LECTURE I
I am of the
opinion, that, in this course we are now starting, it is [a
question of] a discussion of what is necessary in order really
to connect one's self responsibly with the movement of
Anthroposophy and the Threefold Idea. The course will
therefore not be arranged for lecturers in general, but as a
kind of orientation course for the personalities, who have
made it their task to work in the direction indicated.
Personalities
who receive what can come from Anthroposophy simply as a kind
of information will not get much from this course.
Indeed, at
present, we definitely need activity within our movement. It
seems to be difficult to kindle this activity. It seems
difficult to spread the insight that this activity is really
necessary in our time.
Hence, it will
not be a matter of a formal course in lecturing, but rather,
of just those things which are necessary for someone who
would like to accomplish a quite definite task, I mean the
one just indicated.
On the whole,
the Anthroposophical Movement has no use for general talk.
Indeed, this is exactly the mark of our present culture and
civilization that there is general talk around things —
that people do not pick up concrete tasks — that they
have, by preference, interest for talking in general
terms.
Hence, I do not
intend to treat the things in this course, (which I shall
discuss as regards content), in such a way that they might
serve as information. But I shall try to treat these things
so — and this must indeed be the case in such an
orientation course because it is intended as the very basis
for a definite task — so that they can then link up
directly with the spoken word. And I shall treat this spoken
word so as to take into consideration, that he who sets
himself the task of delivering a lecture for Anthroposophy is
perhaps not working under conditions in which interest is
already present, but is working to awaken interest by the
first few lectures. Thus, I should like to shape this course
in this quite concrete sense.
And, even the
large points of view which I shall discuss today are to be
meant entirely in this quite concrete sense. One would be
reporting what is incorrect if — as is so popular
nowadays — one set down what I shall say both today and
in the next days as abstract sentences.
Today I intend
to speak of certain set of rules.
Whenever
through a lecture one sets out upon the task of bringing
something near to one's fellow man, a responseful interchange
will naturally take place between the person who has
something to communicate, something to work for, something to
be enthusiastic about, and the persons who listen to him. An
interplay of soul-forces occurs. And to this interplay of
soul-forces we propose at first to turn our attention.
These
soul-forces live, as you know, in thinking, feeling and
willing. And never is just a single soul-force in abstract
form active by itself. But, into each soul-force the other
soul-forces play, so that when we think, there are also
feeling and willing always active in our thinking, likewise
in our feeling, thinking and willing, and again in willing,
thinking and feeling.
But still, one
cannot consider the soul life — both by itself and in
its responseful interchange between people — save from
the point of view of this tending on the one side to
thinking, and on the other to willing. And so, in the sense
of our task today, we must know the following:
What we think
interests nobody else, and whoever believes that his thoughts
— insofar as they are thoughts — interest any
other person, will not be able to put himself to the task of
lecturing. (We intend to speak more precisely about these
things.) The willing to which we would like to fire a
gathering, or even one other person, this willing that we
wish to put into our lecture, this annoys people, this they
instinctively reject.
When one
approaches people as a lecturer, then one has to do chiefly
with the workings of various instincts: The thinking which
one kindles in one's self does not interest people, willing
annoys them. This, if some one were called upon for this or
that act of will, we would find that we had called up, not
his willing, but his annoyance. And if we were to sketch our
most beautiful and ingenious ideas in a monologue before
people, they would walk out. That must be the fundamental
guiding line for the lecturer.
I do not say
that this is so when we consider a general conversation among
people, a gossip session or the like. For I am not speaking
here about how these two are to be treated. Rather am I
speaking of what should fill our souls, of what should live
in us as proper impulse for lecturing, if the lecture is to
have a purpose precisely in the direction I now mean. I am
speaking of the guiding line one needs to set one's self: Our
thoughts do not interest an audience — our will annoys
every audience.
Now, we must
take a further matter into consideration: When someone
lectures, the fact is that he lectures for the most part not
only out of his own being, but out of all kinds of
situations. For instance, he lectures on some affair that has
perhaps for weeks been discussed by, or described to many of
the people who will be listening to him. He then naturally
meets with quite a different interest than he does if his
first sentences touch on something that, until now, had not
occupied his hearers in the slightest. When someone lectures
here in the Goetheanum, it is naturally something quite
different from what it is when one lecturesat a hotel in
Kalamazoo. I mean, even setting aside the fact, that in the
Goetheanum one is likely to lecture to people who have for
some time occupied themselves with the material, have read or
heard about it, whereas this is probably not the case in
Kalamazoo. I mean the whole surroundings: The fact that one
comes to a building such as the Goetheanum makes it possible
to turn to the public in quite another manner than is
possible when one lectures at a hotel in Kalamazoo. And so
there are countless circumstances out of which one lectures
which must always be considered.
This however,
establishes the necessity, especially in our time, to take
one's lead somewhat from what should not be to what should
be. Let us take an extreme case. A typical, average professor
was supposed to give a lecture. At first he deals with his
thoughts about the object, and, if he is a typical, average
professor, he also deals with the conviction, that these
thoughts which he thinks, are on the whole, the very best in
the world on the subject in question. Everything else has at
first no interest for him. — He writes these thoughts
down. — And of course, when he commits these thoughts
to paper, then they become fixed. He then sticks this
manuscript into his left side pocket, goes off, unconcerned
as to whether it is to the Goetheanum or to the hotel in
Kalamazoo, finds a lecturer's desk that is set up in a
suitable way, at the right distance for his eyes, lays his
manuscript thereon and reads. I do not say that every one
does it in this way. But it is a frequent occurrence and a
characteristic procedure in our time. And it points to the
horror one can have towards lecturing today. It is the type
of lecturing for which one should have the greatest
aversion.
And, since I
have said that our thoughts interest nobody else, and our
will annoys everybody, then it seems that it is the feelings
upon which lecturing depends, — that an especially
significant cultivation of feeling must be basic for
lecturing. Hence it becomes of significance, of perhaps
remote, yet fundamental significance, that we have acquired
this proper aversion for the extreme type of lecture-reading
just mentioned.
Once I heard a
lecture by the renowned Helmholtz at a rather large meeting
that was certainly given in this manner: The manuscript,
taken out of the left side pocket and read off. Afterwards a
journalist came to me and said: “Why wasn't this
lecture printed, a copy slipped into the hand of each one
there? And then Helmholtz could have gone about and extended
his hand to each one!” The latter would have been more
valuable perhaps to the hearers, than the terrible experience
of sitting on the hard chairs to which they were condemned in
order to have read to them the manuscript, which required
more time than it would have taken them to read it
themselves. (Most of them would have needed a very long time
indeed if they wanted to understand it, but listening for a
short time didn't help them at all.)
One must by all
means reflect on all these concrete things if one wishes to
understand how the art of lecturing can, in all truth and
honesty, be striven for.
At the
Philosophers' Congress in Bologna the most significant
lecture was delivered in the following way: It lay on each
chair, three copies, one in each of three languages. One had
first to pick them up in order to be able to sit down on the
empty chair. And then the lecture was read aloud from the
printed copy, requiring somewhat more than an hour. Through
such procedure even the most beautiful lecture is no longer a
lecture, for understanding gained through reading is
something essentially different from the understanding gained
through listening. And these things must be considered if one
wants to familiarize one's self in a vivid way with such
tasks.
Certainly, even
a novel can so move us that we shed tears at definite
passages. I mean of course, that a good novel can do this
only at definite passages, not from the beginning to the end.
But what then is really present during reading so that we are
carried away by what we read? Whenever we are carried away by
what we read, we have to accomplish a certain work that
coincides, that is connected very strongly, with the inner
side of our humanity. This inner work which we accomplish
when we read consists in this, that while we turn our glance
to the single letters, we actually carry out what we have
learned in the putting together of the letters. Through this
activity of looking at the letters, putting them together and
thinking about them, we draw forth a meaning. That is a
process of receiving which occurs in our ether body and yet
strongly engages the physical body in the perceiving.
But all this
simply falls away when only listening. This whole activity
does not occur when simply listening. Nevertheless, this
listening activity is bound up in a definite way with the
grasping of a thing. The person is in need of this activity
whenever he wishes to grasp a thing. He needs the cooperation
of his ether body and in part, even of his physical body. Not
only of the sense organ of the ear! Moreover, when listening,
he needs a soul life so active that it is not exhausted in
the astral body, but brings the ether body to pulsation, and
then this ether body also brings the physical body to swing
along with it.
That which must
take place as activity during reading, must also be developed
while listening to a lecture, but — should like to say
— in quite another form when listening, because that
activity cannot be there in the same way it is for reading.
What is called up in reading is transformed feeling, feeling
that has been pressed into the ether body and the physical
body. This feeling becomes a force. As lecturers we must be
in a position to bring up feeling as feeling content, even in
the most abstract of lectures.
It is really a
fact that our thoughts as such do not interest people, our
will impulses annoy everybody, and only our feelings
determine the impression, the effect — in a justified
sense, of course — of a lecture.
Hence, there
arises the most important question. How shall we be able to
have something in our lecture which in a sufficiently strong
way, will enable the listener to bring forth the needed shade
of feeling, the needed permeation with feeling — and
yet not press him, lest we hypnotize or suggest.
There cannot be
abstract rules by which one learns how to speak with feeling.
For, in the person who has hunted in all sorts of manuals for
the rules for speaking with feeling, one will notice that his
lecturing most surely does not come from his heart, that it
stems from quite another place than his heart. And truly, all
lectures should come from the heart. Even the most abstract
lecture should come from the heart. And that it can! And it
is precisely this which we must discuss, how even the most
abstract lecture can come from the heart.
We must
understand quite clearly what is really stirring in the soul
of the listener when he gives us his ear, not perhaps when we
tell him something he is eager to hear, but when we expect
him to want to listen to our words. Essentially it is indeed
always a kind of attack on our fellow men when we fire a
lecture at them. And that too is something of which we must
be thoroughly aware, that it is an attack on the listeners,
when we fire a lecture at them.
Everything
which I say — I must ever and again add parenthetically
— is to be considered as guide for the lecturer, not as
characteristic for social intercourse or the like. Were I to
speak in reference to social intercourse, I could naturally
not formulate the same sentences. They would be so much
foolishness. For, when one speaks concretely, such a sentence
as “Our thoughts interest no one” can be either
something very clever or very stupid. Everything we say may
be foolishness or good sense according to its whole human
connection. It depends solely upon the way it is placed into
the context. Hence, the lecturer needs quite other things
than instructions in the formal art of lecturing.
Thus, it is a
matter of recognizing what is really active in the listener.
Sympathy and antipathy are active in the listener. These
assert themselves more or less unconsciously when we attack
the listener with a lecture. Sympathy or antipathy! For our
thoughts however, he surely has no sympathy at first. Also
not for our will impulses, for that which we, so to speak,
want of him, for that to which we want to exhort him.
If we want
somehow to approach the art of lecturing, we must have a
certain understanding for the listener's sympathy and
antipathy toward what we say. Sympathy and antipathy have in
reality to do neither with thinking nor with the will, but
operate here in the physical world exclusively for the
feelings, for what has to do with feeling. A conscious
awareness in the listener of sympathy and antipathy has the
effect of obstructing the lecturer's approach to him —
our awareness of sympathy and antipathy must be of such a
kind that it never comes to the consciousness of the
listener, especially during the lecture. Working to rouse
sympathy and antipathy has the effect of making it seem that
we fall over ourselves. Such, approximately, is the effect of
a lecture when we want to arouse sympathy and antipathy.
We must have
the finest understanding for sympathy and antipathy in the
listener. During the lecture however, his sympathy or
antipathy should not concern us in the least. All that has an
effect upon the sympathy and antipathy, if I may say so, we
must bring into the lecture indirectly, beforehand, during
the preparation.
Just as little
as there can be instructions of an abstract kind for painting
or sculpting, just so little can there be rules of an
abstract kind for lecturing. But, just as one can stimulate
the art of painting, so too it is possible to stimulate the
art of lecturing. And it is chiefly a matter of taking in
full earnestness the things that can be pointed out in this
direction.
In order to
start from an example, let us first take the teacher speaking
to children. As far as his speaking is concerned, actually
the very least depends upon his genius and wisdom. As to
whether we can teach mathematics or geography well, the very,
very least will depend upon whether we ourselves are good
mathematicians, or good geographers. We can be outstanding
geographers, but poor teachers of geography. The intrinsic
worth of the teacher, which surely rests in large measure
upon his speaking, depends upon what he has previously felt
and experienced about the things to be presented, and the
kinds of feelings which are again stirred up by the fact that
he has a child before him.
Thus it is for
example, that Waldorf School pedagogy amounts to knowledge of
man, that is of the child — not to a knowledge of the
child resulting from abstract psychology, but one that rests
upon a fully human comprehension of the child. So far does
this comprehension go that through feeling intensified to
loving devotion, the teacher manages to experience with the
child. Then there results — from this experiencing with
the child and from what one has previously felt and
experienced in the field in which one has to express
something — from all this, there results quite
instinctively the manner in which one has to speak and handle
the class.
It doesn't
serve at all, for instance, in instructing a slow child, to
use the wisdom of the world which one has. Wisdom helps one
in the case of a dull child, if one acquired the wisdom
yesterday and used it in one's preparation. At the moment of
instruction of the dull child, one must have the genius to be
as slow as the child himself, and just have the presence of
mind to remember the way in which one was wise yesterday,
during the preparation. One must be able to be slow with the
slow child, naughty, at least in feeling, with the naughty
child, good with the good child, and so forth. As teacher one
must be — I hope that this word will not arouse too
great antipathy because it is directed too strongly towards
thoughts or will impulses — one must really be a kind
of chameleon, if one wishes to instruct rightly.
What many
Waldorf teachers have, out of their genius, been able to do
to increase discipline has pleased me very much. For example,
a teacher is speaking about Jean Paul. The children start
writing notes and passing them to each other. This teacher
doesn't start reprimanding them; instead, he moves into the
situation, and with great patience finds out what it's all
about. He then dissolves the threatened disturbance with some
instruction on postal affairs. That is more effective than
any reminder. The note-writing stops. This result rests
naturally upon a concrete grasping of the moment. But of
course, one must have the presence of mind. One must know
that sympathy and antipathy which one wishes to stir, sit
more deeply in the human being than one is accustomed to
think.
And so it is
extraordinarily important, whenever the teacher has to deal
with some chapter in class, that he first of all call up
vividly into consciousness during the preparation how he
himself approached this chapter when he was the same age as
his children are, how he felt then, — not in order to
become pedantic, of course, not in order when he treats it on
the next day to succeed in feeling again as he once did! No,
it is enough when this feeling is brought up during the
preparation, when it is experienced in the preparation, and
then it is a matter of working on the very next day with the
knowledge of man just described.
Thus, also
here, in teaching, it is a question of finding within
ourselves the possibility of shaping the lecture-material
which is part of one's teaching material, out of feeling.
How these
things can work we can best become aware of, if we bring also
the following before our soul's eye: whenever something of a
feeling character is to work into what pulses through our
lecture, then naturally we may not speak thoughtlessly,
although thoughts do not really interest our listeners, and
we may not lecture without will, albeit our will annoys them.
We shall very often even want to speak in such a way that
what we say goes into the will impulses of the people, that
in consequences of our lecture our fellow-men want to do
something. But we must not under any circumstances so
organize the lecture that we bore the listeners through our
thought content and arouse their antipathy through the will
impetus we seek to give.
So it is a
matter of establishing the thinking for the lecture,
completely establishing it, as long as possible before we
lecture; that we have beforehand absolutely settled the
thought element within ourselves. This has nothing to do with
whether we then speak fluently, or whether we speak
haltingly. The latter, as we shall see, depends upon quite
other circumstances. But what must, to a degree, work
unconsciously in the lecture, is connected with our having
settled the thought content within ourselves much, much
earlier. The thought monologue which should be as lively as
possible we must have rehearsed earlier, letting it take form
out of the arguments for and against, which we ourselves
bring forward during this preparation, anticipating all
objections as much as possible.
Through this
manner of experiencing our lecture in thoughts beforehand, we
take from it the sting it otherwise has for the audience. We
are, to a degree, bound to sweeten our lecture by having gone
through the sourness of the logical development of the train
of thought beforehand, — but, as much as possible in
such a way that we do not formulate the lecture word for
word. Of course, matters cannot be taken literally, —
namely, that we have no idea of how we shall formulate the
sentences when we begin to lecture. But the thought content
must be settled. To have the verbal formulation ready for the
whole lecture is something which can never lead to a really
good lecture. For that already comes very near to having
written the lecture down, and we need but to imagine that a
phonograph instead of us stood there and gave it out
automatically. When the lecture is given word for word, from
memory, then is the difference between this and a machine
that turns it out automatically even smaller than it is
between a lecture read from a manuscript and the machine that
turns it out automatically. Moreover, if we have formulated a
lecture beforehand, so that it is worked out in such a way
that it can be spoken by us verbatim, then we are indeed not
differentiating ourselves very strongly from a machine by
which we have recorded the lecture and then let it be played
back. There is not much difference between listening to a
lecture that is spoken word for word as it was worked out and
reading it oneself, — aside from the fact that in
reading one is not continually disturbed by the lecturer, as
one is continually when listening to him deliver a lecture
that he has memorized.
The thought
preparation is experienced in the correct manner when it is
carried to the point at which the thoughts have become
absolutely part of oneself, and this all well before the
lecture. One must be finished with what one would
present.
To be sure,
there are some exceptions for ordinary lectures which one
delivers to an audience until then unknown to one. Whenever,
before such an audience, one begins immediately with what one
has to a degree worked out meditatively in thoughts, and
speaks from the first sentence on under direct inspiration,
if I may say so, then one does not do something really good
for the listeners. At the beginning of a lecture one must
make one's personality somewhat active. At the beginning of a
lecture one should not immediately entirely extinguish one's
personality, because the vibration of feeling must first be
stirred.
Now, it is not
necessary to proceed as did, for example, Michael Bernays,
Professor of History of German Literature, at one time very
famous in certain circles. He once came to Weimar to give a
lecture on Goethe's Color Theory, and wanted to form his
first sentences in such a way that certainly the feeling of
the listeners would be engaged very, very intensively —
but, to be sure, it happened quite otherwise than he had
intended. He arrived in Weimar several days before the
lecture. Weimar is a small city where one can go about among
the people, (some of whom will be in the hall), and make
propaganda for one's lecture. Those who hear about the
lecture directly, tell others about it, and the whole hall is
really “tuned up” when one delivers one's
lecture. Now Prof. Michael Bernays actually went about in
Weimar for several days and said: “Oh, I have not been
able to prepare myself for this lecture, my genius will
surely prompt me correctly at the right moment.” He was
to deliver this lecture in the Recreation Hall in Weimar. It
was a hot summer day. The windows had to be opened. And,
directly in front of this Recreation Hall there was a poultry
yard. Michael Bernays took his place and waited for his
genius to begin suggesting something to him. For indeed, all
Weimar knew that his genius must come and suggest his lecture
to him. And then, at this moment, while Bernays was waiting
for his genius, the cock outside began: cock-a-doodle-doo!
Now every one knew: Michael Bernays' genius has spoken for
him! — Feelings were strongly stirred. To be sure, in a
different way from what he wanted. But there was a certain
atmosphere in the hall.
I do not
recount this in order to tell you a neat anecdote, but
because I must call your attention to the following: the body
of a lecture must have been so formed that it is well worked
through meditatively in thoughts, and later formulated
freely, — but the introduction is really there for the
purpose of making oneself a bit ridiculous. That inclines the
listeners to listen to one more willingly. If one does not
make oneself a wee bit, ridiculous — to be sure, so
that its not too obvious, so that it flows down only into the
unconscious — one is unable to hold the attention in
the right way when delivering a single lecture. Of course, it
should not be exaggerated, but it will surely work
sufficiently in the unconscious.
What one should
really have for every lecture is this — that one has
verbally formulated the first, second, third, fourth, and at
most, the fifth sentences. Then one proceeds to the
development of the material that has been worked out in the
way I have just indicated. And one should have verbally
formulated the closing sentences. For, in winding up a
lecture, if one is a genuine lecturer, one should really
always have some stage fright, a secret anxiety that one will
not find one's last sentence. This stage fright is necessary
for the coloring of the lecture; one needs this in order to
captivate the hearts of the listeners at the end: —
that one is anxious about finding the last sentence. Now, if
one is to meet this anxiety in the right way, after one has
perspiringly completed one's lecture, let one add this to all
the rest of the preparation, that one bear in mind the exact
formulation of the last one, two, three, four — at
most, five — sentences. Thus, a lecture should really
have a frame: The formulation of the first and last
sentences. And, in between, the lecture should be free. As
mentioned, I give this as a guiding principle.
And now
perhaps, many of you will say: yes, but if one is not able to
lecture just that way? One need not therefore immediately say
that it would be so difficult, that one should not lecture at
all. It is indeed quite natural that one can lecture a bit
better or a bit worse, just so long as one does not let
oneself be deterred from lecturing because of all these
requirements: but one should make an effort to fulfill these
requirements, at the same time as one makes such guiding
principles as we develop here prevade all that he strives to
do.
And there is
indeed a very good means for becoming at least a bearable
lecturer, even if at first one is no lecturer, even the
opposite of a lecturer. I can assure you that when the
lecturer has made himself ridiculous fifty times, that his
lecture will come out right the fifty-first time. Just
because he made himself ridiculous fifty times. And he for
whom fifty times do not suffice, can undertake to lecture a
hundred times. For one day it comes right, if one does not
shy away from public exposure. One's last lecture before
dying will naturally never be good if one has previously
shied away from public exposure. But, at least the last
lecture before one's death will be good if one has
previously, during life, made oneself ridiculous an x number
of times. This is also something about which one should
really always think. And one will thus surely, without doubt,
train oneself to be a lecturer! To be a lecturer requires
only that people listen to one, and that one come not too
close to them, so to speak; that one really avoid anything
that comes too close to the people.
The manner in
which one is accustomed to talk in social life when
conversing with other people, that one will not find fitting
to use when delivering a lecture in public, or generally
speaking, to an audience. At most, one will be able to insert
sentences such as one speaks in ordinary life only now and
then. It is well to be aware that what one has as formulation
of one's speaking in ordinary life, is, as a rule, somewhat
too subtle or too blunt for a lecture to an audience. It just
does not set quite right. The way in which one formulates
one's words in the usual speaking, when addressing another
person, varies; it always swings between being somewhat crude
and, on the other hand, somewhat untruthful or impolite. Both
must be entirely avoided in a lecture delivered to an
audience, and, if used, then only in parenthesis, so to
speak. Otherwise the listener has the secret feeling: while
the lecturer begins to speak as one does in a lecture,
suddenly he starts declaiming, or speaking dialoguewise,
— he must intend either to offend us a bit or to
flatter us.
We must also
bring the will element into the lecture in the right way. And
this can only be accomplished by the preparation, but by such
preparation as uses one's own enthusiasm in thinking through
the material, enthusiasm which to a certain extent lives with
the material.
Now consider
the following: first one has completed the thought content,
made it one's own. The next part of the preparation would be
to listen, so to speak, to oneself inwardly lecturing on this
thought content. One begins to listen attentively to these
thoughts. They need not be formulated verbatim, as I have
already said, but one begins to listen to them. It is this
which puts the will element into the right position, this
listening to oneself. For while we listen to ourselves
inwardly, we develop enthusiasm or aversion, sympathy or
antipathy at the right places, as these responses follow what
we wish to impart. What we prepare in this will-like way also
goes into our wills, and appears during our lecturing in tone
variation. Whether we speak intensively or more softly,
whether we accentuate brightly or darkly, this we do solely
as the result of the feeling-through and willing-through of
our thought content in the meditative preparation.
All the thought
content we must gradually lead over into the forming of a
picture of the composition of our lecture. Then will the
thinking be embedded in the lecture, — not in the
words, but between the words: in the way in which the words
are shaped, the sentences are shaped, and the arrangement is
shaped. The more we are in a position to think about
‘the how’ of our lecture, the more strongly do
we work into the will of the others. What people will accept
depends upon what we put into the formulation, into the
composition of the lecture.
Were we to come
to them and say: “When all is said, every one of you
who does not do his utmost in order to realize the Threefold
Order tomorrow is a bad fellow” — that would
annoy people. However, when we present the sense of the
Threefold Order in a lecture that is composed in accordance
with the nature of its content, that it is inwardly organized
so that it is itself even a kind of intimate 'threefolding',
and especially even if it is so fashioned that we ourselves
are convinced of the necessity for the Threefold Order,
convinced with all our feeling and all our will
impulses — then this works upon the people, works upon
the will of the people.
What we have
done in the way of developing our thoughts, in order to make
our lecture into a work of art, this affects the will of the
people. What springs from our own will, what we ourselves
want, what fills us with enthusiasm, what enraptures us, this
affects more the thinking of the listeners, this stimulates
them more easily in their thoughts.
Thus it is that
a lecturer who is enthusiastic about his subject is easily
understood. A lecturer who composes artistically will more
easily stir the will of his listeners. But the main
principle, the chief guide line must still be this: That we
deliver no lecture that is not well prepared.
Yes, but when
we are compelled to deliver a lecture on the so-called spur
of the moment: when, for example, we are challenged and have
to answer immediately; then we certainly cannot turn back in
time to the preceding day when we brought the argument to
mind, in order to meditate on its counter-argument —
that cannot be done! And yet, it can be done! It can be done
in just such a moment by being absolutely truthful. Or we are
attacked by a person who accosts us in a terribly rude
manner, so that we must answer him immediately. Here we have
a strong feeling-fact at the outset! Thus, the feeling is
already stirred in a corresponding way. Here is a substitute
for what we otherwise use in order to experience with
enthusiasm what we first represent to ourselves in thought.
But then, if we say nothing else in such a moment except that
we as whole man can say at each moment when we are attacked
in this manner, then we are nevertheless prepared in a
similar way in this situation too.
Just in such
things it is a question of the unwavering decision to be
only, only, only truthful and when the attack is not such
that we are challenged to a discussion, then there are
present, as a rule, all the conditions for understanding. (
About this I shall speak later.) It is then actually a
question not of delivering mere lectures, but of doing
something quite different, which will be particularly
important for us if we wish to complete this course rightly.
For indeed, in order to be active in the sense that I
indicated today at the beginning, we shall have not merely to
deliver lectures, but every man of us, and of course every
woman, will also have to stand his ground in the discussion
period, come what may. And about this, much will have to be
said, in fact, very much.
Now I beg you
above all, to look at what I have said today from the point
of view that it indicates perhaps a bit the difficulty of
acquiring the art of lecturing. But it is quite especially
difficult when it is necessary not only to lecture, but even
to have to lecture about lecturing. Just think if one were to
paint painting, and sculpture sculpturing!
Thus, the task
is not altogether easy. But we shall nevertheless try in some
way to complete it within the next days.
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