Lecture I
11th March 1923.
From our studies here you know that since
the 15th century mankind has been living in the Age of
Consciousness
[note 1]
when it is essential
for any individual who wishes to keep pace with evolution to
be enlightened about certain facts. Otherwise he cannot
possibly find his bearings amid the conditions of social life
today. His intercourse with other people and the different
relationships developing in life, especially between human
beings of different ages, the old with the young and the
young with the old, bring him experiences that remain
incomprehensible if he cannot grasp what spiritual-scientific
knowledge contributes to every aspect of man's existence on
this Earth.
We will study
in greater detail a fact already well known to us, namely,
that the four members of man's being discernible in the
ordinary way — physical body, etheric body, astral body
and ego — are directly connected with each other during
the hours of waking life only. The physical body is closely
linked with the etheric body on the one side and, on the
other, the astral body and ego are separated during sleep
from the former two members.
When we are
looking at a human being he stands there before us in his
physical body which has received its stamp from the etheric
body. It is certainly correct to say this, for everything
whereby one human being is revealed to another is due, not to
the physical body alone but to the activity of the etheric
body or body of formative forces within the physical body. It
is therefore the living content of the physical and etheric
bodies that reveals one human being to another on Earth. But
what is determined in the depths of the ego, and is astir in
the astral body, eludes outer observation and even for the
individual himself passes into obscurity between the moments
of going to sleep and waking.
This division
of his being which happens to man at least once a day in the
ordinary course is of fundamental significance for his whole
life. Our senses and intelligence make it evident that from
birth to death his physical body and etheric body undergo
evolution.
From what
comes to expression in the child, to begin with in his
instinctive, imitative life and later in the life unfolding
under the authority of his elders — from all this the
human being evolves to a stage of greater self-dependence.
Thus the different stages of growth, stages in the outer
formation of the physical body, in what comes to expression
in speaking, in thinking, in whatever is revealed through the
physical body — although in reality it is all an
expression of the life of soul — in all this a process
of evolution is in evidence from birth to death.
The other
evolutionary process — that of the ego and astral body
between birth and death — does not become manifest in
the same way. When a human being descends into life on Earth,
many of the forces that were active in him in the spiritual
world are still at work within him. During the stage of early
growth, during the very obvious process of the child's bodily
development, forces which in their full strength and true
character work in pre-earthly life on the soul, through the
soul and in the spirit of the human being, are still active.
They are present in a weakening phase during childhood but
they operate in the process of growth, in everything that
develops gradually as a bodily expression of the soul. And
deeply hidden in the bodily nature there are also corporeal
expressions of the soul, for example the elaboration of the
brain into the perfected organ of thinking, the elaboration
of the vascular system underlying feeling, and so forth.
But these
echoes of the forces of the pre-earthly life become
progressively weaker and eventually reach their lowest ebb,
the point at which, in respect of these pre-earthly forces,
the human being comes to a standstill for the rest of his
life. True, this lowest point is not reached until the
'twenties of earthly life; but then it is unmistakable. The
soul is then affected more strongly by the forces stemming
from the developed physical body; the individual is no longer
subject to such an extent to the echoings of the pre-earthly
life but is now more under the influence of the capacities
acquired by the physical body and of what in turn works back
upon the soul from the physical body.
But if we were
to observe with equal clarity the evolution of the ego and
astral body we should reach definite conclusions about this
process, just as in the case of the evolution of the physical
and the etheric bodies from birth to death. We should say: In
childhood the human being has an astral body and an ego in
which changes are obvious during the years of his earthly
life. We must of course also consider the changes that take
place in the spirit and soul of the human being which emerge
from the physical and etheric bodies during sleep. If as well
as observation of a human being during his waking hours the
ego and astral body could be observed from the moment of
going to sleep to the moment of waking, two biographies of
the individual would be available, both of equal importance
in the life as a totality. Indeed the evolution taking place
during the life of sleep is actually more important than that
connected with the waking life for certain forces in the
human being, but observation of the ego and the astral body
is beyond the power of ordinary perception.
We will now
consider a particularly important factor in the evolution of
the ego and the astral body. This factor is due to the
rôle played in human life by speaking, by speech in
general — not this or that particular language.
The whole man
in waking life participates in the act of speaking. The
physical body participates in the vibration of the vocal
chords, in the activity of the whole speech-apparatus; the
etheric body also participates in the process, so too do the
astral body and the ego. But by comparison the physical body
and the ego do not participate to anything like the same
extent in speech activity as a whole. The members essentially
involved are the etheric and astral bodies.
The statement
that the etheric body is more deeply involved than the
physical body in the act of speaking may cause surprise. But
after all, man's ordinary senses cannot perceive what goes on
in the etheric body, nor does modern science tell him
anything. Hence in the ordinary way he perceives only what
the physical body is doing in acts of speaking, whereas the
far more varied, far more strongly formative activity of the
etheric body in acts of speaking — activity which then
continues in the astral body — eludes sense-perception
as usually understood. But if the rôle of speech is to
be understood, the paramount importance of what takes place
here in the etheric body and in the astral body must be
realized.
Now consider
this: because in speaking the main part is played by the
etheric and astral bodies, speech has two sides. To begin
with, the etheric body in conjunction with the physical body
bring about outwardly perceptible, audible speech. But when
we speak, something always streams back into our soul. We
feel and live with it inwardly. In order to become aware of
the content of our soul, however, the person to whom we are
speaking is dependent upon the physical sounds. We, as the
speaker, are inwardly united in our astral body with what we
impart to our speech. But because in sleep the astral body is
drawn out of our physical and etheric bodies, we carry
something from our speech over with us into sleep, something
of vital importance.
It is an
actual fact that the element of soul we instil into our words
from morning to evening continues to vibrate and pulsate from
the moment of going to sleep until the moment of waking. We
are unconscious of it but let me assure you that everything
spoken during the day echoes on — admittedly in reverse
order — during sleep. Not that the words actually sound
again as they sound through our mouth during the day; it is
rather the undulation of feeling in the words that resounds,
the will-impulses that have flowed into them, the gaiety or
sadness, the joy or pain expressed and revealed in the flow
of the speech.
But these
echoes during sleep are not vague or indefinite; what the
soul experiences echoes in the very sequences of the sounds
in that unconscious state through which a man passes in the
ordinary way between going to sleep and waking.
Until the
seventh year of life whatever echoes in the child's soul
during sleep is to a very great extent dependent upon his
human environment. The life of feeling, willing and thinking
brought to expression in words by the father, mother and
other people in the environment and heard by the child
— all this echoes in his soul from the time he goes to
sleep until he wakes; his soul is given up to what has been
laid into the words by the hearts and souls of those around
him. During sleep the thoughts and will-impulses which the
child experiences through the speech of older people are,
however, connected much more intimately with the actual
sounds.
In short, the
child's whole being is given over to what he experiences from
his environment. This state of things is already less
pronounced in the second period of life, from the seventh to
the fourteenth year, although it is still undeniably present.
At puberty, however, at about the fourteenth year, something
very definite begins: what echoes from speech into the
sleeping soul tries by its very nature to establish
relationship with the spiritual world.
It is a very
remarkable process. Until the seventh year of life, during
sleep too, the child will still be in full accord with
whatever he has heard from those around him; to a certain
extent this is also the case from his seventh to his
fourteenth year, only during that period he is in closer
contact with the actual soul-life of those in his
environment, whereas until his seventh year he is concerned
more with the external aspect of life. But after the
fourteenth year, after the onset of puberty, it begins to be
necessary for the soul during sleep to bring the echoes of
speech into relation with Beings of the spiritual world. This
is a remarkable fact. In everyday life man is not conscious
of it but in sleep it becomes necessary for the life of soul
to let what is spoken on Earth echo in such a way that the
Archangeloi in their world may take pleasure in these echoes
of speech.
It may be said
with truth that it is necessary for the human being to
establish relations with the Archangeloi through the
components of speech which remain with him during sleep as
echoes of earthly speech. The words spoken during the daytime
echo in a remarkable way: the vowel-sounds are inwardly
deepened, the consonants achieve the objectivity of mobile
forms. This is an actual experience. And souls during sleep
would feel unhappy if these echoes did not harmonize with the
sounds ringing out from the other side, from the speech of
the Archangeloi. There can indeed be harmony between the
echoes of speech resounding in man's sleep and the speech of
the Archangeloi resounding out of the astral world from every
direction of the universe.
In his ego and
his astral body the human being develops in such a way that
from about the fourteenth year onwards, between going to
sleep and waking, he has to cultivate intercourse — if
I may so express it — with Angeloi and Archangeloi;
during this intercourse it behoves him to establish
understanding with these Beings. This is a deep secret of
human life.
Now a
characteristic of our epoch is that it produces more and more
individuals who achieve no such understanding in the sleeping
state, who take with them into sleep something from speech
which actually hinders their souls from understanding the
speech of the Archangeloi, and the Archangeloi find no
pleasure in the echoes of speech during the sleeping life of
these individuals.
The epoch has
begun — one is obliged to use earthly terms in speaking
of these things which it is naturally difficult to express in
ordinary language — when the Beings of the spiritual
world can no longer come to any real understanding with
sleeping human souls, when misunderstandings keep occurring
between what the Beings of the spiritual Hierarchies say and
what echoes in the souls of men during the hours of sleep.
Discrepancies, disharmonies creep in.
This is the
aspect which in our epoch presents itself from the other side
of life. A tormenting condition of misunderstanding, of a
complete lack of understanding between human souls and
spiritual Beings has insinuated itself into the state of
sleep. And the question as to the reason for this condition
must weigh heavily upon those who have knowledge today of a
fact of spiritual life such as this.
Now the words
which we draw from the range of our native language may,
while we are learning them in childhood, develop in such a
way that they apply to the physical world alone. This has
been increasingly the case in the age of materialism. Words
are available but these words only express something that is
physical. Just consider how things were in earlier times: a
human being became so intimate with the language that there
were many words which, through their content, transported him
into spiritual worlds. It must certainly be admitted that
true idealism has become feeble in our time, particularly in
those who absorb modern intellectualistic culture.
It makes a
great difference whether ideals are or are not embodied in
the language used. Today we find that individuals who are
supposed to be students certainly have a feeling for words
which refer to external, solidly material things but that
when it is a matter of rising to the level of pure thoughts
reflecting the spiritual, they immediately stop thinking and
the threads of their thought are broken. It is precisely in
those who are considered well-educated according to modern
standards that this most often happens when they are called
upon to assimilate the idealistic concepts of pure thinking.
The words seem to be no more than semblance. It is indeed a
fact that in our days children grow up with a language whose
words have no wings to carry them away from earthly
conditions.
In the first
phase of life, until the seventh year, the child is still
able, during sleep, to experience the spiritual through the
echoes of the speech emanating from his human environment. If
materialism causes this environment to repudiate the
spiritual, it is repudiating itself for it consists of both
soul and Spirit. But during the first phase of life the human
being is still able during sleep to experience the
spiritual.
This continues
during the second phase of life, from the seventh to the
fourteenth year. But if eventually there is no longer any
idealistic, spiritual significance in the words used around
the young human being — as may well happen in this
materialistic age when religious ideas too have lost their
strong spiritual influence upon the souls of men —
then, after the fourteenth year, with the onset of puberty
the young person enters a phase of the life of soul which
chains him during sleep to the physical. The soul is not
released from the physical during sleep. The echoes of the
words coerce the soul and confine it to the physical. The
resonance of the mineral world vibrates from all directions
into what the human being experiences between going to sleep
and waking; so too does resonance of the physical content of
the plant world. This brings discord into the echoes of
speech; the soul cannot then elaborate what the genius of
speech otherwise imparts to the language and which can bring
about understanding between the human soul and the Beings of
the higher Hierarchies.
And then a
peculiar condition sets in. The soul experiences something
but cannot express it, because it is not experienced
consciously. What the soul experiences may be characterized
approximately in the following way. — After the age of
puberty, when the human being passes in sleep into the
spiritual world, the world of the Archangeloi opens out
before him; he senses it but no threads of thought pass from
that world into his soul, or from his soul into that world.
And on waking he comes back into the physical body having
suffered this tragic deprivation.
Since the last
third of the 19th century this state of things has been
present for a large part of humanity. And in the unconscious,
behind that of which man is conscious, there lies in many
souls today something that causes them to say unconsciously
to themselves on waking: We have been born into a world which
does not allow us to enter rightly during sleep into
spiritual existence. — Souls who experience this
condition may well say: As children we have been received
into a human world which has denied us spiritual reality in
the words that are used. All this is astir in the feelings
with which in many ways nowadays, youth faces the old. This
is the spiritual aspect of the feelings manifesting through
the Youth Movement.
What is the
attitude of the young human being to the old today? He cannot
express it because as a result of what he inherits in the
course of his education, his consciousness is repressed
rather than set free by those who are old. He cannot express
it, but he feels it. In the dim obscurity of his life of soul
he feels: As a child I have to accommodate myself to what has
been handed over to me by older generations. I have to be
educated by these older generations, yet they make it
impossible for me to come to an understanding with the
spiritual world when this is necessary. To the same extent as
materialism increases in every sphere of life — in the
spheres of knowledge, of art and of religion — to that
extent the young will be unable to understand the old,
because they confront the old with the feeling that the
latter have denied them idealism in speech and the intimation
in words that points to a spiritual life. The materialism of
civilization is the cause of the cleavage between the young
and the old. And the real source of the lack of understanding
lies in the fact that the corruption of speech by materialism
brings about an unhealthy condition of the soul-life of young
people during sleep.
Certain
phenomena of modern culture can never be understood today if
the spiritual side of life is ignored, for we are living in
the epoch of consciousness and must therefore be alive to the
spirit that moulds the human being and promotes his
development. Understanding between youth and age will not be
possible until the words in our languages again acquire the
wings they have lost, the wings which raise the words out of
the sphere of crass materiality into the world of conscious
ideals.
In the year
1859 the people of Middle Europe were commemorating the
centenary of Schiller's birth. In a certain sense,
however, it was the very year of the death of true idealism.
And what the young today see in Schiller they often disdain
because what is taught them is not the true Schiller but only
a superficial hotch-potch of words; it does not present what
actually lived in Schiller, because the words no longer have
the wings which in his days lifted men into the realm of
ideals. And when Schiller is introduced to youth today with
words that bear the current prosaic, philistine meanings,
this is far more likely to become a burden in the soul than a
liberating force.
What the soul
needs cannot be restored to it in any external way nor by the
nebulous, so-called idealisms which are only shams, cropping
up here and there out of current materialism — maybe
with good intentions but springing fundamentally from false
thinking. The soul can be given what it needs only if, through
genuine spiritual knowledge, vitality is restored to language
and it is able once again to lead to the genius of
speech.
Language as it
is today does not really amount to more than a medium of
understanding on the physical plane. As regards declamation
and recitation we have even come to the point where the
actual prose-content is considered all-important. We find
that speech is being divested of everything that promotes
descriptive power, rhythm, measure, melody, dramatic effect
— that is to say, everything that leads it back into
the realm of the soul, where the Imaginative element lifts it
into the spiritual world. And so we find that in language a
further concession has been made to materialism.
Language as it
exists today among all civilized peoples, fetters the soul
during sleep to the purely physical murmurings of the mineral
world, to the rustlings of the purely physical content of the
plant world, and no longer enables the clear speech of the
Angeloi and the resounding trumpet-tones of the world of the
Archangeloi, with their deep significance, to be audible to
the soul.
From the age
of puberty onwards the human being today ought to bring with
him into sleep something from speech that has prepared his
brain during waking hours in such a way that in his everyday
life he understands the ideal content of what is expressed by
the words. He ought to be able to bring with him — for
the speech of the Archangeloi can be heard by his soul during
the hours of sleep — something that enables his
circulating blood to experience, to some degree at least, the
spiritual depths of cosmic happenings. And if today he cannot
acquire spiritual knowledge, if our school-education is not
spiritually deepened, he brings with him instead the rumbling
sounds of the physical mineral world; he also brings with him
in his blood the rustling, thudding sounds of the physical
part of the plant world.
As a result,
for the purposes of conventional speech he is dependent upon
this mineralized brain, made disharmonious by sleep, and upon
the blood-system with the sounds of hissing and rustling
surging through it, and thus he is confined through speech to
life in the earthly sphere alone, whereas in other
circumstances the words could have borne him above merely
earthly experience to experience in a higher realm.
How could
individuals who have received the materialistic education of
today still affirm from the depths of their souls:
‘Thought is my boundless realm and my winged instrument
is the word?’
[note 2]
For men of culture today thought is by no means a ‘boundless
realm’ but a strictly circumscribed realm, embracing
only the material objects to be seen in the environment. And
the word is no ‘winged instrument’ but an
instrument by means of which we stammer from mouth to ear
utterances of a vague soul-life, but in such a way that there
is little super-sensible significance in what is said. And
whereas through a spiritual world-conception speech could be
an ocean into which a man's inner being sinks and which could
then lift his soul to greater and greater heights, it becomes
instead the means of chaining him to the Earth, chaining him
to rigidly limited conditions of earthly existence.
Today this
state of things takes effect in the destiny of the whole
human race. We see how modern civilization is based upon the
differences among men all over the Earth as expressed in
their languages. Attempts are made to create new cultural
divisions according to language. But because of what language
has become it is evident at once that these cultural
divisions and ideal are concerned with purely material life,
that they form as it were the covering spread in the guise of
civilization over the peoples of the Earth, in order to shut
them off from the spiritual world. Everywhere today we see
this wall of materialism being built around man's life of
soul, and it is this that inculcates the materialism of
mental attitudes, of thinking and of feeling, into external
life as well. It is this that gradually causes man to forget
that within the human race conditions are determined from the
super-sensible spheres, but when humanity is divided into
nations, races and so forth, men are more and more strongly
imbued with a blind belief that they must persist in a purely
materialistic existence.
And so we see
entering into earthly life in the form of civilization and
culture, the element of materialism which has laid hold of
the spheres of knowledge, of art, of religion. In the
national groups that have come into being on the Earth we can
recognize how the forces from the cosmic expanse which once
worked creatively and formatively in life on Earth, no longer
do so; the forces now in Operation issue from the depths of
the Earth itself. We see man, as a member of a nation or
people too, uniting more and more closely with the purely
material side of earthly existence.
If people
could resolve to pay attention to what in many ways sounds
paradoxical in our times, namely that the human ego and
astral body also have a biography, the individual phases of
which become manifest from the time of going to sleep until
the time of waking, just as the external physical life in its
evolution from birth to death becomes manifest during waking
hours, they would perceive the source of a great deal in our
modern civilization that must not be allowed to continue !
But if we stop short at the findings of purely external
sense-observation, we shall fail to perceive the most
important, indeed the all-important things that must be done
in order to change the present decline into an ascent leading
into the future.
If this view
of life is to have practical effects, a spiritual knowledge
of man's existence is essential, and for this the world-view
of Spiritual Science is necessary. This world-view must
therefore permeate the whole of education, in such a way that
instead of acquiring a store of words from which all wings
have been removed, the child absorbs and is guided by the
spirit and receives, together with the words, the power that
raises him into the spiritual worlds in which man's being is
rooted. In physical life we can deny the spirit. With the
spiritual part of our being which must lay aside the physical
and etheric bodies during sleep, we cannot deny the spirit.
And if from the physical side of existence we repudiate the
spirit, then we wake up each morning as grown men who no
longer understand life; and this lack of understanding is
imparted to all our thinking, feeling and willing. The coming
generation is growing up in such a way that its members
inevitably feel that the heritage transmitted by their
forefathers is deserving of reproach because this heritage
thrusts them into an abyss where they cannot be materialistic
but where they needs must be spiritual when living in the ego
and astral body.
The older
languages of mankind were so constituted that their inner
content could be taken into the spiritual world and lead to
understanding with the spiritual Beings with whom man needs
must associate when he is free of the body. The evolution of
language to its present condition has reached a point where,
when man should rightly associate with spiritual Beings, he
inevitably remains spiritually deaf and dumb and is able to
absorb only that which drags him down, namely, the physical
element of the mineral and plant kingdoms.
And so in
order to understand life today — if I may use trivial
words — we must look behind the scenes of this life.
But that is possible only through genuine Spiritual Science.
Notes:
Note 1. Or,
the Age of the Consciousness Soul, sometimes
‘Spiritual Soul’.
Note 2. The
saying of ‘Poetry’ from Schiller's lyrical
play, ‘Homage to the Arts.’
|