III
Critical Judgment and
Colour of the Times
In
my attempt to describe the career of the various societies, or
associations, with which the Anthroposophical Society has a
certain connection (though one, which at the present day is
much misunderstood), I was led yesterday to allude to the
phenomenal appearance of H. P. Blavatsky, and I tried to give
some idea of the manner in which this personality entered into
the spiritual life of the closing nineteenth century. I was
obliged to go back to this particular personality, because,
after all, the impulse which, at the end of the nineteenth
century, led to the association of the people, whom I classed
two days ago under the name ‘homeless souls’, came from those
works of which Blavatsky was the author.
Although Anthroposophy, and its appearance on the scene, has in
reality scarcely anything to do with the works of Blavatsky,
still I do not merely want in these lectures to describe the
historic aspect of the anthroposophic movement only; I want
also to point out its associative features, as we have them
before us in the anthroposophic movement to-day. And this makes
it necessary to take such points to start from, as I have
selected in the past two days.
Now
of course, as regards everything that may be said about
Blavatsky, it is very easy to-day, if one wants to discredit
the kind of spiritual aspirations that manifested themselves,
say, in the ‘Theosophical Society’, — it is easy enough
to dismiss a phenomenon like Blavatsky by pointing out the very
dubious character of what one finds in this individual's
personal biography.
I
might instance a great number of things. I only need allude to
the notions, which arose amongst the society that had gathered
round Blavatsky and her spiritual life, that certain
information about the spiritual world had been made known
through the transmission of physical letters, physical
communications, — by means, that is, of writings on
paper, — from a quarter not situated within the physical
world. They used to call these documents ‘Masters' Letters’,
— used to exhibit them, and declare them not to have been
written in the ordinary way, or at least not conveyed in the
ordinary way to the place from which they were then produced.
It was therefore an affair which made a considerable stir, when
subsequently, in the house in which these letters had been
exhibited under H. P. Blavatsky's leadership, a whole
conjuror's apparatus of sliding doors was disclosed, by means
of which the letters could simply be pushed in, through these
doors, in the ordinary physical way, but fraudulently, into the
room where they then turned up as magic documents; and other
things of the sort.
It
is, of course, exceedingly easy for people in our times to
point to such things, and to find in them plain evidence that
such a personality as Blavatsky's can be simply settled with
the words: ‘She was just a swindler’. — Well, as to this
aspect of the phenomena that. played around Blavatsky, we shall
still have several things to say. But, for the moment, there is
another standpoint still that we may take, namely, of not
troubling ourselves for the moment with all that went on on the
external side of the affair.
Certainly, there are things in it which have raised objection.
But let us just neglect these objections for a while; say that
we don't trouble ourselves about all the things which went on
on the exterior, and simply consider the written works
themselves. And, if one does so, one will then come to the
conclusion which I described to you recently, — to the
conclusion, namely, that in Blavatsky's works one is largely
dealing with a mass of chaotic, dilettante stuff, which has
been scribbled down amongst the rest; but that, along with all
this, there are things which unmistakably, when they come to be
tested by proper methods, are in every way to be regarded as
reproductions — by some means or other — of a very
extensive knowledge of the spiritual world, or from the
spiritual world. This is something which cannot be denied,
despite any objections that may be raised.
And
here then arises the exceedingly important and, as I think,
crucial question for the inner history of civilized evolution:
How and from what cause could it happen that, at the end of the
nineteenth century, from — let us say so far — a
questionable quarter, there could come actual tidings from a
spiritual world? that there could come revelations of a
spiritual world, which at the least, when taken as occasions
for examining into the state of the facts, do show themselves,
even to a spiritual observation of the objective and scientific
kind, to be in every way deserving of most studious attention?
— revelations which, about the fundamental laws of the
world, the fundamental forces of the world, have more to tell,
than everything which in modern times has been brought to light
about the world's secrets, either by philosophy, or by any
other of the different tendencies of world-conception. The
question may well seem a crucial one,
And
then, to face this, there is another problem again in civilized
evolution, which must not be forgotten when speaking of the
life-conditions of anything such as the Anthroposophical
Society, or indeed in connection with any endeavours to find a
way into the spiritual world. And this phenomenon of civilized
evolution is: that the capacity for judgment, the power of
conviction in any judgment, has altogether suffered very
greatly in our age, — has gone back.
People allow themselves to be deceived in this respect by the
great steps that have been made in progress. But if one
considers these very steps of progress, and what the connection
has been between these great steps forwards, that have been
made in our day, and the course followed by its spiritual life,
in so far as the individual human personalities have intervened
as judgmatic persons in this spiritual life's course, —
then one gets a background, so to speak, for observing with
what capacity our age approaches phenomena of any kind, that
appeal to the human powers of judgment.
There is really uncommonly much that might be mentioned. I will
only pick out just a few instances. I would ask, for instance,
those who have had anything to do with applied electricity,
whether as professionals or amateurs, — I would ask them,
what the so-called Ohm's Law means to-day for applied
electricity? The answer would be, of course, that Ohm's
Law forms one of the fundaments on which the whole system
of applied electricity is built up. — When Ohm produced
his first work, which was the basis for his later, so-called
Ohm's Law, this work was rejected as ‘unusable’ by a
distinguished learned faculty at one of the universities. Had
things gone according to this learned faculty, there could be
no applied electricity to-day.
Again, to take perhaps something more directly obvious to you:
— you all know what the telephone means for us to-day in
the whole of our civilized life. When Reis, who was
outside the ring of official science, put on paper for the
first time his idea of the telephone, and sent in his
manuscript to one of the best-known periodicals of the day, the
Poggendorff Annals, the work was returned as
unusable.
So
great, you see, is the power of conviction residing in people's
judgment to-day, — and one might multiply such instances
indefinitely. Great is the judgment of our times in its powers
of conviction. One must simply look at these things with
perfect objectivity.
One
may pick out anything, lying, so to speak, on our top-peaks of
civilization, and one will find everywhere the same kind of
thing. Or, if one goes more into the hidden corners, well,
there too very pretty examples may often be found, to
illustrate the capacity of judgment in those quarters which
have the leading voice to-day in all that may be termed the
management of spiritual life.
And
the public again, the mass of the public, who follow along the
broad high-road of which I spoke two days ago, — they are
entirely under the impress of all this, which is accepted as
the recognized thing to-day. — Well, civilization is
common to all countries; in no country is it better nor worse
than in another.
Take an illustration such as this: Adalbert Stifter is a poet
of some distinction. I don't, however, want now to go into his
distinction as a poet, but to tell something out of his life.
He passed, — extremely well indeed, — through the
classical side of the secondary school, and then studied
natural science, with the intention of qualifying as a
secondary school teacher. But he was judged to be quite
unsuit-able for a secondary school teacher. His talents were
not judged adequate for a secondary school teacher. In the
judgment of the authorities he was not talented enough to
become a teacher at a secondary school.
Now
strangely enough it happened, that a certain Baroness Muenk,
who had nothing whatever to do with judging the qualifications
of secondary school teachers, heard of the poet, Adalbert
Stifter, made him read to her the poems which he had so far
written, and to which he himself attached no great value, and
downright compelled. him to publish them. They made at once a
great sensation. And the authorities now said: We can have no
better man to make school inspector for the whole country. And
so it came about, that the very person, who but a little while
before had been deemed incompetent to be himself a teacher, was
now appointed chief superintendent over the whole of these
teachers.
It
would be extremely interesting, some time or other, to describe
a series of such things, collected from all the various
departments of spiritual life, beginning with a phenomenon like
that of Julius Robert Mayer. The law connected with his name,
that of the conservation of energy, is one, as you know,
which I am obliged to contest in certain of its fields of
application. Modern physics, however, does not contest it; it
upholds it indeed in every particular, and is altogether built
up on this law of the conservation of energy. Julius Robert
Mayer, who to-day figures as a hero (you have heard me mention
others before, such as Gregory Mendel, who had a similar fate),
— Julius Robert Mayer, born at Heilbronn on the Neckar,
was always at the bottom of his class; and at the University,
to which he went on, — it was Tuebingen, — he one
fine day was advised, on account of his performances, that it
would be better for him to with-draw from the university. It is
certainly no merit of the university's, that he came upon his
discoveries; for, at the university, they wanted to turn him
out, before ever he had a chance to take his degree and become
a doctor.
Beginning with such things, down to the vast tragedy attending
the name of that man, to whose immense desert it is owing, that
puerperal fever, — which simply swept its people away
until Semmelweiss appeared, — is to-day reduced to
a minimum, — down to this whole vast tragedy of
Semmelweiss, which finally resulted, as in the case of Julius
Robert Mayer, in Semmelweiss' ending his days in a mad-house,
despite the fact that he is one of mankind's greatest
benefactors ... if one were to put all these things together,
one would have an extremely important element in the history of
civilization in recent times, and would thence be able to
judge, how little power this externally progressive age had for
hitting the facts, in its estimation of spiritual phenomena,
— how little readiness there was, really, to enter into
any signs that showed themselves on the horizon of its
spiritual life.
Such things as these have to be taken into account, if one
wishes to form a true picture of the antagonistic forces
opposed to the intervention of any spiritual movement. And then
one learns to know, what capacity there is for any sort of
judgment in this, our present age, which is so specially proud
of these powers of judgment that it does not possess.
Now
it is really a remarkably symptomatic phenomenon, that what
otherwise had only existed traditionally, hoarded up in all
manner of secret societies, who had no intention whatever of
letting it become public, — that all this hoarded store,
or a great part of it, should suddenly appear openly published
in the book of a woman, Blavatsky, — in a book bearing
the title Isis Unveiled.
Naturally, it gave alarm to all the people who said to
themselves: ‘This book contains a whole mass of things, that we
have always kept under lock and key.’ And these societies, I may
say, paid more heed to their locks and keys than our present
Anthroposophical Society does.
In
the Anthroposophical Society there most certainly was never any
intention of keeping the contents of the cycles totally and
absolutely secret; but what happened was, that, at a particular
time, I found myself required to let those things, which
otherwise I give by word of mouth, he made accessible to a
larger circle. And since there was no time to go through the
things and edit them, one simply let them be printed as
‘manuscript’ in the form they were in, which was not that in
which one would otherwise have published them, — not,
however, because one did not want to publish the material, but
because one didn't want to publish the material in this form,
and also because, after all, one wanted to see that these
things should he read by people who have the preparatory
training, for otherwise they are inevitably misunderstood.
But
in spite of this, every one of the cycles is to be had to-day
by anyone who requires it for antagonistic purposes. Those
societies I am speaking of, who kept a certain spiritual
treasure under lock and key, and put their people under oath to
betray no word of it, they knew better how to take care of
things. And they knew, that something very particular must be
behind it, when a book suddenly appears, which this time really
gave something of importance, such as I indicated. As for the
things which have no importance, you need only go down a
side-street in Paris to pick up basketfuls of the writings of
the secret societies on sale; but the publication of these
writings will occasion no alarm to the people who have kept the
traditional knowledge locked up in their secret societies; for
as a rule they are very valueless things that one finds
published in this way.
Isis Unveiled, however, was not something valueless.
This Isis Unveiled, indeed, delivered itself with a
certain substantiality, that made the knowledge seem original
which it imparted, and which had been so carefully preserved
over from an ancient wisdom until now.
Well, as I said, those people, who were alarmed, could but
think that there was something very particular behind it,
— a betrayal from some quarter. I do not so much want
now, in these lectures, to emphasize the inner side of the
affair, which I have repeatedly discussed at one time or
another in previous lectures from this or that aspect. I want
more to-day to deal with the outer side of it, as the world
judged it, which is of special importance for the history of
the movement, — to describe how the world judged it,
rather than what went on as facts behind the scenes. —
This, then, the people could tell: namely, that somebody or
other, who was initiated in these things, who had received
traditional knowledge of them, must for some reason, —
not necessarily a particularly good one — have given
hints to Blavatsky. This, it was very easy to tell, without
being wide of the truth, that somewhere or other, from some
secret society, or group of societies, there had been a
betrayal; and that then Blavatsky had been the means of making
the thing public.
There would quite well, though, have been other ways of giving
such things to the public, than by employing a lady of
Blavatsky's kind as the means of publication.
There was, however, a reason, of which again I will only give
the outer aspect, for employing this particular lady. And here
I come to a chapter in our spiritual history, which is really a
very curious one. At that time, when Blavatsky and her books
came on the scene, there was but very little talk of what is in
everybody's mouth to-day, namely, of Psycho-Analysis. But I can
assure you, my dear friends, that the people, who had any
powers of judgment, — that these people experienced in
living truth, through this same phenomenon of Blavatsky,
something, compared with which all that ever yet was written by
any of the leading lights of Psycho-Analysis is really —
as I said lately in another connection — a dilettanteism
to the second degree. — For what does Psycho-Analysis
propose to show?
In
the point wherein Psycho-Analysis is in a sense right, it
shows, that down below, at the bottom of the human being, there
lives something, which, — whatever this ‘down below’ may
be, — can be brought up to consciousness, and, when
brought up, extends beyond what man has in his conscious-ness
originally. So that one may say, if you like, that, hidden in
the corporeal body, there is something which, when brought up
into consciousness, looks like spirit. Through the corporeal
body runs a rumble of spirit. — It is of course extremely
elementary for the psycho-analyst in this way to fish up a few
fragmentary leavings of life-experience from the bottom of the
human being, — leavings, that is, remnants of
life-realizations, which have not been lived through with quite
sufficient intensity for the emotional requirements of the
person in question, — which, as it were, have deposited
themselves, form dregs in the man, and thereby bring him into a
state of unstable, instead of stable equilibrium; and that
then, what has thus collected during a man's life should be
fished up, although it rumbles down below in unconsciousness,
and when fished up into consciousness proves to be something
spiritual, something which simply is not, so to speak, properly
assimilated to the human being, and therefore rumbles in a
disagreeable manner. When it becomes conscious, however, it can
then be dispelled by the proper reaction, and so the man gets
rid of the disagreeable rumbling.
It
is interesting, though, what a point this psycho-analytic,
dilettante method of investigation has reached to-day. With
Jung, particularly, it is extremely interesting. Jung has found
out, that down below, — the ‘down below’ can't, of
course, be very exactly determined, but somewhere down below
(its whole being is after all very indeterminate!), —
that somewhere then, man has within his being everything
in the nature of undigested experience that he may have lived
through since his birth; that there, down below, within his
human being, he has all sorts of things, that go back to his
early forefathers, that may take us back indeed all the way
through the life-experiences of the various races, and further
back still. So that it seems to the psycho-specialists to-day
by no means improbable, for instance, that some experience
which they met with, like the OEdipus problem say, in Greece,
left an impression on the people; and that then it was
transmitted by heredity, on and on. And to-day some poor devil
comes to the psycho-analyst's clinic, and he psycho-analyses
him, and gets up something that is seated so deep down in the
patient, that it doesn't come out of his own, present life, but
from his father and forefather and fore-forefather, and so on,
away back to the time of the ancient Greeks who lived in the
days of the OEdipus problem. And so it has run down through the
whole blood-stream, and can be psycho-analysed out again
to-day. There are the OEdipus sensations, rumbling about in the
man, and can be psycho-analyzed out of him. And then they think
that they will come on really very interesting trains of
connection, and on something that will lead back far into the
races, if they psycho-analyse it out.
Only, — you see, — these are altogether dilettante
methods of investigating. For you only need a little
acquaintance with Anthroposophy to know, that it is possible to
bring up a very great many things out of the under depths of
man's life: his pre-natal life to begin with, his pre-earthly
life, what the man went through before he came down into the
physical world; that one can bring up out of him what he went
through in previous earth-lives. There one comes out of
dilettanteism and into actual reality!
And
there, too, one comes to recognize, that in Man the whole
secret of the Universe is contained, involved, rolled up
together, as it were, in him. It was the view, after all, of
ancient times as well, that the secret of the Universe is
un-rolled, when Man brings up from within him all that lies hid
in his own inner depths. That was why they called Man a
Microcosm, not for the sake of a fine phrase, such as people
are so fond of to-day, but because it was a fact of actual
experience, that from the bottom depths of Man every
conceivable thing can be fetched up whatsoever, that lies
spread as a secret through the width and breadth of the
Cosmos.
It
is in reality the merest elementary dilettanteism, which one
finds to-day as psycho-analysis. For, firstly, it is
psychologic dilettanteism, — they don't know, that, when
you get to a certain depth, physical and spiritual life are
one. They merely regard the soul-life swimming on the top, and
apply abstract notions to this surface soul-life; they never
get down to those lower depths, where the soul-life lives
creative, weaving, pulsing in blood and in breathing, where it
is one, in fact, with the so-called material functions. They
study the soul's life in a dilettante way. And again, they
study the physical life in a dilettante way, inasmuch as they
study it merely in its external appearance to the senses, and
don't know that everywhere, in all sense-life, and above all in
the human organism, there is hidden spirit.
And
when two dilettanteisms are so interwoven, that the one is used
to throw light on the other, as is done in psycho-analysis,
then the dilettanteisms do not merely add, but they multiply
together, and one gets dilettanteism squared.
Well, what displays itself in the form of this squared
dilettanteism, was, in a way, to be seen unmistakably in the
psychologic problem of Blavatsky. From some quarter or other
there may have been something betrayed, which gave an
incentment; and this incentment worked practically in the same
way as though an invisible psycho-analyst — but a
wise one this time! — had fetched up out of
Blavatsky, by means, namely, of a sudden jerk, a whole mass of
knowledge; which this time came from the actual person herself,
and not from old writings that had been handed down by
tradition from olden times. Something had here been brought to
light out of the actual human being itself, by what I might
call the invisible psycho-analyst. For, whether there was any
traitor in the question, he, at any rate, was not the
psycho-analyst; he only gave the jerk. The circumstances,
however, themselves gave the jerk. — And what were the
circumstances?
Look back at the evolution of the ages, to about the fifteenth
century, and you will find, my dear friends, that it still,
indeed frequently, happened, if people were stirred and roused
by something or other (it merely needed to be some external
phenomenon, that specially struck them), that then out of their
own inner being there rose up before them some revelation of
world-secrets. Later on, this has become something mystical and
legendary; and the story told by Jacob Boehme, of how he had a
marvellous revelation from gazing at a pewter plate, is thought
very wonderful, simply because people do not know how things
were in earlier times, and that down even into the fifteenth
century it was still possible, through a comparatively, to all
appearance trifling occasion, to call forth out of the inner
man stupendous revelations of world-secrets, which the man then
saw in a vision.
But
ever more and more has the possibility decreased for men to
have inner revelations through incentments of such a kind. This
comes, you see, from the increasing ascendancy of
intellectualism. Intellectualism, is of course, involved with a
definite form of development in the brain; the brain becomes
... one cannot, of course, prove it physiologically in
externals, by anatomic means, but one can prove it nevertheless
spiritually ... the brain becomes in a way calcified, stiver.
And, in matter of fact, the brains of civilized mankind have
grown considerably stiver since the fifteenth century. And this
stiff brain does not allow man's inner revelations to come to
the surface in his consciousness. And now I must say something
exceedingly paradoxical, but which nevertheless is true. This
greater stiffness of brain showed itself, as a fact, mostly in
male humanity; — which I do not say as a special ground
of rejoicing for any particular female brain, for towards the
last half of the nineteenth century the women's brains too
began to be stiff enough; — still, the vantage in respect
of intellectuality and stiffness of brain lay with the men. And
with this is connected the decrease in judgment.
Now
this was the very time, when the practice of keeping secret the
old knowledge was still very largely maintained. And the case
then turned out to be, that the men were not much affected by
this knowledge; for they learnt it by memory, in grades, and it
did not much affect them; — besides, they kept it under
lock and key. Supposing, how-ever, there were someone, who in
some way wanted to set this old knowledge working once more
with peculiar activity, then he might quite well make the
peculiar experiment of administering this old knowledge (which
he himself need not perhaps even understand), just in a small
dose maybe, to a woman, — and to one moreover, whose
brain was very specially prepared; for the Blavatsky brain was,
after all, somewhat different from other woman-brains of the
nineteenth century. And then it might be, that, — just
from the contrast of it with everything else that was there as
education in these woman-brains, — what was otherwise
old, dried-up knowledge might catch fire and so, — just
as the psycho-analyst gives some particular lead, that stirs up
the whole human being, — so it might stir up the peculiar
personality of Blavatsky. And. then, through this stir, she out
of her-self discovered what had been altogether forgotten by
the whole of mankind, except those who were in secret
societies, and by the others, who were in secret societies, had
been kept carefully under lock and key, — to a great
extent indeed not even understood. In this way it could all
come out, as though, one might say, through a cultural
vent-hole.
But
at the same time there was no sort of foundation there, for the
things to have been worked up in a reasonable form. For Madame
Blavatsky was certainly anything but a logical reasoner. In
logic she was exceedingly weak; and whilst in actual fact she
could produce out of her total human being revelations of
world-secrets, she was by no means also adequate to describing
these things in a form for which one could be answerable to the
scientific conscience, say, of the modern age.
And
now, consider for a moment. Seeing the scant measure of
judgment that was brought to hear upon spiritual phenomena,
what possibility was there for a thing such as this, —
which only showed itself again one might say, twenty years
later, in a quite primitive, dilettante fashion at most, in
psycho-analysis, and then only in a very tiny field, —
how was it possible for a thing such as this, that could grow
to a living experience of gigantic size and grandeur, such as
psycho-analysis will only one day be able to rise to, when it
has been purified, clarified, when it is placed on a reasonable
basis and conducted really scientifically, when people no
longer psycho-analyse out of the blood, that comes from men who
lived in the days of the OEdipus problem and has run through
the veins down into our present generation, but when they
really understand how the web of the world is woven ... yes,
indeed, how could such a living experience, which, in the face
of to-day's degenerate psycho-analysing, displays what I might
call its grand, gigantic counterpart, freed of all its
caricature, — how, at a time when the capacity for
judgment was what I have described to you, how could this thing
hope, in any wide circle of people, to meet with an adequate
measure of under-standing?
In
this respect, one could really make many experiences as regards
the comprehension to be met with in our days, when one made the
least attempt to appeal to a somewhat larger measure of
judgment.
To
give an instance as illustration. These illustrations are
necessary, and you will see as the lectures go on, how
necessary it is that I should enter into these seemingly quite
personal matters. I should like to tell you an example of how
hard it is in these modern times to make oneself at all
understandable, directly there is some point about which one
desires to appeal to a somewhat larger measured, larger hearted
judgment.
There was a time, about the turn of the century, in Berlin,
where I was then living, when Giordano Bruno
Associations used to be founded, and amongst others was a
‘Giordano Bruno League’. There were other Giordano Bruno
Associations, but this, that was founded, was a ‘Giordano Bruno
League’. It had in it truly admirable people, according to the
fashion and notions of the time, — people really with a
profound interest in every sort of thing in which one could
possibly take an interest in those days, and round which one
could centre the whole range of one's thoughts and feelings and
will. Indeed, in the abstract fashion which is usual in modern
times, there was even reference made in this Giordano Bruno
League to the Spirit. A notable personage in this
Giordano Bruno League prefaced its foundation with an
introductory lecture on, ‘Matter is never without Spirit.’ But
it was all so hopeless! For this ‘Spirit’, and all that went
on there, was at bottom a pure abstraction, nothing which could
ever get near any actual reality in the world. The whole way of
thinking was terribly abstract! — What in particular
seemed to me very irritating, was the way in which the people
every moment, on every possible occasion, dragged in the word
monoism: One must worship the one-and-only reasonable
and man-befitting Monoism; and Dualism is a thing of the
past. And then came always a reference to the way in which in
these modern times we had emancipated ourselves from the
Dualism of the Middle Ages.
These, you see, were things which at the time I found
uncommonly irritating. I found them irritating for the reason
... in the first place, all this gassing about monoism, and
dilettante rejection of any dualism ... and then I found it
irritating to talk about the Spirit in this general,
pantheistic way, — that the Spirit is ... well, that
there is, after all Spirit too everywhere, — until
nothing was left of Spirit but the word. I found all this
considerably irritating.
As
a matter of fact, after the delivery of the very first lecture
on ‘Matter never without Spirit’, I came to words with the man
who had delivered the lecture; which brought me already at the
time into very bad odour. But this whole monistic business went
on ever further, and grew more and more irritating, —
interesting, but irritating, — until I decided once for
all to lay hold of the people at a salient point, and so at
least, as I hoped, shake up their powers of judgment a little.
And after a whole series of lectures, through which the tirades
had gone on about the darkness of the Middle Ages and the
horrible dualism of the Scholastics, I determined, — it
was just at the time, in which people now declare, at that very
time, that I was a rabid Haeckelite! — I determined for
once to do something which should give the people's judgment a
little shaking-up. And so I held a lecture on Thomas
Aquinas, in which — to put now into a couple of
sentences what I then expounded at length — I said
somewhat as follows: There was absolutely xiii justification,
— I said, — as regards the spiritual life of the
past and its ideas, for talking of the darkness of the
Middle Ages and in particular of the Dualism of Thomas Aquinas
and the Scholastics; for that, if Monoism was the order of the
day, I would undertake to show that Thomas Aquinas was a
thorough monoist. Only then one must not give the name of
Monoism only to what the present age understands by it, as
materialistic Monoism; but one must give the name of Monoist to
everyone, who looks on the Universal Principle as residing in a
Monon, in a Unity. And that — I said — Thomas
Aquinas most certainly did; for he obviously saw in the Unity
of the Godhead the Monon underlying everything that exists as
creation in the universe. Here — said I you have a basis
of the purest Monoism. Only that Aquinas according to the
method of those times, drew this distinction: that the one half
could be comprehended by ordinary human knowledge, through the
senses and the understanding, — the other half by means
of another kind. of knowledge, which in those days was called
Belief. But what the Scholastics still understood by Belief, is
not understood by mankind to-day at all. And so one must be
clear, I said, that Thomas Aquinas wanted to approach the
Universe on its one side by this investigation and knowledge of
the understanding but that, on its other side, he wanted to
supplement and complete this investigated knowledge of the
understanding by the displayed truths of revelation. And it was
precisely by this means that he sought to penetrate to the
Monon of the Universe. He only sought to proceed by two roads.
And it was all the worse for the present age, I said, that this
present age had. not sufficiently large-hearted ideas to look
round about it a little in history.
In
short, I wanted to assist the dried-up brains to a little
moisture. Rut it was all in vain; for the effect was a most
extraordinarily curious one. The people could make nothing at
all of the matter to begin with. They were all thorough-going
evangelical protestants, and thought: here was an attempt to
smuggle in Catholicism. It's a defence of Catholicism, —
they thought, — with its horrible Dualism! It is really
dreadful! — they said: — Here are we, taking every
possible pains to deal Catholicism its death-blow; and now
comes a member of this very Giordano Bruno League, and takes
Catholicism into defence!
Really, the people didn't know at the time, whether I had not
gone mad in the night, when I gave this lecture. They could
make nothing at all of the affair. And. they were really people
of the most enlightened brains, at that time. In fact, there
was only one, really, who afterwards came forward as a sort of
apologist. It was the poet Wolfgang Kirchbach. He was the only
one, who then devised a formula, under which the lecture could
enjoy civic rights in the Giordano Bruno League. And this was
the formula he devised: He said: What Steiner wanted, was not
by any means to smuggle in Catholicism; but he wanted to show,
that in that ancient scholastic wisdom of Catholicism there
still lay something much weightier, than all that we have
ourselves to-day in our superficial ideas. That was what he
wanted to show. He wanted to show us, that the reason why
Catholicism is such a powerful enemy, is because we are such
weak opponents, that we must furnish ourselves with stronger
weapons. That was what his lecture was intended to show.
And
this was the only formula, under which the lecture then, by
one-third, by a minority, so far managed to obtain civic
rights, that I was at any rate not excluded from the Giordano
Bruno League. But with the majority I passed for a man, who had
had his brain turned by Catholicism.
Well, you see, this is just an episode out of the same period,
at which I am now said. to have been a rabid disciple of
Haeckel. Through such things, however, one gained practical
experience as to the capacity of judgment, namely as to the
largeness of judgment, with which anything was welcomed, which
was not bent in the first place upon theoretic formulas, but
was bent on actually pursuing the road to the spirit, on
actually getting into the spiritual world.
For, getting into the spiritual world really does not depend on
what particular theory one has about Spirit or Matter, but on
whether one is in a position to bring about an actual living
experience of the spiritual world. As I have often pointed
out before, the Spiritualists most certainly believe that all
their proceedings make for the spirit; but their theories all
the same are so empty of spirit! — they certainly do not
lead men spiritwards. One may be a materialist even, and yet
inspired with a great deal of spirit; it is real spirit, too,
even though it be spirit mistaken in error. One need not of
course set up self-mistaken spirit as something very valuable;
but self-mistaken spirit, spirit which cheats itself by taking
Matter to be the one and only reality, can at any rate be much
richer in spirit, than that spiritual poverty which seeks the
spirit after a material fashion, because it can find no spirit
whatever within itself.
In
looking back, then, to its first beginnings, which must be
rightly grasped in order to understand the whole meaning and
life-conditions of the movement, one must know, in the lit st
place, in what an exceedingly problematic manner the spiritual
world's revelations made their entrance at first — if I
may use the expression — into the earth-world, in the
last third of the nineteenth century, and how little people's
judgment in general was ripe for the reception of these
spiritual revelations, — and then, above all, how strong
the determination was in certain definite circles, that nothing
whatever which really leads to the spirit should be allowed to
get out amongst the people. Most undoubtedly, there were a
large number of by no means negligible persons, on whom the
apparition of Blavatsky could not fail to act with rousing
effect.
And
that is what it did do at first. The attitude of the people who
still preserved some judgment, was, that they said to
themselves: This, after all, is something that speaks for
itself: It is strange that it should come into the world
just in the way it has now; but it is a thing that
speaks for itself. One need only apply sound ordinary
understanding to it, and it speaks for itself.
There were, however, many people, as I said, whose interest it
was, that just this kind of arousing influence should on no
account be allowed to come into the world.
And
now the thing was there; there, in a person such as Blavatsky,
who in a certain sense again was quite naive and helpless in
the face of her own internal revelation. This can be seen from
the very style of her writings. — The thing was there,
then: and this was how she herself stood towards it: naive and
helpless in a sort of way, and at the mercy of much that
afterwards took place in her surroundings. For do you think it
was especially difficult, — especially with H. P.
Blavatsky it was not very difficult, — for people,
whose desire it now was, so to manipulate the world that it
should be proof against every sort of spirituality, — for
these people to get at Blavatsky and form her surroundings.
Just because she was so naive and helpless before her own
internal revelations, she was in a way credulous. In the affair
of the sliding-doors, for instance, through which were shoved
letters ostensibly from the Masters, but which some person
outside — whether B ... or another — had written
and shoved in, it is by no means a necessary assumption that
Blavatsky had said in the first instance to B ... : You shove
them in! — but rather, she was again, in a way, native,
and believed, herself, in letters of the kind. The same person,
who shoved them in, deceived Blavatsky, It was then of course
very easy to say before the world: The woman is a swindler. But
don't you see, my dear friends, Blavatsky herself might very
well be swindled. For there was a certain capacity in her for
quite uncommon credulity, as a consequence just of this
peculiar, let me say, non-hardness of her brain. The problem
therefore is altogether an extremely complicated one; and
really demands, — as everything genuinely spiritual does,
which comes into the world to-day, — really calls for
power of judgment, for a certain soundness of human
understanding. — It is not exactly sound human
understanding, when people first judge Adalbert Stifter not
even competent to be a teacher, and then afterwards ... in this
case again it was a woman, — probably one again with a
softer brain than those committee-men all had in the government
offices, or the school-boards, ... afterwards, when a hint came
from this quarter, they then declared him qualified to inspect
all the very people to whose ranks he might not even
belong.
To
perceive the truth in such matters does, you see, amongst other
things, require sound human understanding. About this sound
human understanding, however, there are peculiar notions. Last
year, when I was holding a fairly big course of lectures in
Germany, I made frequent use of the expression ‘sound human
understanding’, and said, that everything which Anthroposophy
has to say from the spiritual world can be tested by sound
human understanding. One of the critics, and by no means the
worst of them, caught this up, and made the following
criticism. He said, almost word for word: To talk of sound
human understanding was, after all, bait for gudgeons; for
everybody to-day, who has had any sort of scientific training,
knows very well, that the human understanding, when it is
sound, knows next to nothing; and when it fancies that it knows
something, then it is not sound. — This was the
sub-stance of a critical judgment, written with no lack of
esprit.
Put
more into general words, then, this means, that anyone, who
to-day is as clever as he should be, after all the steps that
have been made in human progress, is aware that one can know
nothing: if he thinks that he knows anything, he is mad.
— So far have we come already in our reception of the
gifts of the spirit.
And
now that I have given you some instances, before the
anthroposophic movement began, of the capacity for apprehending
a spiritual manifestation, and have given you now the judgment
of an at any rate standard critic only a year ago, you have a
tolerable picture of how this disposition of the age has
pursued the whole movement. For, after all, seeing the general
atmosphere of the age, and especially that a personage so hard
to understand as Blavatsky was there in addition, to point to
as an illustration, — there could but proceed from this
atmosphere of the age the one judgment, which is simply the
same as is repeated to-day in all manner of variations, —
only that one person says it in one way, another in another:
Everyone to-day, who is clever, who has sound human
understanding, says, Ignorabimus. Everyone, who doesn't
say Ignorabimus, is either mad, or a swindler.
One
must not look on this as simply proceeding from ill-will. In
order to be able to take one's place rightly in the age, in
order to perceive a few of the necessary life-conditions of the
anthroposophic movement, or e must not see in all this merely
the ill-will of private individuals, but one must recognize it
as something that belongs to the colour of the times in
all countries, amongst the whole of modern mankind, and that
must be recognized for what it is.
Then, it is true, in the whole stand which one takes up,
— and which one must take up vigorously and boldly!
— one will then also be able to mingle what must be there
besides, when speaking about the age from the anthroposophic
standpoint, — what, after all, must be present in all
refutation, however sharp — sharp in soul, — of our
opponents: and that is, compassion. One must, nevertheless,
have com-passion, because the judgment of the age is
clouded.
How
things now went with the anthroposophic movement, and were
bound to go, circumstances being as they are, — of this
we will speak more to-morrow.
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