LECTURE FIVE
I WANT
TO SPEAK TODAY OF something that will help to deepen our
understanding of truths that must now be given to humankind by
anthroposophy. We have often spoken of the two poles of forces of the
human being: the pole of will and the pole of intelligence. To
understand the nature of the human being we must be constantly
mindful of these two poles.
The human is a being of
will and a being of intelligence. Between them — at any rate
from birth until death — lies the element of feeling,
constituting the bridge between the intelligence and the will.
You know that these forces separate from each other in a certain
sense when people reach what is called the threshold of the spiritual
world.
Our study today will be
concerned more particularly with the relationship in which humanity
stands to the surrounding world, on the one side as a being of
intelligence and on the other as a being of will. We shall deal with
the latter first.
In the life between birth
and death, human beings unfold the force of will as the impulse of
their actions and activity. As it comes to expression through the
human organism, the force of will is a very intricate, complicated
matter. Nevertheless in one aspect, everything of the nature of human
will bears a great likeness, amounting almost to identity, with
certain forces of nature. It is therefore quite correct to speak of
an inner relation between the forces of will in the human being
and the forces of nature.
You know from earlier
studies that even while people are awake, they are in a condition
resembling sleep wherever their will is involved. True, we have in
our consciousness the ideas lying behind what we will, but how
a particular idea takes effect in the form of will — of that we
know nothing. We do not know how the idea, “I move my
arm,” is connected with the process leading to the actual
movement of the arm. This process lies entirely in the subconscious
and it may truly be said that people are no more conscious of the
real process of will than they are of what takes place during sleep.
But when the question arises as to the connection of human will with
the surrounding world, we come to something that will strike the kind
of consciousness that has developed in the course of the last three
to five centuries as highly paradoxical. It is generally thought that
the evolution of the earth would be the same even if human beings had
no part in it at all. A typical natural scientist describes the
evolution of the earth as a series, let us say, of geological, purely
physical processes. And even if scientists do not expressly say so,
they have in mind that from the earth's beginning until its
hypothetical end, everything would go on just the same even if it
were uninhabited by human beings. Why is this view held by natural
science today? The reason is that when anything takes place, for
example in the mineral kingdom, or the plant kingdom, let us say on
November 9, 1919, people believe that its cause lies in what has
happened in the mineral kingdom prior to this particular point of
time. People think: the mineral kingdom takes its course and what
happens at any point is the effect of what went before; the mineral
effect is due to a mineral cause.
This is the way people
think and you will find evidence of it in any text book of geology.
Conditions obtaining at the present time are said to be the effects
of the Ice Age, or of some preceding epoch but the causes are
attributed entirely to what once took place in the mineral kingdom as
such; the fact that humanity inhabits the earth is ignored. The
belief is that even were humans not present, everything would run a
similar course, that the external reality would be the same —
although, in fact, humankind has always been part of this external
reality. The truth is that the earth is one whole, humanity itself
being one of the active factors in the earth's evolution. I will give
you an example.
You know that our present
epoch — thinking of it for the moment in the wider sense, as
comprising the period since the great Atlantean catastrophe —
was preceded by the Atlantean epoch itself, when the continents of
Europe, Africa, and America in their present form were not in
existence. At that time there was one main continent on the earth
— Atlantis as it is called — extending over the area that
is now the Atlantic Ocean. You know too that at a certain period in
this Atlantean evolution, immorality of a particular kind was rampant
throughout the then-Civilized world. Human beings had far greater
power over the forces of nature than they later possessed and
employed these forces for evil purposes. Thus we can look back to an
age of widespread immorality. And then came the great Atlantean
catastrophe. The orthodox geologist will naturally trace this
catastrophe to processes in the mineral kingdom; indeed it is a fact
that one part of the earth subsided and another arose. But it will
not occur to those who base their thinking on the principles of
modern natural science to say to themselves that the deeds and
activities of human beings were among the contributory causes. Yet so
it is. In very truth the Atlantean catastrophe was the outcome of the
deeds of people on the earth.
Outer, mineral causes are
not alone responsible for these great catastrophic events that break
in upon earth existence. We must look for causes lying within the
sphere of human actions and impulses: Humanity itself belongs to the
chain of causative forces in earth existence. Nor does this apply
only to an event of such magnitude but to what is happening all the
time. Only the connection between what goes on within human beings
and cosmic happenings which take effect in tellurian events remains
hidden, to begin with. In this respect the whole of our natural
science amounts to a great, all-embracing illusion. For if you want
to get at the real causes you will not discover them by studying the
mineral, plant, and animal kingdoms alone.
| Diagram 1 Click image for large view | |
Let me give you the
following illustration of what comes into consideration here. We will
approach it, so to speak, from the opposite side. Here (X) is the
center of the earth. When something takes place in the mineral
kingdom, the plant kingdom, or the animal kingdom, it is a
matter of seeking the causes. The causes lie at certain points which
are to be found everywhere. You can picture what I mean by thinking
of the following. In the region around Naples in Italy, you
will find that the earth over a wide area will emit vapor if you take
a piece of paper and set it alight. Vapors begin to rise from the
ground beneath you. You will say: the force which drives up the
vapors lies in the physical process generated by the lighting of the
paper. In this case, the physical process is that by lighting the
paper you rarify the air and because of the rarification of the air
the vapors inside the earth press upward. They are kept down by the
normal air-pressure and this is diminished by setting light to the
paper. If I merely want to give an example of effects of a purely
mineral nature — such as these vapors arising out of the earth
— I could say for the sake of illustration that here, and here
(points in the diagram), a piece of paper is set alight. This shows
you that the causes of the rising of the vapor do not lie below the
soil, but above it. Now these points in the diagram a, b, c, d, e, f
— do not represent pieces of paper that have been set alight;
in this instance they represent something different. Imagine, to
begin with, that each point on its own has no significance but that
the significance lies in the system of points as a whole. Do
not think now of the pieces of lighted paper, but of something else
which at the moment I will not specify. Something else is there as an
active cause, above the surface of the earth; and these different
causes do not work singly, but together. And now imagine that there
are not six points only, but, let us say, 1,500 million points
[Representing, approximately, the total population of
the earth.]
all working together, producing a combined effect.
These 1,500 million points are actually there. Each of you has within
you what may be called the center of gravity of your own physical
structure. When people are awake, this center of gravity lies just
below the diaphragm; when they are asleep it lies a little lower.
There are therefore some 1,500 million of these centers of gravity
spread over the earth, producing a combined effect. And what issues
from this combined effect is the actual cause of a great deal of what
takes place in the mineral, plant, and animal kingdoms on the earth.
It is a scientific fallacy to trace back to mineral causes the forces
manifesting in air and water and in the mineral realm; in reality the
causes are to be found within the human beings.
This is a truth of which
there is scarcely an inkling today. It is known to very, very few
that the causes of processes active in the mineral, plant, and animal
kingdoms lie within the human organism. (This does not apply to all
the forces working in these kingdoms of nature, but to a large
proportion of them.) Within humankind lie the causes for what happens
on earth. Therefore mineralogy, botany, zoology, cannot be cultivated
truly without anthropology — without the study of the human
being. Science tells us of physical, chemical, and mechanical forces.
These forces are intimately connected with the human will, with
the force of human will that is concentrated in our center of
gravity. If we speak of the earth with an eye to the truth of
these matters, we must not follow the geologist in speaking of an
earth in the abstract, but humanity must be accounted an
integral part of the earth. These are the truths that reveal
themselves on yonder side of the threshold. Everything that can
be known on this side of the threshold belongs to the realm of the
illusions of knowledge, not to the realm of truth.
At this point the question
arises: What relation is there between the forces of will that areconcentrated in our center of gravity, and the external, physical,
and chemical forces? We are speaking, remember, of present-day
humanity. In normal life, this relation takes effect in the metabolic
processes. When people take into themselves the substances of
the outer world, it is their will that actually digests and works
upon these substances. And if nothing else were in operation,
then what is taken into the organism from outside would simply be
destroyed. The human will has the power to dissolve and destroy all
extraneous substances and forces; and the relation between the human
being and the mineral, plant, and animal kingdoms of nature today is
such that our will is connected with the forces of dissolution and
destruction inherent in our planet.
We could not live were this
destruction not to take place — but for all that it is
destruction. This must never be forgotten. And what are often
described as unlawful magical practices are based essentially on the
fact that certain human beings learn to employ their will wrongfully,
in such a way that they do not confine the destructive forces to
their normal operations within the organism but extend them over
other human beings, deliberately and consciously applying the
forces of destruction that are anchored in their will. That, quite
obviously, is a practice that is never, under any circumstances,
permissible.
Through our will we are
connected with the earth's forces of decline. And if as human beings
we had only our forces of will, the earth would be condemned through
us, through humankind, to sheer destruction. The prospect of the
future would then be far from inspiring; it would be a vista of the
gradual dissolution of the earth and its ultimate dispersal in cosmic
space. So much for the one pole in the human constitution.
But the human is a twofold
being. One pole is, as we have seen, connected with the destructive
forces of our planet; the other pole — that of intelligence
— is connected with the will by the bridge of feeling. But in
waking life, human intelligence is of little account as far as the
planet earth is concerned. During waking life we cannot really
establish a true relationship to earth existence through our
intelligence. What I have told you in regard to the will happens
while we are awake, although we are not conscious of it. If you see a
rock crumbling away and ask where the actual causes of the crumbling
lie, then you must look into the inner, organic nature of the human
being. Strange as this will seem to the modern mind, it is indeed so.
But as I said, the earth would face a sorry future if the other pole
of human nature were not there — the pole of the up-building
forces. Just as the causes of all destruction lie in the will that is
concentrated in our center of gravity, so the up-building forces lie
in the sphere into which we pass during sleep. From the time of
falling asleep until that of waking, we are in a condition
figuratively described by saying that with our “I” and
astral body we are outside the physical body. But then we are
entirely beings of soul and spirit, unfolding the forces that are in
operation between falling asleep and waking. During this time
we are connected, through these forces, with everything that builds
up the earth planet, everything that adds to the forces of
destruction the constructive, up-building forces. If you did not go
about the earth, the destructive forces actually proceeding from your
will would not be working in the mineral, plant, and animal kingdoms.
If you never went to sleep, the forces whereby the earth is
continually up-built would not stream out of your intelligence. The
constructive, up-building forces of the planet earth also lie in
humanity itself. I do not say: in the individual human
being — for I have expressly said that all these single causes
form a collective whole. The up-building forces lie in humankind as a
whole, actually in the pole of intelligence in our being but not
in our waking intelligence. Waking intelligence is really
like a lifeless entity thrusting itself into earth evolution. The
intelligence that works, unconsciously, during our sleep — that
is what builds up the earth planet. By this I am only trying to
explain that it is a fallacy to look outside the human being for the
destructive and the constructive forces of our earth; you must look
for them within the human being. Once you grasp this, what I
am now going to say will not be unintelligible.
You look up to the stars,
saying that something is streaming from them that can be perceived by
human sense organs here on earth. But what you behold when you gaze
at the stars is not of the same nature as what you perceive on the
earth in the mineral, plant, and animal kingdoms. In reality it
proceeds from beings of intelligence and will whose life is
bound up with those stars. The effects appear to be physical because
the stars are at a distance. They are not in reality physical at all.
What you actually see are the inner activities of beings of will and
intelligence in the stars. I have already spoken to you of the
ingenious description of the sun given by astrophysicists. But if it
were possible to journey to the sun by some means of transport
invented by a Jules Verne, it would be found with amazement that
nothing of what was to be expected from these physical descriptions
exists. The descriptions are merely a composite picture of solar
phenomena. What we see is in reality the working of will and
intelligence which at a distance appears as light. If
inhabitants of the moon — supposing in this sense there were
such beings — were to look at the earth, they would not detect
its grassy or mineral surfaces but — also perceiving it
as a light effect or something similar — they would detect what
takes place around the centers of gravity of human bodies and also
the effects of the conditions in which human beings live between
going to sleep and waking. That is what would actually be seen from
the universe. Even the most perfect instrument would not enable the
chairs, for instance, on which you are now sitting, to be seen; what
would be seen is all that is taking place in the region of your
centers of gravity and what would happen if you were suddenly
to fall asleep — it is to be hoped that this would not happen
in every case! But wherever it did happen, it would be perceived out
in the universe.
So that to the outer
universe, what takes place through human beings is the
perceptible reality — not what surrounds us in earthly
existence. A very common saying is that everything perceived with the
senses is maya — the great illusion — no reality
but simply appearance. Such an abstraction is of little account. It
has meaning only when one enters into the concrete, as we have now
been doing. To say glibly that the animal, plant, and mineral
worlds are maya means nothing: What is of value is the
realization that what you perceive outwardly depends fundamentally
upon yourselves and that — not of course at each moment but in
the course of human evolution — you make yourselves an integral
part of the chain of causes and effects.
Even when such a shattering
truth is uttered — and I think it may well be shattering
— it is not always seen in the aspect where it becomes of
importance in life. Such a truth assumes importance only when we
perceive its consequences. We are not physical beings only; we are
moral — or maybe immoral — beings in earthly existence.
What we do is determined by impulses of a moral nature.
Now just think with what
bitter doubt modern thought is assailed in this domain. Natural
science provides a knowledge of the earthly that is confined to the
connection between purely external causes and effects; and in this
cycle of natural causes and effects, the human being too is involved.
So it is alleged by external, abstract science which takes account of
one aspect only of earthly existence.
The fact that moral
impulses also light up in people is admitted but nothing is known
about the connection between these moral impulses and what comes to
pass in the round of external nature. Indeed the dilemma of modern
philosophy is
that the philosophers hear on the one hand from the scientists that
everything is involved in a chain of natural causes and effects
— and on the other hand have to admit that moral impulses light
up in people. That is the reason why Kant wrote two
“Critiques”: the
Critique of Pure Reason,
concerned with the relation of the human being to a purely natural
course of things, and the
Critique of Practical Reason
where he puts forward his moral postulates — which in truth, if
I may speak figuratively, hover in the air, come out of the blue and
have no a priori relation with natural causes.
As long as we believe that
what takes place in the external manifestations of nature can be
traced only to similar manifestations, as long as we cling to
this illusion, the intervention of moral impulses is something that
remains separate and apart from the course of nature. Nearly
everything that is discussed today lies under the shadow of this
breach. In their thinking people cannot use the earthly round as such
with the moral life of humanity. But as soon as you grasp something
of what I have tried briefly to outline, you will be able to say:
Yes, as a human being I am a unity, and moral impulses are alive
within me. They live in what I am as a physical being. But as a
physical human being I am fundamentally the cause —
together with all humankind — of every physical happening. The
moral conduct and achievements of human beings on the earth are the
real causes of what comes to pass in the course of earth
existence.
Natural history and natural
science describe the earth in the way we find in text books of
geology, botany, and so forth. What is said there seems entirely
satisfactory according to the premises formed through modern
education. But let us suppose that an inhabitant of Mars were
to come down to the earth and observe it in the light of
Martian premises. I am not saying that such a thing could
happen but merely trying to illustrate what I mean. Suppose a being
from Mars, having wandered dumbly about the earth were then to learn
some human language, read some geology, and thus discover what kind
of ideas prevail concerning the processes and happenings on the
earth. This being would say: But that is not all. By far the
most important factor is ignored. For example, I have noticed crowds
of students loitering about in their beer houses, drinking and
indulging their passions. Something is happening there: the human
will is working in the metabolism. These are processes of which
no mention is made in your books on physics and geology; they contain
no reference to the fact that the course of earth existence is also
affected by whether the students drink or do not drink. That is what
a being not entirely immersed in earthly ideas and prejudices would
find lacking in the descriptions given by human beings themselves of
happenings on earth. For a being from Mars there would be no question
but that moral impulses, pervading human deeds and the whole of
human life, are part and parcel of the course of nature. According to
modern preconceptions there is something inexorable in the play
of nature, indeed pleasantly inexorable for materialistic thinkers.
They imagine that the earth's course would be exactly the same were
no human beings in existence; that whether they behave decently or
not makes no fundamental difference or really alters anything. But
that is not the case! The all-essential causes of what happens on the
earth do not lie outside the human being; they lie within
humankind. And if earthly consciousness is to expand to
cosmic consciousness, humanity must realize that the earth —
not over short but over long stretches of time — is made in its
own likeness, in the likeness of humanity itself. There is no better
means of lulling people to sleep than to impress upon them that they
have no share in the course taken by earth existence. This narrows
down human responsibility to the single individual, the single
personality.
The truth is that the
responsibility for the course of earth existence through ages of
cosmic time, lies with humanity. Everyone must feel themselves to be
a member of humanity, the earth itself being the body for that
humanity.
Someone may say: For ten
years I have given way to my passions, indulged my fancies and have
thereby ruined my body. With equal conviction such a person should be
able to say: If earthly humanity follows impure moral impulses, then
the body of the earth will be different from what it would be were
the moral impulses pure. The day-fly, because it lives for
twenty-four hours only, has a view of the world differing entirely
from that of human beings. The range of our vision is not wide enough
to perceive that what happens externally in the course of nature is
not dependent upon purely natural causes. In regard to the present
configuration of Europe, it is far more important to ask what manner
of life prevailed among human beings in the civilized world two
thousand years ago than to investigate the external mineral and plant
structure of the earth. The destiny of our physical earth planet in
another two thousand years will not depend upon the present
constitution of our mineral world, but upon what we do and allow to
be done. With world consciousness, human responsibility widens
into world responsibility. With such consciousness we feel as we look
up to the starry heavens that we are responsible to this cosmic
expanse, permeated and pervaded as it is by spirit — that we
are responsible to this world for how we conduct the earth. We
grow together with the cosmos in concrete reality when behind the
phenomena we seek for the truth.
I so often tell you that we
must learn to perceive the concrete realities of things for the most
part taught as abstractions today. Nothing much is accomplished by
adopting oriental traditions such as: the external world of the
senses is maya. We must go much deeper if we are to arrive at the
truth. Such abstractions do not carry us far, because in the form in
which they have been handed down they are nothing but the sediment of
a primeval wisdom that did not hover in abstractions but teemed with
concrete realities which must be brought to light again through
spiritual intuition and research. When you read in oriental
literature of maya and of truth as its antithesis, do not imagine
that what you read there today can be really intelligible to you. It
is only a much later compilation of matters that were concrete
realities to the ancient wisdom. We must get back to these concrete
realities. People think today that they have some understanding of
cosmic processes when they assert that the external world of sense is
maya. But nothing can be understood unless one presses on to the
underlying realities. The moment it is realized: we have not to ask
how the present mineral world has developed out of the mineral
processes of another age; we have rather to ask about what has been
going on in humankind — at that moment the real meaning
of the saying, “the outer world is maya,” becomes clear.
Then we begin to perceive in the human being a reality far greater
than is usually perceived. And then the feeling of responsibility for
earth existence begins.
If you will try to get to
the inner core of these things — and it must be by inward
contemplation, not by means of the kind of intelligence employed in
natural science — you will gradually find your way to the
realization that humankind is composed of free human beings.
Nature does not, in truth, counteract our freedom, for as human
beings we ourselves fashion the nature immediately surrounding us. It
is only in its partial manifestations that nature counteracts
our freedom. Nature counteracts our freedom to an extent no greater
than if — to give an example — you are stretching
out your hand and someone else takes hold of it and checks the
movement. You will not deny freedom of will simply because someone
else checks a movement. As people of the present day we are checked
in many respects because of some action of our predecessors that is
only now taking effect. But at all events it was an action of
human beings. — What human beings? Not anyone against
whom we can turn with reproach, for we ourselves were the ones who,
in earlier earthly lives, brought about the conditions obtaining
today.
We must not confine
ourselves to the mere mention of repeated earthly lives but think of
the connection between them in such a way that even in external
nature we perceive the effects of causes we ourselves laid down in
earlier lives. Naturally, in reference to the single, individual
human being, we must speak of contributory causes only, for in all
these things, as I have said, it is a matter of the collective
inter-working of human beings on the earth. None of us should, for
that reason, exclude ourselves as individuals, for each of us has a
share in what is brought about by humanity as a whole and then comes
to expression in what constitutes the body for the whole of earthly
humanity in its on-flowing life.
I have been endeavoring to
give you an idea of how a spiritual scientist must regard the
statements made in ordinary scientific text-books. Suppose I were to
draw a series of figures:
| Diagram 2 Click image for large view | |
And now
suppose some creature who had never lived in our world were to crawl
out of the earth and, having some rudiments of arithmetical
knowledge, were to look at the figures and say: First figure, second
figure, third figure. The third is the effect of the second, and the
second the effect of the first. Effect of the first figure — a
triangle; effect of the second circle. This creature would then be
combining cause and effect. But it would be a fallacy, for I have
drawn each figure separately. In reality the one is independent of
the other. It only appears to be dependent to this creature
who associates what comes first with what follows, as if the one were
the outcome of the other. This, approximately, is how the geologist
describes the process of the earth: Diluvial epoch, Tertiary epoch,
Quaternary epoch, and so on. But this is no more true than the
statement that the circle is the outcome, the effect of the triangle,
or the triangle the effect of the rectangular figure. The
configurations of the earth are brought about autonomously —
through the deeds of earthly humanity, including the mysterious
workings of the intelligence during the periods of sleep when human
beings are outside their physical bodies.
This shows you that the
descriptions given by external science are very largely
illusion — maya. But merely to speak about maya is of little
account. To the assertion that the external world is maya we must be
able to reply by stating where the actual causes lie. These causes
are hidden to a great extent from our powers of cognition. The part
played by humankind in shaping earth existence cannot be fathomed by
means of external science but only by an inner science. My book
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds and Its Attainment
speaks of the human being's inner activity between the time of going
to sleep and waking. This can be revealed by knowledge that reaches
down to the sphere of the will Human beings know nothing of
the connection between the will and the outer world for the
processes of the will are hidden and concealed. We do not know
what is really going on when by lifting our hand we set in operation
a process of will; nor do we know that this process continues and has
an effect in the whole course of earth existence.
This is indicated in the
scene in my mystery play,
The Portal of Initiation,
where the actions of Capesius and Strader have their outcome in cosmic
manifestations — in thunder and lightning. It is, of
course, a pictorial representation, but the picture contains a deeper
truth; it is not fantasy but actual truth. For a fairly long period
in evolution, truths of this kind have been voiced only by true poets
whose fantasy must always be perception of super-sensible
processes.
This is very little
understood by modern people who like to relegate poetry, indeed all
art, to a place separate and apart from external reality. They feel
relieved not to be asked to see in poetry anything more than fantasy.
True poetry, true art, is of course, no more than a reflection of
super-sensible truth — but a reflection it is. Even if poets are
not themselves conscious of the super-sensible happenings, if their
soul is linked with the cosmos, if they have not been torn away from
the cosmos by materialistic education, they give utterances to
super-sensible truths, in spite of having to express them in pictures
drawn from the world of sense.
Many examples of this are
contained in the second part of Goethe's
Faust,
where as I have shown in the case of particular passages, the imagery
has a direct relation with super-sensible processes.
[Twenty-eight lectures given in the year 1915.
Geisteswissenschaftliche Erlauterungen zu Goethe's Faust.]
The development of art in recent centuries affords
evidence of what I have been saying. Take any picture painted by no
means very long ago, and you will find that as a rule, landscape is
given very secondary importance. The painting of landscape has come
into prominence only since the last three to five centuries. Earlier
than that you will find that landscape takes second place; it is the
human world that is brought to the forefront because the
consciousness still survived that in regard to objective processes of
earth existence the human world is much more important than the
landscape — which is but the effect of the human world. In the
very birth of preference for landscape there lies, in the
sphere of art, the parallel phenomenon of the birth of the
materialistic trend of mind — consisting in the belief that
landscape and what it represents has an existence of its own,
entirely apart from humanity. But the truth is quite the reverse.
Were some inhabitant of Mars to come down to the earth he would
certainly be able to see meaning in Leonardo da Vinci's “Last
Supper,” but not in paintings of landscapes. He would see
landscapes — including painted landscapes — and the whole
configuration of the earth quite differently and with his particular
organ of sense could not fathom their meaning. Please remember that I
am saying these things merely in order to illustrate hypothetically
what I want to convey.
So you see, the saying:
“the external world is maya” cannot be fully understood
without entering into the concrete realities. But to do this we must
relate ourselves intimately with earth existence as a whole, know
ourselves to be an integral part of it. And then we must grasp the
thought that there can be external and apparent realities which are
not the truth, not the true realities. If you have a rose in
your room, it is an apparent reality only, for the rose as it
is in front of you there cannot be the reality. It can be true
reality only while it is growing on the rose tree, united with the
roots which in turn are united with the earth. The earth as described
by the geologists is as little a true reality as a plucked rose is a
reality.
Spiritual science endeavors
never to halt at the untrue reality, but always to seek what
must be added, in order to have the whole, true reality. The
meager sense of reality prevailing in our present civilization
expresses itself in the very fact that every external manifestation
is taken as reality. But there is reality only in what lies before
one as an integrated whole. The earth by itself, without human
beings, is no more a true reality than the rose plucked from the rose
tree. These things must be pondered and worked upon; they must not
remain theories but pass over into our feelings. We must feel
ourselves members of the whole earth. It is of importance again and
again to call up the thoughts: this finger on my hand has true
reality only as long as it is part of my organism; if it is cut off
it no longer has true reality. Similarly, the human being has no true
reality apart from the earth, nor has the earth without humankind. It
is an unreal concept when modern scientific investigators think,
according to their premises, that earth evolution would run the same
course if humanity were not there. I recently showed you that it
would not be so, by telling you that the bodies laid aside by human
beings at death become a leaven in earth evolution and that if no
human bodies — either by burial or cremation — became
part of the earth, the whole course of physical happenings
would be other than it is in consequence of these bodies having been
received into the earth.
In the lecture today I
wanted to speak in greater detail of the connection between the two
poles of will and intelligence in human beings and their cosmic
environment.
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