Esoteric Prelude to an Exoteric Consideration
of the Social Question I
Stuttgart April 23, 1919
My dear friends!
Today I
should like to introduce as a sort of parenthesis a
deeper, Spiritual-Scientific consideration of the subject
of our preceding lecture, the threefolding of the social
organism. Naturally much of the thought underlying what I
want to say, you will yourselves discover gradually from
the general world-conception of Spiritual Science. One
can hardly present the whole foundation of the Threefold
Commonwealth in each single lecture. But today, in order
to obtain a deeper view, will consider from the inside,
as it were, that which confronts us outwardly as the
necessity of threefolding the social organism.
It is
really not difficult for one who has lived to some extent
with spiritual-scientific conceptions to call up in
himself a feeling for the profound differences between
those three spheres of life into which it is our
intention that the social organism should be divided. As
soon as one realizes that the Threefold Commonwealth is
something to be taken very seriously, there develops in
one's feelings the possibility of strongly
differentiating among the three spheres. They are already
fairly well known to you. First, that sphere of life
which we call the spiritual life, in so far as it
manifests itself or has form in what we call the physical
world — thus, the entire field of the so-called (I
must use a paradox) physical-spiritual life. You know of
course what we have to understand by that. It embraces
everything that is connected with men's individual
faculties and talents. As we shall see directly the
spiritual life is much more comprehensive for us than for
a person of materialistic mind. We think of the spiritual
life as much more material than the materialistic person
does, in so far as we speak of the physical-spiritual
life. That fact is ingrained already in my lectures. One
can only understand the spiritual life if one starts with
the realization that all material life is really
concretely saturated by the spiritual: so that for us
there is never a purely material something; that which
reveals itself through the medium of matter is always
according to its inner being also — I say
also — a spiritual something. Art,
science, conceptions of right, the ethical impulses of
mankind — all these things, roughly speaking, come
within the boundaries or the spiritual life. Above all,
It includes everything that belongs to the cultivation of
individual talents, thus the whole field of education and
individual training.
Next, it is
important to distinguish something which is connected in
a certain way with the physical-spiritual life but which
nevertheless is fundamentally different. That is,
everything that one can described as rights-life,
political life, state life. Naturally one must employ all
one's powers of perception hare to see the important
distinction, otherwise one will make the mistake of
thinking that the rights-life is practically the same as
the sense of right. But we who are accustomed, to careful
discrimination must distinguish between phases of ideas
of right, between — if I may so express myself
— the being-inspired with ideas of right, and right
as it is applied in the outer world. We will speak more
fully about all these things directly.
The third
sphere is the one you can most easily distinguish from
the other two, the economic life.
Now, as we
have said, man stands in an entirely different relation
to each one of these three spheres of life. If you try
with a healthy feeling to understand what the
physical-spiritual life is, you will feel (try to lead
your soul-faculties of perception in the direction I have
indicated) that anything rooted in any degree in man's
individual talents, individual faculties, leads into the
innermost part of human nature, springs from the very
depths of human nature. Now if one proceeds quite
scientifically in the work of perceiving, then one
experiences everything that comes to expression in art
and science, in the impulses of education, as a
psychic-spiritual something that lives and works in us,
when we surrender to its activity, in such a way that we
can only experience it properly if we withdraw somewhat
from the outer world. Certainly we must give expression
to it in the outer world; but that is different from
experiencing it inwardly: we cannot as men get a true
conception of that something that manifests itself in art
and science, in educational impulses, we cannot grasp it
inwardly, unless we are able to withdraw a little from
life. One does not need, of course, to withdraw to a
hermit's cell: One can be taking a walk, as far as that
matters; but one must withdraw into one's self, into
one's soul-life, one must live in oneself. That fact
becomes apparent to the human soul as soon as it
cultivates the most simple feeling for the physical-
spiritual Spiritual Science must express it in these
words: the physical-spiritual life is lived in such a way
by our human soul that in unfolding it we do not entirely
depend upon our body. In this respect, Spiritual Science
— as you can gather from everything that Spiritual
Science has already disclosed — takes the very
opposite stand to the materialistic analysis of the human
being, which nurses the delusion that when one creates
within oneself something that belongs to the
physical-spiritual life, one accomplishes this creation
entirely through the instrument of the brain, the nervous
system, etc.. We know that is not true. We know that an
independent inner life must be present in man in order
that manifestations of this physical-spiritual life may
be possible. Something is present in man in this
physical-spiritual life without there being any
corresponding physical manifestation in the physical
body; something transpires solely within the
spiritual-psychic being of man.
It is
different when we manifest those life impulses which we
desire to place on a democratic basis in our Threefold
Commonwealth, to which every man rives expression in
relation to all other men. They appear when men allow
themselves to be instruments of their bodily nature, in
order to unite with each other. Not theoretical ideas of
right, but impulses of right for life; not inner ethical
ideas, but ethical impulses for life, that are active
among men, and that are manifested in the way men meet
one another, work with one another, in the way men
exchange their experiences with one another. Those
Rights-impulses are only present when men do business
with one another, when men turn their bodily outer nature
to one another, when they communicate with one another,
see and live with one another in mutual experiences
— in short, they can only be cultivated amid the
vicissitudes of human intercourse. With respect to
everything that is cultivated on the basis of our
individual talents, that is, with respect to what in the
sense of the above is independent of our body, we live as
individual men, each one a separate personality, an
entity. Except for slight distinctions that arise through
differences in race and people, but which are a small
matter as compared with the differences in men caused by
individual talents and abilities (if one has any
perceptive organ one must know that) — with that
exception, we are equal as men with respect to our outer
physical humanness, through which we meet men as men;
through which we express ethical impulses, impulses of
right. We are equal here as men in the physical world
precisely through the sameness of our human body, simply
through the fact that we all have a human face. This fact
makes us develop for ourselves as outer physical
man impulses of right, ethical impulses, on a
democratic basis, — it makes us equal in this
sphere. We are different one another in our
individual talents, which belong to our inner nature.
With
respect to the third, the economic sphere: truly one does
not need to adopt a false asceticism (it is certainly
contrary to the prevailing tendency of our day, that is,
in the West) in order to perceive how the economic life
allows men to be submerged, as it were, here in the
physical world, in a stream of life in which to a certain
degree they are lost as men. Do you not feel, my dear
friends, that in economic life you are immersed in
something that does not allow you to be so fully man as
in the rights- or state-life? And it is so in still
greater contrast to the life that flows out of your
individual talents, out of the individual talents of all
mankind. Without, as I said, adopting a false ascetic
attitude, one feels with respect to the economic life
that we cease to be complete men when we engage in
economic activity. We are obliged to pay tribute to that
part of us which is sub-human when we concern ourselves
with economic life. (We have the same processes of
economic life, that is, production, circulation, and
consumption of commodities in spiritual production that
grows out of economic life and has the same character as
the circulation of commodities — and we have all of
that life because, so to say, we are men and not animals.
When its economic aspect comes into consideration,
spiritual production has the same character as any
economic activity concerned with material goods. The
material goods are necessary to satisfy our bodily needs;
also, spiritual,activity within the economic life —
dentistry, for instance, and the like — in the end
leads to this, that through an exchange of commodities
the dentist, etc., is able to live physically within the
economic life.) At all events, economic life is always
connected with physical life, and that brings us into a
certain relation with animal life, even though it is on
the human plane. It submerges us in experiences which we
have instinctively together with the animals. There you
have as a beginning a simple healthy feeling for the
different relations an individual man has to these three
spheres of life.
Now let us
approach the subject in a more deeply
spiritual-scientific way. Spiritual Science must first of
all observe the periods of human life, the evolution of
human life between birth, or conception, and death.
Whoever allows himself the possibility of perceiving the
course of human life will be strongly impressed by the
way in which everything that partakes of the nature of a
man's individual faculties is unmistakably
announced during the early days of childhood. To one who
has a spiritual eye for it and who acknowledges his life
experience, the special form of the child soul is easily
perceptible. In what develops during the first three
life-periods, from the 1st to the 7th year, the 7th to
the 14th, and the 14th to the 21st year, there lies the
prophecy as from an inner elementary force, of the man's
future individual gifts. And not only what we are
accustomed to think of as a man's individual gifts, but
connected with that, whether he will be able to do much
or little muscular work. That is where we are obliged to
extend the spiritual further into the material than
materialistic thinkers do. Through spiritual vision we
see a strong connection between the nature of a man's
muscular system and his individual talents. For one who
can observe the human being, everything is connected with
the development of the human head. Even a man's outer
form, whether he has strong less or weak legs, whether he
can run much: all that is seen by one who has developed
his spiritual vision, from the man's head, precisely from
his head. Whether a man is skillful or clumsy, one sees
from his head. These so-called physical abilities of man,
which are closely connected with his fitness for outer
physical , manual work, are connected with the form or
his head. Now you know what I have often told you about
the shape of the head, basing my remarks on the most
varied fundamental facts: everything that comes into
shape in the human head, that gives the human head its
conformation, its form, points to something before birth,
to that which man brings through birth into physical life
from out of the spiritual worlds — from the
spiritual world itself or from previous incarnations on
the earth. And so, when one sees the connection between
all human individual talents, either spiritual or manual,
and the formation of the human head: then one is led
further in one's seeing, and one is able to trace back
everything that comes from man's individual talents to
his life before birth. That, you see, is what gives the
spiritual-scientist such important enlightenment as to
physical-spiritual life is. Physical-spiritual life, my
dear friends, is here in the physical world because we as
men bring something with us at birth. Physical-spiritual
life, in the sense in which I have spoken of it today,
does not arise out or this physical world: all of it
arises out of impulses which we bring from the spiritual
world through birth into physical existence. Inasmuch as
we bring into physical existence echoes of a supersense
existence, we create in human society here in the
physical world that which comprises the
physical-spiritual life. There would be no art, no
science — at the most, in science, a recording of
experiments — there would be no impulse for
education, no education of children at all, if we did not
bring impulses through birth into physical life out of
our life previous to birth. That, then, is one thing.
Now let
take everything in my book Theosophy, or in
Occult Science, that describes the supersense
world. Take especially what is said in those books about
the relation that exists between human souls when they
are disembodied, when they are living between death and a
new birth. You know that we have to speak of quite other
relations existing between souls there than those which
exist here in tae physical world. You remember how I
described what is experienced there from soul to soul as
being reflected here in shadowy images. You remember the
description in Theosophy of life in the
soul-world: when I wanted to describe the disembodied
life of the supersensible world between death and a new
birth I had to speak of certain reciprocal influences, of
soul forces and astral forces, that do not exist in the
physical world. There, souls have an inner relation to
one another, a relation of soul to soul which is called
out by the inner force of the soul itself. Now if one is
thoroughly imbued with the idea of what relation exists
in the supersensible world between souls, if one fixes
one's vision upon the relation quite objectively, then
one makes a remarkable discovery if one draws a
comparison to it in the right way. You know it depends
very much on the tendency to such inner activity as this,
whether one is led to knowledge of the supersense world,
or even to knowledge of the connections between the
supersensible world and the sense world. If one turns
directly to the Rights-, State-, or political life, one
finds that there is no greater contrast to the particular
form of supersense life than the political or Rights-life
here on the physical plane. They are the two great
opposites, my dear friends, that one experiences when one
ready learns to know the supersense life. Supersense life
has nothing at all that can be regulated bylaws of right
or outer ethical impulses; there, everything is regulated
through inner soul impulses. It is just the opposite here
in the physical world where everywhere state-life has to
be established because through birth into the physical
world we lose those deep impulses that are alive in the
soul in the supersense world and that make the relations
there between souls. Here, we make laws of right that
will create what must be created: relations of Right
— because man has lost that which in the supersense
world makes the relation between souls. Those are the two
opposite poles: supersense relation of soul to soul, and
state-relation here on the physical plane.
In the
physical-spiritual cultural life we carry from man to man
something that stays with us after birth as a reflection
from the supersense world. We spread, as it were, a
lustre over life here by letting in the light from the
supersense world, and seeking to reflect it here in art,
science, and education. It is quite different with the
Rights life: we have to establish that on the physical
earth as a substitute for what we lose of supersense
relations when we enter through birth into physical
existence. That gives you an idea, too, of what certain
religious documents mean (and you know how far religious
documents are always penetrated by this or that absolute
truth) when they speak of the authorized “Kingdom
of this world”. They mean by that, that the state
should not presume to any right to control that which man
brings with him as a reflection of the supersense world
when he comes through birth into the physical world. It
should confine itself to ruling the kingdom of Rights,
which is the life we need here because by our physical
birth we have lost the impulses of the spiritual world.
The task of the state life is to create what is necessary
for human intercourse in the physical world. It has
meaning only for our life between birth and death.
Let us look
at the third, the economic life. Something must be said
about it that is quite paradoxical: expressing it
crudely, we are submerged in a sub-humanness, in engaging
in an economic life. At the same time, however, something
is going on in our soul when we concern ourselves with
the subhuman. And that, you can experience. Think how
very actively you must struggle within yourselves when
you give yourselves up to spiritual culture; and on the
other hand, how thoughtless men can be in purely economic
life, often following mere impulses and instincts.
Economic activity proceeds, on the whole, without much
truly active inner thought. And in that case, we sink
into a subhumanness. Our soul stays hidden in the
background. Spiritual Science would say that our body is
more exerted when we are engaged in a material activity
than one ordinarily believes. Consider the end members of
the economic process, eating and drinking: we can realize
that there is not a complete balance there between bodily
and spiritual activity, that the body outweighs the
spiritual-psychic in activity. But then this
spiritual-psychic carries on a strong unconscious
activity. And within this unconscious activity a seed is
hidden. We carry this seed through the gate of death. The
soul can rest, as it were, when we are busy with economic
life; but in what appears to outer consciousness as rest,
a seed is developing which we carry through the gate of
death. And if we cultivate brotherliness in economic
life, as I always describe it, then we carry a
good seed through the gate of death —
precisely by virtue of what we cultivate in our relations
with men in the economic life. It may seem materialistic
to you when I say: Precisely in the brotherliness of
economic life man is planting the seed in his soul for
his life after death; in his spiritual culture, he is
spending his inheritance from his life before birth. It
may appear materialistic to you, but it is true, simply
true to the spiritual-scientific investigator. However
materialistic this may seem to you it is true when I say:
when you are submerged in animalness take care of your
humanness, for you are planting supersensible seeds for
time after death.
Man is a
threefold being. He has in the first place an inheritance
from time before birth; then, he evolves something here
that has value only for the time between birth and death;
finally, he develops here in the physical world something
by which he links his physical life here with lire after
death. That which is manifested here as the lustre of
life and the promise and interest of life, in the
physical-spiritual culture, is an inheritance from the
spiritual world that we bring with us into this physical
world. In possessing this spiritual wealth we show
ourselves as belonging to the spiritual world; we bring
into the physical world a reflection of the supersense
world through which we passed before our conception and
birth.
You see,
abstract science, even abstract philosophy, talks —
naturally — always in abstractions. They talk about
proving the eternity of substance, how the human
substance present at birth remains and then lasts on
through death. Such proofs can never be gained out of
mere thinking. The philosophers have always sought them,
but no proof has ever held against inner logical knowing,
because the thing simply is not so. Something much more
spiritual is connected with immortality. Nothing at all
material, much less anything substantial, is present in
any such way. What is present after death is
consciousness: consciousness that looks back into this
world. That is what we have to consider when we are
considering immortality. We must be much less
materialistic than the abstract philosophers themselves
when we talk of these higher things. It is like this: we
use up what I have characterized as a reflection of the
supersense world , which we reveal as the ornament, the
polished surface of life here — we use that up, and
must make here, during our life, a new link for the chain
of our eternal existence, to carry through death. Anyone
who only thinks of what goes forward in this life, must
conclude, if he is consistent, that the thread wears out;
only when he knows that he makes here a new part of the
chain that goes out beyond death, only then has he come
to immortality.
And so man
is this threefold being. He cultivates talents in himself
that bring a reflection of the supersense world into this
life. He develops a life that forms the bridge between
life before death and life after death, that expresses
itself in all that which has its roots only in the time
between birth and death, the outward Rights, or
State-impulses, etc. And in that he is submerged in
economic life and is able to plant something moral in
this economic life — brotherliness — he
develops the seed for his life after death. That is the
threefold man.
Now think
of this threefold man in such a phase of evolution ever
since the 15th century that he must now cultivate
consciously everything that formerly was instinctive. For
that reason it is necessary today that his outer social
life should afford him the opportunity of standing with
his threefold human nature in a threefold organism. We
unite in ourselves three very distinct members of one
being, the pre-birthly, the one that is active on the
earth, and the after-death member; therefore, we can only
stand in the social organism properly in three parts.
Otherwise we come as conscious men into disharmony with
the rest of the world; and we will come into more and
more disharmony unless we will consider shaping this
world that lies around us into a threefold social
organism.
There, you
see, you have the question from the inside. I am trying
to show how spiritual-scientific research points out the
way to the threefold social organism: how it must be
wrested out of human nature itself.
Many
persons nave thoughts about what I have evolved. But in
open lectures and also on other occasions I have always
warned you that these thoughts to which I give expression
should not be confused with the thoughts of the elder
Schäffle in his book On the Structure of the
Social Organism, or with the dilettantism of Merey's
most recent book Concerning World-mutations, and
similar works. The spiritual scientist cannot be
concerned with mere play of analogy, such as these books
offer; it is at most unfruitful. What I should like when
speaking about the social organism is that men should
train their thinking.
The general
training of thought today is not even adequate for
natural science to be able to grasp facts that I
investigated at 35, and that I presented in my book
Riddles of the Soul, showing that a human being
consists of three members: nerve-sense-life, rhythmic
life, and metabolic life. The nerve-sense-life can also
be called the head life; the rhythmic life can be called
the breathing life, or blood life; and the metabolic life
includes all the rest of the organism as a kind of
structure. Just as this human organism consists of three
members, each centred in itself, so in the social
organism each of the three members works for the whole
because of the very fact that it is centred in itself.
The physiology and biology of today believe that man is a
centralized, unified being. That is not true. Even in
regard to his communication with the outer world man is a
threefold being: the head life is in independent
connection with the outer world through the senses; the
breathing life is connected with the outer world through
the air; the metabolic life is in connection with the
outer world through independent outlets. The social
organism also must be threefold, with each part centred
in itself. Just as the head cannot breathe but
nevertheless receives what is communicated by the
breathing through the rhythmic system, so the social
organism should not itself develop a Rights-life, but
should receive bights from its State-member.
However, I said that one must not mistake what is
presented here for a mere play of analogy, such as arises
when one works from all kinds of hypotheses. Spiritual
Science is real investigation, and does not stop short at
appearances. People believe that a Spiritual Scientist
just thinks something out. Before one is a real spiritual
investigator one has to learn to observe the
spiritual world. One has to give up thinking;
that has value only for the physical world. Naturally one
does not give it up for the whole of life, only for
spiritual research.
I have told
you one usually comes to things upside down if one sets
out to describe the spiritual world by using analogies
from the sense world. Spiritual research shows, for
instance, that the earth is really an organism; that what
geology and mineralogy find is only a bone system; that
the earth is living, it sleeps and wakes like man. But
one cannot go farther in the analogy. If ordinarily you
ask a man: When is the earth awake and when is it asleep?
he will undoubtedly answer: The earth is awake in summer
and asleep in winter. And that is the opposite of what is
actually the truth. The truth is, the earth is asleep in
summer and awake in winter. Naturally one only finds that
out if one actually investigates in the spiritual world.
That is the puzzle that makes spiritual research so
liable to error, the fact that when one goes with some
inquiry from the physical into the spiritual world one
gets perhaps the very opposite of the physical fact, or
perhaps quarter-truths. One has to investigate every
single case.
So it is
also with the surface analogy that people draw between
the three members or the human, and the three members of
the social, organism. that will a man say, using this
analogy? He has to say: On the outside is a spiritual
life, art, science. He will draw a parallel between that
and the human head system, the nerve-sense-life. How
could he do otherwise? Then, when he establishes that, he
will compare the metabolic life , to which I have
referred in my Riddles of the Soul as the most
material, with economic life. Nothing could be more
upside down than that. And nothing whatever is
accomplished by looking at it in that way. One must give
up toying with analogies if one wants to reach the truth.
People outside of Spiritual Science believe that these
ideas have been obtained by a thought game of analogies.
That is the greatest illusion. It is to no purpose to
parallel outer physical-spiritual life with the head
system. It is to no purpose to relate economic life to
the metabolic system. All that is of no avail if one
wants to fathom the question.
When one
makes a real investigation one gets a very paradoxical
result. Comparing the social organism to the human
organism one comes to the truth only if one stands upside
down in the social organism. One must compare economic
life with the nerve-sense-life, state-life with the
rhythmic system,and physical-spiritual life with the
metabolic system for the laws obtaining in them are
similar. That which is present in economic life as
natural conditions is of exactly the same significance
for the social organism as are for man the individual
talents that ne brings with him at birth. As man in his
individual life is dependent upon what he brings into
life with him, so the economic organism is dependent upon
what Nature bequeaths it in the way of existing
conditions. The preliminary natural conditions of
economic life — land, etc., — are the same as
the individual talents that man brings into individual
life. How much coal, now much metal is in the earth,
whether land is fertile or not, are as it were the
talents of the social organism. And as man's metabolic
system is related to the human organism and its
functions, human spiritual production is related to the
social organism. The social organism eats and drinks what
we give it in the form of art, science, technical ideas,
etc. That is its nourishment. That is its metabolism. A
country that has unfavorable natural conditions for its
economic life is like a man who is poorly gifted. And a
country in which the people produce nothing in the way of
art, science, or technical ideas, is like a man who must
go hungry because he has nothing to eat. That is the
reality, the truth! The social organism is our angry
spiritual child. And the natural conditions of the social
organism are its capacities, its talents. A comparison of
the spiritual life with the human head system has meaning
perhaps for one who is playing with analogies; out one
reaches the correct and helpful truth only if one knows
that the laws stand as I have presented them. One can
know that these are the laws of human metabolism; but one
must direct the same thinking to them as one directs to
the social organism and then one easily gets a larger
result. To tamper with spiritual things without such
guiding threads is extraordinarily difficult and
wearisome. Because of the fact that today analogies are
often merely toyed with, on account of which there is a
prejudice against this drawing of parallels between the
social and the human organism, I have only just touched
upon it in my book, but I tried at least to indicate it
because it can be a great help to those who think
healthily about it.
And so you
see that today men are in a peculiar position. Natural
science which has made this great progress, which has so
influenced men's minds that at bottom-even though it is
not conscious of social thinking orientates itself in the
direction of natural science, — this Natural
Science is not capable of analyzing man correctly. For
instance; it says the greatest nonsense about feeling
being transmitted through the nervous system. That is
pure nonsense. Feeling is transmitted directly through
the breathing system, the rhythmic system, and thought
through the nerve-sense-system. And the will is made
possible through the metabolic system, not through the
nervous system in any elementary way. The
thought or willing is transmitted through the
nervous system. Only when you have as men a real
consciousness or willing does the nervous system take any
part. When you think along with your willing then the
nervous system is concerned in it. It is because this is
not known that the physiology and anatomy of today have
made that frightful error of distinguishing between
sensory nerves and motor nerves. There is no greater
falsity than this differentiation of sensory and motor
nerves in the human body. The anatomists are always in a
dilemma when they get to their chanter on nerves and they
don't get out of it. They are in a frightful dilemma
because there is no difference anatomically between these
two kinds of nerves. It is pure speculation. And
everything that is deduced by examining the nerves is
absolutely without support. The reason that the motor
nerves are not distinguishable from the sensory nerves is
that there aren't any motor nerves there. The muscles are
set in motion by the metabolic system. And as you
perceive the outer world through the senses with the
so-called sensory nerves, with other nerves you perceive
your own movements, your muscular movements. The
Physiology of today is wrong when it calls them motor
nerves. Frightful mistakes such as this exist in science,
and corrupt what goes into the popular consciousness
— and they have a much more, corrupt influence than
one would ordinarily think.
Thus
Natural Science is not so far advanced as to perceive
this threefold man. We can wait for theoretical views of
Natural Science to become popular; a year sooner or later
will not affect men's happiness. But the thinking does
not exist for comprehending this threefold man. The same
quality of thinking must however exist to comprehend the
threefold nature of the social organism. And there the
thing is serious. We are today at the point of time when
it must be comprehended. Therefore a change of thought, a
new method of thinking, is essential not only for the
simple man, but, truly, most of all for the learned man.
Simple men at least know nothing about all those things
that have been advanced in natural science in order
unconsciously to conceal man's threefold nature. But the
learned men are stuck full of all those concepts that
today make this threefolding seem like nonsense. To the
physiologist of today it is pure folderol. If one tells
him that there are no motor nerves and that feelings are
not transmitted in the same way as thoughts —
through the nervous system — but only the thought
connected with a feeling, in other words the
consciousness of it — not the feeling as such as he
will object strenuously. His objections are well known.
Men can naturally say: Now look, you perceive music; you
perceive that through your senses. No, experience of
music is much more complicated than that. It is like
this: The breathing rhythm meets with the sense
perception in our brain, and in the contact of the
breathing rhythm with the outer sense perception arises
the musical-aesthetic experience. Even there, the
fundamental thing is in the rhythmic system. And what
brings this fundamental thing to consciousness is in the
nervous system.
However,
this all shows you, my dear friends, that in regard to
many things we are living in a time of transitions. Every
period is indeed a transition from the past to the
future. That is so if one speaks abstractly and one can
see that every period is more or less a time of
transition. I want rather to say in what particular
respect our time is a transition. it is a time of very
important inner transition, in regard to important inner
human impulses. To men capable of perception this shows
itself clearly in a certain way. Men today are not very
apt to consider incidental symptoms with sufficient
earnestness.
I want to
tell you of a purely spiritual-scientific perception.
Naturally I can as little prove this perception to you as
the man who has seen a wallfish can prove to you that it
exists. He can only tell you about it. Then one has
developed one's power of spiritual vision so far as to be
able to have communication with human souls that are
evolving between death and a new birth, then one makes
indeed very surprising discoveries. This communication
can only be had in thought; and when we think here in the
physical body some element of speech is always present in
our thoughts. Something of speech always vibrates with
the thoughts. We think in words. I had the experience
once of declaring energetically: “I am fully
conscious of the fact that I can think without words
resounding simultaneously”, and of having Hartmann
answer: “That is nonsense! That is not possible;
man cannot think unless he thinks in words”. Thus
there are very spiritual philosophers who do not believe
that one can think without an inner forming of words. One
can. But in ordinary everyday thinking man thinks in
words, especially when he would develop some spiritual
intercourse with the dead. For you know intercourse with
the dead cannot be carried on in abstractions — any
more than we can think in blue. It has to be concrete,
this intercourse with the dead. That is why I have said:
definite pictures that are formed very concretely reach
the dead, but not abstract thoughts. Because this is so
we are especially apt to let speech sound innerly in our
thought communication with the dead. Then we make the
most peculiar discovery ( you may believe it or not, but
it is a fact) that, for instance, the dead do not hear
substantives. Substantives are like holes in our
sentences when we communicate with the dead.
Adjectives
are better, but still very weak; but verbs, words of
activity, is what their understanding grasps. One learns
that slowly at first. One cannot think why so much of the
communication goes badly; and one gradually realizes that
it is the nouns. One cannot use many nouns. And you see
one comes to realize this: that in using words of
activity, verbs, one cannot help but be within the words
oneself. There is something personal in verbs — one
lives in the activity; while a noun always becomes
something quite abstract.
Therein
lies the basis of the symptom of which I wanted to speak.
You see that speech is something that unites us with the
super-sense world only in a very limited measure; and the
fact that the whole tendency of speech is more and more
toward substantives brings about the possibility of our
separating ourselves from the spiritual world. The more
we think in substantives the more we break our connection
with the spiritual world. I only wanted this fact to
indicate to you that speech has a great significance for
our supersense life, a fundamental significance. But
speech evolves within human evolution itself. And the
characteristic of the evolution of speech is that it
brings men more and more to abstractions, that it takes
them farther and farther away from living inner
thought-life. You can become aware of this outwardly by
asking yourselves, How are the Western languages formed
as compared to the Eastern? Take the language that
outwardly on the physical plane has progressed the
furthest, the English language: it almost spends itself
in words, it has least thought content. That is the
progress of speech from East to West. That is an
important distinction to make in connection with social
folk-life.
Now there
is a man of our time who has developed great acuteness in
his observation of human speech. This man is so clever
that already he is stupid again. There is, in other
words, a degree of cleverness where one begins again to
be a bit stupid in the face of colossal cleverness. It is
true. One may have a great respect for this cleverness
but one should not value it too highly in face of the
corresponding truth. This man is Fritz Mauthner, who has
out-Kanted Kant in his Critique of Speech, and
also in his Dictionary: observations, however,
made undeniably out of the impulses of the time. Mauthner
has reached something quite definite that must especially
strike the spiritual-scientist: it is this, that in
reality human inner soul-activity has, as it were, three
stages. The first is ordinary sense perception as it is
reflected in art. Mauthner believes in this as something
that is real, something that is a reality. Now through
sense perception one can arouse inner experiences, that
lead over into the supersensible; Fritz Mauthner allows
such inner experience. He calls it “Mystic
experience,” “religious experience.”
Beautiful; but he says:•When man has this mystic
experience he can only be dreaming. One is permitted to
dream, out one is outside of reality them. Mauthner
altogether doubts the possibility or reaching reality
then; the only reality to him is sense perception —
at most, art can reach it. As soon as one gets so far
away from sense perception as to be experiencing
something in mystic religious life, then one is merely
dreaming about reality; one has already let reality go
by. And then one can go still further, according to
Mauthner.
He comes to
all these convictions through a consideration of speech.
He makes an analysis, a criticism of speech, especially
in his philosophical Dictionary. It makes terrible
reading. I have already on another occasion drawn your
attention to the torture one undergoes reading these
articles — and they go all the way from A to Z. One
begins to read one or another of the articles; something
is said. Then another sentence in which what has just
been said is just a little bit qualified. Then a third
sentence, and that which was just qualified is again
qualified, so that one comes back a little to the first
sentence again. One hedges around and around and around,
and in the end — one has got nothing, even though
one has read the whole article to the end. The article
entitled “Christianity” is awful. A frightful
torture. But it is proper, in Mauthner's sense, that it
should be so. Mauthner thinks that, and he really
condemns his reader to the torture; he has gone through
it himself. He does not believe that man is capable, when
he wants to know something, of getting anything else than
just such hedging. He is an absolute skeptic. He finds
nowhere in speech any other content than the speech
itself. It has only an incidental value to him.
And so to
him, inner mystic experience is only a dream. As soon as
one gets out of speech one is inwardly dreaming. But
according to Mauthner there is a third stage: one can
believe that one is thinking but one is only speaking
inwardly. Whether one uses this or that language, the
language, the words, originated once in outer sense
things. I have spoken to you before of the various
opinions of learned men of how speech originated. You
know that their opinions can be divided into two main
classes: the Bimbam theory and the Wan-wan theory (those
are the technical terms). Now Mauthner finds that
everything has evolved from outer sense perception; real
thoughts do not exist for man. In science he strives for
real thoughts, when ne reaches the third stage. But he
does not succeed there in knowing anything real. In
mysticism he is still dreaming; when he in search of
thought reality, for instance to natural laws, then ne is
no longer dreaming, then he is fast asleep. Therefore for
Mauthner all science is Docta ignorantia
(learned ignorance). Those are his three stages.
Now my dear
friends, as I told you, one can have a certain respect
for such observation for it is not altogether incorrect
— that, is, not incorrect for today. Something to
which mankind tends today has been felt correctly by
Mauthner. It is this: when the man of today wants to come
to mysticism it is something quite different than with
men formerly. The man of earlier times was still inwardly
pound up with reality. The man of today has not that
possibility; as a mystic he really is dreaming. And the
natural laws that man finds today — well, one
cannot quite endorse such crude points of view as those
of certain theorizers who have analyzed the matter
similarly to Mauthner, as for example the French thinker
Boutroux, or Ernst Mach. But nevertheless one must say:
if one sounds the content of the so-called natural laws
today there are fundamentally no thoughts there; one only
believes they ate thoughts; they are only combinations of
facts. They are really only records. These things have
been noticed by individuals, Mach, for example. Mauthner
has observed thoroughly — therefore he speaks of
Docta ignorantia, of a learned unknowing, of an
ignorant learnedness. Yes, as human evolution is today,
that is quite true. Today, in mysticism and in science
alike, man has become sterile. Only, in his pride, he is
not yet aware of it as having any significance. But that
is not generally characteristic of humanity. Mauthner and
the others believe that it is, because in reality they do
not consider human evolution; they think: as the soul is
today, so it was always. But really, it is only a
characteristic of the present time. Their observation
only has significance for the soul life of today; we do
come to dreaming and to learned ignorance today, when we
want to rise in these stages.,
But one
must not conclude that human nature is such that it is
obliged to sink either into mystic dreaming or
into learned ignorance (as those do who think as Mauthner
does). One must come to this conclusion: what the
ancients reached in old ways must therefore be found now
in new ways. That means, we must seek a new mysticism, we
must not get into old mysticism. This new mysticism is
sought in Knowledge of the Higher Worlds and its
Attainment. must rise to this new Imagination, to a
new Inspiration, but we must rise of new methods. I have
elaborated that in my book "Riddles of Humanity". Because
we dream in mysticism and sleep in science the necessity
is before us today of waking up. Therefore I have
described the phenomenon of present day knowledge in this
book as an "awakening". We must put in the place of
mystic dreams a wide-awake Imagination; in the place of
Docta ignorantia, Inspiration; in the sense in
which I have talked of it in my book Knowledge of the
Higher Worlds and its Attainment. We live today in a
transition period in respect to the human soul; we must
evolve out of the deepest foundation of this human soul
active power that leads to the spiritual. We will not
find our way through the chaos of the present age unless
we develop the will to evolve active inner soul powers.
The spiritualists do the opposite. They perceive that
nothing springs up unconsciously from within, and so they
allow themselves to project spirits in outer
manifestation, outer sense vision.
And a
tragic phenomenon makes its appearance in the present
day. We have the experience today of seeing men who a
short time ago still believed that materialism could
satisfy their souls become alarmed in their advancing
years about materialism. That is nothing else than what
the healthy soul should feel, in spite of the biology of
today, or the sociology: a smell of decay, a smell of the
corpse of one's soul, that one only prevents by an inner
soul activity. Many do not want that activity today. And
therefore the tragedy of men growing old who will not
have anything to do with spiritual scientific research
and who go back to Catholicism. That allows the soul to
remain passive, and gives it something that it can
believe is a spiritual content. It is a great danger.
That points
from another angle to the transition-humanity is making
in the present age. Quite secretly the human soul is
going through an important stage of development. And with
this transition through an important stage of development
is intimately connected the necessity of learning to
think anew in many other respects concerning man. Read
how the individual man, when entering the supersense
world, begins to divide into three parts. Read it in
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds. Thinking,
feeling, and willing that here in the sense world are
fused as the natural condition for man — read the
chapter on the “Guardian of the Threshold”:
thinking, feeling, and willing become separate from one
another when one gets into the supersense world. Mankind
is going through that process today secretly in the
subconscious. A threshold is being crossed there. Man
divides inwardly into a threefold man in a different way
than was formerly the case. Observation of this passing
of men over a certain threshold teaches one that the
threefolding of the social organism is dictated to us out
of the spiritual foundations of existence itself. If in
the future we want to find a picture of ourselves in the
outside world so that we shall agree with it, then we
shall have had to threefold the social organism.
You see the
signs that spiritual science gives for the Threefold
Commonwealth. But I again emphasize the point: once the
Threefold Commonwealth is found it can, like all occult
truths, be comprehended by a healthy human understanding.
To find it, spiritual scientific research is necessary;
but once it is found, healthy human, understanding
proclaims its truth. That is also something that we must
recall at every opportunity.
I have
tried today to give you a deeper consideration of what in
service to our time must be said today about the
Threefold Commonwealth. Next Sunday we will extend this
consideration and conclude it, and perhaps bring it to
full inner completeness.
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