THE EMERGENCE OF COSMIC CONSCIOUSNESS
FROM EARTH CONSCIOUSNESS
Lecture 2.
September 28, 1919 Stuttgart
The best way to make ourselves familiar
with ideas which can lead us, as men, into the spiritual
world,is to try to obtain information through comparison of
different facts which face us in the world.
What I would
like to speak about today will be best explained if I start
with such a comparison, i.e. — if I compare the
consciousness which our present humanity should in accordance
with the mission of our epoch, attain with earlier stages of
consciousness attained by evolving humanity.
Just think
yourselves back to the consciousness of the Greeks, to the
ordinary consciousness which the Greeks had of Space.
(Naturally I mean the consciousness of Space in a wide
sense). You will realise without difficulty that in the
consciousness of Space which the Greeks possessed only a
portion of Europe was comprised — namely his own land and
what bordered on it, a part of Asia and a portion of Africa,
and that beyond this definitely limited region, the world was
a kind of vague, indefinite quantity It might be said that
what formed the horizon of the Greek's consciousness was the
boundary of a something which was a vague infinity, at least
to his consciousness. And this consciousness of the ancient
Greek can be called (although the expression is naturally
rather rough and ready, as such expressions always are
because the consciousness of language is not adapted to
express such things) — this consciousness which the Greek
possessed may be called a land, or territorial
consciousness. Now you know that the essential feature
about the consciousness of humanity in the forward evolution
of modern times has been that this territorial consciousness
as it were, has developed into an Earth
consciousness, that the surface of the Earth as it were,
has shut itself off within definite boundaries. As a result
of the disclosures of modern history man has imagined the
surface of the Earth to be of a spherical shape. Speaking for
the moment from the point of view of universal history, it
may be said that simultaneously with the emergence of this
Earth consciousness as a development out of a territorial
consciousness, a panorama of what was outside and beyond the
Earth came to be built up, a mathematical-geometrical
panorama. The Copernican world-conception arose, and men have
conceived of that which is outside and beyond the Earth in
Space, in terms of mathematics, of geometry and of mechanics.
The Copernican-Newtonian world-conception is, in its
essential feature is a mathematical-mechanical picture of the
world. Now, for every really thinking man, the question must
naturally arise as to whether this mathematical-mechanical
picture includes all that there is to be said about that
which is beyond the Earth and can be perceived b by men in
Space? It obviously does not include it all,,any more than
the case when the old Greek confined himself as it were
within the land or territory bounded by the horizon of his
consciousness, and constructed what was beyond this, in
phantasies. Of course the modern man does not clothe that
which is beyond the Earth in such poetic phantasy as was the
case with the ancient Greek with reference to what lay
outside the territorial region comprised with in his
consciousness, but the modern man encloses it in
mathematical phantasy. Phantasy it is, none the leer
for being mathematical. The essential feature in the attitude
adapted by humanity in general of the present day is this; to
conceive of the Earth as s great sphere in universal space,
and to embrace what is beyond the Earth by mathematical and
mechanical concepts, which for men who think very accurately,
are merely mathematical and nothing else. The concepts which
have been invented about all kinds of gravitational forces
have been to-day abandoned by more thoughtful men and the
world picture of what is beyond the Earth, is really only
conceived of in terms of mathematics.
If we take
all that we have been considering, during the course of many
years, from the standpoint of spiritual science, the question
must arise as to whether the time is ripe for this
super-terrestrial concept of space, this mathematical and
mechanical concept of space, to be ensouled by something
else, by something empirical, something that can be
experienced. For this mathematical-mechanical concept of
Space is not empirical in any sense; the space-concept of
Copernicus, Kepler, Newton, is something that has been
invented, devised, built up from a comparatively small number
of observations. And you will realise since there is no
possibility of investigating what is beyond the Earth with
physical means that such an investigation can only come to
pass by means of spiritual science And that it can
do to-day. The mathematical-mechanical conception yields no
really human factor in this picture; it simply says something
to us in abstractions, which do not touch the substantial
reality which we postulate. Everything that physics an
astrophysics have to tell us today about the
super-terrestrial universe, is cold, barren and without any
real content. As a matter of fact we are just at that point
of time when it is impossible for human evolution to advance
any further if we do not progress beyond a concept of the
world that is merely mathematical and mechanical. Just as the
old Greek had a territorial, or a land consciousness, and man
since the beginning of what is called the modern historical
epoch, has developed an Earth consciousness, so from now
onwards, there must be an expansion to a universal or cosmic
consciousness. And today I would like to devote the hour
during which we can consider these things, to certain brief,
aphoristical suggestions, as to the nature of this world or
cosmic consciousness, which must take the place of a
consciousness which merely embraces the Earth. Of course a
very great deal will have to be done in the future if we are
to collect in more exact detail proofs and verifications of
that which I am going to put before you today in a kind of
aphoristical outline.
You know that
the investigations of Spiritual Science are based up-an
perceptions of the soul,and in my book An Outline of
Occult Science a considerable amount of knowledge gained
in that way,is given out. In that Look I gave as mush as is
necessary for the general consciousness of humanity at the
present time, but it must be extended; what is to be found in
that book must be deepened and widened.
Now with
reference to the coming cosmic or universal consciousness, we
are, if I may make a comparison, in the position of someone
who is travelling in a railway train. He looks out through
the window of the carriage and gets accustomed to the idea
that he sitting still an his seat. He forgets that the train
is itself moving forward. The forward movement which he
himself makes with the train, is something that he forgets.
He only takes into consideration the movements which he
makes, when he gets up, for instance, and in relation to
other men who are likewise sitting in the train, changes his
position. Now, what such a traveller experiences is something
that is very limited in scope, and restricted, and it can be
extended by the fact of a break in the journey at some town
or other. What he has experienced in the train is not, of
course, changed, but the content of his consciousness is
increased every time he gets out of the train at some town
and experiences what is possible in just that particular
place. This is all summed up, as it were, into the content of
his journey, and something concrete emerges out of the
abstract idea of the journey. The travellers' inner knowledge
of the experiences he has had in the different towns is a
guarantee that he has gone some distance and has entered into
a different set of circumstances. Through the experiences
which he has had, he knows that he was not standing still and
that he was only able to maintain the illusion of being at
rest so long as he remained in the train itself.
Now this is
something entirely different from what is often said in
discussions on the Copernican world-conception. Of course on
such occasions mention is made of all kinds of illusions
under which man labours, for example, the illusion that he
believes to be standing still on the earth, whereas as a
matter of fact, he moves together with it, since it is itself
moving. But what I mean here is not that. I want to point out
something else, namely that man can acquire certain inner
knowledge in the course of his life, and especially in the
course of experiences which follow one upon each other which
are comparable to the experiences which a man has in towns
when he gets out of a train and into it again, and so in a
certain sense pulls himself up in the inner experiences of
his soul, and enters the full content of inner experience at
that point. Therein can be found a guarantee, a proof, that
while a man is in the world, he travels through space and
experiences something which says to him; You, as man, are not
at rest, you are in process of taking a real world journey! I
want you to be clear in your minds that something like that
which is suggested by this parallelism, is the case. The
proof of it can of course only be found in the actual
experience. Make it clear to yourselves that there can be in
the life of the soul, different experiences, in consecutive
periods of time which are a guarantee of the fact that one
passes on to different points in universal, in cosmic space.
We shall afterwards see that this is all said by way of
comparison. We shall see too that the difference between the
consecutive experiences indicate an element of space which is
of much more qualitative a nature than the merely
quantitative element which is usually in the mind
when Space is spoken of. Anyone who has real inner
experience, and not merely the abstract experiences which are
frequently brought forward in so external a sense when
mystical matters are being talked about, knows quite well
that there is something in what I have just mentioned.
Whoever has inner experiences is able to notice in the course
of his earth life, differences in the content of his soul
life at the ages of, say, 30, 40, or 50 years. If he thinks
about these inner souls experiences, he knows that he has
moved on the world, that he has sought out other places and
that his inner, mystical (if I like to use that term)
experiences have changed their character. I am here speaking
of experiences which are only taken into account by those who
do not look upon mysticism in an external, abstract way, but
who look upon it as something concrete in inner experiences.
The abstract mystic may talk from the age of 25 years, right
up to the end of his life, of the “God within
him”. But a man who knows how to understand inner
experiences as a concrete reality, knows that these inner
experiences change their nature and content, as if on a world
journey, which is not the same as a tour around the
earth. If I may again express myself mystically, we traverse
universal space consciously through our inner experiences.
But we only do it as it ought to be done, when we reflect
upon our relation to the surrounding world in a much more
definite fashion than is usually the case.
It is quite
possible to look upon our relation to the surrounding world
in such a way that on the one side we have only our sense
perceptions in mind, and on the other our desires, our
willing, our deeds, our acts. The fact of holding our sense
perceptions in the mind, sets us in definite relationship
with the outer world; we perceive through eyes and ears,
certain facts of the external world — we are in living
intercourse with the outer world. What happens — happens
as it were, at the margin of our corporeality. To-day I will
not go into certain physiological objections, or those of
theories of cognition which could seemingly be brought
against what I am saying, because what I want to do is to
outline the nature of the consciousness which must be
attained in contradistinction to the earth and the
territorial consciousness already described.
Our sense
perceptions then, place us in a certain relationship to
external events. And again, when we act, we stand but from
the standpoint of another pole of our being in a certain
relationship to external events and occurrences. We are
involved in them, involved in a real sense, for we have
ourselves partly brought them about. Between these two
extremes of our life as human beings, is to be found
everything which goes on in the field of our consciousness;
on the one side there is the relationship to the outer world
given us by the senses, and on the other side, by our desires
and acts.
In that we
develop feelings and conceptions of what our senses perceive,
we live an inner life. And willing is fashioned from feeling
and perceptions which have either deepened or condensed, as
it were, into faculties. So that between perception and
willing lies that which we psychically experience. But now,
what is present in sense perception, is only seemingly a
unity. In sense perception we look at the world and it
appears to us as something uniform, a unity perceived through
the senses. But as a matter of fact within this apparent
unity, a duality is contained. For anyone who is capable of
real perception, a duality is contained within what seemingly
is a unity; there is a continual dying and uprising again.
The world without us is in a state of perpetual dying and
again coming to birth. In every moment in the world, we live
in something that faces death, and out of that death, life
continually comes forth again. If you look at a cloud, or
anything else in the outer world it appears to you as a
unity; but that it is not, The fact is that something is
dying in the cloud, and out of this death something is again
being born. Out of what comes from the past, there develops
something which goes forward into the future. In all that we
perceive there is ever contained fuel that is burning away
and dying out; and fire that is arising, newly created,
passing over as living form into the future. Then through
such a training as is given in The Way of Initiation
and Initiation and its Result, we learn how to
separate these two poles of sense perception from each other,
and to perceive actually the phenomena of death and coming to
birth, then for the first time the world takes on a real
aspect for us. When a man who is trained in the right way
observes another man through the senses, he sees in that
other man something that is continually dying and something
that is continually arising again. Dying — coming to
birth; dying — coming to birth, that is what we see when
we have trained our powers of observation to some degree.
When this
continual dying and coming to birth becomes objective to us,
when we really see it and do not merely imagine it in an
abstract way — when we see continually in a man, a corpse
and a child coming into being (and it can be actually seen in
this picture) — in that moment we have within our range
of vision, the three hierarchies of of the Angels, Archangels
and Archai. The world is full of real substance. It is no
longer a unity such as we used to see when we look at nature.
We cannot observe this dying and coming to birth, this Prana
and Shiva of nature, without finding the whole of nature
transformed and resolved as it were, into the activities of
the spiritual beings of the three Hierarchies immediately
above man. And so it is at the other pole of our being. In
our deeds and acts there is again a continual dying and
arising. But at this pole it is much more difficult to
perceive it. A long and arduous training is necessary, but it
can be done. And we then are within range of wisdom of the
Seraphim, Cherubim and Thrones. Through meditation then, we
perceive what is between the two poles: we are able to
contemplate that Being Whom, as I have told you, is to be
found midway between these two poles. Everything becomes more
vital, more living in our epoch as we gradually acquire this
way of thinking.
But by rising
to this height of contemplation, our soul life changes
considerably. 'hen we really have got to the point where we
see in our surroundings the activities of spiritual beings,
then, at the same time we get to a point where we are able
concretely to observe the differences in the soul life of the
different epochs of which I have already spoken. And then
when we have learnt (it is difficult to learn, but it is
possible) — to take account of these inner changes in
concrete inner experiences — then we see ourselves to be
travelling through universal, or cosmic space. And then we
know, not by means of external mathematical considerations,
not by the sequence of inner experiences, that we together
with the earth have changed our position in cosmic space. And
then cosmic space becomes a very different thing to the
mathematical-mechanical space conceived of by Copernicus,
Kepler, and Newton. It becomes something that is inwardly
vital and living, We learn to distinguish movement which we
make as men in universal space. We learn too, to
distinguish a movement which is made from left to right
— that is an actual movement which we make with the
Earth from another movement which is an ascending one as it
were; we realise that in turning, we also ascend in
space. Yet a third movement — a “forward”
movement I might call it — an onward movement. This is
not the same thing as moving an the Earth but is something
which is done together with the Earth which can be proved by
inner experience. We can prove to ourselves that when we turn
from left to right, we ascend and at the same time go
forward. So, by inner experience, we observe a threefold
movement made, not in relation to some other heavenly body
but a movement in an absolute sense in space.
Now of course
you will say that the present consciousness of humanity is
very far away from the conception that man in this sense is a
world traveller and that he can quite well prove to himself
the reality of this world journey. Yet there is a means
whereby such consciousness can be acquired, however far away
from these things human consciousness nowadays may be. What I
have described is a reality, even if men to-day know nothing
about it. Their ignorance can be compared to the belief which
may be held by a man in a railway train who imagines that he
is sitting still, whereas he is moving forward with the whole
train. Now why is this belief general? In the first place the
purely mathematical and mechanical Copernican world
conception has for the last three or four hundred years had a
more lulling to sleep than an enlightening influence an men.
I have often said that this purely mathematical-mechanical
world conception is really based upon a mistake which is
quite fairly obvious. It presents a convenient picture of
space but really no more that that. In the well known work of
Copernicus about the revolutions of the heavenly bodies in
space, three tenets are to be found, but modern science bases
itself only an the first two, and takes no account of the
third. Copernicus knew something more than what is admitted
by modern astronomical science. And this “more”
he concealed in his third tenet -but no account is ever taken
of that third tenet. The observations made do not agree with
the Copernican system, but modern science disregards this.
Today when under certain conditions a man investigates
empirically where some star or other ought, according to the
correct reckoning set forth in the Copernican system to be
found at a particular point of time it is not there. But then
there is the so-called Beseel correction, and it is applied
in order to obtain the right result. The application of this
“correction” is only necessary because the third
tenet of Copernicus has not been taken into account. Because
of this, a kind of convenient mathematical-mechanical world
conception or world picture has come into existence during
the last three to four hundred years. It is not in accord
with many things, but of course today anyone who mentions
this fact is put down as a fool! It is scientific to believe
that the various facts are quite in accord with each other.
Humanity has been lulled to sleep by the Copernican
conception of the world with reference to certain
facts — facts which are nevertheless substantiated by
inner experience. Human consciousness is dulled and in the
future men will have to see to it that this state of things
does not continue.
I have often
remarked that men do not wish to understand spiritual science
with their own “healthy” sense. This is really
only a result of certain educational prejudices which hold
sway at the present time. It is very frequently the case
nowadays that when the occultist gives out his experiences
people say: Oh well, it may be so, but the only people who
can know that are those who have gone through a certain
“mystical” training as they describe it. Now that
is right to a certain degree, but not entirely right. I have
repeatedly said that up to a certain point, everyone
today can recognise as fact, through his own consciousness
what is, for example given in my Outline of Occult
Science. There is no need to take it merely an
authority. Everyone can understand it by means of an ordinary
healthy human intelligence But How? It could be understood by
anyone who had been sent to the Waldorf School from his
seventh to his fifteenth year. In that school the forces of
his soul would have been healthily developed through methods
which correspond to reality, and then, if he had gone to a
more advanced school, the elasticity of' his soul forces
would have enabled him to absorb what people ordinarily begin
to learn after the age of fifteen. That would be one way of
getting men who would realise that reality is only given by
what is substantiated by spiritual science — and that
everything else is nonsense. The fact that men will
not admit this, does not originate from any
impossibility to understand spiritual science without
training, but arises because our school education between the
seventh and fifteenth years is of such a kind as to kill out
and stultify certain forces instead of waking them into
activity. It follows that men resist the acceptance of facts
given by spiritual science, although they would readily
accept many of them if their psychic powers were developed in
a healthy way. Powers of the soul which have been developed
in a healthy way are not dead and benumbed as appears to be
the case in the majority of men of our modern times; they are
mobile, fluidic, elastic, and anyone in whom they had been
rightly developed between the ages of seven and fifteen would
be irritated at the modern way of learning things. Today
people are satisfied with many things because certain
incorrect theories have made the illusions far greater than
they really need be.
I have often
quoted a characteristic example. Children in their 12th,
13th, and 14th years are told that lightning comes from
friction in the clouds and it is admitted at the same time
that the clouds are wet. Of course they are; but then when it
is a matter of producing the electric spark which is the
earthly replica of the lightning, it is found necessary to
keep the electrical apparatus and everything belonging to it
perfectly dry in order that no water of any kind is present;
so that it comes to this — the only thing that is present
when the lightning originates, is removed and yet the
lightning is the same phenomena as the electric spark!
Children and grown up people are quite satisfied to be lulled
to sleep with all kinds of hypotheses of this kind. There are
innumerable examples of the same kind where people will
accept obvious nonsense simply on authority and yet in our
days there is much talk of the laying aside of all
authority — people say that they are no longer credulous
of' authority. Yet as a matter of fact if they had been so
credulous it would have been quite impossible for the
Marxian-Socialistic world conception to arise in our epoch,
for it is far more credulous of authority even than ancient
Catholicism!
It is today
one of the most essential cultural tasks,to overcome that
which in so retardative a way interferes with men's powers of
understanding — and to substitute for the present system
a healthy educational organisation. It is one of the most
important social talks to work for the removal of impediments
to human understanding. And then men will not be so obstinate
and perverse about accepting what spiritual science has to
say; they will rather be irritated by much that orthodox
science has to say today, that is if their development has
been a healthy one. They will very soon learn to see through
all the contradictions. There is instinctive opposition
nowadays to the establishment of healthy educational
conditions, for it is felt that if they were to be
established the authority of modern science would be
undermined in a drastic way. It is essential that fluidic
soul forces should again be produced in humanity and they
will emerge quite naturally as a result of the knowledge
which Spiritual Science is able to impart. As a result of
these elastic soul forces humanity would be able to
understand what is meant when it is said that man is within a
movement which is absolute; men would furthermore
understand how a world consciousness can grow out of
an earth consciousness.
To speak in
pictures for a moment, but the picture is really a good
one — it is as if a man learns to feel himself as a
traveller through universal space — a traveller whose
movement consists of a rotation combined with a forward
movement and a movement from below upwards, If we sketch the
result of these movements — moving upwards in rotation,
moving forward in this upward spiral movement — the curve
will represent the path of the earth through cosmic space,
not mathematically and dynamically as it is built up through
the Copernican- Newtonian world conception — but as a
result of inner observation. This is the way in which it
ought to be arrived at for then we get something that is not
abstract like the Copernican-Newtonian world conception, but
very concrete — something that is actually super-sensible
experienced empirically, if one may be allowed to use this
tautology. The importance of this kind of cosmic
consciousness does not lie in the fact that through it a man
begins to feel things more in accordance with the truth than
is now the case when he believes the Copernican world
conception and the path of the earth as conceived of by it,
to be correct, but very much else is dependent upon it. I
makes on inwardly a different man. A man learns to feel
himself not merely a citizen of the Earth but of the
Universe, of the Cosmos. The world expands,as it were, for
anyone who comes near the forces which are actually operative
in these movements. In the rotary movement from left to right
are to be perceived the activities of the Angels; in the
ascent from below upwards the activities of the Archangels;
and by the advance in universal space forward are to be seen
to movement of the Archai, the forces of the Time Spirits. By
taking up into his consciousness this absolute movement
through the cosmos man turns his gaze into a spiritual space
and becomes aware of the fact that physical space is only an
abstract image of this concrete, spiritual space, in
which the activities of the higher Hierarchies are to be
found.
It follows
from what I have just said that such a consciousness is
connected with something else. Anyone who has an idea that
there is something of this kind bound up with the real being
of man must necessarily realise what terrible harm is
performed by modern education in that it allows certain
forces to be paralysed in our children up to their fifteenth
year and they then as students develop into something that is
a natural result of these paralysed forces. It follows that
young people between the ages of 15 and 21 absorb things that
are not at all what the present time demands. And in their
souls there exists things that are very different from what
they ought to be. I assure you that by giving unctuous
exhortations to children up to fifteen years old and then
again later at an age when people used to have ideals as
young men and girls of 20 years of age — you will attain
absolutely nothing at all; or at least only that the young
people at our Universities and High Schools become what they
are today — which there is no need for me to describe any
further! The only way to obtain real results is by giving
free play to forces which should be active during student
days, which nowadays are simply paralysed. Education today is
a problem touching the whole of humanity. It is a problem not
for arbitrary ideals, but for the whole of humanity, a
problem which must be understood in the light of the very
deepest demands of the present time. At most today men have a
presentiment that muck ought to be different — let us
say, for example, in medicine, possibly also in the realm of
law and judicial matters, but that feeling when it arises is
promptly squashed by the lawyers! Men have a kind of feeling
that many things are not what they ought to be, but that they
cannot be changed. The aim of mankind must be directed at the
right period of life to the awakening and not to the
paralysing of forces within them. The life period between the
seventh and fifteenth years is not there for nothing. During
this period, perfectly definite forces out of human nature
which must be reckoned with when it is a question of
education or giving instruction at this time of life. When
anyone has this in view in education it is a very different
thing to working arbitrarily: without any such aim. Certain
things will be observed which today pass by entirely
unnoticed.
I have called
attention to these matters in the article which will appear
in the next number of the Waldorf magazine treating them from
several different points of view. I have intimated that we
can no longer today be satisfied with pedagogics modelled as
they often are in perfectly good faith and with the best will
in the world. Certain methods and principles and standards
are drawn up — in good will perhaps, but without any real
insight — and it is believed that these standards of
pedagogics can be learnt. Herbart and his followers
have this belief to-day that just by “learning”
pedagogy it is possible to become a good teacher. Now even in
the case where a set of standard rules is the most perfect
imaginable — the rules are almost as worthless for
teaching as a well-written book on aesthetics is worthless to
the artist. It is quite certain that well written books on
aesthetics do not make a man into an artist — and a
science never makes a true teacher. It is not necessary to
learn physiology in order to be able to feed oneself; a man
can feed himself by a science that is quite different from
physiology. Physiology is there for another purpose and if it
is brought into the question of correct feeding, it comes in
as a makeshift. It was always a horror to me to meet men at
table who had scales near them in order to measure out and
weigh every morsel that they put into their mouths and eat at
a meal. That is am example of where the science of physiology
interferes in a most destructive way in the process of
feeding. Ah yes, you may well laugh at that; but those who
because of their scientific prejudices feel such a thing to
be justifiable, would laugh for quite another reason
considering what I have said to you today to be the most
god-forsaken dilettantism. He may laugh at these things from
diametrically opposite points of view.
Well now, a
cut and dried system of Pedagogics can never produce real
teachers. And why? It is drawn up in such a way that its
fundamental rules have to be accepted and then education is
of no benefit at all. What is desirable is to forget
pedagogics altogether when one goes into a classroom; to
forget everything that may be known about academic
pedagogics! Every time it should grow naturally out of a wide
knowledge of what man and humanity is. Nobody can be trained
to be a teacher by the mere fact of learning pedagogy;
pedagogy can only be stimulated in men when they have
acquired a knowledge of the nature of man. We should
disregard pedagogics as a science as it were, and at most
regard it as artists regard aesthetics, being quite conscious
of the fact that aesthetics and its laws can never teach how
to paint. An artist in Munich once said to me when I was
speaking to him about aesthetics and Carriere — who was a
celebrated authority on the subject: “When we were in
the Art School we used to call Carriere ‘an old grunter
on aesthetic rhapsodies!’”(Wonnegrunzer). Now it
has not occurred to students as yet to give the same kind of
appellation to theoretical pedagogics, for the general idea
is that in pedagogics it is possible to make use of things
which cannot be used in art. But as a matter of fact, the two
things are the same. Into pedagogic training there should be
brought that element which is to be found in our spiritual
teachings — knowledge of Man, insight into the
nature of humanity and that is able to stimulate a living
relationship with the human being which is developing out of
the child. Pedagogy should be born afresh every moment in the
teacher; the impulse to teach and instruct in a certain way
arises as the immediate result of having any particular child
in front of one. This will produce quite a different kind of
atmosphere from what prevails in the school room today, just
because it is created not by cut and dried rules of
education, but because it flows of itself out of
life — living life as it were! If education were to arise
out of life in this way, then those forces which ought to be
present at the age of fifteen will not be paralysed, and a
man will enter upon his later life with forces that are
fluidic in his soul-forces of a kind which are necessary in
order that something similar to what happened at the
transition of the Middle Ages to modern times — when
territorial consciousness was transformed into an Earth
consciousness, may come to pass in our epoch — in order
that out of an Earth consciousness there may grow a world
consciousness, a cosmic consciousness. Outer experiences will
not produce this; it will only come through the development
of susceptibility for inner consecutive experiences of the
soul. Today man has not the faintest consciousness of the
dissimilarity of there souls experiences.
Now what is
the position to-day? Men are children; they act like children
influenced by their environment. Then the child becomes an
adult; the concepts become more abstract, the experiences
richer; that is the case with everybody. But with the soul it
is not the same as is the case with regard to the external
bodily part of us. We get a more sharply defined countenance
when we reach a certain age; we have no longer the round
curves of childhood; we get white hair and wrinkles, and we
very often get bald! In short, the external bodily part
changes. We cannot, however, say that the inner soul nature
changes in this way — at most it gets more and more
crammed full — but it does not grow in such a way that it
changes from the point of view of thee external world. Old
age and childhood have a wrong relationship to each other.
Man today has no consciousness of things of which I have
often spoken to you; for instance that an old man can
bless and that the blessing of an old man has a
special significance — a significance which is not there
in the case of a middle aged man. Men of today have no
consciousness of such things — simply because it is not
known in our days that if one is to be able to bless rightly
in old age, one must have learnt in childhood how to fold the
hands (in prayer or veneration) For the power to bless in old
age arises out of the folding of the hands in prayer in
childhood. The soul element has the same relationship to
blessing and the folding of the hands in prayer as grey hair
has to the the hair of childhood. This inner change enters
the sphere of knowledge of modern humanity in a very limited
sense; but it must do so again to a greater degree. Men must
again come to a point where they can understand life in its
different metamorphoses. Otherwise we shall never get out of
the terrible state of things which, for instance, makes it
possible for anyone who is 18 or 19 years old and has a
little talent, to become at that age, a Feuilletonist.
[A journalist responsible for the critical and
literary articles which sometimes appear in a newspaper below
the leading articles. The feuilletons are usually divided from
the rest of the newspaper by a line.]
People who read the feuilletons
produced by these men have no idea that they have been
written by someone only 18 years old — and take them
quite authoritative utterances. But if a man writes
feuilletons at the age of 18 he does not develop any further.
It also comes about that men when they are only 20 or 21
years old are considered mature enough to go into Parliament,
or to become a town councilor! They are supposed to be
capable to do this kind of thing. It is in these cases
considered to be unnecessary at the age of 40 years to try to
be a more accomplished person than was the case at their age
of 20, for everything that the world can offer and what can
be offered to the world, has already been attained! At the
age of 20 one chooses or is chosen and the thing is finished!
But men will first understand the wor1d in a concrete sense
when they again realise that life is something which
undergoes concrete transformation. Then that abstract
socialism of which we hear so much today, will disappear and
something concrete will take its place.
So you see
that the growth of a cosmic consciousness out of an earth
consciousness will be of great significance, especially
because of what is produced in men by their feelings; for the
important thing in such matters is not what a man knows but
how he feels. There are certain things associated with life
which can be understood only when this cosmic or universal
consciousness is reached.
There is a
great deal of abstract talking today about the ages or
generations as they follow each other in life. We think
something in this way — I mean those of us who have
reached a certain age, for I except young people from this; a
man has capabilities of a certain kind; he lives in such and
such a way; his childhood was spent in such and such a way.
People are really very short-lived, for they get angry with
children when they do the same things as they did at the same
age; they do not understand that children of to-day do the
same kind of things as they themselves used to do; they
expect those who are now children to be as well behaved as
they are as grown up people, and do not realise that good
manners and behavious have first to be acquired. But apart
from this, there is something else. Men generally imagine
that children now must be just the same as they were when
they were children — a generation ago; children, who are
born now must be just the same as I was in the year 1860! Now
that is nonsense. For we are in an absolute sense, further on
in cosmic space and those who are babies now are born at a
different point of space. Suppose you travel from Stuttgart
to another town today — you will have had something to
eat in Stuttgart today and tomorrow somewhere else. You
cannot have a meal in Stuttgart when you travel. And the
children who are born in our time, cannot have the same
psychic constitution as those of us who have reached a
respectable age had when we were children. We must realise
that childhood itself changes. This is connected with our
absolute movement in universal space — of which
mathematical space is only a schematic image. There is a
tendency today to take ever thing in an absolute sense and it
is a matter for rejoicing when this is not so. I was recently
very pleased in Berlin when a man came to see me who had
read — well,what shall I say the
“discussions” of the Threefold
Commonwealth which appeared under the title of A
False Prophet in the paper called Die Hilfe. I
do not know whether any of you read that effusion. This man
was an American and he said to himself that there was
something interesting about it. And he came to see me with
Herr Pfarrer Rittlelmayer and explained that in spite of the
feeble style, he had realised that it was a matter of
interest. Among the questions which he — all of which
were quite understandable — was the following, which
specially pleased me; “One can see that the Threefold
State is necessary for modern times and that it must be put
in the place of the old uniform State; is it your opinion
that the Threefold Commonwealth is the final and conclusive
solution of the social question?” I answered him:
“Most assuredly not; but in the course of historical
development it has come about that in past centuries the
State as a unity has been more in evidence and now the times
demand a threefold Commonwealth, a time will come when the
Threefold Commonwealth will have to be replaced by something
different. That will not however, be for about three or four
hundred years and then it will be necessary again to consider
what should take place of the Threefold Commonwealth”.
Now that is the opposite of chiliastic thought, the opposite
to the thought that imagines the kind of empire which has
lasted for a thousand years to be right for all time. It is
the opposite of thinking which imagines that once a blessed
existence is obtained for humanity it must remain for all
time. Life in the world is not so easy as that. What is
essential is that what is right for a particular epoch should
be brought about and then substituted at the right time by
what the following epoch demands, That is the essential
point, that is organic thinking in contradistinction to
mechanical thinking — and mechanical thinking is what
holds sway at the present time; men really imagine that there
is one absolute right for all time. One thing is right for
Stuttgart, another for New York, another for Australia, One
thing is right for 1919, another for 2530. I assure you that
the evolution of humanity is not so simple as to possess one
absolute Right. Things are always right for particular places
and for particular times; there must be concrete thinking
which arises from the facts and relationships. And that will
happed when humanity is conscious of its absolute movement in
universal space. a consciousness which, however, can only be
induced through inner experiences, through inner life.
I have again
to-day called your attention to something which should
indicate to you how things must be looked at with reference
to the penetration by spiritual science of our modern
culture. Anyone who understands such matters,will see that
humanity's love of ease resists spiritual science, for
everything else is far more convenient, far easier, Spiritual
science is terribly inconvenient! Spiritual science does not
permit of our thinking out a certain condition of things
which can remain for ever; it forces us to think out what is
good and right for the centuries immediately following,
perhaps even for a still shorter period of time. But this
cannot be thought out by abstract concepts of the intellect
about humanity, but only when a real effort is made to
understand the special characteristics of the particular
epoch, and to realise thereby what it demands. That may be
inconvenient, but that is the reality. Men today like the
settle down comfortably into cultural evolution, especially
those men whose aim it is to be leaders in it!
I will give
you an example of the understanding which persons of
authority at the present time have of' spiritual science. I
won't relate the story in detail in case someone might get
offended, but in a certain town a man had occasion to lecture
about Anthroposophy in a private High School. He was
lecturing about modern world conceptions and he wanted to
include an address about Anthroposophy because he considered
it historically necessary — you see people try nowadays
to be really “all round”. Now how did this man
set about it? The plan of the lectures, the programme,was
drawn up at the beginning of the tem and a certain hour was
allotted to “Anthroposophy” just as in certain
hours the subject was Darwinism, a particular hour was set
aside for “Steiner's Anthroposophy”. This was all
drawn up at the beginning of the term. Now this man, when he
put Anthroposophy into the programme, had not the very least
idea of what was to be found in a book about Anthroposophy.
When the evening for this particular lecture came round, this
man went to someone who had my books, and in the morning
selected the most important of them in order to get
information, in order to be in a position to give his lecture
an Anthroposophy in the evening. It is very convenient to
familiarize oneself in such a way about a world-conception,
and then to give it our authoritatively. Such a thing as this
is by no means rare in our modern days, and it deserves to be
mentioned. For very, very much of what is said and lectured
about and written about in the present day has no greater
“depth” than this and it is accepted credulously.
Then out of this credulous acceptance it built up what people
have in their heads and in their souls about the different
world conceptions. We must not close our eyes to facts like
this which show the most terrible superficiality, we must be
quite clear that to-day it is essential first of all to
consider who the person is who is speaking
“authoritatively” an certain matters.
The
stimulation of this consciousness in the present time is more
important, my friends, than all the substance of what I am
able to tell you; it is a consciousness which makes us
realise how terribly necessary it is to consider what degree
of depth there is behind that which is given us, and told us.
If one speaks of these things of course many people are hurt.
And particularly it is said about Anthroposophists and
Theosophists that they ought to have more forbearance, to
judge with greater kindliness and not to be so critical,
because to be so critical hurts people. But one asks oneself
whether it is real charity to ignore the fact that such men
who acquaint themselves in the morning with what they have to
lecture upon in the evening should be let loose in the sphere
of education. In questions that arise out of actual life, the
important thing is how they are put. It is important to put
the questions in the right way, for then only can the right
point of view result.
I have tried
to bring home to you today that earth consciousness must
change into a cosmic or universal consciousness just as a
territorial consciousness changed into an earth
consciousness; but I did this in order to indicate much that
in the realm of feeling is essential for the bringing about
of healthy relationships in our civilisation of today.
And Oh! this
must come about. If one could only shake sleepy humanity of
modern times into a realisation of this! But it isn't by any
means easy nowadays. Much may be said in this direction but
men avoid making themselves fundamentally familiar with such
a point of view. It is not enough merely to bring forward
anthroposophical theories. It is absolutely essential to make
one's penetration sharp for what is necessary for our time
and not shut oneself up in preconceived ideas, We must open
ourselves out toward that which has to be wrestled with, in
order that from the point of view of a true charity one may
be able to strike actively at the present time. If something
is done in this direction by stimulating the souls and hearts
of men, more is attained than by the most comprehensive
theories imaginable.
It makes
one's heart bleed to realise the truth of what was said by
Herr Molt recently, that there are people today who say:
“We would rather be a province of the Allies before we
will think of anything like the Threefold Social
Organisation”. This attitude is unfortunately widely
spread. And a great many other things are connected with this
kind of attitude because as a matter of fact another attitude
can only arise from a spiritual deepening. Our modern time
can only grow to be healthy through such spiritual deepening.
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