The Golden Blade, edited by
Adam Bittleston and Jonathon Westphal, Rudolf Steiner Press, London,
32nd issue, 1980, pp.9–24.
|
THE PEOPLES
OF THE EARTH IN THE LIGHT OF ANTHROPOSOPHY
RUDOLF STEINER
A
lecture given in Stuttgart, 10th March, 1920.
Translation revised by C.D.
THE
last few years have shown what intense feelings of hatred and antipathy
are capable of flowing through the souls of the peoples of the Earth. In
his life of feeling, at any rate, no one can blind himself to the
truth that earthly life can never progress fruitfully along such
paths. And so it may be useful today to speak of elements
which, in the light of spiritual-scientific knowledge, can unite
at all events the whole of civilised mankind.
Knowledge and feeling, of course, are two very
different matters, but spiritual-scientific knowledge is much
more intimately bound up with the whole being of man, with his
innermost nature, than are the abstract truths current in the world
of materialism. The truths of Spiritual Science are able to kindle
ideas, feelings and impulses of will in human beings. Inner strength
develops from a spiritual-scientific knowledge of the elements
uniting the different peoples of the Earth and this also intensifies
feelings of sympathy and mutual love.
Just as it is true that in the course of
evolution man has progressed from an instinctive and unconscious to a
conscious life, to a full and free understanding of his mission, so,
as regards the future it must be said that vague sentimentality alone
will not suffice to unite the peoples of the Earth. A conscious and
mutual understanding of what the one may expect of the other —
that is what is needed.
In another sphere of life it is comparatively
easy today to see the necessity for this unification of men all
over the Earth, for we have but to look at the disastrous things that
are happening in the world of economics. When we seek for the
root cause of these disasters and destructive tendencies, we
realise that a striving to make the whole Earth into one economic
sphere is an unconscious urge in the whole of mankind today. On
the other hand, the peoples of the Earth have not yet reached the
point of ennobling their national egoisms sufficiently to enable a
collective economy of the whole Earth to arise out of the economic
values they individually create. One nation tries to outdo the other
in matters of economic advantage. Unreal points of view thus arise
among the peoples, whereas the new instincts of mankind call out for
a common economic life of the whole Earth — in effect an
Earth economy. The leading minds of the times are forever
laying stress upon this. There is indeed a striving for a uniform
Earth economy in contrast to the separate national economies which
have existed right up to the twentieth century, and it is this
opposition of the national economies to an Earth economy that has
caused the present havoc in economic life.
When it is a question of one nation
understanding another or assimilating its spiritual riches, it is not
enough simply to travel among other peoples or to be led there by
destiny. Mere knowledge of everyday dealings between man and man will
never bring about mutual understanding between the peoples. To travel
and live among other peoples is not enough, any more than cursory
observation of a man's gestures and movements enables us to
understand his whole being. It is true that if one has a feeling for
such things, a great deal may be conjectured about the inner being of
another man from his gestures and movements, but if circumstances are
such that his speech is understood, the knowledge is much more
fundamental, for one can then receive from him what his own inner
being wants to communicate. Is it then possible for something akin to
this transmission of inner force, of inner being, to arise between
peoples and nations? It cannot inhere merely in speech or language or
in those things we observe in the daily life of the peoples, for this
is but the intercourse between man and man. Something which
transcends the individual human element must be revealed by knowing
and understanding another man. We are really faced with a difficulty
when we want to speak intelligibly of a nation or people as an
entity. Is there anything as real as an external object, as real as
external life, which justifies us in speaking of a nation or a people
as an entity? We can speak of an individual human being merely from
sense-perception of him; but for sense-perception a nation
or a people is only a totality of so many individuals. Before we can
recognise a nation as a reality we must rise to the
super-sensible — it is the only way.
Now a man who undergoes spiritual training,
who develops those forces of super-sensible knowledge which otherwise
lie slumbering in his daily life, will gradually begin to see a
nation or a people as a real being — of a super-sensible order,
of course. When he perceives the spiritual, a foreign people is
revealed to him as a spiritual being, a super-sensible reality, which
— if I may use a somewhat crude expression — pervades and
envelops the sense-nature of the individuals belonging to it,
like a cloud. Supersensible knowledge alone enables us to penetrate
into the real being of a nation or a people, and super-sensible
knowledge cannot be acquired merely from the observation of daily
life. I want to speak in outline today of how Spiritual Science
strives to gain a really profound knowledge of the relationships
among the peoples of the Earth. And here it is above all necessary to
understand the being of man in the light of Spiritual Science. In a
previous lecture here, as well as in my book
Riddles of the Soul,
published a few years ago, I said that man, as he stands
before us in daily life, is not a unitary being, but that three
divisions or members, clearly distinct from each other, are revealed
in his bodily structure.
In the human organism we have, in the first
place, all that is related to and centralised in the head system
— the so-called system of nerves and senses. By means of
this system man has his sense-perceptions, his thoughts and
ideas. Today, as the result of an unenlightened science, it is
thought that the whole being of Spirit and soul in man is based upon
the system of nerves and senses — is, in fact, a kind of
parasite upon the rest of the organism. This is not so. If a brief
personal reference is permissible, I may say that more than thirty
years' study of the nature and being of man — a study which has
always tried to reconcile Spiritual Science with the results of
natural science — has led me to confirm this threefold nature
of the human organism. It is a general assumption of modern natural
science that the life of Spirit and soul runs parallel with the life
of nerves and Senses. In reality it is only the thought-life of
man that is bound to the system of nerves and senses. Sentient life
(feeling) is bound up with the rhythmic processes in the human
organism. The feeling-life of man is connected directly with the
rhythms of breathing and blood circulation, just as the life of
thought and perception is connected with the system of nerves and
senses. Similarly, the life of will is connected with the
metabolic system (digestion and assimilation) in man. The
seemingly lowest division of the human organism — the metabolic
system (in the sense of a process, of course, and not of substance)
— is the bearer of man's life of will.
In his nature of soul and Spirit, man is also
a threefold being. The spiritual will, the feeling-life of the
soul, the thinking, ideation and perception directed to external
material phenomena — these are the three members or divisions
of man's nature of soul and Spirit. These three members correspond to
the three members of the physical organism — to the system of
nerves and senses, to the rhythmic life of blood circulation and
breathing, and to the metabolic life.
Now if we observe human beings in any given
regions of the earth, we find that in terms of this threefold
organisation they are by no means absolutely the same the whole Earth
over. Another great error in modern thought is to imagine that one
common social programme could be issued for the whole of the Earth
and that men could adjust themselves to it. Human beings are
individualised, specialized, in the different regions of the Earth.
And those who would learn to know the true being of man as he lives
on the Earth must be able to develop love not only for an abstract,
universal humanity — for that would be merely an
‘idea’ of humanity, a dead, empty idea. Those who would
really understand their fellow-beings must develop love for the
individual forms and expressions of human nature in the different
regions of the Earth.
In the short time at our disposal it is
impossible to characterise all the individual peoples. All that can
be done is to consider the main types of earthly humanity. We are
led, in the first place, to a very characteristic type and also one
of the very oldest — to the oriental, as expressed in many
different ways in the ancient Indian peoples and in other Eastern
races. This oriental type reveals one common element, especially in
the Indian people. The man of the East has grown together, as it
were, with the Earth which is his own soil. However clearly it may
appear that the oriental has received the Spirit with intense
devotion into his heart and soul, however deeply oriental mysticism
may impress us, if we study the racial characteristics of the
oriental, we shall find that the lofty spirituality we so justly
admire is dependent, in his case, upon the experiences of the
will flowing in the human being, the will that is, in turn,
bound up with the metabolic processes. However paradoxical it may
appear at first sight, this very spirituality of the oriental
peoples, and especially of the ancient Indian, is something that
— to use a crude expression — wells up from the metabolic
processes. These processes are, in turn, connected with the processes
of Nature in the environment of the oriental. Think of the Indian in
very ancient times. Around him are the trees and fruits, everything
that Nature in her beauty and wonder gives to man. The oriental
unites this with the metabolic processes within him in such a way
that the metabolism becomes a kind of continuation of all that is
ripening to fruit on the trees and living under the soil in the
roots. In his metabolic nature, the oriental has grown together with
the fertility and well-being of the Earth. The metabolic process
is the bearer of the will — hence the will develops in
the inner being of man. But that which develops in the innermost
being, in which man is firmly rooted and by means of which he relates
himself to his environment — this does not enter very vividly
into consciousness. A different element streams into the conscious
life of the oriental. Into the feeling and thinking life of the
oriental — especially of the most characteristic type —
the Indian — there streams something that to all appearance is
experienced in the metabolic processes in a material sense. In its
spiritual ‘mirror-image,’ however, it appears as
spiritual life.
Thus when we enter into all that has come
forth from the soul and the thought of the really creative peoples of
the East, it appears as a spiritual product of the Earth itself. When
we steep ourselves in the Vedas that we pervaded by the light of the
Spirit and speak with such intensity to our souls, if we respond to
the instinctive subtlety of Vedanta and Yoga philosophy or go deeply
into such works as those of Laotze and Confucius, or are drawn to
devote ourselves to oriental poetry, oriental wisdom, we never feel
that it flows in an individual form from a human personality. Through
his metabolic processes the oriental grows together with Nature
around him. Nature lives and works on, seethes and surges within him,
and when we allow his poetic wisdom to work upon us, it is as though
the Earth herself were speaking. The mysteries of the Earth's growth
seem to speak to mankind through the lips of the man of the East. We
feel that no Western or Central European people could ever interpret
the inner Spiritual mysteries of the Earth herself in this
way.
The highest types of oriental peoples seem to
move over the face of the Earth, expressing in their inner life
something that really lives under the surface of the Earth. This
grows up from below the Earth and bursts forth in blossoms and
fruits, just as it does in the Spirit and soul of the man of the
East. The inner essence of the Earth becomes articulate, as it were,
in the oriental peoples. We can therefore understand that in
accordance with their whole being, they have less feeling for the
physical phenomena on the surface of the Earth and the external facts
of the material world. Their innermost nature is one with the
sub-earthly forces of which the external
sense-phenomena are the outcome. They are therefore less
concerned with what is taking place on the surface of the Earth. They
are ‘metabolic-men.’ But the metabolic processes are
expressed, in their case, in the life of soul and
Spirit.
Now when an ideal arises before the peoples of
the East, what form does it take? The injunction given to pupils by
oriental sages was somewhat as follows: ‘You must
breathe in a certain way; you must enter into the rhythm of
life.’ These teachers instructed their pupils in certain
rhythms of breathing and blood circulation. The way in which they
taught their pupils of the higher life of soul is highly
characteristic. The whole organisation of man as we see him in the
ordinary life of the East, belonging to an Asiatic people, and
especially to a Southern Asiatic people, is based upon metabolism.
When he forms a concrete ideal of how he can become higher
man, he develops his rhythmic system, by an act of free-will he
strives for something that is higher, that is not given him by
Nature.
Now the strange thing is that the further we
pass from the Asiatic to the European peoples, and especially to
those of Middle Europe, we find an outstanding development of the
rhythmic system in the ordinary daily life of man. The peoples, not
of Eastern or of Western Europe, but of Middle Europe, possess as a
natural characteristic that for which the Indian strives as his ideal
of a superman. But it is one thing to have to acquire a quality by
dint of self-discipline and free spiritual activity, and another
to possess it naturally and instinctively. The man of Middle Europe
possesses by nature what the oriental has to develop from out of his
metabolic life which is inwardly connected with the Earth. Thus, what
is for the oriental an ideal, is for the European a natural
possession of daily life; his ideal, therefore, must necessarily
be different. The ideal of the European lies one stage higher; it is
the life of thought bound up with the life of nerves and
senses.
There is a quality of unbridled phantasy in
the artistic creations of the oriental. It seems to rise from inner
Earth activity, just as vapour rises from water into the clouds. The
inner, rhythmic ‘wholeness,’ which is the essence of the
life of Middle Europe, enabled the ancient Greek people — who
accomplished so much for the whole of modern civilisation — to
create what we call European Art. The Greek strove for all that makes
manifest the inner harmony of earthly man. The material elements and
the etheric-spiritual elements are balanced — and
the ‘middle’ man is expressed. The creations of oriental
phantasy always run to excess in some direction or other. It is in
the artistic conceptions of Greece that the human form was first
imbued with harmonious roundness and inner wholeness. This was
because man realised his true being in the rhythmic system. When the
man of Greece set himself an ideal, it was one he strove to reach by
dint of inner discipline of soul, by dint of education. He used the
organ of thinking just as the oriental uses the organs connected with
rhythm in the human being. The Yogi of India endeavours to regulate
his breathing according to the laws of Spirit and soul so that it may
bear him above the level of ordinary humanity. The man of Middle
Europe trains himself to rise above the instinctive processes of the
rhythmic system, of the blood circulation, of the breathing, to what
makes him truly man. Out of this the life of thought is developed.
But these thoughts, especially in the highest type of Middle
European, become merely an ‘interpreter’ of the being of
man. This is what strikes us when we turn to the productions of
European culture after having steeped ourselves in those of oriental
humanity. In the highly spiritual creations of oriental culture we
see, as it were, the very blossoming of earthly evolution. Human lips
give expression to the speech of the Earth herself. It is not so in
the man of Middle European nor was it so in the ancient
Greek.
When the man of Middle Europe follows the
promptings of his own true nature, when he is not false to
himself, when he realises that self-knowledge is the noblest crown of
human endeavour, that the representation of the human in Nature and
in history is a supreme achievement of man — then he will
express as his ideal everything that he himself is as a human
being. The very essence of the man of Middle Europe is expressed
when he gives free play to his own inherent being. Hence we can
understand that the wonderful thought expressed in Goethe's book on
Winckelmann could arise only in Middle Europe. I refer to the passage
where Goethe summarises the lofty perceptions, profound thought and
strong will-impulses of this wonderful man into a description of
his own conception of the world, for it is like the very sun of
modern culture: “In that man is placed on Nature's pinnacle, he
regards himself as another entire Nature, whose task is to bring
forth inwardly yet another pinnacle. For this purpose he heightens
his powers, imbues himself with perfections and virtues —
summons discrimination, order and harmony and rises finally to the
production of a work of art.” Man's own spiritual nature gives
birth to a new being.
This application of all the forces to the
understanding of man himself is especially manifest in the man of
Middle Europe — when he is true to his own being. It is only in
more modern times that this has fallen into the background. The man
of Middle Europe has every motive to consider how he should develop
this veneration, understanding and penetration of what is truly
human.
If we now look at the East and its peoples
from a more purely spiritual point of view, we shall find that the
oriental peoples, just because they are ‘metabolic men,’
develop the spirituality which constitutes the connection between the
human soul and the Divine. If man's nature is to be complete, he must
bring forth, in his inner being, those qualities with which he is
not endowed by the elemental world; in his own consciousness
he must awaken the antithesis of all that he possesses by nature.
Thus the oriental develops a spirituality which makes him conscious
of the connection between the human soul and the Divine. The oriental
can speak of man's connection with the Divine as a matter of course,
in a way that is possible to no other race, in words that touch the
very heart. Other peoples of the Earth may subjugate and conquer
oriental races and try to instil into them their own idiosyncrasies,
laws and regulations, but they do, nevertheless, assimilate what the
East has to say about the connection of man with the Divine as
something which applies to themselves also.
In modern times we have seen how Western
peoples, steeped in materialism though they may be, turn to oriental
philosophers such as ancient Laotze to Chinese and Indian conceptions
of the world, not so much in search of ideas but in order to find the
inner fervour which will enable them to experience man's connection
with the Divine. Men steep themselves in oriental literature much
more in order that their feelings may be warmed by the way in which
the oriental speaks of his connection with the Divine than for the
sake of any philosophical content. The abstract nature of the
European makes it difficult for him really to understand oriental
philosophy. Again and again people who have studied the sayings of
Buddha, with all their endless repetitions, have expressed the
opinion to me that these sayings ought to be abridged and the
repetitions eliminated. My only answer could be: ‘You have no
real understanding of the true greatness of oriental philosophy, for
it is expressed in the very repetitions which you want to cut
out.’ When the oriental steeps himself in the sayings of
Buddha, with the repetitions which only irritate people of the West,
he is on the way to his ideal the rhythmic recurrence of the motif.
The same phrase is repeated over and over again. Now, as we have
seen, the oriental lives naturally in the processes of the metabolic
system. When he gives himself up to the recurring phrases of Buddha,
there arises within him a spiritual counterpart of the system of
breathing and blood circulation; he has brought this about by dint of
his own free endeavours.
If a European really tries to understand all
that is great and holy in the oriental nature, he gains a knowledge
which will elude him unless he consciously develops it. It is quite
natural that the European should want to eliminate the repetitions in
the sayings of Buddha, for he lives in the breathing rhythm and his
ideal is to raise himself to the element of thought. When the
thought is once grasped he wants no repetitions — he strives to
get beyond them. If we are to study these oriental repetitions, we
must, in effect, develop another kind of quality — not an
intellectual understanding but an inner love for what is expressed in
individual forms by the different peoples. Our whole attitude should
make us realise that the particular qualities which make one people
great are not possessed by the others, and we can understand these
qualities only when we are able to love the other Peoples and
appreciate the full value of their particular
gifts.
It is just when we penetrate into the inner
nature and essence of the Peoples of the Earth that we find the
differences of their individual natures. And then we realise that the
all-embracing sphere of the ‘human’ is not expressed
in its entirety through any individual man, or through the members of
any one race, but only through the whole of mankind. If anyone
would understand what he is in his whole being, let him study the
characteristics of the different peoples of the Earth. Let him
assimilate the qualities which he himself cannot possess by nature,
for only then will he become fully man. Full and complete manhood is
a possibility for everyone. Everyone should pay heed to what lives in
his own inner being. The revelation vouchsafed to other
peoples is not his and he must find it in them. In his heart he feels
and knows that this is necessary. If he discovers what is great and
characteristic in the other peoples and allows this to penetrate
deeply into his own being, he will realise that the purpose of his
existence cannot be fulfilled without these other qualities, because
they are also part of his own inner striving. The possibility of full
manhood lies in every individual, but it must be brought to
fulfilment by understanding the special characteristics of the
different peoples spread over the Earth. It is in the East, then,
that man is able to express with a kind of natural spirituality his
connection with the Divine.
When we turn to the peoples of Middle Europe,
we find that what is truly characteristic of them is hidden under
layers of misconception — and these must be cleared away. Think
of all the great philosophers who, having thought about Nature and
God in a human sense, have with almost no exception raised another
question as well. Nearly every great German Philosopher has been
occupied with the question of equity, of rights as between man and
man. The search for equity, misunderstood and hindered though
it be, is a characteristic of the Middle European peoples. Those who
do not recognise this have no understanding of the peoples of Middle
Europe, and nothing will divert them from the prevailing materialism
(which has quite another source) back to what is fundamentally
characteristic of true Teutonic stock.
Just as the man of the East is the interpreter
of the Earth because his spiritual life is a blossom or fruit of the
Earth herself, so is the Teuton an interpreter of himself, of his own
being. He faces himself questioningly, and because of this he faces
every other man as his equal. The burning question for him,
therefore, is that of equity, of right. Wherever Teutonic thought has
striven to fathom the depths of the universe, in men such as Fichte,
Hegel or Schelling, it has never been a question of adopting the old
Roman tradition of equity but of investigating its very nature and
essence. The abstract results of these investigations, to be found in
Fichte, Hegel, Schelling and Humboldt, are fundamentally the same
thing as we find in Goethe when he seeks along multifarious paths for
the expression of the truth, harmony and fullness of man's nature. In
this sense Goethe is the representative of the Teutonic, Middle
European nature. Just as the oriental faces the Earth, so does
the Middle European face man, with
self-knowledge.
If we pass to Western Europe and thence to
America, we find the figure of the true Westerner expressed in
abstract thinking. To use a figure of speech employed,
I believe, by that deeply spiritual writer, Rabindranath Tagore, the
Westerner is pre-eminently a ‘head-man.’ The
oriental is a ‘heart-man,’ for he experiences the
process of metabolism in his heart; the Middle European is the
‘breath-man.’ He stands in a rhythmic relationship
to the outer world through the rhythmic processes within him. The
Westerner is a head-man and Tagore compares him to a
‘spiritual giraffe.’ Tagore loves the Westerner, for when
it is a question of describing characteristics, sympathy and
antipathy do not necessarily come into play. Tagore compares the
Westerner to a spiritual giraffe because he raises everything into
abstractions — into abstractions such as gave rise, for
instance, to the ‘Fourteen Points’ of President Wilson.
Speaking in the sense of spiritual reality, one feels that the
Westerner's head is separated from the rest of his body by a long
neck and the head can only express in abstract concepts what it
offers to the world. A long path has to be trodden before these
abstract concepts, these husks of words and ideas, finds their way to
the heart, the lungs and the breathing system, and so to the region
where they can become feelings and pass over into
will.
The characteristic quality of the Western man
inheres, then, in what I will call the thinking system. The
ideal for which the Middle European strives — which he
endeavours to attain as a result of freedom, of free spiritual
activity — does not have to be striven for by the Westerner and
especially not by the American through this free Spiritual activity,
for the Westerner possesses it instinctively. Instinctively he is a
man of abstractions. As I have said, it is not the same to possess a
quality instinctively as to strive for it by dint of effort. When it
has once been acquired it is bound up with man's nature in quite
another way. To acquire a quality by dint of free spiritual activity
is not the same thing as to possess it instinctively, as a gift of
Nature.
Now here lies a great danger. Whereas the
Indian in his Yoga philosophy strives upwards to the rhythmic system,
and the Middle European to the thinking system, the Westerner, the
‘spiritual giraffe,’ must transcend the merely
intellectual processes if he is not to lose his true humanity. As I
recently said quite frankly to a gathering attended by a number of
Westerners, this is the great responsibility facing the West at the
present time. In the case of the Middle Europeans it will be a
healthy, free striving that leads them to spirituality, to Spiritual
Science. The whole nature of Western man will be lost in an abyss,
if, as he strives to rise beyond the thinking-system, he falls
into an empty ‘spiritualism,’ seeking for the qualities
of soul in a region where the soul does not dwell. Here lies the
danger, but also the great responsibility. The danger is that the
Westerner may fall into soul-emptiness as he strives to transcend the
qualities bestowed on him by Nature; his responsibility is to allow
himself to be led to true Spiritual Science, lest by virtue of his
dominant position in the world he should lend himself to the downfall
of humanity.
It is a solemn duty of the peoples of Middle
Europe — for it is part of their nature — to ascend the
ladder to spiritual knowledge. But on their path of ascent from the
rhythmic, breathing-system to the thinking-system, they
gain something else in the sphere of the human. The danger
confronting Western peoples is that they may leave the sphere
of the human when they set up an ideal for themselves. This really
lies at the root of the existence of the many sectarian movements in
the West — movements which run counter to the principle of the
‘universal human’ at the present time.
In the oriental, whose metabolic system is so
closely related to the Earth, a spiritual activity along the paths or
Nature herself arises. The man of the West, with his predominantly
developed thinking-system, turns his gaze primarily to the world
of sense. It is as though something under the surface of the Earth
were working in the oriental; the man of the West seems to pay heed
only to what is above the Earth's surface, the phenomena which arise
as a result of sun, moon, stars, air, water and the like. The
thought-processes themselves, however, have not been derived
from what is happening at the periphery. I said in a previous lecture
that the spiritual in man cannot be explained by the study of the
earthly world around him. The spiritual fruits of the Earth arise in
the very being of the true oriental and he knows himself, as man,
with the living Spirit within him, to be a Citizen of the whole
Cosmos — a member not only of the Earth but of the whole
Cosmos. The Westerner, with his more highly developed
thinking-system, has been deprived of this Cosmos by modern
science, and is left with nothing but the possibility to calculate it
in mathematical and mechanical formulae. The Westerner must realise
that the origin of his soul is cosmic, that indeed he could not exist
as a thinking being if this were not so, and he must also realise
cold, barren mathematics is the only science which remains to him for
the purpose of explaining the Cosmos. The outpourings of the Earth
herself have become part of the very being of the oriental —
his poetic wisdom is like a blossom of the Earth. The Middle European
has to recognise that his essential human quality is revealed
in man and through man. In effect the human being
confronts himself.
The qualities of most value in the man of the
West are those bestowed not by the Earth, but by the Cosmos. But the
only means he has of approaching these cosmic, super-sensible gifts is
by mathematical calculation, by equally dry spectro-analysis or
by similar hypotheses. What the Middle European seeks as an
expression of equity between man and man is sought by the Westerner
through his dedication to economic affairs, for the human rights he
values as an expression of the spirit seem to him to emerge only as
the fruit of economic life. Hence it is not surprising that Karl Marx
left Germany, where he might have learnt to recognise the nature of
man in a Goethean, humanistic sense, and went to the
West, to England, where his gaze was diverted from the truly human
element and he was misled with the belief that what man can know is
nothing but an ideology, a fact of economic life. This is not a truth
in the absolute sense, but is fundamental to the nature of the man of
the West, just as it is fundamental to the oriental peoples to behold
Nature side by side with the being of man and then to speak of the
connection of the human soul with the Divine as a self-evident
fact. That is why many men of the West who feel the necessity for
looking up to the Divine — for, as I have already said, all men
feel the need at least to become complete man — are aware of a
longing, even when they try to conquer oriental peoples, to receive
from them what they have to say about man's connection with the
Divine. Whether we apply this to smaller races and individual
peoples, or confine ourselves to what is typical everywhere we see
that man in his whole nature is not expressed in the members
of any one people or race. Full manhood is as yet only an urge within
us, but this urge must grow into a love for all humanity, for those
qualities we do not ourselves possess by nature but can acquire if we
sincerely seek for knowledge of the nature of other peoples of the
Earth.
The internationalism prevailing in the age of
Goethe assumed this form. It is this kind of internationalism that
permeates such thoughts as are found, for instance, in
The Boundaries of the State
by William Von Humboldt. It is the
striving of a true cosmopolitanism which, by assimilating all that
can be acquired from a love extended to other races, ennobles and
uplifts the individual people; knowledge of one's own race is sought
by assimilating all that is idealistic, great and beautiful in other
peoples of the Earth. It is because of this that in Germany's days of
spiritual prime there arose from out of the rhythmic life of her
people a lofty cosmopolitanism which had been sought from among all
other peoples. Just think how Herder's search took him among other
peoples, how he tried to unravel the deepest being of all peoples of
the Earth! How penetrated he was by the thought that permeating the
individual ‘man of flesh’ there is another man, greater
and more powerful, who can be discovered only when we are able to
pour ourselves out over all peoples.
We cannot help contrasting this spirit, which
at the turn of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries was the germ
of greatness in Middle Europe, with the internationalism of
today. In its present form, internationalism is not a living
pulse in the world; it is preached throughout the world in the form
of Marxism — and Marxism believes only in human thinking.
Internationalism nowadays is a more or less weakened form of Marxism.
There is no longer any inkling of the differentiation of full and
complete humanity over the Earth. An abstraction is set up and is
supposed to represent humanity, to represent man. Such
internationalism is not the first stage of an ascent but the last
stage of a decline, because it is devoid of all endeavours to reach
after true internationality, which always ennobles the individual
stock. The kind of internationalism which appears in Marxism and all
that has developed from it is the result of remaining stationary
within a one-sided and wholly unpractical system of thought that
is applied merely to the world of sense and has not penetrated to the
real national qualities. True internationalism, by contrast, springs
from a love which goes out to all peoples and races in order that the
light received from them may be kindled in the deeds, concepts and
creations of one's own people. Each individual race must so find its
place in the great chorus of the peoples on the Earth that it
contributes to the full understanding which can alone unite them all
in real and mutual knowledge.
In this lecture it has not been my object to speak of matters which
might seem to indicate a ‘programme.’ I wanted to speak of
the spiritual-scientific knowledge that is kindled in the spiritual
investigator as a result of his higher knowledge of the communal life
of man on the Earth, for this true communal life is indeed
possible.
One can, of course, speak from many different
points of view of what is necessary for the immediate future of
humanity; one can speak of this impulse or that. But it must be
realised that a spiritual comfort flowing from the knowledge I have
tried to indicate, more in fleeting outline than in detail, may be
added to all that can be said in regard to social, political or
educational affairs. It is a comfort that may flow from knowledge of
the rhythm, I say expressly the possible rhythm, of the
historical life of humanity.
This lecture should show you that the hatred
and antipathy in the world today can indeed be followed by
international love with healing in its wings. This is indeed
possible. But we are living in an age when all that is
possible must be consciously, deliberately and freely striven
for by men. There must be knowledge of the conditions requisite for
uniting the peoples of the Earth, in order that, as a result of this
knowledge, each individual people may help to make the waves of love
follow those of hatred. Human love alone has power to heal the wounds
of hatred. If mankind has no wish for this love, chaos will remain.
That is the terrible alternative now facing men who have knowledge.
Those who realise its terrors know that the souls of men dare not
sleep, for otherwise, as a result of the powerlessness caused by the
sleep into which the souls of the peoples have fallen, the healing
waves oflove will not be able to flow over the waves of
hatred.
Men who realise this will acquire the kind of
knowledge that flows from a spiritual conception of the relationships
between the peoples. They will take this knowledge into their feeling
— love for humanity will be born. They will take this
knowledge into their will — deeds for humanity will be
accomplished. The evolution of the age, with all the terrible
paralysis that is appearing at the present time, places a solemn duty
before the soul: to gather together all that can unite mankind in
love and array it in opposition to the destructive elements that have
made their appearance in recent times. This quest for loving
unification, for unifying love is not merely a vague feeling. To
those who understand the conditions of life today, it is the
very highest duty of man.
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