How
Does One Disprove Spiritual Science?
Prague, 19 March 1912
The
title of the today's talk How Does One Disprove
Theosophy? may appear strange at first. However, it seemed
to me that it could be a good introduction to understand the
theosophical or spiritual-scientific worldview to let our
thoughts wander over this subject. If spiritual science wants
to gain the hearts of many contemporaries, it is particularly
necessary that it is not only a worldview but also that from
this worldview and philosophy of life impulses originate which
should give us strength, security, and hope for life.
Nothing is more dangerous for a worldview than fanaticism. This
asserts itself just with the various worldviews; everybody
knows this. If theosophy or spiritual science should give an
impulse just in this direction, it has to be unfanatical, that
means to understand its opponents and their objections
completely. How easily does one regard an opponent as an
illogical, maybe even as a bad person? Spiritual science should
get itself into understanding the opponent and his reasons. It
has every reason to do this. Indeed, it can satisfy some
longings of life, but one must say on the other side, the way
is rather far to the depths to recognise the validity of its
assertions and teachings. The difficulties that face someone
who wants to find the way conscientiously to theosophy from the
everyday life are just the biggest ones.
Hence, I want to prepare the talk that I will hold on 25 March
here and that shall introduce into the being of theosophy in
positive way with a consideration of the possible and up to a
certain degree entitled objections. However, to be able to
speak about such objections, we have only to come to an
agreement what theosophy — meant here — wants to
be. Since it is sure that one cannot be successful with any
theosophical book. Above all, I want to speak of theosophy as
far as it claims to be taken seriously as science. What is now
theosophy if we disregard everything that sticks to its heels
in dilettantish way?
Theosophy wants to be a worldview that leads to the spiritual
world. It wants to give scientific reasons of that view which
states that behind everything that our senses say about the
outside world that our mind engaged in the brain says about the
outside world one can recognise a spiritual world. In this
spiritual world, only the reasons of everything are that takes
place in the sensory world and in the intellectual world.
With it, however, we would not differ as theosophists very much
from supporters of this or that worldview. Since today more and
more people, also of the outer science, are convinced that
behind everything that the outer science can investigate
something else is concealed that is unknown at first. Now it is
not substantial for theosophy or spiritual science that one
admits that something spiritual exists behind any physical, but
the essentials are that the human being recognises to a certain
degree and recognises in higher and higher measure — if
he enables his own soul — what there is behind the
physical world. Theosophy or spiritual science cannot agree
with those who state that there are limits of human knowledge.
— We have to confine ourselves, however, as human being
to that which the senses recognise what methodical science can
investigate. However, we can assume that one can extend these
limits of human knowledge more and more, so that the human
being develops his cognitive forces to be able to recognise
worlds that are different from the world in which he is at
first with his normal consciousness. From this viewpoint
theosophy is inextricably connected with the requirement that
the human being can develop spiritual senses, spiritual eyes
and ears, higher organs, not higher physical organs, but higher
spiritual-mental organs, so that for him at a certain time the
great moment takes place. If this also happens on a higher
level, nevertheless, you can compare it to the moment that a
blind-born experiences if he can see after an operation. While
before he had darkness around himself, now the world of light,
of forms and colours presents itself to him. Thus, it is
possible for every soul to experience the moment of awakening
in another world, to behold different from in the world with
the normal consciousness. In the characterised sense, one has
to regard this new world as a higher, supersensible one.
Then theosophy shows the means to cause such a moment of
awakening. About these means, I speak particularly in the next
talk. Today I want only to outline the theosophical
worldview.
Let
us envisage the moment of falling asleep where all outer
impressions stop, and where the reason that spreads out like a
net about the sensory perception stops functioning. We may say,
in such case the human being is in another form of existence;
he can perceive nothing around himself if the impressions of
the sensory world and the work of the reason stop. Of course,
only the real experience can decide whether it is necessary
that the human being always must get another condition if he
receives no impressions of the sensory world which resembles
the sleep, or whether there can also be another state. Only the
experience of those can decide this who have gone through the
intimate work of the soul by which they have developed such
strong soul impulses so that something can happen to them that
resembles the moment of falling asleep and, nevertheless, is
radically different from it. It resembles falling asleep in
this respect that all outer sensory impressions and
intellectual activities stop. It is different because that who
wants to become a spiritual researcher makes his soul active
with exercises and gets such forces from its depth that he is
not unconscious if he himself arbitrarily stops all outer
sensory impressions and the intellectual activities, but he
leads an inner conscious life. The soul orients itself, brings
up abilities and forces from its depths of which the normal
consciousness has no idea.
You
can compare it with bringing up the eyesight of the blind-born
after he was operated. From the depths of the soul, we can
bring up forces which work if, otherwise, unconsciousness had
to occur, and which work now in such a way that they connect
the soul with a spiritual world that as really exists for the
human being as our sensory world exists. Thus, that which leads
the spiritual researcher to his science is, indeed, something
subjective at first, still the observations of those who have
done this experience got to according results.
At
first, we want only to describe what refers to the human being
how he faces us immediately. The human being appears to the
immediate consciousness as physical body at first, with
everything that one can touch with hands, can see with the
eyes. However, theosophy shows us that the nature of the human
being is not exhausted in that which we perceive with the
senses, but that the physical body is embedded in
supersensible, higher members that one can investigate only in
the just mentioned way. Then there we speak of the fact that
everything that causes the life phenomena in the human being is
due to a supersensible member, to the so-called “etheric
body” or life body. We speak of this etheric body in such
a way that it can appear to the spiritual eye as the colour
appears to the physical eye that it is an outer, indeed, only
supersensible spiritual reality.
We
further speak of the fact that except this etheric body another
supersensible member exists — do not take exception to
the term, it should be only a technical term —, the
astral body. We call “astral body” the
supersensible bearer of that which we experience, otherwise,
only in our inside as our passions, as joy and sorrow, as
pains, but also as the whole imagining surging up and down.
Then we distinguish beside the etheric body and the astral body
still the next supersensible member; since as the human being
has a physical body in common with the entire mineral realm, he
has the etheric body in common with all living beings, and the
astral body with the entire animal realm. However, the human
being still has a fourth member for himself by which he is the
crown of the earthly creation that we call the ego-body or the
ego being which the other earthly beings do not have.
Thus, theosophy says that we understand the human being
completely if we consider him as consisting of these four
members. It also shows that with the human being if he falls
asleep a separation of his members takes place, while in the
bed the physical body and the etheric body remain, and the
astral body and the ego are separated from these and ascend to
a higher world. As long as the astral body and the ego are
separated from the physical and etheric bodies, the human being
is so organised that his consciousness remains dark. Hence, the
unconsciousness of sleep. Only the physical body and the denser
part of the etheric body are subject to the temporal decay, the
human essence consists of the ego, the astral body, and a part
of the etheric body. This essence cast off the outer cover of
the physical body and a part of the etheric body at death and
goes through a life under other conditions in the spiritual
world.
Then theosophy speaks of the fact that life does not only run
between birth and death, but that the spiritual essence of the
human being goes through repeated lives on earth in a physical
body, while the forces which belong to the human being reach
from that life to the other. Everything that we take up in our
life as experiences between birth and death because we learn,
everything that we do, everything that we accomplish while we
burden ourselves with guilt or merit: all that develops forces
in our souls. It does not die when the human being dies but
remains united with the human essence. After the essence of the
human being has processed these forces in a spiritual life
between death and a new birth, he builds up a new bodily
existence according to his destiny, so that we have the results
and effects of former lives in this life on earth. We have
created our physical body by our essence so that it has this or
that ability now, can do this or that.
We
call this law of cause and effect, which puts us at this or
that place, in these or those conditions which our destiny
develops after the former lives with the Indian word —
because we have no suitable term in the western literature
— the law of karma. With our essence of which we are not
aware at first in the normal life, we have prepared our
destiny. The human being experiences successive lives on earth.
One could say that he experiences the chain of life that points
beyond time and proves the eternity of the human being.
With it, I have today abstained from proving these things and
have stated the knowledge only sketchily which forms the most
elementary level of the theosophical worldview. What one can
bring forward as documents, as proofs of reincarnation and
karma, I want to treat that in the next talk. Today I wanted
only to point out that it is hard for the scientifically
educated human being of the present to find access to the just
characterised truths of theosophy.
Now
we want to discuss some of the possible serious objections that
those persons can do who have only developed their worldview
from the concepts and mental pictures of the present. For these
persons it is exceptionally difficult at first to familiarise
themselves generally with the idea that the soul can develop
“spiritual senses” — if I may use this
contradictory expression.
Let
us assume that a person has done inner exercises, has tried to
develop the willpower in such a way that he can imagine
something if no outer impressions are there; that he has
internalised himself so that he believes, even if he perceives
nothing with the eyes and ears, that he sees and hears
something. Why — somebody may ask — should one
accept this generally as something entitled? — One has
nothing at all to argue against the fact that a person gets by
certain inner exercises to such experiences that have a certain
liveliness, maybe even a higher liveliness than the outer
sensory impressions and everything that our reason can attain.
However — an opponent may say — does one not know
illusions, hallucinations? Does one not know self-deceptions?
Do not those swear who are subject to such self-deceptions and
who are mentally ill that everything that they see is real that
everything that they hear are real voices and regard them as
real? Why should the visions that are artificially caused by
soul exercises have another objective value? — We have to
answer this at first
Spiritual science takes the view that they are not pathological
states, but something that one attains by
“artificial” soul exercises. What I have said now,
is actually trivial. However, it does not matter that such a
statement is more or less trivial or brilliant, but it matters
what it releases in our souls how we position ourselves to it
with our belief and our convictions. There one has to say, the
conscientious researcher of truth has many reasons to speak
about soul experiences this way, and we understand that serious
research rejects them. We need only to imagine how evident it
is for the human being of the present that serious scientific
research could only have beneficial effects after all similar
tendencies had been forced back as such which also seem to
exist in spiritual science.
There we need only to go back to ancient times. Then we could
prove how everywhere — even until the Middle Ages —
in that which the human being perceived with his senses which
he could investigate with the methods of his reason something
was mixed that the human being believed to experience with
inner mystic knowledge and how the sense percepts were
interwoven with the inner experiences. You need only to look
with the experienced eye into any natural-historical book of
the Middle Ages. You see very odd fantastic animals there, and
you soon recognise that any knowledge and view of that time
were based on the fact that the human beings saw that inexactly
which they had seen and then imagined it with that which they
experienced in their souls. In what way did one overcome these
deceits? — With the exact science that rests upon the
experiences of the senses and on that which these senses teach
our reason by observation and by experiment. We have sure
scientific results only, since we have such a research by which
every human being can check the results at any time. Today the
human being is right if he wants to check everything.
Only spiritual science or theosophy can argue something against
it. We look back at the times of the aurora of natural
sciences, at a person like Kepler. In his mind not only those
outer laws of the celestial mechanics lived which we can study
today as Kepler's laws, but also a real spiritual-scientific
view of the harmony of the universe. From the spiritual
penetration of the universe he got his laws of the celestial
mechanics only. There the spiritual scientist can say, look how
fertile it is if we turn the spiritual-scientific view to
Kepler. Nevertheless, Kepler's laws almost prove a spiritual
world. Nevertheless, Kepler can persuade us of a spiritual
world.
An
opponent may say now, just with such a spirit like Kepler you
can realise that he had, nevertheless, some weaknesses. With
him, you could convince yourself how bad it is for the
scientific security if in his soul such a thing lives like a
certain mystic contemplation of the cosmic relations; since
there you come again to the medieval mysticism and with it
close to rather doubtful spiritual operations as, for example,
astrology is with all its outgrowths.
This arose just because one developed the idea of the general
celestial harmony in abstract way and said, nevertheless, there
must be a connection of the big world of the macrocosm and of
that which happens in the single human being. Then the medieval
astrology arose from it. Now, however, astrology has a rather
doubtful aspect. Nothing stirs up the human egoism as strong as
just astrology if future events should be forecast using the
constellations of the stars. If the human being wants to know
them beforehand, it always has an egoistic reason. Kepler knew
this and it distressed him very much that he had to cast a
horoscope of a lord on order of his prince. In a letter to a
friend, Kepler informs of his pain when he had to forecast
particular things for a high personality. In this case, he
said, it would be bad to inform the personality concerned of
something and it would be better if this person did not know it
because he would develop, otherwise, no care and no energy.
— In another case he said, one had to call the person's
attention to the possibility that a misfortune could
approach.
An
opponent may say, with Kepler the tendency of a doubtful
morality also exists when he says, one must help in a way if
one can determine the destiny of the human being from the
spiritual world, one must not say the truth everywhere only,
one has to consider whether the truth is good or harmful.
Briefly, you can see with Kepler himself that a neighbouring
area of spiritual science, astrology, just goes to the bad.
Tragically can be experienced just with Kepler how a way that
leads on one side to the highest areas of spiritual life can
lead on the other side to the biggest superstition. Kepler
himself had to fight with the crassest superstition of the
Middle Ages to save his mother from the stake because she was
charged to be a witch. Here we stand in a point where we can
close the chain completely between beholding into the spiritual
world and the crassest superstition. Who does not know how
easily people who want to get to know the spiritual world also
want to do this comfortably today and rather want to call the
spirits in a doubtful spiritistic way and to make them
manifest, than to rise by spiritual development into the
spiritual world. Thus, an opponent may say, we see a proof with
Kepler how the theosophical way of thinking can lead as the
astrological one into doubtful areas. We could bring in many
examples. We want to point only to an example that can be
characteristic for others.
Someone who studied Hegel thoroughly, as I did, is also allowed
to say the following: Hegel strove for a worldview that is
independent of every sensory view. As long as one remains
generally in a kind of blurred pan-theism, one can discuss
about the authorisation of single things. However, if one
pretends to know anything about the special constitution of
that which arises from the supersensible world, then one has to
be controlled by the facts. Now one of the areas which
spiritual research enters first is the area of numbers and
their harmony laws. Some philosophers have accepted such laws,
Hegel too. Hegel tried to prove that a certain number rule
forms the basis of our planetary system, and that according to
this number rule we can know that our solar system must have so
and so many planets, and that these move in certain distances.
So Hegel meant, by reflection one must be able to control the
planetary system. Hence, he supplied evidence that according to
the number rules only so and so many planets are possible and
except these no other planets were possible. Nevertheless, the
planet Neptune was discovered later.
We
could bring in many such examples, because they are knitted
after the just characterised pattern. One just realises with it
that not only the experiences are a source of evidence for the
today's science, but that also a healthy control [must be there
by the facts]. Where science accepts hypotheses, it accepts
something only if the experience confirms the theories. Now the
opponents of theosophy may say, science has positioned itself
on a healthy ground; and now spiritual science comes and wants
to mix something in science that comes from quite different
sources, from a higher beholding, from karma laws and the
like.
The
spiritual researcher will maybe say, yes, but you could
approach me so far that you admit that which I claim, for
example, the teaching of karma and repeated lives on earth, as
something that one calls a useful working hypothesis in
science. — At that time when the so-called oscillation
theory of the light originated, no one saw in it something else
than “ether oscillations.” You can argue a lot
against it; the whole theory was an invented system. One said,
if we suppose that a world ether penetrates all material
processes that everything is in motion, then these oscillations
must take place according to the mathematically computable
rules in such a way that this and that arises. — Then
[the calculations] also turned out to be correct in the
experience, for example, with light, heat et cetera. One calls
this a useful working hypothesis if one says, this hypothesis
even avails us to discover new facts; even if the hypothesis is
wrong in itself, nevertheless, it led us just to the true.
Nevertheless, accept the ideas of karma or reincarnation as a
working hypothesis, the spiritual researcher could say to the
opponents of theosophy. Now against it one could argue: where
it concerns so essential and important things that intervene so
deeply in life, one cannot get involved with the possibility
that the outer life can be explained if one does certain
hypothetical requirements. Someone who has looked around a
little more thoroughly in the logic knows that one can conclude
correctly even from wrong requirements. Theosophy could be
quite wrong, even if one supposes that the ideas of karma and
reincarnation are right. The conclusions could be right
concerning the outer life — even if the requirements were
wrong. — However, a strict, succinct logic could say;
with it, the theosophical ideas are rejected as useful working
hypotheses.
It
is even worse if one considers it epistemologically. There an
opponent of theosophy may say, concerning knowledge it matters
above all to investigate the objective validity. Now there is
no possibility at all to distinguish truth and error of
illusions, hallucinations and of any soul life generally than
the control by experience. If one excludes experience and the
soul life should proceed without [control by] experience, one
gets into the area of absolute arbitrariness, of the
uncontrollable. That means, a science that searches the
principle of controllability has to consider the whole method
of higher beholding as unjustified, and it has to agree with
modern science that says, what one should consider as
scientific, must be independent from all subjective
experiences. It has to take place while we exclude everything
that belongs to our soul life.
However, you say — the modern epistemologist may say to
the spiritual scientist — that you want to remain just
within your soul life and want to isolate it; that means that
you enter an area which science has just excluded. Modern
science has shown that it has found its sure results just
because it has proceeded in such a way that it has excluded all
subjective experiences. So one must say to the theosophists, do
not mix anything into science that is warmed up old methods
which one has overcome since the fifteenth, sixteenth,
seventeenth centuries.
Thus, the mood, the sensation of someone may speak who faces
spiritual science with the attitude of our time. However, one
can penetrate even deeper and ask, is there any possibility
generally to state that that which a human being beholds who
has attained a higher beholding has a meaning also for other
human beings? — There, however, spiritual science says,
this higher beholding is necessary to visit the supersensible
world and to investigate its truths. However, if the truths of
the supersensible world have been found and are told, then they
can be understood with any impartial logic and any natural
sense of truth. As well as every human being cannot go to the
laboratory to inform himself of the methods of biology and
zoology and other fields and can still accept the results of
these researches, one can also accept and understand —
spiritual science says — what is investigated in the
supersensible world.
Now
one could ask, is such an assertion of spiritual research
entitled? It would be entitled only if that which the spiritual
researcher has to say could be understood by us after the
pattern which we have formed for understanding in the usual
scientific world. There the spiritual researcher says, for
example, our current life between birth and death is an effect
that arises from the causes of former lives; the former lives
reach into our current life. I experience that which I
experience now as good luck or misfortune, as my abilities, as
my forces, my hopes, and my life security because I caused them
in former lives. I must learn to consider the present life as
an effect of those reasons that I caused in former lives.
Against it, the opponent may say, we have such things also in
the outer world that the effects go back to causes and that we
recognise that something former lives on as effect in something
later. Let us take an example that plays a big role in modern
natural sciences. There we have the law that a being briefly
experiences all those forms in its embryonic development that
certain animals worked through in the course of their evolution
from imperfect levels to more perfect ones. We know that the
human being goes through a level during his embryonic
development — possibly, from the eighteenth day after
conception on — which copies the fish shape; then later
he goes through other forms, so that he grows up gradually into
the forms in which he is born. From that, natural sciences
conclude that the outer, physical human being has descended
from the more imperfect living beings, and that the figure of
the more imperfect living beings has a lasting effect in that
which is the human being before birth. There we see those forms
working which we see in the lineage. You, spiritual researcher,
have to show us that really in the life of the human being, in
his mind and soul and in his destiny something lives with which
one can recognise the origin of the former causes, as well as
one just recognises the lineage by the embryonic development of
the human being in which he accepts the animal forms.
However, spiritual research can now show that one cannot
explain the certain soul processes which are individual with
every human being as a product of heredity that his innermost
essence gives something else than that which is the lineage. If
then one pursues how the human life develops how the human
being grows up gradually, then one realises how forces and
abilities appear step by step. Then one can already recognise
with outer means that heredity does not only give that, not
only the education at first, but also that it has worked its
way out of that which exists with every single human being.
This is added to the inherited, and this must originate —
if one does not regard it as miracles — from other causes
that one can only lead back to a spiritual-mental life that the
human being has already experienced earlier. One can find the
causes neither in heredity nor in education. Such a conclusion
is possible. The spiritual researcher may say, I can make
people understand what I know from the spiritual beholding by
such a logic as I have characterised it now.
The
opponent may respond, something enters into life that would not
be miraculous if you only consulted all usual conditions.
Someone who looks with scientific methods deeper into life
knows which big influence just the very first childhood
experiences have on our souls. They are forgotten, remain
concealed in the soul, but at the suitable opportunity they
emerge, and we could easily believe if we see them emerging
later that none of them lead back to education, also not to
heredity, one has to explain them as originating from a former
life. However, we do this only because we do not mind how the
first childhood experiences take hold in the soul and that they
have a much bigger significance than everything does later.
Hence, the outer science may say, we are not yet so far to
investigate the life of the child sufficiently to be able to
say how for the soul of the child the experiences of the first
years develop. We have to wait, until we get deeper and deeper
into this area, then we can explain something about which you,
spiritual researchers, state that it comes from former lives,
by things which happen in quite natural way.
Yes, the opponent can still go on further. He may say, for
example, even those human beings who get by soul exercises to a
spiritual beholding have to express what they perceive in a
higher world — only to be understood — in the
forms, in the symbols of physical reality. It is very strange:
those people who have become clairvoyant, so to speak, express
— the opponent would state - themselves in each case
quite different. Around the turn of the eighteenth, nineteenth
centuries nobody beheld something in the spiritual world that
referred, for example, to electricity or to railways; now they
behold the things which refer to electricity or railways in the
spiritual worlds. Who would not doubt that unconscious things
interplay in the soul which are transformed in such a way that
these illusory spiritual experiences appear. Nothing could
justify the pretensions of those who speak of ways to
spiritual, supersensible worlds. The more exactly one
investigates, the more the ideas of former lives, of karma
dissolve. One should point repeatedly just to the first
childhood experiences if such things are brought forward like
the karma idea.
Spiritual science may probably say now, let us assume that a
parental couple has three, four children — every child is
endowed with other characteristics. If everything should be
rooted in heredity, nevertheless, one cannot understand why the
children of a parental couple do not have the same qualities
because they originate from the same father and the same
mother. Just this shows us, some defenders of spiritual science
probably say, that in that which the human being has received
as inherited an individual being was born, and from it, the
difference explains itself.
Against it, the opponent wants only to argue, nevertheless,
that which is handed down is handed down from both parents or
also from the ancestors. The different qualities [of the
ancestors] intermingle. Why should not different mixtures
appear with the children and thus the most different
individualities? If one could look once into the complex
structures of heredity — the opponent may say —,
all pretensions of the spiritual researchers would have be
silenced which take the viewpoint of reincarnation. If —
to support the idea of reincarnation — the theosophical
literature points out particularly that even twins show
different qualities, the opponent could reply, everything that
one can show in such a way with children of different ages
applies particularly to twins.
Others say — to prove the teaching of reincarnation
—, the human being shows conscience, moral responsibility
in his essence. If you consider yourself responsible for an
action that you do, nevertheless, you must be able to have
another opinion of your actions than to have done it only. You
have to ascribe another origin to the human being than only
that from the lineage. Certain theosophical authors understand
conscience, responsibility and the like in such a way that they
are evidence of the individual essence that goes through
various lives on earth.
One
only needs to point to the fact that already astute
investigators explained conscience and responsibility in such a
way that the human being developed slowly and gradually within
the human society. For one can easily show in the case of
conscience, for example, that the human being notices that
certain actions bring him certain disadvantages. In his mind,
he connects the concepts of the action with the resulting
disadvantage. This settles down in him, so that he concludes,
in the end: you are not allowed to do this. — Imagine
that changed into an impulse and this impulse is handed down,
and then we have conscience with the following descendants.
However — the opponent may argue — it is
superficial if you assume an inner essence of the human being
that goes through various lives on earth from the fact of
conscience.
Seen from without many a thing could appear to that who does
not exactly look in such a way, as if one cannot prove it. Just
a spiritual researcher has to watch out for the difficulties
that just conscientious people have if they want to approach
spiritual science. Since what I have said today is just for
such people an obstacle; they do not get over it.
If
we go on and investigate how an opponent can put the question,
how does spiritual science behave in the area of morality -
then theosophy normally says, which moral impulse that gives
the human being if he hears that his current life is caused by
reasons which the human essence, that is he himself, put in a
former life, and that he prepares the causes for the next life
with that which he does now. How are the moral views of such a
human being designed? The opponent could ask that way.
He
will say, such a human being will easily be persuaded to say
about a not good action to himself, if I do it, I carry it into
my next life and I myself get the punishment in my next life.
— With such an impulse, he will omit certain
actions. However, it is the most selfish impulse that there can
be if the human being does the good because it brings effects
in the next life which he wishes, and he refrains from the bad
ones because they bring rather disagreeable and fatal effects.
Hence, one appeals to the egoism of the human being if one
refers him to the karma and says to him, by this or that action
you cause bad effects in the next life! —
Where does remain there the great word that one acts morally if
one does the good for the sake of the good? If anybody who
believes in karma says to himself, I still do something that
maybe brings disadvantage — then it brings an advantage
in a later life, the good is not done in such a way for the
sake of the good, but the human egoism is stirred up in the
subtlest way. We take another case. We assume that a person
believes that he experiences happiness or misfortune because he
caused this in a former life to himself and he has to accept
this without grumbling. — Such a disposition — so
the opponent could say — turns out to be fatalism if the
person ascribes everything that happens to his former actions.
Instead of pulling himself up and intervening actively in life,
he will rely simply on the principle: this you have let
yourself in for that! Then this will cause that a theosophist
if he is weak says, why should I pull myself up? My karma has
made me weak; this has its good reasons in a former life.
— In this way, a dreadful fatalism comes out. We can
learn from it how the opponent can state egoism and fatalism as
something that one can bring forward in the most substantial
way against the theosophical principle of moral.
If
we want to visualise now how theosophy has to work on the
religious life, then we realise how leaders of the theosophical
life define theosophy as a kind of religion of wisdom, as
something that leads into the religious area from knowledge and
cognition. Religion cannot exist without a spirit living in the
world — no matter whether you imagine this spirit as many
spirits or as one spirit. Without living spirit, that impetus
of feelings and sensations cannot take place in the soul, which
is necessary for a real religious life. This looking up at
something spiritual — so the opponent could argue-, this
devotion of an outer spirit which is the origin of the earthly
events and the human destinies is clouded by the belief of a
human individuality who goes from one life to the next. He has
to come to terms with himself concerning the religious life;
that means, to refer everything to himself. Thus, the heart
cannot widen and the mind cannot open itself as it is,
otherwise, the case if the human being not only looks into
himself, but can also look up at something divine to which he
belongs in which he has interest and with which he is in a
living relationship.
If
we want to summarise everything that one can argue against
theosophy, an opponent could say, in moral and religious
respects spiritual science leaves much to be desired. This
appears in particular in the fact that people who are
internally undisciplined or have a lax scientific conscience
from the start, gradually develop quite strange impulses toward
life. There one realises — and that applies to all
followers of theosophy, — as it arises from observations
— that people if they get involved with
spiritual-scientific truths would lose the interest for the
fresh, full life; one realises that they withdraw from the
immediate problems of the outer world. They brood over that
which has put them into life and even start despising the outer
reality and feel fine only if they do no longer want anything
from the outer world.
I
want to speak only about that to which opponents of theosophy
rightly could refer. They could point rightly to the fact that
numerous theosophists with a more lax scientific truth feeling
become useless for all performances which a strong, healthy
life demands. For they do not stand in life, but are or become
eccentrics; such people arise from theosophy! — The
opponent could point to numerous examples. Furthermore, he
could show how the lacking control by experience can become
rather bad if the human being who wants to develop spiritual
eyes, spiritual ears in himself has not developed a sense of
truth and such an impulse of truth as the outer experience
controls us. Then the spiritually beholding, the so-called
clairvoyant human being loses the inner control that must be
the more important if the outer control is absent. There it
appears that a human being can get into untruthfulness —
unaware at first — , into errors and finally into
conscious untruthfulness, into lies whose consequences he does
not figure out because he cannot distinguish illusion from
truth.
Therefore, the need to behold into the spiritual world has to
be founded on truth and morality. It turns out, why it could
become such a big problem that, for example, Goethe expressed
in his Faust. There Faust faces us, the typical human
being, who wants to get into the spiritual world and to extend
his individual life who, however, often has the possibility to
stray, in spite of conscientious striving, and who says, after
he has nearly completed his life: could I only remove magic
from my path. — The confession of spiritual research can
become so tragic.
However, we have to consider the human soul not only
theoretically but also in the full life. There only the
experience itself can give us the appropriate teachings. One
may reason ever so much why our soul has this or that
constitution if it wants to follow spiritual research —
one can know for sure: theoretical sentences are the one side,
mental impulses the other side. Everything may be theoretically
quite logical, and the soul can stray, nevertheless, if it has
not found security in itself. The opponents can rightly point
to such a thing that exists in the most different forms. This
can show us that we must not take objections easily because
they are to be found easily.
You
can find references in spiritual science or theosophy that an
individual essence lives in the human being. One shows that
only for the human being a biography is possible because only
the human being has that characteristic, individual course of
life that makes a biography possible. For the greatest as for
the most unimportant human being, a biography is possible. We
show the same interest for the single human being which we have
for a genus of the animal realm. It is a superficial objection
if anybody says, nevertheless, one could also write a biography
of a dog or a cat. Indeed, one could do this. When I was a
pupil, the teacher tormented us once to write the biography of
our pen. One can transfer everything to everything, but one has
to take the essentials of a thing into account. No spiritual
researcher states that a dog or a cat cannot have a sum of
individual qualities. One only says that we show the same
interest, which we have as a human being for a single person,
for the entire animal genus. Even the interest in an animal can
be bigger than for a human being, but it is not the same
interest. We consider every human being as an own type or
genus.
A
difference exists whether we face real opponents of theosophy
or those who cannot overcome the difficulties that our whole
thinking and feeling and our science give us. Today I wanted to
tell such objections. Of course, we could go on talking until
tomorrow morning, increase the objections, and go into details.
I am aware that I have not even told the most important
objections. I have only shown how one can consult epistemology,
morality, religion and life security if one wants to deliver
proofs against theosophy.
It
is maybe the nicest result that can arise from spiritual
science that one learns to practise true tolerance. One can
have true tolerance only if one understands the various
individualities, different thinking, and feeling. As long as we
hear the proposed objections, they can stimulate us if we do
not take them easily, but can find that which the opponent
argues in ourselves. If we make, so to speak, a part of
ourselves our opponent to cope with the entitled objections,
then we practise theosophical tolerance.
In
this characterised way, the spiritual researcher should always
face all other objections that could be done from opposing
side. The supporters as well as the opponents should consider
facing the opponents with the counterpart of fanaticism that
must be an impulse of the theosophical attitude so that you
always ask yourself, which importance do their objections have?
— Hence, no objection surprises the theosophist.
Theosophy can advance only in right way if such an inner
discussion can take place with every opponent.
The
fact that this is a demand with which also our time struggles
can appear if one believes repeatedly that the opponents could
not estimate at all the weight and the importance of their
objections. I have already pointed many a time to the viewpoint
of Eduard von Hartmann that he represented especially in his
Philosophy of the Unconscious which negative reception
it had with his opponents, how he anonymously wrote a
refutation that his opponents liked very much. Then he revealed
that he had written the refutation himself and showed that he
could very well do the same objections and nobody possesses the
absolute truth.
However, the theosophists should not only know the objections
[against theosophy], but it is also their duty as it were to
deal with these objections. After we have today opened
ourselves to these objections, we want to see in the next talk
how this area appears from the other side from which we have
shown the reverse more or less today. We want to see whether
there are substantial reasons for the opponents if they state,
leave us alone with your theosophy, because it is not only
unscientific, but it also contradicts any higher morality, it
founds inadequate ethics, it gives no life security, and it is
religiously absolutely inadequate.
On
the other hand, could anything be wrong that shows that all
these objections are still wrong? However, we do not want to
take these objections in such a way, as if we wanted to dismiss
them simply as errors, but in such a way that we can learn from
them. It is difficult for some contemporaries to find the way
to theosophy. However, it could be also exemplary for some
people who become light-hearted supporters of theosophy to
confront themselves once with such difficulties. Since also the
way to the stars could be rough, and it could be good unless we
make ourselves too comfortable.
In
the next talk, I show how the human being can familiarise
himself with this world of the spiritual stars, and that he
must not succumb to the objections characterised today but can
overcome them.
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