Lecture 6
Stuttgart, 1st January 1911
IN
the lecture yesterday I drew your attention to the fact that very
diverse Powers intervene in the course of human evolution.
For this reason, and also because one mighty stream of influence intersects
another, certain periods of ascent and equally of decline occur in definite
spheres of civilisation. While older civilisations are still waning, while
they are so to say passing over into external forms, the creative impulses
which are to inaugurate later civilisations, to inspire them and bring
them to birth, are being slowly and gradually prepared. So that in a
general way the course of man's cultural life may be described briefly as
follows. — We find cultural life rising from unfathomed depths and
ascending to certain heights; then it ebbs, and indeed more slowly
than it ascended. The fruits of a particular civilisation-epoch live
an for a long time, penetrate into later streams and into folk-cultures
of the most diverse character and lose themselves like a river which
instead of flowing into the sea trickles away over lowlands. But while
it is trickling away the new civilisations — which were still
imperceptible during the decline of the old — are in preparation,
in order eventually to begin their development and ascent, and to contribute
in the same or a similar way to the progress of humanity. If we want
to think of an eminently characteristic example of progress in culture
we can surmise that it must be one in which the principle of the universal-human,
the weaving of the ego in the ego, appeared in the most striking form.
This, as we have shown, was the case in the culture of the ancient Greeks.
We have there a clear illustration of a civilisation running its own
characteristic course; for the achievements of the three preceding civilisation-epochs
and of the epoch following that of Greece are modified in a quite different
way by forces outside man. Hence what lies in the human being himself,
whereby he makes his mark upon the world, everything which, proceeding
from super-sensible powers, is able to express itself in him in the
most characteristically human way — this is exemplified in the
middle, the Fourth civilisation-epoch.
But in regard to this
Greek civilisation, the following must also be said. It was preceded
by the Third epoch, which then ebbed away, and during this period of
decline Greek culture was being prepared. During the decline of the
Babylonian culture, which streamed from the East towards the West, there
was enshrined in the little peninsula of Southern Europe we know as
Greece the seed of what was to sink into humanity as the impulse of
a new life. True though it is that this Greek life brought pre-eminently
to expression the essentially human element, that which man can find
entirely within himself, it must not be thought that such things need
no preparation. What we call the essentially human element — that,
too, had first to be taught to men in the Mysteries by super-sensible
Powers, just as now the still higher freedom which must be prepared
for the Sixth civilisation-epoch is sustained and taught in super-sensible
worlds by the Beings who lead and guide human evolution.
We must therefore realise
that when Greek culture appears to outer observation. as if everything
sprang from the essentially human element, it already has behind it
a period when it was, so to speak, under the influence of the teachings
of higher spiritual Beings. It was through these higher spiritual Beings
that Greek culture was able to rise to the heights it achieved in bringing
the essentially human element to expression. For this reason Greek culture
too, when we trace it backwards, is lost sight of in the darkness of
those prehistoric ages when, as its basis, there was cultivated in the
Mystery-sanctuaries the wisdom which then, like a heritage, was clothed
in majestic poetic form by Homer, by Aeschylus. And so, in face of the
grandeur of there unparalleled figures, we must conceive that these men
did indeed elaborate something that was entirely the product of their own
souls, of the weaving of the ego in the ego, but that it had first been
laid by higher Beings into these souls in the temple-sanctuaries.
That is why the poetry of Homer and of Aeschylus seems so infinitely
profound, so infinitely great. The poems of Aeschylus should not on
any account, however, be judged from the translation by Wilamowitz,
for it must be realised that the full greatness of what lived in Aeschylus
cannot be conveyed in modern language, and that there could really be
no worse approach to an understanding of his works than that tendered
by one of the most recent translators.
If, therefore, we study
Greek culture against the deep background of the Mysteries, we can begin
to divine its real nature. And because the secrets of the life in super-sensible
worlds were conveyed in a certain human form to the artists of Greece,
they were able in their sculptures to embody in marble or in bronze,
what had originally been hidden in the secrecy of the Mysteries. Even
what confronts us in Greek philosophy clearly shows that its highest
achievements were in truth ancient Mystery-wisdom translated into terms
of intellect and reason. There is a symbolic indication of this when
we are told that Heraclitus offered up his work,
On Nature,
as a sacrificial act in the temple of Diana at Ephesus. This means that
he regarded what the weaving of the ego in the ego enabled him to say as
an offering to the spiritual Powers of the preceding epoch with whom he
knew himself to be connected. This is an attitude which also sheds light
an the profound utterance of Plato, who was able to impart a philosophy
of such depth to the Greeks and yet found himself compelled to affirm
that all the philosophy of his time was as nothing compared with the
ancient wisdom received by the forefathers from the spiritual worlds
themselves.
[see Note 36]
In Aristotle everything
appears as though in forms of logic — indeed, here one must say
that the ancient wisdom has become abstraction, living worlds have been
reduced to concepts. But in spite of this — because Aristotle
stands at the terminal point of the ancient stream — something
of the old wisdom still breathes through his works.
[see Note 37]
In his concepts, in his ideas, however abstract, an echo can still be
heard of the harmonies which resounded from the temple-sanctuaries and
were in truth the inspiration not only of Greek wisdom but also of Greek
art, of the whole folk-character. For when such a culture first arises,
it takes hold not only of knowledge, not only of art, but of the whole
man, with the result that the whole man is an impress of the wisdom
and spirituality living within him. If we picture Greek civilisation
rising up from unknown depths even during the decline of Babylonian
culture, then, in the age of the Persian Wars we can clearly perceive
the effects of what the Greek character had received from the old temple-wisdom.
For in these Persian Wars we see how the heroes of Greece, aflame with
enthusiasm for the heritage received from their forefathers, fling themselves
against the stream which, as an ebbing stream from the East, is surging
towards them. The significance of their violent resistance, when the
treasures of the temple-wisdom, when the teachers of the ancient Greek
Mysteries themselves were fighting in the souls of the Greek heroes
in the battles against the Persians, against the waning culture of the
East — the significance of all this can be grasped by the human
soul if the question is asked: What must have become of Southern Europe,
indeed of the whole of later Europe, if the onset of the massive hordes
from the East had not been beaten back at that time by the little Greek
people? What the Greeks then achieved contained the seed of all later
developments in European civilisation up to our own times.
And even the outcome in
the East of what Alexander subsequently carried back to it from the
West — albeit in a way that from a certain point of view is not
justifiable — even that could develop only after what was destined
to decline in respect also of its physical power had first been thrust
back by the burning enthusiasm in the souls of the Greeks for the temple-treasures.
If we grasp this we shall see how not only the teaching concerning Fire
given by Heraclitus, not only the all-embracing ideas of Anaxagoras
and of Thales, work on, but also the actual teachings of the guardians
of the temple-wisdom in prehistoric Greek civilisation. We shall feel
all this as a legacy of spiritual Powers who imbued Greek culture with
what it was destined to receive. We shall perceive it in the souls of
the Greek heroes who defied the Persians in the various battles. This
is how we must learn to feel history, for what is offered us in the
ordinary way is, at its best, only an empty abstract of ideas. What
works over from earlier into later times can be observed only when we
go back to what was imparted to the souls of men through a period lasting
for thousands of years, taking definite forms in a certain epoch.
Why was it that in this
upsurge of the old temple-treasures something so great could be imparted
to the Greeks The secret lay in the universality, the comprehensiveness,
of these temple treasures, and in their aloofness from anything of lesser
account. It was something that was given as a primal source, something
that could engross the whole man, bringing with it, so to say, a direct
forte of guidance.
And here we come to the
essential characteristic of a culture which is rising towards its peak.
During this period, everything that is an active stimulus in man —
beauty, virtue, usefulness, purposiveness, what he wishes to achieve
and realise in life — all this is seen as proceeding directly
from wisdom, from the spiritual. Wisdom embraces virtue, beauty and
everything else as well. When man is permeated by, inspired by, the
temple-wisdom, the rest follows of itself. That is the feeling which
prevails during these times of ascent. But the moment the questions,
the perceptions, fall asunder — the moment when, for example,
the question of the good or the beautiful becomes independent of the
question of its divine origin — the period of decline begins.
Therefore we may be sure that we are living in a period of decline when
it is emphasised that, independently of a spiritual origin, this or
that must be especially cultivated, this or that must be the main consideration.
When man lacks the confidence that the spiritual can bring forth of
itself everything that human life requires, then the streams of culture,
which an the arc of ascent form a unity, fall apart into separate streams.
We sec this where interests outside wisdom, outside the spiritual impetus,
begin to infiltrate Greek life; we see it in the political life, we
see it, too, in that part of Greek life which especially interests us,
in the spiritual life immediately preceding Aristotle. Here, side by
side with the question: What is the true? — which embraces the
question: What is good and practically effective? — the latter
question begins to be an independent one. Men ask: How should knowledge
be constituted in order that one can attain a practical goal in life?
And so in the period of decline we see the stream of Stoicism
arising. With Plato and Aristotle the good was directly contained in
the wise; impulses of the good could proceed only from the wise. The
Stoics ask: What must man do in order to become wiser in the practice
of living, in order to live to some purpose? Goals of practical life
insert themselves into what was formerly the all prevailing impetus
of truth.
With Epicureanism comes
an element that may be described as follows. — Men ask: How must
I prepare myself intellectually in order that this life shall run its
course with the greatest possible happiness and inner peace? To this
question, Thales, Plato and even Aristotle would have answered: Search
after the truth and truth will give you the supreme happiness, the germinating
seed of love. — But now men separate the one question from the
question of truth, and a stream of decline Sets in. Stoicism and Epicureanism
are a stream of decline, the invariable consequence being that men begin
to question truth itself and truth loses its power. Hence, simultaneously
with Stoicism and Epicureanism in the period of decline, Scepticism
arises — doubt in regard to truth. And when Scepticism and doubt,
Stoicism and Epicureanism, have exercised their influence for a time,
then man, still striving after truth, feels cast out of the World-Soul
and thrown back upon his own soul. Then he looks around him, saying:
This is not an age when Impulses flow into humanity from the on working
stream of the spiritual Powers themselves. He is thrown back upon his
own inner life, his own subjective being. In the further course of Greek
life, this comes to expression in Neo-Platonism, a philosophy which
is no longer concerned with external life, but looks within and strives
upwards to truth through the mystical ascent of the individual. One
stream of the cultural life is mounting, another declining, stage by
stage. And what has developed during the ascent peters slowly and gradually
away, until with the approach of the year 1250 there begins for humanity
an inspiration not easy to observe but no less great for all that, which
I characterised yesterday in a certain way. This again has been petering
away since the 16th century. For since then all the specialised questions
have again arisen by the side of those concerning truth itself; again
an attitude is taken which wants to separate the question of the good
and of the outwardly useful from the one supreme question of truth.
And whereas those leading personalities in whom the impulses of the
year 1250 were working contemplated all human currents in their relation
to truth, we now see coming into prominence the fundamental separation
of the questions of practical life from those that are intrinsically
concerned with truth. At the portal leading to the new period of decline,
the period which so clearly signifies the downward surge in spiritual
life—at this portal stands Kant. In his preface to the
second edition of the
Critique of Pure Reason,
he says expressly
that he had to set limits to the striving after truth in order to make
room for what practical religion requires.
[see Note 38]
Hence the strict separation of Practical Reason from Theoretical Reason:
in Practical Reason, the postulate of God, Freedom and Immortality is
based entirely on the element of the good; in Theoretical Reason, any
possibility of knowledge penetrating into any spiritual world is demolished.
That is how things are, when viewed in the setting of world-history.
And we may be sure that the striving for wisdom in our age will follow
in the wake of Kant. When our own spiritual Movement points to the ways
in which the capacity for knowledge can be so extended and enhanced
as to enable it to penetrate into the super-sensible, we shall for a
long, long time continue to hear from all sides: “Yes, but Kant
says! ...” The historical evolution of mankind takes its course
in antitheses of this kind. In what arises instinctively, like a dim
inkling, we can see that underneath what is pure maya but accepted as
the truth, underneath the stream of maya, human instincts do hit upon
things which to a great extent are right. For it is extraordinarily
interesting that in certain inklings arising out of folk-instincts for
practical life, we can perceive the descending course of human evolution
until the Greco-Latin epoch and the re-ascent now demanded of us.
What picture, then, must
have come before the minds of men who had a feeling for such things
When they looked back to the great figures of history in pre-Christian
times — or, we had better say, pre-Grecian times — how must
they have thought of all those whom we described as the instruments
of Beings of the higher Hierarchies They must have said to themselves
— and even the Greeks still did so: This has come to us through
men who were played into by superhuman, divine forces. — And in
all the ages of antiquity we find that the leading personalities, down
to the figures of the Hermes, and even Plato, were regarded as “sons
of the gods”; that is to say, when men looked back to olden times,
heightening their vision more and more, they saw the divine behind there
personalities who appeared in history; and they regarded the beings
who appeared as Plato and in the Hermes as having come down, as having
been born from, the gods. That is how they rightly saw it — the
sons of the gods having united with the daughters of men, in order to
bring down the spiritual to the physical plane. In those ancient times
men beheld sons of the gods — divine men, that is to say, beings
whose nature was united with the divine. On the other hand, when the
Greeks came to feel: Now we can speak of the weaving of the ego in the
ego, of what lies within the human personality itself — then they
spoke of their supreme leaders as the Seven Sages, thus indicating that
the nature of those who once were sons of the gods had now become purely
and essentially human.
What was bound to come
about in the instincts of the peoples in post-Grecian times? It was
now a matter of indicating what man elaborates on the physical plane,
and how he carries the full fruit of this into the spiritual world.
Thus, while the feeling in much earlier times was that the spiritual
must be recognised as taking precedence of the physical man and the
physical man regarded as a shadow-image, and while during the Greek
epoch there were the sages in whom the ego works in the ego, in the
epoch after Greece attention was turned to personalities who live on
the physical plane and rise to the spiritual through what is achieved
in the physical world. This concept developed out of a certain true
instinct of knowledge. Just as the pre-Grecian age had sons of the
gods and the Greeks had sages, the peoples of the
post-Grecian
age have saints — human beings who lift themselves into
the spiritual life through what they carry into effect on the physical
plane. Something is alive there in the folk-instinct, enabling us to
glimpse how behind maya itself there is a factor which impels humanity
forward.
When we recognise this,
the impulses at work in the epochs of time throw light upon the individual
human soul, and we understand how the group-karma is inevitably modified
by the fact that men are at the same time instruments of the process
of historical evolution. We are then able to grasp what the Akasha Chronicle
reveals — for example, that in Novalis we have to see something
that goes back to Elijah of old. This is an extraordinarily interesting
sequence of incarnations.
[see Note 39]
In Elijah the element of prophecy comes strongly to the fore, for it was
the mission of the Hebrews to prepare that which was to come in later
time. And they prepared it during the period of transition from the
Patriarchs to the Prophets, via the figure of Moses. Whereas in Abraham
we see how the Hebrew still feels the working of the God within him, in
his very blood,
[see Note 41]
in Elijah we see the
transition to the ascent into the spiritual worlds. Everything is prepared
by degrees. In Elijah there lives an individuality already inspired
by what is to come in the future. And then we see how this individuality
was to be an instrument for preparing understanding of the Christ Impulse.
The individuality of Elijah is reborn in John the Baptist.
(See Notes 39 and 40).
John the Baptist is the instrument of a higher Being.
In John the Baptist there lives an individuality who uses him as an
instrument, but in order to enable him to serve as such an instrument,
the lofty individuality of Elijah was necessary.
Then, later on, we see
how this individuality is well fitted to pour impulses working towards
the future into forms that were made possible only by the influence
of the Fourth Post-Atlantean culture-epoch. However strange it may seem
to us, this individuality appears again in Raphael, who unites in his
paintings what is to work in all ages of time as the Christian impulse,
with the wonderful forms of Greek culture. And here we can realise how
the individual karma of this entelechy is related to the outer incarnation.
It is required of the outer incarnation that the power of an age shall
be able to come to expression in Raphael; for this power the Elijah-John
individuality is the suitable bearer. But the epoch is only able to
produce a physical body bound to be shattered under such a power; hence
Raphael's early death.
This individuality had
then to give effect to the other side of his being in an age when the
single streams were dividing once more; he appears again as Novalis.
We see how there actually lives in Novalis, in a particular form, all
that is now being given us through Spiritual Science. For outside Spiritual
Science nobody has spoken so aptly about the relation of the astral
body to the etheric and physical bodies, about the waking state and
sleep, as Novalis, the reincarnated Raphael.
[see Note 42]
These are things which show us how individualities are the instruments
of the onflowing stream of man's evolution. And when we observe the
course of human development, when we perceive this enigmatic alternation
in the happenings of history, we can dimly glimpse the working of deep
spiritual Powers. The earlier passes over into the later in strange
and remarkable ways.
To some of you I have
already said
[see Note 43]
that a momentous vista
of history is revealed by the transition from Michelangelo to Galileo.
(Mark well, I am not speaking of a reincarnation here; it is
a matter of historical development.) A very intelligent man once drew
attention to the striking fact that the human spirit has woven into
the wonderful architecture of the Church of St. Peter in Rome what he
calls the science of mechanics. The majestic forms of this building
embody the principles of mechanics that were within the grasp of the
human intellect, transposed into beauty and grandeur. They are the thoughts
of Michelangelo! The impression made by the sight of the Church of St.
Peter upon men expresses itself in many different ways, and perhaps
everyone has felt something of what Natter, the Viennese sculptor,
[see Note 44]
experienced, or what was experienced in his company. He was driving
with a friend towards St. Peter's. It was not yet in sight, but then,
suddenly, the friend heard Natter exclaim, springing from his seat and
as though beside himself: “I am frightened!”At that moment
he had caught sight of St. Peter's ... afterwards he wanted to obliterate
the incident from his memory. Everyone may experience something of the
kind at the sight of such majesty And now, in a professorial oration,
a very clever man, Professor Müllner, has made the point that Galileo,
the great mechanistic thinker, taught humanity in terms of the intellect
what Michelangelo had built into spatial forms in the Church of St.
Peter. So that what stands there in the Church of St. Peter like crystallised
mechanics, principles of mechanics grasped by the human mind, confronts
us once again, but now transposed into intellectuality, in the thoughts
of Galileo. But it is strange that in this oration the speaker should
have called attention to the fast that Galileo was born on the day Michelangelo
died (18th February, 1564). Hence there is an indication that the intellectual
element, the thoughts coined by Galileo in the intellectual forms of
mechanics, arise in a personality whose birth occurs on the same day
as the death of the one who had given them expression in space. The
question therefore inevitably arises in our minds: Who, in reality,
built into the Church of St. Peter, through Michelangelo, the principles
of mechanics only subsequently acquired by humanity through Galileo?
My dear friends, if the
aphoristic and isolated thoughts that have been presented in connection
with the historical development of humanity unite in your hearts to
produce a feeling of how the spiritual Powers themselves work in history
through their instruments, you will have assimilated there lectures
in the right way. And then it could be said that the feeling which arises
in our hearts from the study of occult history is the right feeling
for the way in which development and progress occur in the stream of
time. To-day, at this minor turning-point of time, it may be fitting
to direct our meditation to this feeling of the progress of men and
of gods in the flow of history. If in the heart of each one of you this
feeling for the science of occult progress in time were to become clear
perception of the weaving, creative activity in the becoming of our
own epoch, if this feeling could come alive within you, it might perhaps
also live as a New Year's wish in your souls. And at the close
of this course of lectures, this is the New Year's wish that I
would fair lay in your hearts: Regard what has been said as the starting-point
of a true feeling for time. In a certain way it may be symbolical that
we should have been able to use this minor transition from one period
of time to another as an opportunity for allowing ideal which embrace
such transitions in their sweep, to take effect in our souls.
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