Lecture 6
Stuttgart,
June 25, 1920
There has
been a basic theme to everything we have been considering
here in recent times. Again and again the point has been
made that when any work is undertaken or any proposal
made in connection with the anthroposophical movement
proper regard must be paid to the gravity of the present
situation. In principle everything I have said so far has
been in accord with that basic theme. It should also help
more and more of our members to come to feel this in
their souls. We will continue along these lines. Today I
want above all to refer to something that can help us to
find the right inner attitude, as it were, to the
spiritual-scientific movement that has anthroposophy for
its goal.
There has
now been scientific evidence that Western culture is in a
decline — you know about the book by Oswald
Spengler [ Note 41 ]. How
do people regard the search for truth within this
culture, irrespective of the degree to which they even
admit to this? People who imagine they have both feet
firmly on the ground, considering themselves to be
eminently practical people, regard the search for the
truth as something theoretical and not as a real deed
accomplished by the soul. It is essential for us today to
come to the realization that the search for truth is a
deed accomplished by the human soul. We must come to
realize that when we gain insight this is no mere theory,
no individual point of view, but an actual deed infused
with will impulses, a deed in the total context of the
evolution of the earth and of humankind.
To begin
with let me use a more methodological approach to show
the way recognition of the truth must be seen as a deed,
using a fact from cultural history as an example. I have
frequently spoken of two streams going in opposite
directions in the life of the human soul. One of these is
the abstract mystical stream, the other the abstract
materialistic stream. The latter has developed with the
evolution of science over the last three or four
centuries. Basically it has entered into all areas that
play a role today in the progress of human evolution. The
traditional religious creeds hardly play a role in the
real progress of human evolution the way they are
presented nowadays. They could however play a role in
furthering the decline of Western culture.
It if were
a matter, for instance, of bringing Spengler's idea of
the decline of the West to full realization, the
traditional religious faiths officially represented by
the Jesuits, by positive Protestantism and so on, would
be able to do their part. They would be of no account,
however, for progressive evolution. As I have said on a
number of occasions, the materialistic stream is clearly
in evidence even in people who themselves are quite
unaware of this. Characteristically, and it is something
we must keep in mind, even the theosophical school was
affected by materialism in certain areas when it went by
the title ‘theosophical school’. The
descriptions given of the human etheric and astral bodies
in those circles, where these bodies were merely said to
be more subtle forms of matter, with people imagining
some kind of mist or cloud, surely were nothing more or
less than materialism in spiritual guise. Spiritism is of
course materialism most heavily disguised as something
spiritual, for it speaks of the spirit when in fact its
aims are merely to prove the material existence of the
spirit, to present it in material form. Materialism has
eaten its way into everything spread about by way of
popular literature, above all in popular books and
journals where people are informed as to what is
‘true’; it is present in everything that is
spread about like this, irrespective of whether it comes
from Catholic or Protestant sources. This materialism on
the one hand relates to the progress made in culture. It
must be taken into account and taken positively into
consideration. Traditional historical elements like the
religious confessions must of course attack anything that
is new; they must fight intensely against anything that
is new. This, however, does not have to be taken into
serious account when we form our ideas of the present,
for it goes in the direction of decline. Materialism on
the other hand produces the very things we ought to know
about in the present time, though they are of course
presented in a materialistic way, in materialistic
interpretation. If we wish to share in the work that
brings progress in cultural and intellectual life we must
know what materialistic anatomy, materialistic
physiology, materialistic biology and the sociology of
the present age have brought to light. We must be fully
informed about these things and out of this very
knowledge gain the power to transform materialistic
knowledge, the materialistic way of thinking, into
spiritual knowledge. It is therefore of definite value in
the present time to give full consideration to what
materialism has to offer. We cannot transform, say, the
Catholic philosophy of the Middle Ages the way some
people imagine. This can only be transformed with the aid
of Thomism, as I have shown in Dornach, [ Note 42 ] though it then
transforms itself. Materialism can be metamorphosed into
an inner spiritual life. Anthroposophists therefore have
no reason at all to despise the things that materialism
has to give. We have to reckon with materialism.
Anthroposophy cannot be evolved out of a blue haze, it
must be evolved by people who are alive in and part of
modern life, a life that in the first instance is a
materialistic one.
The moment
we wish to see materialism in the light of the true
progress of humankind we must develop a particular basic
feeling, the very feeling that many people of the present
age, and above all academics of the present age, do not
have. This is the feeling that everything immediately
around us in the world we perceive with the senses,
everything our eyes see, our ears hear and so on, is not
real and that we should not look for reality in that
direction. We must develop the feeling that it is utterly
mistaken to look for atoms and molecules in the world we
perceive around us and to consider them to be real, or
even commemorative coin. Some scientists are particularly
proud to say that they do not take atoms and molecules to
be real but use them as ideograms, ideal points in space.
It is immaterial, however, if you assume atoms to be
physical or ideal points. What matters is whether you
take a living comprehension of spiritual entities as your
starting point or whether you consider the idea of such
living comprehension an abomination and base yourself
entirely on what may be gained in the material world.
This applies also to atoms seen as points where forces
are located. As soon as you base yourself on atomistic
ideas you find yourself in a materialism that must lead
to doom. We can only deal properly with the world we
perceive through the senses if we treat it as a
phenomenon, as a form of manifestation. Matter is not
even present in the things we perceive through the
senses. We must therefore develop the feeling — we
can do this thanks to the findings reported in the
anthroposophical literature — that when we use our
eyes and look out at the whole starry firmament, the
cloud formations, the contents of the three kingdoms
(mineral, plant and animal) and also the fourth kingdom,
the human kingdom, we must not look for anything material
in the things that come to us through sensory perception.
Matter is not behind any of them! All we perceive are
phenomena like the phenomenon of the rainbow, for
example, though they may appear more solid than a
rainbow. No one should consider a rainbow to have some
kind of outer reality—like a solid bridge with its
span in seven colours — but see it only as a
phenomenon. In the same way we should regard all the
things we encounter through our senses as phenomena,
however solid they may appear. A rock crystal can of
course be taken hold of, whilst in the case of the
rainbow we could not take hold of anything. Yet although
it may affect our sense of touch, it should still be
called a phenomenon. We must not allow our fantasy to
create some kind of physical reality, in spite of the
view of nature that is generally taken today, a view that
is following the wrong path. The 'physical' phenomena we
come across therefore are definitely not material
phenomena, are not the reality of matter. They are mere
phenomena; they come and go out of another reality that
we cannot comprehend unless we are able to conceive of it
in the spirit. That is the feeling we must evolve —
not to look for matter in the outer world.
The real
goal of anthroposophical development is missed above all
by people who despise outer materiality, people who say:
‘The things we perceive in an outer way are mere
matter; we must rise above such things!’ That is
quite wrong. The things we perceive outside are not
material, we cannot look to them to find the world of
matter. We simply do not find matter in the world that
impresses itself on the senses. You will come to see this
if you read what our anthroposophical literature has to
say, and take it in the right spirit.
You then
need to develop this feeling further. Here we come to
aspects that people find highly uncomfortable today
because they come very close to the experience we know
can be had with the Guardian of the Threshold. They are
uncomfortable; yet unless we enter into them we will make
no progress in inner development. We have to go through
inevitable discomfort if we are to get from theory to
reality. The search for truth must be based on facts.
Anyone who thinks matter can be found in the world which
we call the material world — the world we perceive
with the senses — is mistaken, and the error
involves more than mere theory. There are people who
think that because others say it is 'matter' it really is
matter; this kind of word-cleverness is in vogue
nowadays. If anyone thinks it is enough just to say:
‘It Is wrong to look for matter in the world we
perceive with the senses’, they cannot be said to
be speaking out of spiritual science working towards
anthroposophy. Spiritual science does not consist in
correcting other people's theories. Spiritual science
must make the search for truth a deed. It must be a
search for knowledge based on strong will impulses, that
is, it must enter into the facts even where it merely
makes definitions or explains things. And this is where
the situation gets uncomfortable.
It is easy
to say to someone that they are wrong in thinking that
matter is to be found within the outside world, which we
perceive with the senses, and to tell them to change
their views. That is just talking theory. To accept
theories, to oppose theories, to correct them — all
that is theoretical talk. Spiritual science cannot in all
reality be satisfied with this. The essential thing is to
develop our sensibilities to a point where we perceive
that someone caught up in materialistic views of the
material world has a thoroughly unhealthy organism. We
must progress from purely logical definition to a
definition that takes hold of realities, in this case the
constitution of the human individual. We must become
convinced that it is not merely wrong logic to say that
matter is to be found in the world we perceive with the
senses, but that anyone who considers that what his
senses perceive is physical substance is truly on the
road to constitutional feeblemindedness. We must perceive
that it is sickness to be materialistic in that
sense.
We want our
ideas to take hold of reality. We cannot do so whilst we
continue to think in theories. Everybody supposes that
they only need to have good instruction to change their
views. Spiritual science always demands that we are alive
as we develop and that we restore ourselves to health
where we have been materialistic in the above sense,
since a departure from the right way means sickness, the
road to feeblemindedness.
At this
point things come very close to the insights to be gained
in meeting the Guardian of the Threshold. When we
encounter the Guardian of the Threshold and thus enter
into worlds other than the physical world--worlds that
add something new to the physical world — all
theory comes to an end, the intellectual mists clear and
reality begins, with every word saturated with reality.
Then we can no longer say that someone is expressing
correct or incorrect views. We have to say that they
express their views out of a sick or a healthy mind. Then
we encounter reality. Nor can we say that someone should
correct their views. Instead we must say: ‘If you
are on the road to sickness, to feeblemindedness, you
must change course and develop a strong, healthy mind
again.’ You see it is not enough to correct the
so-called philosophies that spread their mists about. For
anyone wishing to become a spiritual scientist it is
essential to go through a change that is a very real
process, and not to be satisfied with something that is
intellectual, logical or theoretical. The gravity of the
present situation is such that the pathological nature of
an intellectual view of the world must be vividly
apparent to us.
An attempt
has been made to outline one particular aspect, to
characterize in the light of reality the materialistic
aspect of our cultural life today. The other aspect, the
polar opposite of this, is the mystical approach.
Mysticism is the refuge of many people who are
dissatisfied With materialism. They find that materialism
is not right and therefore feel they must follow a
different philosophy, a different path in their search
for truth than the paths followed by materialism. People
then try to develop by following an inner path and to
find the spirit along that path. I have frequently spoken
of mysticism as a spiritual stream that has the same
right to exist in its one-sidedness as materialism has,
providing one perceives this one-sidedness. I have spoken
of mysticism as a kind of reaction against the
materialism which has developed in the American and
European civilizations over the last centuries. I have
referred to this a number of times, also in the pamphlet
published during the war that was also sent to the men at
the front. [ Note 43 ]
This mystical stream must be considered in more detail,
again without any of the theorizing that is so common.
When it comes to mysticism, people think that by
withdrawing from outer life and entering deeply into
their inner life they will find the spark of which
Meister Eckhart spoke. [ Note
44 ] They think they will come upon the revelation of
the true spirit that cannot be found in the outer
material world. Mystics do however tend to be real
materialists. Taking the opposite route, mystics mostly
are harsh people and out-and-out materialists. They start
to shout as soon as the material world is mentioned,
considering themselves superior to such things — as
has often been said, they feel they are above such
things. The point however is that we must not merely
theorize but go into the reality. The point is that we
must look for the reality behind those mystical
endeavours. It is important to realize what comes to life
in us when we become mystics, what is active in us when
we become mystics. You can find out about it from the
anthroposophical literature. We have to say that this is
the very soil where physical matter is to be found. We
find materiality active in us when we become mystics.
Consider even the most sublime mystic — what is he
bringing into play in his soul? He brings into play
things that boil and bubble in his metabolism, however
refined and subtle this metabolism may be. Matter as such
is to be found within the human skin, and not in the
outside world that impresses us through the senses. We
come upon physical matter when we allow things ignited in
the metabolism to arise within us. Look at the way
Meister Eckhart spoke of God with such depth and
conviction. He actually told how he had scrupulously
brought to awareness what was bubbling and boiling in his
metabolism. It seemed to him to work towards the central
heart and there to become transformed into something that
could be perceived as a spark of the divine self in the
human being. That is the small flame metabolism ignites
in the heart.
The true
nature of physical matter is thus found by following the
path of mysticism. The genuine fruits of Goetheanism must
be raised to a higher philosophy of life. In the same way
we must clearly understand that the fruits of mysticism
must be considered to gain an interpretation of activity
in the material sphere. We do not discover material
processes in our chemical laboratories. When a chemist is
at work in the laboratory, the processes taking place in
the retort are external phenomena, just as a rainbow is
an external phenomenon. That, too, is phenomenon and has
no real materiality to it. We learn about real
materiality when we see the bubbling and boiling of the
processes that go on inside our skin ignite the way a
stearin candle ignites to burn with a flame. That is
where materiality has to be sought, and we only see
mysticism in its right light when we realize that all the
inner experiences mysticism provides in its one-sideness
are material effects; true materiality is to be sought in
there. We must not look for physical matter by analyzing
chemical processes. We must look for physical matter in
every organic form that goes through its complex chemism
and physiology inside the human skin. Mysticism gives us
the solution to the riddle of physical matter. Mysticism
however only gives us the solution to the riddle of
physical matter. We must not reinterpret the inner
materiality of the human organism to the effect, for
instance, that when we see a burning candle we say: 'That
cannot be the fruit of something inherent in the candle.
There is a tiny spirit inside that candle and this spirit
produces the flame.' That would be nonsense of course. It
is also nonsense to look for the reality of the spirit in
the experiences of a mystic.
It is
necessary to arrive at a very definite idea, even if this
is difficult. This is a threshold truth. We do not get
far with what can be achieved in mysticism, for there we
are dealing with phenomena that are like opiates, we are
given up to our egotistical desires that allow themselves
to be defined as anything but the materialistic aspects
of our own inner processes. The bewildering multitude of
phenomena surrounding us in the world of the senses does
not allow us to go so far as to realize that in fact none
of it has any materiality. Let us consider what we are
actually seeing when we look at a distant planet, say, or
a fixed star out there in space. What are we actually
seeing? We do not see the green plant cover of the
ground, the cloud formations, brown or grey earth and so
on that we see around us on this earth. The stars and
even the moon are too far distant for that. Everything
that lives out there on those alien heavenly bodies has
an inner aspect, has material processes that have been
transformed. What we see through the telescope are the
material processes active in the highest form of
existence on the star in question. In the same way, if
that other star, let us say the moon, were to look at us
through a telescope, would it see our plants, animals and
so on? No, the earth is far too far away for that.
Pointing a telescope at the earth the moon would be
looking into your stomachs, hearts and so on. That is the
content which shines forth into the cosmos. The human
kingdom is the highest on earth and because of this
someone looking from outside would see what goes on
inside human skins. When these things which are visible
to distant stars become ignited in our own inner
awareness they are the things mystics experience.
So you see
that anyone seriously devoted to the anthroposophical
view will have to penetrate this second, equally
uncomfortable threshold truth that it is mysticism which
teaches us what matter is on earth. We cannot know
anything about even the simplest of earthly forces if we
merely look at the outside world. Just open a book on
physics. You know it discusses gravitation, earthly
gravity. It always includes the comment, however, that it
is impossible to know the true nature of gravity. People
are in fact rather pleased with themselves when they
explain that the essential nature of gravity is not
known.
How can we
get to know the nature of the force that makes the chalk
fall down when I let go of it? The force called gravity
can be understood as follows. At a certain point in life,
perhaps after the thirtieth year or even earlier —
it depends on how kindly destiny deals with us—we
can make a discovery when we observe ourselves in the
light of spiritual science, rather than by the usual
methods of observation. The methods of spiritual science
do to some extent introduce us to the methods of genuine
self-observation. About the thirty-second year,
therefore, we can make a discovery. Observing ourselves
not in the abstract way of mystics but genuinely, we
shall achieve genuine self-observation; for instance by
noting that living from the thirty-fifth to the fortieth
year, say, we have changed at the organic level. Some
will note that their hair has turned grey; it also
happens nowadays that men grow bald. We find we have
changed. Unless however we have gained the ability to
observe ourselves we shall have no experience of these
changes, we shall not have inward experience of what
happens with these changes. The experience can be gained
if people apply to themselves what it says in my book
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds. [ Note 45 ] From about the
thirty-second year onwards we have the experience that
the body has to be carried differently, that it becomes
heavier. That is our inward experience of gravity, of
gravitation. It has to be experienced inwardly.
None of the
wishy-washy things talked about in mysticism are as
important as a concrete fact like this, the inner
experience of growing heavier. You cannot gain this
experience if some person stands here and lets a stone
drop from his hand. You do not observe the gravitational
pull by watching a stone drop, for stones have no real
materiality. You must observe yourself, this time looking
not into space but into time, that is, the way you
experience things before and after. We must progress from
experience in space to experience in time Things never to
be found in the world of the senses must be gained
through inward experience. They are the second element
belonging to reality.
Experiencing the outer world of the senses we have truth
but no knowledge. Experiencing inwardly in a abstract
mystical way we have merely knowledge and no truth, for
we are under an illusion concerning the basic phenomenon
of inner life; inward experience being the flickering
flames of material processes. Anyone looking for
materiality in the outside world is interpreting the
world in an ahrimanic way. Someone else may merely look
for truth in an abstract way within himself; he or she is
interpreting the world in a luciferic way. Genuine
spiritual science in the light of anthroposophy holds the
balance between the two, with truth and knowledge
interweaving. We must look for truth at one extreme and
knowledge at the other and become aware that living
realities become polar opposites when knowledge is
brought into truth and truth into knowledge. Then the
search for truth becomes a real deed. Then something is
happening. We are not merely producing logical
definitions or correcting our views, but something is
happening when human beings endeavour to gain inner
experience of knowledge and look for the truth outside
them, endeavouring also to let each enter into the
other.
This has to
be understood in the present age. The present age must
understand that human beings must hold the balance
between the two extremes, between the ahrimanic and the
luciferic poles. People always tend to go in one
direction. In the Trinity Group in Dornach the luciferic
element is above and the ahrimanic below. The Christ is
in the middle, holding the balance. These things can be
presented as ideas, can be made into the essence of
ideas. They then become truth and knowledge. It is also
possible to represent them in art, but then we have to
forget about mere ideas and seek to find them—in
line, in form, in configuration. Then it becomes the
Trinity Group in Dornach, for instance. The whole is of
the spirit, however.
Mysticism
is one-sided and so is materialism. We must know that the
two have to be interwoven and we must be alive in our
doing' knowing that the true inwardness of the human
being is to be found in being alive in one's doing. Our
age wants to be one-sided and embrace materialism and
this means that it is indeed on the road to
feeblemindedness. I have shown that we must not be
content with theories but must know in truth and reality
that materialism shows itself to be what it is — a
road to feeblemindedness — as soon as we meet the
Guardian of the Threshold. We must aim for a state of
health, and not merely disprove things in order to arrive
at something else. The opposite extreme is abstract
mysticism. We should be able to develop the feeling that
in reality it is the road to infantilism — to put
it bluntly, to childishness — a condition
appropriate only for small infants. A child as yet
untouched by the world, living entirely in physical
materiality, in the processes of its physical organs, is
exactly the type of the mystic, though the mystic will
have the same experiences at a later stage than a child.
They will of course feel different, those experiences,
but an infant also experiences this concentration of
organic activity in the heart. Sensing this concentration
it will kick its legs in the air and wave its arms about
and we can see how this peripheral activity is the
opposite to the concentration of activity in the heart.
If people remain childish all their lives, if they are
too lazy to take in the things that only materialism can
give, they reject outer materiality; it means nothing to
them, they see it as something low that must be overcome.
And then they kick their legs in the air and in doing so
produce their mysticism. That is the threshold truth, the
unpalatable threshold truth. Everything that is abstract
and mystical, inducing a feeling of self-gratification
when people concern themselves with mysticism nowadays,
with things that make them lick their lips when they
appear in print, though in reality they are the
equivalent of kicking one's legs in the air in one's
thoughts — all that is infantile. It has to be
clearly understood that whereas materialism leads to
feeblemindedness, abstract mysticism leads to
infantilism, to childishness. True life is found when we
find the balance, the equilibrium, between materialism
and mysticism.
Again it is
rather difficult to do this, and things really get
uncomfortable. When you want to balance the scales you
must not despise anything that is present in excess on
one side and upsetting the balance. You must really try
to put into both scales what is needed to maintain
equilibrium. In the same way you should not despise
anything that takes you into the sphere of matter, saying
to yourself that it will cause feeblemindedness. Quite
the contrary: anyone wishing to enter into things must
step boldly into reality, saying to himself: 'I will have
to follow the path that would lead to feeblemindedness if
I were one-sided in my pursuit; but I am armed against
it. I am also armed against remaining one-sidedly on the
other path; I retain what is necessary from childhood
days but do not remain a child.' That is how the balance
must be sought between materialism and mysticism. That is
a true sense of life. The sense of life holds the balance
between feeblemindedness and childishness. Anyone who
cannot be bothered to see these things clearly will not
be able to enter into reality. People Only grow
feebleminded if they fail to note that normal people have
to overcome feeblemindedness day by day, hour by hour.
Feeblemindedness is a constant threat and we only remain
human by remaining childish, i.e. inspired. Anyone
holding on to childishness in the right measure is a
genius. We are geniuses only to the extent to which we
have held on to childishness into our thirties; but this
childishness must be properly counterbalanced. Thus we
have to say that we are all in danger — how shall I
put it — of becoming geniuses or remaining childish
infants. It could go one way or the other.
As soon as
we come close to threshold truths, our ordinary ways of
expressing ourselves no longer work; things that normally
are quite separate blend into each other at this point.
All words acquire a different meaning, and we might say
— it would be quite amusing to represent this in a
painting or sculpture—‘Here is the threshold
of the spiritual world, with one individual on one side
and one on the other; one is active in the spiritual
sphere, the other in the material world, and they are
yelling at each other. The one who is in the spiritual
world yells: “Childishness!” The other yells
across from the material world “Sheer
genius!” ’Just as a tree looks different when
seen from another point of view so things look different
depending on whether we look at them from the spiritual
point of view or out of materialism. From the spiritual
point of view the genius of someone who has retained the
ways of a child, forming ideas in play, has to be called
childishness, we must see it as childishness when we are
on the spiritual side. Childishness is regarded in a
different way from that point of view. There we know that
human beings descend from the spiritual world, that they
come to live in a physical body; we see that a child is
still lacking in skills, is still undeveloped, but we
also see the most sublime spirituality alive in that
child.
It has
caused considerable annoyance to some people—that
numskull Dessoir, [ Note
47 ] for example — that in a small work I
published. Spiritual Guidance of Man and
Humanity, [ Note 48 ]
I have shown that the wisdom involved in giving shape and
form to the brain of a child is far greater than the
wisdom human individuals are able to produce in later
life. Numskulls like Dessoir cannot grasp this. For them,
the full range of wisdom is what they write in their
books. The thing is, however, that when we say
'childishness' from the spiritual point of view we
perceive how the human spirit has descended as a ray of
the divine spirit, and that it was fully developed when
it did so. It entered into a human body that was still
undeveloped, taking hold of it, working it, with the
result that after just a few months the brain has become
something different, and the whole body is something
different in the seventh and fourteenth year of life, and
so on. Childishness is not a term of abuse, therefore,
for childishness is seen to be the descent of the spirit
into the physical world, a first taking hold of the body,
a stage where one is still a child, still in a human
condition where the head has not yet been cleared of the
spirit. That will happen as the rest of the body
develops, for this develops fastest, whilst the head
contains far more spirit. That is the image we have when
we speak of childishness from the spiritual point of
view. The head of a child is full of spirit and —
this is an unpalatable truth — as we get older the
spirit gets less and less, our heads become more and more
petrified. A child still has a great deal of the spirit.
This gradually evaporates. I may be permitted to use the
term 'evaporate' in the sense that the spirit evaporates
from the head down into the rest of the organism. So you
see I am speaking of something most sublime when I speak
of childishness as it is seen from beyond the threshold.
If I speak of childishness from the earthly point of view
it means that one has failed to progress. The language of
the earth and that of heaven are different, alas, and it
is part of the tragedy of our age that people do not even
want to understand the language of heaven. Since it has
become customary to speak in the most earthly terms
possible from the pulpit it is no longer possible for
people to understand the language of heaven.
It then can
easily happen, when one has something to say within a
certain context — expressing it out of that
context, of course, and having prepared the way before
saying the words that come from beyond the threshold,
words to the effect that the entities of the spiritual
world evaporate downwards — that the following may
occur. Let me present a picture to you of something that
really happened. It may happen, then, that someone
writes: ‘Steiner says things evaporate in a
downward and not an upward direction.’ Some
professor of anatomy [ Note
49 ] gets hold of this and reads it out to an
audience which he himself has prepared by asking them to
bring children's trumpets and rattles when someone is
going to talk about genuine anthroposophy. So a lecture
on anthroposophy is given. Then the professor has the
word and reads out something like this, having somehow
got hold of it, and the students use the trumpets and
rattles they have brought along to produce the kind of
scientific argument that has become customary in those
circles. This is something that really happened in
Goettingen the other day. Have a look at the supplement
to the recent issue of our Threefold Order journal. [
Note 50 ] You will find it
there.
These are
serious times in which we live and on Friday I want to
continue in the vein in which I started today, when I
characterized the true face of materialism for you on the
one side and that of mysticism on the other. I will then
show you what we are called on to do. We are not called
today to gather in sectarian groups, but to come alive
and intervene in what goes on in life, bringing
anthroposophical impulses into the world of the present
cultural life. If we understand what the present age asks
of us we cannot remain one-sided materialists or mystics,
we must take the road to reality. I have tried to
characterize this in the pamphlet. Mr Molt took the
trouble to put into print for the men at the front, so
that they might learn something of the anthroposophical
spirit. We must always keep In mind that these are
serious times in which we live and that we shall only
feel able to cope if we are open to the approach of
something that properly speaking cannot even be given a
name, using the old forms of speech, but imposes the
necessity to find new forms of speech if the truth of our
age is to be found. The search for knowledge must go
beyond mere rumination, it must become an active deed.
Then humankind will not slither into the doom of the
Western world, for we shall find the upward path again.
As long as materialism continues to use the symbols of
childishness — those trumpets and rattles —
to rebut anthroposophy, and mysticism makes use of
materialism, dressing up utterly material processes as
something spiritual, we shall slither into the doom of
the Western world at full tilt. It is not a question of
ruminating but of really doing something.
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