Man's Fall and Redemption
by
Dr. Rudolf Steiner:
Dornach,
26th January, 1923.
In my last
lectures, I spoke of man's fall into sin and of an ascent from sin. I
spoke of this ascent as something that must arise in the present age from
human consciousness in general, as a kind of ideal for man's striving
and willing. I have pointed out the more formal aspect of the fall of
man, as it appears in the present time, by showing how the fall of
man influences intellectual life. What people say concerning the
limitations of our knowledge of Nature, really arises from the view
that man has no inner strength enabling him to reach the spiritual,
and that he must therefore renounce all efforts that might lift him
above earthly contemplation. I said that when people speak to-day of
the limits of knowledge, this is only the modern intellectual
interpretation of how man was cast down into sin; this was felt in
older times and particularly during the Middle Ages. To-day I should
like to speak more from a material aspect, in order to show that
modern humanity cannot reach the goal of the evolution of the earth,
if the views acquired in a more recent age — especially in the
course of an intellectual development — do not change. Through
the consciousness of sin, the general consciousness of to-day has, to
a certain extent, suffered this very fall of man. Modern
intellectualism already bears the marks of this fall and decay;
indeed, the decay is so strong that, unless the intellectual
civilisation of the present time changes, there is no hope of
attaining mankind's goal in the evolution of the earth. To-day it is
necessary to know that in the depths of the human soul forces are
living that are, as it were, better than the present state of the
consciousness of our civilisation. It is necessary to contemplate
quite clearly the nature of the consciousness of our
civilisation.
The
consciousness of our civilisation arose, on the one hand, from a
particular conception of the thinking human being, and, on the other
hand, from a particular conception of the willing human being. To-day
man uses his thinking chiefly in order to know as much as possible of
the outer kingdoms of Nature, and to grasp human life with the methods
of thinking gained through the usual way of looking at Nature. To-day
natural science teaches us to think, and we consider social life, too,
in the light of this thinking, acquired through the natural sciences as
they are known to-day.
Many people
believe that this conception of the thinking human being, of man who
observes Nature and thinks, is an unprejudiced conception. All kinds of
things are mentioned that science is unprejudiced, and so on. But
I have shown repeatedly that these arguments are not of much value.
For, everything that a thinker applies when he is bent on his
scientific investigations (according to which other people then
arrange their life) has evolved from earlier ways of thinking. Modern
thinking is the direct outcome of mediaeval thinking. I have pointed
out already that even the arguments of the opponents of mediaeval
thinking are thought out with the methods of thinking that have
evolved from mediaeval thinking. An essential trait of
mediaeval thinking which entered modern thinking is that the activity
of thought is contemplated only in the form in which it is applied in
the observation of the outer phenomena of Nature. The process of
thinking is ignored altogether and there is no philosophy leading to
the contemplation of thinking itself. No notice at all is taken of
the process of thought and of its inner living force.
The reason for
this lies in the considerations that I have already set forth. Once I said
that a modern man's thoughts on Nature are really corpses, all our thoughts
on the kingdoms of Nature are dead thoughts. The life of these
thought corpses lies in man's pre-earthly existence. The
thoughts that we form to-day on the kingdoms of Nature and on the
life of man are dead while we are thinking them; they were endowed
with life in our pre-earthly existence.
The abstract,
lifeless thoughts that we form here on earth in accordance with modern
habits of thinking were alive, were living elementary beings during our
pre-earthly existence, before we descended to a physical incarnation
on earth. Then, we lived in these thoughts as living beings, just as
to-day we live in our blood. During our life on earth, these thoughts
are dead and for this reason they are abstract. But our thinking is
dead only as long as we apply it to Nature outside: as soon as we
look into our own selves it appears to us as something living, for it
continues working there, within us, in a way which remains concealed
from the usual consciousness of to-day. There it continues to
elaborate what existed during our pre-earthly life. The forces that
seize our organism when we incarnate on earth, are the forces of
these living thoughts. The force of these living, pre-earthly
thoughts makes us grow and forms our organs. Thus, when the
philosophers of a theory of knowledge speak of thinking, they
speak of a lifeless thinking. Were they to speak of the true nature
of thinking; not of its corpse, they would realise the necessity of
considering man's inner life. There they would discover that the
force of thinking, which becomes active when a human being is born or
conceived, is not complete in itself and independent, because this
inner activity of thought is the continuation of the living force of
a pre-earthly thinking.
Even when we
observe the tiny child (I will not now consider the embryo in the mother's
body) and it's dreamy, slumbering life on earth, we can see the
living force of pre-earthly thinking in its growth and even in its
fretful tempers, provided we have eyes to see. Then we shall
understand why the child slumbers dreamily and only begins to think
later on. This is so, because in the, beginning of its life, when the
child does nothing but sleep and dream, thoughts take hold of its
entire organism. When the organism gradually grows firmer and harder,
the thoughts, no longer seize the earthly and watery elements in the
organism, but only the air element and the fire or warmth element.
Thus we may say that in the tiny child thought takes possession of
all four elements. The later development of a child consists in this,
that thought takes hold only of the elements of air and fire. When an
adult thinks, his force of thinking is contained only in the
continuation of the breathing process and of the process which
spreads warmth throughout his body.
Thus the force
of thinking abandons the firmer parts of the physical organism for the
air-like, evanescent, imponderable parts of the body. Thus thinking became
the independent element that it now is, and bears us through the life
between birth and death. The continuation of the pre-earthly force of
thinking asserts itself only when we are asleep, i.e. when the weaker
force of thinking acquired on earth no longer works in the warmth and
air of the body. Thus we may say that modern man will understand
something of the true nature of thinking only if he really advances
towards an inner contemplation of man, of himself. Any other theory
of knowledge is quite abstract.
If we bear
this in mind rightly we must say that whenever we contemplate the activity
that forms thoughts and ideas, our gaze opens out into pre-earthly
existence.
Mediaeval
thinking, still possessing a certain amount of strength, was not allowed
to enter pre-earthly existence. Man's pre-existence was declared dogmatically
as a heresy. Something that is forced upon mankind for centuries
gradually becomes a habit. Think of the more recent evolution of
humanity — take, for instance, the year 1413; people habitually
refrained from allowing their thoughts to follow lines that might
lead them to a pre-earthly existence, because they were not allowed
to think of pre-earthly existence. People entirely lost the habit of
directing their thoughts to a pre-earthly existence. If men had been
allowed to think of pre-earthly life (they were forbidden this, up to
1413), evolution would have taken quite another direction. In this
case we should very probably have seen this is a paradox, but it is
true indeed we may say that undoubtedly we should have seen that when
Darwinism arose in 1858, with its exterior theories on Nature's
evolution, the thought of pre-earthly existence would have flashed up
from all the kingdoms of Nature, as the result of a habit of thinking
that took into consideration a pre-earthly existence. In the light of
the knowledge of human pre-existence, another kind of natural science
would have arisen. But men were no longer accustomed to consider
pre-earthly life, and a science of Nature arose which considered man
— as I have often set forth — as the last link in the
chain of animal evolution. It could not reach a pre-earthly,
individual life, because the animal has no pre-earthly, individual
life.
Therefore we
can say: When the intellectual age began to dawn, the old conception of
the fall of mankind was responsible for the veto on all thoughts concerning
pre-existence. Then science arose as the immediate offspring of this
misunderstood fall of man. Our science is sinful, it is the direct
outcome of the misunderstanding relating to the fall of man. This
implies that the earth cannot reach the goal of its evolution as long
as the natural sciences remain as they are; man would develop a
consciousness that is not born of his union with a divine-spiritual
origin, but of his separation from this divine-spiritual origin.
Hence
present-day talk of the limitations of knowledge is not only a theoretical
fact, for what is developing under the influence of intellectualism
positively shows something that is pushing mankind below its level.
Speaking in mediaeval terms, we should say that the natural sciences
have gone to the devil.
Indeed,
history speaks in a very peculiar way. When the natural sciences and
their brilliant results arose (I do not mean to contest them to-day),
those who still possessed some feeling for the true nature of man were
afraid that natural science might lead them to the devil. The fear of that
time — a last remnant of which can be seen in Faust, when he says
farewell to the Bible and turns to Nature — consisted in this,
that man might approach a knowledge of Nature under the sign of man's
fall and not under the sign of an ascent from sin. The root of the
matter really lies far deeper than one generally thinks. Whereas in
the early Middle Ages there were all kinds of traditions consisting
in the fear that the devilish poodle might stick to the heels of the
scientist, mankind has now become sleepy, and does not even
think of these matters.
This is the
material aspect of the question. The view that there are limits to a
knowledge of Nature is not only a theory; the fall and decay of mankind,
due to its fall in the intellectual-empirical sphere, indeed exists
to-day.
If this were
not so, we should not have our modern theory of evolution. Normal methods
of research would show, reality would show the following: There
are, let us say, fish, lower mammals, higher mammals, man. To-day,
this represents more or less the straight line of evolution. But the
facts do not show this at all. You will find, along this whole line
of evolution, that the facts do not coincide.
Marvels are
revealed by a real scientific investigation of Nature; what scientists say
about Nature is not true. For, if we consider the facts without any
prejudice we obtain the following: Man, higher mammals, lower
mammals, fish. (Of course, I am omitting details.) Thus we descend
from man to the higher mammals, the lower mammals, etc. until we
reach the source of origin of all, where everything is spiritual, and
in the further evolution of man we can see that his origin is in the
spirit. Gradually man assumed a higher spirituality. The lower
beings, also, have their origin in the spirit, but they have not
assumed a higher spirituality. Facts show us this.
Man
Higher Mammals
Lower Mammals
Fish.
Correct views
of these facts could have been gained if human habits of thinking had not
obeyed the veto on belief in pre-existence or pre-earthly life. Then,
for instance, a mind like Darwin could not possibly have reached the
conclusions set forth above; he would have reached other
conclusions deriving from habits of thought, not from
necessities dictated by scientific investigation.
Goethe's theory
of metamorphosis could thus have been continued in a straight line. I
have always pointed out to you that Goethe was unable to develop his
theory of metamorphosis. If you observe with an unprejudiced mind how
matters stood with Goethe, you will find that he was unable to
continue. He observed the plant in its development and found the
primordial plant (Urpflanze). Then he approached the human being and
tried to study the metamorphosis of the human bones. But he came to a
standstill and could not go on.
If you peruse
Goethe's writings on the morphology of the human bony system you will see
that, on the one hand, his ideas are full of genius. The cleft skull
of a sheep which he found on the Lido in Venice, showed him that the
skull-bones are transformed vertebrae, but he could not develop
his idea further than this.
I have drawn
your attention to some notes that I found in the Goethe-Archives when I was
staying at Weimar. In these notes Goethe says that the entire human brain is
a transformed spinal ganglion. Again, he left it at this point. These
notes are jotted down in pencil in a note-book and the last
pencil-marks plainly show Goethe's discontent and his wish to go
further. But scientific research was not advanced enough for this.
To-day it is advanced enough and has reached long ago the point of
facing this problem. When we contemplate the human being, even
in his earliest embryonic stages, we find that the form of the
present skull-bones cannot possibly have evolved from the vertebrae
of the spine. This is quite out of the question. Anyone who knows
something of modern embryology argues as follows: what we see in man
to-day, does not justify the statement that the skull-bones are
transformed vertebrae. For this reason we can indeed say that when
Gegenbauer investigated this matter once more at a later date,
results proved that as far as the skull-bones and especially the
facial bones were concerned, matters stood quite differently from
what Goethe had assumed.
But if we know
that the present shape of the skull-bones leads us back to the bones of
the body of the preceding incarnation, we can understand this
metamorphosis. Exterior morphology itself then leads us into the
teaching of repeated lives on earth. This lies in a straight line
with Goethe's theory of metamorphosis. But the stream of evolution
that finally led to Darwin and still rules official science, cannot
advance as far as truth. For the misunderstood fall of man has ruined
thinking and has caused its decay. The question is far more serious
than one is inclined to imagine to-day.
We must realise
that the consciousness of mankind has changed in the course of time.
For instance, we may describe something as beautiful. But if we ask a
philosopher of today to explain what beauty is (for he should know
something about these things, should he not?), we shall receive the
most incredibly abstract explanation. “Beautiful” is a
word which we sometimes use rightly, instinctively, out of our
feeling. But modern man has not the slightest notion of what, for
instance, a Greek imagined when he spoke of the beautiful, in his
meaning of the word. We do not even know what the Greek meant by
“Cosmos.” For him it was something quite concrete. Take
our word “Universe.” What a confused jumble of thoughts
it contains! When the Greek spoke of the Cosmos, this word held
within it something beautiful, decorative, adorning, artistic.
The Greek knew that when he spoke of the whole universe he could not
do otherwise than characterise it with the idea of beauty.
Cosmos does not only mean Universe — it means Nature's order of
laws which has become universal beauty. This lies in the word
“Cosmos.”
When the Greek
saw before him a beautiful work of art, or when he wished to mould the form
of a human being, how did he set to work? By forming it in beauty. Even in
Plato's definitions we can feel what the Greek meant when he wished
to form the human being artistically. The expression that Plato used
means more or less the following: “Here on earth man is not at
all what he should be. He comes from heaven and I have so portrayed
his form that men may see in it his heavenly origin.” The Greek
imagined man in his beauty, as if he had just descended from heaven,
where of course, his exterior form does not resemble that of ordinary
human beings. Here on earth human beings do not look as if they had
just descended from heaven. Their form shows everywhere the
Cain-mark, the mark of man's fall. This is the Greek conception. In
our age, when we have forgotten man's connection with a pre-earthly,
heavenly existence, we may not even think of such a thing.
Thus we may
say that “beautiful” meant for the Greek that which reveals
its heavenly meaning. In this way the idea of beauty becomes concrete.
For us today it is abstract. In fact, there has been an interesting
dispute between two authorities on aesthetics — the
so-called “V” Vischer (because he spelt his name with a
“V”), the Swabian Vischer, a very clever man, who wrote
an important book on aesthetics (important, in the meaning of our
age), and the formalist Robert Zimmermann, who wrote another book on
aesthetics. The former, V-Vischer defines beauty as the manifestation
of the idea in sensible form. Zimmermann defines beauty as the
concordance of the parts within the whole. He defines it therefore
more according to form, Vischer more according to content.
These definitions
are really all like the famous personage who drew himself up into the air
by his own forelock. What is the meaning of the expression “the
appearance of the idea in sensible form?” First we must know
what is meant by “the idea.” If the thought-corpse that
humanity possesses as “idea” were to appear in physical
shape, nothing would appear. But when we ask in the Greek sense: what
is a beautiful human being? this does indeed signify something. A
beautiful human being is one whose human shape is idealised to such
an extent that it resembles a god. This is a beautiful man, in the
Greek sense. The Greek definition has a meaning and gives us
something concrete.
What really
matters is that we should become aware of the change in the content of
man's consciousness and in his soul-disposition in the course of time.
Modern man believes that the Greek thought just as he thinks now.
When people write the history of Greek philosophy — Zeller, for
instance, who wrote an excellent history of Greek philosophy
(excellent, in the meaning of our present age) — they write of
Plato as if he had taught in the 19th century at the Berlin
University, like Zeller himself, and not at the Platonic Academy.
When we have really grasped this concretely, we see how impossible it
is, for obviously Plato could not have taught at the Berlin
University in the 19th century. Yet all that tradition relates of
Plato is changed into conceptions of the 19th century, and people do
not realise that they must transport their whole disposition of soul
into an entirely different age, if they really wish to understand
Plato.
If we acquire
for ourselves a consciousness of the development of man's soul-disposition,
we shall no longer think it an absurdity to say: In reality, human
beings have fallen completely into sin, as far as their thoughts
about external Nature and man himself are concerned.
Here we must
remember something which people today never bear in mind — indeed,
something which they may even look upon as a distorted idea. We must
remember that the theoretical knowledge of to-day, which has become
popular and which rules in every head even in the farthest corner of
the world and in the remotest villages, contains something that can
only be redeemed through the Christ. Christianity must first be
understood in this sphere.
If we were
to approach a modern scientist, expecting him to understand that his
thinking must be saved by the Christ, he would probably put his hands to
his head and say: “The deed of Christ may have an influence on a great
many things in the world, but we cannot admit that it took place in
order to redeem man from the fall into sin on the part of natural
science.” Even when theologians write scientific books (there
are numerous examples in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, one
on ants, another on the brain, etc., and in most cases these books
are excellent, better than those of the scientists, because the style
is more readable), these books also breathe out, even more strongly,
the need of taking a true Christology seriously. This means that
particularly in the intellectual sphere we need a true ascent
from sin, which must work against man's fall.
Thus we see that
intellectualism has been contaminated by what has arisen out of the
misunderstandings relating to the consciousness of sin — not
out of the Fall as such, but from the misunderstandings with
regard to the consciousness of sin. This consciousness of sin,
which can be misunderstood so easily, must place the Christ in
the centre of the evolution of the earth, as a higher Being, and from
this point it must find the way out from the Fall. This requires a
deeper and more detailed study of human evolution, also in the
spiritual sphere.
You see,
if we study mediaeval scholasticism as it is usually studied to-day,
let us say as far back as Augustine, we shall achieve nothing. Nothing
can result, because nothing is seen except that the modern scientific
consciousness continues to evolve. The higher things, extending
beyond this, are ignored.
In this hall
I once tried to give an account of mediaeval scholasticism, showing all
the connections. I gave a short course of lectures on Thomism and all
that is connected with it. But it is a painful fact, and one that is
of little help to our anthroposophical movement, that such ideas are
not taken up. The relationship between the brilliant scientific
conditions of to-day and the new impulse which must enter science is
not sought. If this is not sought, then our scientific laboratories,
which have cost so much real sacrifice, will remain unfruitful.
For these,
progress would best be achieved by taking up such ideas and by avoiding
futile discussions on atomism. In all spheres of fact, modern science
has reached a point where it strives to cast aside the mass of sterile
thoughts contained in modern scientific literature. Enough is known
of the human being, anatomically and physiologically, to reach, by
the right methods of thoughts, even such a bold conclusion as that of
the metamorphosis of the form of the head from the bodily form of the
preceding life. Naturally, if we cling to the material aspect, we
shall not reach this point. Then we shall argue, very intelligently,
that the bones must in this case remain physical matter, in order
that they may undergo a gradual material metamorphosis in the grave!
It is important to bear in mind that the material form is an external
form and that it is the formative forces that undergo a
metamorphosis.
On the one
hand thinking has been fettered, because darkness has been thrown over
pre-existence. On the other hand, we are concerned with
post-existence, or the life after death. Life after death can be
understood only with the aid of super-sensible knowledge. If
super-sensible knowledge is rejected, life after death remains an
article of faith, accepted purely on the ground of authority. A real
understanding of the process of thinking leads to a pre-existent
life, provided such thoughts are not forbidden. A knowledge of
post-existent life can, however, only be acquired through
super-sensible knowledge. Here the method described in my
“Knowledge of the Higher Worlds”
must be introduced. But this method is rejected by the consciousness
of our times.
Thus two
influences are at work: on the one hand, the continued effects of the
decree prohibiting thought on man's pre-existence; on the other hand,
the rejection of super-sensible knowledge. If both continue to work,
the super-sensible world will remain an unexplored region, inaccessible
to knowledge, i.e. it will remain an article of faith, and
Christianity, too, will remain a matter of faith, not of knowledge.
And Science, that claims the name of “science,” will not
allow itself to have anything to do with the Christ. Thus we have our
present-day conditions.
At the beginning
of to-day's considerations, I said, with regard to the consciousness
that is filled to-day with intellectualism, that humanity has slipped
entirely into the consequences of the Fall. If this persists,
humanity will be unable to raise itself. This means that it will not
reach the goal of the evolution of the Earth. Modern science makes it
impossible to reach the goal of the evolution of the Earth.
Nevertheless, the depths of the human soul are still untouched: If
man appeals to these soul-depths and develops super-sensible
knowledge in the spirit of the Christ-impulse he will attain
redemption once more, even in the intellectual sphere redemption from
the intellectual forces, that have fallen — if I may express it
in this way — into sin.
Consequently,
the first thing which is needed is to realise that intellectual and empirical
scientific research must become permeated with spirituality. But this
spirituality cannot reach man as long as the content of space is
investigated merely according to its spatial relationships, and the
events taking place in the course of time are investigated merely in
their chronological sequence.
If you study
the shape of the human head, especially with regard to its bony structure,
and compare it with the remainder of the skeleton (skull-bones compared
to cylindrical bones, vertebrae and ribs) you will obtain no result
whatever. You must go beyond time and space, to conceptions formed in
spiritual science, for these grasp the human being as he passes from
one earthly life to another. Then you will realise that to-day we may
look upon the human skull-bones as transformed vertebrae. But
the vertebrae of the present skeleton of a human being can never
change into skull-bones in the sphere of earthly existence. They must
first decay and become spiritual, in order to change into skull-bones
in the next life on earth.
An instinctively
intuitive mind like Goethe's sees in the skull-bones the metamorphosis of
vertebrae. But spiritual science is needed in order to pursue this
intuitive vision as far as the domain of facts. Goethe's theory of
metamorphosis acquires significance only in the light of spiritual
science. For this reason it could not satisfy even Goethe. This is
why a knowledge gained through anthroposophical science is the only
one that can bring man into a right relationship to the Fall and the
re-ascent from sin. For this reason too, anthroposophical ideas are
to-day something which seeks to enter into human evolution not only
in the form of thoughts but as the content of life.
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