|
|
|
Rudolf Steiner e.Lib
|
|
The Study of Man
Rudolf Steiner e.Lib Document
|
|
The Study of Man
Schmidt Number: S-3817
On-line since: 23rd June, 2002
Up to now we have tried to understand the human being from the point
of view of the soul, in so far as this understanding is necessary in
the education of the child. We must keep the three standpoints
distinct the standpoints of spirit, of soul and
of body, and, in order to arrive at a complete anthropology, we
shall study the human being from all three. The first to be taken is
the psychic, or soul point of view because this is nearest to man in
his ordinary life. And you will have felt that in taking sympathy and
antipathy as principal concepts for the understanding of man we have
been directing our attention to the soul. It will not answer our
purpose if we pass straight over from the psychical to the physical,
for we know, from what spiritual science has told us, that the
physical can only be understood when it is looked upon as a revelation
of the spiritual and also of the soul. Therefore to what we have
already sketched in general lines as a study of the soul we will now
add a contemplation of the human being from the point of view of
spirit, and finally we shall come to a real anthropology,
as it is now called, a consideration of the human being as he appears
in the external physical world.
If you want to examine the human being effectively from any point of
view you must return again and again to the separation of man's soul
activities into cognition (which takes place in thought) and into
feeling and willing. Up till now we have considered thinking (or
cognition), feeling and willing in the light of antipathy and
sympathy. Now we will study willing, feeling and cognition from the
point of view of the spirit.
From the spiritual point of view, also, you will find a difference
between willing, feeling and thinking-knowing. If I may speak
pictorially (for the pictorial element will help us to form the right
concepts): when you have knowledge through thought you must feel that
in a certain way you are living in the light. You cognise, and you
feel yourself with your ego right in the midst of this activity of
cognition. It is as though every part, every bit of the activity which
we call cognition, were there within all that your ego does; and again
what your ego does is there within the activity of cognition. You are
entirely in the light; you live in a fully conscious activity, if I
may express myself in such a concept. And it would be bad indeed if
you were not in a fully conscious activity in cognising. Suppose for a
moment that you had the feeling that while you were forming a judgment
something happened to your ego somewhere in the subconscious and that
your judgment was the result of this process. For instance you say:
That man is a good man, thus forming a judgment. You must
be conscious that what you need in order to form this judgment
the subject man the predicate is good
are parts of a process which is clearly before you and which is
permeated by the light of consciousness. If you had to assume that
some demon or some mechanism of nature had tangled up the man with the
being good while you were forming the judgment, then you
would not be fully, consciously present in this act of thought, of
cognition: in some part of the judgment you would be unconscious. That
is the essential thing about thinking cognition, that you are present
in complete consciousness in the whole warp and woof of its activity.
That is not the case in willing. You know that when you perform the
simplest kind of willing, for instance walking, you are only really
fully conscious in your mental picture of the walking. You know
nothing of what takes place in your muscles whilst one leg moves
forward after the other; nothing of what takes place in the mechanism
and organism of your body. Just think of what you would have to learn
of the world if you had to perform consciously all the arrangements
involved when you will to walk. You would have to know exactly how
much of the activity produced by your food in the muscles of your legs
and other parts of your body is used up in the effort of walking. You
have never reckoned out how much you use up of what your food brings
to you. You know quite well that all this happens unconsciously in
your bodily nature. When we will there is always something
deeply, unconsciously present in the activity. This is not only so
when we look at the nature of willing in our own organism. What we
accomplish when we extend our will to the outer world, that, too, we
do not by any means completely grasp with the light of consciousness.
Suppose you have here two posts set up like pillars. (See drawing.)
Imagine you lay a third post across the top of them. Now notice
carefully, please, how much fully conscious knowing activity there is
in what you have done; how much fully conscious activity such as there
is when you pass the judgment a man is good, where you are
right in the midst of it with your knowledge. Distinguish, please,
what is present as the activity of cognition here from that of which
you know nothing although you had to do it with all your will: why
these two pillars through certain forces support the beam that is
lying on them? Up to now physics has only hypotheses concerning this,
and if men believe that they know why the two pillars
support the beam they are under an illusion. All the concepts that
exist of cohesion, adhesion, forces of attraction and repulsion are,
at bottom, only hypotheses on the part of external knowledge. We count
upon these external hypotheses in our actions; we are convinced that
the two posts supporting the beam will not give way if they are of a
certain thickness. But we cannot understand the whole process which is
connected with this, any more than we can understand the movements of
our legs when we move forwards. Here, too, there is in our willing an
element that does not reach into our consciousness. Willing in
all its different forms has an unconscious element in it.
And feeling stands midway between willing and thinking-cognition.
Feeling is also partly permeated by consciousness, and partly by an
unconscious element. In this way feeling on the one hand shares the
character of cognition-thinking, and on the other hand the character
of feeling or felt will. What is this then really from a spiritual
point of view?
You will only arrive at a true answer to this question if you can
grasp the facts characterised above in the following way. In our
ordinary life we speak of being awake, of the waking condition of
consciousness. But we only have this waking condition of consciousness
in the activity of our knowing-thinking. If therefore you want to say
absolutely correctly how far a human being is awake you will be
obliged to say: A human being is really only awake as long and in so
far as he thinks of or knows something.
What then is the position with regard to the will? You all know the
sleep condition of consciousness you can also call it, if you
like, the condition of unconsciousness you know that what we
experience while we sleep, from falling asleep until we wake, is not
in our consciousness. Now it is just the same with all that passes
through our will as an unconscious element. In so far as we as human
beings are beings of will, we are asleep even when we are
awake. We are always carrying about with us a sleeping human being
that is, the willing man and he is accompanied by the
waking man, by the man of cognition and thought: in so far as we are
beings of will we are asleep even from the time we wake up until we
fall asleep. There is always something asleep in us, namely: the inner
being of will. We are no more conscious of that than we are of the
processes which go on during sleep. We do not understand the human
being completely unless we know that sleep plays into his waking life,
in so far as he is a being of will.
Feeling stands between thinking and willing, and we may now ask: How
is it with regard to consciousness in feeling? That too is midway
between waking and sleeping. You know the feelings in your soul just
as you know your dreams, only that you remember your dreams and have a
direct experience of your feelings. But the inner mood and condition
of soul which you have with regard to your feelings is just the same
as you have with regard to your dreams. Whilst you are awake you are
not only a waking man in that you think and know, and a
sleeping man in that you will: you are also a
dreamer in that you feel. Thus we are really
immersed in three conditions of consciousness during our waking life:
the waking condition in its real sense in thinking and knowing, the
dreaming condition in feeling, and the sleeping condition in willing.
Seen from the spiritual point of view ordinary dreamless sleep is a
condition in which a man gives himself up in his whole soul being to
that to which he is given up in his willing nature during his daily
life. The only difference is that in real sleep we sleep
with the whole soul being, and when we are awake we only sleep with
our will. In dreaming as it is called in ordinary life we are given up
with our whole being to the condition of soul which we call the
dream and in waking life we only give ourselves up in our
feeling nature to this dreaming soul condition.
If you look at the matter in this way, from the educational point of
view, you will not wonder that the children differ with regard to
awakeness of consciousness. For you will find that children in whom
the feeling life predominates are dreamy children; if thought is not
fully aroused in such children they will certainly incline to
dreaminess. This must be an incentive to you to work upon such
children through strong feeling. And you can reasonably hope that
these strong feelings will awaken clear thought in them, for,
following the rhythm of life, everything that is asleep has the
tendency sometime to awaken. If we have such a child, who broods
dreamily in his feeling life, and we approach him with strong
feelings, after some time these feelings awaken of themselves as
thoughts.
Children who brood still more and are even dull in their feeling life,
will reveal specially strong tendencies in their will life. By
studying these things you bring knowledge to bear on many a problem in
child life. You may get a child in school who behaves like a true
dullard. If you were immediately to decide That is a
weak-minded, a stupid child, if you tested him with experimental
psychology, with wonderful memory tests and all the other things which
are done now in psychological pedagogical laboratories, and if you
then said, stupid child in his whole disposition; belongs to the
school for the feeble-minded, or to the now popular schools for
backward children, you would be very far from understanding the
real nature of the child. It may be that the child has special powers
in the region of the will; he may be one of those children who, out of
his choleric nature will develop active energy in his later life. But
at present the will is asleep. And if the thinking cognition in the
child is destined not to appear until later, then he must be treated
appropriately so that in his later life he may be able to work with
active energy. At first he seems to be a veritable dullard, but it may
be that he is not that at all. And you must know how to awaken the
will in a child of this kind. That means that you must work into his
waking sleep-condition, his will, in such a way that later on
because all sleeping has a tendency to change into waking this
sleep is gradually wakened up into conscious will, a will that is
perhaps very strong, only it is at present overpowered by the sleeping
element. You must treat a child of this kind by building as little as
possible on his powers of knowing, on his understanding, but by
hammering in some things which will work strongly on the
will, by letting him walk while he speaks. You will not
have many such children, but in a case of this kind you can call the
child out from the class which will be stimulating to the other
children, and educative for the child himself and get him to
say sentences and accompany his words by movements. Thus: The
(step) man (step) is (step) good (step). In this way you combine
the whole human being in the will element with the merely intellectual
element in cognition, and you can gradually bring it about that the
will is awakened into thought in such a child. It is not until we
realise that in the waking human being we have to do with different
conditions of consciousness, with waking, dreaming, and sleeping, that
we are brought to a true knowledge of our task with regard to the
growing child.
But now we can put this question: How is the true centre of the human
being, the ego, related to these different conditions? The easiest way
to arrive at a true answer to this is to postulate what is
indeed undeniable that what we call the world, the cosmos, is a
sum of activities. These activities express themselves for us in the
different spheres of elemental life. We know that forces are at work
in this elemental life. Life-force, for instance, is at work all
around us. And between the elemental forces and life-force there is
inwoven all that warmth and fire produces. Just think what an
important part fire plays in our environment.
In certain parts of the world, for instance in South Italy, you only
need to light a ball of paper and immediately great clouds of smoke
will begin to rise out of the earth. Why does this happen? It happens
because when you light the ball of paper and thus produce warmth you
rarefy the air in this place, and what is usually at work in the
forces under the surface of the earth becomes perceptible through the
ascending smoke: the very moment you light the paper ball and throw it
on the earth, you are standing in a cloud of smoke. That is an
experiment that can be made by every traveler who goes into the
neighbourhood of Naples. This is an example to show you that if we do
not look at the world superficially we must recognise that our whole
environment is permeated by forces.
Now there are also higher forces than warmth. They too are round about
us. We walk among them continually in going about the world as
physical men. Indeed our physical bodies are so constituted that we
can endure this, though we are unaware of it in our ordinary
knowledge. With our physical body we can pass through the world in
this way.
With our ego, the youngest member of the human being, we could not
pass through these world forces if this ego were to give itself up
directly to them. This ego cannot give itself up to all that is round
it and in the midst of which it is placed. This ego must still be
guarded from having to pour itself out into the world forces. In
course of time it will evolve so that it will be able to enter into
these world forces. But it cannot do so yet. It is necessary,
therefore, that in our fully awakened ego we be not forced to enter
into the real world that is around us, but only into the image of that
world. Hence in our thinking-cognition we have only images of the
world as already described when speaking from the point of view
of the soul. Now we view it also from the point of view of spirit.
In thinking-cognition we live in images; and, in our present stage of
evolution, while we live between birth and death in our fully wakened
ego it is only in images of the cosmos that we human beings can
live, not yet in the real cosmos. Therefore when we are awake our body
has to produce images of the cosmos for us. And then our ego dwells in
these images.
Psychologists take endless trouble to define the relation between body
and soul: they speak of the interplay between body and soul, of
psycho-physical parallelism and many other things. All these are in
reality childish concepts. For the process really at work is this:
when the ego in the morning passes over into the waking condition, it
enters into the body, but not into the physical processes of the body,
only into the world of images, which the body creates from out of the
external processes in the very depths of its being. In this way
thinking-cognition is communicated to the ego.
In feeling it is different. There the ego does enter into the real
body, not only into the images. But if, as it enters into the body, it
were fully conscious, then (remember this is spoken now of the soul)
it would literally burn up in the soul. If the same thing
happened to you in feeling that happens to you in thinking when you
penetrate with your ego into the images which your body has produced
in you, you would burn up in your soul. You could not bear it. This
penetration which is proper to feeling can only be experienced by you
in a dreaming, dulled condition of consciousness. It is only in a
dream that you can bear what really happens in your body in the
process of feeling.
And what happens in willing you can only experience in a sleeping
condition. You would experience something most terrible if in your
ordinary life you were obliged to participate in all that happens when
you will. The most terrible pain would lay hold of you if, for
instance, as I have already indicated, you really had to experience
how the forces brought to your organism by your food are used up in
your legs when you walk. It is lucky for you that you do not
experience this, or rather that you only experience it in a condition
of sleep. For if you were awake it would mean the greatest pain
imaginable, a fearful pain.
Hence you will understand it if I now characterise the life of the ego
during what is usually called waking consciousness which
comprises: complete waking, dreaming-waking, sleeping-waking
you will understand it if I characterise what the ego actually
experiences while it is living in the body in the ordinary waking
condition. This ego lives in thinking-cognition in that it
wakes up into the body; here it is fully awake. But it lives in it
only in images. Hence man between birth and death lives in images
only, when using his thinking-cognition unless he does such exercises
as are indicated in my book
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds and How to Attain It.
Next the ego, in awaking, also sinks into those processes which
condition feeling. In feeling life we are not fully awake, but
dreaming-awake. How do we actually experience what we go through in
feeling in this dream-waking condition? We actually experience it as
what has been called Inspiration, inspired
unconsciously inspired mental pictures. In the artist this is
the centre whence rises all that comes out of the feelings into waking
consciousness. There it is first worked through. There too are worked
through all those inklings, which turn to image in waking
consciousness. The Inspirations spoken of in my book
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds and How to Attain It
are the same as these; only that the experience of the unconscious
inspirations deep within the feeling life of every man is lifted, in
these, into clarity and full consciousness.
And when especially gifted people speak of their inspirations they
really speak of that which the world has laid into their feeling life
and has avowed to come into their fully awake consciousness by means
of their capacities. It is a matter of world content, no less than
thought content is world content. But in the life between birth and
death these unconscious inspirations reflect world processes which we
can only experience in dreaming, for if we experienced them otherwise
our ego would burn up in these processes, or rather it would
suffocate. You sometimes find suffocation setting-in in abnormal
conditions. Suppose you have a nightmare. This means that the
interplay between man and the outer air has come into consciousness in
an abnormal way because something in this interplay is out of order.
In trying to enter the ego consciousness it does not become conscious
as a normal mental picture, but as a tormenting picture, as a
nightmare. And just as this abnormal breathing in a nightmare is
tormenting, so the breathing process as a whole would be torment if
man experienced his breathing with full consciousness. He would
experience it in feeling, but it would be torment to him. For this
reason it is dulled, and so it is not experienced as a physical
process, but only in the dreamlike feeling.
And as to the processes which take place in willing as I have already
indicated to you they would mean fearful pain. So that we can add a
third statement: the ego in action of the will is asleep. What a man
really experiences in such action, with a greatly dimmed consciousness
(a sleeping consciousness in fact), is unconscious intuitions. A human
being has unconscious intuitions continually; but they live in
his will. He is asleep in his will. Therefore in ordinary life he
cannot call up these intuitions; it is only at auspicious moments in
life that they well up. Then in a dim way the human being participates
in the spiritual world.
Now there is something remarkable in the ordinary life of man. We all
know the full consciousness in complete awakeness that we have in our
thinking-cognition. Here we are, so to speak, in the clear light of
consciousness; here we find certitude. But you know that people when
thinking about the world, sometimes say: We have
intuitions. Vague feelings emanate from these intuitions. What
people then relate is often very confused, but it can also be,
unconsciously, quite well-ordered. Finally when a poet speaks of his
intuitions, that is entirely right for he does not produce them
immediately from the region nearest to him from the inspired
representations of his feeling life but he brings them forth,
these completely unconscious intuitions, from the region of his
sleeping will.
Anyone who looks deeply into these things sees that what appear as the
chances of life, are governed by deep laws. For instance, when you
read the second part of Goethe's Faust you want to study
deeply how the structure of this remarkable verse could be achieved.
Goethe was already old when he wrote the second part of his
Faust at least the greater part of it. This was how
it was written: His secretary John sat at the writing table and wrote
what Goethe dictated. If Goethe had had to write it down himself he
would probably not have been able to produce such marvelously chiseled
verses in the second part of his Faust. While he was
dictating in his little room in Weimar, Goethe continuously walked up
and down, and this walking up and down is part and parcel of the
conception of the second part of Faust. While Goethe was
producing this unconscious willed activity in walking, something of
his intuitions pressed upwards and this outer motion brought to light
what the other man wrote down for him on paper.
If you want to make a diagram of the life of the ego in the body it is
possible to make it in the following way:
i. | Waking | ... | ... | Knowing in images |
ii. | Dreaming | ... | ... | Inspired feeling |
iii. | Sleeping | ... | ... | Intuitive or intuited willing |
but if you do this you will not be able to make it clear why
intuition, of which men speak instinctively, comes up more readily to
the image knowing of every day than the inspired feeling which lies
nearer to us. If you now want to draw the diagram correctly (for the
above is not correct) you must draw it in the following way, and then
you will be able to understand the facts more easily. For then you
will say: knowing in images descends in the direction of arrow 1 into
inspirations, and it comes up again out of intuitions (arrow 2). But
this knowing, which is indicated by arrow 1 is the descent into the
body.
And now observe yourself; you are at first quite quiet, sitting or
standing, giving yourself up to thinking-cognition, to the observation
of the external world. There you live in images. What further the ego
experiences in the outward processes descends into the body
first into the feeling, then into the will. You do not notice what is
in your feeling; neither at first do you notice what is in your will.
Only, when you begin to walk, when you begin to act, what you first
observe outwardly is not the feeling but the will. And then in the
descent into the body and the re-ascent, which happens in the
direction of arrow 2, it is nearer for intuitive willing to come to
the image consciousness than for the dreaming inspired feeling. Hence
you will find that people so often say: I have a vague
intuition. In such a case what are called intuitions in my book
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds and How to Attain It
are being confused with the superficial intuition of ordinary
consciousness.
Now you will be able to understand something of the formation of the
human body. Imagine to yourself for a moment that you are walking but
observing the world. Imagine to yourself that it was not your lower
body that was walking with your legs, but that your head had your legs
directly attached to it and that it had to walk itself. Then your
observing of the world and your
willing would be woven into a unity, and the result would be that you
could only walk in a sleeping condition. Because your head is placed
upon your shoulders and upon the remaining part of your body, it is at
rest there. It is at rest, and since you only move with these other
parts of your body, you carry your head. Now the head must be able to
rest on the body, otherwise it could not be the organ of
thinking-cognition. It must be withdrawn from the sleeping-willing;
for the moment you brought it into movement, brought it out of
relative rest into independent movement, it would fall asleep. It
allows the body to carry out the real willing, and it lives in this
body as in a carriage and allows itself to be conveyed by this
carriage. And it is only because the head allows itself, as in a
carriage, to be conveyed by the body, and because it acts while it is
being conveyed during the resting condition, that the human being is
awake in action. It is only when you see things in such connections as
these that you can come to a true understanding of the form of the
human body.
|
Last Modified: 02-Nov-2024
|
The Rudolf Steiner e.Lib is maintained by:
The e.Librarian:
elibrarian@elib.com
|
|
|
|
|