Man and Nature
Intellect in Man and Nature Bereft of the Gods
Dornach, July 18th, 1920
In the
lecture yesterday which dealt with Spengler's Decline of
the West, I tried to bring home to you the significance
of anthroposophical Spiritual Science by emphasising the
difference between merely abstract concepts and that which
also arises in the soul in the form of ideas and concepts but
is, nevertheless, reality. Let us realise once for
all that with his materialistic frame of mind, and his
tendency to reject spiritual conceptions and occupy himself
only with ideas concerning the natural world, man is making
himself more and more akin to the material, is descending so
deeply into the material world that he is no longer speaking
falsely when he declares that it is the material substance of
his body which thinks, that his brain actually does the
thinking. Man is becoming a kind of automaton in the
universe, and as the result of his denial of the soul and
Spirit he is losing the soul and Spirit. I said before that
this thought is by no means popular; people will not accept
it because they cherish the belief that the soul-and-spirit
will be saved to man for all eternity without any action
being necessary an his part. By no means is it so. A man may
give himself up to material life to such an extent that he
severs himself from the soul-and-spirit altogether, sinks
into the realm of the Ahrimanic Powers and passes with them
into a cosmic stream which does not belong to our world. But
thereby he loses his own Ego, for the Ego does not belong to
the world of Ahriman and can only find its true path of
development when a human being pursues the normal course of
progressive evolution; that is to say, when he unites with
the impulse of the Mystery of Golgotha and when he realises
that in the pr sent age he must find a link with all that
spiritual research can contribute to the civilised life of
mankind. Since the middle of the fifteenth century man has
been living through the phase of evolution in which, as he
looks out into his environment, he sees nothing but the
material world. And as he looks into his own being he
intellectualizes the inner experiences of his life of soul;
these become abstract and shadowy. This has been the tendency
since the middle of the fifteenth century.
The thoughts
and concepts with which we build up our picture of the world
to-day, drawn as they are from the dicta of orthodox science,
have no connection with existence as it actually is. Neither
can they lead to the heart of reality. It is merely a
convention to imagine that man's life of soul is
fundamentally involved in the forming of abstract thought.
These abstract thoughts are quite remote from reality; they
are nothing but a series of pictures. We may say, therefore,
that externally man perceives the material world and inwardly
a world of pictures having no essential connection with
existence. This has been the lot of mankind since the middle
of the fifteenth century and we shall presently see what
effect it has upon a conception of the universe to see,
externally, nothing but the material world and, inwardly, to
have experiences that have become a mere series of pictures.
We may ask: Why is it that since the middle of the fifteenth
century man's life of soul has gradually come to the point of
having no more reality than a picture? The reason is that
only in this way is it possible for man to attain his real
freedom.
In order to
understand this let us consider the world as it lies before
us to-day and our own place in the world. To begin with we
will think of the world, leaving aside the human being
altogether. Looking at clouds, mountains, rivers, at the
minerals, plants and animals, we ask: What is there, in
reality, in the whole wide world, when we leave the human
being out of the picture? In other words, we think of all
that surrounds us in the mineral and plant kingdoms, and to a
certain extent also, in the animal kingdom, but apart
altogether from man. In reality, of course, this is quite
impossible, but we will assume hypothetically a Nature
divested of the human being. In this Nature that is
divested of the human being, there are no Gods. That is
what we must bring home to ourselves. In this Nature that is
divested of the human being there are no Gods, any more than
an oyster is there within an empty oyster-shell or a snail in
an empty snail-shell. This whole world which we assume
hypothetically, a world without the human being, is something
which the Gods have separated off from themselves in the
course of evolution, just as the oyster sheds its shell. But
the Gods — the spiritual Beings — are no longer
within it. The world that surrounds us, is a world of the
Past. When we look at Nature we are looking at
something which represents the spiritual Past, we are looking
at a residue of the Spiritual. And that is why religious
consciousness in the real sense can never arise from
contemplation of the external world alone. Let us not imagine
for a moment that any element of the life of the
divine-spiritual Beings who work creatively in mankind, is
contained in this external world. Elementary beings,
spiritual beings of a lower order, are there, of course; but
the creative spiritual Beings who should live in our
religious consciousness belong to this external world only
inasmuch as represents their shell, being a residue of
spiritual evolution in the Past.
Certain
outstanding personalities have felt the truth of these
things. In the spiritual life of the nineteenth century the
man who felt most deeply of all that the Nature surrounding
man is a residue of divine-spiritual evolution was Philip
Mainländer whose philosophy of self-destruction was born
from the gravity of this knowledge and who finally put an end
to his own life. It is often the destiny of human beings to
steep themselves in one-sided truths of this kind and the
inevitable consequence is that this destiny itself becomes
one-sided and difficult to bear. Philip Mainländer, the
unfortunate German Philosopher, is an outstanding example of
this.
Having
realised what has been put forward hypothetically in
connection with external Nature, you may ask: Where then, are
the Gods; where are the creative spiritual Beings? If I were
to make a drawing, I should have to draw the Gods
within the human being. The truly creative Gods have
their habitat in the realm that is bounded by the human skin,
within the organs — if I may use this expression. The
being of man is now the bearer of the Divine-Spiritual. The
Divine-Spiritual, the truly creative principles is
within the human being. Try to picture to ourselves
external Nature as it is to-day, and then a future lying
thousands of years ahead — in this future there will be
no clouds, no minerals, no plants, even no animals. There
will be nothing left of all that now lives in external Nature
outside the bounds of the human skin. What will
continue its evolution is the soul and Spirit permeating the
inner organisation of man. This will constitute the future.
The Nature by which man is now surrounded will pass away, and
the Human-Divine principle now within his being will become
his outer environment.
Insight into
the truth that the Divine-Spiritual — the only truly
creative principle in our time — lives inside the bounds
of the human skin, must be taken in deepest seriousness, for
it lays upon man a responsibility in regard to the whole
universe. It enables him to understand the words of Christ:
“Heaven and Earth” — the world of external
Nature — “will pass away but my words will not pass
away.” And when in the individual human being the
saying of St. Paul, “Not I but Christ in me,” is
fulfilled, then the words of Christ will live in the
individual human being. “Heaven and Earth will pass
away, but My words will not pass away” or My words in
the individual human being, namely all that lies inside the
human skin and is received into Christ, this will not pass
away.
All this is
an indication of the fact that since the middle of the
fifteenth century, through his abstract, intellectual
concepts, man has been making his inner being empty and void.
And to what end has he been making himself empty? It is in
order to receive the Christ Impulse, the Divine Spiritual,
into his inner being. I said that as we look into the
external world, we see only the material. It is the divine
Past. (In this residue of a divine Past there are,
of course, the Elemental Spirits who have remained at lower
stages of evolution.) As we look into our inner being, we
see, to begin with, nothing but abstract concepts which can
only become concrete and real when we receive the impulse of
the Spirit into our being through Spiritual Science and unite
the impulse of the Spirit with our inner life. Man has the
choice — a choice which has become a matter of greater
and greater seriousness since the middle of the fifteenth
century — either to remain at a standstill with his
abstract intellectual concepts or to receive into himself the
living substance of Spiritual Science. Abstract
intellectuality enables him to evolve a brilliant science of
Nature, for intellectual concepts are dead and by their means
he can unfold an admirable understanding of dead Nature. But
all this mummifies him, makes him akin to matter, and leads
him ultimately into the clutches of the Ahrimanic world. To
further the Progress of earthly existence and the whole
evolution of the earth, he must receive the Spiritual into
his being, and in our time the Spiritual does not draw near
to man by way of atavistic instinct. It must be reached
by his own efforts. The assimilation of Spiritual
Science is not, therefore, the assimilation of a theory but
the development of something absolutely real, an impulse that
will fill the otherwise empty recesses of the soul with
spiritual substance.
In the mass
to-day, men prefer to have this emptiness inwardly and the
Past outwardly manifest before them. They will only admit the
validity of thought when it has been proved by experiment and
they resist the quickening impulses of spiritual life. The
danger confronting the world to-day is not so much the spread
of false theories but the loss of the very Mission of the
Earth.
Only those
who have really thought through and perceived the task of the
human race will realise how much depends upon the
assimilation of Spiritual Science. These souls will never
lose sight of the importance of knowledge of the being of
man, but in modern natural science and in the ancient
religious tradition this knowledge simply does not exist.
What is the trend of ancient religious tradition? It directs
the minds of men to unworldly abstractions and is silent an
the subject of the Gods indwelling the being of man,
indwelling his very organism. This thought would he condemned
by religious tradition as out-and out heresy. If any attempt
were made to bring home to the traditional religions in
Europe and America to-day the truth of the ancient saying
that “the Body of man is the Temple of the Gods,”
they would indignantly refuse to countenance such heresy.
And an the
other hand we have a materialistic natural science which
precisely because it is materialistic has no real
understanding of matter. What does science really know about
the functioning of the human brain, of the human heart? I
have often told you, and I have also said in public, that one
of the views held by modern science is that the human heart
is a kind of pump which drives the blood through the body.
This dictum of academic science is universally accepted but
it is simply a piece of nonsense — pure nonsense. We
shall never understand the essential nature of the heart we
imagine that it pumps the blood in every direction and then
lets it flow back again. The circulating blood itself is the
living force. The driving force in the human organisation is
contained in the blood, in the circulating blood, and the
heart is the outward expression of this; the movement reveals
itself in the heart. To say in accordance with modern science
that the heart drives the blood into the Body, is rather like
saying: “At ten minutes to nine one hand of the clock
pointed to nine, and the other a little past ten, and these
hands, in conjunction with the mechanism of the clock, drove
me to the speaker's desk and left a great many still outside
(because in the Anthroposophical Society people have a habit
of unpunctuality). In reality, it is not so at all. Obviously
the clock is simply an expression of what is happening
— it is the expression and nothing more. The heart is
not the pumping machine by means of which the blood is driven
through the body; the heart is inserted into and is the
expression of this whole system of movement.
Natural
Science, as it is to-day, never leads into the inner being of
man. All that science does is to make the inner into the
outer by the dissection of dead bodies. But dissection of the
dead body merely takes the inner and transfers it to the
outer world. I mention this in order to bring home to you
that in the spiritual life of to-day there is no inclination
whatever to penetrate into the inner being and inner nature
of man, and it devolves upon Spiritual Science to bring that
real knowledge of man's being which scares the great majority
of our contemporaries. Why are they scared? It is because
religious traditions through the centuries have utterly
hood-winked mankind so far as striving for real knowledge is
concerned. Just think of the way in which the traditional
creeds mystify human beings with apocryphal utterances
culminating in a warning that it is not meant for man to know
the Supersensible, that he may only have faith in it and feel
its existence darkly. This is all done with the object of
playing upon man's pride and self-conceit and also upon his
inherent laziness. He must be led to believe that it is not
necessary for him to think about the Divine, that
his conception of the Divine must be a matter of instinct and
dim feeling. But ideas that arise from this region of man's
being are merely emanations from the organs — emanations which
become illusions, and these illusions are distorted into all
kinds of nebulous ideas by theologians and others who know
quite well how much they can count an man's inherent love of
ease.
The instinct
for knowledge which alone can promote the earthly evolution
of man and also lead him to the path of spiritual
development, has been stifled and suppressed for many long
centuries. People to-day are frightened at the very thought
of developing knowledgE of realities or of experiencing the
spiritual world. But to the extent to which they are
frightened — to that extent do they sever themselves from
the Spirit and soul and make themselves akin to the
material.
It is so
indeed; people are scared when the gravity of these things
dawns upon them, because everything to-day is regarded from
the external point of view. And here, in parenthesis, let me
repeat certain remarks made a short time ago. In Stuttgart we
have the Waldorf School. The Waldorf School was founded out
of the very spirit of anthroposophical Spiritual Science;
that is to say, fundamental principles of education and of
teaching were laid before those who were specially Chosen to
work in the School. Everything is a question of the
Spirit in this art of education. Yet we are finding
to-day, a sensation, that people visit the school and
actually think that in a couple of hours or so they can
inform themselves about the essentials of education there
given. But it is of course only through Spiritual Science
that one can gain insight into the spirit of the Waldorf
School; it cannot be done by short brief visits which only
disturb the teaching.
To assimilate
anthroposophical Spiritual Science, however, is much more
difficult and much less sensational than visiting the School
as an outsider. As I have often said, the education at the
Waldorf School takes account of the existence of the
spiritual world, and, above all, of the pre-earthly existence
of the human being. What is there to be said about this
pre-earthly existence? We may take the year of our birth and
say that this is the time when we descended to physical life
on the Earth. Children born later have been living in the
spiritual world while we were already on the Earth. These
children have just descended to the physical world, whereas
we ourselves have been living through our earthly existence
for a considerable length of time. And they bring with them
something of what they were experiencing in the spiritual
world while we were already living in the physical world.
One can
realise this quite clearly among children who are taught
according to the principles of Waldorf School education. To
give this kind of education is to prepare for the application
in everyday life of thoughts and ideas which are the natural
outcome of Spiritual Science. But it is precisely here that
people are kept back by traditional religions, for the last
thing these religions want is the development of inner
activity in human beings. Inner activity leads to a real
knowledge of the being of man and brings home the truth that
the dwelling place of the Gods is inside the bounds of the
human skin.
Suppose we
see a planet in the sky. There is nothing of the
Divine-Spiritual in anything upon that planet except in
Spiritual Beings whose nature in some way resembles the
nature of man. From these Beings the Divine pours its
radiance upon us. Why, then, should this radiance be any the
less because it shines from the bodies of men? You will begin
to feel at home with this thought if you dissociate it from
earthly life and relate it to conditions as they are upon
another planet. Living an the Earth as you do, you will find
that there is something oppressive, something rather coercive
in the thought that you and your fellow men are bearers of
the Divine-Spiritual. But if you turn the gaze of your soul
to one of the other planets it will be much easier for you to
grasp the fact that the Beings who there constitute the
highest kingdom of Nature are the point from which the Divine
Spiritual shines down upon you.
In a certain
respect the thought we have been considering to-day amplifies
the thought which occupied our minds in the last lecture,
namely that something is unfolding in the inner being of man
upon which the future evolution of the Earth essentially
depends, but also that it lies within the powers of the human
will to hinder the Earth's evolution, to receive the stream
of Ahrimanic forces only. And to-day we added the other
thought, namely, that Nature around is transient and
external, for it already represents nothing more than a
residue of Divine Spiritual creation. The process of
Divine-Spiritual creation which dominates the
present and will dominate the future, lies inside
the bounds of the human skin. Strange as it may seem, it is
therefore quite true to say that everything our eyes can see
and our ears hear will all pass away with the Earth. Only
that which is contained in the regions enclosed by the human
skin lives over to the Jupiter stage of evolution, bearing
existence as it is an the Earth into future conditions of
planetary evolution.
When it is
once realised that a knowledge of the nature of man is a
burning necessity, the urge to understand the connection of
the human being with the universe will again make itself
felt. You know that man really lives between two extremes,
the Luciferic and the Ahrimanic as we are accustomed to call
them. We can also understand the nature of these two extremes
from a more elementary point of view. Philosophers have
declared again and again that Being in itself eludes the
grasp of thought. This is quite true, for whence comes the
sense of being, the feeling of existence which there is in
man? The human being exists before he enters earthly
existence through conception and birth; he exists in
super-sensible worlds. From super-sensible worlds he descends
into his earthly, material existence. Here he experiences
something quite new, something he did not experience in the
super-sensible worlds. He is encompassed by it as soon as he
has descended to earthly existence. It is the attractive
force of the Earth, gravity, ‘to have weight,’ as
we say, but only by way of illustration. As you know, the
expression ‘to have weight’ is drawn from the
most palpable phenomenon of all. The fatigue of which we
become aware is similar to ‘having weight,’ and
what we feel in our limbs when they move is also akin to
this. But because the fact of ‘having weight’ is
merely the representative phenomenon, we can say: The human
being places himself within gravity. And in a hidden way man
always enters, a little more into this element of gravity
when he approaches a thing of Earth and calls it real.
It is exactly
the reverse when the human being is passing through his life
between death and rebirth. Just as here on the Earth he is
allied with gravity, in the life between death and rebirth he
is allied with light, for ‘light’ too is
used in a representative sense. Because we receive most of
our higher sense-perceptions through the eye, we speak of the
light. But what lives as light in the sense-perception of the
eye is the same element that sounds in the
sense-perception of the ear and reveals itself in different
tones, just as the light reveals itself in different colours.
And it is the same with the other senses. fundamentally
speaking, the element we speak of in a representative sense
as the light, just as we speak of gravity in a representative
sense, is the ‘tincture’ of all the senses. We
are received into the extreme pole of gravity when we descend
to the Earth. We are received into the extreme pole of light
when we are living in the spiritual world between death and a
new birth. are, in reality, always in the middle condition
between light and gravity; and every sense-perception, as we
experience it here on Earth, is half light and half gravity.
When, as the result of some pathological condition, or in
dream, we experience without the element of our own gravity,
we are experiencing only the Spiritual, as for instance in a
dream or in delirium. Psychologically, delirium is a state in
which the human being has experience, but his own gravity is
no factor in them. This state of balance between gravity and
light into which we are placed, is something that is
intimately connected with the riddle of the world, inasmuch
as it is bound up with many of the experiences we have as
beings of soul and Spirit in the world.
It will
surely be obvious to you from what has been said that neither
the traditional creeds nor the fantasies of natural science
succeed in finding their way from merely abstract concepts
into the light nor from sense perception down into gravity.
People have become blind and deaf to these things. Man is
bound to the Earth by gravity. He experiences gravity as the
element which draws him to the Earth. Think of a crystal. A
crystal gives itself its form. Within the crystal there is
the same force which the human being feels drawing him
downwards — the force which gives the whole Earth form.
And now think of the oceans and seas. Here the Earth can give
form, or rather the element of gravity gives the form. This
very same force also gives the crystal its form but in this
case it works from within. According to science, nobody knows
what is behind matter or within matter. This is said to be a
world-riddle. But inasmuch as we experience our own gravity,
we experience what is behind the surface of matter; for in
relation to the whole Earth we are placed within the same
forces which are active in small bodies (as, for instance,
the crystal) and by which the various parts are held
together. We must reach the point of being able to recognise
the small in the great, the great in the small and not to
lose ourselves in speculation as to what presumably lies
behind matter.
Knowledge of
the Divine-Spiritual which transcends matter must be kindled
by those forces in man's inner being which enable him to
understand ideas such as that of the Temple represented in
ancient tradition by the human being himself.
I have said
many times that the sayings of ancient atavistic wisdom
contain much that is worthy of deep veneration. In the
present age it is our task once again to raise these truths
from the depths of our being and to make them the guiding
principles of life and action.
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