Lecture VI
Stuttgart — March 22, 1921
In the lectures so far, I have spoken of
the capacities for supersensory knowledge and I have named
them Imagination and Inspiration. Today I would like to say
something about acquiring these capacities. At the moment I
can only mention a few details. In my book
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds and Its Attainment,
you will find this
presented in greater depth. Today, however, I would point out
what is important in the context I have chosen for the
present lecture. I have indicated that what I call
Imagination with regard to knowledge of the world is attained
through a development modeled on the memory process, only on
another level. The importance of the memory process is that
it retains in picture form what the human being encounters in
outer experience.
Our first task
will be to understand certain characteristics of the ordinary
memory process, and then we must distill out what can be
called pure memory in the true sense, also in ordinary life.
One of the peculiarities of memory is that it tends to alter
to a certain degree what has been experienced. Perhaps it is
unnecessary to go into detail here, since most of you will be
quite familiar with the fact that at times you can despair
when you are relating something, and you hear from your own
telling what has become of your experience by its passing
through your memory. Even in ordinary life a certain
self-education is necessary if we wish to come closer to pure
memory, to the capacity to have these pictures ready at hand
so that they faithfully render our experience. We can
distinguish what happens with memory. On the one hand there
is an activity of fantasy, quite justified, that goes on in
an artistic direction. On the other hand there is a
falsification of our experience. It should suffice for the
moment to point out the difference between the fantasy
tendency and the falsifying tendency, and that we must be
able to experience this to maintain a healthy soul life.
Certainly we must be aware of how memory is transformed by
our fantasy, and how, when it is not subjected to such
arbitrary action, when it is allowed to proceed according to
a kind of natural similarity in the soul, it becomes
increasingly faithful and true. In any case, both from the
good tendency to artistic fantasy, as well as from the forces
active in falsifying the memories — when we study it
psychologically, we can recognize what is alive in the memory
forces.
And out of
these forces, something can take form that is no longer just
memory. For example, one can point to certain mystical
teachings that are in fact essentially falsified memory
images; and yet we can profit from studying 'such images that
have taken the form of earnest mystical experience. What
concerns us at this moment, however, is what I have already
indicated, that we can attain a power of the soul which is
alive in the memory which can be metamorphosed into something
else. This must happen in such a way that the original power
of memory is led in the direction of inner faithfulness and
truth, and not toward falsification. As I have said, when we
repeatedly evoke easily surveyable mental images, which we
intentionally combine out of their separate elements and then
view as a whole, just as easily as the mathematical images:
when we call up such images, hold them in our consciousness
and dwell upon them, not so that we are fascinated by them,
but so that at each moment we continue to hold them through
an inner act of will — then gradually we succeed in
transforming the memory process into something different,
something of which we were previously unaware. The details
are contained in the book I named, and also in
Occult Science, an Outline.
If we continue
long enough with such exercises (how long depends on the
individual) and if we are in a position to expend sufficient
soul energy on them, then we come to a point where we simply
begin to experience pictures. The form of these pictures in
the life of the soul is like that of memories. Gradually we
win the capacity to live in such imaginations of our own
making, although in their content they are not of our making.
The exercise of this capacity results in imaginations rising
up in the soul, and if we maintain a
“mathematical” attitude of soul, we can make sure
at any time whether we are being fooled by a suggestion or
auto-suggestion, or are really living in that attitude of
soul voluntarily. We begin to have mental images with the
characteristic form of memory pictures but with a greater
degree of intensity. Let me emphasize: at first these
imaginations have the character of memory pictures. Only
through inspiration do they become permeated with a more
intense experience. At first they have the character of
memory pictures, but of such a kind that we know their
meaning does not relate to any experiences we have lived
through externally since our birth. They do, however, express
something just as pictorially as memory pictures express
pictorially our personal experiences. They refer to something
objective, yet we know that this objective something is not
contained in the sphere which is surveyed by our memory. We
are conscious that these imaginations contain a strong inner
reality, yet at the same time we are aware that we are
dealing with just images — just pictures of the
reality. It is a matter of being able to distinguish these
pictures from those of memory, in order that these
imaginations remain pure, so that no foreign elements slip
into them.
I will
describe the outer process, but of course in just a few
lectures one cannot go into any great detail. We may form a
mental picture of an outer experience and we can see how in a
sense the outer experience passes over into our organism, and
— expressed abstractly — it then leads a further
existence there, and can be drawn forth again as a memory
picture. We notice that there is a certain dependence between
what lives in the memory and the physical condition of the
human organism. The memory is really dependent on our human
organism right into the physical condition. In a way we pass
on what we have experienced to our organism. It is even
possible to give a detailed account of the continuation of
the various pictures of our experience in the human organism.
But this would be an entire spiritual-scientific chapter in
itself. For our memories to remain pure and true, no matter
how much our organism may participate in what lives on in the
memory process, this involvement may not add anything of real
content. Once mental pictures of an experience have been
formed, nothing further should flow into the content of the
memories.
If we are
clear about this fact of memory life, we are then in a
position to ascertain what it means when pictures appear in
our consciousness that have the familiar character of memory
pictures, but a content which does not relate to anything in
our personal experience. In the process of experiencing
imagination we realize the necessity of continually
increasing the power of our soul. For what is it that we must
really do? Normally our organism takes over the mental
pictures we have formed from life and provides memory.
Thereby the mental pictures do not just sink down into an
abyss, if I may so express it, but are caught and held by our
organism so that they can be reflected back again at any
necessary moment. With imaginative pictures, this is just
what should not be the case; we must be in a position to hold
them through inner soul forces alone. Therefore it is
necessary for us to acquire something that will make us
stronger than we are ordinarily in receiving and retaining
mental images. There are of course many ways to do this; I
have described them in the books already named. I wish to
mention just one of them. From what I now tell you, you will
be able to see the relation between various demands of life
which spring from anthroposophical spiritual science and
their connection with the foundation of anthroposophical
research.
Whoever uses
his intellect to spin all kinds of theories about what he
confronts as phenomena in the world (which of course can be
extraordinarily interesting at times) will hardly find the
power for imaginative activity. In this respect, certain
developments in the intellectual life of the present day seem
specifically suited to suppress the imaginative force. If we
go further than simply taking the outer phenomena of the
mineral-physical realm and connecting them with one another
through the power of our intellect; if we begin to search for
things that are supposed to be concealed behind the visible
phenomena, with which we can make mental constructions, we
will actually destroy our imaginative capacity.
Perhaps I may
make a comparison. No doubt you have had some dealings with
what could be called phenomenalism in the sense of a Goethean
world view. In arranging experiments and observations, Goethe
used the intellect differently from the way it is used in
recent phases of modern thought. Goethe used the intellect as
we use it in reading. When we read, we form a whole out of
the individual letters. For instance, when we have a row of
letters and succeed in inwardly grasping the whole, then we
have solved a certain riddle posed by this row of individual
letters. We would not think of saying: Here is a b,
an r, an e, an a and a d
— I will look at the b. As such, this isolated
b tells me nothing in particular, so I have to
penetrate further for what really lies behind the b.
Then one could say: Behind this b there is concealed
some mysterious “beyond,” a “beyond”
that makes an impression on me and explains the b to
me. Of course, I do not do this; I simply take a look at the
succession of letters in front of me and out of them form a
whole: I read bread. Goethe proceeds in the same way in
regard to the individual phenomena of the outer world. For
instance, he does not take some light phenomenon and begins
to philosophize about it, wondering what states of vibration
lie behind this phenomenon in some sort of
“beyond.” He does not use his intellect to
speculate what might be hiding behind the phenomenon; rather,
he uses his intellect as we do when we “think”
the letters together into a word. Similarly he uses the
intellect solely as a medium in which phenomena are grouped
— grouped in such a way that in their relation to one
another they let themselves be “read.” So we can
see that regarding the external physical-mineral
phenomenological world, Goethe employs the intellect as what
I would call a cosmic reading tool.
He never
speaks of a Kantian “thing in itself” that must
be sought behind the phenomena, something Kant supposed
existed there. And so Goethe comes to a true understanding of
phenomena — of what might be called the
“letters” in the mineral-physical world. He
starts with the archetypal or
“Ur”-phenomenon, and then proceeds to
more complex phenomena which he seeks either in observation
or in experiments which he contrives. He "reads" what is
spread out in space and time, not looking behind the
phenomena, but observing them in such a way that they cast
light on one another, expressing themselves as a whole. His
other use of the intellect is to arrange experimental
situations that can be “read” — to arrange
experimental situations and then see what is expressed by
them. When we adopt such a way of viewing phenomena and make
it more and more our own, proceeding even further than
Goethe, we acquire a certain feeling of kinship with the
phenomena. We experience a belonging-together with the
phenomena. We enter into the phenomena with intensity, in
contrast to the way the intellect is used to pierce through
the phenomena and seek for all kinds of things behind them
— things which fundamentally are only spun-out
theories. Naturally, what I have just said is aimed only at
this theoretical activity.
We need to
educate ourselves in phenomenology, to reach a “growing
together with” the phenomena of the world around us.
Next in importance is to acquire the ability to recall a
fully detailed picture of the phenomena. In our present
culture, most people's memories consist of verbal images.
There comes a moment when we should not be dependent on
verbal images: these only fill the memory so that the last
memory connection is pushed up out of the subconscious into
consciousness. We should progress toward a remembering that
is really pictorial. We can remember, for instance, that as
young rascals we were up to some prank or other — we
can have a vivid picture of ourselves giving another fellow
punches, taking him by the ear, cuffing him, and so on. When
these pictures arise not just as faded memories, but in sharp
outline, then we have strengthened the power we need to hold
the imaginations firmly in our consciousness. We are related
to these pictures in inner freedom just as we are to our
ordinary memories. With this strengthened remembering, we
grow increasingly interested in the outer world, and as a
result the ultimate "living together with" all the various
details of the outer world penetrates into our consciousness.
Our memories take on the quality of being really objective,
as any outer experience is, and we have the feeling that we
could affectionately stroke them. Or one could say: These
memory pictures become so lively that they could even make us
angry. Please bear with me as I describe these things to you!
It is the only thing I can do with our present language.
Then comes the
next step: we must practice again and again eliminating these
imaginations so that we can dive down again and again into an
empty consciousness. If we bring such pictures into our
consciousness at will and then eliminate them again in a kind
of inner rhythm — meditating, concentrating, creating
images, and then freeing ourselves of them — this will
quicken powerfully the feeling of inner freedom in us. In
this way we develop a great inner mobility of soul —
exactly the opposite of the condition prevailing in
psychopaths of various kinds. It really: is the exact
opposite, and those who parallel what I have just described
here with any kind of psychopathic state show that they
simply have no idea of what I am talking about.
When we
finally succeed in strengthening our forgetting — the
activity which normally is a kind of involuntary activity
— when now we control this activity with our will, we
notice that what we knew before as an image of reality, as
imagination, fills with content. This content shows us that
what appears there in pictorial form is indeed reality,
spiritual reality. At this point we have come to the edge of
an abyss where, in a certain sense, spiritual reality shines
across to us from the other side of existence. This spiritual
reality is present in all physical sense reality. It is
essential to develop a proper sense for the external world in
order to have a correct relationship to these imaginations.
Whoever wishes just to speculate about phenomena, to pierce
them through, as it were, hoping to see what is behind them
as some kind of ultimate reality — whoever does this,
weakens his power to retain and deal with imaginations.
When we have
attained a life of inspiration — that is, experiencing
the reality of the spiritual world just as ordinarily we
experience the physical world through our external senses
— then we can say: now I finally understand what the
process of remembering means. Remembering means (I will make
a kind of comparison) that the mental images we have gained
from our experiences sink down into our organism and act
there as a mirror. The pictures we form in our minds are
retained by the organism, in contrast to a mirror which just
has to reflect, give back again what is before it. Thus we
have the possibility of transforming a strictly reflective
process into a voluntary process — in other words, what
we have entrusted to memory can be reflected back from the
entire organism and particularly from the nervous system.
Through this process, what has been taken up by the organism
in the form of mental pictures is held in such a way that we
too cannot see “behind the mirror.” Looking
inward upon our memories, we must admit that having the
faculty of memory prevents us from having an inner view of
ourself. We cannot get into our interior any more than we can
get behind the reflective surface of a mirror.
Of course what
I am telling you is expressed by way of comparisons, but
these comparisons do portray the fact of the matter. We
realize this when inspiration reveals these imaginations to
us as pictures of a spiritual reality. At this moment the
mirror falls away with regard to the imaginations. When this
happens we have the possibility of true insight into
ourselves, and our inner being appears to us for the first
time in what is actually its spiritual aspect. But what do we
really learn here?
By reading
such mystics as Saint Theresa or Mechtild of Magdeburg,
beautiful images are evoked, and from a certain point of view
this is justified. One can enter into a truly devotional mood
before these images. For someone who begins to understand
what I have just described to you, precisely this kind of
mystical visions cease to be what they very often are for the
nebulous types of mystic: When someone comes to real inner
vision, not in an abnormal way (as is the case with such
mystics) but by the development of his cognitive faculty as I
have described it, then he learns not only to describe a
momentary aspect as Mechtild of Magdeburg, Saint Theresa and
others do, but he learns to recognize what the real interior
of the human organization is. If one wants to have real
knowledge and not mystical intoxication, one must strive
toward the truth and put it in place of their mist-shrouded
images. (Of course, this may seem prosaic to the nebulous
mystic.) When this is accomplished, the mirror drops away and
one gains a knowledge, an inner vision of the lungs,
diaphragm, liver, and stomach. One learns to experience the
human organization inwardly. It is clear that Mechtild of
Magdeburg and Saint Theresa also viewed the interior, but in
their case this happened through certain abnormal conditions
and their vision of the human interior was shrouded in all
manner of mists. What they describe is the fog which the true
spiritual investigator penetrates.
To a person
who is incapable of accepting such things, it would naturally
be a shock if, let's say hypothetically, a lofty chapter out
of Mechtild were read and the spiritual researcher then told
him: Yes, that is really what one sees when one comes to an
inner vision of the liver or the kidneys. It is really so.
For anyone who would rather it were otherwise, I can only
say: That is the way it happens to be. On the other hand, for
someone who has gained insight into the whole matter, this is
for him the beginning of a true relation to the secrets of
world existence. For now he learns the origin of what
constitutes our human organization and at what depths they
are to be recognized. He clearly recognizes how little we
know of the human liver, the human kidneys, not to speak of
other organs, when we merely cut open a corpse — or for
that matter, when we cut open the living human organism in an
operation — and get just the one-sided view of our
organism.
There is the
possibility not just to understand the human organism from
the external, material side, but to see and understand it
from the inside. We then have spiritual entities in our
consciousness, and such entities show us that a human being
is not so isolated as we might think — not just shut up
inside his skin. On the contrary! Just as the oxygen I have
in me now was first outside and is now working within me, in
the same way — though extended over a long period of
time — what is now working in me as my inner
organization (liver, kidneys, and so on) is formed out of the
cosmos. It is connected with the cosmos. I must look toward
the cosmos and how it is constituted if I want to understand
what is living in the liver, kidneys, stomach, and so on;
just as I must look toward the cosmos and the make-up of the
air if I want to understand what the substance is that is now
working in my lungs, that continues to work on in the blood
stream. You see, in true spiritual research we are not
limited to separate pictures of separate organs but we come
to know the connections between the human organism and the
whole cosmos.
Not to be
overlooked is the simple symbolic picture which we have
already mentioned of the senses. We can in a way visualize
our senses as “gulfs,” through which the outer
world and its happenings flow into us. At the same time our
senses continue inward as I have described them. Little by
little we can see this activity from an inner point of view
— the forming and molding activity that has worked on
our nervous system since our birth. I have described the
subjective experience of this activity as a life review, a
life panorama, and we discover in the configuration of the
nervous system an external pictorial form of what is really
soul-spiritual. It can also be said that first we experience
imaginations and then we see how these imaginations work in
the formation of nerve substance. Of course this should not
be taken in too broad a sense, since, as we know, nerve
substance is also worked on before birth. I shall come back
to this tomorrow. But essentially what I have said holds
true. We can say: here is where the activity continues toward
the inside; you can see exactly how it goes farther. It is
the same activity, in a certain sense, that "engraves" itself
into the nervous system. For the parts of the nervous system
that are formed completely, this "engraving" activity can be
seen streaming through the nerve paths. In childhood,
however, for the parts that are still in the-process of being
formed, this “engraving” acts as a real modeling
force, a structuring proceeding out of imaginations. This
leaves the rest of the human organism, about which we will
speak shortly — what underlies the muscles, bones, and
so on, also the physical basis of the nervous system —
in fact, all of the organic tissue. At this point I should
relate to you a certain experience I had; it will make this
all a bit clearer.
I spoke once
before the Theosophical Society about a subject I called
“anthroposophy.” I simply set forth at that time
as much of this anthroposophy as had revealed itself to my
spiritual research. There was a request for these lectures to
be printed and I set about doing this. In the process of
writing them down, they turned into something different. Not
that anything that had first been said was changed, but it
became necessary to add to what was said by way of further
explanation. It was also necessary to state the facts more
precisely. This task would require a whole year. Now came
another opportunity. There was again a general meeting of the
Society and there was a request that the lectures should be
ready for sale. So they had to get finished. I sent the first
signature (16 pages) of the book Anthroposophy to the
printer. The printing was rapidly done and I thought I would
be able to continue writing. I did continue writing but more
and more it became necessary to explain things more
accurately. So a whole number of pages were printed. Then it
happened that one signature was only filled up to page
thirteen or fourteen and I had to continue writing to fill up
all sixteen pages. In the meantime I became aware that in
order to get this matter done the way I wanted to would
require a more accurate, detailed development of certain
mental processes, a very specific working out of imaginative,
of inspirational cognition and then to apply these modes of
cognition to these anthroposophical issues. And so I had to
take a negative step, I dropped the whole idea of writing on
Anthroposophy. It is still lying there today as it lay then
— many pages.
[1]
For my intention
was to make further investigations. Thus I became thoroughly
acquainted with what I want to describe to you now. I can
only describe it schematically at this time, but it is a sum
total of many inner experiences that are really a cognitive
method of investigating the human being.
It became
increasingly clear to me that before one could finish the
book called
“Anthroposophy,”
in the form intended at that time, one must have certain experiences
of inner vision. One must first be able to take what one
perceives as soul-spiritual activity working in the nervous
system and carry it further inward, until one comes to the
point where one sees the entire soul-spiritual activity
— which one grasps in imagination and inspiration
— crossing itself. This crossing point is really a
line, in a vertical direction if looked at schematically. For
certain phenomena the point lies farther up, for others
farther down. In these lectures I can't describe this in
detail, I just wanted to make a kind of cross section through
the whole of it. Now because of this crossing, one is no
longer free in exercising this activity. In fact, one was not
altogether free before, as I have shown; now one is even less
free. The whole situation undergoes a change. One is now
being held strongly in an imaginative-inspired state.
Expressed concretely, if one comes to an imagination of the
eye by taking hold of visual sense-perception and the
continuation into mental processes with imaginative-inspired
cognition, then this activity proceeds inwardly and one comes
to a kind of crossing, and with the activity first
encompassing the eye another organ is encompassed, and that
is the kidney.
The same
applies to the other organs. In each case, when one carries
one's imaginative-inspired activity into the body, one finds
various relatively complete organs — complete at least in
their basic form from birth — and one comes to a real
inner view of the human organism. This kind of research is
very demanding; and as I was not obliged at that moment to
finish the book, and had to give another lecture cycle, which
also demanded research efforts, you can imagine that it was
not easy to continue to work out the method which I had
developed at that time — of course, it was quite a few
years ago that this occurred.
I mention this
only to show you some of the difficulties — how one is
continually held back by various demands. To continue in
this, one must hold one's inner forces firmly together if one
is to accomplish it. One must, in fact, repeatedly resolve to
intensify one's thinking ability, the force of one's inner
soul work — to strengthen it through love of external
nature. Otherwise one simply cannot proceed. One goes
consciously into oneself, but again and again one is thrown
back, and instead of what I would call an inner view, one
gets something not right. One must overcome the inward
counterblow that develops.
I wanted to
tell you all this so that you could see that the spiritual
investigator has moments when he must wrestle with certain
problems of spiritual research. Unfortunately, in the years
that followed the event I have just described to you, my time
was so filled with everything imaginable, particularly in
recent years, that the needful — indeed, indispensable
— activity for finishing my Anthroposophy could not
take place.
You see,
something that is inwardly understood, something we spoke of
above rather abstractly, is in fact what is spun into an
enveloping form of an organ, something quite concrete. If you
picture this to yourselves, you will realize that such an
insight into the human being can also build a bridge to
practical activities. These activities must of course be
founded on a vision of the human being and his relation to
the world. I have already indicated in another connection how
through developing imagination we gain knowledge not only of
the sensory realm and its continuation into the nervous
system, but also of the plant world. When we advance to
inspiration, we become acquainted with the whole realm of
forces that are at work in the animal world. At the same time
we become aware of other things of which the animal world is
only the outer expression. We now recognize the nature of the
respiratory system, we can understand the external forms of
the respiratory system through this relationship. The
external form of the respiratory and circulatory system is
not directly similar in its outer shape to its inner
counterpart, as is the case with the outer form of the
nervous system and the inner mental life. I showed this
yesterday — how in the case of the nervous system two
people, representing very different points of view, were able
to draw similar pictures. In a parallel manner we become
acquainted with the outer world and its kingdoms and the
inner aspect of the human being.
Tomorrow I
will consider what this inwardly experienced knowledge adds
to our insight into the nature of the human being and his
relation to his environment. Naturally, a great deal is
revealed to us about specific relationships between the human
being and his environment. It is possible to perceive the
nature of a specific human organ and its connection to what
exists in the outer natural realm. Thereby we discover in a
rational way the transition from a spiritualized physiology
to a true therapy. What once was won through instinctive
inner vision is now possible to be renewed. I have mentioned
yoga, and I could name even older systems which made it
possible to perceive in an instinctive, childlike way the
connection between the human being and the world around him.
Many of today's therapeutic measures come from this older
time — perhaps in somewhat different form, but they are
still among the most fruitful today. Only on this spiritual
path can therapy be developed that is suited to meet the real
needs of today. Through insight into the connection of the
human organs with the cosmos, a medicine will be developed
based an inner perceptions, not just external experiment.
I set this
before you just as an example of how spiritual science must
fructify the various specialized branches of science. That
this is needed is obvious when one looks at external research
efforts, which have been very active and are magnificent in
their own way — but which abound with questions. Take,
for example, outer physiology or outer pathology: questions
are everywhere. Whoever studies these things today and is
fully awake will find the questions there — questions
that beg for answers. In the last analysis, spiritual science
recognizes there are great questions in outer life, and that
they require answers. It does not overlook what is great and
triumphant in the other sciences. At the same time, it wishes
to study what questions result from this; it wishes to find a
way to solutions to these questions in just as exact a manner
as can be taught in the other sciences. In the end, the
questions can be found (even for sense-bound empirical
investigation) only through spiritual investigation. We will
speak more about this tomorrow.
Notes:
1.
Published in German as
Anthroposophie — Ein Fragment,
Bibl. Nr. 45; English translation in
preparation by Mercury Press.
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