ANTHROPOSOPHY AND MODERN CIVILISATION
Dornach — January 14, 1923
My
dear friends,
Today I should like to continue the theme which we have studied
in the last two lectures. Firstly, it is a question of
realising those impulses in evolution which have led to the
spiritual life of our present age, so that we can see on
the one side the Anthroposophical view of the world as a
necessity, but on the other hand can fully understand that this
Anthroposophical view of the world must find its enemies.
Naturally I shall not now enter into the special
characteristics of this or that opponent, perhaps that is
comprehensible at the present time. Indeed, I want to deal with
our theme as generally as possible because it is not essential
for the moment to fix our minds on our opponents. Rather it is
essential for us at present to understand that if the
Anthroposophical Society is to exist as a Society, it must
become fully aware of its position in the spiritual life
of the day. Also, the Society itself must contribute something
towards its own consolidation. Therefore, I am not going to say
anything particularly new today. Only a few weeks ago I
emphasised the fact that consolidation of the Anthroposophical
Society is an absolute necessity.
So
first of all, it has to become clear to us how Anthroposophy is
placed in modern civilisation, a civilisation which, as regards
Europe and America, really only goes back to the time which we
have so often, discussed, the time of the 4th Post-Christian
century. Now this 4th Post-Christian century lies right in the
middle of the 4th Post-Atlantean epoch of time, and I have
often pointed out that the spreading of Christianity, —
the whole mood by which Christianity was grasped in the
early years of the first three or four centuries of Christian
evolution — was essentially different to the mood later
on in time.
Today we think that following history backwards, we can study
the previous epoch, that we can go back to the Middle Ages,
then to the events we call the Wanderings of the Peoples.
Further back we come to the Roman Empire, passing through that
we come to Greece, and then we imagine that we can feel the
same atmosphere in this Greece as we can feel in the time of
the Roman Emperors or in later European history.
But
that is not the case. In reality there lies a deep cleft
between that which can still be placed with a certain
vividness before the consciousness of modern man, namely,
his journey back to Rome; but a deep cleft exists between this
and that which took place as life in ancient Greece. Let us
bring an outline of this before our souls. If we study the
Greece of Pericles or Plato, or of Phidias, or even the Greece
of Sophocles and Aeschylus, we find that their basic mood of
soul goes back to a Mystery civilisation, to an ancient
spirituality. And, above all things, this Greece had still much
in itself of what I characterised yesterday as a living
experience of absolutely real processes in man's inner being,
and which I described as the salt, sulphur and mercury
processes. We must be quite clear that Greek thought and Greek
feeling came close to the feeling of man, whereas that later
age, — from the 4th Post-Christian century onwards
— already began to get ready for that which came about in
the way described in my last two lectures, in which I showed
how Man himself was lost for human nature, for human
consciousness.
I
also told you that these three personalities, Bruno, Jacob
Boehme and, in a certain connection also Lord Bacon, struggled
for a knowledge of man's nature, but that it was impossible for
their striving really to approach the Being of Man. If,
however, we go further back, from Rome to Greece, then this
alienation of man's nature — any talk or an alienation of
man's nature — ceased to have any sense, because the
ancient Greek knew himself as a human being standing in the
cosmos. The Greek had no idea of that concept of nature which
came about later, that concept of nature which finally
culminated in the seizing of the mechanism of nature. One might
say of the ancient Greek: — That he saw the clouds, the
rain falling, the clouds ascending and all that comes out of
the world as fluid; then when with especial vividness looking
into himself with his still sharply concrete vision, he saw the
circulation of his blood, he did not feel a very great
distinction between the rising and falling of water in Nature
and the movement of his own blood. The Greek could still grasp
something of `the world in man and man in the world.'
These things cannot be taken too deeply, because they lead into
a mood of soul which only exists in fragments of the external
history. One should not forget how, in the 4th Post-Christian
century, evolution took the form of destroying everything which
remained of the ancient clairvoyant civilisation. Certainly,
modern humanity knows something of this, because of all the
information which has been dug up, but one should not
forget how that which later gave the impulse to Western
civilisation really arose on the relics of ancient Hellenism,
of that widespread Hellenism which not only existed in the
South of Europe, but even passed over into Asia.
Again, one should not forget that between the middle of the 4th
and middle of the 5th centuries after Christ, countless temples
were burnt, having an infinitely significant pictorial content,
a precious content with reference to everything developed by
Hellenism. Our modern humanity, proceeding only according to
external documents, does not realise this anymore. But one
should recall the words of an author of that time, when he
wrote in one of his letters: — “This age is passing
to its downfall. All those holy places to be found in the open
country, and for the sake of which the labourers worked in
every field, are being destroyed. Where can the
countrymen now find joy for their work?” One can
hardly conceive today how much was destroyed between the middle
of the 4th and the middle of the 5th century after Christ,
Now
the destruction of those external monuments was part of the
effort to exterminate spiritual life in Greece, and this, as
you know, was given its most bitter blow by the closing of the
Schools of Philosophy in Athens in the year 529. Yes, one can
look back into ancient Rome, but one cannot look back into
ancient Greece through external history. And it is indeed true
that very many things in Western civilisation have come down to
us, through the Benedictine Orders, but we must not forget that
even the holy Benedict himself founded the Mother Church of the
Benedictine Order on the site of an old heathen Temple which
had been destroyed. All that had to disappear first, and it did
disappear.
Now, with normal human feelings, it is difficult to understand
why such an impulse for destruction passed over the whole of
the South of Europe, Asia Minor and North Africa at that time.
It only becomes comprehensible when one is convinced that the
consciousness of mankind in that age was entirely
different. I have often mentioned a sentence which is quite
incorrect: — “Nature, — or one may say, the
world, makes no leaps,” but in history such leaps do
occur and the soul mood of civilised humanity in the
2nd and 3rd centuries after Christ was
quite different to the soul mood of today.
But
now I should like to draw your attention to something which may
make it clearer to you as to how this transformation really
occurred. You see, today we must say when we speak of the
interchange between waking and sleeping, that the physical and
etheric bodies remain in the bed, while the ego and astral
bodies go outside. The soul and spirit go out of the physical
and etheric bodies.
Now
at a certain time in ancient India this was not true;
just the opposite would have been correct. Then one would have
said that in sleep the soul and spirit of man go deeper into
his physical body, more into his physical body.
Now
this fact is almost unnoticed, and I must point out to you how,
for instance, when the Theosophical Society was founded, the
people who founded it had heard some of the spiritual truths
from India, and what they heard they made their own property.
Now they heard this fact, of the ego and astral body going out.
Of course, because the Indians said it then, (i.e. when the
Theosophical Society was founded) naturally that was in
the 19th century, and in India what is real can be often
observed. But when these same people of the Theosophical
Society tell us that this is primeval Indian wisdom, it
is pure nonsense, because the ancient Indian would have said
just the opposite: That the soul and spirit go deeper into the
physical body when man sleeps. Which was the case in ancient
times.
Now
in a certain sense a consciousness of this was existing in
Greece, a consciousness of the fact that in sleep the soul and
spirit seize the physical body more than in waking, and that
this lies in the evolution of mankind.
Now
today, because we have to describe things out of our direct
spiritual perception, we must describe the following as
correct: — The ancient Wise Men, and even the people of
Greece, had an instinctive dreamy clairvoyance. And we can
describe it so from our modern standpoint, but for those people
it was not dreamy. They felt in their condition of clairvoyance
as if they were just waking up, they felt themselves especially
awake. And so, their consciousness existed with a greater
intensity when they perceived the world in those magnificent
pictures which I described to you in my last lectures. But they
knew that when they pressed down into the inner part of their
being and at the same time saw that which occurs in man, that
that which they beheld were world processes, because man
is in the world. And they knew then that in their time man
dived still deeper into his physical body, and in deep sleep
their consciousness became dim twilight, even unconsciousness.
And these people ascribed to the Influence of their physical
body that which embraces the soul and leads it over into
sin.
And
it was just from this point of view that the ancient
consciousness of sin arose. If we exclude the Jewish form
of sin, the consciousness of sin leads back into heathendom,
and it proceeded from the consciousness of the diving down into
the physical body which does not leave the soul free enough to
live in the spiritual world. But considering all that I am
describing to you, it must be said: — that ancient
humanity had a consciousness of the fact that he was a
spiritual being, and as a spiritual being, lived in a physical
body, but it never occurred to him. to call that MAN which he
saw as physical body.
Why, the very word MAN itself leads back to some such meaning
as “The Thinker.” Not to something which is to be
seen with a more or less red or white face, with two arms and
two legs. That was not a man! Man was a being who dwelt as a
spiritual soul in that dwelling house of the physical body. And
a consciousness of this spiritual psychic man, existing in the
wonderful, plastic, artistic forms in Greece, passed over into
the sphere of Art, and into the general Greek civilisation.
And
even if the external temples, even if the cult became
infinitely decadent in many connections, one must still say
that in all the divine images and temples which were destroyed,
much existed that points to this ancient soul mood. And I might
add that the ancient spiritual psychic consciousness of
humanity was shown with tremendous power in the form of
everything destroyed in those centuries. Now if with that
consciousness — not of the following incarnation when the
consciousness was changed — but if a Mystery Initiate of
that early Greek age came to us with the same consciousness
which he then had, he would say: — ”You modern
human beings, you are all asleep,” Indeed he would say:
— “You modern men are sleeping through everything.
We were awake, we woke up in our bodies. We woke up as
spiritual beings in our bodies; we knew that we were human
beings, because in our bodies we could distinguish ourselves
from the body. What you call waking, for us is sleeping,
because whereas you wake up and direct your attention to the
external world and explain something about the external world,
all the time you are asleep with regard to your own human
nature. You are asleep, we were awake.” That is what he
would say, and from a certain point of view he should be quite
right. We wake up from our moment of waking until we go to
sleep, as we say, when we are in our physical bodies as
spiritual human beings. But then we know nothing of ourselves,
we are asleep with regard to ourselves. When, however, we are
in the world outside us, we are asleep — and that
is the time from sleeping to waking up. Thus, it is that we
must learn to wake with the same intensity as that with which
the ancient humanity were awake in their bodies. That is,
modern man must learn to be awake outside his body when he is
really in the external world.
From this you can see that we are dealing with a transition. As
humanity, we have all gone to sleep compared with the ancient
waking condition, but now we are in just that period when
we have to be wakened up into a new waking state. What
is the aim of Anthroposophy in this connection? Anthroposophy
wants to be, Anthroposophy is nothing else than
something which points out to you that man must learn to wake
up outside of himself. And so, Anthroposophy comes along and
shakes up modern humanity, the modern humanity which that
ancient Initiate would have called a sleeping humanity,
Anthroposophy shakes it up, hut they do not want to wake.
Anthroposophy often feels like Gallus beside the sleeper
Stickl. (A reference to the Christmas Play just performed).
Anthroposophy points out that the birds in the forest are
singing. “Let them sing” says the present
generation, “the birds have tiny heads and have soon had
their ration of sleep.” Then Gallus goes on: “But
the heavens are creaking,” Stickl (who is half asleep),
“Let them go on creaking, they are old enough.” Of
course, it is not said in the same words, but Anthroposophy
says: — “The spiritual world wants to break
through! Get up while the light of the spirit is
shining.” The answer is: — “Let it go on
shining, it is old enough.”
My
dear friends, really it is so. Anthroposophy wants to awaken
the sleepers, because that is just what is demanded of modern
civilisation — an awakening — but humanity wants to
sleep, and to go on sleeping!
I
might say of Jacob Boehme — because he went right into
the racial wisdom, and of Giordano Bruno, because he stands in
a spiritual community which at that time had preserved so
much from ancient times — that in them there lived a
memory of the ancient waking condition.
In
Lord Bacon there really lived the impulse for the
justification of this new sleeping. That is, as I might
put it, a still deeper explanation than we were able to give in
the two preceding lectures and is the characteristic of our
age.
Now
with reference to the grasping of his own human nature, man of
the present day cannot be awake as was humanity in ancient
times, because man today does not press deep down into his
physical body as ancient humanity did when asleep; because
today when man goes to sleep he goes out of himself, but he
must learn to come out of his physical body in a waking
condition, for only thereby will he be in a position to realise
himself again in his human nature.
But
this impulse to continue asleep is still growing.
“Stickl, the carters are cracking their whips in the
street.” “Well, let them go on cracking, they have
not far to go.”
It
is du Bois Raymond, not Gallus, who says; — “Man
has limits of knowledge, he cannot enter into the phenomena,
the secrets of nature, he must limit himself.” But
Anthroposophy says; — “We must strive yet further
and further; the call for spirituality is already
resounding.” “Well” says du Bois Raymond,
“let it go on sounding, it won't be so very long before
Natural Science will have come to the end of earthly days and
therewith to the end of the discovery of all the secrets of
nature.”
My
dear friends, in many a relationship one thus finds a
justification for the sleep of humanity today, because
all talk of the limit of knowledge is a justification for sleep
instead of a justification for a penetration into one's
knowledge of human nature. And our present humanity can find
ways enough of going to sleep. Even of this we have often
spoken in our lectures. Today people only want to listen to
things which can be put before them in images, in pictures.
That is why the cinema is liked so much., but it is not popular
when the listeners are asked to work with their heads. And so
it is today that people want to go on dreaming of world
secrets, but do not want to co-operate actively with those
world secrets by means of energetic thinking. But that is just
the path of awakening — one begins to wake up in one's
thinking, because it is thought which first of all seeks to
evolve into activity. That is the reason why in my
“Philosophie der Freiheit” decades ago I pointed to
this kind of thinking with such energy.
And
now I should like to remind you of something else. I should
like you to call to mind many a dream which you have had, and I
should like to ask you whether you have never had a dream in
which you have done something of which you would have been
ashamed if you had done it in the daytime, — if you ever
did by day what you did in the dream. Well, perhaps there are
many sitting here who have never had such a dream, but at any
rate they could let other people tell them of such an
experience, because many people have dreamt of things they
would never repeat in their waking lives, because they would be
ashamed. My dear friends, apply that to our great sleep today
— which we call the great sleep of present civilisation
— where people really are letting themselves dream of all
kinds of cosmic secrets, Anthroposophy comes along and says:
— “Stickl, get up!” Anthroposophy wants to
wake the people, they ought to wake! I can give you this
assurance, — Many of the things that have been done in
this civilisation would never have been done if humanity had
been awake. That really is the case. You will say: — Who
is going to believe that? Well, the dreamer pursuing his little
business in his dreams, does not bother himself as to how that
is really going to look when he is awake, but unconsciously the
feeling exists somewhere in his soul that one really dare
not do such things if one were awake. I do not mean this in a
pedantic or a commonplace way, I just mean that many of the
things which one considers today as being quite in order
would look differently if one were really awake in one's
soul.
And
an unholy anxiety prevails in the soul because of this,
especially in science. (If one were awake one could no longer
comfortably dissect first a liver and next a brain.) One would
be terribly ashamed of many methods of investigation if one
were awake Anthroposophically. How can one ask people using
such methods to wake up without any further reason? One notices
many extraordinary apologies which exist for sleeping.
And
now I want you to think of something else. What an
immense pleasure a dreamer has when he dreams something which
actually happens, say a couple of days later. You must have
noticed yourselves the tremendous joy of a superstitious
dreamer when his dream actually happens; and it often happens,
and they all have this tremendous joy. In our present
civilisation dreamers calculate by Newton's laws of
gravitation, by formulae which have been worked out by
mathematicians, and they have calculated that Uranus has a
definite path in the heavens. But that path does not agree with
the formulae and therefore they go on dreaming; certain
disturbances must exist owing to a planet as yet
undiscovered. When this did happen, and when Dr. Gall really
discovered Neptune, the vision was fulfilled. Now this is just
what is so often brought forward today as a justification of
the methods of Natural Science.
The
existence of Neptune was calculated in a dream and later the
dream really happened. It is just like a person dreaming of
something which later on takes place. Then there is the
case of Mendaleff, who even calculated elements out of his
periodic system. But this dream of a curse is not quite so
difficult, because when such a periodical system is discovered
and one place in it is empty, then it is easy enough to fill up
that place and to mention a few properties. Here we have the
fulfilment of a vision by the same methods as when a sleeper
dreams of something which actually takes place a couple of days
later, and which, he then calls a verification of the fact. And
today people say that in this way the affair can be proved.
One
has to understand how radically our modern civilisation has
become the civilisation of sleepers and how necessary an
awakening is for humanity. At the same time this tendency to
sleep in our present age has to be seen very clearly by
those who have received an urge from Spiritual Science towards
waking. Such a moment must occur as sometimes in a dream when
the dreamer knows “I am dreaming,” and in the same
way humanity ought to have a special feeling for a strong
expression which was once used by that energetic philosopher
J.G. Fichte. Fichte said “The world which is spread out
before mankind is a dream and all that man thinks about the
world is a dream about a dream,” Of course one must not
fall into anything like the philosophy of Schopenhauer,
because, after all you are not doing very much for a human
being when you characterise everything in front of him as a
dream. It is not one's task merely to say: — “one
dreams,” that is not quite enough. But that is all that
many people of the present want to prove: — Man dreams
and cannot do anything else but dream. Then in one's dream one
comes to the limit of one's dream. And beyond the dream is what
Kant calls the “Thing in itself,” and one cannot
approach the thing in its reality. Edouard von Hartmann, that
acute thinker, often spoke of this kind of dreaming with
relation to reality. And Edouard von Hartmann makes it clear
that everything which man has in his consciousness is a dream
by the side of the Thing in Itself, of which man knows nothing,
but which lies at the basis of his dream. So that Hartmann, who
drives everything to extremes, speaks of the `real' table, in
contrast to the table which we have before us in our
sensations. The table we have in our consciousness is a dream,
and behind that stands the table in its reality. Hartmann
distinguishes between the table as appearance and the table in
itself; between the chair in appearance and the chair in
itself. But he is not fully conscious that finally the chair of
which he is speaking had something to do with the chair in
itself, because if you take the chair as appearance one
cannot very well sit down on it. Even a dreamer has to
have a bed to lie on. And so all this talk of “the Thing
in Itself” can only be a preparation for something else.
For what? For waking up, my dear friends.
And
so it is not a question of seeing the world as a dream, but, as
soon as we have the idea: — That is a dream! — we
must do something we must wake up; and this waking up already
begins with an energetic grasping of one's own thinking. It
begins with active thinking, and from that point one comes to
other things.
Now
you see, what I have characterised — this impulse for
awakening — is a necessary impulse for the present time.
Certainly that which as Anthroposophy can be presented to
the world; but however, when an Anthroposophical Society
becomes a Society, then that Society must represent a reality.
Then every single person who lives in the Anthroposophical
Society should feel it as a reality, and he must be
deeply permeated by the will to awake, and not, as is so often
the case, feel insulted if one says to him: —
“Stickl, stand up.” This is very necessary. And it
is something which I should like to repeat in a few words.
The
misfortune (i.e. the burning of the Bau) which has met us
should above all be an awakening call to the Anthroposophical
Society to do something that is a reality. This real
Being — which I have characterised at the end of the
Christmas Congress — this real Being (Wesen) which one
can feel since that time as “the living stream from man
to man within the Anthroposophical Society” that must
exist, a living stream from one to the other. A certain lack of
love has often appeared in the newest phases of our Society
instead of a mutual trust, and if this lack of love gets the
upper hand then the Anthroposophical Society must crumble. You
see, our building brought many wonderfully beautiful qualities
in the different Anthroposophists to the surface, but side by
side with them there had to be an invigoration of the Society
itself. Many of these beautiful qualities were named during our
course of lectures which were given during the building of the
Bau, and on the night of the burning of the Bau, but those
beautiful qualities require guidance, and above all things this
is necessary: — That anyone who has anything to do within
the Society should not carry into it those things, which today
are so customary outside it. And above all things, that each
one who does anything for the Society should do it with real
personal interest and participation. It is this personal
interest, this personal share that one misses when people do
one thing or another for our Society.
My
dear friends, no service for the Society — and that means
anything done in the Society by one person for another —
nothing can be trivial. The tiniest service rendered becomes
valuable through its standing in the service of something great.
That is so often forgotten, and the Society must really see
this with the greatest and highest satisfaction, at a time when
such a staggering blow demands the cultivation of these
most beautiful qualities in the members. But at the same time,
it should not be forgotten that in the industrious and patient
accomplishment of everyday things, much which is necessary is
overlooked. These are things which must not be undervalued when
one sees Anthroposophy finding its enemies in the world around
it. The fact that an enemy (Gegenschaft} is there, must not be
overlooked, rather must it be grasped out of the very objective
course of evolution itself. And I have often been astonished,
and have said so publicly, at the lack of interest when
opposition, taking its roots in objective untruth, develops
around us. We must really place ourselves as positive defenders
of Anthroposophy when it comes to a question of objective
untruth. And at the same time, we must be able to raise
ourselves to an understanding of the fact that Anthroposophy
can only exist in an atmosphere of truth. We must develop a
feeling of what it really means when so much untruth and so
much objective calumny is brought against Anthroposophy. And
for this we also need a real inner life. So you see, my dear
friends we have a splendid opportunity for awakening ourselves.
And if we can only reach the awakening in this sphere, then the
impulse for awakening will spread itself out over other
things.
But
if we see everyone asleep while the flames of untruth are
making themselves felt everywhere, then we must not be
surprised when even Stickl goes on sleeping?
So
that which I should like to characterise today, both in great
things and also in tiny things is: — “Think, feel
and meditate about this awakening.” So many today long
for esotericism while these calumniations are hailing on our
windows. Well, my dear friends, esotericism is there. Take hold
of it. But, above all things, the will to awake is esoteric in
our Society, and this will to awake must take its place within
the Anthroposophical Society. Then the will to awake within the
Society will be a point from which the awakening of the whole
present civilisation will radiate.
And
of this we shall speak further in our next lecture.
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