The essential part of our present study is to recognise how the two
streams of the world's history, the heathen stream and the Christian
stream, meet in our life, how they work into one another and are
connected with the events in the whole Universe. In order to search
more closely into this, we must first consider the following. It is
essential that we should discriminate as exactly as possible wherein
the heathen world-conception, taking it in the widest sense (for
indeed, it is still and must remain at the basis of our modern
conception of the Universe) — wherein this heathen
world-conception differs from the Christian, which has only in a very
small degree, in its full reality, passed into the minds of men. The
point is, as I have often pointed out, that we have now come to a time
when what we may call the cosmogony of Natural Science, and what we
call the Moral Order of the Universe — to which of course, also
belongs the religious view of the world — stand side by side,
utterly unconnected. For the man of today, more than he is aware of,
the occurrences belonging to natural and moral happenings are two
things wholly apart, which he cannot at all unite if he wishes
honestly to hold the position of modern cosmogony. That is why the
greatest part of the advanced theology of the nineteenth and twentieth
centuries actually has no Christology. I have often remarked on the
existence of such books as Adolf Harnack's
The Nature of Christianity,
in which there is no reason whatever why the name of
Christ should be mentioned; for what appears therein as
‘Christ’ is no other than the Deity met with in the Old
Testament as the God Jehovah. There is really no actual difference
between Harnack's ‘Christ’ and the God Jehovah — that
is, there is no difference between what is said of the Christ-Being
and what followers of the Old Testament view of the Universe said of
their Jehovah. If we take the idea of Christ held today by many
persons and compare it with what they have otherwise as their view of
life, there is no reason whatever why they should speak of Christ and
Christianity, for to speak of Christ and Christianity — and
Nationalism, for example — as many do today is an absolute
contradiction. These things only escape notice because people today
avoid courageously drawing the logical conclusion of what they see
before them. The widest rift however, the widest gulf, exists between
the view of things held by natural science and what is held by
Christianity; and the most important task of our time is to build a
bridge over the gulf. The conception of the Universe held by natural
science is absolutely the off-spring of the nineteenth century; and it
is well not always to describe these things in the abstract, but to
look into them a little in a concrete way.
I have often mentioned the name of a prominent personality of the
nineteenth century, one who directs our attention directly to the
conception of the Universe held by natural science — I refer to
Julius Robert Mayer, whom we must associate with the nineteenth
century view although in his case it leads to some misunderstanding.
You know how in a popular way it has been said that the assertion of
the law of the conservation of force originated with him — or, to
speak more accurately, the law that the Universe contains a constant
sum of forces which can be neither increased nor lessened, and can
only be changed into one another. Heat, mechanical force, electricity,
chemical force, all change one into the other; yet the quantity of the
force existing in the Universe remains always the same. Every modern
physicist holds this view. Although in popular consciousness men are
not aware of this law of the conservation of force and energy, they
think of natural phenomena in a way that they can only be thought of
when one is under the influence of this law. I want you clearly to
understand what I mean. There may be something in the action of a
being that corresponds to a certain principle, even when that being is
not in a position to understand that principle. Suppose, for instance,
that one wished to make a dog understand that a double quantity of
meat means that a single quantity has been taken twice over; it could
not be done. The dog could not take that in consciously, but
practically he will act according to this principle; for if he
has the chance of snapping at a small piece or at one twice the size,
he will as a rule, seize the larger, other conditions being equal. And
a man can stand under the influence of a principle without explaining
it to himself in abstract form as such. Thus we may say: Certainly
most people do not think of the law of conservation of force, but they
do picture the whole of Nature in a way that is in accordance with the
law, because what they were taught in school was taught on the
assumption that the law of conservation of force exists. It is
interesting to see how Mayer's line of thought expressed itself when
he had to put it clearly to others who did not as yet think along the
same lines.
Julius Robert Mayer had a friend who kept a record of many of their
conversations. He relates many interesting facts, facts by which one
can examine thoroughly the mode of thought of the nineteenth century.
In the first place, to give something quite external, I will choose
the following. Julius Robert Mayer was so thoroughly steeped in the
whole mode of ideas leading to that of the conservation of force, of
the mere transmutation of one force into another, that as a rule,
whenever he met a friend in the street he could not help calling to
him from a distance: ‘Out of nothing, nothing comes!’
Visiting his friend one day — Rümelin was the friend's name
— knocking at the door and opening it, these were his first
words, even before greeting his friend: ‘Out of nothing, nothing
comes.’ So deeply was this saying rooted in Mayer's
consciousness.
Rümelin tells of a very interesting discussion in which he, not
as yet knowing very much of the law of the conservation of force,
wished to have its nature explained. Julius Robert Mayer, who came
from Heilbronn — (his monument stands there) — said ‘If
two horses are drawing a carriage and they go for some distance, what
will happen?’ — ‘Well’, said Rümelin,
‘the travelers in the carriage will arrive at Ohringen.’
— ‘But if they turn and go back without having done anything
in Ohringen, and return to Heilbronn?’ ‘Well,’ replied
Rümelin, ‘in that case the one journey has so to speak
cancelled the other, so that there is apparently no result; yet there
is the actual effect that the travelers came and went between
Heilbronn and Ohringen.’ ‘No’, said Mayer, ‘that
is only a secondary effect; it has nothing to do with what actually
happened. The outcome of the expenditure of force on the part of the
horses, that is something quite different. Through this expenditure of
force, first the horses themselves grew hotter, secondly the axles of
the carriage round which the wheels moved became hotter, and thirdly
if we were to gauge with a delicate thermometer the grooves made by
the wheels in the road, we should find that the warmth within them was
greater than at the sides. That is the actual result. In the horses
themselves, matter was also consumed through the transmutation of
substance. All this is the actual effect. The other effect, that the
people traveled backwards and forwards between Heilbronn and Ohringen
is a secondary effect, but not the actual physical occurrence. The
actual physical occurrence was the spent force of the horses, the
transmutation into increased heat of the horses, the increased heat in
the axles, the heat-consumption of cart-grease through friction in the
wheels, the warming of the tracks on the road, and so forth.’
When one measures — as Mayer then did and specified the
corresponding amount — one finds that the whole of the force
which the horses exerted passed without remainder into heat. The rest
is all a secondary matter, a side issue.
This has of course a certain influence on our conception of things,
and the ultimate result is that we must say: ‘Well, we must free
natural occurrences from everything that is a side issue in the sense
of strict scientific thought, for side issues have nothing to do with
scientific thought in the sense it is understood in the nineteenth
century. The secondary effect is right outside the bounds of the
events of natural science.’ If, however, we ask: How does what we
may call natural moral law come to expression? In what are human worth
and human dignity expressed? Certainly not in the fact that the force
(energy) of the horses is transmuted into the heat of the carriage
axles; no, in this case the secondary effect is the chief point! Let
us reflect however, how in all that is considered in natural science,
this secondary effect is wholly omitted. The men of the nineteenth
century, and even Kant in the eighteenth, formed their view of the
origin of the Universe simply out of the principles which Julius
Robert Mayer so sharply defined, when he separated out what belongs to
nature alone from all that was for him merely secondary effect.
If we bear this clearly in mind, we are obliged to say: The Universe
must thus be constructed from the principle we recognise as
Nature-Principle; all that has taken place through Christianity, for
instance, is just a secondary effect, like the fact of the persons
journeying by coach from Heilbronn to Ohringen, for what they had to
do there does not come into consideration in the view of Natural
Science. Yet, do these two streams not cross in some way or other?
Let us suppose Rümelin had not been satisfied, but had raised the
following objection — I know it does not hold good for the
physicist of today, but it is applicable to the construction of a
general view of the Universe — suppose the following was said: If
the people who were traveling from Heilbronn to Ohringen had chosen
not to do so, the horses would not have expended their force, the
transmutation into heat would not have taken place, or it would have
happened at a different place and under different conditions. Thus in
our consideration of what happened in accordance with natural science,
we are limited to that part of the event which does not lead us to the
ultimate cause. The event would never have taken place if the
travelers had not supposed they had something to do in Ohringen. Thus
what natural science must regard as a side-issue enters
notwithstanding into natural occurrences. Or, suppose that the
travelers had something to do in Ohringen at a definite hour. Suppose
the carriage axles not only became hot, but that one of them broke
— in that case they could not have continued their journey. What
happened, the breaking of the axle, would then of course be explicable
scientifically, but what occurred through this natural phenomenon
— namely, that something planned could not be carried out —
might, as can easily be imagined, have tremendously far-reaching
consequences, leading moreover to other natural processes, which would
in their turn have led to further consequences.
Thus we see that even when one stands on purely logical grounds very
significant and grave questions arise. We must at once say, that these
cannot be answered by the conception of the Universe arising from the
hypothesis of our modern training; they cannot be answered without
Spiritual Science. They can in no wise be answered without it; for
before the tendency to the natural-scientific mode of thought arose,
which was first brought to such exactness by Julius Robert Mayer,
there was not that sharp line of division between the
natural-scientific mode of thought and moral thought. If we consider
the twelfth or thirteenth century, we find that what people had then
to say of the moral order and the physical order always harmonised.
Today people no longer read seriously; but if you read such works
— I might say, there are not many things left from olden times
which have come down to our days quite unadulterated — but if you take
works which are like stragglers of the old cosmic conceptions, you
will discover many things that prove how in earlier times the Moral
was carried into the Physical, and the Physical raised to the Moral.
Read one of these — now already somewhat falsified yet still
fairly readable — read one of the writings of Basil Valentine.
When you read there about metals, planets, medicinal drugs, in almost
every line you will come across adjectives applied to the metals
— good, bad, sagacious metals, and the like; which show that even
in this domain some moral thinking was introduced. That of course
could not be done today. Abstraction has gone so far that natural
phenomena have been severed from all the secondary effects, as we may
see in Julius Robert Mayer; one cannot say that it was the kindness of
the horses' feet which moved them to use up the axle-grease by the
warmth produced by their movement! It is not possible in this
scientific connection to bring in any kind of moral category. There
are two domains, the natural and the moral, and these stand quite
definitely side by side. If the world-happenings were as shown by that
kind of presentation, man could not exist at all in our world, he
would not be there — for what is the reason for the present
physical form of man?
When I speak here of the physical form of man, I must ask you to take
the word ‘form’ seriously. The natural philosophers of today
do not take the expression ‘human form’ seriously. What do
they do? Like Huxley and others, they count the bones of man and of
the higher animals, and from the number of these they draw the
conclusion that Man is only a more highly evolved stage of the animal.
Or they count the muscles and so forth. We have repeatedly had to
point out that the essential point is that the line of the animal
spine is horizontal, while the human spine is vertical; and although
certain animals raise themselves, the position with them is not
characteristic, what is characteristic of the animal is the horizontal
line of the spine. Upon this depends the whole formation. Thus I ask
you to take seriously what I wish to express by the word
‘form’.
This form of man; where must we look for its origin, its
primary physical origin, in a spiritual way in the Universe? I have
already touched on this point in these lectures, I have pointed to the
starry heavens which move — whether apparently or actually is
immaterial at the moment — round the Earth; the Sun also. Thus
the Sun takes the same way; but if we take into consideration what we
now know, namely that the Sun shifts its point of departure every
Spring, remaining behind a little in relation to the stars, we come to
a specially important fact. The change in position of the Vernal Point
can be seen in the fact that the constellation in the following year
rises earlier than the Sun and sets earlier, showing us that the Sun
remains behind. I have pointed out that even the old Egyptians knew
that if the circle is divided into 360 degrees, the Sun remains one
day behind in 72 years. That is, in 360 times 72 years, or 25,920
years, it remains the whole circle behind, and returns to the star
from which it started 25,920 years before.
Thus we have the fact that in the Universe the stars travel round, and
the Sun goes round — I will not go into the question as to
whether this revolution is only apparent or not, the important point
under consideration is that the Sun travels more slowly, remaining
behind one degree of the cosmic circle in 72 years; and 72 years, as I
have already indicated, is the normal maximum duration of a man's
life. Man lives 72 years, exactly the period the Sun remains one
degree behind the other stars.
We have lost the right feeling for these things. Even as late as in
the Hebraic Mysteries, the teacher still impressed very strongly upon
his scholars that it is Jehovah who brings it about that the sun
lingers behind the stars and, with the force which the Sun thus kept
back, He fashioned the human form, which is His earthly image. Thus,
mark well, the stars run their course quickly, the Sun more slowly,
and so a slight difference arises which, according to these ancient
Mysteries, was that which produced the human form. Man is born out of
time, he is so born that he owes his existence to the difference in
velocity between the cosmic day of the stars and the cosmic day of the
Sun. In modern parlance we should say: If the Sun were not in the
Universe as it is, if it were just a star like other stars, having the
same velocity as other stars, what would be the consequence? It would
be that the Luciferic powers alone would rule. That this is not so,
that man is able to withhold himself from the Luciferic powers with
the whole of his being, is due to the circumstance that the Sun does
not share in the velocity of the stars but lags behind them, not
developing the Luciferic velocity but the velocity of Jehovah. Again,
if there were only the Sun velocity and not that of the stars, man
would not be able to run on in front of the rest of his development
with his mental powers, as he does at present. Such a condition would
not fit well into his whole evolution. In our time this is very
striking. If we have studied Spiritual Science seriously, we know that
a man of 36, for instance, understands things he could not at 25.
Experience is necessary for the comprehension of certain things. This
is not admitted today, for a man of 25 feels himself complete. He is
only complete as regards mental powers, but not in experience, for
experience is gained more slowly than understanding. If this were
taken into account, we should not find that the young people of today
have already formed their point of view, for they would know that they
could not do so before acquiring a certain amount of experience.
Understanding travels with the stars, experience with the Sun.
Assuming that human life is 72 years (unless events of Nature
intervene causing Man to die older or younger), we say that it lasts
the time the Sun takes to retrograde one degree. Why is this? The
reason lies in a certain fine adjustment in the Cosmos. Our
preliminary study obliges me to ask you to follow me for a little
while into this domain.
If we consider a lunar eclipse occurring in a certain year, then there
will be a certain date when the eclipse can occur. The lunar eclipse
occurs on the same date about every 18 years, and in the same
constellation. There is a periodical rhythm in the lunar eclipse, a
rhythm of 18 years. That is just a quarter of a cosmic day and just a
quarter of a man's life. Man, if I may so express it, endures four
such periods of darkness. Why? Because in the Universe everything is
in numerical harmony. On the average, Man has in accordance with the
rhythmic activity of his heart, not only 72 years of life, but 72
pulse beats, and approximately 18 respirations — again the
quarter — in the minute. This numerical accord is expressed in
the Universe by the rhythm between the 18 years — the Chaldean
Saros period, so-called because the Chaldeans first discovered it
— and the Solar period; and it is the same rhythm as is also to
be found in man in the inner mobility between his respiration and his
pulse-beats. Plato said, not without reason: ‘God geometrises,
arithmetises’ ... Thus our 72 years of life, to which is
co-ordinated also our heart and pulse activity, goes through the Saros
period four times; because in our heart and pulse activity we have our
breathing activity, as it were, four times over. Our whole human
organism is constructed on the lines of the Universe, but we only see
into its significance when we bear in mind another connection.
As I said in one of the foregoing lectures, we only gauge correctly
the movement of the Moon, its revolution round its axis, when we
connect its revolution not with the day of the Sun, but with the day
of the stars. If we have the solar time in view, we must consider a
shorter time, 27.5 days for the revolution of the lunar day. I have
told you that the Moon's revolution is not such as quite to accord
with that of the Sun, but with the time of the stars. Hence we only
understand our lunar movement aright when we do not think of it as
belonging to the solar movement, but to that of the stars. In a
certain sense therefore, the solar movement is outside the system to
which the Moon and stars belong. Thus we are so situated in the
Universe that on the one hand we are co-ordinated to the stellar-lunar
system, and on the other to the solar movement.
Here we see the gradual divergence of the solar and the stellar
astronomy. As we have seen, if we have one astronomy only, everything
falls into confusion. We can only reach a right understanding if, not
limited to one astronomy, we say: On the one hand we have the starry
system which, in a certain respect, contains within it the Moon; and
on the other, the system to which the Sun belongs. They mutually
interpenetrate. They work together. But we are wrong if we apply the
same law to the two.
When we realise that we have two quite different astronomies, we shall
say: The cosmic happenings in which we are involved have two origins,
but we are so placed that these two streams flow together in us. They
fuse in us human beings. What is it then that takes place in us?
Suppose that only what is admitted by the natural scientist took place
in us — all sorts of things would take place in the human
organism, movements of substances and so forth; these would extend
over the whole organism, also to the brain and consequently to the
senses. What then would the consequence be if the whole transmutation
of substances which goes on in the human organism and which is
inserted into the Cosmos as I have explained — if this metabolism
were to extend to the brain? We should never be able to have
the consciousness that we ourselves think. Oxygen, iron and other
substances, carbon and so forth — of these we should say, in
their mutual relations, ‘they think in us’. But as a
matter of fact we are not conscious of any such thing. There is no
question of its being in our consciousness. What we have as a fact of
consciousness is the content of our soul-life. That can exist under no
other hypothesis than that the whole of this quite material happening
is demolished, is annihilated, and that in us there actually is no
conservation of force and substance, but room is made by the
annihilation of substance, for the development of the thought life. In
fact, Man is the one arena in which an actual annihilation of
substance takes place. We shall never realise it so long as we are
only conscious of what is outside ourselves.
Now, if we start from the assumption that after 72 years the Sun lags
one degree behind in the celestial sphere, that there is this
difference of velocity between the movement of the stars and that of
the Sun (which difference works in us, converges, as it were, in us);
and if we then picture to ourselves how the formation of our head
comes from the starry heavens, and how when we, according to a very
beautiful saying, first ‘see the light’, we become involved
in the Sun's movement, then we must say: There is in us a continual
tendency to work with a lesser velocity over against the more rapid
velocity of the stars. The action of the stars in us is opposed. What
is the effect of this opposition? It is the destruction of what the
stars bring about in us materially, its destruction; thus, the
destruction of the purely material law comes about through the solar
activity. Hence we may say: In our progress through the world as human
beings, if we kept pace, as it were, with the stars, we should
accompany them in such a way as to be subject to the material law of
the Universe. But this we are not. The solar laws oppose it, they hold
us back. There is something within us which holds us back. The
resultant of the two activities in us could be exactly calculated, for
instance, in the following case. (The calculation cannot be followed
up here, first because it would take too long and secondly because you
would not be able to follow it). Here, let us say, a certain movement
occurs (arrow pointing downwards), i.e. a flow takes place with a
certain velocity; and the stream then fuses with another stream —
it must be assumed that the other flow is going not in the same
but in the opposite direction (arrow upwards). The two streams flow
therefore into one another. Or imagine a wind whirling with a certain
velocity from above downwards, and another from below upwards, and
they whirl into one another. If we take the difference of velocity
between the downward and the upward current, relating the latter to
the former in such a way that a difference in velocity results bearing
the same relationship as the difference in velocity between the
stellar time and the solar time, then through the rotation a
condensation arises which receives its own distinct form. One whirls
downwards, and because the other whirls upwards driving with a greater
velocity, the lesser velocity would be that driving downwards, which
gives here (see diagram) through the collision, a condensation, a
certain figure. This figure, disregarding imperfections, is a
silhouette of the human heart.
Thus, through the meeting of the Lucifer stream and the Jehovah
stream, it is possible to construct exactly the figure of the human
heart. It is constructed simply out of the revelations of the
Universe. It is absolutely true; the Sun-movement is an expression of
a slower movement which meets a quicker movement, and we are so
inserted into the two movements that the silhouette of our heart
arises; and on to it the rest of the human form is fitted. We see from
this what Mysteries are actually hidden in the Cosmos, for as soon as
we admit we have two astronomies, which work together in their results
— what is the result? The human heart. The whole outlook of
modern natural science is based on the fact that it does not
distinguish these two streams from one another. This brings upon it
the tragic fate, that the harmonious working is split apart, leaving
on the one hand, the events in Nature, as reasoned by Julius Robert
Mayer; and on the other hand, the ‘secondary results’,
because people are unable to unite cosmically in thought what works
together from these two streams. Thus for man's thinking the world
falls asunder in two extremes.
Here lies the cosmic aspect of something tremendously significant in
regard to the understanding of Man and the Universe. Unless man can
renew, on that basis of thought which we are giving today, the
knowledge contained in the ancient Mysteries at the time when man was
awaiting Christianity — as I have described in the book,
Christianity as Mystical Fact
— unless we can bring this ancient knowledge to life in a present
form, as must be done, all knowledge remains an illusion; for that
which comes to expression with such clarity in the human heart is to
be found everywhere. Everywhere the events that happen are explainable
through the union of two streams, arising from different sources.
In the insertion of the Mystery of Golgotha into the evolution of our
Earth, we have to do with an Event of a totally different nature from
all the rest of the happenings of Earth-evolution; and this we shall
never understand unless we begin by learning to understand the Cosmos
itself.
What I have said today is intended as a preparation or groundwork on
which we shall be able to build up in our lectures of to-morrow and
the day after.
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