Lecture I
11 May, 1919
What I am going to say
today is intended to deal with primary and secondary education, and to
deal with it in such a way that what is of essential value can be useful
for the present time, the grave times, in which we are now living. I
believe you will have seen for yourselves that what could be given only
as outline in my book The Threefold Commonwealth has many deep
contributing factors — indeed very many, if we take into
consideration all that arises from the new shaping of the world. So that
actually in everything that must be said on this subject, preeminently
where fresh activity has to be aroused, only guiding lines can be given
to begin with instead of anything of an exhaustive nature.
When we look at the times
in which we are living — and we need to do so for we have to
understand them — it must constantly strike us what a gulf there is
between what must be called a declining culture and a culture that may be
described as chaotic, but all the same on the up-grade. I expressly draw
attention to the fact that today I am wanting to deal with a special
aspect of my subject, and therefore ask you to take it in connection with
the lectures as a whole, once they are brought to completion.
I should like to start by
drawing your attention to something that is clearly noticeable, namely,
how the culture based on bourgeois social contract is in rapid decline,
whereas we are witnessing the dawn of another culture based on what is
largely not understood and represented by the proletariat. If all this is
to be understood — it can be felt without being understood but will
then lack clarity — we must grasp it in its symptoms. Symptoms are
always a matter of detail; I ask you to remember this in what I am saying
today. I shall naturally be forced by the subject itself to take details
out of their context, but I shall take pains so to shape this
symptomatology that it will not be able to work in the way of agitators
or demagogues, but will really be shaped by the relevant circumstances.
We may meet with much misunderstanding in this direction today, but that
we shall have to risk.
Now in the course of years
I have often asked you to bear in mind that, on the ground of the
world-outlook represented here, it is perfectly possible to be a real
upholder and defender of the modern natural scientific approach to the
world. You know how frequently I have referred to all that can be said in
defense of this approach! At the same time, however, I have never failed
to point out what a fearful counterpart it has. Quite recently I reminded
you that this can be seen at once when anyone, as a result of what we
call here the symptomatic method of study, points to some particularly
telling example and goes to work quite empirically. Now in another
connection I have had to sing the praises of a recent remarkable work by
the outstanding biologist Oskar Hertwig, Das werden der Organismen
— Eine Wiederlegung der Darwinischen Zufallstheorie. Then, to
avoid misunderstanding after the publication of a second book of his, I
have had to remark how this man has followed up a really great book on
natural science with a quite inferior work on social conditions. This is
a fact fraught with meaning for the present time. It shows that even on
the excellent foundation of the natural scientific approach to the world,
what is pre-eminently necessary for an understanding of the present times
cannot arise, namely, knowledge of the social impulses existing in our
age. I want today to give you another example to bring home to you with
greater emphasis how, on the one hand, bourgeois culture is on the
decline and can be saved only in a certain way; how, on the other hand,
there exists something that is on the ascent, something that must be
carefully tended with understanding and judgment if it is to be a sarting
point for the culture of the future.
Now I have before me a book
that is a symptomatic and typical product of the declining bourgeoisie.
It appeared immediately after the world war with the somewhat pretentious
title The Light Bearer. This light bearer is admirably adapted to
spread darkness over everything which today is most necessary for social
culture and its spiritual foundation. A remarkable community of people
have foregathered, who in separate articles have written remarkable
things about a so-called rebuilding of the social organism. Naturally I
can quote only certain passages from this rather voluminous work. To
begin with we have a scientist named Jakob von Uexkull, really a good
typical scientist who — and this is the important point — has
not only a certain knowledge of natural science, is not merely well
versed in it, but in his research work is recognised as an accomplished
scientist of the day. He feels impelled, however, like others bred in the
scientific tradition, to treat us to his views upon organising the world
socially. He has learnt about the 'cell-state' as the organism is often
called in scientific circles. He has certainly learnt to develop his
mind, with which he then observes the social life. I want to refer you
just to a few instances from which you may be able to see how this man,
not from his knowledge of natural science but as a result of his
scientific method of thinking — really quite correct but wholly
absurd for practical life — how he now looks at the structure of
modern society: he turns to the social organism, to the natural
scientific organism, the organism as it is in nature, and finds that "the
harmony in a natural organism can at times be disturbed by processes of
disease" — and referring to the social organism goes on to say:
“All harmony can be
disturbed through disease. We call the most terrible disease of the human
body cancer. Its characteristic is the unrestrained activity of the
protoplasm which, without considering the preservation of the organs,
goes on producing more and more protoplasmic cells. These press upon the
bodily structure; they cannot, however, fulfil any function themselves
for they are lacking in structure.
“We recognise the
same disease in the human community at large when the people's motto:
liberty, equality, fraternity, replaces the motto of the state:
compulsion, diversity, subordination.”
Now here you have a typical
scientific thinker. He looks upon it as a cancerous disease when the
impulse towards liberty, equality and fraternity arises out of the
people. In place of freedom he wants to put compulsion, in place of
equality, diversity, in place of fraternity, subordination. This is what
from the 'cell-state' he has learnt to adopt as his method of viewing
things, and which he then applies to the social organism. The rest of
what he puts forward too is not without significance when considered from
the symptomalogical point of view. He goes so far as to find something in
the social organism that corresponds in the natural organism to the
circulation of the blood, not at all in the way I have described it in
various lectures, but as he himself pictures it. He goes to the length of
looking upon gold as blood circulating in the social organism and says:
“Gold possesses the faculty of circulating independently of
commodities, finally reaching the collecting centres represented by the
great banks (Gold heart)”. Thus this scientist seeks a heart for
his social organism and finds it in the collecting centres of the great
banks, “which can exercise an overwhelming influence on the
movements of both gold and commodities”.
Now I particularly stress
that I have no intention of making fun of anything here. I want just to
let you see how a man, who from this point of view has the courage to
think things out to their logical conclusion, is actually obliged to
think. If today many people deceive themselves about our having during
the last three or four centuries brought evolution to the point of making
this kind of thinking quite intelligible, then it is evident that these
people are asleep in their souls, that they give themselves up to
cultural narcotics which prevent their looking with wide awake souls at
what is concealed in bourgeois culture. For this reason I have shown you
a symptom that sheds light on this light bearer, sheds light on the
elements of present-day culture, in so far as, out of the scientific
method of thinking, this culture understands the social life. In a
further examnple I want to show you how different a result we experience
from what we meet within the spiritual sphere.
Among those belonging to
the society just mentioned there is a man with a more spiritual bent, by
name Friedrich Niebergall. Now this Friedrich Niebergall is quoted
because his attitude towards certain things we consider of value is most
sympathetic. But I should like to say here that what matters is the
nature of the sympathetic attitude with which from such a side certain
matters are approached. If we know this, and if we are not mere egoists
but understand the great social impulses, perhaps we do not value this
sympathetic attitude very highly; and it would be good if in these
matters we were not to give ourselves up to illusion. We know, some of us
at least could know, that what we carry on here and call spiritual
science, or anthroposophy, we have for some time considered to be the
true spiritual foundation of what today is on the ascent. Here, it is
true, extremes meet; and I have always been forced to experience how some
of those very people who participate in our anthroposophical endeavors
turn to other movements they feel to be closely akin, but which differ
from our endeavors in that they belong to the worst phenomena of the
bourgeois decline, whereas spiritual science has from the first been
strongly opposed to all that is behind this. So we find confused together
in a certain Johannes Müller, who has no power of discriminating the
different streams — like Niebergall for example — we find in
this Johannes Müller a phenomenon showing just the characteristics
of our decadent culture; and on the other hand (you know I do not say
these things out of mere foolishness) you find mention of my name. It is
true that all kinds of elegant things, most elegant things, are said
about what I try to accomplish. You must, however, realise how in all
that is put forward in anthroposophy my every effort is directed towards
taxing man's understanding and fighting in a pronounced way against
anything in the way of nebulous mysticism or so-called mystic theosophy.
This could be done only by approaching the highest spheres of knowledge
with clear insight, lucid ideas, which will be striven for when through
natural science we have learnt, not the natural scientific outlook of
today, but true thinking. After the gentleman in question has declared
how fine much of anthroposophy is, he adds: “Round this basis of
practical truth there then springs forth a confused medley of alleged
knowledge concerning the life of the soul, of mankind and of the cosmos
— as once was the case in the all-embracing gnostic systems offered
out of the secret wisdom of the East to an age seeking in like manner
inner depths and peace of soul.” It is not possible to say anything
less to the point than this. For the fact that the author describes this
as confused nonsense, a confused medley, rests solely on his lacking the
will to adopt the mathematical method of our spiritual science. This is
generally the case with those wishing to gain conceptions from a
knowledge that is on the decline. The result of disciplining inner
experience by mathematical method appears to this author therefore to be
a confused medley. But this conf used medley that brings into the matter
mathematical clarity, perhaps indeed mathematical dryness, is what is
essential, for it preserves what is meant to be pursued here from all
fantastic mysticism, all nebulous theosophy. Without this so-called
confused medley there can be no real foundation for the future life of
spirit. It is true that by reason of our social conditions there had to
be a struggle to make it possible for spiritual science to be carried on
in the very modest dimensions it has reached today. We had to struggle
with what very often appears as a result of most people — who now
have time, and nothing but time, for the affairs of spiritual science
— still having those old habits of thinking and perceiving which
are on the decline. Hence, we have to struggle so hard against what
easily spreads in a circle such as ours, namely, sectarianism, which
naturally is the very opposite of what is meant to be cultivated here,
and against every kind of personal wrangling which, it goes without
saying, leads to the systematic slandering that has flourished so
exuberantly on the soil of this movement.
Now whoever studies the
life of spirit today from symptoms such as these will soon come to the
point of saying: What is particularly needed in the sphere of spiritual
endeavour is a return to original sources. The clamor for a new form of
social life is always heard at a time when people harbor the most
widespread anti-social impulses and anti-social instincts. These
anti-social impulses and instincts are particularly evident in people's
private intercourse. They are to be seen in what men give or do not give
— to each other. They are to be seen in the characteristic way
people ignore the thoughts of others, talk others down, and finally pass
them by. In our day the instinctive capacity really to understand the
people we meet is extraordinarily rare. The following also is a
disappearing phenomenon — the possibility of people nowadays being
convinced of anything unconnected with their social status, education or
birth. Today people have the most beautiful thoughts, but it is very
difficult for them to be enthusiastic about anything. In thought they
pass by all that is best, and this is a deeply rooted characteristic of
our age. As consequence of this fact — you know that recently I
have talked of logic based on fact as being important for the present
time in contrast to mere logic of thought — as consequence of this
a longing exists in men today to have recourse to authority and the
pronouncements of feeling rather than by their own inner activity to work
through to things. Those today who talk a great deal about freedom from
authority are the very people who, at heart, believe in it most firmly
and long to submit themselves to it. Thus we see, only it is generally
unnoticed because most people are asleep, a rather questionable tendency
among those who, without finding any way out of it, are involved in this
cultural decline, namely the tendency to sink back into the bosom of the
old Catholic Church. Were people to realise what lies in this tendency to
return to the Catholic Church they would be much astonished. Under the
present conditions, if this tendency were to increase, at no very distant
date we should have to witness a mighty swing over to the bosom of the
Catholic Church by masses of the people. Whoever is able to observe the
special features of our present culture knows that this is threatening
us.
Now whence does all this
arise? Here I must draw your attention to an essential phenomenon of our
present social life. The special feature of what in the last few
centuries has increased to ever wider dimensions, and will increase
further in those lands which will preserve their civilisations throughout
the present chaos — this special feature is the technical coloring
of the culture, the particular technical shade taken on by the culture of
recent times. Were I to speak exhaustively on this subject, I should have
to point in detail to all that now is referred to just in passing; and
one day I shall do so. This technical culture has indeed one quite
definite quality; this culture in its nature is through and through
altruistic. In other words there is only one favourable way for technical
accomplishments to be widespread, namely, when the men actively
engaged in them in contrast to egoism, develop altruism. Technical
culture makes it increasingly necessary — and those who are able to
observe these things see the necessity on every fresh advance of
technical culture — for work organised on a technical basis to be
entirely free from egoism. In contrast to this there has developed at the
same time what has had its origin in capitalism, which must not
necessarily be linked to technical culture or remain so linked.
Capitalism, when it is private capitalism, cannot work other than
egoistically, for its very being consists in egoistic activity. Thus in
recent times two streams meet in diametrical opposition to one another:
modern technical life which calls upon men to be free from egoism, and,
coming from the past, private capitalism, which can prosper only by the
assertion of egoistic impulse. This is what has made its way into our
present situation, and the only means of extricating ourselves is to have
a life of spirit which has the courage to break away from the old
traditions.
Now today there are many
people concerned with the problems of future primary and secondary
education, school education, and of professional training for human
beings. Especially when we are studying the question of primary and
secondary education we must say to these people: Well and good, but with
the best will in the world, can you interest people at large in primary
and secondary education if you do nothing to change present conditions of
education and matters of the spirit? Have you the material for the work?
What actually are you able to do? With your principles — perhaps
socialistic in a good sense — you may be able to found schools for
a great mass of the people and to found institutions for their higher
education. You may organise everything of this kind to which your good
will impels you. But have you the material really to organise for the
benefit of the people what you want with good will to extend to them? You
tell us that you found libraries, theatres, concert halls, exhibitions,
lecture courses, and polytechnics. But the question must arise: What
books do you have in your libraries? What kind of science is dealt with
in your lectures? You place on your library shelves those very books
which belong to the bourgeois culture that is on the decline; you hand
over the scientific education in the polytechnics to men who are products
of that bourgeois culture. You give the nature of education new forms,
but into these new forms you cast what you have absorbed of the old. For
instance you say: For a long time we have been trying to give primary and
secondary education a democratic form; up to now the various states have
been against this for they want to educate men to be good civil servants.
— True you are opposed to this education of good civil servants;
you allow the people to be educated by them, however, for up to now you
have nothing else in mind but these civil servants whose books are on the
shelves of your libraries, whose scientific method of thinking you
propagate by means of your lectures and whose habits of thinking permeate
your colleges. — You see from this that in these serious times the
matter must be taken far more profoundly than it generally is today.
Now let us just look at
certain details to have at least something clear before us. We will begin
with what we may call primary and secondary education. Under this heading
I include everything that can be given to the human being when he has
outgrown the education to be acquired in his family, when to this must be
added the education and instruction obtained at school. Those who know
the nature of man are clear that school education should never be a
factor in the evolution of the human being until approximately the change
of teeth has taken place. This is just as much a scientific law as any
other. Were people to be guided by the real nature of human beings
instead of by mere dummies, they would make it a regulation that school
instruction should not begin till after the change of teeth. But the
important question is the principles upon which this school instruction
of children is to be based. Here we must have in mind that whoever is
able to bring his thoughts and efforts into harmony with the ascending
cultural evolution can really do nothing today bµt recognise, as
inherent in the principles holding good in school education and
instruction, what lies in the nature of the human being himself.
Knowledge of human nature from the change of teeth until puberty must
underlie any principles in what we call primary and secondary education.
From this, and from a great deal of the same nature, you will realise
that, if we take this as our basis, the result will be the same education
for everyone; for obviously the laws which hold good in human evolution
between approximately the seventh and fifteenth years are the same for
all human beings. The only question we need answer concerning education
and instruction is: To what point have we to bring human beings by the
time they reach their fifteenth year? This alone may be called thinking
in terms of primary and secondary education. At the same time this alone
is thinking in a modern way about the nature of instruction. The
consequence of this today will be that we shall no longer ignore the
necessity of making an absolute break w1th the old school system, that we
shall have in all earnest to set to work on organising what, during the
years specified, is to be given to children in accordance with the
evolution of the growing human being. Then a certain basis will have to
be created — something that , when social goodwill exists , will
not be a nebulous idea for the future but something practical which can
be immediately acted upon. The basis for this will have to be created in
the first place by a complete change in the whole nature of examination
and instruction of the teacher himself. When today the teacher is
examined, this is often done merely to verify whether he knows something
that, if he is at all clever and doesn't know it, he can read up in a
text book. In the examination of teachers this can be entirely omitted,
but with it will go the greater part of such examinations in their
present form. In those that will take their place the object will be to
discover whether the man, who has to do with the education and
instruction of the developing human being, can establish with him a
personally active and profitable relation; whether he is able to
penetrate with his whole mentality — to use a word much in fashion
— into the soul of the growing human being, into his very nature.
Then the teacher will not just teach reading, arithmetic or drawing; he
will be fit to become a real moulder of the developing human being.
Thereupon, from all future
examinations, which will take a very different form from their present
one, it will be easy to discover if the school staff are really creative
in this sense. For this means that the teacher will know: I must help
this pupil in some particular way if he is to learn to think; another in
another way if he is to unfold his world of feeling. — For the
world of feeling is intimately bound up with the world of memory, a thing
few people know today, most modern professors .being the worst possible
psychologists . The teacher must know what to give to his pupil if the
will is to unfold in such a way that the seeds, sown between his seventh
and fifteenth years, may bring about the strengthening of the will for
the whole of his life. The cultivation of will is brought about when
everything that has to do with practical physical exercises and artistic
pursuits is adapted to the developing being. Whoever is a teacher of
those who are in process of development will concentrate all his effort
on enabling the human being to become man. In this way he will discover
how to utilise all that is conventionally called human culture —
speaking, reading and writing. All this can best be utilised in the years
between seven and fifteen for the development of thinking. However
strange it may seem, thinking is the most external thing in man, and it
must be developed on wha tever establishes us in the social organism.
Consider how the human being on coming into the world through birth lacks
any propensity towards reading and writing and how these belong to his
life as a member of a community. Thus, for the development of thinking we
must, comparatively early, have good instruction in languages, naturally
not in what was spoken formerly but in languages as used today by the
civilised peoples with whom we have contact. This efficient teaching in
languages would naturally not consist in teaching the grammatical
anomalies as is done today in the grammar school; it must be started in
the lowest classes and continued. It will be important too that teaching
should be given in a conscious way to unfold the feeling and the memory
bound up with it. Whereas everything relating to arithmetic and geography
— of which children can absorb an extraordinary amount when it is
given them rightly — stands between what has to do with thinking
and what has to do with feeling, everything taken into the memory has
more to do with pure feeling, for instance, the history that is taught,
the myths and legends that are told. I can only touch on these
things.
But it is also necessary in
these first years to give particular attention to the cultivation of
will. Here it is a matter of physical exercises and artistic training.
Something entirely new will be needed for this in these early years. A
beginning has been made in what we call eurythmy. Today we witness a
great deal of physical culture that is decadent and belongs to the past;
it pleases many people. In its place we shall put something that so far
we have had occasion to show only to the employees of the Waldorf —
Astoria factory through the sympathetic help of our good Herr Molt; we
shall put what — if it is given to the growing human being instead
of the present gymnastics — promotes culture in both body and soul.
It can so develop the will that the effect remains throughout life,
whereas cultivation of the will by any other means causes a weakening of
it when vicissitudes and various experiences are met with in the course
of life. In this sphere particularly, however, we shall have to go to
work with common sense. In the way instruction is given, combinations
will have to be made little dreamt of today; for instance drawing will go
hand-in-hand with geography. It would be of the greatest importance for
the growing pupil to have really intelligent lessons in drawing; during
these lessons he would be led to draw the globe from various sides, to
draw the mountains and rivers of the earth in their relation to one
another, then to turn to astronomy and to draw the planetary system. It
goes without saying that this would have to be introduced at the right
age, not for the seven-year-olds but certainly before they reached
fifteen, perhaps from the twelfth year onwards, when if done in the right
way, it would work on growing youth very beneficially. For cultivating
the feeling and the memory it will then be necessary to develop a living
perception of nature even in the youngest pupils. You know how often I
have spoken of this and how I have summed up many different views by
saying: Today there are innumerable town-dwellers who, when taken into
the country cannot distinguish between wheat and rye. What matters is not
the name but that we should have a living relation to things. For anyone
who can look into the nature of human beings it is overwhelming to see
what they have lost, if at the right time — and the development of
human faculties must take place at the right time — they have not
learnt to distinguish between such things as, for example, a grain of
wheat and a grain of rye. Naturally, what I am now saying has wide
implications.
What in a didactic and
pedagogical way I have just now been discussing concerning primary and
secondary education will, in accordance with the logic of facts, have a
quite definite consequence, namely that nothing will play a part in
teaching that is not in one form or another retained for the whole of
life. Today, as a rule, only what is included among the faculties plays
its part rightly — what is done by learning to read is concentrated
in the faculty of reading, what is done in learning to count is
concentrated in the faculty of arithmetic. But just think how it is when
we come to things having rather to do with feeling and memory. In this
sphere children today learn a great deal only to forget it, only to be
without it for the rest of life. In future, stress must be laid on this
— that everything given to a child will remain with him for
life.
We should then come to the
question: What is to be done with the human being when having finished
with the primary and secondary school he goes out into life? Here it is
important that everything unsound in the old life of spirit should be
overcome, that at least where education is concerned the terrible cleft
made by class distinction should be abolished.
Now the Greeks, even the
Romans, were able to devise for themselves an education that had its
roots in their life, that was bound up with their way of life. In our
time we have nothing which binds us in our most important years with our
quite different mode off living. Many people, however, who later take up
positions of authority, learn today what was learnt by the Greeks and
Romans, and thus become divorced from life today; added to which this is
spiritually the most uneconomical thing possible. Besides, we are today
at a point in human evolution — if people only knew it — when
it is quite unnecessary for preserving our relation to antiquity that we
should be brought up in their ideas. What people in general need of the
old has for a long time been incorporated in our culture, in such a way
that we can absorb it without years of training in an atmosphere foreign
to us. What we should imbibe of Greek and Roman culture can be improved
upon, and this has also been the case; but that is a matter for scholars
and has nothing to do with general social education. What is to be
imbibed from antiquity for our general social education, however, has
been brought to such a stage through the work of great minds in the past,
and is so much in our midst, that if we rightly absorb what is there for
us we have no need to learn Greek and Latin to deepen our knowledge of
antiquity; it is not in the least essential and is no help at all for the
important things in life. I recall how, to avoid misunderstandings, I
found it necessary to say that, though Herr Wilamowitz is most certainly
a Greek scholar of outstanding merit, he has nevertheless translated the
Greek plays in a way that is really atrocious; but, of course, these
translations have been acclaimed by both the press and scholars. Today we
must learn to let people participate in life; and if we organise
education so that people are able to participate in life, at the same
time setting to work on education economically, you will find that we are
really able to help human beings to a living culture. This, too, will
enable anyone with a bent towards handicraft to take advantage of the
education for life that begins about the fourteenth year. A possibility
must be created for those who early show a bent towards handicraft or
craftsman ship to be able to participate in what leads to a conception of
life. In future, pupils who have not reached their twenty-first year
should never be offered any knowledge that is the result of scientific
research and comes from scientific specialisation. In our day, only what
has been thoroughly worked out ought to have a place in instruction; then
we can go to work in an out-and-out economic way. We must, however, have
a clear concept of what is meant by economy in didactic and pedagogical
matters. Above all we should not be lazy if we want to work in a way that
is economic from the pedagogical point of view. I have often drawn your
attention to something personally experienced by me. A boy of ten who was
rather undeveloped was once given over into my charge, and through
pedagogical economy I was enabled to let him absorb in two years what he
had lacked up to his eleventh year, when he was still incapable of
anything at all. This was possible only by taking into account both his
bodily and his soul nature in such a way that instruction could proceed
in the most economical way conceivable. This was often done by my
spending three hours myself in preparation, so as in a half-hour or even
in a quarter to give to the boy instruction that would otherwise have
taken hours — this being necessary for his physical condition. If
this is considered from the social point of view, people might say that I
was obliged in this instance to give all the care to a single boy that
might have been given to three others who would not have had to be
treated in this way. But imagine we had a social educational system that
was reasonable, it would then be possible for a whole collection of such
pupils to be dealt with, for it makes no difference in this case whether
we have to deal with one or fourteen boys. I should not complain about
the number of pupils in the school, but this lack of complaint is
connected with the principle of economy in instruction. It must be
realised, however, that up to his fourteenth year the pupil has no
judgment; and if judgment is asked of him this has a destructive effect
on the brain. The modern calculating machine which gives judgment the
place of memorising and calculating is a gross educational error; it
destroys the human brain, makes it decadent. Human judgment can be
cultivated only from and after the fourteenth year when those things
requiring judgment must be introduced into the curriculum. Then all that
is related, for example, to the grasping of reality through logic can be
begun. When in future the carpenter or mechanic sits side-by-side in
school or college with anyone studying to be a teacher, the result will
certainly be a specialisation but at the same time one education for all;
but included in this one education will be everything necessary for life.
If this were not included matters would become socially worse than they
are at present. All instruction must give knowledge that is necessary for
life. During the ages from fifteen to twenty everything to do with
agriculture, trade, industry, commerce will have to be learnt. No one
should go through these years without acquiring some idea of what takes
place in farming, commerce and industry. These subjects will be given a
place as branches of knowledge infinitely more necessary than much of the
rubbish which constitutes the present curriculum during these years. Then
too during these years all those subjects will be introduced which I
would call world affairs, historical and geographical subjects,
everything concerned with nature knowledge — but all this in
relation to the human being, so that man will learn to know man from his
knowledge of the world as a whole.
Now among human beings who
receive instruction of this kind will be those who, driven by social
conditions to become workers in a spiritual sense, can be educated in
every possible sphere at schools specially organised for such students.
The institutions where people today are given professional training are
run with a terrible lack of economy. I know that many people will not
admit it but there is this lack of economy; above all validity is
ascribed to the most curious conceptions belonging to the world-outlook
that is on the decline. Even in my time I have experienced this —
people have begun to press where it is a question in the universities of
historical and literary subjects, for fewer lectures and more "seminars";
today we still hear it said that lectures should be given as little space
as possible on the programme but seminars encouraged. One knows these
seminars. Faithful followers of a university tutor gather together and
learn strictly in accordance with the ideas of this tutor to work
scientifically. They do their work under his coaching and the results of
the coaching are forever visible. It is altogether another matter if a
man, in the years when he should be learning a profession, goes of his
own free will to a course of intelligent lectures, and then has the
opportunity of embarking upon his own free exposition — though
certainly this would be connected with what the lectures contained.
Practical application can certainly be included in the programme but this
exaggerated emphasis on seminars must be stopped. That is just an
undesirable product of the second half of the nineteenth century, when
the emphasis was on the drilling of human beings rather than on leaving
them to develop freely.
Now when we are discussing
this stage in education it must be said that a certain educational
groundwork ought to be the same for everyone, whether he is destined to
be a doctor, a lawyer or a teacher; that is one aspect of the matter; in
addition to this, everyone must receive what contributes to the general
culture of man, whether he is to become a doctor, a machine maker,
architect, chemist or engineer; he must be given the opportunity of
receiving general culture, whether he is to work with his hands or his
head. Today little thought is given to this, though certainly in some
places of higher education many things are better than they were. When I
was at the Technical College in Vienna a Professor was giving lectures on
general history. Each term he started to give his general history; after
three or perhaps five lectures he ceased — there was no longer
anyone there. Then, at this college, there was a Professor of history of
literature . Thus there were the means to receive what was universally
human besides specialised subjects. To these lectures on the history of
literature, which included exercises in rhetoric and instruction on how
to lecture, like those given, for example, by hand — to these
lectures I always had to drag someone else, for they were held only if
there was an audience of two. They could be kept going, therefore, only
by a second being dragged in, and this was someone different practically
every time. Except for this, the only attempt to provide students with
the information they needed about conditions in life was by lectures on
constitutional law or statistics. As I said, these things have improved;
what has not improved is the driving force that should exist in our whole
social life. This will improve, however, when there is a possibility for
all that constitutes the universally human not to be made intelligible
only to those with a definite professional view but intelligible from a
universally human aspect. I have often been surprised how distorted my
lectures on anthroposophy have been by my audience; for if they had taken
them in a positive way they could have said: we won't bother about the
anthroposophy in these lectures, but what is said about natural science,
which receives great praise when coming from the ordinary natural
philosopher — that is enough for us. For as you all know these
lectures are always interspersed with general information about nature.
But there are many people who are not interested in taking things from a
positive angle, preferring to distort what they have no wish to accept.
What they refused to accept, by the very way in which the thoughts were
formed, by the whole mode of treatment, as well as the necessary
interspersing of natural science, could be taken as contributing to
universal human knowledge, which the manual worker could receive just as
well as the scholar, and which was also generally intelligible as natural
science. Just consider other endeavors towards a world-outlook. Do you
imagine that in monistic gatherings, for instance, people can understand
anything if they have not a scientific background? No, and if they have
not, they merely gossip. What here we pursue as anthroposophy is
something that can change all knowledge of nature, and even of history,
so that everyone will be able to understand them. Just think how
intelligible to everyone what I have shown to be a great leap
historically in the middle of the fifteenth century can be. That, I
think, is intelligible to everyone. But it is the groundwork without
which there can be no understanding at all of the whole social movement
in our time. This social movement is not understood because people do not
know how mankind has developed since the middle of the fifteenth century.
When these things are mentioned people come forward and declare: Nature
does not make leaps, so you are wrong to assume there was such a thing in
the fifteenth century. This foolish proposition that nature never makes a
leap is always being harped upon. Nature continually makes leaps; it is a
leap from the green leaf of a plant to the sepal which has a different
form — another leap from sepal to petal. It is so too in the
evolution of man's life. Whoever does not teach the history that rests on
senseless conventional untruth, but on what has really happened, knows
that in the fifteenth century men became different in the finer element
of their constitution from what they were before, and that what is
brought about today is the development of what they have grasped in the
centre of their being. If there is a desire to understand the present
social movement, laws of this kind in historical evolution will have to
be recognised. You have only to call to mind the way in which matters
here are dealt with and you will say: To understand all this no special
knowledge is necessary; there is no need to be a man of culture; everyone
can understand it. This indeed will be what is demanded in the future
— that no philosophies or world-conceptions should be propagated
which can be understood only by reason of a form of education belonging
to a certain class. Take up any philosophical work today, for example, by
Eucken or Paulsen, or anyone else you want information about, take up one
of those dreadful works on psychology by university professors —
you will soon drop it again; for those who are not specially trained in
the particular subject do not understand the language used. This is
something that can be set right only by universal education, when the
whole nature of education and instruction will be absolutely changed in
the way I have tried to indicate today.
You see, therefore, that in
this sphere too we can say: here we have a big settling-up — not a
small one. What is necessary is the development of social impulses or,
rather, social intincts, through instruction, through education, so that
people do not pass by one another. Then they will understand each other
so that a practical living relation is develcped — for nowadays the
teacher passes his pupil by, the pupil passes his teacher. This can
happen only if we run our pen through what is old — which can be
done. The facts of the case do not prevent this; it all goes back to
human prejudice. People cannot believe that things can be done in a new
way; they are terrified that their life of spirit may lose what was of
value in the old way. You have no idea how anxious they are on this
score. Naturally they are unable to take all this in; for instance they
cannot see all the possibilities created by having an instruction that is
economical. I have often told you that provided this is done at the right
age it is possible from the beginning of geometry — the straight
line and the angle — up to what used to be called the pons a
sinorum, the Pythagorean theorem. And on my attempting this you
should have seen the joy of the youngsters when, after three or four
hours work, the theorem of Pythagoras dawned upon them. Only think what a
lot of rubbish has to be gone through today before young people arrive at
this theorem. What matters is the enormous amount of mental work wasted,
which has its effects in later life; it sends its rays into the whole of
life, right into its most practical spheres. Today it is necessary for
people to come to a decision in these matters — fundamentally to
re-organise their way of thinking. Otherwise — well, otherwise we
simply sink deeper into decline and never find the path upwards.
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