Your task is to gain an insight into what the human being really is.
Up to now in our survey of general pedagogy we have endeavoured to
comprehend this nature of man first of all from the point of view of
the soul and then from that of the spirit. To-day we will continue
from the latter point of view. We shall of course continually have to
refer to the conceptions of pedagogy, psychology and the life of the
soul, which are current in the world to-day; for in course of time you
will have to read and digest the books which are published on pedagogy
and psychology, as far as you have time and leisure to do so.
If we consider the human being from the point of view of the
soul, we lay chief stress on discovering antipathies and
sympathies within the laws which govern the world; but if we consider
the human being from the spiritual point of view, we must lay
the chief stress on discovering the conditions of consciousness. Now
yesterday we concerned ourselves with the three conditions of
consciousness which hold sway in the human being: namely, the full
waking consciousness, dreaming and sleeping: and we showed how the
full waking consciousness is really only present in
thinking-cognition; dreaming in feeling; and sleeping in willing.
All comprehension is really a question of relating one thing to
another: the only way we can comprehend things in the world is by
relating them to each other. I wish to make this statement concerning
method at the outset. When we place ourselves into a knowing
relationship with the world, we are first of all observing. Either we
observe with our senses, as we do in ordinary life, or we develop
ourselves somewhat further and observe with soul and spirit, as we can
do in Imagination, Inspiration and Intuition. But spiritual
observation too is observation, and all observation
requires to be completed by our comprehension or conception. But we
can only comprehend if we relate one thing to another in the
universe and in our environment. You can form good conceptions of
body, soul and spirit if you have the whole course of human life
clearly before you. Only you must take into account that in this
relating of things to each other, as I shall now explain, you have
only the rudiments of comprehension. You will need to develop further
the conceptions you arrive at in this manner.
For instance if you consider the child as he first comes into the
world, if you observe his physical form, his movements, his
expressions, his crying, his baby talk and so on you will get a
picture which is chiefly of the human body. But this picture will only
be complete if you relate it to the middle age, and old age of the
human being. In the middle age the human being is more predominantly
soul, and in old age he is most spiritual. This last statement can
easily be contended. People will certainly come and say: But a
great many old people become quite feeble-minded. A favourite
objection of materialism to those who speak of the soul and the spirit
is that people get feeble-minded in old age, and, with true
consistency, the materialists argue that even such a great man as Kant
became feeble-minded in his old age. The statement of the materialists
and the fact are quite right. Only they do not prove what they set out
to prove. For even Kant, when he stood before the gate of death, was
wiser than in his childhood; only in childhood his body was capable of
receiving all that came out of his wisdom, and thereby it could become
conscious in his physical life. But in old age the body became
incapable of receiving what the spirit was giving it. The body was no
longer a proper instrument for the spirit. Therefore on the physical
plane Kant could no longer come to a consciousness of what lived in
his spirit. In spite of the apparent force of the above-mentioned
argument, then, we must be quite clear that in old age men become wise
and spiritual and that they come near to the Spirits. Therefore in the
case of people who, right into their old age, can preserve elasticity
and life power for their spirit, we must recognise the beginnings of
spiritual qualities. For there are such possibilities.
In Berlin there were once two professors. One was Michelet the
disciple of Hegel, who was over ninety years old. And as he was
considerably gifted he only got as far as being Honorary Professor,
but although he was so old he still gave lectures Then there was
another called Zeller, the historian of Greek philosophy. Compared
with Michelet he was a mere boy, for he was only seventy. But
everybody said how he was feeling the burden of age, how he could no
longer give lectures, or, in any case, was always wishing to have them
reduced. To this Michelet always said: I can't understand
Zeller; I could give lectures all day long, but Zeller, though still
in his youth, is always saying that it is getting too much of a strain
for him! So you see one may find isolated examples only of what
I have stated about the spirit in old age; yet it really is so.
If, on the other hand, we observe the characteristics of the human
being in middle age, we shall get a first basis for our observations
of the soul. For this reason, too, a man in middle life is more able,
as it were, to belie the soul element. He can appear to be either
soulless or very much imbued with soul. For the soul element lies
within the freedom of man, even in education. The fact that many
people are very soulless in middle life does not prove that middle age
is not the age of the soul. If you compare the bodily nature of the
child kicking and sprawling and performing unconscious actions
with the quiet contemplative bodily nature of old age, you have
on the one hand a body that shows its bodily side predominantly, in
the child, and on the other hand you have a body that as it were
withdraws its bodily side in old age, a body that to a certain degree
belies its own bodily nature.
Now if we turn our attention more to the soul life we shall say: the
human being bears within him thinking-cognition feeling and willing.
When we observe a child the impression we get of the child's soul
shows a close connection between willing and feeling. We might say
that willing and feeling have grown together in the child. When the
child kicks and tumbles about he is making movements which precisely
correspond to his feelings at the moment; he is not capable of keeping
his movements and his feelings separate.
With an old man the opposite is the case: thinking-cognition and
feeling have grown together within him, and willing stands apart,
independently. Thus human life runs its course in such a way that
feeling, which is at first bound up with willing, gradually frees
itself from it. And a good deal of education is concerned with this,
with this freeing of the feeling from the will. Then the feeling which
has been freed from willing unites itself with thinking-cognition. And
this is the concern of later life. We can only prepare the child
rightly for his later life if we bring about the proper release of
feeling from willing; then in a later period of life as a grown man or
woman he will be able to unite this released feeling with
thinking-cognition, and thus be fitted for his life. Why is it that we
listen to an old man, even when he is relating his life history? It is
because in the course of his life he has united his personal feeling
with his concepts and ideas. He is not telling us theories: he is
really telling us about the feelings which he personally has been able
to unite with his ideas and concepts. With the old man, who has really
united his feelings with thinking-cognition, the concepts and ideas
ring true; they are filled with warmth, and permeated with reality;
they sound concrete and personal. Whilst with those who have ceased to
develop beyond the stage of middle-aged manhood or womanhood the
concepts and ideas sound theoretical, abstract, scientific. It is an
essential factor of human life that the evolution of soul powers runs
a certain course; for the feeling-willing of the child develops into
the feeling-thinking of the old man. Human life lies between the two,
and we can only give an education befitting this human life when our
study of the soul includes this knowledge.
Now we must take notice that something arises straight-away whenever
we begin to observe the world indeed in all psychologies it is
described as the first thing that occurs in observation of the
external world; and that is sensation. When any one of our senses
comes into touch with the environment, it has a sensation. We have
sensations of colour, tones, warmth and cold. Thus sensation enters
into our contact with our environment.
But you cannot get a true conception of sensation from the way it is
described in current books on psychology. When the psychologists speak
of sensation they say: in the external world a certain physical
process is going on, vibrations in the light ether or waves in the
air; this streams on to our sense organ and stimulates it. People
speak of stimulus, and they hold to the expression they form, but will
not make it comprehensible. For through the sense organ the stimulus
releases sensation in our souls, the wholly qualitative sensation
which is caused by the physical process (for example by the vibration
of air waves in hearing). But how this comes about neither
psychology nor present-day science can tell us. This is what we
generally find in psychological books.
You will be brought nearer to an understanding of these things than
you will by these psychological ideas, if, having insight into the
nature of sensations themselves, you can yourself answer the question:
to which of the soul forces is sensation really most closely related?
Psychologists make light of it; they glibly connect sensation with
cognition, without more ado, and say: first we have a sensation, then
we perceive, then we make mental pictures, form concepts and so on.
This indeed is what the process appears at first to be. But this
explanation leaves out of account what the nature of sensation really
is.
If we consider it with a sufficient amount of self-observation we
shall recognise that sensation is really of a will nature with some
element of feeling nature woven into it. It is not really related to
thinking-cognition, but rather to feeling-willing or willing-feeling.
It is of course impossible to be acquainted with all the countless
psychologies there are in the world to-day, and I do not know how many
of them have grasped anything of the relationship between sensation
and willing-feeling or feeling-willing. It would not be quite exact to
say that sensation is related to willing; rather it is related to
willing-feeling or feeling-willing. But there is at
least one psychologist, Moritz Benedikt of Vienna, who especially
distinguished himself by his power of observation, and who recognised
in his psychology that sensation is related to feeling.
Other psychologists certainly set very little store by this psychology
of Moritz Benedikt, and it is true that there is something rather
peculiar about it. Firstly, Moritz Benedikt is by vocation a
criminal-anthropologist; and he proceeds to write a book on
psychology. Secondly, he is a naturalist and writes about the
importance of poetic works of art in education, in fact he analyses
poetic works of art to show how they can be used in education. What a
dreadful thing! The man sets up to be a scientist, and actually
imagines that psychologists have something to learn from the poets!
And thirdly, this man is a Jewish naturalist, a scientific Jew, and he
writes a book on Psychology and deliberately dedicates it to Laurenz
Mullner, a priest, the Catholic philosopher of the theological faculty
in the University of Vienna (for he still held this post at that
time). Three frightful things, which make it quite impossible for the
professional psychologists to take the man seriously. But if you were
to read his books on psychology, you would find so many single apt
ideas, that you would get much from them, although you would have to
repudiate the structure of his psychology as a whole, his whole
materialistic way of thought for such it is indeed. You would
get nothing at all from the book as a whole, but a great deal from
single observations within it. Thus you must seek the best in the
world wherever it is to be found. If you are a good observer of
details, but are put off by the general tendency of Moritz Benedikt's
work, you need therefore not necessarily repudiate the wise
observations that he makes.
Thus sensation, as it appears within the human being, is
willing-feeling or feeling-willing. Therefore we must say that where
man's sense sphere spreads itself externally for we bear
our senses on the periphery of our body, if I may express it rather
crudely there some form of feeling-willing and willing-feeling
is to be found. If we draw a diagram of the human being (and please
note it is only a diagram) we have here on the outer surface, in the
sphere of the senses, willing-feeling and feeling-willing. (see
drawing
further on) What then do we do on this surface when feeling-willing
and willing-feeling is present, in so far as this surface of the body
is the sphere of the senses? We perform an activity which is
half-sleeping, half dreaming; we might even call it a
dreaming-sleeping, a sleeping-dreaming. For we do not only sleep in
the night, we are continually asleep on the periphery, on the external
surface of our body, and the reason why we as human beings do not
entirely comprehend our sensations, is because in these regions where
the sensations are to be found we are only dreaming in sleep, or
sleeping in dreams. The psychologists have no notion that what
prevents them from understanding the sensations is the same thing as
prevents us from bringing our dreams into clear consciousness when we
wake in the morning. You see, the concepts of sleeping and dreaming
have a meaning which differs entirely from that we would give them in
ordinary life. All we know about sleeping in ordinary life is that
when we are in bed at night we go to sleep. We have no idea that this
sleeping extends much further, and that we are always sleeping on the
surface of the body, although this sleeping is constantly being
penetrated by dreams. These dreams are the sensations of
the senses, before they are taken hold of by the intellect and by
thinking-cognition.
You must seek out the sphere of willing and feeling in the child's
senses also. This is why we insist so strongly in these lectures that
while educating intellect we must also work continually on the will.
For in all that the child looks at and perceives we must also
cultivate will and feeling; otherwise we shall really be contradicting
the child's sensations. It is only when we address an old man, a man
in the evening of his life, that we can think of the sensations as
having already been transformed. In the case of the old man sensation
has already passed over from feeling-willing to feeling-thinking or
thinking-feeling. Sensations have been somewhat changed within him.
They have more of the nature of thought and have lost the restless
nature of will they have become more calm. Only in old age can
we say that sensations approach the realm of concepts and ideas.
Most psychologists do not make this fine distinction in sensations.
For them the sensations of old age are the same as those of the child,
for sensations for them are simply sensations. That is about as
logical as to say: the razor (Rasermesser) is a knife
(Messer), so let us cut our meat with it, for a knife is a
knife. This is taking the concept from the verbal explanation. This we
should never do, but rather take the concept from the facts. We should
then discover that sensation has life, that it develops, and in the
child it has more of a will nature, in the old man more of an
intellectual nature. Of course it is much easier to deduce everything
from words; it is for this reason that we have so many people who can
make definitions, some of which can have a terrible effect on you.
On one occasion I met a schoolfellow of mine, after we had for some
time been separated and had gone our several ways. We had been at the
same primary school together; I then went to the Grammar School
(Realschule) and he to the Teachers' Training College, and what
is more to a Hungarian College and that meant something in the
seventies. After some years we met and had a conversation about light.
I had already learnt what could be learnt in ordinary physics, that
light has something to do with ether waves, and so on. This could at
least be regarded as a cause of light. My former schoolfellow then
added: We have also learnt what light is. Light is the cause of
sight! A hotchpotch of words! It is thus that concepts become
mere verbal explanations. And we can imagine what sort of things the
pupils were told when we learn that the gentleman in question had
later to teach a large number of pupils, until at last he was
pensioned off. We must get away from the words and come to the spirit
of things. If we want to understand something we must not immediately
think of the word each time, but we must seek the real connections. If
we look up the derivation of the word Geist (spirit) in Fritz
Mauthner's History of Language to discover what its original
form was, we shall find it is related to Gischt
(froth or effervescence) and to
gas. These relationships do exist, but we should not get
very far by simply building on them. But unfortunately this method is
covertly applied to the Bible and therefore with most people, and
especially present-day theologies, the Bible is less understood than
any other book.
The essential thing is that we should always proceed according to
facts, and not endeavour to get a conception of spirit from the
derivation of the word, but by comparing the life in the body of a
child with the life in the body of an old person. By means of this
connecting of one fact with another we get true conception.
And thus we can only get a true conception of sensation if we know
that it is able to arise as willing-feeling or feeling-willing in the
bodily periphery of the child, because compared with the more human
inward side of the child's being this bodily periphery is asleep and
dreaming in its sleep. Thus you are not only fully awake in
thinking-cognition, but you are also only awake in the inner sphere of
your body. At the periphery or surface of the body you are perpetually
asleep. And further: that which takes place in the environment, or
rather on the surface of the body, takes place in a similar way in the
head, and increases in intensity the further we go into the human
being into the blood and muscle elements. Here, too, man is asleep and
also dreaming. On the surface man is asleep and dreaming, and again
towards the inner part of his body he is asleep and dreaming.
Therefore what is more of a soul nature, willing-feeling,
feeling-willing, our life of desires and so on, remain in the inner
part of our body in a dreaming sleep.
Where then are we fully awake? In the intervening zone, when we are
entirely wakeful. Now you see that we are proceeding from a spiritual
point of view, by applying the facts of waking and sleeping to man
even in a spatial way, and by relating this to his physical form so
that we can say: from a spiritual point of view the human being is so
constituted that at the surface of the body and in his central organs
he is asleep and can only be really awake in the intervening zone,
during his life between birth and death. Now what are the organs that
are specially developed in this intervening region?
Those organs, especially in the head, that we call nerves, the nerve
apparatus. This nerve apparatus sends its shoots into the zone of the
outer surface and also into the inner region where they again disperse
as they do on the surface: and between the two there are middle zones
such as the brain, the spinal cord and the solar plexus. Here we have
the opportunity of being really awake. Where the nerves are most
developed, there we are most awake. But the nervous system has a
peculiar relationship to the spirit. It is a system of organs which
through the functions of the body continually has the tendency to
decay and finally to become mineral. If in a living human being
you could liberate his nerve system from the rest of the
gland-muscle-blood nature and bony nature you could even leave
the bony system with the nerves then this nerve system in the
living human being would already be a corpse, perpetually a corpse. In
the nerve system the dying element in man is always at work. The nerve
system is the only system that has no connection whatever with soul
and spirit. Blood, muscles, and so on always have a direct connection
with soul and spirit. The nerve system has no direct connection with
these: the only way in which it has such a connection at all is by
constantly leaving the human organisation, by not being present within
it, because it is continually decaying. The other members are alive,
and can therefore form direct connections with the soul and spirit;
the nerve system is continually dying out, and is continually saying
to the human being: You can evolve because I am setting up no
obstacle, because I see to it that I with my life am not there at
all. That is the peculiar thing about it. In psychology and
physiology you find the following put forward; the organ that acts as
a medium for sensation, thinking and the whole soul and spirit
element, is the nerve system. But how does it come to be this medium?
Only by continually expelling itself from life, so that it does not
offer any obstacles to thinking and sensation, forms no connections
with thinking and sensation, and in that place where it is it leaves
the human being empty in favour of the soul and spirit,
Actually there are hollow spaces for the spirit and soul where the
nerves are. Therefore spirit and soul can enter in where these hollow
spaces are. We must be grateful to the nerve system that it does not
trouble about soul and spirit, and does not do all that is ascribed to
it by the physiologists and psychologists. For if it did this, if for
five minutes only the nerves did what the physiologists and
psychologists describe them as doing, then in these five minutes we
should know nothing about the world nor about ourselves; in fact we
should be asleep. For the nerves would then act like those organs
which bring about sleeping, which bring about feeling-willing,
willing-feeling.
Indeed it is no easy matter to state the truth about physiology and
psychology to-day, for people always say: You are standing the
world on its head. The truth is that the world is already
standing on its head, and we have to set it on its legs again by means
of spiritual science. The physiologists say that the organs of
thinking are the nerves, and especially the brain. The truth is that
the brain and nerve system can only have anything to do with
thinking-cognition through the fact that they are constantly shutting
themselves off from the human organisation and thereby allowing
thinking-cognition to develop.
Now you must attend very carefully to what I am going to say, and
please bring all your powers of understanding to bear upon it. In the
environment of man, where the sphere of the senses is, there are real
processes at work which play their part unceasingly in the life of the
world. Let us suppose that light is working upon the human being
through the eye. In the eye, that is, in the sphere of the senses, a
real process is at work, a physical-chemical process is taking place.
This continues into the inner part of the human body, and finally
indeed into that inner part where, once again, physical-chemical
processes take place (the dark shading in the drawing). Now imagine
that you are standing opposite an illumined surface and that rays of
light are falling from this surface into your eye. There again
physical-chemical processes arise, which are continued into the muscle
and blood nature within the human being. In between there remains a
vacant zone. In this vacant zone, which has been left empty by the
nerve organ, no independent processes are developed such as that in
the eye or in the inner nature of the human being; but there enters
what is outside: the nature of light, the nature of colour. Thus, at
the surface of our bodies where the senses are, we have material
processes which are dependent on the eye, the ear, the organs which
can receive warmth and so on: similar processes also take place in the
inner sphere of the human being. But not in between, where the nerves
spread themselves out: they leave the space free, there we can live
with what is outside us. Your eye changes the light and colour.
But where your nerves are, where as regards life there is only hollow
space, there light and colour do not change, and you yourself are
experiencing light and colour. It is only with regard to the sphere of
the senses that you are separated from the external world: within, as
in a shell, you yourself live with the external processes. Here you
yourself become light, you become sound, the processes have free play
because the nerves form no obstacle as blood and muscle do.
Now we get some feeling of how significant this is: we are awake in a
part of our being which in contrast to other living parts may be
described as a hollow space, whilst at the external surface and in the
inner sphere we are dreaming in sleep, and sleeping in dreams. We are
only fully awake in a zone which lies between the outer and inner
spheres. This is true in respect to space.
But in considering the human being from a spiritual point of view we
must also bring the time element of his life into relationship with
waking, sleeping and dreaming. You learn something, you take it in and
it passes into your full waking consciousness. Whilst you are
occupying yourself with this thing and thinking about it, it is in
your full waking consciousness. Then you return to your ordinary life.
Other things claim your interest and attention. Now what happens to
what you have just learnt, to what was occupying your attention? It
begins to fall asleep; and when you remember it again, it awakens
again. You will only get the right point of view about all these
things when you substitute real conceptions for all the rigmarole's
you read in psychology books about remembering and forgetting. What is
remembering? It is the awakening of a complex of mental pictures. And
what is forgetting? It is the falling asleep of the complex of mental
pictures. Here you can compare real things with real experiences, here
you have no mere verbal definitions. If you ponder over waking and
sleeping, if you look at your own experience or another's on falling
asleep, you have a real process before you. You relate forgetting,
this inner soul activity, to this real process not to any word
and you compare the two and say: forgetting is only falling
asleep in another sphere, and remembering is only waking up in another
sphere.
Only so can you come to a spiritual understanding of the world, by
comparing realities with realities. Just as you have to compare
childhood with old age to find the real relationship between body and
soul, at least the elements of it, so in the same way you can compare
remembering and forgetting by relating it to something real, to
falling asleep and waking up.
It is this that will be so infinitely necessary to the future of
mankind; that men accustom themselves to enter into reality. People
think almost exclusively in words today; they do not think in real
terms. How could a present-day man get at this conception of awakening
which is the reality about memory? In the sphere of mere words he can
hear of all kinds of ways of defining memory; but it will not occur to
him to find out these things from the reality, from the thing itself.
Therefore you will understand that when people hear of something like
the Threefold Organism of the State, which springs entirely out of
reality and not out of abstract conceptions, they find it
incomprehensible at first because they are quite unaccustomed to
produce things out of reality. They do not connect any of their
conceptions with getting things out of reality. And the people who do
this least are the Socialist leaders in their theories; they represent
the last word, the last stage of decadence in the realm of verbal
explanations. These are the people who most of all believe that they
understand something of reality, but when they begin to talk they make
use of the veriest husks of words.
This was only an interpolation with reference to the current trend of
our times. But the teacher must understand also the times in which he
lives, for he has to understand the children who out of these very
times are entrusted to him for their education.
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