Hidden Forces of
Soul-Life.
Lecture by Rudolf Steiner.
Held on the 27th of February, 1912, in Munich.
During the last few
days, we have spoken about many things connected with the existence
of hidden depths in our soul-life; and we should now do well to
consider various other aspects of this subject, which may be useful
for the Anthroposophist to know. On the whole, it must be said
that a complete clarification of these things is possible only when
we work them through in the light of what Anthroposophy is able to
give.
Now, we have already
considered, from the most varied aspects, all that might be termed
the organisation of man. Hence, it should be quite easy for each one
of us — if we direct our attention in some measure, to the
hidden depths of the soul to connect in the right way what thereby
appears from a new standpoint, with the organisation of man as it is
known to us through the more or less elementary presentation of the
Anthroposophical world-conception. It has been repeatedly stated,
during the last few days, that everything comprising our conceptual
thoughts, our perceptions, the impulses of our will, our feelings and
sensations — in short, everything that takes place in our soul
during its normal state, from the moment of waking to the moment of
falling asleep — may simply be termed the activities, the
peculiarities, or the forces, of ordinary consciousness.
Let us now summarise
graphically — by enclosing it between these two parallel lines
(a―b) — everything that is included in the ordinary human
consciousness: that is, everything that a human being knows,
feels, and wills, from the time he awakes, till he falls
asleep.
We then find —
do we not — that our thoughts, and also every one of our
perceptions, belong within this sphere enclosed by these two parallel
lines. Thus, when we enter into relationship with the external
world through our senses, and thereby form an image of this external
world through all sorts of sense impressions — an image which
is still in connection, or in contact, with the external world
— this also forms part of our ordinary consciousness. At the
same time, our feeling-life and our impulses of will belong here also
— in short, everything that constitutes our ordinary
consciousness. We might say that this sphere represented by these
parallel lines (a―b), includes everything which the normal,
every-day life of the soul makes known to us.
Now, the important
thing is that we should know, quire clearly, that this so-called
soul-life is dependent upon the instruments of the physical body --
that is upon all those instruments comprised by the senses and the
nervous system. If we now draw two other parallel lines beyond the
first two, we may say that the sense-organs and the nervous system in
our physical organism serve as the instruments of this ordinary
consciousness — the sense-organs being the more important,
although the nervous system may also be included, to a certain
extent.
And, below the
threshold of our ordinary consciousness, lies all that may be
enclosed between these other two parallel lines (b―c) —
and which may be termed the hidden side of the soul's life, or the
sub-consciousness. We obtain a clear conception of what is imbedded,
as it were, in this sub-consciousness, when we remember, on the
one hand, that the human being acquires, as we have learned, through
spiritual training, imagination, inspiration, and intuition. Thus we
see that, just as we have to include our conceptual thoughts, our
feelings, and our will-impulses, in the ordinary consciousness, so we
have to include imagination, inspiration, and intuition, in the
subconscious life. But we know, also that the sub-consciousness
is active, not only when such a spiritual training is carried on, but
that it may also become active in the form of an ancient inheritance
— as an original primitive state of human consciousness,
or a kind of atavism. In this case, something arises which we may
call visions; and these visions, arising — let us say —
in the naive consciousness, correspond, in this primitive state of
consciousness, to the Imaginations acquired by means of the right
training. Moreover, forebodings may arise; and these would be the
primitive inspirations. A significant example will at once show us
the difference between a foreboding and an inspiration.
We
have often mentioned the fact that, in the course of the
20th century, an event will occur, in human evolution, which we may
call a kind of spiritual return of the Christ; and that there will be
a number of people who will experience the influence of the Christ
upon our world — when He enters it in an etheric form, from out
the astral plane. A knowledge of this fact can be attained if we
learn to know, through the right sort of training, just how evolution
takes its course, and we then come to see — as a result of this
training — that such an event must indeed take place, during
the 20th century. It is also quite possible, on the other hand
— and indeed this often happens, in our days — that
certain people will be gifted with a natural, primitive clairvoyance,
a mysterious kind of inspiration, which we may describe as a
foreboding of the approaching Christ. These people will not
even know, perhaps, exactly what is taking place; yet, nevertheless,
an important inspiration such as this may quite well appear as a
foreboding, if something takes place within the primitive
consciousness which is more than a vision, more than a foreboding. A
vision is experienced when the image or counterpart of a spiritual
occurrence arises before us. Let us suppose, for instance, that
someone has lost a friend — so that the Ego has passed through
the portal of death and is now dwelling in the spiritual world. A
kind of connection may be established, in this case, between the one
living in the spiritual world, and the one dwelling on the earth; and
yet, the one who is living in this world may not know, at all
rightly, just what the dead friend desires of him — indeed, he
may have a false idea of what the departed friend, yonder, is
experiencing in his soul. Nevertheless, the very fact of such a
condition may be experienced in the form of a vision; and —
even if it should be wrong, as far as the picture is concerned
— the vision may be based upon the true fact: namely, that the
departed friend wishes to establish a connection with the one who is
still alive. And this assumes the form of a premonition. Thus, one
who has premonitions knows certain things concerning either the
past or the future, which are not accessible to ordinary
consciousness. Let us suppose, on the other hand, something arises
before the human soul in the form of a clear perception (not merely
as a vision which may, under certain circumstances, be misleading,
but as a clear perception); and let us suppose that it represents
either some event which takes place in the physical world —
although not in a sphere which renders it accessible to the ordinary
senses — or an event taking place in the super-sensible world.
Such an appearance is usually designated by occultism as
“deuteroscopy,” or second sight. And with this I have
described to you something, whether it be described through regular
training or whether it appears in the form of natural clairvoyance,
that takes place in human consciousness — in the
sub-consciousness, to be sure; yet at the same time in the human soul
itself.
Now,
when we speak of sub-consciousness, in contrast to
ordinary consciousness, we find that everything that takes place here
in the human soul differs very greatly from all processes in the
ordinary consciousness. These processes of ordinary consciousness
— with respect to those things with which they are connected
— are in reality such, that we must speak of the impotence of
this ordinary consciousness. The eye sees the rose; but this eye,
which acts, to be sure, in such a way that the image of the rose
arises in us, is quite powerless to picture to the ordinary
consciousness — even with all its perception and its capacity
to imagine the rose — such a thing as the growth, the growing
and fading of the rose. The rose grows and dies again through its
inherent natural forces; and neither the eye, nor the ordinary
consciousness, can go beyond the sphere which is accessible to their
perception. This is not the case, however, with the facts belonging
to the sphere of the sub-conscious. And this is what we must bear in
mind first of all; for it is extremely important. If we perceive
something with our eye, during the normal act of vision —
whether it be coloured pictures, or anything else — we are not
only unable, through our perception, to change anything in the
objective facts, but something else indeed arises, if our sight is
normal. If nothing else takes place, for the eye, than the mere act
of vision, the eye in this case remains unchanged by this process.
Only when we go beyond the natural limits, by sometimes passing from
a normal light to a blinding light, do we injure the eye. So that we
may say: facts and processes of ordinary consciousness do not enable
us even to react upon ourselves, if we simply remain in this ordinary
consciousness. Our organism is indeed constructed in such a way that
facts accessible to ordinary consciousness do not even cause any
particular changes within us.
It
is quite different, however, with those things which
arise in the sub-consciousness. Let us suppose that we form an
imagination, or that we have a vision. And let us now suppose that
this Imagination, or this vision, corresponds to some good Being.
This good Being, in that case, is not in the physical, sense-world,
but in the super-sensible world; and let us now suppose that the
world, inhabited by these Beings which we perceive through
imagination or vision, lies enclosed, here, between these two
parallel lines. Let us try to find in this world everything which may
become object, or perception, for our sub-consciousness (b―e)
— we shall refrain from writing anything in this space, for the
time being. On the other hand, if we have an imaginary picture, or a
vision, of some sort of evil or demoniacal Being in this
super-sensible world, we are not powerless, as far as this Being is
concerned, in the way the eye is powerless with regard to the rose.
If, during the imagination or vision of an evil Being, we call
forth the feeling that it should retreat from us — if we do
this while seeing perfectly clearly this visionary, or imaginative,
picture, such a Being in this other world, must actually feel as if
it were pushed and driven away by a force proceeding from
us.
The
same thing happens, if we have the corresponding
imagination, or vision, of a good Being. In this case, also, if we
develop a feeling of sympathy, this Being will feel within itself a
force which compels it to approach us and to connect itself with us.
All Beings — whatever may be their place in this world —
sense the forces of attraction, or repulsion, coming from us,
whenever we form visions of them. Our sub-consciousness is
therefore in a situation similar to that of an eye that would not
only see a rose, but would develop, through the mere sight of the
rose, the desire that the rose should approach it — could
attract it to itself. Or, if upon seeing something repulsive, the eye
were not only to come to the opinion, “This is
repulsive,” but could eliminate this repulsive thing through
mere antipathy. Our sub-consciousness is therefore connected with a
world in which the sympathy and antipathy arising in the human soul
can be active. It is necessary to place this quite clearly before our
minds.
But
sympathy and antipathy — and, generally speaking,
all the impulses in our sub-consciousness — are not only active
in this sphere, in the way already described; they are also active in
what is more especially within ourselves, and which we must now think
of as a part of man's etheric body — not only as a part of the
etheric body, however, but also as certain forces of the physical
body — enclosed, here, within these two parallel lines
(b―c). We must imagine here, that is to say, first of all what
lives in man as a force pulsating through his blood, or: the
force of warmth in the blood. And then, we must imagine within
this space still another force: namely, that force which is present in
our healthy or unhealthy breathing depending, as it does, upon our entire
organism in short, the more or less healthy force of breathing.
We may also call it the constitution of the force of breathing.
Furthermore, a great part of what we must term man's etheric body
belongs to all that upon which the sub-consciousness is actively at
work within us. Hence, sub-consciousness, or the hidden forces of the
soul-life, work within us in such a way that they influence, in the
first place, the temperature of our blood. Since the entire
pulsation, the vitality, or lack of vitality of our circulation
is dependent upon the temperature of our blood, we can realise that
this whole circulation must be connected in some way with our
sub-consciousness, Whether or not a human being has a more
rapid, or a less rapid, circulation is essentially dependent upon the
forces of his sub-consciousness.
Now,
if the influence man has on all that exists in that
other world, in the form of demoniacal of good Beings, takes place
only when there arise out of his sub-consciousness with a certain
clearness visions, imaginations, or other sorts of perceptions
— that is if, things really stand clearly before him; and if,
then, certain forces become as it were magically active in this
world, through sympathy and antipathy, this clear way of facing
himself, subconsciously, in his own soul, will not be necessary for
the influencing of that inner organism which consists of what we have
indicated here (b―c). Whether man knows, or fails to know,
exactly what imaginations correspond to this or that sympathy within
him — in either case, this sympathy works upon the circulation
of his blood, upon his breathing-system, upon his etheric body. Let
us now suppose that, for a certain period of time, someone is
inclined to have only feelings of repulsion. If he were able to see
visions, or if he were endowed with imaginative knowledge, he would
have the kind of vision, or imagination, described day before
yesterday, in the form of perceptions of his own being. These would
be projected out into space, to be sure, but they would nevertheless
belong only to his own world; these visions and imaginations would
reveal what lives within him in the way of forces active in feelings
of repulsion. Yet, even if he simply has these feelings of repulsion,
so that they live within him — they nevertheless work upon him
all the same. And they work in such a way, indeed, that they actually
influence the force which warms his blood, and also the force in his
breathing. Hence, if we now pass on to the other aspect,
we find that the human being has a more or less healthy
breathing — depending upon the feelings which he experiences in
his sub-consciousness; and that he has a more or less healthy
circulation, depending upon his sub-conscious experiences. It
is especially the activity of the etheric body, and all its
processes, that are dependent on the world of feeling that lives in
man.
When the facts of
sub-consciousness are really experienced by the soul, we can see, not
only that there exists this connection (of the world of feeling
— with the breathing, the circulation, and the activity of the
etheric body), but that owing to it, there is a continual influence
upon the entire constitution of man, with the result that there are
certain feelings and sensations which reach down into the
sub-consciousness. And because these call forth certain forms in the
force of warmth in the blood, and a certain disposition in the force
of breathing and of the etheric body, their influence upon the
organism is either a furthering one, during the whole of a man's
life; or it is one that retards and hinders it. Thus there is always
something arising or passing away in man, through these forces which
play into his sub-consciousness. He either diminishes his vital
forces, or he increases them, through what he sends down into his
sub-consciousness out of his ordinary conscious state. If a man takes
pleasure in the thought of lies which he has told; if it does not
fill him with repulsion — for this would be the natural feeling
toward a lie — or if he is lazy and indifferent toward lies,
and even takes pleasure in telling them, this feeling which
accompanies the lie, is in that case sent down into his
sub-consciousness. Whatever enters the sub-consciousness, in this way
injures the circulation of the blood, the constitution of breathing,
and the forces of the etheric body; and the consequence of this
will be that the human being, when he passes through the portal of
death with what then remains to him, will be stunted — will
become impoverished in his forces — because something has died
in him, which would have come to life had he felt abhorrence and
repulsion toward lying — in accordance with the normal human
feeling. If the feelings of aversion toward lying had dived down into
his sub-consciousness they would then have been transferred to those
forces indicated here, in our drawing, and the human being would have
sent down into his organism something beneficial — something in
the nature of forces of birth.
Thus we see how, in
the first place, the human being works from out of his
sub-consciousness upon his own growth and decay, because of the fact
that forces are continually passing from his upper consciousness
— from his ordinary consciousness — down into his
sub-consciousness. Man, as he is constituted today, however, is not
yet strong enough to cause injury through his soul-nature, as it
were, to other parts of his organism also — besides his
circulation, his breathing, and his etheric body. He cannot harm the
coarser and firmer parts of his physical organism, as well. Thus, we
may say that man is in a position to harm only a part of his entire
constitution. What has thus been injured appears with especial
clearness, when that part of the etheric body which has remained (for
the etheric body is continually connected with the force of warmth in
the blood, and with the constitution of breathing) has been
influenced in the way we have mentioned; for in this case it
deteriorates through wrong feelings. On the other hand it acquires
fruitful, strengthening and beneficent forces through good, normal,
true feelings. We may therefore say that what takes place in his
sub-consciousness enables man to work directly upon the growth and
decay, that is, upon the true processes, the reality, of his
organism. He plunges down from the sphere of impotence of his
ordinary consciousness, into the sphere where there is constant
growth and decay, in his own soul, and consequently in his whole
human constitution.
Now we have seen that,
through the fact that our soul has more or less experience of our
sub-consciousness — knows something concerning it: through this
fact, the sub-consciousness also acquires an influence over that
world which may be termed (according to an expression which was used
for it throughout the Middle-Ages) — the elementary
world. Nevertheless, man cannot enter into direct relationship
with this elementary world, but only by the circuitous road, of
experiencing, first of all in himself, the effects of his
sub-consciousness upon his organism. If, after a period of
time, the human being has learned sufficient self-knowledge to say to
himself: “When you have this feeling within you, and when you
send the one or the other result of your conduct down into your
sub-consciousness, you destroy certain things in yourself, thereby,
and cause them to be stunted; and when you experience other things,
and send down certain accompanying experiences, you further your
development,” if, for a certain period of time, he experiences
within himself this fluctuation between destruction and furthering
forces, he will then become more and more mature in self-knowledge.
This is, in reality, the true self-knowledge; and it can be
likened only to a “picture” with may be obtained as
follows: —
Self-knowledge,
attained in this way, may actually bring it about — through a
lie, and through a wrong feeling toward the lie, which arises in our
instincts — that we feel as if a scorpion were biting off one
of our toes. We may be sure that, if human beings were to perceive
some real effect of this sort, they would never lie as they do. Thus,
if we were to experience at once, in the physical world, a crippling
of our physical organism this would correspond to what actually
happens in connection with things that usually remain invisible
— through what we send down into sub-consciousness, out of our
daily experiences. Any sort of lazy indifference toward a lie, which
is sent down into the sub-consciousness, has the effect of biting off
something within us, as it were — taking away something which
we then no longer possess, so that we are stunted and must acquire it
again, in the later course of our karma. And if we send down a right
feeling into our sub-consciousness (of course, we must imagine an
infinite scale of feelings which may plunge down in this way) we grow
in ourselves thereby, and form new life-forces in our organism. The
first thing which appears in a man who attains true self-knowledge is
this ability to become a spectator of his own growing and
fading.
I have been told that
my listeners did not understand quite clearly, day before yesterday,
how we may distinguish between a true vision or imagination which
forms an objective experience, and one which is merely projected into
space and belongs to our subjective life. Now, we cannot say —
“Write down this or that rule, and then you will be able to
distinguish the one from the other.” Such rules do not exist;
on the contrary, we learn only gradually, in the course of our
development. And we are able to distinguish between what belongs only
to ourselves, and what arises as exterior vision and belongs to a
true Being, only when we have passed through the experience of being
continually devoured, inwardly, by sub-conscious processes that kill.
This will equip us with a kind of certainty, and will be followed
also by a state in which we shall always be able to face a vision or
an imagination and say to ourselves: “If we can see into the
vision through the force of our spiritual sight, the vision will
remain; for, if we develop the active force of spiritual sight, this
corresponds to an objective fact. If, on the other hand, the active
force of spiritual sight obliterates the vision, this proves that it
was merely a part of our own self.”
Thus, a human being
who is not careful with regard to this may even see thousands and
thousands of pictures from the Akasha Chronicle; yet, even so, if he
does not apply the test as to whether or not these pictures are
obliterated through an absolutely active sight, these Akasha
pictures, in that case — no matter how many facts they may reveal
— can be looked upon only as pictures of man's own inner life.
It might happen, for instance — I repeat, it might happen
— that someone who sees nothing more than his own interior,
projected in very dramatic pictures, imagines these to be events, let
us say, which extend over the entire Atlantean world, through whole
generations of humanity. ... And, all the while — no
matter how seemingly objective — this might, under certain
circumstances, be merely a projection of his own inward being. Now,
when a human being passes through the portal of death, it always
comes to pass that whatever might hinder his subjective life from
being transformed into visions or Imaginations now disappears.
In the ordinary human life of our day, as we know, what man
experiences within himself sub-consciously, what he sends down into
his sub-consciousness, does not always become vision or Imagination.
It becomes an Imagination if he undergoes the regular and necessary
training; and it becomes a vision if he still possesses an atavistic
clairvoyance. When the human being has passed through the portal of
death, his entire inner life becomes immediately an objective world,
and is there before him. Kamaloka is in its essence nothing else than
a world erected around us out of all that we have experienced within
our own souls. Only in Devachan does the reverse of this take place.
Thus we can easily realise that what I have said regarding the
activity of man's sympathy and antipathy, as contained in visions,
Imaginations, Inspirations, and also premonitions, etc. — that
this activity always, under all circumstances, influences the
objective elementary world. And I said, in connection with this
activity, that, in the human being who is incarnated in the physical
body, only that which he brings as far as vision or Imagination can
influence this elementary world. In the case of the dead, those
forces also which existed in the sub-consciousness and which
always accompany the human being when he crosses the portal of death,
are active in the elementary world; so that everything which he
experiences after death is in reality exceedingly active in the
elementary world.
Just
as certainly as we create waves in the river, when we
lash its waters — with the same certainty do the experiences of
the dead continue to influence the elementary world. Just as
certainly, I repeat, as waves arise and ripple out from
whatever point we happen to strike, in the water; and just
as surely as a current of air continues to create itself, just
so surely do these forces continue their
influence in the elementary world. Hence, this elementary world is
continually filled with forces which have been called into being
through what human beings take with them, out of their
sub-consciousness, when they cross the portal of death. The important
thing, therefore, is always to be in position to create such
circumstances as will enable us to see — to perceive —
the things in the elementary world. It need not surprise us, when the
clairvoyant rightly recognises the things that occur in the
elementary world as Beings brought about through the activity of the
dead. At the same time — and under certain specific conditions
to be sure — we can pursue these activities, resulting from the
experiences of the dead (and influencing, first, the elementary
world) even as far as the physical world. For, when a clairvoyant has
himself passed through all those experiences which I have described,
and has attained the ability to perceive the elementary world, he
will arrive at the point, after a certain length of time, when he has
the most extraordinary experiences.
Let
us suppose that a clairvoyant passes through the
following process: — To begin with, he looks at a rose, let us
say. He looks at it with his physical eye. Now, when he looks at it
in this way, he will receive a sense-impression. And let us suppose,
further, that this clairvoyant has trained himself to experience
quite a definite feeling, with a certain definite nuance, when he
sees the colour red. This is necessary; otherwise the process would
not go any further. Unless we experience quite definite nuances of
feeling, when we see colours, or hear sounds, we cannot progress in a
clairvoyance that is directed at exterior objects. Now, let us
suppose that the clairvoyant gives away the rose. If he were not
clairvoyant, his perception would sink down into his
sub-consciousness and would carry on its work, there — making
him ill or healthy, as the case might be. If on the other hand, he is
clairvoyant, he will now perceive just how his Imagination of the
rose works upon his sub-consciousness. That is, he will have a
visionary picture — an Imagination of the rose. At the same
time, he will perceive how the feelings which the rose called forth
in him have either a furthering or a destructive effect upon his
etheric body — as well as upon what we have here described as
the physical body. He will perceive in everything, the effect upon
his own organism. And if he has now formed an Imigination of the
rose, he will be able through this to exercise a force of attraction
upon that Being which we may call the Group-Soul of the rose, and
which is always at work in the rose. Thus, he will be able to look
into the elementary world, to see the Group-Soul of the rose,
in so far as it lives in that world. Now, on the other hand,
if the clairvoyant goes still further —
that is, if he has started by looking at the rose; has then given it
away; and, finally, has pursued the inner process of his surrender to
the rose, and of the effect resulting therefrom; and if he thus
reaches the point of seeing something of the rose in the elementary
world, he will then see, in the place where the rose appeared to him,
a wonderfully luminous sort of picture, belonging to the elementary
world. And then, if he has followed the process as far as this point,
something new will take place. He may now ignore what is there,
before him, and may command himself not to look with the inner eye at
what appears before him as a living etheric Being, extending out into
the world — he must not see this! An extraordinary thing then
takes place: namely, the clairvoyant sees something which goes
through his eye and which shows him the activity of the forces that
construct his eye — those forces, that is, which build up the
human eye out of the etheric body. He sees which are the constructive
forces of his own physical body. He actually sees his physical eye as
if it were an exterior object.
This
is actually what may take place. He may follow the
path leading from an exterior object to that point — otherwise
a space containing absolute darkness — where, without allowing
any other sense-perception to enter, he now perceives what his own
eye looks like, in a spiritual picture. Thus he can see the interior
organ itself; and he has now reached this region, here) — the
region of what is truly creative in the physical world, or the
creative physical world. Man perceives it first, by perceiving his
own physical organisation. Thus he retraces the path and returns to
himself. What is it that has sent into our eye forces which, in
reality, cause us to see this eye, as if rays of light went out from
it, corresponding completely with the nature of vision? As a
next step, we then see the eye surrounded by a sort of yellow
luminosity, we see it enclosed within ourselves. All this has been
effected by the process of those forces which have brought man up to
this stage.
The same course is
followed by those forces which may proceed from a dead person. The
dead man takes with him, into the world in which he lives after
passing through the portal of death, the content of his
sub-consciousness. As soon as we reach the interior of our own
physical eye, we experience there the forces sent out by the dead,
and coming from the elementary world back into the physical world.
The one who has died may perhaps experience a special longing for
someone he has left behind. This special longing was contained, at
first, in his sub-consciousness; but it now immediately becomes
a living vision; and through this he influences the elementary world.
In the elementary world, what at first was only living vision
becomes, now at once, a force. This force takes the path indicated by
the longing for the one living on earth; and if it is in any way
possible, there will be knocking and other noises in the physical
world, in the neighbourhood of the living. One may hear these sounds
of rapping, etc., or perceive them, just as one perceives any other
physical thing. These very things, which are due to connections and
circumstances of this sort, would be noticed far more often in the
world than is generally the case, if people would only pay attention
to the times most favourable for such influences. And the most
favourable times are the moments of falling asleep, and of waking in
the morning. People simply do not pay sufficient attention to such
things — for, indeed, there cannot really be any human beings,
anywhere, who have not, at some time or other, received messages from
the super-sensible world, in the transition state between falling
asleep and awaking again — messages that come in the form of
rapping noises, or even of spoken words.
I wished to allude to
this today, my dear friends, because I wished to point out the true
reality of the connection between Man and the Universe. What man
obtains from the objective sense-world, in his ordinary
consciousness, is powerless, and devoid of any real connection with
this sense-world. But, as soon as his experiences pass into his
sub-consciousness a connection with Reality is established. The
impotence of his preceding state of consciousness is transformed into
a fine, imperceptible, magic force. And when man has passed through
the portal of death, and is unhampered by his physical body, his
experiences are such as to play into an elementary world; and, under
favourable circumstances they may work down as far as the physical
world — where they may be perceived even by the ordinary
consciousness.
I have indicated the
simplest sort of thing which can take place; because, after all, we
must always begin with the simplest things. Naturally, in the course
of time — for we have always allowed ourselves time to work out
gradually whatever we need to know — we shall pass on to the
more complicated things, which may lead us, in turn, into the more
intimate connections, so to speak, existing between the Universe and
Man.
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