Lecture 9
Stuttgart,
November 8, 1920
Today we
shall base ourselves on facts relating to the nature of
human beings and then make the transition to certain
guiding principles in world history.
We have
already considered the rhythmical alternation between
sleeping and waking that human beings experience within a
twenty-four hour period and have done so from many
different points of view. Today I want to take a point of
view that has so far been used less frequently in
considering this alternation between sleeping and
waking.
We know
that there are three main aspects to a human being. One
aspect is the head organization. Here, we have first of
all the sensory organism which faces the outside world.
The actual brain organism lies more on the inside. We
know of course that this is only an approximate way of
looking at these things. We cannot simply divide the
human being into sections according to the space
occupied. We have to be clear in our minds that the
nerves and senses merely have their main concentration in
the head and that they are in fact present everywhere in
the human being. Everything said in this respect applies
to the whole human being. We base our characterization on
the part where the main concentration lies, i.e. the
head. So we have the sensory organism facing the outside
and the brain organism situated inside.
The
question is, what happens to the sensory organism and the
brain organism when a human being changes from the waking
state — which you are familiar with, perhaps not in
depth but at least in outer terms — to the sleeping
state? As you know, the sensory organism ceases to be
active. The brain organism can be observed in so far as
our dream life shines into our souls, in a way. If you
consider this dream life you will be able to say that it
presents you with a kind of surrounding scenery that in
some respects is similar to the outside world you
Perceive with the senses. It contains images from the
outside world you perceive with the senses. Human beings
know very well when they are awake, that dream life
presents them with images that, in a way, derive from the
outside world we perceive with the senses. When we then
take a closer look at the dream world, considering it in
an unbiased way, we find that the dream images are
connected—that they relate to each other; they
interrelate in a way that is as definite as the
interrelations and connections that exist in our waking
thoughts, though these tend to be more imageless. It may
be said, however, that whereas human beings have full
control of the way thoughts are connected in the
imageless thinking of their waking life, and are able to
use their will to connect one thought with another, this
does not apply in the interplay of dream images. Dream
images have their own order. Human beings are passive
where they are concerned. If we then reflect on the way
in which dream images follow each other we find that it
is as if the phenomena of ordinary thinking proceed in a
watered-down way, as if they lack drive and will.
Residues of sensory and also of thought life can still be
traced in dream life. It will be evident from everything
we discover as we consider our dream life — and
spiritual science will be able to establish this beyond
all doubt — that the human brain, which in a way is
the physical basis of our life of ideas, must have
undergone a change from the way it was in the waking
state. In the waking state the situation is that our will
gives us control of the way thoughts follow each other.
In our dream life we have no such control. What is more,
our senses have ceased to act and our dream life only
contains images that echo the life of the senses. The
life of the senses has therefore also been watered
down.
The
question we want to ask ourselves today is what kind of
changes the human brain had undergone. If you take an
unbiased view you will have to agree that spiritual
science is right when it says that the brain acts like a
sense organ when we dream. A sense organ receives
impressions of the outside world and immediately
processes them, at least to some extent. The way a sense
organ faces the outside world does not involve an element
of will, however. If you consider the way the sense
organs face the outside world and compare this with the
dream state you will find that when the brain acts as the
physical basis of dreaming — take it as a working
hypothesis, if you like, that it provides the physical
basis for dreaming — it has come to resemble a
sense organ. It has become more of a sense organ than it
is in the waking state; or we may also say that it is not
a sense organ when we are awake for it shows none of the
properties of a sense organ in that state.
Now we do
not have far to go to understand what happens in
dreamless sleep. Dreams hold a middle position between
waking and sleeping. If the brain becomes more like a
sense organ even when we are dreaming, it must do so to
an even greater extent when we are fully asleep. The way
we are constituted as human beings today we are not in a
position to make use of this sense organ in normal life.
There was, however, a time in the history of humankind
when human beings were able to use the brain as a sense
organ to a very considerable degree. In a way, however,
the brain always becomes a sense organ between going to
sleep and waking up. We know that, between going to sleep
and waking up again, the real human being — the
human soul and spirit — is in the outside world. We
will not take time at this point to consider the nature
of this outside world; we merely need to understand
clearly that the essential soul and spirit of the human
being is then in an outside world of soul and spirit. The
physical world we see around us between waking up and
going to sleep does not reveal its spiritual and soul
ingredients. In the state which pertains between going to
sleep and waking up, the human being is in the outside
world which has its soul and spirit aspect. Today the
constitution of human beings is such that they experience
themselves unconsciously in the outside world of soul and
spirit.
This soul
and spirit environment in which we find ourselves during
sleep was the actual world in those far distant times
where the original wisdom of humankind had its origin. An
echo of those times is still to be found in the Vedic
writings, in Vedanta philosophy — in short in the
wisdom that was revealed in the ancient Orient. Looking
back to those times we find exactly what those early
people of the ancient Orient experienced in the outside
world between going to sleep and waking up. For them, the
brain was still very much a sense organ when they were
asleep. It was a sense organ, however, which did not
permit them to think at the same time as they made
sensory perceptions. When the people of the ancient
Orient were in the world of soul and spirit they were
actually able to perceive what they experienced between
going to sleep and waking up. In a way this was reflected
in their brains, which had become sense organs. They were
however unable to think whilst they were in that
condition. They had to wait until they were awake, as it
were, before they were able to think the things that they
had perceived. We actually have outer evidence that
things were the way I have just described. You only need
to try and enter into anything that still remains of
ancient oriental culture and you will find that the
wisdom of that culture took the form of representing the
universe perceptible to the senses from a spiritual point
of view. Astrology, now a mere caricature, was living
wisdom in those times. Most of that ancient wisdom was
based on the revelations of the stars, the revelations of
the night sky, i.e. on things hidden from view between
waking up and going to sleep. Human beings experienced
these things between going to sleep and waking up. They
found themselves in the outer world and their souls and
spirits experienced their relationship with the heavenly
bodies. When they woke up, their brains changed from
being sense organs to a state partly similar to that of
our own brains — except that their brains were
constituted in such a way that when they were awake they
were able to remember what they had experienced during
sleep. The things they remembered lit up in their minds
as instinctive Imaginations. As people went through their
daily lives in the ancient Orient they were able to
deflect their inner attention from the sense-perceptible
world around them and focus it on the great illuminating
pictures their souls perceived as a memory of their
night-time experiences. Those were the original oriental
Imaginations. Echoes of them are to be found in the Veda
and in Vedanta philosophy and literature.
What image
did the people of those times have of themselves? It
certainly was not the kind of description of the human
being that is given in anatomy or physiology today, which
is based on the evidence of the senses concerning outer
form. At that time human beings experienced themselves as
soul and spirit among all the other things they
experienced in the outside world between going to sleep
and waking up. They experienced a cosmos that was soul
and spirit, and themselves as soul and spirit within that
cosmos. Exactly how did they experience themselves? They
perceived themselves as their own deal model. Please pay
particular attention to these words. When an individual
living in those times had an illuminating Imagination of
what he had experienced in his sleep, he saw himself as
the ideal model of himself and was able to say to
himself: ‘My ideal model looks like this. This
model contains specific models, as it were, of the inside
of my head, of my lungs, liver and so on.’ People
did not have the experience of themselves that we are
given on the basis of modern anatomy and physiology, i.e.
in terms of organs perceptible to the outer senses. They
had experience of the ideal model, the idea out of which
the organs perceptible to the senses are created. Human
beings had the experience of being heavenly and divine
spirits — the heavenly and divine ideal of an
earthly human being. They were therefore less interested
in the earthly human being than they were in the heavenly
and divine ideal.
This whole
complex of experiences also led to something else. It
helped people to realize that they had, in fact, been
those heavenly and divine ideals before they were
conceived or born as physical human beings. In ancient
oriental times human beings were so constituted that they
had the experience of being divine and heavenly human
beings, and at the same time experienced themselves as
they had been before they became earthly. That is the
essential point of ancient oriental cultures. Human
beings experienced what they had been before they entered
into physical existence on earth. Their conviction of
this was only instinctive, but it did give them the firm
conviction that they had existed before they came to
earth and had descended from a spiritual world into the
world of the physical senses. It is a forgotten
characteristic of the ancient oriental religions that
they were very much concerned with life before birth, and
presented life on earth as a continuation of life in
heaven.
I have
already said on another occasion, and from another point
of view, that on the whole our time no longer has the
kind of awareness that belonged to those times. We have a
word we use to express that death is not the end of life,
the word 'immortality', deathlessness. We do not have a
word to express that the beginning of an earth life is
not the beginning of life altogether. There is no word
similar to `immortality' that refers to the time before
birth. We ought to have the term
‘unbornness’. If we had that word, and if it
were as alive to us as the word 'immortality', we would
be able to enter into the state of soul that people had
in the ancient Orient.
If you were
to put yourself in the state of soul of someone living in
the ancient Orient you would be able to say: For him,
life on earth did not merit much attention, for it was
merely an image of life in the realm of the spirit. Nor
did the people of the ancient Orient take themselves very
seriously as physical human beings. The human being
walking around on this earth was merely the image of a
heavenly human being and it was this which largely
occupied people's minds. The eternal aspect of the human
being was a fact that was immediately apparent to those
orientals, for it came to them as an illumination, as I
have said. In daytime life, during their waking hours,
they had the memory of their night-time life. To gain a
mental image of such a state of soul we have to go back
to the ancient Orient.
The great
culture of the ancient Orient goes back to far distant
times. Any of it still to be found in books, even in the
glorious Veda, in Vedanta philosophy, is merely a faint
echo. To see the contents of that ancient oriental wisdom
in their pure original form we would have to go a long
way back to a much earlier period than that of the Veda.
This can only be done with the aid of spiritual science.
In that ancient oriental culture the whole of life on
earth was illumined by insight into the spiritual
world—an insight that, whilst it may have been
instinctive, was also sublime. This culture then fell
into decadence. If you take a good look at oriental
culture as it essentially is today you will find that the
underlying impulse is still to focus attention on the
divine human being. Echoes of this underlying trend are
to be found even in Rabindranath Tagore's
superficialities. Tagore is entirely immersed in a later,
decadent culture but, as I said, the underlying trend is
still there in his writings, which in part are of
tremendous interest and significance though basically
completely superficial. An example are the essays
collected in his book on nationalism. [ Note 62 ] When we look to the
Orient, therefore, we see an ancient, sublime,
instinctive culture with a marked emphasis on life before
birth. And we also see the gradual decline of what
originally was a sublime culture. The decline reveals an
inability to take up the mission of modern humanity, to
enter properly into the existence we have between birth
and death. In ancient times the people of the Orient were
given the ideal image of the human being. They saw life
in the physical, sense-perceptible world as a reflection
of that ideal. This heavenly and divine ideal had been
full of life and luminosity. Gradually it darkened and
became obscured and all that was left was a shadow image.
By now it has faded completely. A shadow image remained
of something that once presented itself to the soul as
alight and alive, the ideal image the human being had of
himself as soul and spirit, part of a whole cosmos of
soul and spirit.
A certain
impotence also formed part of oriental nature. This is
something of which we must take special note if we want
to live in accord with our age. Orientals were left with
a certain inability to observe the human being whose
image is perceived during the time between birth and
death. Orientals had no real interest in this in the
past, not even when what they came face to face with was
not a substitute but something quite different—a
human being who was both heavenly and physical. Even
today they are not really interested in human beings the
way they are between birth and death. It was left to
another culture to consider the true nature of the human
being here in the world of the senses between birth and
death. It was left to a culture which I should like to
call the culture of the Middle. Historically this culture
of the Middle first appeared during the latter part of
the ancient Greek period. Original Greek antiquity still
echoed ancient oriental wisdom. Later the element began
to appear which I am now going to characterize as the
culture of the ‘Middle’ or the
‘Centre’.
The culture
of the Middle came up from a southerly direction and
spread through the late Greek and then, particularly, the
Roman world. Vision was the characteristic of the
oriental culture I have described. The element that came
up from the south, spreading through the late Greek world
and assuming its true form in the Roman world —
finally becoming the culture of Middle — came to be
a culture based on law, dialectics and intellectual
thinking. It came to be a culture not of visionaries but
of thinkers. This intellectual culture has a particular
capacity for considering the human being between birth
and death. It went through preliminary stages in the late
Greek period, grew tough and indeed brutal in the Roman
Empire, and was kept alive in the language of ancient
Rome; the Latin language, the language used by scientists
right into the Middle Ages. This dialectical and
intellectual culture reached its high point at the turn
of the 18th to the 19th century. That was the time of
Schiller, Goethe, Herder and also the philosophers
Fichte, Schelling and Hegel. Consider the characteristic
nature of those great minds and you will see that I am
right in what I am saying.
Take
Fichte, Schelling, even Goethe. What made them great?
Their greatness and significance has to do with
perception of the human being between birth and death.
They demanded that the human being must be perceived and
understood as a whole. Take Hegelian philosophy, for
example. You will find that great emphasis is put on the
spiritual nature of the human being. The spirit is
however onlY considered in so far as the human being
lives between birth and death-Hegel never considered the
pre-birth existence of a heavenly and divine human being.
He presented a historical approach to everything that
happened among human beings here on earth, always in so
far as they were human beings living between birth and
death. You will find nothing about the intervention of
powers from the world in which human beings live between
death and rebirth. It is as if all this had been erased
from that great culture, for its mission was to emphasize
very clearly that here, in the life between birth and
death, human beings have soul and spirit as well as a
physical body. That culture had its limits, however, in
that it was not possible to look up to a life in the
spirit. The soul principle that goes beyond birth and
death, the eternal element, was given tremendous emphasis
particularly by Hegel, but also by all other great
thinkers, especially in Germany. Yet they only took
account of it in so far as it came to revelation between
birth and death; they completely lacked the ability to
see into life eternal as it comes to revelation before
birth and again after death. When people spoke of a human
being independent of the body, they were using an
original tradition that had not welled up from their own
perception. It was mere tradition. In the intellectual
life of Central Europe at that time, tremendous
perceptive powers had been developed that focused on the
soul and spirit of human beings, but at the same time
also on their physical bodies. These tremendous powers
did not however extend beyond the life between birth and
death.
In the West
all kinds of new beginnings were emerging for a different
kind of life that will evolve in times to come, when a
spiritual Principle that is free of the body will come
into life in a different way. Let us recall — how
did the people of the ancient Orient let the spiritual
element enter into their lives? They remembered in the
daytime the things they had experienced at night, when
they had been outside their bodies, between going to
sleep and waking up. This will be different in times to
come. Today we have merely the early signs, the
preliminary stages of this. Between waking up and going
to sleep human beings do not merely have experience of
the things of which they are conscious. Little of what we
actually experience is at present coming to conscious
awareness. The truth is that down below In our human
nature we experience immeasurably more than we are able
to hold in awareness. Some people already have an idea of
this, particularly in the West. Thus William James [
Note 63 ] was speaking of
a ‘subconscious’ or ‘unconscious’
because he had an inkling of this, but none of these
people have so far been able to achieve full insight.
Everything said on the subject is like the babbling of
infants, but the idea is there. In the ancient Orient
experience of the cosmic soul and spirit entered into
awareness that had been gained when free of the body. The
time will come when the unconscious contents —
experienced in the depth of human nature — will
rise up into awareness for the people of the Western
world. Imaginations will also arise. Association
psychology as it is practised today is a nonsense, but
anyone who has studied the different psychologies of the
Western world, today, can see that it is a preparatory
stage.
In time to
come something that came to the people of the Middle only
as a revelation of human experience between birth and
death, will reveal its eternal aspect through the special
faculties developed in the West.
Down below
we have the element that will live in the spiritual world
after death. Remember what I have told you about these
things on different occasions and from different points
of view. I have said that the human head is the outcome
of the previous life on earth. The other parts of the
human being will be the head in the next life on earth.
Those other parts of the human being may be flesh and
blood, muscle, skin and bone as we see them today, but in
essence they contain the germ of what will be the head
during the next incarnation. They therefore relate to the
time after death. This connection with the time after
death will be revealed and brought to conscious awareness
in the humanity of the future. The early, primitive
stages of such a humanity are already present in the
West. In future the inner soul and spirit will be
imaginatively perceived, just as the soul and spirit in
the world outside human beings were perceived at an
instinctively imaginative level in prehistoric times. The
difference will be that the revelation of these inner
aspects will come to full awareness, whereas the people
of the ancient Orient received revelations that were more
instinctive and came only dimly to awareness.
What are
the early signs to be seen today? The first signs are
that in these Western regions people are very much
inclined towards materialism. In time to come, the spirit
will be revealed out of physical human substance. Because
of this the Western world is tending to become extremely
materialistic. That is the source of the materialism that
is predominantly a Western product and, coming from the
West, has overrun the Middle and is spreading to the
East.
The culture
of the Middle is not materialistic by nature. We might
nature call it physical and spiritual, because
the view taken of the of the human being is such that a
balance is maintained between turning the eye to the
physical aspect and turning it to the spiritual aspect.
German philosophers, Goethe and Schiller have always
given equal validity to body and spirit, as it were. In
the West the spirit is a matter for the future; at
present attention focuses on the body. Yet everything is
in a state of flux in human evolution and this
understanding of the body, this materialism, will one day
become spiritualism. Only this spiritualism will have
quite a different source than the spiritualism of the
ancient Orient, and above all it will be conscious.
So you see
the peculiar distribution of the three different human
configurations over the world — I have discussed
other aspects of this before. In the East, human beings
once saw their own heavenly and spiritual image in
themselves. In the Middle, human beings see themselves as
inhabitants of the earth endowed with soul and spirit as
well as a physical body. In the West today, human beings
see themselves as merely physical; it is to be their
mission, however, to develop faculties out of this
physical human body that will be the spiritual content of
human awareness in time to come. The early signs of this
are already apparent.
The human
beings of the Middle are held as in a vice between East
and West. The East originally had a very advanced culture
but it has fallen into decadence. In the West a great
culture is to come, and the first signs are there, but at
present people are still entirely caught up in the
material world. In the Middle a culture has evolved that,
I think I can say, holds the balance between the two. On
the one hand we have the clear dialectical thinking of
Schiller's letters on aesthetic education, for instance.
This way of thinking goes to a point where it does not
yet become subject to the superficiality of modern
science but still retains a personal human element. On
the other hand we have pictures of human social life like
those in Goethe's Fairy Tale of the Green Snake and
the Beautiful Lily. [ Note 64 ] This approach does
achieve pictures or images, but it does not take them to
a point where they become perceptions.
The people
of the Middle have therefore also been given the mission
to take the insights that their particular faculties have
given them into the nature of the human being between
birth and death, and to extend them through direct
perception. The human being is thus seen as soul and
spirit as well as a physical body, but this is then
extended by immediately ascending to the wisdom of the
mysteries. By developing the same faculties that have
rescued soul and spirit, accepting their existence as
well as that of the physical body, and by letting clear
thinking develop into Imagination, Inspiration and
Intuition, human beings rise again to the spiritual world
in which they live between death and rebirth. Here in the
physical world we will only come to experience the total
illumination those faculties can give, once they have
been developed, if we consider the problem of freedom. In
my Philosophy of Freedom I have therefore
concentrated entirely on that particular problem. There
it was of course necessary to use this faculty, though
merely to deal with earthly problems. If it is developed
further, however, it will raise our horizons to include
the world that lies beyond birth and death.
You see
that in a sense the world also shows three stages of
evolution: in the ancient Orient an instinctive wisdom,
in the Middle a certain dialectical and intellectual
life, and in the West today still materialism with the
spiritualism of the future to be born out of it. In the
ancient Orient everything depended on that instinctive
wisdom. Political life as we know it did not yet exist.
The people who presided over the mysteries also set the
tone for political and economic life. Greatness for the
people of the ancient Orient lay in life of the spirit
that developed instinctively. Political and economic life
depended on this life in the spirit. The life style of
the European Middle did, of course, originally come from
the South; its first beginnings go back as far as Egypt.
The life style that evolved in the Middle reached the
point where the state, the political element, was thought
through dialectically. Political life — the state
— really developed in this culture of the Middle.
The life of the spirit became mere tradition. In the
West, finally, in Puritanism, for instance, the spiritual
element became something entirely abstract, something
that could become sectarian, and people let this illumine
their ordinary everyday physical lives.
The
European Middle therefore provided the soil where above
all political ideas were developed further by Wilhelm von
Humboldt [ Note 65 ] for
instance and even took such marvellous form as the
'social community' in Schiller's letters on aesthetic
education. They were presented to human minds in the
grandiose pictures created by Goethe; his
‘Tale’ of the Green Snake and the
Beautiful Lily basically presents the idea of the
state.
In the
West, ideas that have so far developed only in relation
to material things, to economics, will one day have to
evolve into the threefold social order. The idea of the
state has merely been inherited from the culture of the
Middle. Woodrow Wilson, who used to be very famous, has
written a large volume on the subject of the state. [
Note 66 ] This contains
nothing that has originated in the West; all it does is
repeat the theories relating to the body politic that
have been developed in the Middle, including specific
ideas. The book has even been translated into German,
because in Germany, too, Woodrow Wilson was considered a
great man for a time.
It may
therefore be said that the idea of a threefold social
organism which is present in our minds has evolved in
three historical stages. In the ancient Orient
instinctive ideals became the life of the spirit. The
culture of the Middle was partly instinctive — the
idea of the state developed by Humboldt, Schiller, Herder
and others who were to follow is half instinctive and
half intellectual — with the emphasis on the sphere
of rights and on political life. Economic life, as such,
really is in the first instance the business of the West.
It is the business of the West to such an extent that
even the philosophers of the West are really out-of-place
economists. Spencer would have done a great deal better
to have established factories, rather than philosophies.
The specific configuration of the West really fits the
structure of a factory. There you will find all all the
things that Spencer was considering.
There is
also another way of putting it: In the ancient Orient
human beings ascended to the divine aspect of man. For
them, man was in a way the son of the deity, the issue of
the divine principle. The divine was in a way reaching
down, as the ancient orientals saw it. It had a downward
extension that was then merely reproduced: the human
being on earth was a continuation of the divine model.
They saw the divine and spiritual human being above, and
the physical human being—as the image of that
divine being — in the world below. They merely saw
something of the heavenly human being hanging down, as it
were, reaching down into the physical world. Later the
heavenly human being came to be forgotten, only a faint
idea remained in a culture grown decadent, and people no
longer had any feeling for something of the divine human
being reaching down into the human being on earth.
The people
of the Middle are organized in such a way that the aspect
of the heavenly human being reaching down from the
heights of the spirit has condensed into a kind of closed
semicircle, with the physical human being joined on to
this. A being of divine spirit and physical, bodily
nature, a being the mind could entirely encompass, was
the result. This is beautifully shown in Hegel's
philosophy and Goethe had it beautifully present in his
mind.
In the
culture of the West attention focuses on the animal
world, on animal nature. Darwin presented a magnificent
view of its evolution. At the top is a kind of rounded
peak. This is difficult to grasp. It is merely considered
the highest product of evolution: the human being. In
reality the West considers only animal nature, just as
the East only considered the heavenly aspect, the god
finding continuation in man. In the West attention
focuses on the animal world. This comes to a rounded peak
in a creature seen as a continuation of the evolutionary
sequence of animals, a kind of super-animal extending
beyond animal nature. That is as far as the West has got.
The point which has been reached is reflected in Western
philosophy. It will develop further and the people of the
Occident will one day give form and substance to the
spiritual element from below, just as the people of the
Orient received it from above. But in the West it will be
done in full conscious awareness. The Middle represents
the transition between the two.
When one is
considering real things it feels wrong to speak of an age
of transition. Every age is one of transition of course,
because there will always be something that went before
and something that follows. Yet in a plant the calyx is
in a definite place for instance, with the flowers above
and the leaves below. One does get clear divisions. In
the same way there are clear divisions in human
evolution. We can certainly call the time when the great
slaughter was in progress, from 1914 onwards, a time of
transition, a time that stands out in the historical
evolution of humankind. It also was a time when the
destiny of the people of the Middle developed in a way
that is full of inner tragedy in certain respects. The
people of the Middle were faced with a great question:
'How do we find the way from physical life between birth
and death on this earth to life between death and
rebirth?' Hegel's philosophy immediately turned into
materialism afterwards. The first half of the 19th
century was unable to answer the question: ‘How do
we extend the insight we have gained into the spiritual
element present here on earth to the spheres beyond this
earth?’ That indeed is the great question
specifically facing us, the question put to the culture
of the Middle. Goetheanism must be developed further. It
must develop in the direction of soul and spirit. It must
grow out of merely physical human concerns and become
cosmic. Spiritual science working towards Anthroposophy
is attempting to do this. It is a continuation of
Goetheanism, extending into the spiritual realm.
Goetheanism must be extended to become mystery wisdom. It
has to be developed to grow into mystery wisdom.
That is the
significant aspect of the signature of the present time.
We must understand it before we can consciously take our
place in the life of the present, in the work that has to
be done at the present time. The Central European element
has been severely put to the test. If it does not falter,
its task will be to deepen its perception of human
existence in the physical, sense-perceptible world; a
perception in which the spirit is still present in the
physical, sense-perceptible world. That will have to be
the basis on which a mystery wisdom is developed, using
the same clear intellect as that used to gain
understanding of the physical, sense-perceptible world.
The European Middle therefore must, or ought to, come to
understand very clearly how a balance is achieved between
the three spheres of culture, politics and the economy.
The others will then simply follow suit. Here in the
Middle people would be utterly remiss, however, if they
refused to wake up and ignored the great necessity that
has arisen—to grasp and put into effect the impulse
for a threefold order of the social organism.
The
European Middle is held as in a vice between East and
West. Today it lies prostrate. Out of the very darkness
of despair it has to find its way to the light.
In the next
lecture we will talk about what is to happen before the
middle of this century. I shall speak to you about the
Christ appearing before the middle of the 20th century.
This reappearance of the Christ is something I hinted at
in my first mystery play. For the moment let me just say
that this reappearance of the Christ is closely bound up
with our understanding of the threefold nature of the
whole of the cosmos. It will come about in so far as the
Middle will have to turn its attention on the one hand to
the instinctive spiritual culture of the East, a culture
grown old, and on the other hand to the West. It must
turn its attention to the West with a thorough
understanding of what is in preparation there in a
culture that is still materialistic today, but whose
materialism holds the seed of a spirituality of the
future. The culture of the Middle must take its place in
the middle; it must find the energy and the strength to
take its place there and point the way.
It causes
me great pain and my heart feels sore because souls are
not open today to receive the words that speak of the
necessities of which I have spoken. It causes me pain
that people want to stay asleep, want to let themselves
go; that they shrink from the great tasks that have to be
done today. We must look to the East and look to the West
and understand what is in progress there.
It has to
be clearly understood that Western culture is in its
initial stages. We can see that this is most immediately
apparent at the point where economic processes sprout
from technological processes, if I may put it like this.
A very typical example is the ideal once conceived by an
American, an ideal that is bound to come to realization
in the West one day. It is a purely ahrimanic ideal but
one of high ideality. It consists of using the vibrations
generated in the human organism, studying them in great
detail and applying them to machines to the effect that
if someone stood by a machine even his smallest
vibrations would be intensified in that machine. The
vibrations of human nerves would be transferred to the
machine. Think of the Keely engine. [ Note 67 ] It did not succeed at
the first attempt because it had been largely developed
from instinct, but it is something that will certainly be
realized one day. Here something arises from the crude
mechanistic material world that points to what is to come
— material mechanics linking up with immaterial,
spiritual elements.
In the
East, on the other hand, the old spirituality is
increasingly falling into decadence, into decay. It is
rotting away. The experience we have of the East is such
that we may certainly say: The human being once perceived
as a heavenly, spiritual being has come to look like a
senile old person. This human being still has no
understanding for the things of the earth, for the things
in which human beings, too, are clothed on this earth.
The West understands earthly things only, the East has no
understanding of them. Because of this, the heavenly
element has grown completely senile. It is always a great
mistake not to pay proper attention to the way in which
the spiritual element still has to be won from the
mechanical genius, the mechanistic materialism of the
West. The spirit will have to be intuitively gathered out
of a science that is also still very much subject to
Western materialism. In the same way it is a great
mistake to cast sidelong glances at the East and to try
and bring the spiritual life of the East to the West, in
this day and age. The Theosophical Society based at Adyar
used to do this and perhaps still does in its antiquated
ways. Looking across to the East, nothing one finds there
has anything in it that relates to present life; it is
something grown old, and has to be studied as something
historical that has grown old — something of no
significance for the present.
In the
West, if I may put it like this, we have Keely and his
engine as a rough, crude mechanistic forerunner of a
future culture. The final upshot of the East's spiritual
senility on the other hand may be seen in the work of
Tolstoy. There we see a concentrated form of something
that has once been great and is now completely decadent.
This is an interesting phenomenon but it does not have
the least significance for the present. Much has been
wiped out with the events that happened from 1914
onwards, and this includes that last flame of Eastern
senility flickering up in Tolstoy. Before the war it was
still possible to speak of Tolstoy as relating to the
present time. The war has put an end to this and Tolstoy
is no longer of significance. It is definitely out of
date to speak of Tolstoy as though he were of
significance today. And we must take care not to cast any
kind of sidelong glance in the direction of the East, of
the ancient East, and at the things that have in a way
grown senile and come to a final concentration once again
in an individual such as Tolstoy. We must take our stand
on the mission that belongs to the present time. We can
only do so if we grasp the impulse for a threefold order
of the social organism out of what lies in ourselves. The
decaying East has created a symbol, as it were, in world
history — or we might say a symptom—in making
Tolstoy a kind of final upshot, full of inner activity,
and yet impotent. The West on the other hand has produced
Keely with his engine as a first forerunner. Tolstoy
showed how the old oriental culture had grown completely
luciferic; Western culture is still entirely under the
sign of the ahrimanic element.
This is
what we must grasp in the present age. On the one hand we
must be wary of past elements reaching across from the
East, be wary of past elements from the East in someone
living in this century and on the other hand we must be
wary of what is only in its beginnings in the West. If we
fail to grasp this and fail to perceive the true nature
of these things we do not belong to the present age.
Someone belonging to the present age may of course be
English, French, American or Russian — humanity
must extend beyond geographical boundaries today. It is
important however to consider the old geographical limits
because of their role in the historical evolution of
humankind. Behind us lies a history of humankind that
went in three stages — Orient, Middle, West. Before
us — and this is something spiritual science
working towards Anthroposophy must really stress —
lies the time when we will be purely human beings,
holding the East, the Middle and the West within us at
one and the same time. Anyone born to be truly alive
today — and this includes anyone who is Asian
— is capable of holding all three within him or
her. The people of the Middle need not limit themselves
to holding the Middle within them. They must gain inner
experience of the historical East in its decadence and
the historical West which is in the ascendant. And
Americans can hold East, Middle and West within
themselves if they give thought to mystery wisdom —
they actually need it more than most — and raise
their thinking from being concerned entirely with the
economy to include the spheres of politics and the life
of the spirit.
That is
what we must say today when we want to define the tasks
which human individuals should come to realize are the
tasks given to the innermost soul. We will recognize these
tasks if we consider the great needs of the present age.
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