Five
WE HAVE
BEEN HEARING in recent lectures how fundamental impulses in the
development of history are expressed in such phenomena as the strange
custom in Egyptian culture of mummifying the human body and in the
modern age the preservation of ancient cults — which is also a
kind of “mummification”, in this latter case of ceremonies
and rites.
Thinking again of
Egyptian culture as expressed outwardly in the phenomenon of
mummification, we will combine the picture thus outlined with a theme
of which I have spoken recently and have frequently expounded here,
namely, the theme of ordinary human thinking, how this thought-activity
is exercised by man, how he gradually unfolds the faculty of thinking
during childhood, becomes to a certain degree accomplished in it during
his youth and then puts it into operation until his death. This
thinking, this intellectual activity, is a kind of inner corpse of the
soul. Thinking, as exercised by the human being in earthly life, is
viewed in the right light only when it is compared, as far as its
relation to the true being of man is concerned, with the corpse left
behind at death.
The principle, which
makes man truly man, departs at death, and something remains over in
the corpse, which can only have this particular form because a living
human being has left it behind him. Nobody could be so foolish as to
believe that the human corpse, with its characteristic form, could have
been produced by any play of nature, by any combination of
nature-forces. A corpse is quite obviously a remainder, a residue.
Something must have preceded it, namely, the living human being. Outer
nature has, it is true, the power to destroy the form of the human
corpse but not the power to produce it. This human form is produced by
the higher members of man's being — but they pass away at
death.
Just as we realise that
a corpse derives from a living human being, so the true conception of
thinking, of human thought, is that it cannot, of itself, have become
what it is in earthly life, but that it is a kind of corpse in the soul
— the corpse of what it was before the human being came down from
worlds of soul-and-spirit into physical existence on the earth. In
pre-earthly existence the soul was alive in the truest sense, but
something died at birth, and the corpse, which remains from this death
in the life of soul, is our human thinking. Those who have known best
what it means to live in the world of thought have, moreover, felt the
deathlike character of abstract thinking. I need only remind you of the
moving passage with which Nietzsche begins his description of
philosophy in the era of Greek tragedy. He describes how Greek thought,
as exemplified by pre-Socratic philosophers such as Parmenides or
Heraclitus, rises to abstract notions of being and becoming. Here, he
says, one feels the onset of an icy coldness. And it is so indeed.
Think of men of the
ancient East and how they tried to comprehend outer nature in living,
inwardly mobile pictures, dreamlike though these pictures were. In
comparison with this inwardly mobile, live thinking, which quickened
the whole being of man and blossomed forth in the Vedanta philosophy,
the abstract thinking of later times is veritably a corpse. Nietzsche
was aware of this when he felt an urge to write about those
pre-Socratic philosophers who, for the first time in the evolution of
humanity, soared into the realm of abstract thoughts.
Study the sages of the
East who preceded the Greek philosophers and you will find in them no
trace of any doubt that the human being lived in worlds of
soul-and-spirit before descending to the earth. It is simply not
possible to experience thinking as a living reality and not believe in
the pre-earthly existence of man. To experience living thinking is just
like knowing a living human being on earth. Those who no longer
experienced living thinking — and this applies to Greek
philosophers even before the days of Socrates — such men may,
like Aristotle, have doubts about the fact that the human being does
not come into existence for the first time at birth. And so a
distinction must be made between the once inwardly mobile and living
thinking of the East wherewith it was known that man comes down from
spiritual worlds into earth-existence, and the thinking that is a
corpse, bringing knowledge only of what is accessible to man between
birth and death.
Try to put yourselves in
the position of an Egyptian sage, living, let us say, about 2000
B.C.. He would have said: Once upon a time, over
in the East, men experienced living thinking. But the Egyptian sage was
in a strange situation; his life of soul was not like ours today;
experience of living thinking had faded away, was no longer within his
grasp, and abstract thinking had not yet begun. A substitute was
created by the embalming of mummies whereby, in the way I have
described, a picture, a concept of the human form was made possible.
Men trained themselves to unfold a picture of the dead human form in
the mummy and began, for the first time, to develop abstract, dead
thinking. It was from the human corpse that dead thinking first came
into existence.
The counterpart of this
in modern times is that in occult societies here and there, rituals,
cults and ceremonial enactments once filled with living reality have
been preserved as dead traditions. Think only of rituals that you may
have read, perhaps those of the Freemasons. You will find that there
are ceremonies of the First Degree, the Second Degree, the Third
Degree, and so forth. All of them are learnt, written or enacted in an
external way. Once upon a time, however, these cults were charged with
life as real as the life-principle working in the plants. Today, the
ceremonies and rites are dead forms. Even the Mystery of Golgotha was
only able to evoke in certain priestly natures here and there, those
inner, living experiences which sometimes arose in connection with
rites of the Christian Churches after the time of Christ. But up to now
mankind has not been able to infuse real life into ceremonies and rites
— and indeed something else is necessary here.
All present-day thinking
is directed essentially to the dead world. In our time there is simply
no understanding of the nature of the living thinking which once
existed. The intellectualistic thinking current since the middle of the
fifteenth century of our era is, in very truth, a corpse and that is
why it is applied only to what is dead in nature, to the mineral
kingdom. People prefer to study plants, animals and even the human
being, merely from the aspect of mineral, physical, chemical forces,
because they only want to use this dead thinking, this corpse of
thoughts indwelling the purely intellectualistic man.
In the present series of
lectures I have mentioned the name of Goethe. Goethe was, as you know,
a member of the community of Freemasons and was acquainted with its
rites. But he experienced these rites in a way of which only he was
capable. For him, real life flowed out of the rites which, for others,
were merely forms preserved by tradition. He was able to make actual
connection with that spiritual reality of being, which flowed in the
way described from pre-earthly into earthly existence and which, as I
said, always rejuvenated him. For Goethe underwent actual rejuvenation
more than once in his life. It was from this that there came to him the
idea of metamorphosis
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— one of the most significant thoughts in the
whole of modern spiritual life and the importance of which is still not
recognised.
What had Goethe actually
achieved when he evolved the idea of metamorphosis? He had re-kindled
an inwardly living thinking, which is capable of penetrating into the
cosmos. Goethe rebelled against the botany of Linnaeus in which the
plants are arranged in juxtaposition, each of them placed in a definite
category and a system made out of it all. Goethe could not accept this;
he did not want these dead concepts. He wanted a living kind of
thinking, and he achieved it in the following way. First of all he
looked at the plant itself and the thought came to him that down below
the plant develops crude, unformed leaves, then, higher up, leaves
which have more developed forms but are transformations, metamorphoses
of those below; then come the flower-petals with their different
colour, then the stamens and the pistil in the middle — all being
transformations of the one fundamental form of the leaf itself. Goethe
did not say: Here is a leaf of one plant and here a leaf of another,
different plant.
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He did not look at the plant in this way, but said: The fact that one
leaf has a particular shape and another leaf a different shape, is a mere
externality. Viewed inwardly, the matter is as follows. The leaf itself
has an inner power of transformation, and it is just as possible for it
to appear outwardly in one shape as in another. In reality there are
not two leaves, but one leaf, in two different forms of manifestation.
A plant has the green leaf below and the petal above. Intellectualistic
pedants say: “The leaf and the petal are two quite different
things.” Nothing could be more obvious, as far as the pedants are
concerned, for the one form is red and the other green. Now if someone
wears a green shirt and a red jacket — here there is a real
difference. As regards clothing, at any rate in the modern age,
philistinism prevails and is, moreover, in its right place. In that
domain one cannot help being a philistine. But Goethe realised that the
plant cannot be comprised within such theories. He said to himself: The
red petal is the same, fundamentally, as the green leaf; they are not
two separate and distinct phenomena. There is only one leaf,
manifesting in different formations. The same force works, sometimes
down below and sometimes higher up. Down below it works in such a way
that the forces are, in the main, being drawn out of the earth. Here
the plant is drawing forces from the earth, sucking them upwards, and
the leaf, growing under the influence of the earth-forces, becomes
green. The plant continues to grow; higher up the sun's rays are
stronger than they are below, and the sun has the mastery. Thus the
same impulse reaches into the sphere of the sunlight and produces the
red petals.
Goethe might have spoken
somewhat as follows. Suppose a man who has nothing to eat sees another
who has quantities of food and gets envious, literally pale with envy.
Another time someone gives him a blow and then he reddens. According to
the principle that speaks of two distinct and different leaves, it
might be argued: Here are two men — two, because one is pale and
the other is red. Just as little as there are two men, one who is red
on account of a blow and the other who is pale because of envy —
as little are there two leaves. There is one leaf; at one place
it has a particular form, at another place a different form. Goethe did
not regard this as particularly wonderful for, after all, a man can run
from one place to another and the men you will see in different places
are certainly not two different persons. Briefly, Goethe realised that
this observation of things in strict juxtaposition is not truth but
illusion, that there is only one leaf — green at one place, red
at another; and he applied to the different plants the same principle
he applied to the several parts of the single plant. Think of the
following. Suppose some plant lives in favourable conditions. Out of
the seed it forms a root, a stem, leaves on the stem, then petals,
stamens and pistil within the stamens. Goethe maintained that the
stamens too are only different formations of the leaf. He might also
have said: Intellectualists argue that, after all, the red petals are
wide and the stamen as thin as a thread, except perhaps for the anther
at the top. In spite of this, Goethe maintained that the wide flower
petal and the slender stamen are only different formations of one and
the same fundamental leaf. He might have asked: Have you not noticed
some person who at one time in his life was as thin as a reed and
afterwards became very stout? There were certainly not two different
people. Petals and stamens are basically one, and the fact that they
are situated at two different places on the plant is immaterial. No man
can run swiftly enough to be in two places at once, although the story
goes that a clever banker in Berlin when he was being pestered on all
sides, once exclaimed: “Do you think I am a bird which can be in
two places at once?” ... A human being cannot be in two places
simultaneously. The point here is that Goethe was seeking everywhere
for manifestations of the principle of metamorphosis, of the unity
within multiplicity, of the unity within the manifold. And thereby he
imbued the concept with life.
If you grasp what I have
now said, my dear friends, you will grasp the idea of Spirit. I have
said that the whole plant is really a leaf manifesting in different
formations. This cannot be pictured in the physical sense; something
must be grasped spiritually — something that transforms
itself in every conceivable way. It is spirit that is living in the
plant kingdom. Now we can go further. We can take a plant that is
normal and healthy because its seed has been properly placed in the
earth, it has absorbed the gentle sun of spring, then the full summer
sun and has been able to develop its seeds under the weakening sun of
autumn. But suppose a plant exists in such conditions of nature that it
has no time to develop a root, an adequate stem, leaves or petals, but
is obliged to unfold very rapidly — so rapidly indeed that
everything about it lacks definition. Such a plant becomes a mushroom,
a fungus.
There you have two
extremes: a plant that has time to differentiate into all its detailed
parts, to develop roots, stem, leaves, flowers, fruit; and a plant
placed in such conditions of nature that it has no time to form a root,
with the result that everything about it remains indication only; it
cannot develop stem and leaves, and is obliged to unfold rapidly and
without definition the principle underlying the formation of petals,
fruit and seed. Such a plant only just manages to take its place in the
earth and unfolds with amazing rapidity what other plants unfold
slowly. Think, for example, of the corn poppy. After slowly putting out
its green leaves it can proceed to unfold its petals, then the stamens,
then the jaunty pistil in the centre. But a mushroom must do all this
very rapidly; there is no time for differentiation, no time for
exposure to the sun, which would bring the beautiful colours, because
the sun is absent during its brief period of development. In the
mushroom we have a flower without definition; development has taken
place far too rapidly. Here, too, there is fundamental unity. Two quite
different plants are basically the same.
But before all this can
be really thought through, one must change a little, inwardly. An
intellectualist — Goethe might have said, a “rigid
philistine” — looks at a poppy with its sappy, red flower
and well-developed pistil in the centre. What he really ought to do is
at the same time to look at a mushroom and keep the concept he has
formed of the poppy so mobile and flexible that he is able to see
within the poppy itself, in tendency at least, some kind of mushroom or
toadstool. But that, of course, is asking too much of a pedant. You
will have to place before him the actual mushroom so that his intellect
may drag itself away from the poppy without inner exertion, without
being kindled to life — for all he need do is to incline his head
very slightly. Then he will be able to visualize the one object beside
the other separately, and all is well!
Such is the difference
between dead thinking and the inwardly alert, live thinking unfolded by
Goethe in connection with the principle of metamorphosis. He enriched
the world of thought by a glorious discovery. For this reason, in the
Introductions to Goethe's works on Natural Science which I wrote in the
eighties of last century, you will find the sentence: Goethe is both
the Galileo and the Copernicus of the science of organic nature, and
what Galileo and Copernicus achieved in connection with dead, outer
nature, namely, clarification of the concept of nature to enable it to
embrace both the astronomical and the physical aspects, Goethe achieved
for the science of organic nature with his living concept of
metamorphosis. Such was his supreme discovery.
This concept of
metamorphosis can, if desired, be applied to the whole of nature. When
a picture of the plant-form came to Goethe out of this concept of
metamorphosis, it immediately occurred to him that the principle must
also be applicable to the animal. But this is a more difficult matter.
Goethe was able to conceive of one leaf proceeding from another; but he
found it much more difficult to picture the form of one of the spinal
vertebrae, for instance, being metamorphosed, transformed, into a bone
of the head — which would have meant the application of the
principle of metamorphosis to the animal and also to the human being.
Nevertheless Goethe was partially successful in this too, as I have
often told you. In the year 1790, while he was walking through a
graveyard in Venice, he was lucky enough to come across a sheep's
skull, the bones of which had fallen apart in a way very favourable for
observation. As he examined these animal bones the thought dawned upon
him that they looked like spinal vertebrae, although greatly
transformed. And then he conceived the idea that the bones, at least,
can also be pictured as representing one, basic bone-creating impulse,
which merely manifests in different forms.
With respect to the
human being, however, Goethe did not get very far because he did not
succeed in passing on from his idea of metamorphosis to real
Imagination. When real Imagination advances to Inspiration and
Intuition, the principle of uniformity is revealed still more
strikingly. And I have already indicated how this uniformity is
revealed in the being of man when the concept of metamorphosis is truly
understood. When Goethe contemplated the dicotyledons and visualised
the flowers of such plants in simpler and more and indefinite forms, he
could finally see them as a mushroom or fungus. And from this same
point of view, when we study the human head, we can conceive of it as a
metamorphosis of the rest of the skeleton.
Try to look at one of
the lower jaws in a human skeleton with the eye of an artist. You will
hardly be able to do otherwise, than compare it with the bones of the
arm and of the leg. Think of the leg bones and arm bones transformed
and then, in the lower jaws, you have two “legs”, except
that here they have stultified. The head is a lazybones that never
walks, but is always sitting. The head “sits” there on its
two stultified legs. Imagine a man in the uncomfortable position of
sitting with his legs bound together by some kind of cord, and you have
practically a replica of the formation of the jaws. Look at all this
with the eye of an artist and you can easily imagine the legs becoming
as immobile as the lower jawbones — and so on.
But the truth of the
matter is realised for the first time when the human head is conceived
as a transformation of the rest of the body. I have told you that the
head of our present earth-life is the transformed body (the body apart
from the head) of our previous earth-life. The head, or rather the
forces of the head, as they then were, have passed away. In some cases
indeed they actually pass away during life! The head — I am
speaking, of course, of forces, not substances — the forces of
the head are not preserved; the forces now embodied in your head were
the forces which were embodied in the other parts of your body in your
previous life. In that life, again, the forces of the head were those
of the body of the preceding life; and the body that is now yours will
be transformed, metamorphosed, into the head of the future earth-life.
For this reason the head develops first. Think of the embryo in the
body of the mother. The head develops first and the rest of the
organism, being a new formation, affixes itself to the head. The head
derives from the previous earth-life; it is the transformed body, a
form that has been carried across the whole span of existence between
death and a new birth; it then becomes the head-structure and attaches
to itself the other members. Accepting the fact of repeated earthly
lives, we can thus see the human being as a metamorphosis recently
perfected. The idea of plant-metamorphosis discovered by Goethe at the
beginning of the eighties of the eighteenth century leads on to the
living concept of development through the whole animal kingdom up to
the human being, and contemplation here leads on to the idea of
repeated earthly lives.
Goethe's participation
in the ceremonial enactments of the cult to which he belonged was
responsible for this inner quickening in his life of thought. Although
it was not fully clear to his consciousness, he nevertheless had an
inkling of how the human being, still living entirely as a soul in
pre-earthly life, carries over forces which have remained from the
bodily structure of the previous earth-life and which, having entered
into the present life, develop within the protective sheaths of the
mother's body into the head structure.
Goethe did not know this
consciously but he had an inkling of it and applied it, in the first
place, to the simplest phenomena of plant life. Because the time was
not ripe, he could not extend the principle to the point that is
possible today, namely to the point where the metamorphosis of the
human being from one earth-life over to the next can be understood. As
a rule it is said, with a suggestion of compassion, that Goethe evolved
this idea of metamorphosis because, owing to his artistic nature,
something had gone wrong with him. Pedants and philistines speak like
this out of compassion. But those who are neither pedants nor
philistines will realise with joy that Goethe knew how to add the
element of art to science and precisely because of this was able to
make his concepts mobile. Pedants insist, however, that nature cannot
be grasped by this kind of thinking; strictly logical concepts are
necessary, they say, for the understanding of nature. Yes, but what if
nature herself is an artist ... presuming this, the whole of natural
science which excludes art and bases itself only upon the concepts of
logical deduction might find itself in a position similar to one of
which I once heard when I was talking to an artist in Munich. He had
been a contemporary of Carriere, the well-known writer on Aesthetics.
We began, by chance, to speak about Carriere and this man said:
“Yes, when we were young, we artists used not to attend
Carriere's lectures; if we did go once, we never went again; we called
him ‘the aesthetic rapture-monger’.” Now just as it
might be the fate of a writer on Aesthetics to be called a
“rapture-monger” by artists, so, if nature herself were to
speak about her secrets she might call the strictly logical
investigator ... well, not a rapture-monger, but a misery-monger
perhaps, for nature creates as an artist. One cannot order nature to
let herself be comprehended according to the laws of strict logic.
Nature must be comprehended as she actually is.
Such, then, is the
course of historical evolution. Once upon a time, in the ancient East,
concepts and thoughts were full of life. I have described how, to begin
with, these living concepts became actual perception through a
metamorphosis of the breathing process. But human beings were obliged
to work their way through to dead, abstract concepts. The Egyptians
could not reach this stage but forced themselves in the direction of
dead concepts through contemplating the human being himself in the
state of death, in the mummy. We, in our day, have to awaken concepts
to new life. This cannot happen by the mere elaboration of ancient,
occult traditions, but by growing into, and moreover elaborating, the
living concept which Goethe was the first to evolve in the form of the
idea of metamorphosis. Those who are masters of the living concept, in
other words, those who are able to grasp the Spiritual in their life of
soul — they are able, out of the Spirit, to bring a new and
living impulse into the external actions of men. This will lead to
something of which I have often spoken to Anthroposophists, namely,
that men will no longer stand in the laboratory or at the operating
table with the indifference begotten by materialism, but will feel the
secrets revealed by nature to listening ears as deeds of the Spirit
which pervades and is active in her. Then the laboratory table will
become an altar. Forces leading to progress and ascent will not be able
to work in the evolution of humanity until true reverence and piety
enter into science, nor until religion ceases to be a mere bolster for
human egoism and to be regarded as a realm entirely distinct from
science. Science must learn, like the pupils of the ancient Mysteries,
to have reverence for what is being investigated. I have spoken of this
in the book Christianity as Mystical Fact. All research
must be regarded as a form of intercourse with the spiritual world and
then, by listening to nature we shall learn from her those secrets,
which in very truth promote the further evolution of humanity. And then
the process of mummification — which was once a necessary
experience for man — will be reversed. The Egyptians embalmed the
human corpse, with the result that even now we can witness the almost
terrifying spectacle of whole series of mummies being brought by
Europeans from Egypt and deposited in museums. Just as human thinking
was once rigidified as the outcome of the custom of mummification, so
it must now be awakened to life.
The ancient Egyptians
took the corpses of men, embalmed them, conserved death. We, in our
day, must feel that we have a veritable death of soul within us if our
thoughts are purely abstract and intellectualistic. We must feel that
these thoughts are the mummy of the soul, and learn to understand the
truth glimpsed by Paracelsus when he took some substance from the human
organism and called this the “mummy”. In the tiny material
residue of the human being, he saw the mummy. Paracelsus did not need
an embalmed corpse in order to see the mummy, for he regarded the mummy
as the sum-total of those forces which could at every moment lead man
to death if new life did not quicken him during the night.
Dead thinking holds sway
within us; our thinking represents death of soul. In our thinking we
bear the mummy of the soul which produces precisely those things that
are most prized in modern civilisation. If we have a wider kind of
perception, the kind of perception, for example, which enabled Goethe
to see metamorphoses, we can go through rooms where mummies are
exhibited in museums and then out into the streets and see the same
thing there ... it is merely a question of the level from which we are
looking, for in the modern age of intellectualism there is little
difference — the fact that mummies do not walk as human beings
walk in the streets, is only an externality. The mummies in the museums
are mummies of bodies; the human beings who walk about the streets in
this age of intellectualism are mummies of soul because they are filled
with dead thoughts, with thoughts that are incapable of life.
Primordial life was rigidified in the mummies of Egypt and this
rigidified life of soul must be quickened again for the sake of the
future of mankind. We must not continue to study anatomy and physiology
in the way that has hitherto been customary. This was permissible among
the ancient Egyptians when corpses of the physical human being lay
before them. We must not further mummify the corpse of abstract
soul-life we bear in our intellectualistic thinking. There is a real
tendency today to embalm thinking so that it becomes pedantically
logical, without a single spark of fiery life.
Photographs of mummies
are as rigid and stiff as the mummy itself. A typical standard work
today on some branch of modern knowledge is a photograph, an image of
the mummified soul; in this case it is the soul that has been embalmed.
And if doubt arises because as well as the intellect which is certainly
mummified, human beings have other characteristics, all kinds of bodily
and other urges, for instance, so that the picture of the mummy is not
very clear ... nevertheless it is there, unmistakably, in standard text
books. The embalming process in such writings is very perceptible. This
embalming of thought must cease. Instead of the embalming process
applied by the Egyptians to the mummies, we need something different,
namely, an elixir of life — not as many people think of
this today, as a means of perfecting the physical body, but in a form
which makes the thoughts alive, which de-mummifies them. When we
understand this we have a picture of a profoundly significant impulse
in historical evolution. It is a picture of how spiritual culture was
once rigidified in the embalming of mummies and of how an elixir of
spirit and soul must be poured into all that has been mummified in
modern man in the course of his education and development, so that
culture may flow onwards to the future. There are two forces: one
manifests in the Egyptian custom of embalming and the other in the
process of “de-embalming” which modern man must learn to
apply.
To learn how to
“de-embalm” the dead, rigid forces of the soul — this
is a task of the greatest possible significance today. Failure to
achieve it produces phenomena of which I gave one example here a short
time ago. A man like Spengler realised that rigidified concepts and
thoughts will not do, that they lead to the death of culture. In an
article in Das Goetheanum I showed what really happened to
Spengler. He realised that concepts were dead, but his own were not
living! His fate was the same as that of the woman in the Old Testament
who looked behind her. Spengler looked at all the dead, mummy-like
thoughts of men and he himself became a pillar of salt. Like the woman
in the Old Testament, Spengler became a pillar of salt, for his
concepts have no more life in them than those of the others.
There is an ancient
occult maxim that “wisdom lives in salt” ... but only when
the salt is dissolved in human mercury and human phosphorus. Spengler's
wisdom is wisdom that has rigidified in salt. But the mercury that
brings the salt into movement, making it cosmic, universal — this
is lacking; and phosphorus, too, is lacking in a still higher degree.
For when one reads Spengler with feeling, above all with artistic
feeling, it is impossible for his ideas to kindle inner enthusiasm,
inner fire. They all remain salt-like and rigid and even produce a
bitter taste. One has to be pervaded inwardly by the mercurial and
phosphoric forces if it is a question of “digesting” this
lump of salt that calls itself The Decline of the West. But it
cannot really be digested ... I will not enlarge upon this particular
theme because in polite society one does not mention what is done with
indigestible matter! What we have to do is to get away from the salt,
away from rigidity, and administer an elixir of life to the mummified
soul, to our abstract, systematized concepts. That is the task before
us.
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