Esoteric Prelude to an Exoteric Consideration
of the Social Question II
Stuttgart May 1, 1919
My dear friends!
The last
time we gathered here I was able to speak to you of the
deep foundations underlying the ideas of the Threefold
Commonwealth. I was able to carry the lecture far enough
for us to see in what sense one may say that we are
living at the present time in a definite period of
transition. You will not misunderstand that remark, for I
have often told you that when I talk of a transition it
is not meant in the trivial sense in which people often
speak when they talk about living in a period of
transition. Naturally as I have often said, every period
is a period of transition from what went before to what
is to follow. The essential thing is to direct our
attention to what is changing. And from that point of
view there are more important and less important moments
in the great world evolution of mankind. And it is clear
that beneath the surface, as it were, of outer events
something is happening in our time with respect to
enormously important impulses of human evolution. In my
last lecture I drew your attention to the fact that one
must see into the so-called unconscious, or subconscious,
of the human being if one would recognize what is really
vitally involved in the transition mankind is undergoing
today. Not much in our consciousness today tells us about
the evolution of mankind in general, although we are
living precisely in that world-age in which a development
of the consciousness-soul is normal for the individual.
Mankind as a whole, as distinguished from the individual,
is in this age passing through a development of inner
soul and spiritual forces, and for that reason the
development is more in the subconscious. For mankind as a
whole we must look for the most important forces of
transition in the subconscious; while for the individual,
we will find the most important forces today in the
tendency to develop complete consciousness. In the
individual an instinctive, more naive soul-life is
changing more and more to a conscious soul-life; in
mankind as a whole, however, an important change is
taking place unconsciously, without the individual often
being aware of it unless he has deepened his vision by
work in spiritual science.
This vital
change, this most important happening, is not so easy to
describe, for our language has been made fundamentally
for the purpose of reproducing outer sense reality in the
soul. This makes it difficult for us to describe
precisely, or adequately, something that does not belong
to sense reality, but to supersense existence. Often one
has to make use of comparisons — not abstract ones
but such as you are well acquainted with in spiritual
science, where one phenomenon of life is placed by the
aide of another so that one will throw light on another.
If such comparisons are used it must at the same time be
made very clear that only flexible thinking, thinking
that does not stamp the concepts, the words, into a set
shape, in really compatible with the sense of what is
presented. If I want to characterize the most important
thing that is happening to mankind as a whole at the
present moment of world evolution (I have already pointed
it out) I must compare it with the experience that an
individual has (consciously, however) when he crosses the
threshold, as it is called, into the supersense world.
You all know from the description I have given of this
individual experience in my book Knowledge of the
Higher Worlds and Its Attainment that the crossing
of the threshold is an event of deepest significance for
the human being. On this side of the threshold is the
sense world for man's consciousness, and on the other,
the supersense world. Truly, on that other side
everything is different from things of the sense world
here. And man experiences something there that is named
by those who went through the same experience in the
manner of former ages in the significant words,
“passing through the gate of death”. Indeed,
he who crosses the threshold has to learn to know death
in its reality. He has to become acquainted with death in
its meaning for humanity.
Now you
know from the description which I have given in
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds that in this
crossing of the threshold the entire soul being of man
goes through a transformation — but only, of
course, for those times in which one remains consciously
in the supersense world. The constitution of soul that
one has here in the sense world, that is suited to life,
to work and action, in the sense world: one cannot come
into the supersense world with that. Here in the sense
world our soul forces are as it were melted together, so
that we never have the experience in our sense life of
these soul forces being separated. Anyone who did not
have a certain amount of willing in his soul at the same
time that he was thinking, even though in a latent form,
would not be really healthy physically. We are not in a
position in our sense life to separate these three soul
forces one from another, so that really we never develop
a pure isolated thought, or a pure isolated feeling, or a
pure isolated willing. In our conceptions, feelings,
actions, and will, these three soul forces are still
interwoven always, mixed up with one another. But as soon
as we cross the threshold into the supersense world
— that is, as soon as we get our soul to the stage
where we are actually surrounded by supersense beings, by
supersense deeds of these beings, just as formerly we
were surrounded by a world of sense things and sense
happenings — then, my friends, then there takes
place in our soul an absolute separation of thinking,
feeling, and willing. As you hove been able to gather
from the description in Knowledge of the Higher
Worlds, a man must have so schooled himself that he
is able then to summon sufficient power to hold together
with his ego these three elements of the soul life,
thinking, feeling, and willing: — otherwise he
would split up into three persons.
Yes, my
dear friends, one meets with a significant experience of
inner activity when one has crossed the threshold; this
finding oneself within in the most enhanced activity of
the ego, in the highest manifestation of the ego, for the
purpose of holding together the separated soul forces,
thinking, feeling, and willing. And that accounts for the
fear that a faint- hearted man today feels: fear of
actual supersense knowledge, fear before the highest kind
of inner soul activity. He would like all of his activity
to be of such a kind as is aroused by the outer world and
has effect in the outer world. Inner activity is not yet
natural to him; more and more it must be developed by him
for the future. And so, because at first this development
is a task, because it is not actually already
inherent, man is afraid, man is cautious about entering
the supersense world. Unconsciously he is afraid of
himself (if I may so express it) in face of the exertion
necessary there to hold the separated soul forces
together.
I am
picturing this inner experience of the individual in
order to have some way by which to characterize for you
that which is happening in this age inside the soul life
— and you know that one can speak of such a thing
—of mankind as a whole. That which I have just
described as an individual's experience when crossing the
threshold into the supersense world is naturally a fully
conscious experience for him, much more so then any
conscious experience of his ordinary waking day
consciousness. It is a heightened consciousness in which
one crosses the threshold and in which one perceives in
the supersense world the threefold nature of the human
soul being. Something similar to that — but now not
consciously — the whole of mankind is going through
in the present age as a cosmic historical experience. It
is not noticed, this unconscious process that is going on
in all mankind, unless one in studying consciously in
spiritual science. You know our age is the fifth since
the great Atlantean catastrophe which made the
configuration of our earth surface as it now exists. We
are living in the fifth post-Atlantean period; and in
this period mankind must go through in its evolution as a
whole something similar to what the crossing of the
threshold into the supersense world is for an individual.
Mankind as a whole, I said, in its cosmic — or we
can say if we like terrestrial — evolution, is
crossing a threshold on one side of which, or in other
words, for the time preceding which, an entirely
different kind of world conception and knowledge was
necessary for mankind as a whole than is necessary on the
other side, or in other words, for the time
afterward.
This
process going on in the unconscious of all mankind today
is what one must discover through spiritual science. It
shows also how necessary spiritual science is to mankind
today. For the crossing of this threshold must truly not
remain in the unconscious. Men must become aware of it,
otherwise they will sleep right through, or at least
dream right through, an event that is very important for
them. And this fifth post-Atlantean period is the very
period in which we should be extending consciousness. But
we cannot extend our consciousness of the most vital
thing that is happening to mankind in any other way then
by rising out of mere sense-science into spiritual
science.
If you
think about this, my dear friends, you will perhaps
remember something that has been said again and again in
the course of spiritual scientific, lectures which have
been held now for such a long time in Stuttgart.
You
remember I have had to emphasize this fact again and
again: that Spiritual Science, as it is meant here, is
not just something as it were to satisfy an individual's
subjective thirst for knowledge. Spiritual Science is
something that is connected with the taking up in
thought, feeling, and will, of the fundamental impulse of
mankind for our time. Therefore activity in spiritual
science should not be a mere satisfying of an
individual's longing for the newest thing, nor a mere
satisfying of his desire, for knowledge. Spiritual
Science should be the fulfilling of a certain duty that
one has toward mankind as a whole, in order that it shall
realize what is going on precisely at this moment in the
depths of its evolution.
I showed
you when I spoke to you last time that certain
individuals who have a degree of external cleverness
developed by the scientific training of the present day,
are definitely aware of a phenomenon that is present in
mankind in this epoch and that corresponds to something
in the depths of mankind of which they are not aware. I
showed you how such individuals as for example Fritz
Mauthner, say that first and foremost in man is his sense
perception; and that that is the only true reality of
which one can speak. He reflects this reality in its
highest form by his creation in art of the beautiful and
the sublime. But it does not permit him to arrive at any
satisfaction. He wants to penetrate things more deeply.
If he tries to penetrate into the being of things through
his inner self, then — Mauthner says — he
does not arrive at a real contact with the true being of
the world, but only comes to dreaming — dreaming
which may be pleasing because he imagines it is connected
with the central forces of the world, but which
nevertheless, so far as knowing is concerned, is
after all just dreams, just mysticism. Mysticism then is,
for these persons, the second stage of man's inner
soul-striving. Then they assert that mysticism is, from
their point of view, dream knowledge, they are right,
because they deny a supersense knowledge. The third
stage, for Fritz Mauthner, is man's struggle to attain
knowledge by busying himself with natural laws,
historical laws, etc.; and he describes all that as
docta ignorantia, on the ground that when we
think we know something through science we are not merely
dreaming, as in mysticism, but sleeping — sleeping
as compared with what would be a real contact with the
central forces of the world. Thus persons like Fritz
Mauthner think that at the most man has a waking sense
perception and can ennoble it through art; that he is
doomed to dream when he attempts to connect himself with
true reality in religion or mysticism through his inner
nature; and that he is doomed to sleep when he believes
he is connecting himself with things in any way through
science and wisdom.
My dear
friends, speaking in an absolute sense, that is all a
mistake. But speaking relatively of the special
soul-condition that mankind has evolved through the 19th
century into the 20th century, speaking quite
specifically of this mankind and not of mankind
in general, it is a truth. With the means that natural
scientific knowledge has made great, by which we have
come to such a shipwreck of the social older, with those
means the only possible soul life is what Fritz Mauthner
has described; that is, the three stages — waking,
in sense perception; dreaming, in mysticism; and
sleeping, in science.
Such a man
as Fritz Mauthner feels the crossing of the threshold by
mankind as a whole. Whoever has read his Critique of
Speech in which he criticizes not only concepts but
speech itself -- or the two thick volumes of his
Philosophical Dictionary, or even one or two of
the articles in it (it is arranged alphabetically)
— that person knows the soul condition he gets into
as a result of this very work of Mauthner. I suggest
especially — you will perhaps only be grateful for
my suggestion from one point of view — that you
read the article on “Christianity” in this
Dictionary of Philosophy — or the article
“Res Publican”, or “Goethe's
Wisdom”, or “Immortality”. Everywhere
you will have the feeling: first one reads a sentence; in
the second sentence what one has just read is modified;
in the third the modified statement is again modified; in
the fourth one gets back to the first; in the fifth the
entire thing is picked up again with all the assertions
and modifications included. One undergoes a twisting of
one's whole intellectual, rational, and soul system, and
it is frightful what one experiences after such a
reading. It is a frightful inner soul torture. And if one
describes the inner soul torture that a man experiences
after such reading — man, that is, who has
sufficient courage to admit the final outcome of the
present day condition of soul (there are many who have
not that courage) — then in the exposing criticism
that one would make, and such as I have just made, one
will not be censuring Fritz Mauthner, for his very
article is a confession that he suffers from the same
condition of soul himself. For he says: With human
knowledge one can come to nothing else than a kind of
“spirit dance” in which one does not discover
oneself. He mistakes the lack of knowledge that became
necessary in the 19th and the beginning of the 20th
century for a supposed absolute incapacity for knowledge
in all mankind.
What
actually is the truth? Something quite different from
what Mauthner believes.
In former
ages, as you know, in the clairvoyance of Atlantean
times, man did not dream in mysticism but had contact
through mystic knowledge with reality. Also, he did not
merely sleep in wisdom. We realize from what still
remains of older wisdom, Plato, for instance — that
they knew things to tell mankind. In Aristotle, that is
already no longer true. Mankind of former ages did not
have just a docta ignorantia; it had a wisdom in
which it was connected with the central forces of he
world, that are at the same time the central forces of
the human being. But these faculties ebbed away. They had
to, in order that man might then seek within himself for
those strong powers that were previously given him by
spiritual beings without any effort on his part. Today we
are crossing the threshold, mankind as a whole; and we
must develop out of our inner self the power with which
to awaken mysticism, which otherwise by its very nature
sleeps within us — by our own power to call
mysticism from its dreaming to an experience of the
spirit; and also by our inner activity, inner force, to
raise what is otherwise dead abstract science to actual
experience of supersense spiritual reality. Today, my
dear friends, this is in our power. We must undertake the
necessary training.
And men who
are are willing to accept spiritual science will, like
Fritz Mauthner, be obliged to experience the tragic soul
condition that has been a necessary accompaniment to the
evolving of man's inner forces. Men like Mauthner, who do
feel such things and yet are not willing to accept
spiritual science, will indeed have to despair of all
possibility of contact with the central forces of
existence which are at the same time the central forces
of the human being. Therefore they will have to despair
of the possibility of any knowledge of life. My dear
friends, if you think earnestly of what I have just said,
will you not have to say to yourselves: Man is confronted
today in his evolution, through the fact of his
unconscious crossing of the threshold, by a mighty test.
It is that indeed. For if he will not develop activity of
soul, intense activity of soul, then he is condemned to
sink into inactivity, passiveness, and thereby into
unbelief in existence — at the very least into some
degree of uncertainty — when he considers his place
in the whole current of world evolution. That is
approximately the soul-condition of men of whom Mauthner
is a type.
There are
many such men in the present day; but Mauthner had
sufficient inner courage to acknowledge it in many
writings, while others are in the same condition of soul
and do not acknowledge it. He finally had sufficient
resignation to retire to Southern Bavaria after he had
spent his whole life in journalism as a profession; and
there he thought out the Critique of Speech, his
book of bitter doubt of human knowledge; then afterwards
he wrote his Philosophical Dictionary. He has
withdrawn, but he still writes all kinds of articles that
truly no more than his book tend to lead to a positive,
forceful position within human evolution. They always
show a kind of despair of the possibility of one's really
comprehending existence, because as a matter of fact one
cannot comprehend existence through knowledge. He has
finally accepted the consequence, he has given in and
withdrawn to a profession that to him is equivalent to
journalism, and in which one can be a skeptic, a
pessimist.
But there
are pupils of Fritz Mauthner who have not been so
resigned. Let us ask, what will become definitely, what
will become of these pupils who subscribe wholeheartedly
to Mauthner's conception of life? They will never be able
to arrive at a living comprehension of reality at any
comprehension that can penetrate reality fruitfully. They
are unable to adapt themselves to life when they are
placed in it. Fritz Mauthner got out of it. They only
comprehend the sense life, and they believe that anything
that goes on outside of that is only a dream or sleep.
Look at one of these pupils of Mauthner — Gustav
Landauer, for instance — noble, upright, but
altogether useless or the social life of the present day.
He is a real pupil of Fritz Mauthner. It is not enough
today merely to judge life from the surface. We are
confronted with tasks that can only be master- edit we
are willing to go down into the foundations of life. We
may not seek thought impulses today for a new social
order — as do such men as I have described —
out of whet the time has already brought. No we must seek
even social impulses out of the age that is dawning, out
of the impulses that are just arising, the impulses of
spiritual knowledge. Otherwise we will not arrive at
real social impulses. Then when they are found,
they can be comprehended, like all spiritual scientific
knowledge by a healthy human understanding. It is in such
a sense that I wanted to speak of the Threefold
Commonwealth.
Today it is
essential that men learn to speak in all things with
deepest earnestness, first for true self
knowledge, secondly for true world
knowledge.
Consider
Spiritual Science, as it is meant here, from the most
varied points of view. Certainly the need for self
knowledge and the need for world knowledge are emphasized
by it, just as in abstract mysticism and in much abstract
occultism. But they are spoken of in a different way. And
in that way I should like to write the very heart of our
time: One can never attain real self knowledge without
seeking this self knowledge through world knowledge.
Brooding within oneself does not bring self knowledge.
World knowledge must first discipline one so that one can
then come to self knowledge. Also, one cannot attain
world knowledge without making the way through one's
self. World knowledge is not possible without self
knowledge. The two things seem to contradict each other,
perhaps, but this contradiction is living and fruitful.
No world knowledge without self knowledge, no self
knowledge without world knowledge. It is like the
swinging of a pendulum back and forth. Man must seek
continually in his life the swing of the pendulum from
self experience to world experience, from world
experience to self experience. That will give the
strength of soul, that inner activity of soul, which
becomes today, and in the future will become, ever more
and more necessary to all mankind. Because it is so very
easy today for men to brood within themselves, out of a
certain egoism that is natural in this age of the
development of the consciousness-soul; for that reason
they have fallen in love with abstractions. They
themselves cannot really judge correctly how strong their
love is, in this age, for mere abstractions. For that
reason it is all-important — in order to cross the
threshold which I have described in the right way —
that we arouse ourselves from a mere
abstraction-necessity, a mere thought-necessity, to fact.
From mere abstract knowledge to an experiencing of fact.
To a thinking within ourselves that is not mere thoughts
but that sinks us into the things, that thinks with the
things and events of the world. Only then can we wake to
the present.
I will give
you an example of what I mean. But first I would say
that, you should not interpret what I am going to say as
if, when I have to characterize this or that world
conception, I wanted also to take a stand against them. I
only want to characterize, not criticize. What one calls
“the natural scientific world conception”, or
thinking orientated in the direction of natural science,
has evolved in a way that I have characterized for you
from most varied points of view. It has finally reached
such an outlook as Mauthner's; and it has expressed
itself in other variations. I wonder whether you remember
a man whom I mentioned here once years ago in another
connection: the man who wanted to describe the difficulty
of self knowledge in one of his books called An
Analysis of Experience. He wants to describe the
external difficulty of self knowledge, and for that
purpose gives two instances of his having been thoroughly
illusioned with respect to knowledge of his own external
self. Once, he says, he was walking up the street and
suddenly someone was approaching him (the writer was a
professor), and he thought to himself, “What a
strange looking school master that is coming toward me!
The person was very unattractive to him, he says. Then he
noticed what actually had occurred: he cam in front of a
show window and found he was facing himself in the glass.
On another occasion he got into an onmibus. Opposite the
door by which he entered was a mirror. He was extremely
tired. He sw the image and said to himself:“What a
funny looking tramp that is coming in the opposite
door!” It took him a long time to realize that it
was himself. There is the tale, and you will be able to
judge that after all here is a man to be taken seriously:
Ernst Mach, who from a natural researcher became a
philosopher. He has various pupils. His world conception
is not unlike Mauthner's except that he came less to
uncertainty, less to skepticism; he simply believes in
the play-quality of thought. The ego itself is merely a
myth to him, as also to Mauthner, only Mach is content.
One must study Ernst Mach, and then become acquainted
with his life and his whole personality. I remember when
I saw him for the first time, in the Vienna Academy of
Science, where he was giving a special lecture on the
Economy of Thinking, in the course of which he explained
all thinking as merely an arrangement according to the
principle of the smallest amount of force. I was greatly
enraged at the time by this presentation of the thought
process. Afterwards he elaborated the theory and wrote
his books, and they had a great influence over many
people. One who knows his life knows that he was
undoubtedly a very excellent citizen, obedient to the
city he served throughout his teaching career, and in his
teachings a typical example of the thinking that has
evolved in recent times.
I might
name another similar thinker. Mach himself did not teach
in Zurich, but a pupil of his, Adler — the same
Adler who shot the Austrian minister Stürgkle. But
there was even a much more abstract thinker in Zurich,
and his world conception was very similar to the
philosophy of Mach — Richard Avenarius. I shall not
recommend that you read his books; You would throw them
away after the second page. They are written in
unintelligible language. And the most unintelligible
thing for you would be, how it happens that so very many
people have wormed their way into Avenarius's books and
have formed a world conception out of his philosophy.
You see,
these are extreme cases to show you the difference
between a logic of mere abstract thoughts and a logic of
fact. Avenarius was also in his life a good middle-class
citizen, an excellent citizen of the state in the best
sense of the word. But such people as Ernst Mach, his
pupil Adler, in whom it was even more apparent, and
Avenarius — let us take just Mach and Avenarius
— they feel nothing of that logic of fact within
which they stand through their on actions. For, look you,
what became of the world-conception of this Ernst Mach,
solid Bourgeois teacher? What became of it? It became the
political philosophy of the Bolshevists; it is the
world-conception that lies at the bottom of Bolshevism.
Only it went through other human temperaments, through
other human soul conditions. That is the actual
consequence! The consequence according to fact-logic, of
what Ernst Mach and Avenarius taught. It was not just by
external chance that some gifted young Russians studied
with Avenarius and then with Adler in Zurich; and that
then this philosophy happened to be carried over into
Russia. No, there is an inner spiritual connection there.
It can only be grasped by one who does not think
about things, but who thinks in things; he then
knows that no system of abstract logical
consequences leads from Avenarius and Mach to Lenin and
Trotsky, but only a very living logic leads from
one to the other. Those are the things upon which so much
depends today. They are only comprehensible to one who
has sufficient earnestness to study fro the inside how
things become, how things metamorphose. We have
come to a time when inner life is complicated: when
anyone can believe, just as Mach and Avenarius did, that
he is a law-abiding man who lives only “on the
heights in spiritual serenity”, and does not for a
moment suspect that his teachings are capable of becoming
political dynamite when they are passed on to other
minds.
The great
call to men today is to develop in themselves a sense for
the deeper connections of life. Without that sense we can
go no further. If we want to arrive at fruitful social,
ideas then we must not search, as Mach and Avenarius did,
for the dead ruins of old self-annihilated
world-conceptions. We must turn to the new structure, the
world-conception that can only be found in Spiritual
Science and that alone understands how to ask: That kind
of social order must come, since from now on man, as he
passes through the world, will be ever more and more
threefolded in his inner nature— for that is how he
is crossing the threshold. The external social order must
also be threefold. Then outer and inner fact will
correspond. This threefolding, if one will really examine
it earnestly through Spiritual Science, is not something
invented; it is something, that has been learnt from
listening to the actual inner metamorphosis of mankind as
it moves from the present into the future.
Among all
the necessities confronting the man of the present day,
is this one: that he develop the willingness to concern
himself with the spiritual world; that he develop first
of all the willingness so to observe himself — that
he is able to see the spiritual man that is underneath.
The materialism of natural science has not been
worthless. It has been significant and useful even in the
form of Haekelism. That is all a test that must be
undergone. It classes man with the animals, because with
respect to practically everything that it considers
important, man appears to be nothing more than a highly
developed animal. However, as soon as we begin to
consider man in his relation to the world with respect to
self knowledge, then at once the thing is different. Then
facts which before were of no importance become
important, and vice versa. From a certain perspective a
new light streams upon the whole being of man. We know it
is a fact (and the exceptions only teach more bout the
fact) that the animal walks about the earth with his
backbone parallel to the earth's surface. Man makes
himself erect in the very first period of his life; he
places his body, or his backbone, at right angles with
the earth's surface, and thereby forms a cross with the
earth's surface and also a cross with the position of the
animal's backbone. That fact expresses clearly man's
relation to the outside world. It is different from the
animal's relation. Of course you can read in Haeckel: Man
has just as many bones and muscles as the higher animals.
But there are other things to he compared which in an
intuitive, or, better, an imaginative grasp of various
relations between them, demonstrate the common form of
the cosmos and the earth; and this manner of
comprehension of the human form is more important than
counting bones and muscles, more important than what
comparative morphology has to say about man.
I could say
a great deal in this connection that would show you,that
where the old world conception which has ripened such
thought-habits in man as have plunged him into his
present misfortune — that where this thinking and
these thought-habits end, now a new world conception must
begin which, for instance, will comprehend the human
form. Then it will give a spiritual view of the world
that will fructify the independent spiritual member of
the social organism. And at a still higher stage one will
have a living knowledge of that existence which is always
around us, the “open secret”, as Goethe
called it. From there one will rise to an
“awakening” such as I have described in my
books, Human Riddles and Soul Riddles;
one will rise beyond mere comprehension of the relation
of the human form to the cosmos to the stage that is
actual participation in the great rhythmic swing of the
cosmos.
You know
that man consists of these three members: nerve-sense
system, rhythmic system, and metabolic system. He stands
within his nerve-system in such a way as to be able to
comprehend the relation of his form to the cosmos. With
respect to his feelings — his rhythmics or
breathings or breast-system — he stands with this
rhythm within the rhythm of the whole world. We can only
just touch upon this rhythm now from one angle — we
could naturally do much more, but we have mentioned it
often in the course of these years from the most varied
points of view. I will only repeat what I have often
said.
Look at our
breathing. Normally, we take 18,breathe a minute. That
makes about 25,920 breaths a day. So that in a day we
breathe in and out alternately 25,920 times. That is the
average number of breaths that a man takes. Now you know
that the Old Testament puts the age of a patriarch at 70
years. Naturally one can grow older or die younger, but
that is the average age of man. How many days of life is
that? An average of 25,920 days. Now if you count that
huge breath that we take when we enter in the morning
with our ego and astral body into our etheric and
physical bodies, so that in the morning we breathe in our
spiritual psychic being, and in the evening we breathe it
out again — if we count that as a a breath that is
drawn every day, then our life-day which consists on the
average of 71 years, draws 25,920 breathe. In other
words, that great spirit that breathes when we are born
and when we die, breathes in his life-day which includes
our whole human life, the same number of inhalations and
exhalations as we do in our day of 24 hours. So we are
related with our human breath to that breathing of the
the product of his breath in our waking and sleeping
life. And the sun — which you can at least suspect
to have some relation to our life — men observe how
its rising moves back in the Zodiac a certain number of
degrees every year, in such a way that if spring comes at
a certain place in a certain constellation one year, the
next year it shifts back a few degrees. So the rising of
the sun circles around the whole ellipse in what is
called a Platonic world-year, which consists of 25,920
years. A life-day for and death consists of 25,920
life-years. A life-day for us consists of 25,920 breaths;
our life between birth and death consists of 25, 920
life-days; a great sun-year consists of 25,920 of our
life-years. Thus we are brought to what is breathed in
the whole sun-earth-process through a Platonic
world-year. There you see into a world rhythm of which is
a part within the cosmos.
Without at
least the willingness to gain an active knowledge of
man's relation to the cosmos you can attain no knowledge
of man. You can comprehend nothing more through the
natural science of today — however strangely this
sounds — than man's life up to birth. After man is
born something enters into his lie that natural science
can no longer comprehend. Therefore natural science has
to stay dallying in the method it especially loves,
embryology. That is especially apparent today in the fact
that the entire teaching of evolution is only an
elaboration of embryology. All the rest is phantasy. As
soon as man begins to live on earth the necessity
immediately arises of contemplating him in imaginative
and inspired knowledge. For that is the only means by
which one can perceive what man experiences at death, and
what death is. At the highest stage of knowledge, true
Intuition, which you find described in Knowledge of
the Higher Worlds, one attains to that insight into
being which is wonderfully indicated in the German
language, for one says when a man dies — with a
certain fitness — he verwest. (perishes)
If today one could still feel something in words, one
would truly feel that verwesen means ins
Wesen übergehen, ins Wesen hineingehen, mit dem
Wesen eine werden. (To go over into being, to go
into being, to become one with being) When the language
speaks of verwesen it truly is not talking of
vergehen (to pass away) [Translator's Note:
Although in English one says “pass away”, the
German word vergehen which means that, is
apparently never used in connection with death;
verwesen is the word in common use.] And that
mysterious process the deep knowledge of which will
create a natural science of the future, the process that
is only completed when the human body apparently perishes
or is reduced to ashes, is not a destructing; it is a
significant constructive part of the event.
Through
this kind of consideration I should like to arouse a
feeling for the inner connection that lies between what
is the dying world-conception and scientific tendency of
the old time, and the Spiritual Science that is still in
the seed today, really just emerging, in the sense of
what it will be in the future. But now the two things are
roughly pushed together, and that is the deep tragedy of
modern life which we must overcome by inner human power.
What I call — one may perhaps be offended by
it— the dying bourgeois conception of the world and
of life, is at an end; it has brought about its on ruin.
What is emerging today as proletarian longing —
although still very far from what it will be — has
other human foundations. While the bourgeois
world-conception is dying in the ether body, what is
evolving out of the proletarian world is springing to in
the astral body. An extraordinarily significant symbol of
the dying world-conception was the egoism of Max Stirner.
You will find it described in my book Riddles of
Philosophy. We live in an age when we must always
try not to judge the thing that is just arising by its
outside. However many mistakes it may be making here and
there, we must be able to see that the social movement is
evolving today among the proletariat out of man's
spiritual outlook as the seed of the future. We must be
able to see that mankind is passing over a threshold and
has to enter into supersense knowledge. And the key that
reveals this tendency to one who has supersense —
spiritual — knowledge, is precisely the fact that
the proletarian world is behaving itself very
materialistically indeed, in this or that leader, this or
that political boss, fighting against that which it will
be someday. It fights against it. It has accepted the
bourgeois way of thinking as a final bequest; but it is
called in human evolution to cross the threshold
consciously, to work its way out of materialistic
delusion to real knowledge of the supersensible.
These things that we are considering must be studied
by observing their spiritual foundations, so that they do
not merely become abstract knowledge but, become an inner
impulse for our will. Then we will be able to establish
our position within this present social order at the
right time and in the right way, with full
consciousness.
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