SECOND LECTURE
26th June, 1924
It
is, as you know, my dear friends, our intention to work things out
here from their foundations, in order then to pass on afterwards to
the practical side. I called your attention yesterday to the fact
that the ordinary, superficial life of soul has to be regarded as a
complex of symptoms, and no more. It follows from this that, if we
want to get at the real state of affairs that lies behind a so-called
mental illness or mental weakness in some child, modern methods of
approach are quite inadequate, for they can only describe how things
are in this superficial soul-life, without being able to lead on to
what lies deeper that is to say, to the region where, as we
saw yesterday, the real life of soul is working. We cannot here enter
into the question of how mental illnesses in grown-up people should
be dealt with (there are indeed always, as you know, problems of many
kinds connected with that), but we do want, in this course, to make a
thorough study of what it is possible to do with children.
Before
going further into the subject, I would like to read you an article
from this newspaper that gives a crude example of how misleading an
observation of the superficial life of soul can be. (I use the word
superficial in the sense of locality, not in a
derogatory sense.) It is an example that will have special
significance for you, in view of the tasks that you are undertaking.
A
man of the name of Wulffen, [Erich
Wulffen, b. 1862, author and criminologist.] who was once
Public Prosecutor, has made a study, from the standpoint of criminal
psychology, of all kinds of mental abnormalities, and has written big
books on the subject. How does he reach his conclusions? For he
obviously does not take his start from professional medicine. In his
capacity as Public Prosecutor he naturally became familiar with a
wide field of abnormalities in the life of soul, and afterwards at a
more mature age, he set out to acquire a somewhat miscellaneous
knowledge of medicine. He then combined his experience in his
profession with his subsequent reading, and evolved a theory which is
nothing else than the inevitable outcome of the so-called
scientific hypotheses of today. For either we take this
modern scientific point of view seriously, in which case we are bound
eventually to come to the conclusions arrived at by Wulffen, or we do
not take it seriously, and then nothing remains but to take our start
from Anthroposophy. An intermediate way can never be anything but a
questionable compromise.
Wulffen
recently gave a lecture in Zürich dealing with the subject of
criminal psychology, in which he spoke about abnormality in the life
of the soul. It is important that we should pay attention to what is
said in such a lecture, for we are in fact in these days continually
coming up against the very same kind of thing. If you set out to
think about any knowledge you have gained from looking into some
modern scientific book, or into any book that is based on the
scientific way of thinking, you will find it full of the forms and
modes of thought which this man Wulffen voices in a particularly
radical way. And you really ought to know whither modern science must
inevitably lead when it begins to investigate the field of abnormal
soul-life. Before I read the press notice let me tell you that
Wulffen himself is a much more able man, and much more correct in his
statements, than the journalist who is reporting his lecture. The
journalist can only make fun of it, which he is free to do, since he
has still the public behind him thanks be! in his
prejudice against psychiatry and criminal psychology. The tone in
which the report is written need not therefore concern you; the
journalist, as I said, is not a man of much ability and can do no
more than ridicule the whole thing. He has, however, no idea that his
jests are a hit at modern science rather than at Wulffen! For if the
science upon which Wulffen takes his stand were honestly adhered to,
its representatives in other fields of knowledge would have to speak
in the very same way as he does. And now let us read this press
notice for it really does concern us. It is entitled:
Schiller according to the Psycho-Analysis of the Public
Prosecutor. It should rather be called: Friedrich
Schiller, according to the Psycho-Analysis of present-day Psychology
or Psycho-pedagogy.
Last Friday, 29th February, I924, the Public Prosecutor Dr. E. W.
Wulffen, a man known and respected far outside his immediate
profession, took severely to task the penniless Swabian, Fritz
Schiller (at one time Professor of History in Jena and the author of
several revolutionary writings) in a brilliantly constructed lecture
on Criminal Psychology and Friedrich Schiller. He
achieved among the large number of listeners belonging to the Zürich
Lawyers' Union a success all the more lasting because, on account of
death, the accused was unable to be present at the meeting; the
utmost he could do was perhaps to point with an invisible hand to
what he had written during his lifetime.
Wullfen's arguments were most effective. The proofs adduced were
irrefutable. The lecturer had even confiscated I mean, had
read Schiller's private correspondence. And, lo and behold,
thanks to Dr. Wulffen's help, scales fell from the eyes of the
audience. Our people's love for Schiller, youth's adoration for him,
were laid bare in all their ugly roots. Schiller is popular, it
seems, on account of his innate cruelty which makes wallowing in the
gloomy splendor of the horrible come natural to him, and causes him
to write ballads like Die Kindesmörderin, etc.,
which are evidence enough of a cruelty that is continually
intensified by Schiller's struggle with his own sick body. And then
his tragedies, which stimulate fear and compassion in the spectators
why are they so effective on the stage? Because they appeal to latent
criminal qualities in the public and enable the audience to enjoy a
safe outlet for dangerous propensities ...
It is true that in spite of this overwhelming load of proof Wulffen
concedes to Schiller certain redeeming features. There is his feeling
for freedom, which, nursed by the suppression he laboured under in
earlier years (associated, as it was in him, with an inferiority
complex) suddenly flares up in The Robbers, and is then
gradually purified and ennobled, until finally in Wilhelm
Tell we have the glorification of a revolution that is founded
on order. For the rest, Schiller's attitude to good and evil is seen
to be the outcome of aesthetic points of view.
Thus are the arteries which feed Schiller's poetry quickly detected
by Dr. Wulffen and defined; they are cruelty and the urge for
freedom. The struggle with these impulses, which Schiller lived out
in his poetry this it was, so we are assured, that led him
along the path to perfection. [From
Neue Züricher Zeitung, No. 342, 7th March, 1924.]
So
there was, then, in Schiller an inferiority complex
in his childhood. It is quite important to realise what the outcome
would be if modern science were to enter the realm of pedagogy, and
teachers were then to give lessons in the manner of this science
let us say, in a school where some young Schiller was among the
pupils. You must envisage quite exactly what this would mean.
If
you think of what was said yesterday, you will see that, just as we
have to take, in other illnesses, the symptoms, that help us to find
the right orientation, and then lead back from these to the real
facts of the illness, so we must start in our present investigation
from the manifestations of the life of soul, from thinking, feeling
and willing, and trace our way back until we can behold
the real condition of the patient. We saw that the origin, for
example, of an abnormality of soul, which showed itself in the
patient's being unable to pass from intention to deed, had to be
sought in some subtle abnormality of the liver, and that the
knowledge of this connection must form the starting point for our
treatment, both educational and therapeutic.
And
now, before we can pass on to consider the practical side in detail,
we must look back once again at the life of soul of the child. We
have seen how during the first seven years the body presents a model,
and the individuality works out in accordance with this model the
second body, which functions between the change of teeth and puberty.
If the individuality is stronger than the inherited qualities, the
child will overcome these more or less in the course
of changing his teeth; his individuality will then be apparent in his
whole life of soul, and will manifest also externally in his bodily
nature. If, however, the individuality of the child is weak, it will
be overcome by the inherited characteristics; it will give, as it
were, such close attention to the model that a slavish copy of the
same will be visible in the body. And then one can rightly speak of
inherited characteristics. For between the change of teeth and
puberty everything is as it results from the individuality; the
reason why it can happen that inherited characteristics show
themselves at all during this period, is because the individuality
has been to that extent too weak to overcome them and follow its own
line of direction in accordance with karma. What works in the
individuality as the real impulse of karma shows itself overpowered
in such a case by the inherited characteristics.
Now
at this point we must observe and it will also provide us
with what I may describe as a symptomatology of more general
application we must observe how thinking is related in its
development to the development of will, in the child. We saw
yesterday that there is a certain sense in which we have to look upon
thinking, feeling and willing as no more than symptoms. We saw that
thinking, as it expresses itself in the superficial soul-life, has
behind it a synthesizing activity which operates in the construction
and organisation of the brain; and then we saw how behind expressions
of will is an analytical activity which underlies the organs
underlies indeed our whole metabolism-and-limbs man, keeping the
organs separate and distinct one from another.
To
begin with, let us consider thinking, with the synthesizing activity
of the brain, that underlies it. We must understand clearly what
thoughts really are. Thoughts, as we know, enter the organism of the
child, as it were, in snatches, bit by bit. Even the grown person has
around him only in scattered fragments, so to speak, all that man is
capable of thinking. One person will have a great wealth of thoughts,
another will have less. But now, what are thoughts?
The
modern view, which tends to degenerate into the conclusions you find
in people like Wulffen, imagines that thoughts come into existence
gradually in the human being, as he progresses in his development,
and that when he succeeds in having thoughts that answer
in the world, that fit in all right with the world, then these
thoughts he has evolved, of course, out of himself. But if we
investigate, with anthroposophical understanding, the being of man,
we shall never succeed in discovering in him anything from which
thoughts can arise. All investigations which set out to discover
where thoughts could originate in man are, in the eyes of Spiritual
Science, no more sensible than if someone who had a jug of milk given
him every morning were to begin one day to ponder, in his cleverness,
how the china of which the jug is made produces the milk. It might
conceivably happen that he had never observed how the milk does get
into the jug; but if he could start wondering how the milk manages to
ooze out of the china, we should take him for a simpleton indeed. To
assume such a possibility in regard to a milk jug is obviously to
adopt a hypothesis which leads to an absurdity. And yet, in regard to
thinking, science makes this very hypothesis; science is just as
stupid, every bit as stupid as the fellow we have imagined. For when
we set out to investigate with all the means afforded by Spiritual
Science (and we have been speaking of these now for more than twenty
years), we find nothing at all in the human organisation that could
possibly produce thoughts. There is simply nothing there capable of
doing it. Just as the milk must be poured into the jug in order to be
in the jug, so for thought to be in man, they must come into him. And
whence do they come for the life we are considering, between
birth and death? Where are thoughts? We can investigate the question
of where milk comes from; we ought also to be able to discover where
thoughts are. Where then shall we look for these thoughts.
We
are surrounded by the physical world. But we have around us also the
etheric world, from which, as you know, our own etheric body is
taken, immediately before we descend to physical incarnation. The
etheric body of man comes from the cosmic ether, which is all around
us in every direction. Now it is this cosmic ether, my dear friends,
that is the bearer of the thoughts. The cosmic ether, which is common
to all, carries within it the thoughts; there they are within it,
those living thoughts of which I have repeatedly spoken in our
anthroposophical lectures, telling you how the human being
participates in them in pre-earthly life before he comes down to
Earth. There, in the cosmic ether, are contained all the living
thoughts there are; and never are they received from the cosmic ether
during the life between birth and death. No; the whole store of
living thought that man holds within him, he receives at the moment
when he comes down from the spiritual world when, that is, he
leaves his own living element, his own element of living thought, and
descends and forms his ether body. Within this ether body, within
that which is the building and organising force in man, are the
living thoughts; there they are, there they still are.
If
we have here the symptomatic life of soul thinking, feeling
and willing and here behind, the real life of soul, then the
thoughts constitute a part of this real life of soul: and these
thoughts which we take from the universal cosmic ether build up in
us, first of all, our brain, and then in the wider sense, our whole
nerves-and-senses system. For it is the living thinking that forms
our brain forming it into an organ of demolition, an organ
that deals with matter in a way we might describe somewhat as
follows.
When
we look out upon our environment, we have around us the world of
earthly substance, in all its various processes and ways of working.
These processes, which in Nature are living processes, are gradually
broken down by the activity of the living thinking, so that here
in the brain a continual demolition is going
on; the processes which are, as I said, Nature processes
are arrested. Thus, in the brain, a beginning is actually made in the
direction of a stoppage of Nature processes; matter is continually
being secreted and then falling away. The matter that has fallen
away, the matter that has been excreted and become useless, is the
nerves. And the nerves, arising in this way as a product of living
thinking but with the life in them being perpetually killed all the
time, become in consequence endowed with a faculty that resembles the
faculty possessed by a mirror. They acquire the faculty of enabling
the thoughts of the surrounding ether to be reflected in them; and
this is the origin of subjective thinking, the superficial thinking
which consists in reflected pictures, the thinking we carry within us
between birth and death. Through the fact, therefore, that living
thinking is active within us, we are enabled to hold up our
nerves-and-senses system to the world like a mirror, and can then
produce there pictures of the impressions that are living in the
surrounding ether, and throw them back into our consciousness. This
means that the thinking, and the forming of mental pictures, which
belongs to the superficial life of soul is nothing else than the
reflection of the thoughts that live in the cosmic ether.
When
you compare yourself with your reflection in a mirror, you realise at
once that you are something altogether different from that reflected
picture. Similarly, you can compare thoughts with their reflections,
and you will find that the latter are dead thinking,
just as the picture of you in the mirror is dead, whilst you
yourself, standing in front of it, are alive. There cannot ever be in
the cosmic ether a distorted, an illogical or a deranged thought. Yet
the thoughts that are contained in the ordinary, superficial life of
soul are, as we have seen, reflections of the thoughts in the cosmic
ether; how, then, does a deranged or senseless thought come about?
How can it ever arise? The answer is, through the mirror not being in
order. The whole process that originated in the structure of the
brain has not succeeded in producing a perfect mirror. In order,
therefore, to explain the presence of distorted thoughts, we have to
go back to what takes place in the brain and the nerves-and-senses
system, which the human being constructed for himself from the real
living life of thought. It is most important to be clear from the
outset that it is not the thoughts themselves that we can in any way
assail; for the thought-content as such, the thoughts themselves, are
in the cosmic ether in their full validity and truth.
We
must make every endeavour to enable the pupil with whom we are
dealing, who has been given into our charge, to find his right
relation to this cosmic ether. We shall never do so unless we, as
teachers, are permeated through and through with the feeling that the
thoughts in all their rightness and in all the power of their
livingness are contained in the cosmic ether, are present all the
time in the cosmic ether. Without having ourselves this religious
feeling towards the cosmos, we cannot possibly develop a right
attitude towards the child. And the attitude, the whole relation that
we bear to him, is what matters most of all. Let me explain why this
is so.
What
is it that is influencing the child, and what is it that is living in
the child, when he gets distorted thoughts? And what is able then to
work from the teacher upon the child? What can the teacher do? From
all that I have said, you will be able to see that in such a child
the etheric body has not been formed in the right way. When the human
being is descending from pre-earthly existence, there are of course,
at that moment, as always, only right and true thoughts in the cosmic
ether; but these right thoughts have to be received by the being who
is providing himself, clothing himself, with an ether body. And now
let us go back to our milk jug. We cannot accuse the milk of having a
wrong form or shape: it is obliged to take on the form that the jug
can give it. If we have a sensible vessel, then our milk will be
properly and sensibly housed in it. But suppose it
occurred to an eccentric person to make a milk jug like an hour glass
with the waist stopped up. [A drawing was made.] He pours in the milk
and it cannot get down to the bottom. And yet, in reckoning up the
cubic content of the jug, he reckons in all this part down below! I
have given you an extreme case. All sorts of mistakes are, in fact,
possible. One could, for example, make a jug that very easily tips
over, and more often than not, the milk is spilt. The point is, of
course, that the way in which the milk will be in the jug, will
depend upon what the jug is like. And the way in which the ether body
with all its livingness will be in the human being, will depend upon
how the human being as he arrives from pre-earthly existence,
bringing with him his karma is able to receive into himself
the ether body. It is important to recognise this and have it in our
consciousness.
It
can actually happen that a human being, owing to his karma, arrives
from pre-earthly existence with something that is not at all unlike
this very inadequate milk jug. For his karma may not enable him, for
instance, to permeate the metabolism-and-limbs system properly. This
system will then be poorly provided with etheric body. The child will
have in the region of the head a properly developed etheric body, and
in the region of the abdomen and limbs, a poorly developed etheric
body. In these parts he will lack the formative thoughts. It is
actually most important for you to know that in very many cases of
backward children we have to do with an imperfectly developed etheric
body. And we teachers must ask ourselves the question: What is it
that can influence the etheric body of a growing child?
Here
we encounter a law, of the working of which we have abundant evidence
throughout all education. It is as follows. Any one member of the
being of man is influenced by the next higher member (from whatever
quarter it approaches) and only under such influence can that member
develop satisfactorily. Thus, whatever is to be effective for the
development of the physical body must be living in the etheric body
in an etheric body. Whatever is to be effective for the development
of an etheric body must be living in an astral body. Whatever is to
be effective for the development of an astral body must be living in
an ego; and an ego can be influenced only by what is living in a
spirit-self. I could continue, and go beyond the spirit-self, but
there we should be entering the field of esoteric instruction.
What
does this mean in practice? If you find that the etheric body of a
child is in some way weakened or deficient, you must form, you must
modify, your own astral body in such a way that it can work upon the
etheric body of the child, correcting and amending it. We could, in
fact, make a diagram to demonstrate how this principle works in
education:
-
Child |
|
Teacher |
Physical body |
: |
Etheric body |
Etheric body |
: |
Astral body |
Astral body |
: |
Ego |
Ego |
: |
Spirit-Self |
The
teacher's etheric body (and this should follow quite naturally as a
result of his training) must be able to influence the physical body
of the child, and the teacher's astral body the etheric body of the
child. The ego of the teacher must be able to influence the astral
body of the child. And now you will be rather taken aback, for we
come next to the spirit-self of the teacher, and you will be thinking
that surely the spirit-self is not yet developed. Nevertheless, such
is the law. The spirit-self of the teacher must work upon the ego of
the child. And I will show you how, not only in the ideal teacher,
but often in the very worst possible teacher, the teacher's
spirit-self of which he is himself not yet in the least
conscious influences the child's ego. Education is indeed
veiled in many mysteries.
What
concerns us at the moment is that the weakened etheric body of the
child must receive the influence of the teacher's health-giving
astral body. How is the astral body of the educator to be educated
for this purpose? Self-educated too, as it needs must be today! For
Anthroposophy can at present do no more than give suggestion and
stimulus; we cannot right away establish colleges and arrange courses
for all the necessary branches of training. The astral body of the
teacher must be of such a character and quality that he is able to
have an instinctive understanding for whatever debilities there may
be in the child's etheric body. Say, the child's etheric body is weak
and deficient in the region of the liver. As a result, we shall
notice that the child stops short at intention, he cannot get beyond
it; it constantly happens that he has an impulse of will, but the
impulse comes to a standstill before the actual deed. If the teacher
can feel his way right into this situation (where the child's will
ought to push through to deed), if he is able himself to feel the
stoppage that the child feels, and able at the same time out of his
own energy to evoke in his soul a deep compassion with the child's
experience, then he will develop in his own astral body an
understanding for the situation the child is in, and will gradually
succeed in eliminating in himself all subjective reaction of feeling
when faced with this phenomenon in the child. By ridding himself of
every trace of subjective reaction, the teacher educates his own
astral body.
Let
us say, the child wants to walk, has the will to walk, but cannot.
This can become a pathological condition, can become quite
conspicuous; it may even happen that at last the child comes to be
described as incapable of learning to walk. But we will
suppose that the condition shows itself in only a slight degree. So
long as the teacher meets the situation with any kind of bias, so
long as it can arouse in him irritation or excitement so long
will he remain incapable of making any real progress with the child.
Not until the point has been reached where such a phenomenon becomes
an objective picture and can be taken with a certain calm and
composure as an objective picture for which nothing but compassion is
felt not until then is the necessary mood of soul present in
the astral body of the teacher. Once this has come about, the teacher
is there by the side of the child in a true relation and will do all
else that is needful more or less rightly. For you have no idea how
unimportant is all that the teacher says or does not say on the
surface, and how important what he himself is, as teacher.
How
may one set about acquiring this kind of understanding? By developing
greater and greater interest in the mystery of the human
organisation. All sense of its mystery in fact, any real
interest in the organisation of man is completely lacking in
present-day civilisation; consequently, one thing present-day
civilisation does not know [A gap
occurs here in the text.] ...
Suppose
someone is suffering from severe mental disease. How is that regarded
in our time? For obviously whatever is done in such a case has to be
done within the civilisation of the present day; there is no
alternative. This will mean that while we must do our best to come to
an understanding of such illnesses, we cannot expect to be able at
once in each single case to use methods and treatment that accord
with the picture we have in our understanding. It is, on this
account, very important that there shall be no fanatics among you. It
will not do for you to set out on this work of Curative Education in
a fanatical spirit, not knowing how to judge the scope and bearing of
some truth, when it is a question of applying esoteric knowledge in
practical life. For this reason the circles within which these truths
are communicated cannot be too carefully restricted; for people of
the present day have not the insight to see why, in very many cases,
it is quite impossible to follow at once some particular guidance
that has been given. We must know the truth, and then try to act
wisely and sensibly, applying the guidance where it can be
applied, as in the education of backward children, within the given
limits. In dealing with adult mental patients you will not be able to
apply the guidance in the same way; for something extraneous comes in
there namely, the law. And the moment you have to reckon with
factors other than those that arise out of the nature of the case,
the moment you have to do with hard and fast laws, the thing becomes
unworkable. For what the law lays down is general; it cannot be
individual in its application, it has to be general. So far as
treatment of abnormal human beings is concerned, the law is a
veritable poison. It is there in the world, however, and you have to
reckon with it. The things of which we are speaking here cannot be
applied fanatically; you have to let them percolate into life, in
ways that are possible and practicable.
Let
us suppose then that you have this person who is said to be suffering
from grave mental illness. You can, as is generally done nowadays,
describe the case psychographically that is, describe the
symptoms. According to the view of the case that is certain to be
adopted in our present-day civilisation, the person does the maddest
possible things. But people do not stop to consider what they may
have before them in this mad person! As a matter of fact, it may
quite well be that the person who is now passing his life in complete
insanity has had in earlier ages a very significant incarnation, he
may at one time have been a genius. But suppose this manifestation of
genius came two incarnations ago and then, in the intermediate
incarnation, the man was imprisoned when comparatively young, and had
from that moment on no contact with the world. He passed then through
the gate of death, and lived on further in the spiritual world. Then
he appeared again on Earth insane. Because what he took in
during that incarnation remained completely outside the field of
experience of the physical and the etheric body, he had not the
opportunity of elaborating it, and therefore returns to incarnation
in entire ignorance of the interior of the human body. He cannot get
into the physical body and ether body, he remains outside them all
the time; and so, being unable to make use of the physical body, he
is, you see, insane. His manner of life is such that we shall not be
able to see him as he really is, until we look right away from his
physical and his etheric body and give our attention to his astral
body and ego.
Let
us now imagine, we have such a person before us in childhood. There
will be a constant effort on the part of the child to come into the
physical and into the etheric body, and then again, he will
experience a resistance, he will be pushed back. It may very well be
that owing to the predetermined conditions some of the organs are not
in order. Imagine you have here physical body and etheric body. [A
drawing was made.] The astral body and ego want to come in.
And they do come in, everywhere, but here they do not enter in a
proper and orderly manner. They have to make a special effort. Every
time, they want, let us say, to penetrate liver and stomach, the
astral body and ego have to make an effort. And now this effort works
itself out regulates itself, as it were, in a curious way. A
kind of rhythm is set up, an abnormal rhythm. At one moment the ego
strengthens itself, then it become feeble again. So that we find in
the child this alternation first, a strong liver-stomach
feeling, and then, before this has come to consciousness, a weakened
liver-stomach feeling. The child oscillates continually between the
two. And the consequence is, he has not, as it were, time to make use
of his body in the so-called normal way. For he could make use of the
body only if this rhythm were not present and astral body and ego
were able to take possession of the several organs quietly.
How
can we learn to recognise and understand such a condition? It will
help us to do so, if we look at the whole process in somewhat the
following way.
Imagine you have before you a clever man, an exceedingly clever man
but a man who is definitely not a watchmaker. It happens one day that
he is in the predicament of having to mend his watch, which has
stopped. Instead of mending it, he completely ruins it. That does not
gainsay the fact that he is an exceedingly clever man. He fails, not
from lack of cleverness, but because he has not sufficient mastery of
the situation. Similarly genius may, under certain circumstances,
fail and come to grief, when descending from pre-earthly to earthly
existence. Only, in this case the failure is not so quickly finished
with, but lasts for the whole of that earthly life.
There
is a real call to us here to look with love upon the soul-and-spirit
nature that descends from the spiritual world, to look with love upon
it, even where it comes to expression in so-called insanity
yes, to look with love upon the very details of the insanity. And
then we shall feel impelled to go beyond the symptomatology that can
furnish a psychography of the case, and look rather at the karmic
connections into which this insane human being comes. We shall have
to observe his relation with the outer world, and note carefully the
situations of life into which he comes, for these are incredibly
interesting. And then, watching all this objectively, we shall find
that insanity is really something that can arouse our deepest
interest. We shall see in it a distorted image of the highest wisdom;
it will be for us like the opening of a door from the direction of
the spiritual world though the spiritual world has then to
come in through a rather twisted and contorted passage of entry! And
as our interest in the whole process grows without of course
becoming sensational the particular abnormalities will become
deeply and inwardly interesting to us. Suppose an abnormality gets
hold of the physical and the ether body and a rhythm such as I have
described is set up: first, a powerful development of astral and ego
activity, so that physical body and etheric body are taken hold of
strongly; then, that is all reversed, and the activity of astral and
ego becomes weak again. Suppose there is this rhythm, and we come to
the point of being able to observe what happens, first in the moment
when firm hold is taken of the physical and etheric bodies, and then
again in the moment when this hold is weakened. If we are able also
to enter into the experience the child goes through inwardly,
entering into it with a great capacity of love, it can come about
that, as time goes on, the rhythm is overcome, and that then as a
result of it all, liver and stomach are gripped with quite unusual
intensity and behold, the child begins to do things that are
a manifestation of genius! Otherwise the condition has to remain as
it is until these things can be adjusted in the further life between
death and a new birth. For it is indeed true, and we must be
conscious of the fact: in educating backward children we are
intervening in a process which in the normal course of development
were there no intervention, or were there misguided intervention
would find its fulfilment only when the child had passed through the
gate of death and come to birth again in the next life. We are
making, that is to say, a deep intervention in karma. Whenever we
give treatment to a backward child, we are intervening in karma.
And it goes without saying, we must intervene in karma in this
way. For there is such a thing as right intervention. Certain
prejudices in these matters need to be overcome. How necessary that
is, let me demonstrate to you from another example.
In
the Agricultural Course at Koberwitz, [A
course held at the Estate of Count Carl Keyserlink near Breslau,
7th 16th June, 1924.] at which one or two of those here
were also present, I indicated guiding lines for agriculture. An
elderly farmer attended the course, who is also an old member of the
Society. Throughout the whole of the course he could not rid himself
of a feeling of misgiving; it kept coming out in the discussions.
Again and again he would say: But if we do that, we shall be
using occult means for practical ends; won't that be steering too
close to the sphere of ethics? Could not these truths be applied also
in a wrong way? He was never able to get rid of this scruple;
he was always suspicious of black magic in the application. Needless
to say, these things do become black magic when they are not handled
as they ought to be handled. And it was for this reason that I said
once on that occasion quite explicitly: A high standard of
morality is absolutely essential in dealing with these matters;
therefore I assume at the outset that those who attend this course
attend it on purely ethical grounds, desirous only to serve humanity
and help agriculture. The Agricultural Experimental Circle has
accordingly to be regarded also as an ethical circle, which
definitely sets itself the task of seeing that the truths are applied
in the right and proper way. The Gods use magic, and the
difference between white and black magic consists only in this: in
white magic one intervenes in a moral, selfless way, and in black
magic in an immoral, selfish way. There is no other difference. And
so, in the nature of the case, since all talk about education
of backward children is mere talk and leads to nothing, obviously
this education can only be effective when it uses measures which are
capable also of immoral application. And that brings us once again to
the imperative need for a deep sense of responsibility.
If
only one could count upon a more serious sense of responsibility, one
could at this time do a great deal. I must, however, frankly admit
that silence has to be maintained today about many things, just
because conscientiousness is not sufficiently developed. When people
hear that this can be done, and that can be done they want to
do it! An eagerness to be doing something that they have. But
that is not enough. As soon as it comes to the doing of a real deed,
and no mere continuation of some old impulse, as soon as it is a
question of bringing in new impulses from the spiritual world
and that is what is needed, new impulses from the spiritual world!
then it becomes imperative to demand a high standard of
conscientiousness and responsibility. And there is only one way in
which these can be awakened in us, namely, that we have knowledge of
what is really involved. Thus, we must know that in the education of
backward children it is a matter of deep intervention in karmic
activities which would otherwise come to fulfilment between death and
the next birth. It is actually so: what is done by us now, intervenes
in the work of God which would otherwise be brought to fulfilment at
a later time. If we are not satisfied for this to remain merely a
piece of theoretical knowledge, if we are ready to let it work
powerfully upon our minds and hearts, then we shall find ourselves
continually faced with the alternative of doing what has to be done
or of leaving it undone. Let us never forget that every step taken at
the prompting of the spiritual world leads us into a situation where
we have to look right and left, and make a new decision and
these decisions that are continually facing us have to be made with
courage, with inner courage of life.
In
ordinary life, man is protected from the necessity of this inner
courage, for in ordinary life he can simply continue doing what he
has been accustomed to do. He can jog on in conformity with the
motives and standards that are so deeply rooted in him, taking for
granted that these are correct, and feeling no necessity to adopt new
ones. This answers quite well for the life that proceeds merely in
the physical world. But when we come to working out of spiritual
sources, we are inevitably confronted, daily and hourly, with
decisions; in regard to each single action, we stand face to face
with the possibility of either doing it or leaving it undone
or else maintaining an entirely neutral attitude. And the decisions
require courage. This inner courage is the very first thing needed,
if we want to accomplish anything in the domain of Curative
Education. And it can be aroused in us if we hold continually before
our minds the greatness of that which we have undertaken. We must be
constantly thinking: I am doing something which generally God
does in the life between death and new birth. The fact that
you know this is of untold significance. Receive it as a meditation.
To be able to think it, is most important. If we bring it
before us every day in meditation as one says a prayer every
day if we place it there before our soul day by day, it will
endow our astral body with the character and tone that we need to
give it if we are to deal in the right way with backward children.
It
is really only possible for us to go on in these lectures and speak
together of further things, if we are ready to acknowledge that we
must in this way prepare ourselves for the task before us. Therefore,
let us resolve to take what has been said as a necessary
introduction, providing the groundwork for what follows; and let us
ponder it with all earnestness. For in approaching tasks like those
of which we are speaking here, it is indeed a matter of undergoing
preparation of mind and heart.
| Lecture 1, Blackboard Image 1
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| Lecture 1, Blackboard Image 2
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