was being made to combine
religious feeling and sentiment with scientific and economic
thought into one homogeneous substance; and then, actually,
just as two substances react in a test-tube and separate out,
so these two separated out, — the cold intellectualist
thought and the religious impulse fell apart and deposited
Protestantism, Lutheranism. Science on the one side, one truth;
on the other side the rival truth, Faith. And the two shall mix
no further. If anyone tries to saturate the substance of Faith
with the substance of Thought, or to warm the substance of
Thought with the substance of Faith, the experiment is regarded
as downright sacrilege. And then, as the climax of all that was
cold and dreary, came the Konigsberg-Kant-school with its
Critique of Pure Reason alongside its Critique of Applied
Reason — Ethics alongside Science, — making a
most terrible gulf between what in man's nature must be felt
and lived as a single whole. These are the conditions under
which European civilisation still exists. And these are the
conditions under which European civilisation will be brought
ever nearer and nearer to its downfall. It was as an alien
element from the East that Europe adopted the religious
impulse, and it has never combined organically with the rest of
her spiritual and physical life. So much with regard to the
spiritual life of Europe.
You
see, my dear friends, the progress of modern civilisation has
had Its praises sung long enough. They have gone on singing its
praises until millions of human beings in this civilised world
have been done to death, and three times as many maimed for
life. It has been blessed in unctuous phrases from the pulpits
of the churches, till untold blood has been shed. Every
lecturer's desk has sounded the praises of this progress, until
this progress has ended in its own annihilation. There can be
no cure before we look these things straight in the face. And
to-day, people of the Lenin type and others come and beat their
brains over socialist systems and economic systems, and fancy
that with these concepts which have long since proved
inadequate to direct European civilisation, they can now,
without any new concepts, without any revolution of thought,
effect a reform in our economic system, in our system of
society.
I
think I have here, once before, spoken of the beautiful
concepts that our learned professors arrive at when they are
dealing with these subjects. But it is so beautiful that I must
really come back to it once more. There is a well-known
political economist called Brentano, Lujo Brentano. Not long
ago an article appeared by him, entitled: “The Business
Director (Der Unternehmer).” In it Brentano tries to
construct the concept of the Business Director the Capitalist
Director. He enumerates the various distinctive marks of the
capitalist director. The third of these distinctive marks, as
given by Lujo Brentano, is this: That he expends the means of
production at his private venture, at his own risk, in the
service of mankind. Mark of the capitalist director! Then that
excellent Brentano goes on to examine the function of the
Worker, of the ordinary Labourer, in social life; and now, see
what he says: That the labour-power, the physical labour-power
of the labourer is the labourer's means of production; he
expends it at his own venture and risk in the service of the
community. Therefore, the labourer is a Business Director
(Untemahmer); there is absolutely no difference between a
labourer and a business director; they are both one and the
same thing! You see, what they nowadays call scientific thought
has by now got into such a muddle that when people are
constructing concepts, they are no longer able to distinguish
between two opposite poles. It is not quite so obvious here,
perhaps, as in another case of a Professor of Philosophy at
Berne, one of whose specialities was that he wrote such an
awful lot of books, and had to write them so awfully fast, that
he had not time to consider exactly what it was he was writing.
However, he lectured on philosophy at the Berne University. And
in one of the books by this Professor of Philosophy at Berne,
this statement occurs: — A civilisation can only he
evolved in the temperate zone; for at the North Pole it cannot
be evolved, there it would be frozen up; nor could it be
evolved at the South Pole, for there the opposite would occur,
it would be burnt up! That is actually the fact. A regular
Professor of Philosophy did once write in a book that it is
cold at the North Pole and hot at the South Pole, because he
was writing so fast that he had no time to consider what he was
writing.
Well, that excellent Brentano's blunders in political economy
are not quite so readily perceived; but at bottom they proceed
from just the same surface view of things, from which so much
in Europe has proceeded. People take for granted what already
exists, and starting from this, proceed to build up their whole
system of concepts just on what exists already. That is what
they learn from natural science, from the natural science
methods. This is how the science institutes do it; and in our
day, — the age when people set no store by authority and
take nothing on faith, (of course not!) — that is what
they obediently copy. For nowadays, if a man is an Authority,
that is sufficient reason for what he says being true, —
not a reason for turning to his truth because one sees it to be
true, but because he is an Authority. And people regard
economic facts, too, in this way. They regard economic facts as
being all exactly on a par with one another. Whereas, as a
matter of fact, they are made up of mixed elements, each of
which requires individual consideration.
The current of religious impulse had come from the East into
European civilisation; and for the economic structure of Europe
something again different was needed. The approach of the Fifth
post-Atlantean age was also the time for the irruption of those
events which set their stamp upon the whole civilisation of the
new age and gave to it its special physiognomy. The discovery
of America, the finding of a sea-route round the Cape of Good
Hope to India, to the East-Indies, — this set its stamp
on the civilisation of the new age. It is impossible to study
the whole economic evolution of Europe by Itself alone. It is
absurd to believe that from the study of existing economic
facts one can thereby arrive at the economic laws that sway the
common life of Europe. In order to arrive at these laws, one
must bear constantly in mind that Europe was able to shift any
amount off on to America. The whole social structure of Europe
has only grown up owing to the fact that there was an unfailing
supply of virgin soil in America, and that everything
flung off from Europe passed Westwards into this virgin soil.
Just as she had drawn her religions impulse from the East, so
she sent forth an economic impulse towards the West. And the
whole system of industrial economy peculiar to Europe was
conditioned by this Westward outflowing, just as her spiritual
life was developed under the inflow of the religious impulse
from the East. European life, the whole course of the rise of
European civilisation, has gone on through the centuries until
now, under the Influence of these two currents. Here, in the
middle, was European civilisation; here from the East came the
religious impulse pouring in; here, in a westward stream, the
economic impulse, pouring out. — Inflow of the religious
impulse from the East, outflow of the economic impulse towards
the West. Now this, you see, towards the turn of the 19th
and 20th centuries reached a sold, of crisis. There came a
gradual stoppage. Things no longer went on the same as they had
been going for four centuries. And to-day we are still lining
in this stoppage and are affected by it. The religious impulse
came in as an alien and brought forth our spiritual life. And
our economic life came about under a process of being
continually drawn off and weakened. If America had not been
there, and if our industrial economy had been obliged to grow
up solely according to its own principles, — had it not
been able continually to fling off what it could not
assimilate, — then it could never have developed at all
in Europe. Now there is a stoppage; and accordingly, an outlet
must be found within. It Is from within that the way must be
found to lead off into the right channel what no longer can go
on externally in space. It must be done by bringing about
the threefold social order. What has been mixed together
in inorganic confusion must be combined into an actual
organism. There is not one reason, there is every
conceivable reason for the adoption of the threefold social
order, — scientific reasons, economic reasons, historic
reasons. And only he can fully appreciate the claims of the
threefold social order, who is in a position to survey all
these various grounds on which it rests.
That is a thing that one would so like to tell the people of
the present day; for people of the present day suffer under a
poverty of concepts that has grown positively alarming. This
poverty of concepts is really such that anyone who has got any
feeling for ideas finds to-day that quite a small number of
ideas dominate our spiritual life, and they meet him at every
turn. If anyone is hunting for ideas, this is what he finds; he
takes up a work on Physics; it contains a certain limited
number of ideas. Next, he studies, say, a work on Geology;
there he finds fresh facts, but precisely the same ideas. Then
he studies a biological work; there he finds fresh facts, but
the same ideas. He reads a book on Psychology, dealing with the
life of the soul. There he finds more facts, which really only
consist of words, for they only know the soul really as a
collection of words. When they talk of the will, there is a
word there; but of the actual will itself they know nothing.
When they talk of Thought they know nothing of real thinking;
for people still only think in words. Nor do they know anything
of feeling. The whole field of Psychology is to-day just a game
of words, in which words are shaken up together in every
conceivable kind of way. Just as the bits in a kaleidoscope
combine into all sorts of different patterns, so it is with our
concepts. They are jumbled up together into various
sciences; but the total number of ideas is quite a small one,
and keeps meeting one again and again. These ideas are forcibly
fitted on to the facts. And people have no desire to
find the concepts that fit the facts, to examine into the ideas
that fit the facts. People simply do not notice things.
In
a certain town in Central Europe, not long ago, there was a
conference of Radical Socialists. These Radical Socialists were
engaged in planning out a form of society suitable for adoption
in Europe. The form of society as there planned by them was
almost identical with what you can read in a collection of
articles that appeared in the “Basler
Vorwärts” of this week, — a series of
articles in the Basel “Vorwärts,”
putting forward in outline a scheme of society almost identical
with what was thought out some time back in a Mid-European
town. And what is the special feature of this scheme of society
as planned out there? People think it very clever, of course.
They think that it cannot be improved on.
But
it is what it is, solely for the reason that it was
drawn up by men who, as a matter of fact, had never really had
anything to do with industrial and economic life, who had never
acquired any practical acquaintance with the real sources and
mainsprings of industrial and economic life. It was a scheme
invented by men who have taken an active part in the
political life of recent years. Well, you know what
taking an active part in the political life of recent years
means, — one was either elector or elected; one was
elected either -in the first ballot, or in the second ballot.
Say that one did not succeed in getting elected in the first
ballot. Well, one had raised those huge sums of money, of
course, subscriptions had been collected, and the huge
sum raised, in order that one might have enough voters to get
elected. The money was all spent; one had vented a terrible lot
of abuse on the rival candidate the fellow was a fool, a knave
and a cheat, If nothing worse. And came the second ballot. So
far, no one had got an absolute majority, and now it was a
question of electing one of those who had had proportional
majorities. Now there was a change in the proceedings. Now,
one-third of the election money was returned by one's opponent,
— the same who was a fool, knave, cheat, etc. One
accepted the returned money, and all of a sudden one's speeches
took a different tone; there is nothing for it, one said, but
to elect the man (the man who before was a knave, fool, cheat,
etc), — he will have to be elected. After all, one had
got back a third of the election money, and, inspired by this
return of a third of the election money, one was gradually
converted into his active supporter. For, after all, one of the
two must be elected; the other man had no chance; all that
could be done was to save a third of the election expenses.
So
they had taken an active part in political life. So, too, no
doubt, they had had a voice in the political administrations,
but they had no notion, not the remotest, vaguest notion, of
industrial and economic life. They simply took the political
ideas they had acquired, — ideas that had, of course,
become much corrupted, but still they were political ideas of a
sort, — and they tried now • to fit them on to
industrial and economic life. And accordingly, if these ideas
were put into effect, one would get an industrial and economic
life organised on purely political lines. Industrial economic
organisation has already become confounded with political
organisation, — so impossible has it become for people to
keep apart things that have become so welded, so wedged
together. But the time has come when it is urgently necessary
to carry into many, many places an insight into what really
exists. And that is a thing for which people to-day show no
zeal.
There is nothing to be expected from the influence of a
civilisation which never contemplates external reality, —
which wants to bind external reality to a couple of hard and
fast concepts; nor need one hope with this little set of
concepts to draw near to that true reality which is the
business of anthroposophical science to discover. For it is
this true reality that the spiritual science of Anthroposophy
has to seek and find. Therefore, the spiritual science of
Anthroposophy must not be taken after the pattern of what
people were often pleased to call “religious
persuasions.”
That, you see was what one suffered from so terribly in the
course of the old Theosophic movement. What more was the old
Theosophic movement than just that people wanted a sort of
select religion? It consisted in no new impulse proceeding from
the civilisation of Europe itself. It consisted merely in
emotions, which were to be had out of the old religious element
just as well. Only people had grown tired of these old
religious concepts and ideas and feelings, and so had taken up
something else. But the same atmosphere pervaded it as pervaded
the old persuasion. They wanted to feel good, with an
evangelical sort of goodness if they had been evangelicals, or
with a catholic kind of goodness if they had been Catholics;
but they did not at bottom want the thing really needed,
namely, an actual new religious impulse along with other
impulses, because the life of the European peoples has grown up
habituated to an alien religious impulse, that of Asia. That is
the point. And until those things are organically interwoven
that were inorganically intermixed, — till then, European
civilisation will not rise again. It cannot be taken too
seriously; it must pervade everything that is going to live in
science, in economic, in religion, in political life.
We
will speak more of this, then, to-morrow. To-morrow the
eurhythmic performance takes place here at 5 o'clock. Then,
after the necessary interval, that is, I take It, about half
past seven to-morrow, there will be the lecture.
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