Prelude to the Threefold Commonwealth
Stuttgart, April 21, 1919
My dear friends!
To what I
was able to say to you here, a year ago, more has
doubtless been added for all of you, by a very forceful
teacher — I mean, as the latest great teacher,
those significant events which have taken place since
last we gathered here. Those events spoke to you all the
more forcibly because they were the fulfillment of what
many of you had believed for a long time would come to
pass. Truly it is a long way in content, though,
seemingly short in time, back to those first days of
August 1914, when amid countless hopes, and even more
illusions, Germany suddenly marched out with an army that
was not yet on a war-footing, that did not yet have its
mobilization-order, and accomplished the siege of
Louvain; a long way back to those days when because of
various illusions people had already grown accustomed to
think and to repeat in speech what certain sides were
commanding to be thought. It is even a long way back to
those days last autumn when the army outside the German
boundaries was in danger of being cut off within a few
days from all home supplies, a possibility which
immediately led through the well-known events to
something that, to you at least, is of greatest
importance. All this is a long way back, in significance,
even though the time embraces only a few years. And for
men of deep vision there is the added disillusionment,
that not only Germany's external military capitulation
but her spiritual capitulation also was brought about by
the very man to whom many looked in the autumn of 1918 as
a last hope. The events that took place in that autumn of
1918 were very fitting proofs indeed of all those things
which in so many connections could only be indicated
between the lines, things which in recent years, as you
well know, it was quite impossible to express openly
inside the boundaries of what was then the German
Empire.
Now, my
dear friends, — and this must be said today and to
you especially in the sense in which it has often been
said here — we are confronted, as it were, by a
trial that we must undergo, a test of that which has been
developed among us and which I should like to call by an
expression that sounds strange, perhaps, —
“our Anthroposophical conviction”. Again and
again, throughout the last year especially, I have
emphasized the fact that this Anthroposophical conviction
of ours must not confine itself to the taking in of
ideas, in order merely to enjoy a kind of mystic feeling
of inner well-being: and that is precisely what the
present state of affairs teaches us so loudly and so
eloquently. Many of us have been content to find in
Anthroposophy something that will answer certain
soul-questions for us — which, to be sure, is one's
privilege. But truly, it is not without reason that the
fact has been emphasized again and again in the last
year, that our anthroposophical conviction must lead us
further; it must lead us to a better understanding of
immediate practical life, which for a thoughtful person
is penetrated by the spirit; it must lead as to a better
understanding than is possible when one does not have the
background of this anthroposophical conviction. It is not
for nothing that those persona who have been privileged
to permeate themselves with an Anthroposophical
conviction have been called to think-through the great
problem which mankind faces. Now in a certain sense we
face a test of whether that which we have been able to
assimilate, which as a matter of fact has often
accomplished nothing more than the uncovering of a
superior kind of egoism, — whether that can really
penetrate our understanding, our feelings, our hearts, so
thoroughly that we will awake to the tasks of ever
greater magnitude which we are bound to encounter in the
immediate future. For much that is now crowding down upon
us is just in its infancy. We face the beginnings, my
dear friends, of many things. We must learn the lessons
that events teach. Only think how the whole of life
converged in these events. Think now those men who often
seemed of all people the most practical, who regarded
Spiritual-Science as a frightful whim, turned out, with
all their practicalness, to be hardly awake to what came
bursting upon mankind with overpowering elemental force.
One must recall today the way in which those persons to
whom the earthly destinies of mankind were entrusted,
spoke immediately before the great world-war catastrophe.
Years ago, in this place, I remarked upon the manner in
which they spoke. Today I will only recall to your minds
those critical sessions of the German Reichstag, when the
minister responsible at that time for Germany's foreign
policy could say: “The general political expansion
has recently gone forward in a gratifying manner”.
And in the same speech he could say: “Our relations
with Russia are all that could be desired; the cabinet at
Petrograd is not troubled by the press agitation, and we
will be able to continue our friendly, neighborly,
relations.” He could say in the same speech:
“Most gratifying negotiations have been entered
into with England, which will be consummated in the near
future in the interest of world peace; upon the whole the
two governments [he meant the English and the German] so
stand that relations between them will become ever firmer
and firmer”.
Notice, my
dear friends, that those things were said by persons who
were looked up to as directors of the destinies of
mankind. They made those statements at the same time that
I was compelled to say what I have since repeated many
times — it was in my lecture in Vienna in the
spring of 1914: “The tendencies of life prevailing
in the present day will become stronger and stronger
until finally they will destroy themselves by their own
force. He who penetrates social life with spiritual
vision sees how everywhere the conditions exist from
which are bound to spring frightful social abscesses:
that is the great anxiety regarding civilization that one
who penetrates into existence must feel. That is the
dread that is so oppressive, and that has compelled one
to speak of the means that can be employed toward a
solution, so that one would like to shout it aloud to the
world. If the social organism develops any further in the
direction it has been taking up to the present time, then
sores will break out in civilization which will be the
same for the social organism as cancers are for the human
physical organism”.One spoke thus in that spring of
1914, and was regarded by' the so-called practical people
as a dreamer. That general expansion of which Herr von
Jagow spoke at that time before the enlightened assembly
of the German Reichstag, — before men who should
have had some judgment, but who heard everything
tranquilly and believed that expansion went forward in
such a direction that the following year at least ten to
twelve million men were killed, and three times as many
were crippled. My dear friends, I say this emphatically
because it must be said today: It is essential that one
gain an insight into human affairs through quite a
different kind of thinking than that to which the leading
circles were accustomed. It is essential today that one
understand over better and more thoroughly what flowed
out of the old world-conception. Such old thinking is
worthless even for practical life, because practical life
produced more and more the most impossible thoughts,
which necessarily led to catastrophe. It is not a
question of manufacturing thoughts about readjustment,
but,of this: of realizing that humanity must learn new
lessons in regard to its deepest thinking. That is the
reason why one spoke so seriously of the necessity of
renewing one's whole conception of the universe, the need
for all of mankind to turn to the sources of reality,
that lie in the spiritual life alone. For finally it all
comes down to this: the necessity of realizing that we do
not merely need organizations in this or that field,
altered in this or that way, but that above all we need
something quite different for the future, and for the
very nearest future: what we need is heads in
which something quite different pulsates than pulsated in
those heads that were shaped by the influence of a
worn-out conception of the universe. Before all things we
need a new organizing, a new building of thoughts in
men's heads. That is what one has wanted to work for
during the last twenty years, for the work had become
necessary. Heads are what we need, constructed
differently from those which plunged mankind into
disaster.
So long as
this is not realized thoroughly, and so long as it is not
realized that the light from Spiritual Science alone can
illumine these beclouded heads: so long, whether people
think as Conservatives or Radicals or however they think,
no improvement of any kind can come about. With any of
the trifling means that issue from the old thoughts there
will be no salvation insured to mankind. New thoughts
above all things are needed, new thoughts that can only
spring up from the ground of what has been talked of in
this place for years as the greatest need for the present
age and for the immediate future.
You are
acquainted, my dear friends, with the so-called
Appeal to the German People and to the Civilized
World which arose out of the necessity of the time:
in which is represented quite openly what in recent years
I have taken pains to express in narrow circles, where to
be sure it found no response, where the desire was only
to hear the thunder of cannons, not the Voice of the
Spirit. You know that in this Appeal the demand is made
definitely for that which lies in the impulse actually
present at this time in human evolution itself. For, my
dear friends, he who can see the forces that are active
in the world of men considers as the greatest
unhealthiness those abstract, so-called immortal, ideals
which come not out of a real spiritual life but only out
of its reflected images, human concepts and ideas that
have no reality out are only images in a mirror. One must
be especially conscious of that in the present day. Also
in the present day there will be countless men who
believe they are saying something full of significance
when they tell how mankind can be made everlastingly
happy, when they talk of ideal conditions that must be
gained for mankind. My dear friends, such ideas of
everlastingness and such ideal conditions for mankind are
not in the thoughts of one who derives his knowledge from
actual spiritual spiritual life. As I have always
explained it here, evolution has been like this: one
definite epoch has peen followed by another; and above
all for each big epoch of post-Atlantean time a single
concrete Ideal has been present, just as also for our
time and the immediate future. It is not a question of
creating a government that will last for a thousand years
in a chiliastic manner; but of what the spiritual world
desires to bring to realization for a short space of
time, — and that, one can only see if one really
devotes oneself to Spiritual Science. Our time is in
serious need of that which the Appeal presented as its
fundamental demand: the threefolding of the social
organism. The social organism can only become healthy by
means of this threefolding, of which you have read in the
Appeal, and as you will find it in my book The
Threefold Commonwealth Life Necessities of the Present
and Future. The present cycle of humanity demands
this threefolding.
Think, my
dear friends, — all would have been quite different
if in the middle of 1917, or even as late as the autumn
of 1917, an important nation, either Germany or Austria,
had advocated this threefolding as manifesting the
impulse of Middle Europe, in contrast to the so-called
Fourteen Points of Woodrow Wilson drawn up from an
American point of view. At that time it was an historic
necessity. I said to Kühlmann then, “You have
a choice: one alternative is to listen sensibly to what
is proclaiming itself now in the evolution of humanity as
something which is to happen for what I am setting forth
is not some program, as there are so many today, but
something that is read out of the evolution of mankind
and that quite certainly will be realized in the next
fifteen, twenty, or twenty-five years, but which above
all must be realized in Middle Europe. You have these
alternatives: either to listen to reason and accomplish
sensibly what wants to be accomplished; or else go
straight into revolutions and cataclysms.” Instead
of listening to reason we got the peace, the so-called
peace, of Brest-Litowsk. Think what it would have been
(this can be said without boasting) if at that time amid
the thunder of cannons, in contrast to the Fourteen
Points, the voice of the Spirit could have been heard.
All of Eastern Europe would have had an understanding for
the threefold social organism in the place of Tsarism
(anyone knows this who is acquainted with the forces in
Eastern Europe). For that would really have been only
what was really obliged to come about.
Those who
were sympathetic at the time to the ideas of the
Threefold Commonwealth at the most offered their opinion
that they should be published in a brochure. Now think
what folly that would have been then. It would have
remained as literature among all the other things that
were not read then. Times change. Today, with the days of
October and November 1918 lying between then and now,
everything has to be given out wholesale; today the
proper way is to adopt a wide publicity about these
things. Those people are the greatest menaces to mankind
who think that if a thing is right for practical life it
must be right at all times in the same way. Things have
to be judged at different times from entirely different
standpoints.
My dear
friends, one must look more deeply into human evolution
if one would appreciate the complete far-reaching
practicalness of what lies at the foundation of the
Threefold Commonwealth. This threefolding — I must
emphasize it again and again — is not something
that can abruptly come into being. It is what the Spirit
of the Time and of the Present demands unconditionally
from man, what the Spirit of the Time desires to realize;
it is what the Spirit of the Time (and when you hear what
follows you will understand this statement which I can
now give out) is actually subjectively bringing to pass.
And chaos results precisely from the fact that men think
and, especially, act differently from the way the Spirit
of the Time thinks and acts. As a matter of fact what is
contained in this threefolding has been coming into being
since the sixtieth year of the 19th century; only, men
have talked and maintained an attitude in violent
opposition to all that came into existence through
events. You know, it is a question of dividing the social
organism into three parts — a spiritual part, a
real state or political part, and an economic part. I
should like to insist before going further that the truth
of this fundamental conception can be grasped by mere
healthy human understanding, as can everything that is
won through Spiritual Science. But I do not believe one
can come to it in the right way through present-day
thinking — (I beg you not to forget I said: in the
right way). There are men who have reached something
similar, but the essential thing is that one should
accept it on a real, practical basis — a basis that
takes into consideration that which is struggling to come
into existence in our time, and which actually is
beginning to work itself out.
Today let
us consider — as a prelude, I might say —
just one instance that can help us to a conception of
what an exhaustive study of the time reveals in regard to
this threefolding. You see, my dear friends, when
recently, in the last four centuries, what one calls
today the capitalistic economic order and the modern
technical order swept over mankind, a new habit of
thought, a new conception of the world, came too. If the
so-called History in the schools were not a fable
convenue then one would learn from history how
radically the habits of thought of the entire civilized
world changed from the 13th, 14th 15th centuries on into
the following centuries. That that has all evolved slowly
is a superficial view; for in historical development
there are really great and sudden changes. Just such a
change lies behind the whole development during, the last
3 or 4 centuries of the spiritual life-habits and
thought-habits of mankind. I should like to mention
especially something that appeared under our very eyes. I
mean always soul-eyes, but which really has hardly been
estimated at its true value. It was allowed to go to
waste. What small roles in the life of humanity,
especially among the Germans, have so-called spiritual
personalities really played: How little in the last few
centuries has the general schooling at the Universities
helped to draw what has unfolded in single spiritual
individualities into the general cultural wealth. Take
instance of Goethe which I have often mentioned here.
Goethe had a great comprehensive conception of the
universe; something colossal for the evolution of mankind
was taking place during the years from 1749 when Goethe
was born to 1832 when he died. Enormous spiritual
impulses lay in this Goethe. But let us see what
impression Goethe's world-conception, Goetheanism, made
on the German people: we obtain an appallingly sad
picture. Those very persons who think they know something
about Goethe know nothing at all of the deepest impulses
of his spiritual being. And perhaps in a still higher
degree one could speak in the same way of many others.
One must say, my dear friends, that since the spread of
technical science and capitalism the spiritual life of
single personalities, which was important precisely
because of its general human quality, became — one
cannot say it in any other way — a parasite, a
parasitic growth on the ordinary body of culture. It
existed, but fundamentally it existed for naught. As if
to prove just that: that the spiritual life of Goethe,
for instance, was for naught — that it was thrown
back, not absorbed, but merely flirted with theatrically:
as if to prove that, we see the Goethe Society itself,
which regards itself as the official custodian of
Goetheanism, asking from an impulse that became more and
more customary — Whom shall we choose as president
for our Goethe Society? And the thought was not, who best
understands Goetheanism? — but, who can do the best
bowing and scraping if the G. S. has to appear at court?
And then a minister of finance was chosen as the first
president of the Goethe society in Weimar, a man whose
spiritual path had never led to Goethe. What might show
one the hollowness of the whole thing was the gentleman's
surname: Kreutzwendedich von Rheinbaben (English:
“Turn thou, oh Cross”). Kreutzwendedich von
Rheinbaben was chosen then as by an irony of fate to be
the president of the Goethe Society. These seem to be
unimportant facts; out just the fact that they can be
regarded as unimportant, when in truth they are symptoms
of the deepest feelings: that is the horrible thing.
Whoever does not comprehend these facts as important
symptoms revealing inmost thoughts and feelings shows
himself in agreement truly with all that has led mankind
into such dire calamity. Now compare this parasitism of
the spiritual life, this lack of connection between what
is produced on the heights of humanity, and the general
life of the people — compare this with earlier
ages. It could not have been thought of in earlier ages.
Just think what impression a Buddha had, for example, on
the general life of the later Indian people. Compare this
popularity of Buddha with the popularity that a Goethe
had. Perhaps you will say: But by the side of Goethe are
so many other spiritual heroes; Buddha was only one.
Whoever makes that objection shows that he does no
understand anything of the fundamental conditions of the
evolution of mankind. For that is the great misfortune,
that through natural conditions there has come to be a
frightful overproduction of such spiritual persons, such
spiritual individualities. So that those who are part of
the general working community do not know at all how to
find their way about: for look you, there is not merely
Goethe but also Herder and Schelling and Schlegel; and
not only these but one should read Mabel too, and
Wildenbruch. And that's only the beginning; there is
every other possible field, and one should concern
oneself with everything that belongs to the general world
of culture: And then one must think of international
figures, etc… Yes, what lies at the bottom of that
is of very deep import, something extraordinarily
significant. There is a great difference between the men
who figure thus next to one another in the history of
literature.
But in the
course of the last centuries men have lost their
reverence for the spiritual life. That fact confronts one
in single instances. One must be able to view the
evolution of mankind symptomatically, then one finds from
the symptoms — what really pulses underground!
Look, my dear friends, I spoke once at the beginning of
1890 to a small circle of people who were members of the
school examination board. One especially esteemed member
of the board, also spoke on that occasion. We remarked
how significant it is that so dreadfully little takes
place in the school of the present day that will foster
the general growth of spiritual impulses, so dreadfully
little reaches the young people who are trained
spiritually in these places from their tenth to their
eighteenth year. Then the examining officer said:
“Yes, when we see these camels that we must send
out to teach the young, then we cannot nope for anything
healthy to come of it.” You see, that is a symptom.
Persons such as he, who in recent years were responsible
for the spiritual life of the minority, the upper
classes, esteemed it of so little worth that they
regarded as a matter of course their examining school
teachers and then letting them loose like camels among
the young. They were convinced that those who handed in
the best examinations were the greatest camels. Ah! but
men's thoughts, my dear friends, men's thought-habits!
everything depends upon them, in spite of all opinions to
the contrary. In the end we find that mankind's real
happiness and misfortune depend upon these
thought-habits; they accumulate finally in such world
catastrophes as we have just lived through. One must see
into the small things, for they are symptoms of what is
taking place in the subconscious sphere, which remains
unaccounted for while one is pointing with pride to
technical developments, capitalism, etc..
So
slightly, then, has the spiritual life been valued that
in reality it has become a luxury; men in the most
different branches of life could only experience it
really as a luxury. But they love this luxury. One might
point to many spheres of life where this luxury has taken
the place of the spirit. Let as take just one: landscape
painting as it has developed in the last century. Do you
believe, my dear friends, that outside of a few men who
are educated to it, the broad masses of humanity can
really have an open heart and taste for this landscape
painting? Do you believe, for instance, that the laborer
who is enmeshed by the capitalistic order of economic
life and technical industry in a truly desperate
labyrinth of life, — do you believe that if you
throw down to him all the crumbs that you can find in the
way of popular lectures, peoples' courses, centres,
exhibitions where you show him pictures, do you believe
that he can truly with his inmost soul respond to it?
Landscape painting — just think — he who is
not educated up to it, says: “Ach, why do they
paint that? It is much more beautiful outside. Why,
honestly, do they paint that?” When you hold
popular courses for a palliative, you can persuade him
that it is real, — but it does not enter into his
subconsciousness. His subconsciousness keeps on saying:
Why do they paint that? One shouldn't waste human forces
on such nonsense, — And finally from out of these
feelings there accumulates that which bursts out today in
such eloquent events. That is the crux of the mater. For
what, indeed, has not one heard continually in the last
ten years, about the noble progress we have made, now
human thought speeds like lightning over the widest
stretches of country, how we can travel so easily, how
spiritual culture has spread, etc. But all that, that has
been praised so extravagantly was only possible because
under it was a foundation of millions of men who were not
able to share in it. None of you would be able to travel
by rail, to telephone, to send thoughts out over wide
stretches of country, if countless men were not denied
the privilege of sharing in any of this culture, if this
culture had not meant hunger and need for the body and
soul of millions and millions of men. My dear friends,
let us look for a moment at a definite point of time, the
middle of the 19th century for it was then approximately
that what one calls the social question really began.
Look at the upper class that gradually arose out of that
atmosphere which one cannot otherwise characterise than
by pointing to the parasitic condition of the true and
good spiritual life — the spiritual life that
became parasitic because it was not absorbed; it was
meant to penetrate the general culture of the people, but
nothing was done about accepting it, the cross had not
yet turned. Now look, the people of this upper class were
gradually inspired with the idea of getting something for
their souls. How often have I remarked what unnatural
roads this longing of every soul takes. One could see how
the people finally became theosophists in well-heated
rooms, as the last rung of the Bourgoisie-ladder, how
(and this was the very last phase) they talked about
brotherliness, human love, noble ethical ideals, etc.
But, my dear friends, in what rooms did these things
happen? In what manner of places did all this come about?
(I speak of the middle of the 19th century; later it
became a little but not much better, and then not by any
merit of the upper class.) All this went on in places
heated with coal, about which the British government had
already in 1840 confirmed the report that 9, 11, and 13
year old children were working in the coal mines, and
were not seeing sunlight except on Sunday, for the reason
that they were taken into the shafts before the sun rose,
and came out again after sundown. Ah, it was easy to
speak of love of neighbor, brotherliness, love for all
mankind, when one was warmed by coal acquired through
such “brotherliness”. It was easy also to
talk about improving men's moral sense, when one was kept
warm by coal brought out of shafts where, as the British
inquiry reported, men and women had to work together the
entire day, naked; pregnant women half-naked, men
entirely naked; for in the mines it is very hot, etc.,
etc. I mention these things — they could be added
to a hundredfold — in order to show you a picture
of what all this is about: a picture of the culture of
the last century, the Luxury-culture, a culture that
already smelt of decay; and underneath, the foundation
without which this culture would not have been possible,
millions and millions of men who could not share in it.
How people were gradually aroused to improve this 16 hour
work in the mines was also reported by the Inquiry. But
what was the characteristic of the last half of the
century? Thoughtlessness. Preeminently, it was
thoughtlessness. And this thoughtlessness is what must be
recognized above all things if any improvement is to be
worked for. Instead of saying so easily: “Dear
stove, fulfil your stove-duty, make the room warm”,
one should take wood and make a fire, and stop preaching.
There has been so much preaching done, in priest and
atheist circles alike: And what has been neglected is
thinking: thinking according to reality. It all comes
down to that. It is that above all things that must be
made clear to the man of today, the fact that it is
precisely in the spiritual life that a great change must
come about.
The
spiritual life cannot flourish unless it is free to
manifest itself every day anew. But that will only be
possible if it is placed on its own basis. From the
lowest school position to the highest, from the
established branch of science to creative work in art, in
order to endure it must be free, because it can only
build on its own strength. He who is acquainted with the
spiritual life of mankind knows what unhealthiness has
entered into it in the last four centuries through the
State, because of the fact that the State spread its
wings over this spiritual life, so that all spiritual
life should gradually become politicalized, with the
exception of some few branches that still remained free
and for which also there was danger of subjection. For if
affairs had gone any further even free these last
branches of free spiritual life would have been
politicalized. But men's thought-habits today are not yet
broad enough for them to realize that the frightful
subjection of the spiritual life to the political
state-life must be undone, and that this spiritual life
must be sat free. The very goal that men still work
toward is this curbing of the freedom of spiritual life
and the politicalizing of it, even when so many states
have already shown just how state-absorbtion of spiritual
life has worked out. It is still very difficult for
people to extricate themselves from the great illusion
about state-life. I was recently In Berne where the
so-called “Peoples' Union” was holding a
conference. The people spoke about everything under the
sun in the same style as formerly — in May 1914
— Herr von Jagow had talked about the future. Just
as that which actually came to pass was entirely
different from what he expressed by his phrase “the
general expansion is making progress”, so is there
a difference between that which will actually come to
pass and what has been said in Bern. People do not stand
at all on the ground of reality. Men who give lectures,
who write in German newspapers, made speeches telling
what should happen in order to guarantee this Peoples'
Union a prosperous existence. How a parliament should be
formed, that would now embrace all state relations. The
gentleman in question also could not resist saying:
“A super-parliament must be created, a
super-state”. In a lecture that I was giving at the
same time I said that it would be more pertinent to
consider what the states ought to leave undone than what
they ought to do, in order not to increase further that
which led us into the world-catastrophe. The only
question one hears is, what should the state do? —
in the sense of the old state. One has not learnt from
the times to ask: What should the states stop doing? They
should before all things stop mixing themselves up in
spiritual and economic life. One should hardly be
thinking of creating super-parliaments and super-states,
when the sub-parliaments and sub-states have had such
poor results. Today the question cannot be: What should
the State do? but: What should the State give up doing?
Only that is appropriate for the present time.
But one
must have the courage in one's thinking to look at these
things frankly. To see the connection between this
spiritual life and what is now going on in the other
branches of the social organism, will not be possible to
one unless one has filled one's head with something
evolved from the thoughts contained in Spiritual Science.
Why is Spiritual Science such a horror today to many
people? Just because it demands that one think
differently from other people. But events have taught us
that we can go no further with the thoughts in which
mankind has been stuck. Men cannot realize that thy must
change their way of thinking, for they cannot see the
events. Men find it so difficult today to understand the
Threefold Commonwealth because they have not wished to
see what has actually occurred.
The
evolution of mankind has already brought about a great
piece of threefolding in events which escape men's gaze;
only men are not aware of the accomplishment. I will give
you one instance: if we go pack to 1869 we find the
steel-industry in Germany developed to such a point that
about 799,000 tons of iron had to be extracted: more than
20,000.were needed to extract these 799,000 tons. By the
end of 1880, through the expansion of the industry,
through the great demands created on the one hand by the
increased railroad trade, and on the other by the great
war armament programs — it later rose immeasurably
higher, but already at the end of 1880 it had so
increased that no longer was it 799,000 tons of raw iron
but now 4,500,000 tons were necessary. Now, my dear
friends, you can ask: How many workers were needed now? I
said, something over 20,000 workers were necessary to
extract 799,000 tons. Then there were 4,500,000 tons at
the end of 1880. And for that, only 21,300 men were
necessary. Now please let these figures speak to you
— not as statistics, but comprehend these figures:
something over 20,000 men extracted 799,000 tons at the
beginning of 1860; 21,000 men, or thereabouts, extracted
4,500,000 tons at the end of 1880. How is that possible?
You must indeed ask, How is that possible? It only became
possible through enormously fine technical improvements;
only because the most inconceivable, immeasurable
technical improvements were made, by which it was
possible for one man to extract so much more iron. Thus
for all the progress that was made in this industry
— and one could give similar details for 25 or 30
first-grade industries — for all that developed in
them such improvements are the explanation. What does
that mean? That is the significance, if just this number
of men, because of purely technical improvements,
produced that much more? Do you think that has no
consequence? Naturally; when the number of workers was
not increased much, and production itself was increased
to such an enormous extent, the entire economic world
that had any connection therewith was revolutionized.
Just think what that means for the third part of the
decentralized threefold organism. In all the
rights-relations, and in all spiritual relations, nothing
needed to change; there has only been a change in
economic relations. For the change all came to expression
in the price of steel and all that is connected with
that. It is nothing less an event than this: That
independently of the spiritual evolution, of the
rights-evolution (for you need no other right, unless you
look at the whole) independently of them, the economic
life got itself free and transformed itself without men
having a hand in the transformation. The things
themselves did it, and men took no notice of it. That may
be a proof to you that in actual events the
threefolding was accomplished. The true economic teaching
has progressed far, altogether b: itself; and men did not
follow after; they directed their intelligence not to the
possibility of following it up, out of staying behind in
the old relationships. One may be ever so enthusiastic
about the great talent that went into the improvement;
that is all right, but for today it is not a question of
that. Today the point is, that the economic life has
emancipated itself. In the making of prices, and all that
is connected with the establishment of prices and values,
the economic life has taken its own course. That is the
point. The three branches have practically emancipated
themselves, and men have artificially welded them
together, and have insisted upon welding them together
ever more and more closely. That is how we got into the
world-catastrophe. The facts lie under the surface of
what men want to think today. One must look deep into the
relations of things if one wants to judge what the
reality is.
I chose
such an instance so that one might see how foolish it is
to judge the Threefold Commonwealth as senseless. The
Threefold Commonwealth has been taken out of existing
circumstances, while the men to whom the fate of mankind
has been entrusted in the last ten years have altogether
failed to adapt themselves to existing circumstances. You
can easily prove through a healthy human understanding
that this Threefold Commonwealth is the only thing to
work for in order to bring about healthy development of
the social organism. It does no good today merely to
think one should maintain present conditions because this
or that cannot be dispensed with. On that score the
strangest objections are raised. All kinds of quite
crooked e thinking are demonstrated. For instance, lately
I was lecturing in Basel on the Threefold Commonwealth.
In the discussion that followed, a very clever man got up
and said: “Many admirable things have been said
about this Threefold Commonwealth and yet one cannot
comprehend it, because justice would be maintained by the
political state only, thus by only a third of the social
organism; and yet justice must exist also in the economic
and spiritual life”. I had to reply with a picture.
I said: “Now let us take any family in the country,
consisting of man and wife, two children, manservants,
maidservants, and three cows. The entire family needs
milk, just as all three members of the social organism
need justice. But is it necessary for all members of the
family to give milk? Certainly not, for they will all be
well supplied if the three cows provide it. So it is with
the threefolding of the social organism. It is essential
that all three members have justice. But they will only
have it if it is created by the state-organism, the
central member, as the milk is provided by the
cows.” So crooked is men's thinking that they must
needs turn out the wisest sophistries about the simplest
conceptions.
Certainly,
people are not stupid when they make such objections. One
can never say that people are stupid. People who make
objections today are, I consider, often very clever. I do
not wish to dispute peoples' cleverness but I should like
to paraphrase Shakespeare's line: “Honourable men
are they all”: and say, Clever people are the: all,
all, all — the essential thing however, is not
merely to find clever thoughts out to find correct
thoughts, that can actually be applied and used. And one
comes to a healthy thinking in Spiritual Science, a
thinking that can really penetrate to reality. You can
have the most distorted thoughts in regard to outer
physical affairs, and at the same time with a little
elementary mathematics and technical knowledge you can
prove that for instance if someone builds a railroad
bridge badly, perhaps by the time the third train travels
over it the bridge will collapse. But you cannot prove,
for instance, let us say out of medical science: if so
and so many people are well, and so and so many people
die, just what medical science had to do with it. There
the facts are not so obvious. And with respect to the
social organism, the facts are not obvious at all. There
the wildest charlatanism can prevail. There, one cannot
help but feel that what was once ridiculed as an old
superstition has come right down into recent times, in
another field. You all know the place in the second part
of Faust where the Middle Age idea of the
Homunculus is dealt with. Today many people think it is a
superstition, this wanting to construct an homunculus.
But it is just as much a superstition to think of
creating something out of mere intellectualizing. People
do not realize that they have only transplanted the
superstition to another field. The social theories of
today want to produce a social Homunculus; they want to
construct something artificially out of mere intellect.
The Threefold Commonwealth is just the opposite of that.
It seeks, not to set up an artificial program, but to
find how men must meet one another in the three folded
organism in order to find out or themselves what is
necessary. It goes straight to reality, to the reality in
which men stand in the social organism. Because it
differs in this way from that Homunculus-idea of which
men have become accustomed to think in the last ten
years, for that reason it is so difficult to grasp today.
For that reason one finds it so incomprehensible, in
spite of the fact that it contains not one
incomprehensible sentence, or indeed, not one sentence
that is not quite easy to understand. It is because men
have forgotten how to think accurately; they are
satisfied everywhere to think around the edges. They are
only content if they can think around the edges, or if
they can think what they are told to think by one of the
many sides.
It must not
be overlooked, however, that the fundamental principles
of the Threefold Commonwealth embrace a great many of the
one-sided ideas that nave come up here and there. One
cannot say that fruitful social ideas nave not also
arisen in many heads; but for the most part they are
one-sided. I must therefore say: I am for the most part
in agreement with the people who have offered me some
objection or other, but they are not in agreement with
me. What they advance is right from their one-sided point
of view, but one does not get a step forward by it,
because with one-sided points of view one would
accomplish something that then causes mischief on the
other side. It is important today that we meet facts in a
comprehensive way. That for instance, we do not
ask: What should we do with the gold? This question and
all others dealing with money standards will be settled
within the independent economic life. This is the
important point, that one grasp the reality of it. We do
not need programs for single cases, programs spun out of
the intellect; we need impulses that are related to
reality; then, whatever one touches, one will come into
contact with the practical. Only, those theorizers who
consider themselves practical men are so made that they
want to have definite programs everywhere for actual
life. It cannot be a question of programs.
That which
lies at the bottom, at the foundation, of the Appeal, and
of the book elaborating it, is fundamental. It is
developed out of that which alone can exist as tie real
impulses of social life. In order to make myself better
understood I will make a comparison: It has often been
said that if one man were to grow up from childhood on an
island he would never learn to speak. One learns to speak
only in human society. That is correct, speech is a
social phenomenon, man speaks because society is
necessary to him. That is also true in regard to social
impulses in a larger sense. Only within the social
organism itself can a man's social life evolve. One man
can never set up a social program, for inner individual
life goes in quite a different direction from the setting
up of social programs. One can only say: Thus and thus
must men stand, thus must men be orientated in the field
of the+ spiritual life, thus in the political field, and
thus in respect to the economic life. Then what is
necessary will result. That is the essential. For if a
man applies his individuality today in the age of the
consciousness soul to develop a social program, when
everything is built on individuality, what comes of it? I
should like to give you an example: They talk today about
Bolshevism, of Lenin and Trotsky; now, I cite a third for
you, who by the side of these is a thorough Bolshevist,
— only people have not noticed it: Johann Gottlieb
Fichte. Fichte, whom we recognize as an ideal thinker, a
noble thinker. Read the Self-contained
Commonwealth. What Fichte develops as a program is
so little different from the Bolshevik program that you
could quite easily ascribe Fichte 's Self-contained
Commonwealth to Trotsky. How does this happen? That
happens when a single man today makes a social program
— which is what Fichte did. Only Fichte was still
in an age when such a thing as the Self-contained
Commonwealth could not yet be comprehended. The war
catastrophe had to lead up to it. You see, it will be
like that if one man wants to create out of himself a
comprehensive social program. Fichte is a proof of it.
There will be no social program, any more than the single
man on an island will learn to speak. The essential thing
therefore is this, that one find the tendencies, the
inherent structure of the social organism.
It is not a
matter of setting up programs, but of finding the way in
which men must live together in order to discover what
social impulses they may have. That stands on reality
which concerns itself with society and not with the
individual. How often in the last few weeks have I had
said to me: “Yes, this man and that man are
presenting definite programs that regulate the social
life in every single point”. But that is of no
avail; people nave always done that. Just look how
countless the Utopias are. But there should be no Utopia,
there should be something that is rooted in practical
life. One should have a feeling for this comparison: I
have often said: He who does not see the spiritual
impulses in outer reality seems to me like someone who
has a raw piece of iron. Someone says to him: That is a
magnet that attracts other steel. But he says: Ha! that
isn't a magnet, that is what one shoes horses with. Which
is also true. The relation between them is not that one
is right and the other wrong; but he is more deeply right
who knows that it is a magnet, and that also it can be
used for horseshoes. So it is with reality. They are
right who speak of materialism, but the spirit too makes
the complete reality.
Therefore
it is a question now of coming back to the spirit. But
truly, it must not remain a thing of phrases. Nowadays
there are all kinds of preachers going about the world.
They are like those people who sat in mirrored salons or
in well-heated rooms and talked about love or neighbor
and brotherliness. As I remarked just now, “stove
fulfil thy stove-duty” is what they say. And
preachers go about the world saying: Calamity has come to
mankind through materialism, men must turn again to the
spirit. Yes, the reproach was even made in regard to this
Appeal that it contained too little spirit, it devoted
too much attention to material life. It is not essential
that we do a lot of talking about the spirit, but it is
essential that we know how to bring the spirit into
actual life. That man is not really standing firmly on
the ground of spiritual knowledge who always only talking
spirit, spirit, spirit — but he who receives the
spirit so deeply into himself that it is able actually to
solve the problems of life. That is the point. One could
do without men's exhortations to turn again to the
spirit. The important thing is that one should strive
today to make the spirit living and active in
oneself.
But men
have gradually forgotten how to do that, precisely
because the state has become something to them —
what, forsooth? In Faust there is this line
— as instruction to a girl, and the philosophers of
course have misunderstood it and have sought a deep
subtlety therein: “The All-embracer, All-sustainer,
Holds and sustains the not thee, me, himself?” That
is the way men came gradually to talk spout the State,
especially during the war. “The All-embracer,
All-sustainer, Holds and sustains the not thee, me,
himself?” In the subconscious of people who give
such instruction the “me” naturally is
emphasized. For they have laid great stress on the fact
that they had a somewhat superior, out —
characteristically of them — not a very active
inner relation to the spirit. What kind of relation have
men had to the spirit? They have endeavored to comply for
a certain number of years to the state regulations and
then have been made into theologists, jurists, or some
other kind of person. They have been supposed to grow up
in the State, and to do everything that the State
desired, and to be specially trained just for that. But
where was any inner activity, where was any intense
participation in the whole world process — which is
the heart of Spiritual Science — where was that?
They have said: I want to hold my position in the State
for a certain number of years, and then I want the
pension that is guaranteed me; in other words, I will
work for the State as long as the State prescribes, then
the State must see to it that I have a pension the rest
of my life. And then at the end of their life they found
no active relation to the spirit either, but a passive
one — for then the Church was supposed to see about
the eternal life of their soul. As a passive man one was,
of course, very well taken care of: laid at birth in the
State's lap, educated according to its ideas, then
working for it, then cared for by it until death; and
then after that the Church looked after one's soul
without oneself having to make any effort about eternity.
One could hardly ask for a more noble life! A life
without one's having anything to do about it: that became
more and more men's ideal at the end of the 19th century
and the beginning of the 20th. But the possibility for
that kind of thinking only existed because of the
foundation structure of which I have spoken, where people
were not taken care of at all until their death —
and even then most insufficiently, through diverse
insurance systems. And therefore when it was no longer
possible for Rights to blossom out of the world
conception of the upper class, the people also lost faith
in that after-death age- and invalid-Insurance which the
Church distributed for the immortality of the soul.
You see,
that is what one must grasp today. But one only grasps
some measure of reality if one is able to think
practically about what is presented in the Threefold
Commonwealth.
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