Lecture VI
Stuttgart, January 6, 1921
My Dear Friends,
You will have seen, from what has been
said so far, that in the explanation of natural phenomena we
need to find a path leading beyond the intellectually
mathematical domain. That we do not dispute the justification
of a mathematical approach is implicit in the whole spirit of
these lectures. But we were able sharply to define the point
beyond which it is impossible to go with mathematical
thought-forms, in the celestial spaces on the one hand, and
in the realm of embryology on the other. We must hew out a
path to other methods of cognition. It is the purpose of
these lectures to show the scientific need of other
methods.
I shall try
to show that what is looked for nowadays merely by gazing
outward into celestial space — whether with the unaided
eye or with the help of optical instruments — needs to
be put on a far wider basis, so that not only a part but the
whole of man becomes the ‘reagent’ for a deeper
penetration of the Heavens. Today I shall try, if not to
prove, at least to indicate the validity of such a widening
of method, by approaching the problem from quite another
side. It may seem paradoxical in relation to our present
theme, but the reason will soon become plain.
In studying
the evolution of mankind on Earth we must surely find
something within human evolution itself to guide us to the
essential source of the celestial phenomena. For otherwise we
should be assuming that what goes on in the Universe beyond
the Earth is without influence on man, — on human
evolution. No-one will make such an assumption, although
admittedly the influences may be over-estimated by some and
under-estimated by others. It will therefore be plausible
— at least from a methodic point of view — to put
the question: ‘Can we find anything in the evolution of
mankind itself to indicate ways of access to the secrets of
celestial space?’ Asking this question, we will take
our start, not from Spiritual Science, but from the facts
which anyone can gather for himself by empirical, historical
research.
Looking back
in the evolution of mankind in the realm where human
thoughts, the human faculties of knowledge find expression,
where, so to speak, the relation of man to the world takes on
the most highly sublimated forms — we are led back, to
begin with (as you may gather from my ‘Riddles of
Philosophy’), only a few centuries into the past.
Indeed I have often pointed to a certain moment during the
15th century, one of the most essential in the more recent
phase of human evolution. The indication is of course
approximate. We have to think of the period about the middle
of the Middle Ages. Needless to say, we are referring only to
what was going on within civilized mankind.
It is not
generally seen clearly or sharply enough, how deep and
incisive a change was then taking place in human thought and
cognition. There has unfortunately for some time been a
downright aversion — among philosophers especially
— to a real study and appreciation of the epoch in
European civilization which may be called the Age of
Scholasticism. During that age, deeply significant
questions came to the surface of man's life of knowledge. It
one goes into them deeply enough, one feels that these
questions did not merely spring from the realm of logical
deduction — the form in which the Middle Ages used to
clothe them — but from the very depths of man's
being.
One need only
recall what then became a fundamental question in human
knowledge — the question of Nominalism and Realism. Or
again, what it betokened in the spiritual development of
Europe that attempts were made to prove the existence of God.
There was for instance the so-called ontological proof of the
existence of God. From thought itself — from the pure
concept — men wanted confirmation of God's existence.
Think what it means in the whole evolution of human
knowledge. Something was stirring in the inmost depths of
human being; in the philosophical deductions of the time it
only found fully conscious expression. Men were perplexed as
to whether the concepts and ideas, which man forms and puts
into words, in some way stand for a reality, or whether they
are merely formal summarizations of the external sensory
data. The Nominalists regarded the general concepts which man
creates for himself as a mere formal summary, having no
significance for the external reality but only helping man to
find his way about — to orientate himself in an
otherwise confusing outer world. The Realists (an expression
used in a rather different sense than today) declared that
something real is to be found in general or universal
concepts, — that in these concepts man in his inner
life takes hold of something real, — that they
are no mere convenient generalizations or abstractions from
the world.
Often in more
public lectures I have related how my old friend Vinsenz
Knauer — a latter-day scholastic, though he would not
have claimed to be one — showed himself very clearly,
in his interesting work “The Central Problems of
Philosophy, from Thales to Robert Hamerling”, to be
thoroughgoing Realist. The Nominalists, he said, assert that
the concept ‘lamb’ is nothing but a convenient
generalization arising in the human mind; so too the concept
‘wolf’. Matter is only put together in a
different way in the lamb and in the world. We only summarize
it in the convenient abstraction, ‘lamb’ or
‘wolf’ as the case may be. Well, he suggested,
try for some time to keep a wolf away from all other food and
give it only lambs to eat, after the necessary lapse of time
the matter in the wolf will be nothing but lamb, and yet it
will not have lost its wolfishness. Therefore the
wolf-nature, expressed in the general concept
‘wolf’ must be something real.
Now the fact
that the so-called ‘ontological’ proof of God's
existence could arise at all, bears witness to a deep and
thorough going change then taking place in human nature.
Quite a short time before, it simply would not have occurred
to anyone within European culture to want to prove God's
existence, for this was felt to be self-evident. Only when
this feeling was no longer alive in men, did they begin to
crave for proof. If you have living inner certainty about a
thing, you do not want to prove it. But at that time
something was slipping away from man, which until then had
been alive in him quite as a matter of course, and the human
spirit was thus led into quite other channels — quite
other needs. I could adduce many another example, showing
precisely at the highest levels of thought and knowledge
(though you may take the word 'highest' with a grain of salt)
what a deep stirring and rumbling was going on in human
nature during that period of the Middle Ages.
Now we can
surely not deny that there must be some connection between
what is going on in the life of mankind and the phenomena in
the Heavens beyond the Earth. In the most general sense, we
must assume that there is some connection; what it is in
detail, we shall discover in due course. Hence we may ask
— we want to proceed very carefully, so we need only
ask — ‘How were these inner experiences
which man on Earth was undergoing at that time, connected
with the evolution of the Earth-plant altogether?’,
— a question which may obviously lead us into realms
beyond the earth. Was it perhaps a special moment in the
evolution of the Earth a such? Is there anything that we can
point to as a more definite criterion of what this moment was
in human evolution?
We can indeed
point to something of significance in this connection. There
was another time which made a deep incision in the name
regions of the Earth where in the Middle Ages these events
were taking place in the most highly sublimated realm of
human life the spiritual life of thought. The medieval time,
when this deep moving and stirring of humanity took place,
lies in the very midst between two end-points, as it were, in
the scale of time. For European regions these
‘end-points’ do not represent the kind of times
in which intense activity of human life and culture would be
possible at all. In effect, if from this medieval moment,
which I will call A
(Fig. 1),
we go backward and forward an equal length of time into a
fairly distant past and future, we come to points of time
representing a certain barrenness and death of civilization
in the very regions where this deep stirring of human life
was going on in the 13th, 14th, and 15th centuries. About
10,000 years forward and 10,000 years back from this moment
(A in Figure 1)
we reach the maximum
development of the Ice Ages in these very regions Ice Ages
certainly would not allow of any outstanding development in
human life and culture.
Fig. 1
Surveying
therefore the evolution of these European regions we find an
Ice Age — a laying-waste of civilization — 10,000
years before the Christian era, and we should find the same
again 10,000 years after this time. The deep stirring of
human life, of which we have been speaking, happened midway
between two such barren epochs.
As I said
just now, there is a certain reluctance to pay attention to
this period in the development of philosophy — the 13th
and 14th centuries; — it is not seen clearly and
accurately for what it is. Yet if one has a feeling for the
evolution of the life of knowledge in mankind, one is aware
that to this day our philosophic history is influenced by the
after-effects of what was stirring and rumbling in the life
of mankind at that time. It showed itself in other domains of
civilization too; it only came to expression most clearly and
symptomatically in this phase of development of the life of
thought and knowledge.
Now as you
know, this phase of development — appearing about the
middle of the Middle Ages — was an incisive one in
European civilization. I have often spoken of it in
anthroposophical lectures. It was an incision. Something was
changed in the whole trend of human evolution. It had been
beginning long before — in the 8th century B.C. We may
describe it as a most intense development of human
intellectuality.
Since then,
in the life and civilization of mankind, we have been looking
especially at the development of Ego-consciousness. All
aberrations and all wisdom gained in the general life of
humanity since that medieval time are really due to this
Ego-development to the ever-growing elaboration of the
consciousness of “I” in man. The consciousness of
the ancient Greeks and even of the Latins (both the ancient
Latins and their descendants, the Latin peoples of today) did
not lay so much stress on the Ego. Even in language for the
most part, in grammar and syntax, they do not pronounce the
“I” so outspokenly, but still include it in the
verb. The “I” is not yet so blatantly set forth.
Take Aristotle and Plato, and above all the greatest
philosopher of antiquity, Heraclitus. Throughout their work
the Ego is not yet so prominent. The way in which they take
hold of the world-phenomena with the intellectual reasoning
principle is as yet rather more selfless. (Please do not over
stress this, but in a relative sense the word
‘selfless’ may be used.) There is not yet so
sharp a dissociation of the self from the world-phenomena as
there tends to be in the new age — the Age of
Consciousness in which we are now living.
Going still
farther back — beyond the 8th century BC — we
come into the Egyptian and Chaldean Age as I have called it
(you will find the details in my “Occult
Science”). Once again, the condition of the human soul
was different. During this age — which like the others,
lasted for over 2,000 years — man was not yet relating
external phenomena to one-another by intellectual reasoning
at all. He apprehended the world — the Heavens too
— rather in feeling and direct sensation. It is
mistaken and fruitless to approach what is still extent of
the Astronomy of Egypt and Chalden with present-day
intellectual judgments — the kind of judgment which we
ourselves have inherited from the Graeco-Latin Age. We must
achieve a certain metamorphoses or soul so as to enter into
the quite different soul-condition then prevailing, where man
took hold of the world in simple feeling and sensation (where
the concept was not yet separated from the sensation).
Even in the
realm of actual sensations or sense-impressions — as
can be shown historically and philologically — they
attached no great importance to the precise description of
the blue and violet shades of color, whereas (they had a very
keen sensation of the red and yellow regions of the spectrum.
Indeed the sensation of the dark colors can be seen to have
arisen simultaneously with the capacity for intellectual
concepts.
The
Egypto-Chaldean Age — from 747 B.C. about 2160 years
into the past, — takes us to the beginning of the third
millennium BC. Still earlier, say in the fourth or fifth
millennium BC, we come into an age when man's whole outlook
and mode of perception were so different from ours today that
it is hard for us, without recourse to spiritual-scientific
methods, to transplant ourselves at all into the way in which
the man of that time was the world around him. It was not
only a feeling and sensing, — it was a living
with the outer happenings, being right in
them. Man felt himself a part and member of all Nature around
him, much as my arm, if it were conscious, would feel itself
a member of my body.
Here
therefore was an altogether different trend and quality in
man's relation to the world. And if we go still farther back,
we find this union of man with the surround world even more
enhanced. In those very early times, civilizations were only
able to develop where special geographical conditions made it
possible. I mean the time described in my “Occult
Science” as the Ancient Indian civilization —
much earlier than the culture of the Vedas, which was but a
later echo of it. The Ancient Indian epoch comes very near to
the time when glacial conditions prevailed in our regions of
the Earth. A culture like the Ancient Indian could only
develop when such climatic conditions, more or less, as we
enjoy in the Temperate zone today, extended to what is now
the Equator. You can deduce it simply from the relative
advance or retreat of the ice; tropical conditions did not
come about in India until a must later time, when in more
northerly regions the ice had receded.
We see
therefore how the inner evolution of mankind undergoes
modifications hand in hand with changing terrestrial
conditions — changing conditions, that is to say, on
the Earth's surface. Only those who take a very short-term
view of mankind's evolution upon Earth will imagine that the
scientific ideas we entertain today have any absolute
validity — that we have now at last got through to the
scientific truth, so to speak. To anyone who looks more
deeply into these regions of the Earth which are today
enjoying certain forms of cultural and spiritual life will at
some future time inevitably be laid waste again; they will be
desolate once more. From the past length of time you may
reckon out how long ahead it will be till a new glacial age
overtakes our present civilization. Moreover assuming that we
can find some connection between the celestial
phenomena and these facts of earthly evolution — the
successive Ice-ages and the mid-point between them —
this will lead on to a further insight. That which take place
on Earth in the most highly sublimated realms of cultural
life — in the life of thought and knowledge —
will be related now not only to these changing conditions on
the Earth itself, but to conditions in the outer Cosmos.
Purely empirical reflection shows that man is what he is by
virtue of conditions on the planet Earth and in the Universe
beyond.
Once more
then taking the facts empirically as is usual in Science,
only with a somewhat wider range, our vision is extended
until we recognize such a relationship as we have just been
describing. Now in a sense, even in present time we can
perceive how the quality and trend of human spiritual life is
brought about by the relation between the Earth and the
celestial bodies. In an earlier lecture it was pointed out
how different the spiritual configuration of mankind tends to
be in Equatorial and in Polar regions. Investigating this
more closely, the different relation of the Earth to the Sun
proves to be the determining factor. It makes man in the
Polar regions less free of his bodily nature. Man in the
Polar regions is less able to lift himself out of the bodily
organism, — to pain free use and manipulation of his
life of soul (As to the different mutual relations of Earth
and Sun, there will be more in it than that, as we shall find
in due course; but to begin with we can take our start from
the conventional notions.)
We need only
picture to ourselves how differently the men of Polar regions
are taken hold of by something which in ourselves keeps more
in the background. We of the Temperate zone have the quick
alternation of day and night. Think how long this alternation
becomes as you approach the Polar zone. It is as though the
day were to lengthen out into a year. I told you of what
works in the little child, deep in the bodily nature from
year to year, from birth to the change of teeth, and of how
the independent working of the life of soul, given up as it
is to the quicker rhythm of the day, gradually frees and
detaches itself from this more bodily working. This is not
possible to the same extent in Polar regions. It is the
yearly rhythm which will there tend to make itself felt. The
emphasis is more on the bodily side. The human being will not
wrest himself free to the same extent from what works within
the body.
Think now of
the scanty relics that have been preserved from the
civilization of very early times, — that have survived
the Ice Age. Then you will see that there were times in which
a kind of ‘Polarization’ (giving the word its
proper meaning in this context) extended right across the
present Temperate zone, so that conditions were prevailing
here not unlike those in the present Polar regions. You can
use this comparison for what was working in the Ice Age; you
can truly say: What is now pressed back towards the North
Pole, extended then over a considerable part of the Earth.
(Please keep this free of present-day explanations and ideas,
for otherwise the pure phenomenon will be obscured. Take only
the pure phenomenon as such.)
Conditions on
the Earth today are such that we have the three types; the
human beings of the Tropical, the Temperate and the Polar
zones respectively. Of course they influence each other, so
that in outer reality the phenomenon does not appear quite so
purely. Nevertheless, what you here have in a
spatial form — you find it again in
time as you go backward. Going back in time, we come to
a ‘North Pole’, as it were, in time — in
the history of civilization. Going forward, we come to a Pole
again. Remembering that the Polar influence on man is
connected with the mutual relations between Earth and Sun. We
must conceive that the change which has taken place since the
Ice Age — the de-polarization, so to speak — is
connected with a changed relation between Earth and Sun.
Something must have happened as regards the mutual relation
between Earth and Sun. What was it then? The facts themselves
suggest the question. What is the source of this in the
celestial spaces?
Consider it
more nearly. Of course these things will be different in the
Northern and Southern hemispheres, but the facts remain. We
shall at most have to extend our picture, adapting it to the
real facts. We can only take our start from the empirically
given data. What is revealed then, if we approach the
phenomena without preconceived ideas? The Earth and the
events on Earth appear as an expression of cosmic happenings
— cosmic happenings which manifest themselves in
certain rhythms. Something that showed itself about the tenth
millennium before the origin of Christianity, will show
itself again about the eleventh millennium after. What is in
between, will also in a sense be repeated. What we here have
between the two Ice Ages, will undoubtedly have been there
before — in former cycles. It is a rhythm; our
attention is drawn to a rhythmic process.
And now look
out into the celestial phenomena. To emphasize one fact
especially, which I have often pointed to in my lectures, you
have the following. (I will only characterize it roughly.)
You know that the vernal point — where the Sun rises in
spring-time gradually moves through the Ecliptic. Today the
vernal point is in the constellation of Pisces; before, it
was in Aries; still earlier in Tauraus, — that was the
time of the cult of the Bull among the Egyptians and
Chaldeans. Still earlier, it was in the constellation of
Gemini, and then in Cancer; in Leo. This already brings us
very nearly to the last Ice Age. Thinking it through to a
conclusion, we know that the vernal point goes all the way
round the Ecliptic, and that the time it takes is called the
Platonic Year — the great Cosmic Year, lasting
approximately 25,920 years.
A whole
number of processes are comprised in these 25,920 years,
involving among other things this rhythmic alternation on the
Earth; Ice Age., intermediate period, Ice Age, intermediate
period, and so on. At the time we spoke of, when there was
that deep stirring of the spiritual life in mankind, the
vernal point was entering the sign of Pisces. In the
Graeco-Latin Age it had been in the sign of Aries, previous
to that in Taurus, and so on. We get back to Leo or Virgo,
more or less, during the time when glacial conditions
prevailed over the greater part of Europe and in America too.
Looking into the future, there will be another Ice Age in
these regions when the vernal point reaches the sign of
Scorpio. This rhythm is contained within what takes its
course in 25,920 years. Although admittedly of vast extent,
it is a true rhythm none the less.
Now as I have
often mentioned, this rhythm is reminiscent — purely
numerically — of another rhythm. If it is simply a
question of rhythms and the rhythms are expressible in
numbers, if the numbers are the same the rhythms too are the
same. You know that the number of breaths man takes —
in breathing and out breathing — is approximately 18 to
the minute. Reckon out the number of breaths in a 24-hour day
and you get the same number as before — 25,920. Man
therefore shows in his daily life the same periodicity, the
same rhythm, as is revealed by the movement of the vernal
point in the great Cosmic Year. Now it is in the day that man
shows this rhythm. A day therefore, with respect to
breathing, corresponds to the Platonic Year. The vernal point
— connected as it is with the Sun — goes round
apparently in 25,920 years. But there is also the apparent
movement of the Sun through the 24 hour day, while man is
taking 25,920 breaths. It is the same picture here as in the
great Universe. If then there were a Being who breathed in
and out once a year (a simple-minded hypothesis no doubt, but
we will use it for comparison), — such a Being, if
living long enough, would undergo in 25,920 years the same
process as man does in a day. Man reproduces, as it were in
miniature, what is manifested in the great cosmic
process.
These things
make little impression on the people of today, for they are
not accustomed to look at the qualitative aspect of the
world. Quantitatively, the mere rhythm appears less
important. Therefore the scientists are out to find other
relations between numbers than these that find expression in
pure rhythms. They pay less heed to the latter: But in the
epochs when man experienced more nearly the relation between
himself and the Universe — when he felt himself more
immersed in the phenomena of the Cosmos — these things
made a deep impression on him. As we go back in the history
of mankind — beyond the second or third millennium BC
— we find great attention paid to the Platonic Year. I
mentioned yesterday not to explain it, but by way of
illustration — the ancient Indian Yoga system. Man
entered deeply into a living inner experience of the
breathing process, trying to make it conscious. In doing so
there dawned upon him this relation between the rhythm that
goes on in man — breathed, as it were, into
man in a concentrated and contracted form — and the
phenomena of the great Universe. Therefore he spoke of his
own in- and out-breathing and of the mighty in- and
out-breathing of Brahma, a single breath spanning an entire
year, for which 25, 920 years are a day — a day of the
Great Spirit.
I do not wish
to make an unkind remark, my dear friends, but we do here
begin to get some notion of the great distance which men at
one time felt between themselves and the Spirit of the
Macrocosm whom they revered. Man felt himself about as far
beneath the Spirit of the Macrocosm as a day is beneath
25,920 years. It was indeed a great Spirit — a very
great Spirit — whom man conceived in this way and whose
relation to himself he experienced with due modesty. It would
not be uninteresting to compare how great is the distance
often felt by modern man between himself and his God. Does he
not often conceive the Deity as little more than a slightly
idealized human being?
This may not
seem very relevant to our subject, but in fact it is. If we
want to develop real means of knowledge in this sphere, we
must find our way from what is merely calculable into quite
other realms. Indeed our study of Kepler's Laws and all that
followed from them showed how our very calculations, leading
as they do to incommensurable numbers, impel us of their own
accord into a realm beyond mere calculation.
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