Lecture V
18th March 1923.
By considering in retrospect what has been
presented in the last lectures concerning happenings, facts
and actions in the super-sensible worlds — it was all
more or less supplementary to my little book,
The Spiritual Guidance of Man and Mankind
— you will understand that it is essential to realize that
in our time a mighty event is taking effect. It is the event of
which I said that it belongs essentially to the 4th century
A.D.
and it consists in the transference of rulership of the
cosmic thoughts from the Spirits of Form to the Spirits of
Personality, the Archai or Primal Powers. If we are mindful
of the whole import, the cosmic import of this significant
event, we may say: it consists in giving men in the course of
their evolution what should rightly become theirs in our
present Fifth post-Atlantean epoch, the epoch of the
evolution of the Consciousness Soul, namely, inner freedom,
the possibility for the individual to act from his own inner
self. We know, of course, that human evolution on Earth was
in essentials a kind of preparation for this very epoch, that
the natural foundation had first to be laid down in man, so
that within the sphere of what this foundation has enabled
him to become, his soul might progress towards freedom. How
is this connected with the super-sensible event previously
characterized?
If we picture
this event in broad outline we can say: on the one side, from
our survey of the super-sensible world, we realize that the
outstanding spiritual leaders of mankind are the Beings whom
we must call Spirits of Personality, Archai, but those Archai
who have been vested with rulership of the cosmic thoughts by
the Exousiai, the Spirits of Form. These Archai to whom man
in his evolution owes the possibility of formulating thoughts
through the inner efforts of his own soul, are hampered in
their activity by those Beings who, as Exousiai, as Spirits
of Form, have remained behind at an earlier stage of
evolution; they are Beings who, as Spirits of Form, have not
ceded rulership of the cosmic thoughts. And now, in this
epoch of the Consciousness Soul in which we have been living
since the 15th century A.D.,
man is confronted with the great
choice in some one of his incarnations definitely to decide
for freedom or, which is the same thing, to have the
possibility of this freedom through turning to the legitimate
Archai.
We do indeed
see, in our own age, how men strive to free themselves from
those spiritual Beings who, as Exousiai, were unwilling to
cede rulership of the cosmic thoughts. What part these Beings
play in the present phase of the evolution of humanity will
be clear to us when we realize what role was justifiably
played in earlier times by the Exousiai who were then
undergoing normal development.
In earlier
times men did not unfold their thoughts as they have to do
today. They did not unfold their thoughts by inner activity,
inner effort. They unfolded thoughts by devoting themselves
to the contemplation of external Nature and just as we
perceive colours and sounds today, they simultaneously
perceived the thoughts. But in still earlier ages, when men
gave themselves up to instinctive, unconscious clairvoyance,
they received, together with the clairvoyant pictures,
thoughts as a gift from the divine-spiritual worlds.
Men did not work out their thoughts; they received them. It
was inevitably so in olden times.
Just as the
child must first develop his physical nature, must first lay
a foundation for what he can learn only in later life, so
humanity as a whole could achieve the inner, active
development of a world of thoughts only when this world of
thoughts had first penetrated from outside into the whole
nature of man.
This period of
preparation had to be lived through. But during it man could
really never say that he was qualified to become a free
being. For, as you can see from my
The Philosophy of Freedom,
the basic condition of human freedom is
precisely that man shall unfold his thoughts himself in inner
activity, and that out of these self-evolved thoughts which
in my book I have called ‘pure thoughts’, he
shall also draw his moral impulses.
Such moral
impulses, springing from the soil of man's own being, did not
and could not exist in the earlier epochs of the evolution of
humanity. Moral impulses had then to be imparted together
with the thoughts, which were, so to speak, God-given, like
commandments that were unconditionally binding and made a man
unfree. You will find this aspect of the subject presented in the
The Philosophy of Freedom:
the transition of mankind
from bondage by commandments which exclude freedom, to action
out of moral intuition which includes freedom.
Now the Spirits
of Form are Beings who always work from outside when they
bring about something in man. All stimuli from outside that
cause a man to work on his own being bring to expression the
deeds of the Spirits of Form. And it was definitely the case
that as long as the Spirits of Form instilled the cosmic
thoughts into man, the thoughts either came to him from
stones, plants or animals as perceptions, or else rose up
from instincts and impulses within him. In those days men
floated, as it were, on the waves of life, and the waves of
life were thrown up — but also calmed in so far as they
brought thoughts — by the Spirits of Form. It was from
outside, therefore, that there came to man what he then laid
hold of in his inmost soul. Hence in those olden times man's
feeling for his Gods was such that he turned primarily to
them when seeking to find the causes of world-happenings and
of his own life. When a man spoke of the Gods he spoke as
though he was seeking to find in them the causes of his own
existence on Earth, and of the manifestations of nature on
Earth. He always looked back to the Gods as the primary
causes of things. Whence came the world? Whence came I
myself? These were the great religious questions of an
earlier humanity.
If you study
the ancient myths, you will always find, in the biblical
story of Creation too, references to Genesis-myths, because
men were seeking primarily for the origin of the world, but
actually stopped short at this point in their search.
The whole mood
and attitude of the human soul were due to the fact that in
the world of his thoughts man was dependent upon the Spirits
of Form. Until the 4th century A.D.
and in its after-effects
right on into the 15th century, the Spirits of Form were, so
to speak, fully authorized in the world-order — if I
may use this expression — to rule over and direct the
cosmic thoughts and to promote thinking, the unfolding of
thoughts, in man from outside.
Since that
period things have changed. Since then the Exousiai, the
Spirits of Form, have ceded the rulership of the cosmic
thoughts to the Archai. But how do the Archai exercise this
rulership? It is no longer as if they themselves were ruling
over the thoughts, as if they were laying them into man from
outside; they make it possible for man to evolve these
thoughts himself. How can this be? It can come about for the
reason that we men have all passed through a number of lives
on Earth. In those olden times, when it was right for the
Exousiai to bring the thoughts from outside, men had not
lived through as many lives on Earth as is now the case. They
could not yet, even when they awoke the impulse for it in
themselves, produce activity of their own in order to
engender the power of thoughts within themselves. We live
today in such and such an earthly incarnation. And if only we
have the necessary will for it — for it depends upon
the will — we can find in ourselves the force to
produce our own world of thoughts, an individual world of
thoughts, as I have also described it in the
The Philosophy of Freedom.
Such is the Progress consisting of the
transference of the rulership of thoughts by the Spirits of
Form to rulership by the Spirits of Personality.
The Spirits of
Form drew these thoughts out of the cosmic reservoir of
thoughts, in order to instil them into men from outside. Man
took the cosmic thoughts into himself and willynilly felt
like a creature propelled forward in the Hoods and waves
produced in the cosmos by the Spirits of Form. The world of
thoughts within the cosmos transmitted its harmony to man
himself. But man was an unfree being within the cosmos! Today
he has acquired the freedom to work out his own thoughts but
these thoughts would all remain hermits in the cosmos if they
have not been taken from and brought back again into the
cosmic harmony. And in our epoch this comes to pass through
the Archai.
Here the
foundation is laid for the solution of that immensely
significant historic cleavage that has come about in modern
times and has plunged human souls into such infinite
confusion. Do we not perceive this cleavage? From other
points of view I have often told you that man learns, on the
one hand, that the whole cosmos is permeated by a
nature-order, that this natureorder also plays into man's own
being, that there was once an archetypal nebula out of which
sun and planets took shape, and then man himself. Do we not
see on the one hand the system of cosmic laws of nature to
which man feels himself yoked? And on the other hand, do we
not see how man, in order to preserve his true human dignity,
is urged, in his capacity as a being arising out of nature,
to quicken in himself the thought of a moral world-order so
that his moral impulses may not fly off and be scattered in
the universe but have reality?
In the course
of the 19th century this cleavage has again and again
resulted in a certain philosophical hair-splitting. Think of
those religious conflicts which, within Protestantism, are
allied with the school of Ritschl.
[note 1]
Most people
know nothing of these religious-philosophical conflicts as
such, for they have taken place within the narrow framework
of the theological or philosophical schools. What goes on
within this narrow framework, however, does not remain within
its bounds. It is not important whether you or humanity in
general know what Ritschl thought about the moral-divine
world-order, or about the personality of Jesus. But what such
people have thought in the course of the 19th century about
the personality of Jesus flows down and persists in the
teachings given to children from six to twelve years old.
That will become, and indeed has become, a universal attitude
of soul. And although men do not realize it in full clarity
it is nevertheless present in them as vague feelings, as
dissatisfaction with life; and it then passes over into
action that must eventually bring about an era as chaotic as
that in which we are now living. This is the anxious question
facing modern humanity; it arises because man is obliged to
say to himself: Here is the world of natural law, having
issued from the primal nebula, reaching eventually total
entropy, and therefore heading towards a condition where
everything of the nature of soul and Spirit will have become
submerged in a world which lacks all mobility and must
inevitably become a great cemetery. All moral ideals
proceeding from the individuality of man would have
perished.
People do not
acknowledge this today because they are not honest enough to
do so. But all that they get from modern civilization would
inevitably lead them to suffer on account of this immensely
significant cleavage in their world-view, to suffer —
only they do not realize it — from being subject to a
natural world and also from being obliged to assume the
existence of a moral world, yet having no power, because of
the modern outlook, to ascribe any reality to moral
ideas.
It was not so
for an older humanity. An older humanity felt that its moral
ideas came from the Gods. That was in the days when the
Exousiai, the Spirits of Form, instilled the thoughts into
man — including, of course, moral ideas. At that time
man knew that even if the Earth did indeed perish, the
divinespiritual Beings who draw the world-thoughts out of the
cosmos would be there in the future. Man knew that it was not
he who made the thoughts, that they were there in the same
way as processes of Nature are there; they must therefore
always have been in existence, like the external processes of
Nature.
We must be
quite clear that many people — in greater and greater
numbers — simply cannot come to terms with life. Some
admit this to themselves — they are possibly the best.
Others do not admit it, and the world-chaos into which we
have fallen is due to their actions.
All the chaos,
the disorder that exists today, is the direct consequence of
this inner cleavage, this ignorance of the extent to which
the moral world has reality. Men prefer to blunt their
understanding of the great world-problems since they are
unwilling to force themselves to admit where the cleavage
actually lies. They prefer to ignore it.
Now the
cleavage cannot be healed by what is today called
civilization. It can be healed only an the basis of a
spiritual world-outlook sought by way of Anthroposophy. Man
comes to realize the existence of Archai who have now
received the task in the cosmos of linking the thoughts of
man — which now arise in isolation in the soul —
to the world-processes in due arrangement.
In a grand and
impressive way man again finds the foundation for the moral
world-order. How does he find it? He could not become free if
he were incapable of feeling: You unfold your thoughts out of
your own individuality; you are yourself the elaborator of
your thoughts.
But this at once implies that we have wrested our thoughts
away from the cosmos. In ancient times it was like this:
If I draw the ocean of cosmic thoughts (yellow) and man
diagrammatically (red), then I must indicate what passed into
each man as his share of the world of cosmic thoughts. He
clung to the world of cosmic thoughts — it came down
into him. That this could take place was due to the action of
the Spirits of Form.
In the course
of evolution this has changed. We have here the ocean of
cosmic thoughts (yellow) but the rulership of it has passed
to the Archai. If I indicate individual men (below, red),
their thoughts are detached; they are no longer connected
with the cosmic thoughts. This is inevitable, for man could
never be a free being if he did not wrest his world of
thoughts away from the cosmos. He must wrest his thoughts
away in order to become a free being but then they must be
linked again with the cosmos. What is necessary, then, is
that the rulership of these thoughts — which is not a
direct concern of human life (green) but of the cosmos
— should be exercised by the Archai, the Spirits of
Personality.
But now, if we
turn to the moral aspect of these thoughts we shall say to
ourselves: When we enter the spiritual world — either
through the gate of death or in the Earth's future or
whenever it may be — when we enter the spiritual world
we shall meet the Spirits of Personality, the Archai. We
shall then be able to perceive what it has been possible for
them to do with our thoughts which, to begin with, for the
sake of our freedom were isolated within ourselves. We shall
then recognize our worth and dignity as men from what the
Spirits of Personality have been able to do with our
thoughts. And cosmic thought turns directly into moral
sensibility, moral impulsion.
Moral impulsion
can arise anywhere today from Anthroposophy if rightly
grasped — only it must be grasped by the whole being of
man.
If we grasp
this thought, the thought of responsibility to the normally
evolving Archai, if we truly grasp our spiritual function in
the cosmos, then we shall also find the place that rightly
belongs to us in our epoch; we shall be true men of our time.
And then we shall look in the right way at what, indeed, is
forever around us: not a world of sense alone but also a
spiritual world. We shall regard the Archai as the spiritual
Beings to whom man must be responsible if, as a member of
humanity, he is to undergo his evolution rightly in the
course of earthly time. We shall realize that in the present
age what was once the necessary world-order is still opposed
by all that has remained from those Spirits of Form who are
still intent upon ruling over the cosmic thoughts in the old
way. And this is the most important concern of civilization
in our time. The deeper talks of man today consist in this:
through a right attitude to the Archai, the Spirits of
Personality, to become truly free so that he may also adopt
the right attitude to the Spirits of Form who today are not
within their rights when they strive to exercise rulership
over the cosmic thoughts as formerly, but were once the
legitimate rulers. On the one hand we shall find what makes
life in the world difficult, but we shall also find
everywhere ways out of these difficulties. Only we must seek
for these ways as free individuals. For if we have
no will to achieve a free development of thoughts, what could
the Archai possibly make of us?
What is
important in our age is that man should have the resolute
will to be a free being. In most cases he still does not will
it and so has to accommodate himself to the idea. It is still
difficult today for a man to wish to be a free being. What
would please him most would be to wish what he likes and that
the right Spirits would be there to carry out his wishes in
an invisible, super-sensible way. Then he would perhaps feel
free, feel his dignity as man! We need only wait for one or
two incarnations — not such a very long time, until
about the year 2800 or 3000 — and then in our next
incarnation, when looking back on the earlier one, we should
never be able to excuse ourselves if we had confused human
freedom with the furtherance of human comfort by indulgent
Gods !
Today man does
exactly this — he confuses freedom and indulgence of
benevolent Gods with his love of ease and his wishes for
comfort. There are still many people today who wish that
there were benevolent Gods to carry out their wishes without
much assistance from themselves. But as I said, we need only
wait for the year 2800 or 3000 and in a subsequent
incarnation we shall thoroughly despise such an attitude.
Today, if we develop a truly moral attitude of mind this must
be allied with a certain moral strength, with a genuine
desire for freedom — inner freedom in the first place;
outer freedom will soon follow in the right form if the will
for inner freedom is present. But to this end it is essential
to perceive exactly where the unauthorized Spirits of Form
are active.
Well, they are
active everywhere. I could imagine — the human
intellect has such a strongly Luciferic tendency — that
there may be people who say: Yes, it would certainly be much
more sensible for the divine ordering of the world if these
backward Spirits of Form were not causing havoc, indeed if
they were not there at all ! I advise individuals who think
like this also to consider as sensible people whether they
could nourish themselves without at the same time filling
their intestines with unpleasant substances. The one process
is simply not possible without the other. Similarly it is not
possible in the world for the things upon which the greatness
and dignity of man depend to exist without their
correlates.
Where, then, do
we see backward Spirits of Form in action? Today in
particular we see them active in the national chauvinisms
which have spread over the whole world wherever the thoughts
of men arise, not directly from the innermost core of human
nature but out of the blood, out of what comes from the
instincts.
In this
connection there are two attitudes to nationality One is
this: a man scorns the normal Archai and simply lends himself
to what the backward Spirits of Form achieve through the
nationalities. He then grows up simply as a national,
boasting in chauvinistic style of what he has become through
having been born with national blood in his veins. His speech
is a product of his nationality, his thoughts come to him in
the language of his nationality, the very form of his
thoughts too comes from the particular form of this language.
He grows from the soil which the Spirits of Form have made
out of the nationalities.
Now suppose
there is someone who is willing to fall in with the backward
Spirits of Form and is at the same time an extremely
ambitious individual, placed by destiny in a special
position, then — with an eye to the national
chauvinisms — he may compose ‘Fourteen
Points‘. He then finds followers who regard Woodrow
Wilson's Fourteen Points as a splendid gift to the world!
Seen truly,
what were these Fourteen Points? They were something flung to
the world as an inducement to pander to what the backward
Spirits of Form were intent upon inculcating into the
different nations. The Fourteen Points were directly inspired
from that source.
One can speak
of all these things on very different levels. Exactly what I
am saying today on one level in characterizing the Archai and
the Exousiai, I said years ago in order to underline the
significance of Woodrow Wilson's Fourteen Points, because
they have lulled the world in a cradle of illusions, have
caused untold disaster and chaos.
Further, we see
today how the influence proceeding from these backward
Spirits of Form makes itself felt in the one-sided,
materialistic world-view of natural science, where there is
downright horror — or, better said, an unholy dread
— of engaging in real activity of thought. Just picture
what a terrible scene an orthodox professor would make if a
student in the laboratory were to look into the microscope
with the aim of producing some thought. That would never do !
One must carefully record only what external sense-perception
presents. People are quite unaware that this presents only
half of the reality — the other half being produced
through a man's own creative thought-activity. But the
present mission of the normally developed Archai must be
known and understood. In the science that has been vitiated
by the backward Spirits of Form, it is essential that the
true mission of the Spirits of Personality shall make itself
felt. And there is the greatest possible fear of this
prospect today.
You have
probably heard the well-known anecdote of how scientific
knowledge is obtained by the different nations in accordance
with their fundamental character. What happens when it is a
question today of learning in orthodox zoology about a camel?
How do the different nations set to work? The Englishman
makes a journey into the desert and observes the camel. It
may take him two years to observe the camel in every set of
circumstances but in this way he gets to know its nature
thoroughly, describes it, omitting all thoughts — as
would be expected; he describes everything without
formulating any thoughts of his own. The Frenchman goes to a
menagerie where a camel is on show, looks at it and describes
the animal as seen in the menagerie. He does not, like the
Englishman, get to know the camel in natural situations of
its life but describes it as it is in the menagerie. The
German goes neither into the desert nor into a menagerie but
sits down in his study, gathers together all the thoughts he
can educe from what he has learnt, constructs the camel a
priori and on the basis of this a priori
construction, describes it. — This is how the anecdote
is generally narrated. Moreover it is nearly, very nearly
correct; for everywhere one has the feeling that whether a
camel is being described, or man himself, or anything else,
the description has originated in the ways indicated. One
thing, however, is omitted. This alone would have given the
right answer: there might be a fourth participant in this
threefold anecdote. It matters not whether this hypothetical
fourth goes into the desert or whether, having no opportunity
to go into the desert or into a menagerie, he studies books.
He may even go to a painter of animals and Look at pictures
in which animals are portrayed with genius. But no matter
whether he sees the camel in the desert or in a menagerie or
whether he takes the a priori descriptions out of
books, he is able from what he learns to put this question to
the divine-spiritual world-order itself: What is the
real nature of a camel? The individual who has made
this inner effort sees the camel in the menagerie and also
how it behaves in the desert; he also perceives what can be
gathered from reading different books, perhaps even books
containing horribly caricatured, philistine, pedantic
descriptions. Nevertheless if he can discern the essential
nature of a camel he can still gather the important points
from pedantic treatises and all kinds of a priori
constructions.
What mankind
needs above everything else today is to find the way to the
spiritual, not, of course, by excluding but by including
experience of the world gained through the senses.
Here again we
have the indication of what, in every domain of our striving
for knowledge, will lead to insight into how the backward
Spirits of Form can mislead us, and how a true understanding
of the mission of the Spirits of Personality can give us, as
men, our rightful place in the epoch in which we are living.
And what is most important of all is to inform ourselves
about growing children, in order to achieve a true art of
education. For a glaring defect in all education nowadays is
that people hold fast to what man has become in the course of
evolution through the backward Spirits of Form; it is assumed
that everything is as it should be.
Now the child's
nature revolts against this attitude — thank God, we
may say. The grown-up person is content with this state of
things, but the child's nature revolts against it; youth
above all revolts against it.
Here again we
have one of the characteristic features of the modern Youth
Movement and one of the points where modern education must,
shall I say, become clairvoyant — or at least must
allow itself to be fructified by the findings of clairvoyance
— so that it may be recognized that when a human being
is born nowadays the seed of inner activity of thoughts is
born with him. Then if this seed of the inner activity of
thoughts is present, we learn one essential thing which men
today are for the most part incapable of achieving. Do you
know what that is? It is that they cannot become old! And
youth would like to have as leaders men who have become old
in the true sense. The young do not want to be led by the
young — even if they insist that they do, they are
deceiving themselves; they would like to have as leaders men
who have understood how to grow old in the genuine sense and
have brought with them into old age the living seed of the
development of thoughts. If youth can perceive this it will
follow such leaders, knowing that men have something real to
say if they have known how to become old in the right way.
But what does youth encounter today? Its own likeness ! Men
have not understood how to become old and have remained
infantile. They know no more than the fifteen and
sixteen-year-olds know already. No wonder that the fifteen
and sixteen-year olds refuse to follow the sixty- and
seventy-year olds who have grown no older than they are
themselves. The others have not understood how to bring
activity into their old bodies. Youth wants people who have
become old in the real way, people who may be old in
appearance, with wrinkles, white hair and bald scalps but
who, despite old hearts, are fundamentally as young as
themselves. Youth wants human beings who have understood how
to become old, who therefore in becoming old have increased
in wisdom and inner strength.
The problem of
the Youth Movement would be easily solved if it were to be
grasped in its cosmic significance, if, for instance,
fundamental lectures were to be given an the theme: How is it
possible in the world today not to remain infantile in ripe
old age? There is the real problem.
With those who
have become old in the real sense, who have not remained
infantile, youth will ally itself, will harmonize quite
naturally. But from those who are exactly like itself youth
can learn nothing. It simply seems grotesque to a young man,
himself perhaps only eighteen years old and possibly not
having learnt a great deal — he has of course learnt
something — whose hair is still quite dark or fair, who
has no wrinkles, still a chubby face, not a beard yet —
it seems grotesque to this young person to have to follow
someone who is inwardly no older than himself, who looks so
funny with his grey hair and bald crown, who has learnt no
more than he has himself — but yet it all looks
different! That is fundamentally the core of the manifest
disharmony between youth and age.
If you take
very seriously, in all its significance, what I have tried to
express in a humorous way, you will also be able to perceive
clearly much that constitutes a great and burning question in
modern civilization.
Notes:
Note 1.
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