FREE WILL,
IMMORTALITY
Wie Kann die Erforschung der Uebersinnlichen
Wesenheit des Menschen Bewirkt Werden? (The Supersensible Being
of Man. Lecture given at Basel, Switzerland, January 12, 1916)
Of
all the problems related to the soul life of the human being
and that have constantly to be faced by each individual, those
concerning free will and immortality are among the most
important. I have planned today's lecture so that these two
questions can be discussed in conjunction with each
other. I have not united these two fundamental problems of
human soul life arbitrarily, but I hope to be able to show how
intimately they belong together and how it is hardly possible
to make a thorough study of the one without the other.
Anyone dealing with these two problems who has any grasp of
what we are concerned with in human and spiritual history will
immediately be aware of two facts. Apart from approaching such
problems through faith, about which I intend to make neither
positive nor negative comment here, people have tried to come
to grips with them purely on the basis of thinking,
scientifically and philosophically. Entirely on this basis of
thinking attempts have been made to gain the most shrewd,
penetrating and profound knowledge about the two problems.
Anyone who tackles them cannot fail to note how individual
scientists have disputed and acted in quite contradictory ways
when dealing with free will and immortality.
There must be some reason why humanity finds it so difficult to
get anywhere with questions which lie so close to the efforts
of the human soul, and which arise out of the deepest needs of
the soul. The human soul incessantly tells itself that within
the human being is hidden something that exists beyond birth
and death, and which one should be able to investigate
scientifically. It also tells itself that there must be
something like free decision at the root of human action, a not
being bound to natural necessity as a falling stone is. But
when on the basis of its thinking, the soul then tries to
investigate the things that are so important to it, it can set
out with the greatest hopes of achieving something, but soon
other considerations show that it is possible to say as much
against it as for it.
The
approach I have represented for many years now — and also
in these lectures here — seeks to clarify these questions
from its own viewpoint and it thinks it recognizes not only the
path that has to be followed to arrive at a conception of the
two problems that is humanly satisfying, but it believes it
also recognizes why it is that there is so much of a
contradictory and unsatisfactory nature in other
approaches to the problems. As is usual in these lectures given
from the viewpoint of the science of spirit, in dealing with
such problems I am obliged to take a quite different course
from that taken by ordinary science. Science takes the facts,
makes pronouncements about its findings, and then reaches its
conclusions on the basis of these findings. The scientist of
spirit normally has to proceed differently, especially
when dealing with such subjects as these today.
The
scientist of spirit first must give an idea as to how he
arrives at his results. He has constantly to describe the path
upon which the source of his findings is revealed to him. For
naturally he is dealing with things that cannot be reached by
means of the ordinary senses, and which are far removed from
the usual processes of knowledge. He therefore has to give an
idea of the path upon which he reaches a point where his
findings appear set out before the eye of the spirit.
Such questions as we have before us today are of particular
concern to the human being himself, for they are pre-eminently
questions of human self-knowledge.
It
is quite possible to say — as I have already done here
many times — that the science of spirit is definitely an
admirer of the magnificent and tremendous progress which
humanity has enjoyed as a result of scientific work in recent
times. But it is precisely because it realizes how to value the
findings of natural science, as far as they can be valued, that
it also knows how far these scientific methods can go, and
where they can obtain no information.
We
have to admit that for such questions as we are considering
today, questions that concern human self-knowledge above all,
the magnificent and admirable work of scientific thinking
and particularly its method of thinking are more of a hindrance
than a help. Therefore by way of introduction let me give you
an example.
Serious and well-intentioned scientists have constantly
directed their particular way of thinking to what goes on
within the human being himself, to what surges to and fro in
his soul life. We can take an example to show how the scientist
is bound to miss the way that would lead to a solution, not
because of any mistake he makes, but because of his method. A
good scientist, Waldstein, has published among his works, which
are very good in parts and which deal with the border-area
embracing the nervous system and the soul, a dissertation on
the unconscious ego. He speaks about all sorts of things that
go on in the human soul, and which are of significance to the
soul but of which our ordinary consciousness is not aware. He
says, for instance — and anyone can think of hundreds of
thousands of similar examples — supposing I stand
in front of a window of a bookshop and look into it. My eye
falls on the most varied collection of books. It is a
scientific bookshop. Nothing but serious books are there.
Because of my profession I am attracted by one particular book
that is in the window: Concerning
Mollusks. — And the moment I see this book,
Concerning Mollusks, I cannot help
beginning to laugh quietly. Now I am, after all, a serious
scientist and there is no apparent reason why I should begin to
laugh when I see this book, Concerning
Mollusks. What has caused me to laugh when
looking at the title of a book about mollusks? I close my eyes
— the scientist continues — in order to find out
what has caused me to laugh. And, lo and behold! — now
that my eyes are no longer drawn toward the book I can hear
dimly in the distance amid many other noises and hardly
audible, for it is a long way off, the sound of a barrel organ,
and this barrel organ is playing the very tune to which I first
learned to dance decades before as a very young man. At that
time I attempted to learn the steps of the quadrille to this
tune. I did not give much attention to the tune then, for I was
very much occupied, first, in learning the steps and then in
giving attention to my partner in the proper way. So even at
that time I only noted the tune in a half-dreaming state. But
now, although I have not concerned myself with this tune in any
way more recently, the moment I see the book about mollusks,
this tune strikes up in the distance, and I have to laugh
quietly. Had I not closed my eyes — for when I looked at
the book I knew nothing about a barrel organ playing, it simply
beat on my ear unnoticed — I would not have discovered
why I had to laugh when I saw the book. This shows me how
remarkable are the things that go on inside us, that move and
work in the subconscious, and how this subconscious nature
pursues its ways in the human being.
Such examples he describes in great numbers, and others have
cited similar ones. But in following such learned dissertations
one very quickly notices that although the people certainly
know that they are dealing with something that belongs to a
knowledge of what works and lives in the human being, their
scientific thinking cannot achieve anything that leads to a
furtherance of a real knowledge of what lives in man as
his true being. For this we have to advance a stage further.
And this is what I must deal with first — the path that
leads us to self-knowledge. But I want, first of all, to place
the two questions before you so that you see how they have to
be dealt with in order to be felt and understood absolutely
clearly.
In
choosing where we begin with this, we should not take the
hardly perceptible impressions in the human self, such as those
of the barrel organ, for then we only arrive at what it is that
affects the self, and not what lies behind it. To put the
question satisfactorily, we have to ignore this continual
movement into which all sorts of things are incorporated, such
as the sound of the barrel organ, and turn to something that
has a different relationship to human life. In our soul life
there is a continual movement of mental images which are gained
through our normal way of perception, and also feelings
and will impulses — all these play a role when we hear
something like a barrel organ. But basically, the whole of our
ordinary everyday soul life is more or less similar to the case
of the barrel organ. It is true that we are fully conscious of
at least part of what lives in our ordinary consciousness, but
there is also an immeasurable amount, the origin of which we do
not know. Science quite rightly looks for causes of what plays
into our soul life in this way in the physical body, the part
of us that passes away with death. We are completely taken up
with this interplay of our mental images. But there is one
thing where we have to admit that it has a quite different
character from this continual movement of our feelings and
sensations. This is the realization, — which brings with
it a certain power of judgment, — that we cannot simply
allow our mental images to come and go as they please. On the
contrary, we have to take ourselves in hand and say: Some ideas
and images are right, others are wrong. — We begin to
develop logic in our thinking, — logic that is designed
to enable us to have the right relationship to reality.
Can
it be the normal interplay of our mental images that is at work
when we say that something is right or wrong? No, it cannot be
the normal interplay, for now right and wrong ideas or images
appear. All now depends on our being able to judge according to
something that rejects wrong ideas — which arise
out of bodily necessities, just as much as good ones do —
and accepts good ideas. Something therefore of a quite
different nature from what can otherwise be found by normal
scientific self-observation, plays into our soul life. That is
why the philosophical approach has constantly entered in at
this point.
Whenever the attempt has been made to save the human being from
being simply the outcome of his physical functions, it has
always been pointed out how something plays into the soul life
that cannot come from the body. Sometimes it is the right
thing, sometimes the wrong; both appear in the same way. But it
is just on this point that we can see that this kind of
approach cannot pursue the matter to a conclusion, that it is
really impossible to find out anything in this way. For we get
no further than establishing the facts, while the fundamental
causes and real nature of the case are sought in vain. —
That is the one point.
On
the other hand, there is the fact that among all the other
things that take place in our soul life we are also able to say
Yes or No to a particular action, to decide to do it or to
leave it undone. But this contradicts every kind of
scientific observation. For this action can only take place on
the basis of our bodily nature, our human nature, and this
means that we have to seek this basis in our human nature
according to laws which function according to necessity. Human
freedom does not come into it. — This is the other
boundary. We have to start with these two points.
Twenty-five years ago in my Philosophy of Spiritual
Activity I attempted to make these two boundaries or limits
my starting point, and purely on the basis of observation
sought to establish what lives in the human soul, what really
happens in the human soul when an action is performed where a
person feels he is employing his freedom.
At
that time I did this in such a way as to remain within purely
philosophical considerations. Today I will try to offer a
solution, as far as is humanly possible, on the basis of the
findings of the science of spirit. In order to do this,
however, it is necessary to approach these two points that I
have just characterized as the border points of genuine
self-knowledge, in a way that only the science of spirit can
approach them.
One
of the characteristic things about the science of spirit is
that we do not allow the soul to investigate in its everyday
condition. Our ordinary consciousness does this, as does
science too, but in the science of spirit we evolve the soul
beyond the point it attains if simply left to its own natural
development. We ourselves must take the soul in hand, and
it has to develop into something different. For it has to be
able to see and perceive something different from what can be
perceived with the ordinary means of acquiring knowledge.
It has, if I may indicate this right at the outset, to be able
to grasp with its spiritual eye the spirit that lives in
man.
Most people maintain that this is a subject for belief only,
but this is really simply because they do not wish to make any
effort to consider such things as the human spirit, that they
say this. The actual method and practice of the scientist of
spirit proves that it is not just a belief that is acquired,
but knowledge as certain in its sphere as is scientific
knowledge in the natural sphere. We must, of course, be quite
clear that by undertaking certain exercises and functions, the
soul has to attain a quite different constitution from the one
it has in normal life and ordinary science. It has to acquire a
different kind of perception. In my writings, where more
detailed information about these matters can be found, I have
called the first stage that the soul reaches in investigating
the spiritual world, imaginative knowledge.
How
do we acquire this imaginative knowledge? Mainly by applying
our thinking, our minds in a different direction from the
one usual in everyday life. To take the example already cited,
we have to try to introduce something into our thinking that is
as remote as possible from the barrel organ. For the barrel
organ introduced a kind of unknown quantity into the soul life,
which was not even noticeable. Precisely the opposite must be
the case if we wish to train our souls, to prepare ourselves
for spiritual investigation. Nothing must enter our soul unless
the soul itself admits it. This can only be done if we succeed
— naturally only for the purposes of our investigations
— in eliminating the past we have lived through, and the
future we look forward to, and in concentrating in our souls
solely on the present, as far as possible in one comprehensible
mental image, a mental image that we have put together
ourselves so that we know what is in it. And we have to
do this again and again.
What is characteristic about this is that such activity should
be completely removed from any kind of dream life in the soul.
No one can become a scientist of spirit in the right way who is
fond of giving himself over to self-indulgence and dreaming. No
one who willingly indulges in a false mystical way, in
something indefinite, can ever become a scientist of spirit.
For such indulgence does not lead to the science of
spirit. We can only take up the science of spirit if we
experience something in our souls that we ourselves have put
there with every conceivable effort of our own consciousness,
and then constantly concentrate upon it and devote
ourselves to it. In my writings I have called this
meditating, and by this I mean meditating in the proper
sense that we are directed toward our own consciousness, our
own soul activity.
There is a further point I would like to mention. Not only must
this meditating be far removed from any kind of dream state or
false mysticism, it must also be removed from everything that
produces hypnotic and suggestive conditions in the soul.
Staring at shining objects, for example, by means of which
hypnotists produce a hypnotic state is the very opposite
of the first condition of a spiritually scientific training.
All the various kinds of exercises that dull the
consciousness are the very opposite of spiritually
scientific training.
What we are concerned with is placing ideas, feelings and
will impulses, of which we have a clear picture, into the
center of our soul life with full consciousness, so that
we are as clear as we are when using the full powers of our
thinking. In fact, this absolutely clear thinking, carried out
with our full consciousness, must be our example and pattern.
We have to be careful not to stop at this, however, for
then we achieve nothing, but this should be a pattern for all
the activity the soul undertakes in exercises directed toward
finding the path into the spiritual world.
It
may perhaps take years of trying, but the passing years stand
us in good stead, for the fact that we get older as we do the
exercises is a great help in enabling something to happen.
Constant attempts to concentrate our soul life upon our
self-directed mental images by means of meditation, results in
the development of our imaginative life. This means that we no
longer need only to use pictures and mental images that we
ourselves put together, but that such pictures, such
imaginations, themselves appear as objective entities in
the soul, and in fact, we can live in such imaginations. It is
only when we have prepared ourselves in the way I have
described, that these imaginations no longer arise out of the
body, but out of the life of the soul.
But
we also become conscious of gradually following an inner
necessity. In living in this world of pictures — for it
is the imaginative world that we first experience — we
gradually cease to believe that we can arrange the pictures as
we please, but that we are bound to certain laws, just as we
are bound to laws in the outer world.
You
can set a chair upon the table; it stays there. If you put it
somewhere in the air, it falls down. If in looking at the outer
world you wish to remain within reality, you find yourself
bound to certain laws. As you develop your soul in the right
way you will gradually see that you are similarly bound to laws
in your inner world that are just as objective as, for
instance, the law that a chair can only stand on something that
supports it. On the one hand, we feel that with our
consciousness we are part of the world in which the
pictures exist; on the other hand, we feel bound to the
underlying order which may be compared to the kind of
order that exists in the physical world.
In
two particular respects we have to be able to differentiate
carefully what we experience. We should not confuse the latter
with what people experience under the influence of ordinary
visions, for these ordinary visions come from the body. They
are not induced by ourselves, and do not take the place in the
soul. Imaginations, on the other hand, are processes which take
place in the soul. Whoever has not learned to differentiate
between imaginations and visions can, it is true, become a
visionary who allows all sorts of vague clouds to arise out of
his body, but he can never become a scientist of spirit. We are
simply not consciously present when visions arise, and
this is a most important point. It is in fact just as important
and actual as the cautionary rules we adopt when pursuing
chemical, physical and physiological methods.
I
would like to cite a critic of the spiritual scientific
approach who has a high opinion of his own book wisdom. I
have no wish to speak about all the rubbish he has said
concerning my science of spirit, but I shall quote something
from a book of this so-called learned gentleman. This book has
attracted considerable notice and has already gone into a
second edition after quite a short time. The author relates
what happens to him sometimes when lecturing. For a time he
speaks in such a way that he thinks over everything he says,
but then sometimes he has observed that he does not think any
longer, or at least thinks about something else, but yet he
continues to speak.
Well, first I promise never to impose myself upon you by
ambling on when I have ceased to think! On the other hand, it
must be emphasized that whoever believes it is possible to
approach the mysteries of the soul when acting this way, is
from the start much too stupid to be able to grasp anything
about the fundamentals of what the true science of spirit
is. He is also much too stupid to make any remotely correct
statements about the science of spirit. With this one
statement he proves how far he is from what is meant
here. For the most essential thing is that the science of
spirit must emphasize that consciousness must be present
wherever the spiritual is sought. All visions and every kind of
undirected dreaming, even if it is impressive enough to
captivate a public without thinking as to the means by which it
is captivated, — all this is quite out of the question,
not only when we speak, but also in connection with what goes
on inside us in our souls, if we are on the path to the spirit
indicated by the science of spirit.
The
other thing that has to be differentiated from what I have
called imagination, is our ordinary fantasy. Our higher
imaginative life is not simply an act of our fantasy any more
than it is a visionary or undirected mystical experience. With
our fantasy, it is true, the pictures have a certain law and
order, but they are arranged inwardly in quite a free way.
— With our fantasy we are not so bound to the objective
course of the pictures as we are in our ordinary perception or
in the life of imagination where we know that the chair cannot
stand in the air.
If,
therefore, in our inner training of the soul we reach the point
of having before us what we cannot have before us in our
ordinary consciousness, in our ordinary everyday life, we do
not simply experience a world of pictures that arises out of
the soul, the origin of which the soul itself has experienced
bit by bit. We now experience a new world, a world of pictures,
a world that otherwise we do not have around us. This is the
first thing that anyone has to struggle for who wishes to
penetrate into the real spiritual world.
But
now something specially important happens on this path toward
spiritual investigation. The visionary is satisfied with this
world of pictures. He says that that is what he has sought. The
dreamer is also satisfied. — But the person who achieves
imaginative knowledge is by no means satisfied with this world
of pictures. He regards it only as a means for proceeding
further. For the experience of this world of pictures is
accompanied by a strengthening of our means of
experience. We have to find quite different inner forces in our
soul life if we want to hold on to these pictures, or be really
consciously present when they come into existence. These forces
are quite different from those we must use when ordinary
pictures arise, when speaking in the ordinary way, or when
writing books. This strengthening of our consciousness is
the important factor, for by these means the soul becomes
stronger than it is otherwise in life, or needs to be.
There is nothing to be gained by this world of pictures other
than a strengthening of our soul life. We should say to
ourselves: This whole world of pictures is only a preparation
for the spiritual world.
Then, having experienced ourselves — and I say
“experienced ourselves” intentionally — we
realize that there is not really any objective world in these
pictures, but that we have the means to penetrate into this
objective world. We have, as it were, in this world of pictures
a spiritual eye and a spiritual ear, but they are not yet
transparent. Imagine that you have eyes in your eye sockets,
but that they are not made of a transparent glasslike
substance, but are darkened and opaque. This is the nature of
this world of pictures within us, which is more likely to cut
us off from the spiritual world, but which can be strengthened
by taking into our souls the first available means to penetrate
into the spiritual world. We have to acquire a further power.
And this is acquired by feeling the power that we experience in
these pictures. In experiencing them to the full, we acquire a
second power. You can find more detailed information in my
books.
The
second power consists in making the pictures transparent and
transaudient, then doing away with them, just feeling ourselves
in the pictures, having only strengthened our own self, but
making the whole world of pictures transparent. We have to be
in it, but we no longer have to see it. This is a condition
that the visionary does not want at any cost, for he is
immensely satisfied to feel himself in the pictures, to have,
as he thinks, “the whole spiritual world” before
him. He has no wish to make the pictures transparent. The
scientist of spirit utilizes what he experiences with the
pictures only to strengthen his ego that thereby becomes
stronger than the ordinary ego, and can now maintain itself.
When the ego maintains itself, it also maintains the world of
pictures for itself, but by means of this inner strength it no
longer directs its gaze to the perception of the world of
pictures. The latter is overcome, so that although we live in
this world of pictures we no longer perceive it and no longer
look at it as something coming to us as a reality from
outside.
Further energetic practice of the exercises having made the
imaginations transparent, the second thing necessary in order
to enter the spiritual world comes about. This is what I call
inspired knowledge. In using this word I would ask you
to take it only in the sense that I have explained here, and
not to confuse it with all sorts of superstitious notions. It
is what appears in the soul when the latter has been
strengthened in the world of pictures and then has eliminated.
The world of pictures becomes transparent, and the outer
objective spiritual world makes itself known in spiritual
hearing, spiritual perception. It is not that then we have only
the strengthened self before us, for our experience now gives
us the possibility of knowing that there is a spiritual world
around us, just as there is a physical world around us which we
perceive with our physical eyes and ears. In fact, anyone who
is of the opinion that proper investigation is not necessary in
order to enter the spiritual world, or that talk about the
spiritual world is only a lot of meaningless words, is quite
wrong. And likewise wrong is the person who maintains that the
scientist of spirit is a kind of visionary whose task is easy
compared with the serious work which goes into the discoveries
made in the laboratory and observatory. However difficult it
may be for us to adopt the methods of ordinary science, it is
even more difficult to master all the preparation necessary for
the soul to get beyond the stage of imagination and enter the
spiritual world as I have described. Irresponsible statements
about such matters can come only from those who have never
bothered to get a true idea of what the science of spirit
is.
Having now penetrated into the spiritual world when it is
revealed to us in a way similar to our experience of color and
sound in the physical world, something happens which we feel in
a remarkable way. By continuing to apply ourselves to
inspiration we continue to experience it and what happens then
is what can be called a reversal of going to sleep. It is most
important to grasp this. We know that by means of imaginative
and inspired knowledge we have gone through all the various
conditions that we normally only experience when we go to
sleep. This making ourselves free of the physical body in
imagination and inspiration is the same as when, in going to
sleep, the physical body follows only its own laws, which have
nothing to do with what happens in the soul. Notice what
happens when we go to sleep: our normal perceptions become
unclear and sink away, then we become unconscious. This sinking
away of our physical perceptions does not happen because
the physical body is tired, but because something else takes
the place of our perceptions — namely,
imaginations. It is not that we develop a lower form of
soul activity, but a higher. This is even more the case with
inspiration.
If
we proceed even further it is as if we were to wake up in the
middle of sleep and see our bodies lying there apart from our
souls. This is a real experience. We see that when we have
experienced inspiration we are outside our bodies. We are not
unconscious, however, but within the spiritual world. We
now enter into what made itself known in inspiration, we enter
into it, coming to know its beings and processes, step by step.
In my writings I have called this third stage of spiritual
knowledge, intuition.
We
penetrate into the spiritual world by imagination,
inspiration and intuition. This is how we immerse ourselves in
the spiritual world by the transformation of the soul. It
cannot be attained by empty phrases or meaningless mystical
talk about losing oneself in this or the other, but only by
really earnest work on the soul. — Having reached this
stage — and we do not have to call it a higher stage than
our ordinary life, but only a different kind of knowledge
— we then have quite a different relationship to the
outer world than we have without this knowledge.
Although it is well known to many of you after all the lectures
I have given here, I would nevertheless like to mention in
passing that it is not that a scientist of spirit is a
scientist of spirit from the moment he wakes up until he goes
to sleep as, say, a chemist is a chemist even when not in his
laboratory. For the times when the scientist of spirit is not
actually immersed in the spiritual world he is an
ordinary human being like anyone else. He naturally lives
according to what the outside world demands of him. It is a
great mistake to imagine that the scientist of spirit becomes a
different person. Many misunderstandings arise in the outside
world about various kinds of societies because their members
constantly suggest that they are a higher kind of human being.
This is quite irresponsible and is certainly not meant here.
What is meant is that in certain states of life we train the
soul to enter the spiritual world, and that during these
states, in this condition of soul, the soul has a different
relationship to the outer world than usual, even regarding the
more subtle distinctions in life.
It
may well seem odd to you, but it is nevertheless true, that it
means a great deal to those who look at life in a one-sided
way, whether one is a materialist or a spiritualist —
spiritualist not in the sense of Spiritualism, but of German
philosophy. It is really all the same to a scientist of spirit
whether a person is a materialist or spiritualist. But this is
not the point. For the materialist who approaches the outer
material world with his deepened self, however material
the phenomena are that he investigates, proceeds from matter to
spirit, because spirit lies at the roof of all matter. If you
start with matter and do not stop halfway, however rabid a
materialist you may be, but are willing to apply your
thinking to the investigation, you will then be on the
right track. Neither should a spiritualist stop halfway, for
then he only speaks eternally about spirit, and perhaps even
despises matter. The important thing is not to talk about
spirit, but to find the way from spirit to matter, to immerse
oneself in matter, and to take the spirit with one into it. It
is a fact that the spiritualists, who always chatter about
spirit and have no idea of how to apply this spirit to our more
immediate and useful life, are perhaps even more harmful than
the materialists.
Whether we start from matter or from spirit is not important.
What is important is that we continue our investigations to a
conclusion. But in a certain respect this does not happen in
the case of the methods pursued by modern science.
Although modern physiology and biology deal almost exclusively
with the material aspect, even when studying the human being,
their methods — that is, their method of thinking, not
the facts they discover — cannot get behind the real
mysteries of, say, human evolution. And for the questions
we are now considering it is just this that is so
important.
You
are well aware that the idea of evolution is one of the special
achievements of modern science. But evolution has become a
pretty threadbare word. The whole of science, including the
human being, has come within the orbit of the idea of
evolution, and this has led to the discovery of much useful and
significant material. However, despite this, science has really
only discovered half of what is necessary to make the human
being understandable. For the human being is not as simple as
all that, and cannot simply be understood on the basis of this
single line of evolution.
Man
is a complicated being. If we are to apply the idea of
evolution to the human being and really penetrate the
real mysteries of his nature, we must apply the idea of
evolution to the human organism, as the latter appears to our
everyday senses, quite differently from the somewhat
oversimplified approach attempted by science until now. For in
dealing with the human being we have to differentiate between
different parts — the head with the senses and the
nervous system (for simplicity's sake I call it the head
organism), the more central organism connected with the breast
and abdominal regions, and the third, consisting of what
takes place at the periphery of man's body. Anyone who has seen
a human skeleton will know that what is expressed so
differently from animals in the formation of man's extremities,
his arms and hands, his legs and feet, is not only different in
its outward expression, but this differentiation is also
continued on a more inner level.
Everything we experience outwardly concerning the human being
is in the first instance, material. We come to know the real
mysteries of this when we are in the position of being able to
immerse ourselves in this material manifestation. Then in
applying the idea of evolution as held by modern science
we find that it only explains the middle of the three parts,
the breast region. The human being considered from the aspect
of his head organism cannot be explained by this idea of
evolution. Why should this be? — Because the head
of man not only undergoes a forward evolution, but within this
forward evolution it also evolves in the opposite
direction, a retrogressive evolution. The head, instead
of building up, reduces, takes something away from the
straightforward course of evolution, does not stop when the
impetus of evolution comes to an end, but then ossifies more
than the rest of the organism. We can see in this peculiar
ossification of the head a trivial outer expression of
the fact that anatomically the brain is strangely
undifferentiated, a fact that the findings of modern science
also point to — modern science and the science of spirit
point to the same fact. Looking at the human being as a head
organism, we are not concerned with one straight line of
evolution, but with a development that at one time moves
forward, then stops and becomes retrogressive.
In
becoming familiar with imagination, inspiration and intuition,
our inner experience enables us to penetrate further into
the structure of the material world than — however odd it
may appear — those who always want only to experience the
spirit. This experience of the spirit presupposes that we can
penetrate into the material sphere. We then experience what our
minds, which really make us human beings, really are. What
happens in the unconscious when our minds are active? This is
very odd — in using our minds, our heads become hungry.
The head loses substance. Every idea that is permeated by our
thinking is a partial condition of hunger. Ascetics, who have
set about it in the wrong way, have then tried to let the whole
body starve in order to call up certain ideas. This is wrong.
In fact, the right thing comes about simply by establishing a
certain unstable equilibrium. In our organism we have only a
proper equilibrium and are properly nourished insofar as our
middle organism is concerned, and respecting our head,
only in sleep. All the time we are awake the head must suffer
from undernourishment. This is the retrogressive evolution. It
is derived from the withdrawal of evolution, from reducing
substance.
And
lo and behold, we come upon something that is tremendously
important, that provides the bridge from natural to scientific
knowledge.
We
ask: How do our minds function? Is it due to a forward,
germinal kind of evolution? No, it is due to evolution becoming
retrogressive, where evolution stops and crumbles, thus making
room for soul experience. If we believe that evolution simply
continues in a straight line as it does in our purely animal,
middle organisms, we never arrive at a concept of the
independence of our minds, of our experience of thinking.
This only happens when we know that evolution has to withdraw,
as does everything that induces growth and life, in order that
room is made within the head for the soul. Only in knowing how
the head is the foundation of our soul life do we come to
appreciate the independence of our experience. In penetrating
to imagination, inspiration and intuition we see, therefore,
how our thinking, whether right or wrong, affects our soul
life. The body has to suspend its functions in order that the
soul life can be present.
We
can then proceed further. The thinking part of us that takes up
an independent position in the organism can be perceived,
and we can see what it is and how it enters the human being
when we say that one thing is right and another wrong, how it
emerges out of our organism. And we have learned to recognize
what sort of experience we have in imagination,
inspiration and intuition. But now, in what way do we
experience our thinking? We find that as it exists in
everyday life, providing it is a real kind of thinking, it does
not simply follow the haphazard way of our mental images, but
evolves logically, rightly or wrongly, and that it is an
unconscious form of inspiration to the human being. This is the
great discovery that we make.
The
science of spirit leads us consciously into the sphere of
inspiration. This can come about only by recognizing the
fact that something flows into us that tells us to reject one
thing and accept another. This is an unconscious form of
inspiration. — Where does it come from? We discover this
through the science of spirit in our experience of imagination,
inspiration and intuition. If, having attained to imagination
we do not rest there but immerse ourselves in inspiration, we
come to see what it is that inspires us. This turns out to be
the life that we lived before entering the body given to us by
our mother and father, at birth or at conception. We now
realize that this physical life is a continuation of a
spiritual life that we have lived. Now through the thinking
itself we learn that the human being descends from out of a
spiritual world and enters into an existence where the
mother and father provide him with a bodily vehicle which comes
into being at birth or conception. In recognizing our thinking
as unconscious inspiration and in perceiving intuitions, that
is, in speaking of an intuitive thinking, of intuition living
in our thinking, we are really speaking about the spirit-soul
existence of man which he has before birth, or rather, before
conception.
In
future the problem of immortality will be expanded
considerably. Thus far, people have only interested
themselves egoistically in what happens after death. But the
life that we live here in a physical body is the continuation
of a spiritual life. The science of spirit opens up the
possibility of looking at our life here in conjunction with the
immortal soul as it was before it entered into the physical
body at birth or conception.
Let
us observe the human being from another aspect of his
evolution. Here I shall have to say something very paradoxical.
But I also know that the paradox I am going to speak about,
which perhaps people will regard as somewhat perverse, will in
fact be a solid possession of the science of the future.
Let
us look at the organism belonging to our extremities,
that is, everything connected with the formation of our
arms and hands, feet and legs, and see how these are continued
on the inward plane. Here we have quite a different picture of
evolution. With the head organism we saw how evolution has to
be retrogressive. In the limb organism we have the odd
situation that it is a shade ahead of what is normal in
the middle organism; our extremities, our limbs, are really
over evolved. Here the human being progresses beyond the norm
established in the evolution of the head. Even the form —
the time is unfortunately too short to go into all the details
— and the whole life of our limb organism provides proof
that we are here concerned with over-evolution, for it tends
toward something for which the human being has no need for the
preservation of his body. Our evolution goes beyond this,
whereas our heads have evolved retrogressively. What is the
consequence of this? — Because of this over
evolution something is brought to life unconsciously in
us that we only recognize when we have attained a grasp of the
imaginative life and when this has then been deepened
through inspiration and intuition.
When the spiritual eye of the scientist of spirit
perceives the limb organism, he sees how something is
added to the organism. This something is, in fact, an
imagination which arises as a matter of course in its own
right. The extremities overdo evolution, thereby allowing
something to be taken into the soul that cannot be seen
with our normal eyes, but which appears immediately when we
attain to imaginative life. Through the medium-ship of our
limbs an imagination is produced, having nothing to do with our
life here in the body. What have we here that is integrated
into our limbs, and that can only be grasped as an
imagination? It is nothing other than what later goes
through the gate of death, that provides the foundation for the
continuation of life after death.
On
the one hand, what exists before birth, before conception,
unfolds its life in our heads, that have undergone
retrogressive evolution to allow inspiration to work in our
thinking, on the other, what bears our soul life in a kind of
vehicle into the spiritual world after death, is integrated
into our limb organism. Thus on the one hand we are endowed
with unconscious inspiration in our heads, while on the
other we are endowed with unconscious imagination in our limbs,
whereby the part of us that goes through the gate of death
lives unconsciously in us, bearing us into immortality
after death. We therefore come to know life before birth and
life after death in two different ways, the former as
unconscious inspiration, the latter as unconscious
imagination.
It
is possible to study biologically and physiologically the
connection between the limb organism and the rest of the human
organism. We then have only to see how in their structure the
primary sexual organs are connected with the feet, and
the secondary sexual organs, that is, the breasts only, are
connected with the arms. Thus we have before us the physical
basis for producing a new life, which then separates off,
that has been integrated into the human being through the limb
organization. This physical basis is complete when the
human being reaches puberty, though he continues his life
beyond this.
What we have here as our physical organization has its
counterpart. The physical organism, insofar as it is connected
with the sexual organization, is the basis for producing
further physical life. The spirit-soul nature, which is the
basis of the organism of our extremities is, on the other hand,
necessary in order to produce what is sent beyond the gate of
death and brings about the next life on earth.
We
have here a starting point for a rigorous scientific
investigation of the problem of immortality. And when more than
twenty-five years ago I pointed out in my Philosophy of
Spiritual Activity that it is necessary to observe
correctly if we wish to approach freedom, I also indicated that
on the other hand we have to progress toward purely intuitive
thinking. Today I would add: This intuitive thinking is to be
perceived before birth or conception. This was already written
in The Philosophy of Spiritual Activity when I called
the one element of the human will, intuitive thinking.
The other element that arises as imaginative life I called, for
the purposes of discussing freedom, moral fantasy, in
order to make the book possible for those who consider the
science of spirit a lot of nonsense. It is described there from
a philosophical viewpoint. The scientist of spirit adds that
what is described there as moral fantasy is a part of what
lives in the human organization as unconscious imagination and
which then emerges in moral action.
I
said at that time that the interaction of moral fantasy and
intuitive thinking is responsible for action on the part of the
human being based on free will. Today I would add: What is the
thinking? It is our inspiration here, that belongs to the
sphere of pre-earthly existence. When does it become manifest?
— It becomes manifest when we are able to work out an
action that is so dear to us that it has nothing to do with our
instincts and inclinations, that it is as dear to us as a
person whom we really love because we have come to recognize
and respect his inmost being. When we perform an action out of
love — that is, not out of egoism, nor on the basis of
our fluctuating mental images or ideas, but out of insight
into the inner necessity of the action — then
we give ourselves over to intuitive actions, we are then
inspired by the life before birth.
But
where does the power to do this come from? — It is the
power that takes us into the spiritual world after death. This
goes on in us subconsciously. As moral action freely unfolds,
there lights up what lies before birth or conception. This
unites with what enters into the spiritual world after death.
During our life between birth and death we already carry out
actions where what lies before birth plays a part in us in our
intuitive thinking, that flows as inspiration into our lives.
What lies beyond death is really not connected with us at all,
but is nevertheless carried out by us. It is characterized by
being performed out of love: this is the truly free
action. We therefore have to say that what enters us as
inspiration by way of our intuitive thinking, has no
connection with our body. And what works imaginatively
has no significance for the moment, but only after death. These
two factors, having nothing to do with the body, are the real
forces that work in the true, free act of will in the human
being. The profound mystery is that when we investigate
the free will we find that nothing mortal in the human being
carries out the actions, but we find that free actions are
carried out by the immortal part of man.
The
problems of free will and of immortality are intimately
connected because the only truly free actions are those in
which the super-sensible plays a part, which is not yet bound to
the body, which the human being has evolved in the spiritual
world before he bears a body, and in which this super-sensible
is joined to what results from over evolution, which has as yet
no significance for our present development, but which
will have significance after death, and which shines into those
actions that are carried out apart from us. This is why I said
in The Philosophy of Spiritual Activity that one cannot
put the question: Is the human being free or unfree? —
For this always leads to the wrong answers. It is not a
question of “either — or,” but of “both
— and.”
The
human being performs many actions arising out of the needs of
his body, out of the interplay of mental images rising up out
of the body as a result of the impulses of the body. But he
always has the ideal of performing actions where he can say:
What is to happen here is so free that I do not come into it;
it is as free of me as the human being whom I love; it only
happens because I realize that it should happen. Our whole
human thinking is set in this direction, and it gradually
seeks to infiltrate into our unfree action. The human being
extricates himself from unfree actions by evolving
increasingly toward his true self, especially in what he does
and wills, where the spheres of before birth and after death
shine into his willing. He evolves toward freedom within
the sphere of unfreedom; he is on the way to becoming
increasingly free. This is not a question of “either
— or” but of action. Those who put the question in
this way cannot possibly find an answer to the problem of
freedom. On the contrary, it is a question of “both
— and.” The human being is free in his actions
inasmuch as the immortal soul is revealed to him underlying the
life of the physical body. What he does is released by his
thoughts, flowing by way of love into deeds, and his freedom
will be measured by the extent to which this happens.
In
conclusion today I would simply like to show how the problems
of immortality and free will illumine each other, and how they
are so closely connected with each other. Free will can only be
the possession of an immortal being. No one can be an adherent
of free will without recognizing man's immortality at the same
time. And those who do recognize man's immortality know
that the human being is on the path of evolution toward
freedom.
The
kind of considerations we have discussed today, in which
the science of spirit enables us to approach the most
important questions that then point to the necessity of
selfless self-knowledge, are normally fraught with prejudices.
For they indeed make great demands upon us. We have to take
ourselves rigorously in hand if we are to succeed in
persevering with the whole power of our souls in what I have
called imaginative ideas. It is something we have yet to
learn. It would be much more comfortable if we could answer the
most profound questions and mysteries of human life without all
this.
What leads people today to regard the science of spirit as
nonsensical and irrelevant? It is because they are
unconsciously afraid of the powers that have to be developed in
order to grasp the spirit in a completely free kind of
experience of the spirit. For courage is necessary for such
investigation, courage to believe that we do not immediately
fall into an abyss of nothingness when we are dependent
upon our own powers for producing a particular kind of
experience which we ourselves place before our souls. It is
certainly easier to want to penetrate the mysteries of life
with outer means than to be told that the soul needs an inner
strengthening far beyond anything found in ordinary life. It is
therefore largely a matter of comfort and fear that leads to
opposition to the science of spirit. Such things, however, will
gradually be overcome by a humanity that is increasingly
thirsting for truth.
I
would like to close today's lecture by quoting, in a somewhat
modified form, the words of a German thinker. The science of
spirit is slandered by many people today because it is not
properly understood and recognized, because people do not see
how necessary it is for human life. But if we really
contemplate the course of human evolution, we are bound to say
that however overbearing the opposition, the
misunderstandings, the slanders that oppose the truth,
the truth will find its own way through the narrowest cracks in
the rocks of human evolution, however great the pressure
from the rocks may be. The truth we have been talking about
today — that on the one hand we recognize the needs of
present day humanity, existing in the subconscious, and
that on the other we look into the spiritual world and
see how it reveals itself to us on the path from imagination to
intuition — this is the kind of truth that must be seen
by the scientist of spirit as the kind that will find its way
through, however great the weight of opposition and slander
that rests upon it. For the truth winds its way against
obstacles through the tiniest cracks in the rock of human
evolution, and is bound to triumph in the end.
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