Lecture V
Stuttgart — March 21, 1921
I have tried to show how it is possible to
rise to supersensory modes of cognition, how through them we
gain access to new realms of experience — realms that
are completely accessible only to a super-sensory approach. I
spoke of the development of imaginative cognition — how by
means of it we can understand what takes place in the activity of
the human senses, and also understand the nature of the plant
world. We learn these things through imaginative cognition as
we understand the physical-mineral phenomena of the world
through a mathematical approach. Further, I pointed out that
through a continuation of these exercises we can attain to a
higher form of knowledge — namely, inspired cognition.
This opens the way to certain realms of experience through
which we can begin to understand what I have called the human
rhythmic system.
I would like
to look at the whole problem once again from a certain angle.
When one tries to gain a real understanding of what is
included in the sphere of human rhythmic activity, one sees
— if one is honest — that the processes taking
place here elude the kind of comprehension by which physical
processes are understood through mathematics. Nor will one
find that they can be comprehended through what I have called
imaginative cognition. Everything that has to do with the
senses and which is developed in the nervous system in the
course of life as I have described — thus also
providing a basis for the experience of the life panorama
when imaginative cognition has been developed: all of this
only clarifies the term, nerve-sense organization.
In fact, our
sensory organization can only be fully understood when this
capacity of imaginative cognition has been acquired by us.
Even external natural science has noticed that it is not
really possible to understand a particular human sense when
it is explained in terms of the general human organization.
You will find, if you study what individual scientists have
to say in this regard, that the facts themselves — in
external phylogeny, or embryology, or ontology — simply
point to the necessity of accepting the eye, for instance, as
being formed from without. The structure of the eye cannot be
understood in terms of the rest of the human organism —
as, for example, the structure of the liver or the stomach.
It can only be understood as brought about through outer
influences, through action from without. But how do we grasp
this process of "in-forming from without" in the human
organism? Only imaginative cognition makes it comprehensible
to us, as a mathematical approach makes physical phenomena
comprehensible.
From all this
you may now begin to see why external science gives us
essentially a deficient physiology of the senses. Before I
myself was able through imaginative cognition to develop a
physiology of the senses, something in me always resisted any
wish to subject the realm of the human senses to the sort of
measures applied by conventional physiology and psychology.
I always found that what they offered to explain the senses
was incomplete for the sense of hearing or sight, for
example. Particularly the psychological explanations are
deficient in this respect. Basically they always start by
asking: how are the human senses constructed in general?
Then, having given a general characterization, they proceed
to specialize for the various senses. But it never occurs to
them that their customary descriptions, particularly in the
psychology text books, are really only applicable to the
sense of touch. There is always something in their theories
that does not fit when one tries to apply them unchanged to
any other sense. We can understand this when we remember that
the physiologies and psychologies use exclusively the
ordinary logic of the intellect to put together the facts
which external research presents. However, for someone who is
examining the question carefully, it is simply impossible to
do justice to the sensory phenomena by only the putting
together of physical facts. When we apprehend each separate
sense with imaginative cognition (when doing this, I was
forced to extend the number of senses to twelve) and not just
intellectually, we arrive at their true individual forms. We
see that each separate sense is built into the human being
from certain entities, certain qualities of the outer world.
This reveals again — to one who will see it — the
bridge that is thrown across from what I have called
clairvoyant research to what is given by empirical
observation.
Certainly it
can be said that a person endowed with healthy human
understanding may still have no inclination to give up a
certain point of view, and therefore may find no reason to be
interested in clairvoyant research. But there really is an
objection to this. When we subject the facts to a thorough
analysis, there is a point at which we reach an impasse when
we apply only sense observation and the ordinary logic of the
intellect. We simply cannot clear up the problems. They leave
an unsolved remainder. For this reason we must develop our
logical thinking further to imaginative perception. Part of
what imaginative perception discloses to us is the individual
forms of the various human senses, as well as the gradual
formation of the human nervous system.
There is
something to add to this — I will explain with a short
story. Once I was at a meeting of the society that at that
time called itself the Giordano Bruno Association. The first
to speak at the meeting was a stalwart materialist who
elaborated on the physiology of the brain; by this he
believed he had given sufficient explanation for the
association of mental images and in fact for everything that
takes place in mental life. He made drawings for the
different parts of the brain and showed how they are assigned
different functions — one to seeing, another to hearing,
and so on. Then he tried to show how it might be possible,
following the neurologist Meynert, to see the connecting
paths as physical formations responsible for connecting the
individual sensory impressions, the individual mental
pictures, and so on. Whoever wishes to learn about this can
read about these extremely interesting investigations by the
important neurologist Meynert, for they are still significant
even for the present day. Well, after this materialistically
tinged but still quite ingenious explanation, in which the
brain was presented not as the mediator but as the producer
of mental life, another man stepped forward, just as stalwart
an Herbartian as the man before him was a materialist. This
man said the following:
| Diagram 1 Click image for large view | |
Yes, I see what you have sketched,
the various parts of the brain, their connections, and so
forth. We Herbartians, the philosophers, could actually make
the same diagrams. I could draw exactly the same thing. Only
I would never intend it to represent parts of the brain and
neuronal tracts. Rather, I would draw the mental images
directly — thus, and the soul forces that are active in
this picturing activity as they go from image to image. The
drawing actually comes out the same, he said, whether I, an
Herbartian, draw the psychic processes, or you, a
physiologist, draw the parts of the brain and their
connections. And it was truly interesting how one drew his
diagram —I will draw it here schematically — and
then the other drew his. The drawings were identical. The one
drew to symbolize the life of the soul, while the other drew
brain processes, which he also symbolized. In this way the
two of them then disputed the matter — of course, without
one convincing the other — but they actually drew two
altogether different things in exactly the same way.
This is in
fact a characteristic experience in the field of knowledge,
because when one tries to illustrate mental pictures
symbolically through diagrams, as Herbart did (it can also be
done in other ways), one actually arrives at something very
similar to what one gets when one sketches processes and
parts of the brain. How does this happen? This is something
that becomes clear only to imaginative cognition, when we see
in the retrospective life panorama how the independence of
the soul life develops. We see how the etheric body actually
organizes — and, in fact, has already at birth to some
extent organized — the brain. It permeates the brain in
its organization. Then we are not surprised to find out that
the brain grows similar in formation to the entity which
permeates it. But we do not come to real insight in the
matter until we are able to perceive that there is an
activity of soul working on the organization of the brain.
This is similar to when someone paints a picture and what he
paints resembles what he is copying. It is similar
because the image he has in his mind works on in his painting
and brings about the similarity. In the same way, what is
found in the brain — actually in the entire nervous
system — as the consequence of a forming activity on
the part of the soul, will be similar to the soul's forming
activity, or to the soul content itself. But if we wish to
understand the activity that works itself into the nervous
system, we must simply say: in its origin and development,
the whole nervous system is an expression of a reality that
may only be viewed imaginatively.
The brain and
the entire nervous system are, of course, external physical
formations. But we do not really grasp them unless we
comprehend them as imaginations that have become physical.
Thus what the spiritual investigator generally calls
imagination is not, as one might suppose, absent from the
phenomenal world — it is indeed present, but in its
physical image. This fact occasionally makes itself manifest
in a striking way, as in the case of those two men, the one a
physiologist, the other a philosopher, who portrayed two
different things in the same way.
But this has
still another aspect. I have already referred to the research
of the psychiatrist, physiologist, and psychologist Theodor
Ziehen. Theodor Ziehen undertook to explain mental life in
such a way that he replaced it by brain activity in every
particular. His explanation is essentially the following: he
contemplates mental life; he then considers the brain and
nervous system anatomically and physiologically (to the
extent that present empirical research permits) and shows
which processes, in his opinion, are present in the brain for
a particular mental activity (including memory). I have
pointed out, however, that his explanation — which is
truly valuable for the study of mental life and brain
activity — is forced to come to a standstill before our
life of feeling and our life of will. You will find this in
Ziehen's
Physiologische Psychologie
(Physiological Psychology).
There is, however, a
shortcoming in this psychology. Although he makes everything
so enticing by explaining mental life in terms of
processes in the brain, in the end he does not completely
account for such things as the forms that are present in the
brain. To do this it is necessary to bring in an artistic
principle; and this again is nothing else than the outward
expression of imaginative cognition. Were Ziehen to consider
this, his explanation of mental life through brain processes
would not be fully satisfying to him either. When he wants to
move on to the realm of feeling, he finds himself completely
at sea. He is not able to account for feelings at all. So he
tacks a “feeling coloration” onto the mental
images. This is nothing but a word; when one cannot go any
further, one makes do with a word. He says: Yes, in certain
cases we are dealing not just with mental images, but with
feeling-tinged mental images. He comes to this because he is
unable to fit feeling into the brain, where it might enter
into mental life. Also he does not find an organic basis for
feeling that would permit him to make a link to mental life
similar to that of the brain and nerves.
In the case of
brain and nerve activity it is easier because researchers
like Theodor Ziehen are — most of them —
extremely clever when it comes to an intellectual or
mathematical understanding of the entire natural realm. I
mean that exactly — without irony. In science these
days an extraordinary amount of intellectual acumen has been
applied in this direction. If you should decide to become
better acquainted with the whole anthroposophical movement,
it would become clear to you that in no way do I favor
dilettante talk about abstruse nebulous anthroposophical
conceptions while arrogantly disputing what present-day
science presents, or that I approve when a speaker does not
know present-day science well enough to acknowledge it in all
its proper significance. I hold firmly to the standpoint that
one can pass judgment on present-day science from an
anthroposophical point of view only if one is really familiar
with this science. I have had to suffer continually from the
actions of anthroposophists who, without having an idea of
the importance and task of contemporary science, talk loosely
about it. They think a few fine anthroposophical phrases they
have learned entitle them to pass judgment on what has been
achieved through years of painstaking, conscientious, and
methodical work. This stage we must of course leave behind
us.
Now, to
continue, what actually happens is this: one arrives at the
point of finding the relation between mental life and
nerve-sense activity. But something is always left
unexplained. Something always eludes one's attention. One
swims slowly from the point of view of rational, logical,
mathematical construction into a realm where things become
unclear. One examines the senses and sees their continuation
in the nervous system — and that is where one should
take the next step into imaginative thought. But to some
degree every human being has a dim feeling of the
transformation of well-defined mathematically constructible
figures into something that cannot be grasped mathematically
and yet manifests itself clearly in the brain and nervous
system. As a result of this feeling it is said that someday
we shall also succeed in penetrating those parts of sensory
life and nerve life that evade direct, purely mathematical
construction. In other words, something is put off as a
future ideal that is in fact attainable now if one will
simply admit that it is not possible to penetrate the realm
of the senses and nerves merely by rational cognition. This
must be led over to something pictorial, something evoked
just as consciously as a mathematical figure, but going
beyond the mathematical. I mean, of course, imagination.
Perhaps for
some of you it would be helpful to make an exact picture of
how ordinary analytic geometry relates to so-called synthetic
or projective geometry. I would like to say a few words on
this subject. In analytic geometry we discuss some equation
of the kind y=ƒ(x). If we stay, for instance,
in the x-y coordinate system, then we say that for
every x there is a y, and we look for the
points of the y-coordinate, which are the results of
the equation. What is actually occurring here? Here we have
to say that in the way we manipulate the equation, we always
have our eye on something that lies outside of what we
ultimately seek, because what we are really looking for is
the curve. But the curve is not contained in the equation
— only the possible x and y values are contained in the
equation. When we proceed in this manner, we are actually
working outside the curve; and what we get as values of the
y-coordinate in relation to the
x-coordinate we consider as points belonging to the
curve. With our analytic equation, we never really enter the
curve itself, its real geometric form. This fact has
significant implication as regards human knowledge.
When we do
analytic geometry, we perform operations which we
subsequently look for spatially; but in all our figuring we
actually remain outside of a direct contemplation of
geometrical forms. It is important to grasp this because when
we consider projective geometry, we arrive at a very
different picture of what we are doing. Here, as most of you
know, we don't calculate, we really only deal with the
intersection of lines and the projection of forms. In this
manner we get away from merely calculating around the
geometrical forms, and we enter — at least to some
degree — the geometrical forms themselves. This becomes
evident, for example, when you see how projective geometry
goes about proving that a straight line does not have two,
but only one point at infinity. If we set off in a straight
line in front of us, we will come back from behind us (this
is easily understood from a geometrical point of view), and
we can show that we travel through exactly one point
at infinity on this line. Similarly, a plane has only one
line at infinity, and the whole of three-dimensional
space has only one plane at infinity.
These ideas
— which I am only mentioning here — cannot be
arrived at by analytical means. It is not possible. If we
already have projective-geometric ideas, we may imagine we
can do it; but we cannot really. However, projective geometry
does show us that we can enter into the geometrical forms,
which is not possible for analytic geometry. With projective
geometry it is really possible. When we move out of mere
analytic geometry into projective geometry, we get a sense of
how the curve contains in itself the elements of bending, or
rounding, which analytic geometry describes only externally.
Thus we penetrate from the environment of the line, the
surroundings of the spatial form, into its inner
configuration. This gives us the possibility of taking a
first step along the way from purely mathematical
thinking — of which analytic geometry is the prime
representative — to imagination. To be sure, with
projective geometry, we do not actually have imagination yet,
but we approach it. When we go through the processes
inwardly, it is a tremendously important experience —
an experience which can actually be decisive in leading us to
an acknowledgment of the imaginative element. Also, this
experience leads us to affirm the path of spiritual research,
inasmuch as we can form a real mental picture of what the
imaginative element is. When I was reading the memoirs of
Moriz Benedict — a good natural scientist and physician
of our day — I found them in general to be unpleasant,
blase and arrogant, but at one point I felt real sympathy.
There he says something which seems to me quite correct; he
finds that medical doctors lack the preparation that the
study of mathematics can give. Of course, it would be a very
good thing indeed if physicians had more mathematical
preparation, but in this regard we must just register the
shortcomings in contemporary training. From my point of view,
however, while reading his memoirs, I could not help feeling:
No matter how good their mathematical conceptions, doctors
would still not be in a position with them to properly
account for the kinds of forms that exist, for example, in
the sense and nervous systems. There one can only succeed by
transforming mathematical knowledge and advancing to
imaginative knowledge. Only then does the specific nerve or
sense structure reveal itself to us in a similar manner as a
physical-mineral structure reveals itself to the mathematical
representation.
Matters such as
these allow you to see how, in every area, the doors stand
open for contemporary science to enter into what spiritual
research wishes to give. In the coming days, if we manage to
enter, even a little bit, into medical-therapeutic aspects,
you will see how wide open the doors really are for spiritual
research to enter and throw light on all that cannot be
revealed through the usual methods of investigation. Let us
now suppose we proceed on this path, but we do not wish to
proceed any further than imagination, which I will describe
further tomorrow. Let us suppose we do not wish to move
forward to inspiration. We will then not have the slightest
possibility of even recognizing something in the human
organism as the approximate image or bodily realization of a
soul-spiritual nature — so that two men with completely
opposite ways of thinking will draw these structures
similarly. Only through inspired cognition will we have our
first opportunity to become aware in the human being of the
rhythmic system, encompassing primarily the processes of
respiration and blood circulation. Only at this point are we
able to tolerate — if I may express it thus — the
outer lack of similarity between the physical structures and
the soul-spiritual. The life of feeling does in fact belong
directly to the rhythmic system in the same way as the life
of mental representation belongs to the nervous system. The
nerve-sense system, however, is a kind of external physical
image of mental life, while the rhythmic system — what
is accessible to external sense-empirical investigation
— shows hardly any resemblance to what takes place in
the soul as feeling. Just because this is so, external
research never discovers that this similarity exists; it only
reveals itself when we come to another kind of cognition than
that of imagination. With this step, as I indicated
yesterday, we approach a path of knowledge which was followed
in a more primitive, or instinctive way in the practice of
yoga in ancient India.
Those who
practiced the yoga system, (as already pointed out, to try to
renew this yoga would be wrong, because it is not suited to
the changed constitution of modern man) tried for short
periods of time to replace the ordinary, normal, but largely
unconscious respiratory process with a more consciously
regulated respiration. They inhaled differently from the way
we ordinarily do in our normal, unconscious breathing. The
breath was then held, to bring to awareness of how long it
was held and then it was exhaled in a particular manner. At
best, such a method of breathing could give additional
support to present spiritual life. In India, however, this
process was done by those who wanted to reach the
awe-inspiring Vedanta philosophy or the philosophical
foundation of the Vedas. This is no longer possible
todäy. In fact, it would contradict what the human
constitution actually is today. Nevertheless, much can be
learned from this way in which a rhythmic process is
willfully made conscious by an alteration of normal
breathing. What otherwise takes place quite naturally in the
course of living is lifted into the domain of conscious will.
Thus respiration — all that takes place in the human
life-process during breathing — is carried out
consciously. Because it is carried out consciously, the
entire content of human consciousness changes. In breathing
we draw what is in the environment into our own organization.
In the kind of consciously structured breathing process I
have described, something of a soul-spiritual nature is also
drawn into the human organization.
Now consider
the following. When we contemplate the human organization as
a whole, if we are not satisfied with abstraction but want to
move on to reality, then we cannot really say: We are only
what is within our skin. We have within us the respiratory
process, it may be about to begin, or it may be proceeding
with the transformation of oxygen and so on. But what is in
us now was outside us before and it belonged to the world.
And, what is in us now, when exhaled, will again belong to
the world. As soon as we approach the rhythmic system, we do
not find ourselves individualized organically in the same way
as we picture ourself when we consider only what is not of an
aeriform nature within our skin. When the human being becomes
fully aware that he exchanges his aeriform organization quite
rapidly — now the air is without, now it is within
— he cannot help but appear to himself as a
self-conscious finger would appear to itself, as a part of
our organism. The finger could not say: I am independent
— it could only feel part of the whole human organism.
As a breathing organism, we must feel the same way. We are
members of our cosmic surroundings precisely by virtue of the
respiratory organism and the only reason we do not pay
attention to the fact that we are a part of it is because we
perform this rhythmical organizing activity naturally, almost
unconsciously.
When, on the
other hand, this fact is raised to consciousness through the
yoga process, one notices that, in fact, it is not just
material air that is inhaled and combined with one's self,
but along with the air something of a soul-spiritual nature
is inhaled and assimilated. When exhaling, something of a
soul-spiritual nature is returned to the outer world. One
comes to know not only one's material connection with the
cosmic surroundings; one also comes to know one's
soul-spiritual connection with the cosmic surroundings. The
entire rhythmic process is metamorphosed so that a
soul-spiritual element can incorporate itself.
Just as the
cosmic environment integrates itself into the process of
mental representation, so into the breathing process (which
otherwise is an inner physical-organic process), something of
a soul-spiritual nature is incorporated. In this way the
transformed yoga breathing becomes a more
pantheistically-tinged way of knowing, in which the separate
entities are less individualized. Thus in the Indian, a
different consciousness takes shape from the ordinary one. He
experiences himself in another state of consciousness in
which he is, as it were, surrendered to the world. At the
same time, this has the effect of leading him into an
objective relationship with his accustomed mental world as he
moves down, as it were, with his consciousness into the
respiratory-rhythmic system. Before this, his conscious life
was in the nerve-sense system, in the form of the sum total
of his mentally-viewed images. Now he experiences himself,
precisely what he experiences he doesn't know, but as soon as
it becomes objective it comes into inner view, and through
this he learns to recognize the true nature of his accustomed
image world. He now experiences himself one level lower, so
to speak, in the rhythmic system. When we become acquainted
with this inner process of experience, then we can understand
in a new way what is breathing through the Vedas. The Vedanta
philosophy is not only something that has taken a different
form than it takes in the west; it grows out of something
immediately experienced — from the experience that is
simply given in a consciousness displaced into the breathing
process.
There is still
a further experience when we descend into this respiratory
process. Before I mention it, however, I would like to review
more precisely what I indicated the day before yesterday. I
said that the yoga-process is not for us any more, and the
human constitution has advanced since then. In our age we are
no longer capable of entering into the yoga process, simply
because our intellectual organization is so strong today;
because our mental images are so inwardly
“hardened” — this is just meant
figuratively — that we would send much more power into
the respiratory system than did the Indian with his
“softer” mental life. Today the human being would
be inwardly numbed or he would disturb his rhythmic system in
some other way if he proceeded as the Indian did in the yoga
process. As I have pointed out — and as I will describe
later in greater detail, we are in a position to advance from
a further development of the memory faculty to a development
of the process of forgetting. By entering into the depth of
the forgetting process, we take hold of respiration from
above, and can leave it as it is. We do not need to change
it. The right way for modern man is to let it be. With an
artificially enhanced forgetting, we shine down, as it were,
into the respiratory system. We transfer our consciousness
into this region. But now it is possible to do this in a more
fully conscious way, with greater penetration of the will
than the ancient Indian could use.
In this way, we
now have the possibility to recognize the rhythmic system in
its association with human feeling life. When we gain the
ability to retain a mental imaging capacity in this region,
when it becomes possible for us to have inspired mental
images, we no longer feel the need for the sense-perceptible
structure to be similar to the soul structure — as is
the case where the brain structure is similar to the
connections between mental images. In fact, the external,
sensory structure can be so different from the related soul
element that it completely escapes the notice of conventional
physiology, as in Theodor Ziehen's case. Looking at the world
in a more spiritual way, looking at it purely spiritually, we
find that in fact it is the feeling life that enables us to
penetrate consciously into the rhythmic system. Thus we begin
to see why in earlier times (the Indians, after all, are
simply representative of what came from the earlier stages of
human development), when human beings strove to go beyond an
ordinary everyday understanding of the world, their path to
knowledge led them down into the life of feeling. Cognition
remained an activity of mental picturing, but it penetrated
into the feeling life, it was suffused with feeling. Modern
research only speaks of a coloration of feeling. What the
yogi of old, and human beings in general in older cultures
experienced, was a sinking down into the realm of feeling.
Yet this was without the vagueness typical of this realm. The
full clarity of conscious mental life remained, and yet not
only was feeling not extinguished, but it appeared more
intense than in ordinary everyday life, thereby suffusing
everything that normally had a sober, prosaic character. At
the same time the mental images, in going through a
metamorphosis, a deepening, took on other forms. These
transformed mental images were so suffused with feeling that
the will was directly stimulated. What this human being of
earlier times then did was something that we do today in a
more abstract way, when we take something we are carrying in
our soul and use it as a subject for drawing or painting.
What was experienced in yoga in this way was so intense that
the mere drawing or painting of it would not have been
enough. It was an entirely natural step to transform it into
an external symbolism embodied in external objects.
Here you have
the psychological origin of all that appeared in the form of
rituals in ancient culture. To find the motive for these
rituals, one must look at their inner nature. It was not out
of some form of childishness, but out of his way of
experiencing knowledge that the human being of old came to
perform ritualistic ceremonies and to regard them as
something real. For he knew that what he molded into his
ritual was something inward put into outer form, something
rooted in a cognition from which he was not estranged, but
which connected him with reality. What he impressed into his
ritual was what the world had first impressed into him. When
he had reached this state of knowledge, he said to himself:
Just as the physical breath from the surrounding cosmos lives
within me, now the spiritual essence of the world lives in my
transformed consciousness. And when I in turn make an outer
structure, when I build into the objects and rituals what
first formed itself in me out of the spiritual cosmos, I am
performing an act that has a direct connection with the
spiritual content of the cosmos.
Thus for the
human being of an ancient culture, the outward cultic objects
stood before him symbolically in such a way that through them
he felt again the original connection with the spiritual
entities he had first experienced through ordinary knowledge.
He knew that in the elements of the ritual something is
concentrated in an outer visible form. This something does
not exhaust itself in the outward expression I see before
me, for the soul-spiritual powers that live in the cosmos are
alive in the ritual while it takes place.
What I am
relating to you is what went on in the souls of those human
beings who as a result of their inner experiences gave form
to the rituals. One reaches a psychological understanding of
such rituals when one is willing to accept the idea of
inspired cognition. These things simply cannot be explained
in the usual external way. One must enter deeply into man's
being and must consider how the various functions of the
entire human race developed in sequence — how, for
instance, in a certain epoch particular rituals developed.
The religious ceremonies of today are actually rernnants of
something that took form in ancient times and then stood
still afterward. This is why it is becoming so difficult for
a person today to understand the reason for the religious
ritual, for he feels it is no longer a justifiable way of
relating to the outer world.
Furthermore, we
can see another aspect of how the soul works in the course of
mankind's development. Deep knowledge, as I have described,
underlies the creation of a ritual or the carrying out of a
ritual. But humanity has developed further and another factor
has entered in, which still lives more or less in the
unconscious. What shows itself most clearly when we reach
imaginative cognition is that the nervous system is formed
out of our soul-spiritual powers. This too has developed in
the course of human history. Particularly since the middle of
the fifteenth century, humanity in all its various groups has
developed in such a way that this instinctive incorporation
of the soul-spiritual powers into the nervous system has
become stronger than it was formerly. We simply have a
stronger intellect today. This is obvious when one studies
Plato and Aristotle. Our intellect is organized differently.
In my Riddles of Philosophy I have demonstrated this from the
history of philosophy itself. Our intellectual functioning is
different. We simply overwork that element of the soul which
has grown stronger in the course of human development. And
this element which has grown stronger has also become more
independent. The increasing independence of our intellect
from the nervous system simply has not reached the attention
of the philosophers — or of mankind in general. Because
the human being has grown stronger on the inside, so to say
— because he has penetrated his nervous system with a
stronger organizing power from the soul-spiritual realm, he
feels the need to make use of this intensified intellectual
activity in the outer world. In ancient times, knowledge
attained inwardly was used in the creation and the exercise
of rituals; there was a striving to carry over what had been
originally experienced inwardly as knowledge into what was
performed outwardly. In the same way today, the longing
arises to satisfy our stronger, more independent intellect in
the outer world. The intellect wants a counterpart that
corresponds to the ritual.
What is the
result of such a wish? Please accept the paradox, for
psychologically it is so: Where inner experience is expelled,
as it were; where the intellect alone wishes to arrange a
procedure so that it can live in the object just as cosmic
life was once intended to live in the “object” of
the ritual: what results from this is the scientific device,
serving the experiment. Experiment is the way the modern
human being satisfies his now stronger intellect. Thereby he
lives of the opposite pole from the time when man satisfied
his relation to the cosmos through the cultic object and
ritual ceremony. These are the two opposite poles. In an
ancient culture of instinctive clairvoyance, the impulse was
to give outer presence to inner cosmic experience in what
could be called ritualistic exercise. Our intensified modern
intellect, on the other hand, is such that it wishes to
externalize itself in controlled movements that are devoid of
all inwardness, in which nothing subjective lives — and
yet the experiment is controlled just precisely through the
subjective attainments of our intellect. It may seem strange
to you that the same underlying impulse gives rise on the one
hand to the ritual, and on the other to the experiment, but
one can understand these polarities if one considers the
human being as a whole.
Starting with
this as a foundation, we will continue our discussion tomorrow.
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