Perception of the Elemental
World
Munich, 26 August 1913
WHEN SPEAKING
about the spiritual worlds as we are doing in these
lectures, we should keep the following well in mind: the clairvoyant
consciousness which the human soul can develop in itself will change
nothing in the nature and individuality of a person, for everything
entering that consciousness was already long present in man's nature.
Knowing a thing is not the same as creating it; a person learns only
to perceive what is already there as a fact. Obvious as this is, it
has to be said, for we must lead our thoughts to realize that the
nature of the human being is hidden in the very depths of his
existence; it can be brought up out of those depths only through
clairvoyant cognition. It follows from this that the true, inmost
nature of man's being cannot be brought to light in any other way
than through occult knowledge. We can learn what a human being
actually is not through any kind of philosophy but only through the
kind of knowledge based on clairvoyant consciousness. To the
observation we use in the sense world and to the understanding
limited to the sense world, the being of man, the true, inmost nature
of man, lies in hidden worlds. Clairvoyant consciousness provides the
point of view from which the worlds beyond the so-called
threshold have to be observed; in order to perceive and learn, quite
different demands are made on it from those in the sense world. This
is the most important thing: that the human soul should become more
or less accustomed to the fact that the way of looking at and
recognizing things that for the sense world is the correct and
healthy one is not the only way.
Here I shall give the name elemental world to the first world that
the soul of a human being enters on becoming clairvoyant and crossing
the threshold. Only a person who wants to carry the habits of the sense
world into the higher super-sensible worlds can demand a uniform
choice of names for all the points of view the higher worlds can
offer.
Fully new demands meet the life of soul when it steps over the
threshold into the elemental world. If the human so insisted on
entering this world with the habits of the sense world, two things
might happen: cloudiness or complete darkness would spread over the
horizon of the consciousness, over the field of vision, or else —
if the soul wanted to enter the elemental world without preparing
itself for the peculiarities and requirements there — it would
be thrown back again into the sense world. The elemental world is
absolutely different, from the sense world. In this world of ours
when you move from one living being to another, from one happening to
the next, you have these beings and events before you and can observe
them; while confronting and observing them, you keep your own
distinct existence, your own separate personality. You know all the
time that in the presence of another person or happening you are the
same person that you were before and that you will be the same when
you confront a new situation; you can never lose yourself in another
being or happening. You confront them, you stand outside them and you
know you will always be the same in the sense world wherever you go.
This changes as soon as a person enters the elemental world. There it
is necessary to adapt one's whole inner life of soul to a being or
event so completely that one transforms one's own inner soul life
into this other being, into this other event. We can learn nothing at
all in the elemental world unless we become a different person within
every other being, indeed unless we become similar, to a high degree,
to the other beings and events.
We have to have, then, one peculiarity of soul for the elemental
world: the capacity for transforming our own being into other beings
outside ourselves. We must have the faculty of metamorphosis.
We must be able to immerse ourselves in and become the other
being. We must be able to lose the consciousness which always —
in order to remain emotionally healthy — we have to have in the
sense world, the consciousness of ‘I am myself.’ In the
elemental world we get to know another being only when in a way we
inwardly have ‘become’ the other. When we have crossed
the threshold, we have to move through the elemental world in such a
way that with every step we transform ourselves into every single
happening, creep into every single being. It belongs to the health of
a person's soul that in passing through the sense world he should
hold his own and assert his individual character. But this is
altogether impossible in the elemental world, where it would lead
either to the darkening of his field of vision or to his being thrown
back into the sense world.
You will easily understand that in order to exercise the faculty of
transformation, the soul needs something more than it already
possesses here in our world. The human soul is too weak to be
able to change itself continuously and adapt itself to every sort of
being if it enters the elemental world in its ordinary state.
Therefore the forces of the human soul must be strengthened and
heightened through the preparations described in my books
Occult Science
and
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds;
from these the
life of soul will become stronger and more forceful. It can then
immerse itself in other entities without losing itself in the
process. This being said, you will understand at once the importance
of noting what is called the threshold between the sense world and
the super-sensible world. We have already said that the clairvoyant
consciousness of a human being on earth must go back and forth
continually, that it must observe the spiritual world beyond the
threshold while it is outside the physical body and must then return
into the physical body, exercising in a healthy way the faculties
which lead it to the right observation of the physical sense world.
Let us suppose that a person's clairvoyant consciousness, when
returning over the threshold, were to take back into the sense world
the faculty of transformation it has to have in order to be at all
aware of the spiritual world. The faculty of transformation I have
been speaking about is a peculiarity of the human etheric body, which
lives by preference in the elemental world. Now suppose that a person
were to go back into the physical world keeping his etheric body as
capable of transformation as it has to be in the elemental world.
What would happen? Each of the worlds has its own special laws. The
sense world is the world of self-contained forms, for here the
Spirits of Form rule. The elemental world is the world of mobility,
of metamorphosis, of transformation; just as we continually have to
change in order to feel at home in that world, all the beings there
are continually changing themselves. There is no enclosed,
circumscribed form: all is in continual metamorphosis. A soul has to
take part in this everchanging existence outside the physical body if
it wants to unfold itself there. Then in the physical sense world we
must allow our etheric body, as an entity of the elemental world
capable of metamorphosis, to sink down into the physical body.
Through this physical body I am a definite personality in the
physical sense world; I am this or that distinct person. My physical
body stamps my personality upon me; the physical body and the
conditions of the physical world in which I find myself make me a
personality. In the elemental world one is not a personality, for
this would require an enclosed form. Here, however, we must note that
what the clairvoyant consciousness recognizes in the human soul is,
and always has been, present within it. Through the forces of the
physical body, the mobility of the etheric body is restrained only
for the time being. As soon as the etheric body sinks back into the
physical encasement, its powers of movement are held together and
adapted to the form. If the etheric body were not tucked into the
physical body as if into a tote bag, it would always be impelled to
continuous transformation.
Now let us suppose that a soul, becoming clairvoyant, were to carry
over into the physical world this desire of its etheric body for
transformation. Then with its tendency towards movement it will fit
rather loosely into the physical body, and thus the soul can come
into contradiction with the physical world that wants to shape it
into a definite personality. The etheric body, which always wants to
move freely, can come back over the threshold in the wrong way, every
moment wishing to be something or someone else, someone that may be
quite the opposite of the firmly imprinted form of the physical body.
To put it even more concretely: a person could be, say, a
Scandinavian bank executive, thanks to his physical body, but because
his etheric brings over into the physical world the impulse to free
itself from physical constraints he may imagine himself to be the
emperor of China. (Or, to use another example, a person may be —
let us say — the president of the Theosophical Society, and if
her etheric body has been loosened, she may imagine that she has been
in the presence of the Director of the Universe.)
We see that the threshold that sharply divides the sense world from
the super-sensible world must be respected absolutely; the soul must
observe the requirements of each of the two worlds, adapting and
conducting itself differently on this side and that. We have
emphasized repeatedly that the peculiarities of the super-sensible
world must not unlawfully be carried over when one comes back into
the sense world. If I may put it more plainly, one has to understand
how to conduct oneself in both worlds; one may not carry over into
one world the method of observation that is right for the other.
First of all, then, we have to take note that the essential faculty
for finding and feeling oneself in the elemental world is the faculty
of transformation. But the human soul could never live permanently in
this mobile element. The etheric body could as little remain
permanently in a state of being able to transform itself as a human
being in the physical world could remain continually awake. Only when
we are awake can we observe the physical world; asleep, we do not
perceive it. Nevertheless we have to allow the waking condition to
alternate with the sleeping one. Something comparable to this is
necessary in the elemental world. Just as little as it is right in
the physical world to be continually awake, for life here must swing
like a pendulum between waking and sleeping, so something similar is
necessary for the life of the etheric body in the elemental world.
There must be an opposite pole, as it were, something that works in
the opposite direction to the faculty of transformation leading to
perception in the spiritual world. What is it that makes the human
being capable of transformation? It is his living in imagination, in
mental images, the ability to make his ideas and thoughts so mobile
that through his lively, flexible thinking he can dip down into other
beings and happenings. For the opposite condition, comparable to
sleep in the sense world, it is the will of the human being that must
be developed and strengthened. For the faculty of transformation,
thinking or imagination; for the opposite condition, the will.
To understand this, we should consider that in the physical sense
world the human being is a self, an ego, an ‘I’. It is
the physical body, as long as it is awake, that contributes what is
necessary for this feeling of self. The forces of the physical body,
when the human being sinks down into it, supply him with the power to
feel himself an ego, an ‘I’. It is different in the
elemental world. There the human being himself must achieve to some
degree what the physical body achieves in the physical world. He can
develop no feeling of self in the elemental world if he does not
exert his will, if he himself does not do the willing. This, however,
calls for overcoming something that is deeply rooted in us: our love
of comfort and convenience. For the elemental world this self-willing
is necessary; like the alternation of sleeping and waking In the
physical world, the condition of ‘transforming oneself into
other beings’ must give way to the feeling of selfstrengthened
volition, just as we have become tired in the physical world and
close our eyes, overcome by sleep, the moment comes in the elemental
world when the etheric body feels, ‘I cannot go on continually
changing; now I must shut out all the beings and happenings around
me. I will have to thrust it all out of my field of vision and look
away from it. I now must will myself and live absolutely and entirely
within myself, ignoring the other beings and occurrences.’ This
willing of self, excluding everything else, corresponds to sleep in
the physical world.
We would be mistaken if we imagined that the alternation of
transformation with strengthened ego feeling were regulated in the
elemental world just as naturally as waking and sleeping are in the
physical world. According to clairvoyant consciousness — and to
this alone it is perceptible — it takes place at will, not
passing so easily as waking here passes into sleep. After one has
lived for a time in the element of metamorphosis, one feels the need
within oneself to engage and use the other swing of the pendulum of
elemental life. In a much more arbitrary way than with our waking and
sleeping, the element of transforming oneself alternates with living
within with its heightened feeling of self. Yes, our consciousness
can even bring it about through its elasticity that in certain
circumstances both conditions can be present at the same time: on the
one hand, one transforms oneself to some degree and yet can hold
together certain parts of the soul and rest within oneself. In the
elemental world we can wake and sleep at the same time, something we
should not try to do in the physical world if we have any concern for
our soul life. We must further consider that when thinking develops
into the faculty of transformation and begins to be at home in the
elemental world, it cannot be used in that world in the way that is
right and healthy for the physical world. What is thinking like in
our ordinary world? Observe it as you follow its movement. A person
is aware of thoughts in his soul; he knows that he is grasping,
spinning out, connecting and separating these thoughts. Inwardly he
feels himself to be the master of his thoughts, which seem rather
passive; they allow themselves to be connected and separated, to be
formed and then dismissed. This life of thought must develop in the
elemental world a step further. There a person is not in a position
to deal with thoughts that are passive. If someone really succeeds in
entering that world with his clairvoyant soul, it seems as though his
thoughts were not things over which he has any command: they are
living beings. Only imagine how it is when you cannot form and
connect and separate your thoughts but, instead, each one of them in
your consciousness begins to have a life of its own, a life as an
entity in itself You thrust your consciousness into a place, it
seems, where you do not find thoughts that are like those in the
physical world but where they are living beings. I can only use a
grotesque picture which will help us somehow to realize how different
our thinking must become from what it is here. Imagine sticking your
head into an anthill, while your thinking comes to a stop — you
would have ants in your head instead of thoughts! It is just like
that, when your soul dips down into the elemental world; your
thoughts become so alive that they themselves join each other,
separate from each other and lead a life of their own. We truly need
a stronger power of soul to confront these living thought-beings
with our consciousness than we do with the passive thoughts of the
physical world, which allow themselves to be formed at will, to be
connected and separated not only sensibly but often even quite
foolishly. They are patient things, these thoughts of our ordinary
world; they let the human soul do anything it likes with them. But it
is quite different when we thrust our soul into the elemental world,
where our thoughts will lead an independent life. A human being must
hold his own with his soul life and assert his will in confronting
these active, lively, no longer passive thoughts. In the physical
world our thinking can be completely stupid and this does not harm us
at all. But if we do foolish things with our thinking in the
elemental world, it may well happen that our stupid thoughts,
creeping around there as independent beings, can hurt us, can even
cause real pain.
Thus we see that the habits of our soul life must change when we
cross the threshold from the physical into the super-sensible world.
If we were then to return to the physical world with the activity we
have to bring to bear on the living thought entities of the elemental
world and failed to develop in ourselves sound thinking with these
passive thoughts, wishing rather to hold fast to the conditions of
the other world, our thoughts would continually run away from us;
then hurrying after them, we woud become a slave to our thoughts.
When a person enters the elemental world with clairvoyant soul and
develops his faculty of metamorphosis, he delves into it with his
inner life, transforming himself according to the kind of entity he
is confronting. What is his experience when he does this? It is
something we can call sympathy and antipathy. Out of soul depths
these experiences seem to well up, presenting themselves to the soul
that has become clairvoyant. Quite definite kinds of sympathy and
antipathy appear as it transforms itself into this or that other
being. When the person proceeds from one transformation to the next,
he is continually aware of different sympathies or antipathies, just
as in the physical world we recognize, characterize, describe the
objects and living beings, in short, perceive them when the eye sees
their colour or the ear hears their tones, so correspondingly in the
spiritual world we would describe its beings in terms of particular
sympathies and antipathies. Two things, however, should be noted. One
is that in our usual way of speaking in the physical world we
generally differentiate only between stronger and weaker degrees of
sympathy and antipathy; in the elemental world the sympathies and
antipathies differ from one another not only in degree but also in
quality. There they vary, just as yellow here is quite different from
red. As our colours are qualitatively different, so are the many
varieties of sympathy and antipathy that we meet in the elemental
world. In order therefore to describe this correctly, one may not
merely say as one would do in the physical world — that in
diving down and entering this particular entity one feels greater
sympathy, while in immersing oneself in another entity one feels less
sympathy. No, sympathies of all sorts and kinds can be found there.
The other point to note is this. Our usual natural attitude to
sympathy and antipathy cannot be carried over into the elemental
world. Here in this world we feel drawn to some people, repelled by
others; we associate by choice with those who are sympathetic and
wish to stay near them; we turn away from the things and people who
are abhorrent and refuse to have anything to do with them. This
cannot be the case in the elemental world, for there — if I may
express it rather oddly — we will not find the sympathies
sympathetic nor the antipathies antipathetic. This would resemble
someone in the physical world saying, ‘I can stand only the
blues and greens, not the red or yellow colours. I simply have to run
away from red and yellow!’ If a being of the elemental world is
antipathetic, it means that it has a distinct characteristic of that
world which must be described as antipathetic, and we have to deal
with it just as we deal in the sense world with the colours blue and
red — not permitting one to be more sympathetic to us than the
other. Here we meet all the colours with a certain calmness because
they convey what the things are; only when a person is a bit neurotic
does he run away from certain colours, or when he is a bull and
cannot bear the sight of red. Most of us accept all the colours with
equanimity and in the same way we should be able to observe with the
utmost calmness the qualities of sympathy and antipathy that belong
to the elemental world. For this we must necessarily change the
attitude of soul usual in the physical world, where it is attracted
by sympathy and repelled by antipathy; it must become completely
changed. There the inner mood or disposition corresponding to the
feelings of sympathy and antipathy must be replaced with what we can
call soul-quiet, spirit-peacefulness. With an inwardly resolute
soul life filled with spirit calm, we must immerse ourselves in the
entities and transform ourselves into them; then we will feel the
qualities of these beings rising within our soul depths as sympathies
and antipathies. Only when we can do this, with such an attitude
toward sympathy and antipathy, will the soul, in its experiences, be
capable of letting the sympathetic and antipathetic perception appear
before it as images that are right and true. That is, only then are
we capable not merely of feeling what the perception of sympathies
and antipathies is but of really experiencing our own particular
self, transformed into another being, suddenly rising up as one or
another colour-picture or as one or another tone-picture of
the elemental world.
You can also learn how sympathies and antipathies play a part in
regard to the experience of the soul in the spiritual world if you
will look with a certain amount of inner understanding at the chapter
of my book
Theosophy
that describes the soul world. You will
see there that the soul world is actually constructed of sympathies
and antipathies. From my description you will have been able to learn
that what we know as thinking in the physical sense world is really
only the external shadowy imprint, called up by the physical body, of
the thinking that, lying in occult depths, can be called a true
living force. As soon as we enter the elemental world and move with
our etheric body, thoughts become — one can say — denser,
more alive, more independent, more true to their own nature. What we
experience as thought in the physical body relates to this truer
element of thinking as a shadow on the wall relates to the objects
casting it. As a matter of fact, it is the shadow of the elemental
thought-life thrown into the physical sense world through the
instrumentality of the physical body. When we think, our thinking
lies more or less in the shadow of thought beings. Here clairvoyant
spiritual knowledge throws new light on the true nature of thinking.
No philosophy, no external science, however ingenious, can determine
anything of the real nature of thinking; only a knowledge based on
clairvoyant consciousness can recognize what it is.
The same thing holds good with the nature of our willing. The will
must grow stronger, for in the elemental world things are not so
obliging that the ego feeling is provided for us as it is through the
forces of the physical body. There we ourselves have to will the
feeling of ego; we have to find out what it means for our soul to be
entirely filled with the consciousness, ‘I will myself’;
we have to experience something of the greatest significance: that
when we are not strong enough to bring forth the real act of will, ‘I
will myself’, and not just the thought of it, at that moment we
will feel ourselves falling unconscious as though in a faint. If we
do not hold ourselves together in the elemental world, we will fall
into a kind of faint. There we look into the true nature of the will,
again something that cannot be discovered by external science or
philosophy but only by the clairvoyant consciousness. What we call
the will in the physical world is a shadowy image of the strong,
living will of the elemental world, which grows and develops so that
it can maintain the self out of its own volition without the support
of external forces.We can say that everything in that world, when we
grow accustomed to it, becomes self-willed.
Above all, when we have left the physical body and our etheric body
has the elemental world as its environment, it is through the innate
character of the etheric body that the drive to transform ourselves
awakens. We wish to immerse ourselves in the other beings. However,
just as in our waking state by day the need for sleep arises, so in
the elemental world there arises in turn the need to be alone, to
shut out everything into which we could transform ourselves. Then
again, when we have felt alone for a while and developed the strong
feeling of will, ‘I will myself’, there comes what may be
called a terrible feeling of isolation, of being forsaken, which
evokes the longing to awaken out of this state, of only willing
oneself, to the faculty of transformation again. While we rest in
physical sleep, other forces take care that we wake up; we do not
have to attend to it ourselves. In the elemental world when we are in
the sleeping condition of only willing ourselves, it is through the
demand of feeling forsaken that we are impelled to put ourselves into
the state of transformation, that is, of wanting to awaken.
From all this, you see how different are the conditions of
experiencing oneself in the elemental world, of perceiving oneself
there, from those of the physical world. You can judge therefore how
necessary it is, again and again, to take care that the clairvoyant
consciousness, passing back and forth from one world to the
other, adapts itself correctly to the requirements of each world and
does not carry over, on crossing the threshold, the usages of one
into the other. The strengthening and invigorating of the life of
soul consequently belongs to the preparation we have often described
as necessary for the experience of super-sensible worlds.
What must above all become strong and forceful are the soul
experiences we can call the eminently moral ones. These imprint
themselves as soul dispositions in firmness of character and inner
resolute calm. Inner courage and firmness of character must most
especially be developed, for through weakness of character we cripple
the whole life of soul, which would then come powerless into the
elemental world, this we must avoid if we hope to have a true and
correct experience there. No one who is really earnest about gaining
knowledge in the higher worlds will therefore fail to give weight to
the strengthening of the moral forces among all the other
forces that help the soul enter those worlds. One of the most
shameful errors is foisted on humanity when someone takes it on
himself to say that clairvoyance should be acquired without paying
attention to strengthening the moral life. It must be stressed once
and for all that what I described in my book
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds
as the development of the lotus flowers that crystallize
in the spirit body of a student/clairvoyant may indeed take place
without attention to supportive moral strength, but certainly ought
not to do so.
The lotus flowers must be there if a person wants to have the faculty
of transformation. That faculty comes into existence when the flowers
unfold their petals in a motion away from the human being, in order
to grasp the spiritual world and adhere to it. Whatever a person
develops as the ability to transform himself is expressed for the
clairvoyant vision in the unfolding of the lotus flowers. Whatever he
can acquire of a strengthened ego-feeling becomes inner
firmness; we can call it an elementary backbone. Both of these must
be correspondingly developed: the lotus flowers so that one can
transform oneself, and an elementary backbone so that one can unfold
a strengthened ego in the elemental world.
As mentioned in an earlier lecture, what develops in a spiritual way
can lead to a high order of virtues in the spiritual world. But if
this is allowed to stream down into the sense world, it can bring
about the most terrible vices. It is the same with the lotus flowers
and elemental backbone. By practising certain methods it is also
possible to awaken the lotus flowers and backbone without aiming for
moral firmness — but this no conscientious clairvoyant would
recommend. It is not merely a question of attaining something or
other in the higher worlds, but of knowing what is involved. At the
moment we pass over the threshold into the spiritual world we
approach the luciferic and ahrimanic beings, of whom we have already
spoken; here we meet them in quite a different way from any
confrontation we might have in the physical world. We will have the
remarkable experience that as soon as we cross the threshold, that
is, as soon as we have developed the lotus flowers and a backbone, we
will see the luciferic powers coming towards us with the intention of
seizing the lotus flowers. They stretch their tentacles out towards
our lotus flowers; we must have developed in the right way so that we
use the lotus flowers to grasp and understand the spiritual events
and so that they are not themselves grasped by the luciferic powers.
It is possible to prevent their being seized by these powers only by
ascending into the spiritual world with firmly established moral
forces.
I have already mentioned that in the physical sense world the
ahrimanic forces approach us more from outside, the luciferic more
from within the soul. In the spiritual world it is just the opposite:
the luciferic beings come from outside and try to lay hold of the
lotus flowers, whereas the ahrimanic beings come from within and
settle themselves tenaciously within the elementary backbone. If we
have risen into the spiritual world without the support of morality,
the ahrimanic and luciferic powers form an extraordinary alliance
with each other. If we have come into the higher worlds filled with
ambition, vanity, pride or with the desire for power, Ahriman and
Lucifer will succeed in forming a partnership with each other. I will
use a picture for what they do, but this Picture corresponds to the
actual situation and you will understand that what I am indicating
really takes place. Ahriman and Lucifer form an alliance; together
they bind the petals of the lotus flowers to the elementary backbone.
When all the petals are fastened to the backbone, the human being is
tied up in himself, fettered within himself through his strongly
developed lotus flowers and backbone. The results of this will be the
onset of egoism and love of deception to an extent that would be
impossible were he to remain normally in the physical world. Thus we
see what can happen if clairvoyant consciousness is not developed in
the right way: the alliance of Ahriman and Lucifer whereby the petals
of the lotus flowers are fastened onto the elementary backbone,
fettering a person within himself by means of his own elemental or
etheric capacities. These are the things we must know if we wish to
penetrate with open eyes and with understanding into the actual
spiritual world.
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