II.
Address given by Dr. Steiner at a Study
Evening in Stuttgart 9th June, 1920.
(On Propaganda of the Threefold Social Order)
L a d i e s a n d G e n t l e m e n
It will be
more in keeping with the character of a study-evening, such
as this, if I do not deliver a regular lecture, but begin
simply by offering a few remarks, which may lead on to as
wide a discussion as possible of the particular subjects
which the different members of the audience may have more
especially at heart, and which may seem needful for the
further work of propagating the Threefold Social Order.
It has been
intimated to me, that an important question at this moment is
that of propaganda; a how and through what means the
idea of the Threefold Order can best be propagated during the
coming months.
Since I was
not present at the last study-evenings, it is possible that
what I say to-day may be apart from the general context; but
this question of propaganda was represented to me as being of
particular importance.
Well, it is
hardly very profitable, to-day, to discuss the ways and means
in which the propaganda of the Threefold Order should be
carried on, unless one is prepared to base anything one may
propose to do upon the experiences we have actually had up
till now. In discussing a subject of this kind, I must really
point out once more, that, in face of the general situation
throughout the world to-day, it can really not be a question
of how one thinks of arranging every detail in one particular
concern, — especially not in the economic field. From
any measures on a small scale, one can truly no
longer hope for much to-day. To-day we should after all be
learning to see, that at bottom nothing is to be accomplished
except by treating things on a big scale, as I might
say. As regards our propaganda, — I spoke of it last
time at one of these very study-evenings, and called
attention to the fact, that with our propaganda we have met
with very interesting experiences. And the dominant note of
our repeated experiences was always this: how very difficult
it is really today, even in these times of need, to approach
men's souls at all with the very thing which in all respects,
— spiritual, political, economical, — one must
feel to be absolutely needful.
I pointed out
last time, how certain proposed plans had failed, and how we
were therefore obliged to fall back upon more or less
individual enterprises, which, as you know finally
concentrated in our business-undertaking, the Kommender
Tag. We are quite well aware, that if our propaganda for
the Threefold idea does not succeed in making its way through
as a whole, this single undertaking can at best be but a very
unsatisfying substitute in every respect. For the thing,
above all, which is of importance to-day, — and it
cannot be too often repeated, — is, that an
understanding of the threefold idea, as an active
onward-bearing force, should make its way into as many heads
as possible. Unless we have a sufficiently large number
of people who really understand this Threefold idea,
there is no getting on. This understanding applies
to many things, let me say. And here I should like to point
to a concrete instance.
When we first
started our propaganda here, we began, as you know, by
working in the way I have just indicated: by trying to win
over as large a number as possible of souls with
understanding. And the actual questions of economic life too
were practically discussed. There is one very definite
question of economic life for instance, which was discussed
by me not once but many times: and that was the question of
price-adjustment. I have often pointed out, that
this question of price-adjustment is a cardinal one;
that the fact of the matter is simply, that in the economic
process there are of course other questions, but that even
such questions as wages, and the like, are not the primary
ones to be settled; but that these also must be settled on
the basis of the price-question; that a quite
definite price for any particular article is the only
state of things which can be regarded as a healthy one in
economic life. In other words: a definite article must be
obtainable for a definite price within any particular set of
economic combinations; and this must be the standard
to which economic relations are adjusted. There can be
nothing more unsound that to look upon prices as something
that can be put up and down at convenience; and then begins
the endless screw, of adjusting the rate of wages to suit the
prices, and then putting up the prices again at convenience
to suit the wages; if prices rise, then wages rise, and so on
ad infinitum. This is laying hold of the whole matter by the
wrong end.
In those days
I used to take for discussion a concrete question of this
kind from the bed-rock of general economics. What was the
result? In those days we used to have meetings which were
attended for the greater part by working men only. The
middle-class circles held aloof, for they thought that we
arranged things only to suit the working classes. Well, in
short, we met with some understanding amongst the particular
circles who, in those days, listened to us. But this
understanding completely dried up. The people gradually left
off coming. They produced all their old stock-in-trade of
questions from the regulation party shibboleths; and then
they gradually stayed away; and one of the cardinal questions
simply dried up in this way. I am just picking out one
example; there are many others that might be quoted. And I
cannot help thinking, in comparison, of an occasion I had,
not long ago, to talk with a thoroughly practical business
man, who is in the thick of business-life under a
state-system which is not the German one; and in the course
of our conversation it came out, that, simply from his own
experience as a practical businessman, he had arrived at the
view, that the most important thing to be dealt with is the
problem of price-adjustment. Yes! of this —
let me say — I am convinced: with people, who are
business people, and at the same time can think, one
finds no difficulty. I must confess that, so far, I have met
with remarkably few people of this description. I have met
with business-people who did not think, but who are under the
habit of thought, even today, of regarding it as the
all-important matter that one is ‘a practical
man,’ and that one is ‘a practical man’
when one takes care that the State — or some other
institution — thinks for one: one can leave it
to them. — This was the way things were done too in
Germany during the war; It must be left to the people above,
at headquarters; they must know all about it! — And so,
as I was saying, I have not met with many as yet, but when
one does meet with such people to-day, who are business-men
and at the same time can think, they arrive quite infallibly,
through their own practical thinking on business matters, to
the same results as you find in my Roots of the Social
Question. [ Note 1 ] You must not
compare my Roots of the Social Question, and test what you
find there, with the crazy things in the party-programmes.
The party-programmes of the fourteen parties just elected to
this impossible Reichstag (it will be a quite impossible
conglomeration!) are all alike equally impracticable and
impossible. The point about what you find in the Roots of the
Social Question is, that it must be compared with a real
practice of life, with what the actual facts of life require,
— that is to say if one really thinks about actual
life, and does not merely go crying the old stock-in-trade
and the regulation shibboleths.
But this
method of propaganda, as we have seen, makes no headway: the
method of really examining what, of course, had to be said on
a limited number of pages. For one can't write a whole
library off-hand; and it would be only less read than The
Roots of the Social Question! But instead of people comparing
what is said in The Roots of Social Question with the things
one can learn in the factory as a business-man or a practical
technician, they go hawking about the old, old party
shibboleths and party-programmes; and the real practical
thing of which the book is talking, instead of being compared
with real practice, is compared with some bee or other, that
is buzzing in some particular bonnet, and is supposed to be
‘the practical thing.’
This, then,
is the first thing we have to achieve. We must decide to
direct our efforts to making people see, that it is really
not so easy to settle public affairs. I must say that for me
it is a bitter pill, a bitter experience in this respect,
that after I tried to write this book at that time from the
actual needs of the time, people should now come and demand,
that what is written in The Roots of the Social Question
should be boiled down into a general mess, and drained off
onto a page or two. That is what these people want! They want
to have everything laid before them in a couple of pages,
— which already in the book is stated as shortly as
ever is possible! Or perhaps they would like to have it on a
single leaflet for distribution! If you ask me to-day: In
what does the trouble lie in our present age? I can only
answer: The trouble lies just in this fact, that people can
still to-day make such a demand as this; and that they are
not willing, even now, to go to the bottom of things. Things
that require careful study, they want to have crammed
together anyhow on a couple of printed sheets, — such
as already have appeared as an abstract of the Roots of the
Social Question. So long as this is people's attitude of
mind, nothing will be accomplished in the only way in which
anything can be accomplished to-day. It is true that I
propose very soon to issue a new edition of the Roots of the
Social Question, with a special introduction, in which I
shall shortly summarise in a couple of pages the contents
discussed in the book. [ Note 2 ] But
this is only intended to be used as a sort of preparatory
introduction, printed as the beginning, by way of preparation
for reading the book in full. But if anyone imagines that he
can learn from still fewer pages what it is necessary to
understand to-day, it simply means that he has no feeling for
the things that have actually to be done to-day. This is the
very first thing we have to consider, if we are really in
earnest about what we may term the
propaganda-question.
Just take
this concrete fact, that our weekly paper, the Threefold
Social Order [ Note 3 ] , has
already brought out 49 numbers: — 49 numbers. Take
these 49 numbers, read them through in succession, and you
will see what an amount we have collected together in them of
practically all the things which it is more immediately
necessary for mankind to know about the Threefold question.
We have already issued 49 numbers; and really there is to be
found in them all that is more immediately necessary to know.
Yet what can we only tell ourselves to-day? People still come
to us, asking for information about some point or other. They
are always asking for information about this point or that.
As a matter of fact we have written these 49 numbers of the
Threefold Order, and the whole of the material is for the
time being flung away. Doesn't it look as though we should be
almost obliged to begin over again from the beginning; to
give out No. 1 again just as before, and then all the
following numbers, just as they appeared before! Having said
really a great deal here, which was thrown to the winds,
which never made its way into people's heads at all, are we
always expected to find something new to say! Well, they
can't after all expect too much — the people
outside; — they can't expect us always to be finding
something new. What is wanted now, would be to set to work
and actually propagate the Threefold idea, as it is. Of
course there are any number of things in the way of this; but
they all reside entirely in the human will. They reside in
the fact, that it is necessary that people's souls to-day
should wake up; and that they should take the things
seriously which are really in question.
There is one
question, for instance, which people to-day invariably seek
to evade. But it is the one from which the Roots of the
Social Question sets out from the very first, and upon which,
practically speaking, the whole of the Threefold propaganda
must be based, not in substance, but as regards the way of
propaganda: namely, the recognition, that in the so-called
‘social question’ to-day, we most certainly are
not dealing with what most people talk about under that name.
Most people, in talking about the social question, talk about
what should be done with this or that institution, about the
systems to be adopted in one or other department. Anyone who
talks in this way has absolutely no understanding of what is
going on in our present age; for the simple reason, that he
does not see, that to-day you might make the most splendid
institutions — if that were possible! — and that
afterwards, when you have made them, you will soon have
exactly the same agitation going on as before. As mankind is
constituted at the present day, you may have a party, which
for a long while has been in opposition; — take for
example the Majority Socialists at the present time: the
moment these Majority Socialists come into power, another
party forms, of the socalled Independent Socialists. If these
were to come into power, a new party again would form in
opposition, — the Communists. And if these were to come
into power, another new opposition party would soon be in the
field. The fact we have to recognise is, that we are not
dealing to-day with anything that can be touched by any sort
of projects for particular institutions, but that the social
question to-day is a human question, a question
strictly of human worth and human consciousness. And one
sees, what the social question really is, if one looks about
one in countries, where everything has not yet crashed, but
where the crash is still to come. There one may see, on the
one side, the classes who formerly held the reins. These
people see so far as that all business is coming to a
stand-still: that enormous stocks of goods are piling up in
the business-houses; that they have difficulty in making
enough to pay their workmen, and are beginning to think, that
if things go on in the same way, they soon won't be able to
pay them at all; that they also won't be able to get rid of
the stock in the warehouses. All this they see so far quite
well; but they fancy, that some miracle will come about, and
then, in a little while, things will be different. And so
they sit waiting for the miracle, in order not to have to use
their own brains, and think what ought really to be done.
And, standing over on the other side, one sees those people
who talk a very different language: namely the broad masses
of the working class throughout the civilised world. Of what
is going on amongst these broad masses, the first description
of people have, nevertheless, not the faintest notion. But in
these working-classes there exists a will: a will,
that clothes its problems in conceptions, in ideas, which,
the moment they are actually realised, will mean the
destruction of everything we possess in the form of human
civilisation: — ideas that destroy everything,
everything, — that sweep everything away. And the
leading classes imagine, that in a little while maybe things
will have gone back again to the year 1913, or the Spring of
1914, and they will begin again whore they left off at that
time; — and that then, amongst these broad masses, they
will still find people to come quite willingly, and work
again as they used to work in those days.
No! to-day it
is no question of institutions with which we have to deal,
but a question of human beings. And we have to recognise,
that amongst the leading classes for a very long time past
there has not been the faintest sign of understanding for the
task they had to perform. And do you think, then, that from
the masses anything could possibly come, except what we
experienced to our horror here in Stuttgart, when we started
with our Threefold propaganda?
You must
consider, that there were two conditions under which the
beginning we made, in April last year, might quite well have
been carried further. Under two conditions: — the one
would have been, that we should have succeeded, regardless of
their leaders, in winning over the broad masses of the
working classes to a really understanding conception of life.
That was on a very fair road to success. And the next thing
would have been, on the other side, if the people with some
influence amongst the middle-classes — the bourgeoisie
— would have held out a hand, would have shown us some
confidence; if they had said to themselves: ‘Here is at
least an attempt being made to construct a bridge between the
working classes and the others.’ — And what
actually happened? As you can think, the matter is no easy
one to-day; for as to the sort of thing which Stresemann
talks, and the like, — or which bears the least odour
of any leanings in that direction, — in
nothing of this sort will the working classes ever, under any
circumstances, place the slightest confidence. But, for all
that, we were really in a fair way to appeal to the working
classes simply on common-sense grounds; and all that was
needed, would have been, that the bourgeoisie on their side
should have met us with so much understanding as to say:
‘Alright: we will do our best, and wait and see what
you can do. We will admit that amongst ourselves, there are a
large number of people who cannot hope to win the necessary
confidence, for they have trifled this confidence away; but,
by this line of proceeding, it will be possible to bridge the
gap.’
But, instead
of this, what happened? The people who should have met us
with this much understanding, planted themselves down across
the path, and declared:iThese people are leading us straight
into Bolshevism, — or not far short of it! They are
hand-in-glove with the proletariatell Not the least
understanding was to be met with on that side. And under
these circumstances it then grew too late; so that the
leaders of the working class, who should have been left out
of it, found it easy to step in and alienate the workers from
us again. That is what spoilt the matter for us, and why it
came to grief at that time.
But, in the
same way, anything we might now do in respect of propaganda,
would also inevitably come to grief, if the general kind of
view were to be, for instance, as regards the paper:
“Yes; but the articles in the Threefold Order are so
difficult to understand!” — When anybody says
that to me, I look upon it as my duty to tell him, with all
politeness (politeness is necessary with such people as a
rule); so I politely explain to him, that it is just for this
reason, — that people have so long had a tendency to
think everything un-understandable which comes from the real
practice of life, and have always demanded that one should
descend to a lower level when it comes to writing, —
that now we find ourselves in trouble. And you — I say
— are a representative of the people who have brought
us into trouble. And when you demand, that one should write
to suit the kind of understanding which passes current with
you, you simply show yourself to be a specimen of the
detrimentals who have brought us to this present pass. And so
long as we are not in a position, (with all due politeness,
of course, for the individual instance!), — so long as
we cannot find a sufficient number of people with the courage
at last to say, ‘A new day will have to come, with new
people! There must be a clean sweep of everything to do with
these horrible old parties; something quite new must come to
life!’ — until we can do this, all discussion as
to the most effective ways of propaganda is so much talk for
the cat! We are not living to-day in an age when anything
whatever can be done by little measures; we are
living in an age when it is an urgent necessity, that a
sufficiently large number of people, holding the same
language and the same ideas, should be capable of throwing
themselves actively into the thing, — not merely of
being ‘quite enthusiastic’ about it.
I think that
many of you must be asking himself, why there should be this
continual crescendo in the way of speaking; why the words
that I myself use, for instance, should grow ever stronger
and stronger? Well, for a very simple reason. Only think for
a moment: when one has been trying to induce a part of
mankind to wake up; when one has taken the practical steps to
enable a part of mankind to wake up; and one sees people
falling ever more softly and soundly asleep, — then
one's voice too grows louder in proportion, then everything
one has to say grows proportionately louder, because one
feels the instinctive necessity of overcoming the sleepiness
of one's fellow-men! And as regards their conceptions of the
urgent social questions of the day, we truly cannot say that
the sleepiness of our fellow-humanity has grown any less of
late. Things are taken up, even in our own movement, from an
utterly wrong end. I delivered a lecture recently on the idea
of the Threefold Order, and the necessity of placing the
spiritual life upon its own footing. And in reply, somebody
said in the most good-natured, well-meaning way: ‘Here,
amongst us, there is really no occasion to complain of the
lack of freedom in spiritual life. We possess a very
considerable degree of freedom in our spiritual life. Amongst
us, the State really interferes very little in anything we
may choose to do as regards our school-system.’ —
Let me say to you, that people who talk in this way are the
very best testimony to the necessity of emancipating our
spiritual life. People who still have some sense of how
unfree they are, are people for whom one can find much more
use. But the people, who no longer have even a sense of their
own lack of freedom, who take the State-educational ideas,
that have been pumped into their heads, to come from their
own inner freedom, and have not the faintest notion of how
far this public-educational slavery extends, — these
are the people really, who are the drag upon everything. It
is a question of taking hold of things by the right end. And
people who, without knowing it, take slavery for freedom, are
the people who, naturally, hinder us from getting
forwards.
One may say,
therefore, that the first matter above all, is to recognise,
that all mutual understanding has been lost between the broad
masses and those other people, whose special task for long
years past it should have been, to hold such a language in
the world, that these broad masses should not to-day be
advocating, in their newspapers and everywhere, the kind of
views which they are advocating. I read lately
— in another country — the Whitsuntide number of
a socialist newspaper. They were the queerest Whitsun
articles, that were in it! Everything to do with
‘Spirit’ was rejected altogether, and it was
pointed out instead, that the only kind of Spirit is the one
which proceeds from the broad masses. Well, one really feels
oneself wrought into such a state of mind by such Whitsun
articles in a socialist paper of bolshevist tendencies, that
one begins to say to oneself: ‘Where can I catch it?
where can I hold of it, this “Spirit,” which is
coming up like a smoke out of the broad masses?’ And
then, when one really sets to work to try and form even some
conception, let alone to grasp this Spirit of the broad
masses, — then I can only say that one has after all
the feeling: It is a far worse superstition, than the kind of
superstition which sees a hobgoblin or a fairy in every bush
and tree. The men of modern times have no notion really,
under what forms of superstition they are living as a matter
of fact. And what does it all amount to? Well, you know, it
amounts after all to this: that people are much too
easy-going to give their minds to the necessity of really
building up a new spiritual life.
This is an
experience which one has had very thorough opportunities of
learning for many years past. Directly one approaches people
with any appeal for the necessity of building up a new
spiritual life, one finds a certain number of people no
doubt, who, in addition to their other occupations in life,
can make up their minds, — on Sunday afternoons, or
Branch-evenings, or for the time they spend on
anthroposophical reading, — to devote themselves to
this new spiritual movement. But, as to trying to make any
connection between this new spiritual movement and their
other occupations in life, — this is something which
they cannot make up their minds to do.
But there are
numbers and numbers of other people, who come to one and say:
‘After all, what you want, is really what the better
sort of Catholics, or the better sort of Protestants, want
too. Why there was some clergyman, again, whose sermon from
the pulpit was quite in the anthroposophical direction! More
or less everything that you are aiming at is to be found in
this or the other quarter as well.’ — People who
would like to make compromises, to the extent of being ready
to let Anthroposophy be practically swamped by the sort of
thing they are used to, — such people are to
be found in plenty. People, who, even in matters that call
for resolute will, — such as we spoke of in the public
lecture yesterday — nevertheless still follow the
principle ‘Wash my fur, but don't wet it by a single
drop,’ — such people are peculiarly plentiful in
these days. And until we find means to put a clear
understanding into as many heads as possible, that what is
needed before all else is a new spiritual life, a
spiritual life that lays hold on everything, —
until we find means to do this, we shall get no further. When
we have this new spiritual life, — when we no longer
have the senselessness of the intellectuals to contend with,
— then we shall once more have something that can speak
to men in such a way, that the speaking has power to call
forth social facts.
If people
would but form a conception of what can be done by the power
of the Word! Look over the whole civilised world today,
whereever you may travel, by train or by motor-car;
everywhere you see towns and villages, and in all these towns
and villages churches: churches, that have been built. These
churches were none of them there, not so very long ago. In
the first centuries of our present, Christian era, all over
this Europe, now strewn with churches, there was something
very different. Yet they were but a small Few, who went out
amongst the people, — though indeed amongst a fresher
age of man, less given to sleep. And these small Few it was,
who through the power of their words gave Europe the face it
wears to-day. Had the people, who accomplished this, been of
the same type of mind as — say the sample-dozen leaders
of our collective 14 parties, probably not so many as a dozen
of these churches would have been built. It is the inner
power of the spirit, after all, which must create social
facts. But then, this inner power of the spirit must
find its carriers in men, who really have courage to
carry it. And today we simply have to face the fact,
that everything, which in those days was founded on its own
inner grounds, can only now be maintained in place by
measures of force, by prejudice, by custom, — and that,
at bottom, it is not possible to maintain it, if people's
minds are true and honest; — that a new spiritual life
must be set in its place; — that there is no other
possible way for us to go forwards, except by setting a new
spiritual life in place of the old. Every sort of compromise
is an impossibility to-day. And until people recognise
that it will be inevitably necessary to put something
entirely new in the place of all these old things, but
something which shall draw from the spirit the power to
create a new social order, — till then, we shall
get no further. — And therefore I must say to you, that
I regard it, in a way, as a matter of very minor importance,
whether all the petty measures of propaganda are discussed in
this manner or that, — whether it is done in this
manner or that; it may all, from a certain point of view, be
very good, or miserably bad: that is not the important
matter; the really important matter, as I have said over and
over again in our paper, The Threefold Order, is this: that
we should find a sufficiently large number of people who
will make up their minds to stand out courageously for our
ideas, who will make up their minds not for ever to be
wanting to drift back into the old grooves.
At the
present moment, as you know, we are busy setting on foot the
various businesses, collectively comprised under this
Kommender Tag. What strikes me more than anything
else about it is, that well-meaning people keep coming and
saying: ‘Really, you know, that ought to be done quite
differently; you ought to call in a specialist; you ought to
call in a practical man.’ — It is the most
pitiable experience one can gb through, if one does for once
give in and follow the suggestion. For such a suggestion
really implies, that the person wants to import the old
unpractical groove-drifting amongst us again. What we need,
is not to import the old so-called practical men into our
institutions; on the contrary, what we need, is clearly to
recognise, that the people who may happen to-day to have the
best reputation in any department, and know best how to
handle the old routine, are the worst people for our purpose.
And the best people for our purpose are those who are
prepared to do new work from their own quite inner and
spontaneous initiative, and who do not plume themselves in
any way on what they have learnt under the old conditions.
Unless we leave off pluming ourselves on anything we have
attained to under the old conditions, we shall in no case get
any further. This is what we must clearly recognise
to-day.
And in
conclusion I would say to you as regards our propaganda: Let
us spread abroad in the first place what we have really been
endeavoring to do for more than a year past; and don't let us
always try to be over-clever and always want to twist round
the attempts that have been made, and give them a different
shape again; in order then — excuse the expression!
— to lick one's fingers over one's own cleverness, and
for ever be repeating: ‘They are so unpractical in
everything they start! This ought to be done, and that ought
to be done!’
Just reflect
for a moment what it means: 49 numbers of the Threefold.
Order — of our paper — flung away and come to
nothing! And why did they come to nothing? The Threefold
Order ought really by now to be so far on, that we could
bring it out as a daily paper. Why do I say this? Because as
a matter of fact today I can still only take the same
standpoint as was expressed in the words I used when we first
began this thing, in April and May of last year. Do you
imagine that it was a form of speech, that it was a phrase,
when I concluded a great number of my speeches in those days
with the words: we must make up our minds to do whatever it
might be, before it is too late! — For many things it
is simply too late to-day. By the paths along which we
attempted to do all manner of things in those days, we to-day
can obviously get no further. To-day it is not in the least
our business to enter into any sort of discussion with the
old stock-in-trade arguments whether of the creeds or the
parties. Our business today, is to stand firm upon the ground
of what we have to say, and to introduce it into as many
heads as possible. In no other way shall we get forwards. For
as a fact, for many things it is now simply too late. And it
may possibly very soon be too late also for other things,
which it is still possible to do, namely for the spreading of
our ideas, — if we are for ever turning our minds to
all sorts of secondary matters, instead of going straight for
the main thing, which is to spread our ideas.
I said, that
this concern we have founded, the Kommender Tag; can
after all be only an unsatisfactory substitute. And why?
Simply because we are under no delusions that we can possibly
be practical without basing ourselves upon practical actions.
We are endeavoring to take an active share in practical
business-life; and then people come and ask one: ‘How,
exactly, ought one to set up a grocery shop, so as to be as
much as possible on the lines of the Threefold
Commonwealth?’ Of course, we are trying to found
business undertakings in the Kommender Tag; but
there it is a case of handling them really practically. And
how, is one, for instance, to handle the matter really
practically to-day, when one can only tell oneself: If I
intend to carry on a particular kind of undertaking, then, in
order to carry out the thing rationally, I must have another
set of undertakings. For a particular set of industrial
undertakings, for instance, I must have a particular set of
agricultural undertakings. Well, but can you do it? It is all
impossible as things are to-day. The State makes it quite
impossible for you to make this particular kind of practical
arrangement. So great is the external power of the State
to-day. It is not a question of any want of practicality; but
simply that the thing is made impossible on the other side by
external power. — And therefore those persons, who
actually now possess a standing in one or other department of
economic business-life, should really not spend their time
to-day in discussing subordinate questions, but should
discuss together instead, how these various
‘business-estates’ of the Body Economic can make
themselves free of the political State and everything
involved with it, — how they can manage to slip out of
it. So long as the technical experts, so long as all these
various people are concerned with nothing but how to make
arrangements that may best fit in with the life of the
existing State, we shall get no step further; — not
till they begin to discuss: How can we get free? how can we
establish a really free economic life, where things are not
‘organised’ from above downwards, where, instead
of ‘organisation,’ there is
‘association,’ in which the different
‘business-estates’ link up together through the
actual course of business? — As yet there is not the
first, elementary A.B.C. of this in our practical discussions
of the Threefold system, but only the same old talk and the
same old tinkering round and round, always with a respectful
eye on existing conditions. All this roundabout talk leads
nowhere to-day. We must be chary of the people who are for
ever saying, ‘But how about this, and how about thatl! for
the fact of the matter is, that we shall first be able to
begin to discuss things sensibly, when we are a bit further
on with the separation of the three systems; when we actually
have thrown ourselves so completely into the propaganda for
the threefolding of the body social, that a sufficiently
large number of people in economic life definitely know:
‘Nothing we can say has any sense, so long as we still
continue to reckon on the whole of our economic life being
arranged for us by the State. Only in proportion as we manage
to get free, will discussion begin to have any sense. Until
then, everything we may say is nonsense.’ — And,
in the same way, there is just as little sense in discussing
reforms in the spiritual life, until one is clear, that one
can't even begin to converse on the subject, before one is
actually living in a free spiritual system. One must at least
be fully aware, that so long as one is living in a spiritual
system which is dependent on the State, all one may say can
have no sense, — that, so long as this is the case, one
cannot reform anything.
This, you
see, very clearly marks out the point which is the important
one: It is a question, not of little things, but of big
things; and the more this comes to be recognised, so much
more will it be possible to accomplish in the field of
practical life.
You will say:
‘What is the use of giving us such a philippic, when what we
are asking is, how to carry on our propaganda?’ When you come
to think over what I have said however, you will see, that
even with what I might call an ‘elevenpence ha'penny
propaganda’ (as they say in Austria, where they used to
have shops in which every article could be bought for
elevenpence halfpenny), that, even so, we shall get no
further, so long as, even in our own circles, people discuss
every petty detail of ways and means. We shall only begin to
get further, when people have hearts and minds for the great
motor forces of the world; for it is a question of these
great motor forces to-day.
Well, I have
said a great deal to the same effect before now, and all in
vain; — namely that it is a question of the great motor
forces of the world. Still, I shall never grow weary of
persisting, in general principle, to decline everything which
leans towards the making of compromises to-day. I shall never
weary of pointing out, again and again, the necessity of
bringing the great world-moving questions of the day really
to the comprehension of the very broadest masses of the
people. And for this reason too, I always feel myself obliged
to deliver the public lectures in the style I did yesterday,
and to defy all the over-clever people who say, that one
ought to talk more intelligibly to the masses, —
meaning as a rule themselves only and their own intellectual
niveau. I shall always maintain the view, that it is the
people who talk in this way, who are the detrimentals; these
are the people whom we have to overcome. And we must come so
far as to have the courage to say to ourselves: ‘Yes,
indeed! The foundations must be laid of something quite
new!’ The truth is — as I wrote lately in our
paper, — that the old parties, practically speaking, no
longer exist; they only exist any longer as lies and phrases,
and are made up of people who, knowing of nothing new, drape
themselves with the empty catchwords of the old parties; and
all the while, the whole business is nonsense (including what
has been going on in these last days), and directly proves
how radically something new is needed.
(At the close of a desultory discussion Dr.
Steiner concluded as follows:)
It is
regrettable that so little has been said about the Threefold
idea itself in the course of the discussion, and only about
all sorts of other matters. I should like just to bring back
the theme a little to the Threefold idea and to the things
connected with it. I will therefore pick out several
questions that have been raised, and so lead back to the
theme of the lecture. One of the questions raised was; What
my attitude is — or the attitude of the Threefold idea
— towards Syndicalism?
Well, as you
know, we have endeavoured, really, to find an attitude
towards a great many movements of all kinds. I myself could
only say the same about Syndicalism to-day, as I have often
said about it before: that in certain circles of syndicalist
tendencies one undoubtedly finds a consciousness of how much
might be done by means of combining the various
business-callings, the various branches of business, and that
this, the ‘syndicalist’ idea, might lead in a way to certain
fruitful results, at any rate in economic life. All this I am
quite ready to acknowledge; — as also, for example, that
Syndicalism takes up, in a way, a less slavish position
towards the idea of the ‘State,’ than Marxian Socialism does
for instance. This I am perfectly ready to acknowledge, and
have often acknowledged it before. But all such movements in
this direction belong, after all, not to the present day, but
to a past one; and only project themselves on into the
present day, because the people who adopted the name at an
earlier date, have since been incapable of learning new
conceptions. One might say really, that the whole set of
party-shibboleths have lost their meaning for present-day
conditions, — only that the people, who in past days belonged
to the things these party shibboleths stand for, have not get
made up their minds to label themselves with anything else
but old party-shibboleths. Down to the end of 1914, you see,
there was still a certain sense in people calling themselves
by a party-name, such for instance as v.H.... and L.... still
do to-day; but to-day there is no longer any sense in it. And
yet people still go on calling themselves by the names of
these parties. In the same way, to go on clinging to-day to
bye-gone things like Syndicalism, has no real meaning any
longer. And so, having made the attempt to approach such
people as might be hoped to have brains still plastic enough
to get beyond these old party-shibboleths, — so long as the
attempt could be made, we made it. But one must learn a
little wisdom from the circumstances in this case; — and
indeed it is urgently necessary to-day to learn wisdom from
circumstances. And therefore I must confess, that to-day I no
longer feel any force in the question: What is my attitude
towards Syndicalism? I can only assure you, that I have also
tried to find an attitude towards Syndicalism; that is to
say, I have tried to find people amongst the syndicalists who
might be able, by means of a still more plastic brain, to
understand the idea of the Threefold Order: — but that too was
all in vain. And therefore, to-day, it is necessary to speak
as I have spoken to-night, and to say, that our business is
to take our stand on the firm ground of the Threefold idea,
and not to trouble about anything else. For, what we have to
do to-day is, to find a sufficiently large number of people
who understand the idea of the Threefold Order; and whether
they come to us from this camp or that, from the syndicalist
camp, or any other, is to us a matter of complete
indifference. We no longer trouble ourselves to-day about
what is the attitude of the Threefold idea to the
syndicalists; we can wait and see, what attitude the
syndicalists will adopt towards the Threefold idea. Anything
else would be so much wisdom learnt in vain in the course of
the last year; and no one can work effectively to-day who is
not capable of learning wisdom.
And then the question was asked: ‘In what way is it proposed
to widen out the organisation of the ‘Kommender Tag,’ so that
the Threefold movement may spread?’ — Well, here, I must
really beg you — especially in the question of an isolated
case like this, — to bear in sight, that the Threefold idea,
in its whole character, is something eminently practical;
that we are dealing with something that is concrete, and not
floating in a blue haze. The ‘Kommender Tag’ was founded,
because it was recognised that the usual bank-system, as it
is to-day, has gradually in the course of the nineteenth
century come to be a injurious
element in our economic life. I pointed this out when I was
here last time, at another of the study-evenings. I showed
that, more or less from the first third of the nineteenth
century on, money has played a similar role in the economic
life of modern civilisation, to that of abstract conceptions
in our thinking-process: that it has gradually blotted out
all concreteness of aim and
effort; that it has spread itself like a cloak over the
things that must find their expression in economic energies.
And therefore it has become necessary to-day to found
something, which is not merely a bank, but makes a centre of
concentration for economic forces which are both a bank and,
at the same time, engaged in concrete economic activity: — to
found, that is, something which combines in itself real,
concrete economic activities with the organisation of these
special branches of economic activity, — in the same way as is
done by a bank, where economic activities are included, but
abstractly, without regard to the conditions of actual
economy. That is to say, a practical attempt is here being
made to overcome the injury done by the money-system.
To-day we have seen all sorts of people, — Gesell,
[Silvio Gesell, originator of the Free-Money
(‘stable money’) movement. — ‘Gesell’
in German means ‘fellow.’]
and other strange ‘fellows’ in life, — dancing around,
and talking about ‘free money.’ Those are the utopians! Those
are the abstractionists! What is wanted in reality, is to look
at practical life, and learn to see where the centres of injury
really lie. And one centre of injury lies in the fact, that
the bank-system has taken the economic form that it has
to-day. The bank-system in our economic life to-day plays the
same part as a man's thoughts in the life of his soul, when
he translates everything at once into abstractions, and
troubles himself no further about the particular, concrete
things which one sees and has to do with, but translates
everything into lofty abstractions. A man who
translates everything into lofty abstractions, — and that is
the majority of people to-day, — never arrives at any real
understanding of realities. Abstractions of this kind you can
hear today on any Sunday from any pulpit. Abstractions of
this kind have no longer anything to do with the actual life
of the people who find it so thoroughly happy and comfortable
to be lulled away from life in this manner for the space of a
Sunday afternoon. And what for the individual souls life this
substanceless abstraction is, that flies away to its airy
cloud-castles, the same for economic life is the bank-system,
that lives in the transaction of money. And so it was
possible to make an experiment in little, which, let us hope,
will grow into something quite big, and in which things could
be so arranged, that the money is brought back as it were
into the economic activities, and the economic activities
carried up into money; so that money, here, again becomes
something which serves to make economic activities more
feasible and easier to set in motion. Just as our thoughts
are not for the purpose of carrying us aloft into abstract
sublimities where we feel happy and comfortable, but of
enabling us to set in motion the concrete facts of life; so
too, with money, the important thing is to bring it down into
actual economic industry, to carry on the different branches
of practical economy, and not to sit ourselves down in a bank
and transact business, in money: — for money-trasactions in
themselves are the most injurious element we have in economic
life, in the nineteenth and beginning of the twentieth
century. Here we have then simply a practical idea, taken up
and also practically conceived. And until people recognise
that it is a case here of quite practically conceiving ideas
down into every particular, they will not succeed in
understanding the League for the Threefold Social Order.
And now I should like to direct your attention to something
which is not unconnected with the general note which I have
been endeavoring to strike to-day: to a quarter, namely,
which was alluded to by Mr.D.... (i.e. the Jesuits). — And
although the cause is one, with which I, truly, will have nothing
to do; yet you certainly find things advocated there in a very
forceful manner. You may hear continually from that quarter:
‘Thousands and thousands of our followers may fall away; yet,
though we should lose thousands and thousands, this matters
nothing to us; the thing alone that could matter to us, would
be the loss of a single truth!’ You may hear this over and
over again from the quarter to which Mr.D.... alluded:
‘Thousands and thousands of our followers may fall away from
us; but not a single truth must be let fall!’
Where people speak in this way on behalf of a cause, with
which I, truly, will have nothing to do, it is easy to see,
that they have here a very forceful manner of propaganda. And
this is the thing which is needed7 to have strength to take
up the stand, that it matters nothing to have numbers of
followers; but that it matters everything to have strength to
take our stand on the truths we possess, with no making of
compromises, no sidelong glances to one side or another: "Can
I get hold of this person? should I make myself agreeable to
that person?" That is not what is needed to-day; but what is
needed is, that we should win over as many people as possible
to the ideas of the Threefold Order, — really not because one
is enamoured of the Threefold Order, or because one is set on
one's own notions; but because one sees that there is no
other may of carrying on further.
Well, it is hardly necessary, I think, to go into the subject
raised by Dr.H.... as to the licensed architects, — the
State-architects, — and their relations with the legal
profession. These are things which were all settled long ago
in the most elementary discussions of the League. And you
will agree that is quite out of the question, when we are
talking on the lines of
the Threefold Order, that we should take up a standpoint
altogether off Threefold ground. For it would after all, you
know, make a curious impression, if when we were talking —
say — of the free spiritual life, we were to start a
discussion, as to whether
it might be advisable, from a certain point of view, to alter
the old titles of the heads of the University Colleges and
call them "Directors of Studies", or something of that sort!
These are all questions which are based on the old forms of
the social State. And the same with the State-architects: it
really cannot matter, what their relations are with the legal
profession; for, the moment one enters upon the Threefold
Commonwealth, it is not possible to talk of
Government-architects, since one is talking here on the basis
of a political State, which is strictly democratic ground,
and comprises in its sphere those things in which every
full-grown man meets every other full-grown man as an equal;
and it really cannot be a question of the line this
democratic State would take as regards a person on whom some
title is to be conferred, and things of that kind. In short,
we must accustom ourselves, altogether, to go rather more
into realities.
One meets with so many strange things in life, of which one
is so often reminded. For instance, I was in company once
with a certain socialistic celebrity — a very sound socialist
— and we were discussing a very, very exalted Government
official. I held this very, very exalted Government official
to be totally incompetent, in fact a hopelessly impossible
person; and I said, that I thought really the proper
profession for this very exalted Government official would
be, to give up his job and take to the business of a
road-sweeper. You should just have seen the horror which
overcame the socialistic gentleman at the suggestion that
this person, with whom he was well-acquainted, could possible
become a road-sweeper! Well, of course it was only just an
idea; but still it seems to me that this idea was more in the
direction of reality than — forgive me for saying! — the one
put forward just now in this form, that ‘the gentleman should
not look askance at the road-sweeper, nor the road-sweeper at
the gentleman. Really, we shall not solve the social question
simply by not looking askance at each other! The point of the
matter really is, that in our present order of society the
gentleman needs the
road-sweeper, and so forth, — but, if he merely doesn't look
askance at him, the social question will hardly be solved.
And whether one plumes oneself on something, or whether one
doesn't, are, after all, questions that have nothing whatever
to do in reality with the actual business-facts and the grave
realities of life at the present day. It really is not the
important matter for us to-day, merely to demonstrate to
people that the gentleman needs the road-sweeper, and the
road-sweeper needs the gentleman. For, in the background, we
have still, after all, just a little the notion, that the
road-sweeper should remain a road-sweeper, and the gentleman
should remain a gentleman, in the position where each happens
to be placed to-day; only they should not look askance at
each other, — which will certainly be an easier matter for
the gentleman than for the road-sweeper! But in my opinion,
all these things (which savour rather strongly of moralic
acid!) will not help us to a blade of grass to-day; for the
urgent matter is not, to-day, that we should merely not look
askance at each other, but that we should turn our hands to
making things different; and, first and foremost, that we
should succeed in coming to an understanding, above and
beyond classes. And this understanding will lead to a total
reconstruction of the forms of life, — not merely to twisting
eyes round from skewness to straightness, but to very
different things besides. And if you go through the whole
tendency that lies in the Threefold idea, you will see that,
here, there can be a question of its leading in actual fact
to something which mankind cannot but long for today, in so
far as they understand anything of the forces that are
striving to realisation in world-history. These are the
things upon which we must turn our eyes to-day, and not upon
something, which is mere moralising, and yet is linked with
those forms of social life which happen to be in force at the
present day.
No! to-day we must be clear, that we take our stand on the
ground of a new spiritual life, and that we need something
that proceeds from this new spiritual life itself. And though in
detail the Threefold Movement may have managed things never
so badly, yet, nevertheless again and again we must affirm,
that this Threefold Movement takes its stand on the ground,
that: Only through a change of thinking, only through a
transforming of human thoughts and feelings in their
innermost depths, can we ever look to reach a better state of
things, — and through nothing else.
Notes:
1. Die
Kernpunkte der sozialen Frage published in English under
the title of The Threefold Commonwealth.
2. This
Introduction to the 2nd edition of the "Roots of the Social
Question" ("Threefold Commonwealth") has appeared
(translated) in No. 1 of the present Study Series.
3.
"Dreigliederung des sozialen Organismus," of which the
first number appeared in July 11, 1919, and contains, amongst
other things, an article by Dr. Carl Unger giving the history
(up to that date) of the Threefold Movement.
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