II.
The Impulse towards the Threefold Order:
No Utopia, but the practical demand of the hour.
Address given by Dr. Rudolf Steiner at a meeting
the League for the Threefold Social Order,
Stuttgart, 31st May 1919.
L a d
i e s a n d G e n t l e m e n
In
speaking to-day as one must, if one speaks from the way of
thinking that underlay, and underlies, the impulse towards the
threefold social order, one cannot fail with one's whole soul
to have been following the events of the times; and so one well
knows, that one is talking into a storm. And although many
people still remain unaware of the storm, yet the storm
nevertheless is raging. So that one may well be filled with a
kind of amazement, when, answering back, from a blank
unconsciousness of this storm, one hears the reply, —
which we have heard in these days, — “All ideology!
a mere Utopia!”
It
is from the actual events of the times that we shall seek
to-night to refute the notion, that the impulse towards the
threefold social order can be treated as a piece of unpractical
idealism, a ‘Utopia,’ or that it has in it anything whatever
‘ideologic.’
Since the present Appeal
[Aufruf an das deutsche Volk und die Kulturwelt
(“Appeal to the German People and the Civilised World”),
issued early in 1919.],
as need hardly be said, goes out in the first place from the experience
of a particular person, you will find it excusable, if a very natural
astonishment at this reproach of ‘utopianism’ and
‘ideology’ leads me to begin with just a few introductory
remarks which might perhaps he thought personal. But it is only too
true in these days, that everything personal — which is not
deliberately shut up in its own walls, hut can live with the
life of mankind — may, through the grave events of the
times, be something also which is very commonly human, and
therefore perhaps a very good example of what is commonly human
in these present anxious days, — with the undoubted
prospect of a still more anxious future.
First came this Appeal to the German People and the Civilised World,
where the
Threefold Order of the Body Social
was first set forth in the form now being propagated
by the League for the Threefold Order. And this then was
followed up by my book on the Roots of the Social Question, or
the Life-needs of To-day and Tomorrow
[Die Kernpunkte der sozialen
Frage in den Lebensnotwendigkeiten der Gegenwart und Zukunft.
Published in England under the title
“The Threefold Commonwealth.”].
Such things as these are not put forward without reason by a
man who had no wish to do so, and no power to do so, until
close upon his sixtieth year of life. In no way whatever do
they originate in any sort of theoretic reasonings or ingenious
propositions; they originate in the fullness of life and
of the observation of life. And probably they would even
to-day not have become public, if the person who made
them public had not been led by the actual events of the times
to the conviction, that in these critical times so much is
being done which is not practical, and so much finds its
way into men's heads which is Utopian and ideologic, that, if
anyone has something to put in place of all this, which ij3
practical, it is nothing less than his bounden duty to speak
out, and make this life-practicality known. — And yet,
Echo answers: Utopia! Ideology! Impracticable
idealism!
You
will therefore pardon me, if I make a few remarks of a personal
kind, by way of introduction. — It was not from any
feeling of personal attraction that I was induced to come
forward with this thing, after having spent long years in one
of the three fields in question, doing as much as in me lay to
put this particular field onto its legs again, — it
having been, in my opinion, stood upon its head by our modern
form of culture. After having been busily engaged for some
twenty or thirty years past in working at what I call Spiritual
Science, it was really not any personal attraction that led me
to extend into the other two fields of life as well, but simply
the urgent necessity imposed upon a man by the present
times.
What stood so menacingly before my eyes, long years ago, as the
terrible problem of our civilisation, was this: that our modern
spiritual life, through the peculiar character which leads to
its most triumphant successes on the one side, — namely
in the field of natural science, — is on the other
disqualified from laying hold upon actual human life, —
the life, that is, which goes beyond such things as proceed
solely from the natural world; that this same spiritual life
could therefore ... and this was what stood as the terrible
menace of civilisation before my mind's eye ... that this
spiritual life could never therefore prove qualified to grasp
those great social problems which mankind is urgently called
upon to solve at this present day. For the social problem is,
ultimately, a spiritual one. Nobody is in a position to grasp
it in its truth, who cannot grasp it from its spiritual aspect.
Here, in the grasping of spiritual things, I felt myself more
peculiarly at home; and this too I more peculiarly felt to be
the home where I did not find the kind of hearing that I should
have liked to find, so that what was only words might have
passed over into acts, into a reformation of that spiritual
life which was no longer capable of actually entering into
human life and permeating it. Still, I would gladly have kept
within this special field, if it had not been for all the
things that arose out of the events of these last few years,
— things, that so very plainly showed the way men go
hunting after Utopias and ideologies, and never manage to grasp
the really practical thing at their door, except from the
aspect of some “grey theory” or some party
dogma.
In
the midst of the war-troubles, when I thought the time had
come, when one might expect mankind to be beginning to see that
any further prolongation of these war-troubles would
inevitably lead to the ruin of Central and Eastern
Europe, I then for the first time drafted the outlines of the
scheme which has now come out, for the threefold social order.
For I could see coming up, as the war went on, a terrible
Utopia; a Utopia, — but one which unfortunately,
from the peculiar circumstances of the times, exerted a very
real influence. Its real influence was due to two properties
which it possessed: In itself, in its substance, it was
an unmixed Utopia. And again, in what went along with
it, it was something which had been launched into the world by
the interests of actual groups of human beings, and was
peculiarly fitted to delude all such people as think themselves
practical whilst running after every sort of utopia, and to
conceal from these people the fact, that this Utopia had its
origin simply in human and, in this case, purely economic
interests. One could see it; one could see this Utopia, coming
up on the mental horizon of the day. One could see how, in the
western world, this Utopia acted upon people in such a way as
not only to create certain tones of mind; but also —
because it was a Utopia that coincided with very practical
interests (though these interests didn't come to expression in
what it said) — that this Utopia had the power to set
armies marching, and to propel ships across the seas. And
greater and ever greater grew the following of this Utopia in
the countries of the West. And finally this Utopia assumed the
shape of the so-called Fourteen Points of Woodrow Wilson.
In
Germany, there would have been, at that time, no sense in doing
so: in Switzerland, (where it was necessary to speak out the
truth in this direction during the war), I repeatedly pointed
out the Utopian character, on the one hand, of this
Wilson-Programme, and, on the other, its economic character,
that had its source solely in the economic conditions of the
West.
So
strong was the influence of this Utopia, that in the autumn of
1918 it not only found general adherence on the side of the
Entente; but that in Germany, in addition to the military
capitulation there came the capitulation of the spirit, —
the capitulation to Wilson's Utopia, — and through the
very man to whom the German People in their day of destiny
looked as to their last hope. — Before it had yet taken
shape in the Fourteen Points, at a time when this World Utopia
was still only on the horizon, I tried to set on paper what
ought to be put forward in opposition to this World Utopia as a
Central European Reality. In not one quarter, where the matter
should have obtained a hearing, was it possible to find any
understanding for the thing which, from its inherent
practicality, was fitted to be matched against a World-Utopia.
At that time, they thought it very practical to trumpet into
the world phrases about: ‘the rule amongst men of Might and
Right.’ Those were the statesmen, who could get as far as
threadbare definitions of Might and Right, but couldn't
get as far as anything concrete, as really laying hold of
something that was real. Never shall we get clear of confusion
and chaos, until we grow able to lay practical hold on what is
really practical!
As
I told you, I neither wished, nor in a way was I able, to bring
this thing to public notice until close upon my sixtieth year
of life. For the thing goes back in retrospect to what I
myself had experienced in my own life as a working-class
child amongst the working classes, — where I learnt the
note that rose up from the working classes of to-day, (that is,
of those days,) and from the din of economic life with its
toils and its troubles, in the 'sixties and 'seventies of the
nineteenth century. I made acquaintance with what today is
termed ‘class-struggles,’ through the ample opportunities my
destiny gave me of becoming acquainted with the classes. I
learnt to know the working class as myself a member of the
working class. Later on, I learnt to know the middle-class with
all its habits and ways: its short-sightedness for the real
practical requirements of the times, its absorption in the
interests of the one particular class, its indifference to
everything that lies outside these particular class-Interests.
And I learnt to know that class of people too from direct
intercourse in life, who deal in the ‘big politics’ of
the day. And in this way I acquired a direct picture of what is
actually living in the age: of the struggle between the
different classes of mankind. Believe me, I have been
brought into near touch with the needs, the toils and troubles,
the various destinies, of all those classes, of which to-day we
are obliged to speak, because the great audit of accounts is
beginning with regard to class-differences.
There was one thing only to which circumstances kept me a
stranger; and to this I remained a very thorough stranger. I
have always been kept aloof by circumstances from any sort of
association with one or other party. In all my life I
have never be* longed to any party whatever. I have had to do
with any number of party-men, I have become acquainted with any
number of party-programmes and party-opinions; but I never
belonged to any party. In Austria, where my youth was spent, I
could neither elect nor be elected, for the simple reason that,
in those days, nobody might elect or be elected, who did not
possess a yearly income amounting to a considerable figure.
Afterwards, I never was in any place where I had a chance of
giving my vote, for the simple reason, that my temporary
residence in two other countries never gave me citizen's rights
in either country. No circumstances of party, no schemes of
party, have any share in what comes before the world today as
the Impulse for the Threefold Social Order. Nothing has any
share in this impulse, save what can be acquired in the course
of a life spent in learning to know the needs, the demands, the
conditions and circumstances of all the many human beings
living side by side in the various classes. And when a
practical way of life is then sketched out to-day on premises
such as these, then one is told that this practical way of life
is a ‘Utopia,’ an ‘ideology!’
For
me the whole thing is a symptom: it is a symptom of the
mentality of the age, that the very thing today which is out
against all utopianisms, should itself be taken for a Utopia by
all those utopian-minded people who fill the ranks of parties
— or other posts in human society. I venture to say that,
from the needs of the costermonger and the day-labourer, up to
the needs of the big capitalists or of the people — for
there is that sort too! — who, as diplomatists, have been
concerned in the world's destinies during these last twenty or
thirty years, that all this has come together in the thing,
which of course in this first Appeal had to be compressed into
a few short sentences. And there has gone into it too, whatever
the experience of an elementary school teacher, up to
that of a member of the upper universities, can
contribute towards the practice of real life to-day. This
seems, and seemed, to me the only possible way of acquiring the
ground from which one can attempt to approach the great
social problem of our times.
The
social problem of our times: in what does it find its
expression? — It finds expression in everything, from
what the costermonger enters with a stumpy pencil in his
pocket-book as his takings and outlay, up to all those
creations of the mind that go out into the world as spiritual
impulses to give mankind a direction and an aim. All these
things to-day involve vast, wide-reaching problems, which we
require to consider, before we can enter upon anything, big or
little, that concerns the social question and the tasks it lays
upon us.
I
spoke just now of, call it a revolution, or call it a reform,
in the character of our spiritual life, and said, that I looked
upon this as the province where I was peculiarly at home. And I
said, that the great anxiety, the great problem of
civilisation which faced me here, was, that this
spiritual life, in the reactionary and conservative form in
which it has lingered down into our days, is suited to lay the
basis for a great science of the natural world, but is bound to
remain sterile and unproductive, when it comes to really
grasping the will-forces at work in social life. This is
a fact, one might say, which to-day is palpable. Let us
just look at what the results have been of this incapacity to
extend the powers of the mind over the field of social
will. — During the last three or four centuries,
when mankind began to emerge from the earlier,
instinctive patriarchal conditions and to think over its
economic system, there arose for the first time all sorts of
views as to the form this economic system ought to take,
— views with which I needn't trouble you to-day, and
which have been superseded. They merged however finally, on the
one side, into the principles of national economy evolved by
the spirit and in the style of university learning, —
which is nothing however but the imposition of middle-class
views upon national economy. And on the other side they
crystallised out into what has found its clearest, its
most forcible, its most comprehensive expression in
Marxianism, in the social views of Carl Marx,
— which are nothing however but a reflexion of those
impulses by which the working-classes are determined to see
national economy propelled.
What are the characteristic features of these two
tendencies? — In pointing them out, we shall at the
same time be pointing out just those things in the present day
which are not practical, but the reverse of all that is
practical, which are ‘ideology.’
University learning: what has it finally come to? except to
regarding anything like social will and purpose on a
large scale as an impossibility, and taking petty tinkerings
for great measures of social reform. This university-made
economics moreover has declared its incompetence to do
anything whatever in national economy beyond registering what
actually takes place, or — expressed in this learned
language itself — making a historical and statistical
analysis of it. This historical and statistical analysis has
resulted in nothing hut a complete paralysis of all social will
and purpose. They examined the existing social tendencies
historically: that is, they recorded what occurred. They
examined them statistically: that is, they
tabulated figures of all that went on, and thereby killed every
sort of impulse towards any social will and purpose
whatever. So that in practice all social will and purpose
exhausted itself in petty details; whilst the things, which
life actually brought with it were devoid of all real
will-force, at a time when the problems of the day had long
been clamouring for active consideration. And these things
which actual life brought with it, being left to run their
course thought-less and will-less, rushed headlong at last into
the World-Catastrophe, which is the great
r e d u c t i o - a d - a b s u r d u m
of this Social Will-lessness.
And, on the other side, yoked to the factory, yoked to the
technical processes, to the soul-blighting capitalist system,
were the working classes, who turned with all their spiritual
fervour to the doctrine of Marx; for they saw in this Marxian
doctrine the most brilliant, the most grandiose criticism,
which they themselves felt in their own hearts towards the
social order: a social order; on which they could only wage
war, because it was one that allowed them no share in its
material and spiritual possessions.
And
this Marxian doctrine, so powerful, so grandiose in its
criticism of Society, — what is the nerve of it? The
nerve of it is this: — ‘Evolution goes forward of itself.
Little by little, in modern times, the economic system has
evolved forms, in which the means of production have gradually
passed over into the hands of Trusts, or similar Combines. This
is the way in which the working-class have become expropriated;
but it is also the way which will inevitably lead, quite of
itself, to the expropriation of the expropriators. Whatever men
may do to assist the process, this evolution will go forward of
itself.’ — This, let me say, is the most unpractical
confession of faith that ever was uttered: the confession, that
evolution must go forward of itself; that Man is tied and bound
to the wheel of history; and that he is bound to wait until the
historic, economic forces in their un-human objectivity of
themselves evolve what then is to be the salvation of the great
masses of the working class!
Then came the World-Catastrophe. And what did it show? It
showed, that all talk of automatic evolution had its origin
simply in the paralysis of the human will. The will of the
working-classes, yoked to the factory, yoked to the
soul-blighting capitalist system, was paralysed by this yoke.
They had no faith in their own power to shape a new
world-order. They made it their confession of faith: ‘For us
too salvation will come in due course: we cannot bring it about
of ourselves.’ And they comforted themselves with this, —
with this confession of faith: ‘Our salvation will come
to us from without, in the course of automatic evolution.’ Such
is the great creed, and such the mis-practice of life amongst
the large masses of the working-class.
And
now came the World-Catastrophe and suddenly demonstrated
that what they put their faith in, the accumulation of the
means of production, didn1t lead to what was
expected of it in the course of evolution, but planted the
working-man down himself on his two feet, as a human
being, and demanded of him: ‘Now then! Act!’ And this ‘Now
then, act! act like a man, out of your own social will and
purpose!’ is like a sign hung up in very luminous letters
before the eyes of the working-classes to-day.
If
one was not going through life asleep; and if one was not a
theorist, simply saying yes or no to propositions
propounded in some theory of life; but if one was a
person who regards what men say and what men think as the
outcome of something much deeper-seated, — as symptoms of
what is going on deep down, inside the external affair, —
then one said to oneself: Men are rapidly drifting into a total
disregard of real practice, into a paralysis of all practical
will. Such was the disposition of men's minds, whilst
those great questions were gathering, which to-day can only
find their answer, when people see fit to introduce
genuine practice into life's mis-practice.
Jumbled together in all the relations of our life to-day, there
is an unnatural conglomeration of Rights, of
Labour and of that, which must really lie below the cry
for social reconstruction in its true form. In the things
about which people are fighting today, there is a great deal
more underneath, than enters the minds of those who are
fighting. In truth: one may say that at every point in all that
is done in these critical times, one may see this
unpracticality coming into it. The cry for socialisation
runs through all the ranks of the working classes; it finds
expression in quite definite impulses; it finds its
immediate expression in the demand of the day for
Works' Councils.
If
the Works' Councils are to play that part in the age of
socialisation, which in reality they are called upon to play,
and which is demanded by the consciousness of the age (though
often may be unconsciously) throughout the wide ranks of the
working-classes, then these Works' Councils must grow up on the
independent soil of an economic life, which in its
internal organisation is completely detached from
everything else in the form either of political or of spiritual
life.
In
saying that the corporate body of Works' Councils must grow out
of a free selection of such persons as are actually
engaged in economic life, so that it may make its own
forms of constitution for the coming economic life of the
future, — this, and what this means, — the whole
nature of what is now rising up from the subconscious depths of
men's souls and seeking expression in acts, — all this is
something so foreign to those who today call themselves
practical people, that they have now in project a Works'
Councils Law, which in every one of its items is a flat
contradiction of all that Works' Councils are intended to be:
— a law which in every one of its items proceeds from the
idea, not of moving on towards a new future, but of somehow
preserving forms that inwardly are dead and done with. There
can be no plainer symptom of the impracticality and utopianism
of this age than the life-remote phaenomenon presented by this
Works' Councils Bill. — Is it not time, that even
people who had till now made their spiritual home elsewhere,
should feel it their personal duty to speak out, when
they see how this age is saturated with Utopianism, — how
infinitely far this age — so rich in life's routine, is
removed from anything like life's genuine practice! -
In
this present age we have — all jumbled together —
impulses still dating from the earliest times; times,
when wave after wave of migrant peoples broke in and built up
territorial lordships, conquered the soil, and on the strength
of conquest of the soil established rights over the soil, out
of which has grown in due course the whole code of legal
rights. In our notions of right and justice, in our impulses of
right and justice, we still have the old conceptions,
principles, laws, attached to the conquest of the soil.
“Of the rights you brought with you at birth” of
these alas! there is still in many respects “no
question.” That age has left much behind with us to-day;
it has left us everything in our national economy which
has to do with the soil. — Then followed the age of
industrialism, which has led to the thing against which people
are struggling so fiercely today in many quarters; namely, to
Capitalism.
What do we mean by Capitalism? By Capitalism we
simply mean, in other words, the private ownership of the means
of production. And so we have, matched one against the
other, (as becomes plain directly one tries to form a
comprehensive view of the whole economy of the civilised globe)
... we find, matched one against the other, on one side those
conditions that arise from the use of the soil for the purposes
of human economy, and those again that arise from ownership of
the means of production, and the use of these for the same
economic purposes.
This is something which very few people see: that down to the
smallest thing, down to the halfpenny that I take out of my
purse to buy some trifle that I need, there is this economic
struggle going on between the conditions arising from the soil,
and the conditions arising from the means of production. Our
whole process of national economy is one constant endeavour to
effect a balance between these two sets of conditions: arising
from the soil, and from the means of production. And into this
whole process we ourselves are forced with all our life's fate
in every field, as men of modern times. And what came about
when the old aristocratic forms of society passed over into its
middle-class forms, can be best described by saying, that these
middle-class forms of society have given rise to the modern
market, governed anarchically by Supply and Demand. In
the market today, we find capital transferred
from hand to hand, from company to company. And subject
to this principle of Supply and Demand, we find human
labour-power, working under a system of wage-relations, and
commodities circulating, the services performed by human
hands.
Three separate things have been flung into the market by the
middle-class order of society: Capital, Wages, and Services
[Leistung:
i.e. that which is performed by labour, whether the manufacture
of an article, a personal service rendered, or a literary or
artistic production.];
and under this middle-class order of society Capital has been made
the substitute for something that in earlier days, under the old
aristocratic world-order, wore a very different aspect. Under
the old aristocratic world-order, based upon conquest of the
soil, everything in the nature of services exchanged between
men was relegated to the sphere of Rights. Part of all
that was produced must be paid as dues to the landlord; and
so-and-so-much one might keep back as labourer. All this was
relegated to the sphere of Rights. One had a right to
consume so and so much oneself; and one had a duty,
because the other man had a right to consume so and so
much of what one produced in his service. Rights were
the rule under the old aristocratic order; that is to say,
rights of privilege, class-rights, ruled everything to do with
human requirements. Much of all this echoes on into our
own times, — vibrates on even into the penny I take out
of my purse to buy something. And through this under-note comes
the sound of the other thing: of what has taken the place of
this old Order of Rights; the sound of all which has turned
capital, human-labour and human
services into commodities, ruled by Supply and
Demand, regulating themselves, that is, according to
profit, according to the most sordid competition, the blindest
human egoism, which leads every man to try and earn as much as
ever he can squeeze out of the social system. And so, in the
place of the old Rights, there came something that was a play
of forces between economic power and economic
coercion. In place of the privileged with
preferential rights, and the others with
deferential rights, under the old patriarchal
relations of master and servant, there came the economic
relations of the middle-class regime, based upon the war of
competition, upon profit, upon economic coercion in the tug of
war between capital and wages. And into this again is coerced
the exchange of commodities, is coerced the adjustment of
prices, which is dependent on the egoist war between capital
and wages. — And to-day, ... to-day what is trying to
grow up ... for this is the really practical thing, to see what
is growing up, and how, more or less unconsciously —
though consciously too in many quarters to-day! — a
new order of society is trying to take shape; one that shall no
longer be based upon relations of coercion, of economic
coercion, but based upon reciprocal services, justly
exchanged; — based, that is, in this respect upon a
really unegoistic and social way of thinking amongst the human
community. And the only practical person to-day, the only
person, who is not working in opposition to what nevertheless
must come, is one who hears the cry that goes up from the whole
depths of the human soul: ‘The old privileged rights,
the old system of capital and wages, must give place to
the system of mutual services!’ How many people are
there to-day, do you think, who understand it as yet in all its
consequences, this great, new, up-welling life-impulse,
springing from human evolution itself, — not conjured up
by the arbitrary wishes of individuals, — this
life-impulse, which has had such a bloody prelude in the
terrible World-War? One may still hear people, even those who
think socialistically, who with every fibre of their will are
bent on combating capitalism, — one may still hear
them talk — and it's a plain symptom of the times!
— of the worker receiving the just wages of his labour,
and that this is the way to combat capitalism!
Anyone who looks deeper into the conditions, knows,-that
Capital will exist, so long as Wages exist. For, as you know,
in the real world we always find two opposites going together:
a north pole, and a south pole; north-pole magnetism, and
south-pole magnetism: each positive has its negative; Capital
brings Wages in its train; and one only needs to look into the
whole business of national economy at the present day, to know
the answer to the question: What are wages paid out of? —
Wages are paid out of Capital! And there will inevitably be
Capital, so long as Wages have to be paid out of Capital.
Anti-capitalism has no sense, unless at the same time one is
clear, that along with capital the wage-system itself must go;
and that there must come a free communal association of the
manual worker and the spiritual worker in the non-capitalist
order of economy. A free communal association, which makes the
manual worker the free partner of the spiritual worker, who is
no longer a capitalist, will do away with the wage-principle,
with the wage-relation; and, with the wage relation, will do
away with the capital-relation. And therefore the only
possible way to talk of capitalism, is to talk of it from the
standpoint of the social requirements of the day, — as
you find them discussed in my book
The Threefold Commonwealth
or
The Life-needs of To-day and To-morrow.
We must start from this important truth: that we
are situated in the midst of this struggle between the two
opposing sets of Rights: the Rights arising from the soil, and
the Rights arising from the means of production; and we must
show, that the soil, in our future economic order, will
be a means of production, and nothing more; and that a
means of production can only accumulate labour-value until it
is ready-finished; that, from that moment on, it is nobody's
property; that, from that moment on, nobody has strictly
speaking any rights of heritage over it; that, from that moment
on, it goes back into circulation in the community, as I have
described in my book* And then, then we come also and very
straight to the discovery, that this was the position held by
the soil from the very first; that all mortgaging of the soil
is a thing against nature; that land and ready-finished means
of production are in no way commodities, but must pass from man
to man by some other means than by exchanging them for
commodities. This is something one may learn at the present day
from the actual practice of life.
That this is something which may be learnt from the actual
practice of life to-day, will be plain from the following
considerations. Nobody can look into life with a
practical eye to-day, who approaches this life with a mind hill
of stereotyped theories, party definitions or merely abstract
ideas. We have moved on today into an age, when man has
awoken to the consciousness of himself, in quite a
different way from ever before. Only their disinclination
to the objective study of souls can make men today blind to the
fact, that since the middle of the fifteenth century we have
entered upon a totally new epoch as regards the evolution of
the human soul, — an epoch, in which the soul of man is
becoming ever more and more conscient. And there is one
class of mankind from whose unexhausted brains the cry goes
forth: ‘Let me come to myself as a human soul, in full
consciousness of my manhood!’ — That, ladies and
gentlemen, however unpleasing the symptoms which may often
accompany it, — that is the soul of the Working-Classes!
And the first words in this appeal for a self-conscient life
under human conditions are as follows: ‘No longer shall Capital
coerce me by unjust economic power through the means of Wages!’
Wages, for the modern working man, represent what he has
to fight against, if he would rise to that full human
consciousness which is absolutely demanded by the age upon
which we are now entering. And it is the task of this age, upon
which we are entering, to give Services their right
place as such in the economic process.
Services can only find their right place In the
economic process, when every measure has been taken on the
other hand to separate out from this process again all that has
become involved with it through the old aristocratic and the
old middle-class regimes; — when we have separated out
from the economic circuit the system of state-rights:
the political relations; — when we have separated out the
spiritual life (which truly has been long enough in
bondage!), and released it from the state on the one side, and
from the economic process on the other. And therefore every
endeavour after a social order in which services shall ensure
just reciprocal services, in which men shall work for men, not
merely every man for himself, is inseparably involved with the
division of the body social into those three organic systems,
which have been fused together and confounded by what had quite
other interests than interests of common humanity, — by
what had, and could have, only interests of caste, interests of
class.
All
these single, separate interests, then, mount up to what we
find as the collective totality of interests when we come to
the big world-affairs. As I mentioned to-day in my opening
remarks, which had a somewhat personal tinge, — a
person who has spent his life in learning to know the
life-needs of all kinds and conditions of men, has his eyes a
little sharpened for those international conditions too, which
have come about through the amalgamation of economic
life, political or rights life, and
spiritual life. Believe me, if one has not been
asleep through all that has happened, one finds so much in
these happenings which is symptomatic and very plainly shows
the impossibility, in international life also, of this
amalgamation of the three fields of life!
Let
me remind you of one thing only: At the time when the German
Empire was founded from reasons of the political life, how
often did Bismarck lay it down as a maxim that, ‘This Empire is
politically saturated; this Empire needs no extension.’ This
was in the first place a political line of thought, proceeding
from the political impulses which led to the founding of the
Empire. And then, whilst the remains, the remnants, of this
political way of thought lingered on amongst the people
in power, economic conditions began to come to the
front, amalgamating ever more and more with these political
conditions; and, finally, the economic conditions gained so
completely the upper hand, that if one asked any of the leading
people (and I often made the experiment during the war): What
are they aiming at on political considerations in
Germany? one got no answer to one's question. But answers came,
and very early in the day, from certain economic
interests: which is to say, that economic interests
wanted to have the decision in a political matter.
— One has only to observe things of this kind with an eye
to the really practical understanding of life!
For
years, the whole tangle of national, that is to say
spiritual and cultural relations, of economic
relations, and of political-international relations of
rights were all knotted up together in the fatal part
played by the so-called Baghdad Railway Question. It was one of
the causes that contributed to set the world on fire. For years
past, any real practitioner of life, any real observer of life,
could see how, — like a knot that is continually
being ravelled and unravelled, — economic, political,
•cultural relations were for ever, now blending, now
undoing one another in this question of the Baghdad Railway.
One could see the thing coming up over the horizon: how It
began politically with the Young Turk Party establishing itself
in Constantinople and setting up Liberalism as a political
system, in place of the old Turkish conservative system. There
one had, to begin with, political considerations.
And then these became mixed up with purely economic concerns,
in the question of the Sanjak Railway and the question of the
Dardanelles. And to this there then came in addition the
cultural problem of the Slavonic question, involving spiritual
relations of a national and cultural character. No steps had
been taken to forestall this confusion of provinces in the
international life too of modern times, and to bring the three
into same form of international structure in which they might
work, not to mutual disturbance, but so as to correct and
balance one another.
Anyone, who looked from the real experience of life in one nationality
to the field of international affairs, might see the terrible
T w i l i g h t o f t h e N a t i o n s
coming up in Europe from this amalgamation of the three provinces
of life in all the great questions of world-politics in modern
times. And for him it lay like a nightmare on his soul:
‘When at last will they see, that the sources of all
really social thinking in every people must lead to a
separation of those three social systems, whose entanglement is
bringing mankind into crises and disaster!’
Our
diplomacy was a mis-practice, a Utopia, an ideology! No wonder
then, that from this quarter the very thing to be set against
it is regarded as a Utopia, as an ideology, as a mere piece of
idealism I These things have finally brought about the
conditions, of which at the present day one can only say to
oneself again and again: When will people wake up to the
seriousness of the times? When at last will they see, that the
worst of all Utopias at the present day is the Utopia that
cannot see that it is a question to-day of big accounts, not
little ones, and that one is sinning against the spirit of the
age when one labels a thing from some hole and corner of one's
own, as being the kind of thing that happens to fall within the
particular limits of one's own understanding, — when one
looks out at life from some point of view like this at
something which obviously demands experience of life,
demands the good will to learn from actual life, — and
then calls this thing unpractical, a piece of idealism! —
When will people at last wake up, and recognise this ‘piece of
idealism’ to be the genuine practice of life? — When will
they be willing to see, that the important thing is not to say,
‘I don't understand that,’ but to feel from the underlying
instincts of life, whether a person is talking, not from some
shadowy theory but from the faithful observation of life
itself! — Or else, — to the great misfortune of the
age! — we shall always be meeting in the social field
with a repetition of something which is a typical picture of
bourgeois philistrosity: — At the time when the plans
were being made for the construction of the first German
railway, they consulted a college of physicians —
practical people therefore, a select committee! —
as to whether it were advisable to build a railway. And these
practical people replied: That it would be better to build no
railway; for that if they did, it would be injurious to the
health of any persons who might eventually travel on it.
But that if, however, there were persons already who were
determined to travel on It, then at any rate they should put up
a high wooden fence to right and left along the line, so that,
when the train rushed by, people mightn't get brain-shock from
the rapidity of the motion. — Well, to-day too, people
are afraid of the on-rush of the social movement. They would
like to put up high fences, for fear of getting brain-shock.
Woe to the weaklings, who want to put up such fences, for fear
the reality might unhinge their brains!
And
so every actual observation of our times is a constant reminder
to speak in such a way, that one knows that in speaking one is
talking into the storm. Though many people may still be unaware
of the storm, yet the storm is raging. May as many people as
possible grow aware of the storm, — may a large enough
number of people grow aware of it, — before it is too
late!
* *
(a
discussion followed; after which
Steiner replied in conclusion:)
After all that has been said by the other speakers in the
course of the discussion, there remains very little for me to
say to-night in addition. I should only like to point out,
— not by way of correction, but simply to prevent any
misunderstanding, — that by ‘capitulation to the
Wilson-Utopia’ I simply meant what the previous speaker, Mr.
X..., himself said. X merely wanted to point out the
significant fact about it, which in my opinion is, that in this
Western Utopia we have before us, what in its
substance as I said is a Utopia. Its Utopian
character has by now, I think, been plainly enough
demonstrated. A Utopia is something which utters very
fine words and words which are meant to be very ideal, but
which lack all basis for realisation. And in this sense
everything that came to light in these Fourteen Points —
insofar as they proposed to bring about ideal conditions
— was Utopian. I am quite of opinion with the gentleman
who spoke, that, with all this, there was something very
different behind; as I expressed it myself in my lecture, there
were extremely real western interests behind. And so we have to
do with a Utopia, which very cleverly conceals behind it
something which is Not-a-Utopia, namely very real interests.
And in saying that in Germany in October 1918 they succumbed
also to this Utopia, I meant to say that in those days people
believed ... well, in certain circles at any rate they
believed ... that these Fourteen Points didn't represent a
Utopia, but something that was to be taken as Not-a-Utopia. I
should like to know otherwise, why they surrendered
— so to speak — to this Utopia! At any rate, they
didn't say: We appeal to the very real selfish interests which
lie behind the Fourteen Points, and to these we
surrender. But they said: We surrender to the Fourteen Points,
and appeal to the realisation of them. And therefore I think,
in the light of what has actually come to pass, that one may
certainly see all the signs of a real capitulation to a real
Utopia.
If
I may say a few words upon the question that was raised about
the Works' Councils; I should like to refer to the brief
remark already made in my lecture: that the whole corporation
of Works' Councils must go out solely from the economic body
itself; and in this way; namely that in the different
businesses, from the different persons actually engaged in
manual and spiritual work, and simply and solely on the grounds
of a confidence founded in this joint associative work, —
that first of all these Works' Councils should be set upon
their legs. Then we have the Works' Councils there,
possessing the confidence of their fellow-workers in the
different businesses. One can't socialise in the individual
businesses. This is just what is so unpractical in the proposed
Works' Councils Bill, which is in all truth wide enough of
anything like real socialisation. The really practical thing
will be, that all the inter-arrangements between the different
businesses should come from the Works' Councils of these
businesses themselves; and they will have to come about
in this way; that the councils elected from the separate
business-works come together and form a Corporation of Works'
Councils covering a definite self-contained system of
economy, and begin first by giving themselves a constitution at
a sort of preliminary Founders' Meeting. And they will also go
on to mark out the lines of direction along which the
individual councils are then to work in their own businesses,
under the joint social management of the whole Corporation of
Works' Councils. It must come out of the forces of the economic
life itself, of an independent economic life, resting upon its
own grounds, if the thing which proceeds to-day from the real,
social foundations of human nature, — not from any red-tape
government theory, — is to what is officially termed
‘march;’ — though indeed this official
‘marching’ is very unlike the old military forward
march, and looks much more like a skipping-about, — or
‘running to cover,’ let us say! —
And
now, after the many points that have been touched on by the
different gentlemen who spoke in the course of the
discussion, it only requires that I should add one thing
to what I have said already; which is: That the age, which we
have now entered upon in the course of historic evolution, is
one which sets a great task before us; the task of combining
together men who render spiritual, and men who render manual
services, and of enabling them to turn their services to full
value, so that they may find their rightful place socially in
the whole social community of which they form part. But
this means, that we must give our minds in deepest earnest to
this demand of the times, so that really we may succeed at last
in arousing men to a mutual understanding and agreement
between man and man in the field of Economics, of
Rights, of the Spirit.
That these three departments of life work best in actual
practice when they are divided, is something very plain to be
seen in a quarter, where people are obliged to-day to let them
work together from separate and very different sources: namely
in the life of the individual family. Just think what would
become of the individual family of these days, if Rights life,
spiritual life and economic life were all jumbled up together
in it chaotically! What is needed for the times to come,
as well as for the present time, is that we should find means
to apply to our social conditions today, what goes on of itself
as a matter of course in the family. But here our eyes grow
confused; and we can't see the wood because of the trees; and
then, if we talk of separating the three systems of the body
social, we are accused of wanting to split the body social into
three parts, whereas of course anything can only live as
a unity. But just in order to keep this unity properly alive,
the body social must be placed on its three proper footings!
It's not I that am so unpractical as to want to chop the horse
into three pieces; all I want is, that those people should come
to their senses who maintain that the only one and undivided
horse is the horse with one leg, not with four. This seems to
me much the same as those people who declare that one wants to
out up the body social into three parts, because one wants to
separate its three limbs. No! what I want, is to establish the
unity of the body social, so that this body social may stand
soundly upon its three legs of Rights, of
Economics, of Spiritual life. But to-day one is shouted
down as a Utopianist, directly one talks of a horse standing on
its four legs; and those are taken for the really practical
people to-day, who maintain, that the only proper horse,
the only one-and-undivided horse, is the horse that stands only
on one leg. — There are many things to-day, which are
only standing upon one leg, and which we need to put upon their
sound number of legs; indeed one might say that very much has
been stood on its head by Utopian dreamers, which we need to
set up on its proper legs.
*
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