Lecture 6
From Imaginative Knowledge to
Inspirational Knowledge
Stuttgart, September 3, 1921
You will have realized, from what has gone before,
that imaginative perception shows some similarity to the way memory
works in the human mind. One way of defining imaginative perception
is to compare it to the processes going on in our memory. It will, however,
be necessary to take a more penetrating look at this life of memory
than is normally done by psychologists today.
Memory is very often thought
to consist of thoughts becoming attached to outer sensory perceptions.
The idea seems to be that we have thoughts about what we perceive with
the senses — while we do so, or perhaps a little while after —
and those thoughts then subside gently into a subconscious sphere, rising
up again from that subconscious when suitable efforts are made are taking
the form of remembered ideas. One school of philosophy has referred to
such thoughts or ideas as going down below the threshold of consciousness,
as it were, to come up again, crossing the threshold, when the moment
is right. It is of course exactly what the lazy thinker wants: to imagine
a process where ideas are first of all stimulated by sensory perception,
and then, when we no longer have those perceptions, they hang around
somewhere or float about in a subconscious — which of course one
has never seriously thought about — to pop up again when required.
Even a very superficial look at what the human soul experiences will
show that this certainly is not the case.
To begin with, direct observation
will show no appreciable difference between an idea arising in connection
with something we perceive with our senses and one held in the memory.
In the first case, the outside world stimulates the idea or concept.
Something outside is perceived, an idea follows. We do of course have
awareness of the process of perception, and are able to follow the process
leading to the evolution of an idea if we reflect on this. But that
is not really the point. It is true that when a remembered idea comes
up we have no immediate awareness of what it is inside us that stimulates
this idea. Yet, as I have just indicated, the point is not that we know
about sensory perception, but that from one side or another — now
from without and now from within — an idea is brought to mind.
It could be said, taking care
to use the words properly, that in either case it is something objective
that drives us to form an idea. Pursuing the process of sensory perception
and ideas arising from it further, the essential point will have to be
that we go through certain motions when we want to make sure we remember
something, that is, when it matters to us that something we have experienced
does not simply fall into oblivion, and it is important to keep it in
our memory. Just consider the machinations we used when we were young
to help us memorize things when it was important to memorize them. Whatever
brings about memory therefore clearly goes beyond what is needed merely
to form an idea. If we consider memory as such, we shall find that the
ability to remember is at times reduced or else enhanced merely by the
physical condition we are in, and that our organism as a whole is involved
when memories arise. We shall discover that when we are in the process
of forming ideas based on sensory perceptions we carry out an activity
that is organic by nature. This organic activity is partly or completely
concealed from conscious awareness, yet it is in fact the function responsible
for memory. This is so because a concept or idea formed on the basis
of sensory perceptions does not simply swirl down into the subconscious.
Something else is linked with the process of forming concepts on the
basis of what we perceive. The concept or idea fades. Once we have gone
past the process of sensory perception that has been in the forefront
of our mind, the idea will have faded; but something else has also happened
within us, and this will recall the idea when the occasion arises.
Anyone able to observe mental
processes will find that a remembered idea is something completely new
and that it forms in about the same way as an idea based on sensory
perceptions is formed. The difference is that in the one case the process
is going from without to within and in the other it goes from within
to without. In the one case one is clearly aware of the triggering factor
being something perceived by the senses, while in the other it remains
hidden from awareness, being an inner process connected with the organism.
Let us simply state this fact — I have only been able to give an
outline — and return to our discussion of imaginative perception.
I have described how imaginative
perception is developed first of all by doing exercises that enable
us to form mental images in the same way we form mental images when
remembering things. These exercises have been described in my book
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds
and in my
Occult Science.
They enable us to experience in images. A point is reached where such
inner experience of seeing concepts in the form of images has a content
that does not recall personal experience but now bears the stamp of
representing a reality, a truth, not initially accessible to ordinary
consciousness — a truth we may call a spiritual truth.
When imaginative perception
is applied to the action I have just described, this action will appear
in quite a different light. It becomes apparent how perception linked
with the forming of ideas and ideas based on memory appear in relation
to the ability to form images. The ability to perceive in images will
above all give a specific inner experience of the forming of ideas, of
thinking as such. We do not get far when we use our ordinary consciousness
for reflection. Philosophical training would be necessary if one wanted
to arrive at anything at all when making the forming of ideas, thinking
as such, the subject of one's reflections. Anyone without philosophical
training will grow impatient when required to think about thinking as
such. Even Goethe considered himself lucky for never having thought
about thinking.{ Note 1 ] It is easy to see why
if we consider Goethe's nature. He was always endeavouring to
achieve a vivid, plastic image — I have already referred to this
in these talks. He felt like a fish abandoning the water for the air
when he moved from his concrete element into this element of pure thought;
there his spirit could not breathe, it being utterly against his nature.
It is however possible, and
indeed necessary, to understand thinking as such. Without this, no conclusive
philosophical concept can be achieved. This may not be to everybody's
taste, but it certainly is the philosopher's business. Our concept
of thinking activity, of the forming of concepts, is extraordinarily
abstract; it is a pale notion to our everyday consciousness and we do
not like to dwell on it for long. Yet to imaginative perception it becomes
more concrete, more vivid and graphic; indeed I would say that now the
thinking process, the forming of ideas, that previously appeared an
abstract, disembodied thing, comes close to being concrete and graphic.
A statement like that should
not be misinterpreted. In the first place it must really come as a surprise
that something usually regarded as having nothing to do with the material
world becomes more concrete when looked at in the first stage of working
towards knowledge of the non-physical world — supersensible knowledge.
Indeed it approaches a form that, I would say, actually bears the stamp
of the material world. The picture one forms of the thinking process — for
Imagination consists in receiving pictures — bears the mark of processes
to do with life coming to an end, with dying. Imaginative perception
does indeed show the process of forming ideas, of thinking, as one in
which the material world is dying. Comparing what I have just described
with something perceived by the outer senses, I think I may say that
the only thing to compare it with is the process to be observed when
physical death ensues for a living creature. Basically, the transition
from ordinary sensory perception to imaginative perception of the thinking
process is an experience of the kind one gets when sharing in a death
in the physical world.
The process of gaining insight
comes more alive when approaching Imagination and Inspiration, than
it is in its abstract form, in ordinary consciousness. This also is
the reason why advancement to supersensible perception is combined with
what yesterday I referred to as inner experiences of destiny. In ordinary
consciousness, the acquisition of knowledge is gone through with a certain
inner indifference. We know that life normally lifts us up in delight
and takes us down into pain, that we move up and down with the waves
of feeling and emotion. We also know that the processes involved in
cognitive thinking have an icy coldness to them, a quality that leaves
us cold, making few waves in our emotions.
This does indeed change when
we advance to imaginative perception. Here, the processes of gaining
insight come to resemble more the processes of ordinary life, although
they are entirely in the sphere of mind and spirit and have nothing
to do with the physical world. A more intimate relation to the processes
of perception develops, for they now arouse greater personal interest.
And now, in going through this process where thinking, the forming of
ideas, becomes vivid, we experience a process so vivid it is almost
concrete. Making ourselves really conscious of this process, we are
able to use it to gain more of an understanding of the memory process.
The human organism in a way becomes transparent if one visualizes it
in this way. In the first place, the thinking process has been experienced
in mind and spirit, in an Imagination. The same process becomes a material
image when we come to study the memory process. The reason is that a
remembered idea is preceded by a form of material process similar to
the process which presents as a picture to the inner eye when we apply
the process of Imagination to thinking, as I have just described. It
can be said that imaginative perception offers the possibility of seeing
through the memory process. Continuing in our efforts to gain insight
in this way, we shall indeed come to realize that Imagination itself
is a process in mind and spirit similar to the process of remembering
at the level of the physical body. The memory process is however individualized
into the human body — if I may put it like this, made individual
for our personal experiences. The process of Imagination moves away
from the human body, aligning itself with similar processes that occur
in the cosmos, outside the human body.
A physical process of dying
is active in the organism; in return, memory concepts arise in the conscious
mind. A spirit and soul element is active in Imagination. There is an
actual process in the outside world corresponding to this, but Imagination
is as yet unable to grasp it, because the complete process of supersensible
perception consists in Imagination, Inspiration and Intuition. But,
as you can see, there are certain things in human life, such as memory,
such as the processes occurring in body and soul altogether, that cannot
be grasped by speculating, nor with philosophical arguments. They can
only be approached by training faculties of the soul that initially
are latent. That way we can get closer to them, as will be obvious also
from the following.
When the life of our hearts
and minds is within the sphere of ordinary thinking, the usual way of
forming ideas, then our feeling with regard to such thinking processes
is that it is we ourselves who let one idea follow the other. Indeed,
we are clearly aware that if we do not use our minds to exercise a certain
inner choice in letting one idea follow another, and if instead ideas
impel one another, we should merely be the reflection of an automatic
machine within us, and we should not be real human beings. In my
Philosophy of Freedom
I have tried to show how this feeling we have towards
our ordinary thinking processes is the very source of our feeling of
freedom altogether, and it is only through this that the phenomenon
of freedom can in fact be grasped — in experience.
This feeling of deliberate
inner choice will be lost for a time when we progress to Imagination.
Imagination yields images that are experienced purely in soul and spirit
and yet, as I said yesterday, have nothing to do with visions, hallucinations
and the like. Exactly because they have content, these images show that
they no longer permit the same freedom in linking or analysing them
as the freedom we know when we put ideas together or separate them in
our ordinary consciousness. Very gradually, we get the feeling that
with imaginative perception we are not merely entering into pictures
the way we enter into our ideas, into ideas that strictly speaking appear
as individual concepts we must link up ourselves. The feeling we gradually
develop is that the Imaginations are only broken up into individual
detail by ourselves, and that in reality they form a whole, that a continuous
force is always at work in them, as it were. We experience a presence
in the imaginative sphere that only comes to conscious awareness in
us through this imaginative perception. In our ordinary consciousness
we really have no idea of it.
And again — if we consider
ordinary life, and especially if we follow Goethe and observe how plant
forms come about, noting the transition from one form to another — living
metamorphosis — we shall find that this life of the plants in the
material world holds within it the very thing of which the continuous
force we experience evolving in the world of Imaginations is a picture.
Gradually we find out that through entering into Imagination, we have
worked our way through to a point where we are able to grasp the power
of growth. We realize that we must reject a vital force arrived at through
speculation, indeed, even more so than the mechanists. [ Note
2 ] Anything in the sphere of this vital force will never be understood
by the usual thought processes, the usual philosophical speculation.
It is accessible only to a higher power of understanding, and this has
to be worked for. We come to realize that only the inorganic world is
accessible to ordinary understanding, and that the entity alive in the
growth process has to be grasped in a state of mind and soul that we
shall achieve only by achieving Imagination. This power of growth lives
in our organism. We are able to see through it by giving ourselves up
to a life in Imagination.
It should be noted that it
is really important to observe the rules I have given in my books when
following the exercises that lead to imaginative perception. What is
the purpose of all those rules? Their purpose is to make sure that everything
done by someone working to achieve a capacity for higher understanding
is done with the same inner clarity as that experienced in forming mathematical
concepts. The conscious mind needs to be in the same state as when it
is working with geometry, when it enters in a living way into everything
that is needed to develop Imagination and also the next two stages of
supersensible perception — Inspiration and Intuition. Just think
of life in visions and hallucinations, which is pathological, or of
our dream life, which is at least a shadow picture of something pathological,
and you will see the tremendous difference between all this and a conscious
mind proceeding with the clarity of mathematical thought. The steps
taken to reach Imagination must never aim for a reduced level of conscious
awareness. Our goal must be achieved purely in the sphere of mind and
spirit and with the lucidity we know in mathematics, not with a dreamy,
mystical attitude, in confusion and in darkness. Otherwise we would
be unable to rise to higher powers of perception. We would sink down
into forces we already possessed, the forces of growth, the inner reproductive
forces of the human organism. These would be stimulated into growth,
and the result would be a tendency to have visions, hallucinations,
rather than imaginative perception. It is possible to see how things
are related, but we must get a really clear idea of the path to imaginative
perception, as it has been described.
In imaginative perception
we live in a world of pictures, as I have described it. But it is in
the very nature of those pictures that characteristically they are reflections
of realities. We do not have the realities. Instead, we have an awareness
of living in a world of pictures that are not real. And that is sound
and healthy. A person who hallucinates, who has visions, takes his visions,
his hallucinations, to be a reality. A person practising Imagination
knows that everything he experiences in Imagination is an image — an
image of reality, but still an image — and it is this knowledge
that gives a person practising Imagination a state of conscious awareness
that is not the usual one but has become enhanced. It is impossible
for him to confuse this world of images with the reality. It will be
Inspiration that carries us forward, as it were, into the reality of
the world of images.
Imagination first presents
a picture of supersensible reality. Inspiration shows the way beyond,
to the reality. We achieve Inspiration by using a mental technique,
just as meditation, concentration, is used to make Imagination possible.
The new faculty acquired is one that would be anything but welcome in
ordinary life, and rightly so. It will be necessary to use observation
to help one get a reasonably clear awareness of what it is to forget,
to throw out an idea from conscious awareness. Meditative exercises
are required in artificially forgetting ideas, separating them out.
This must lead to the ability to reject and, in the final instance,
wipe out the imaginative life, the life in images, as we have acquired
it. Anyone merely able to have Imaginations cannot yet penetrate into
a spiritual reality, which can only be done by someone who has reached
a point where he is able to erase these Imaginations again. These Imaginations
only appear like a realization of imaginative faculties initially and
have to be erased, for they are more or less something we have produced
ourselves. It is a question of completely clearing the conscious mind,
as it were, using the act of forgetting deliberately, applying it to
the imaginative life. Then we shall come to know what it means to live
in a state of fully awake consciousness, a state where no mental images
are formed but where the Imagining that went before has created inner
energy and has been cleared of its contents. We shall then come to know
what it means to live in such a state of energized consciousness. This
we must come to know, and then we progress from Imagination to knowledge
through Inspiration. We shall then also know that we are touched by
a spiritual reality that reveals itself in a process in soul and spirit
that is comparable to breathing in and breathing out, to the rhythmical
process of respiration altogether. That process consists in our taking
in the outside air, working it through within ourselves, and then releasing
it again in a different form, having in a way identified ourselves with
it. In the same way we come to know a process in soul and spirit that
consists in our being able to sense, to inhale, as it were, the inner
conscious energy we have acquired into a conscious awareness strengthened
through Imagination. As a result, the objective Imagination will shine
forth in our strengthened conscious awareness. We inhale the spiritual
world, we take it into ourselves. A rhythmical interaction with the
spiritual world occurs.
In ancient India, instinctive
efforts were made to attain higher perception. These instinctive efforts
active in yoga made use of the breathing process, as you probably know,
to make it possible to experience this actual breathing process as a
process in soul and spirit, by using a physical method. In oriental
yoga exercises, breathing — inhalation, holding the breath, exhalation — is
controlled in a special way, and the person enters wholly into this
breathing process. As a result, the soul and spirit is sucked out of
the breathing process, as it were. The breathing process is removed
from conscious awareness by the very fact that it is pushed in, leaving
behind the soul and spirit aspect. The organization of our present culture
is such that we cannot copy the process gone through in the yoga exercise,
and we must not copy it. It would cast us down into the physical organization.
It may be said that our soul life is no longer on the plane where the
soul life of the Indian was in the past. His soul life tended more towards
sensibility, ours tends towards intellectuality. And in the sphere of
intellectuality, yoga breathing would present the risk of man destroying
his physical organization. Living on the intellectual plane, it is necessary
to use exercises of the kind that I have described in my book Knowledge
of the Higher Worlds. These exercises are entirely in the sphere of
soul and spirit. They may just have a hint of the physical breathing
process — though even this only rarely and mostly not at all. The
essential part of our exercises to achieve Imagination lies entirely
in the sphere of mind and spirit, the sphere man has experience of when
working with geometry and mathematics. The work which has to be done
to achieve Inspiration also has to be in this sphere.
With Inspiration, it becomes
possible to gain awareness of an outside world of soul and spirit, objectivity
of soul and spirit. This is connected with conscious life itself undergoing
an inner metamorphosis. Man simply has to let it happen that as a physical
being he goes through external growth and metamorphosis as he passes
through childhood, youth, old age and very old age. Where his conscious
awareness is concerned, he feels a touch of fear, a hesitation, when
it comes to going through something as alive as those metamorphoses
in his innermost soul content. Yet this has to be gone through it supersensible
perception is to be achieved. Goethe reached a certain perfection in
his perception of metamorphosis, and such perception is particularly
well able to move on the plane of imaginative life. The reason is that
everything subject to Imagination presents itself in living, ever-changing
forms. Some form or other comes to awareness. It changes into a completely
different form through transitional changes or directly — yet it
is possible somehow to transpose the contours of the first figure into
those of the second. It is possible to transform one into the other
without making too great a jump. This stops when we approach the essential
aspect of the world that has to be understood through Inspiration; it
stops as soon as we approach the animal organization.
Let me try and show you what
it is we have to approach as we turn towards the animal organization.
Anyone studying the process of thinking as a psychologist or logician
and more or less reaching a point where this can be defined can evolve
a certain idea of the thinking process. Logicians, experts in the theory
of knowledge and psychologists will take pride in getting such a clear,
lucid, definite idea of the thinking process. They will be pleased to
have achieved this, to be able to say: The process of thinking is...
and now predicates (or the second term of the proposition) will follow.
But let us assume someone was really pleased to develop such an idea
of the thinking process and then found himself in the situation I found
myself in when I wrote my
Philosophy of Freedom.
He would need
to trace the thinking process from the form in which it is active when
it links up with external visual perceptions to the form in which it
is active in free spirituality in the human individual, as an impulse
of will, an impulse to act. In the latter case the thinking process
certainly will still be recognized as pure, clarified thinking. We are
able to move on from the type of thought we have studied through the
sensory perceptions it linked up with, to the thoughts that are the
motivation for our actions when we act as free human beings. Yet when
we come to consider this particular type of thinking process, which
indeed is a genuine process of thinking, it no longer agrees entirely
with the definition we established for the thinking process linked to
sensory perception. We are no longer able to do anything with the definition,
for this form of thinking — and it definitely is thinking — no
longer resembles the kind of thinking that is the motivation behind
our actions; for now it is also out-and-out will force. It has metamorphosed,
one might say, into its opposite, into will, has become will, is out-and-out
substantive will, if I may put it like this. You see from this how flexible
one has to become in one's mind when using ideas or concepts.
Anyone who gets into the habit of forming concepts and then applying
them can easily find himself in a situation where realities make his
applied concepts utterly meaningless.
Let us assume — and this
after all is actually the case where external reality is concerned — we
have formed a concept of Joseph Miller in his seventh year. When we
get to know him again in his fiftieth year, the concept will not help
us to see through Joseph Miller properly. We have to expect a metamorphosis,
something must have changed. The definition of young Miller at seven
will not help us when face to face with fifty-year old Miller. Life
makes a mock of definition, of sharply defined concepts full of content.
It is this which causes all the misery in the many discussions and disputes
that arise in life. We are really disputing from a point beyond reality,
while reality makes a mock of rigid definitions and rigid descriptions.
And in the same way we must also come to see how thought becomes will,
and will becomes thought.
That was a case applicable
to a person, and it is approximately also the case which applies when
we simply want to get to know the animal organization through Inspiration.
Here we cannot just speak of the type of metamorphosis Goethe spoke
of in relation to the plant world, where in a way it is possible still
to transform one shape into another. It will be necessary to speak of
inner transitions, or — if I may be permitted to use the term Dr
Unger and I were using yesterday — of inversion or involution, speaking
not only of geometrical but also of qualitative involutions, to get
from one thing to another. In short, we have to accept that the inner
state of soul goes through a metamorphosis, that we go through a process
in which our inner content of experience, content of knowledge gained,
grows up, as it were.
And so it happens that, ascending
from Imagination to Inspiration, we are not able to use the concepts
that are quite rightly and properly used in ordinary consciousness.
They will have to remain for purposes of orientation, but need to be
modified when perception is addressed to the truly inner world, that
is, to the spiritual nature of things. This then lifts the logical distinction
between ‘right’ and ‘wrong’ out of the abstract
as we advance form Imagination to Inspiration. In the world that now
presents itself as a spiritual world outside us, we shall no longer
be able to manage if we use the terms ‘right’ and ‘wrong’
in the same way as we have learned to use them, quite rightly, at an
earlier level of perception. The ideas ‘right’ and ‘wrong’
now become something much more concrete, something we now experience
in the radiant Imaginations that arise in us. Where they are concerned,
we cannot say ‘right’ and ‘wrong’ the way we
do with reference to ideas in the intellectual sphere. At this point,
more concrete ideas arise specifically in the sphere of soul and spirit;
one thing is ‘sound’ or ‘healthy’, another ‘sick’,
one encourages life, the other kills it. The abstract notion of ‘right’
turns into a more concrete notion, and what we are tempted to call ‘right’
is something that brings life and health into the spiritual world, while
the things we are tempted to call ‘wrong’ bring disease,
paralysis and death into the spiritual world.
Ideas we are accustomed to
apply in physical life thus arise in a new form when we have crossed
the threshold of the spiritual world, and this is because we then experience
the content of these ideas at the level of soul and spirit. You will
find that someone with integrity towards perception of the spheres that
lie beyond sensory perception will use different terms. He will no longer
juggle with terms such as ‘right’ and ‘wrong,’
but will of his own accord come to use such terms as ‘sound’
and ‘unsound’ and the like.
I have been attempting to
describe — and in the lectures that follow I shall go into these
things in much greater detail — how it is possible to progress from
ordinary perception to Imagination and to Inspiration, and how access
is gained step by step to the true nature, that is, the spiritual nature,
of the part of the world that is not accessible to the physical senses.
Let me remind you how in order
to describe human actions, to understand the phenomenon of freedom when
writing my
Philosophy of Freedom,
I found it necessary on the
one hand to achieve a sharp definition of the concept of purely sensory
perception and the thinking process linked to this. On the other hand
I pointed out that moral impulses are Intuitions taken from a spiritual
world. In my efforts to establish a realistic moral philosophy, I thus
found it necessary on the one hand to present a clear definition of
how perception of the outside world accessible to the senses has to
be penetrated with thought at one extreme of all that is human and,
on the other hand, define moral Intuition at the other extreme — on
the one hand perception and recognition of physical objects, on the
other, intuitive perception. If we really want to understand man as
he is in this physical world, with regard to the way he perceives things
with his physical senses and with regard to the way he develops his
impulses to act out of the very depth of his being, then it is necessary
on the one hand to draw attention to sensory perception penetrated by
thought-representing reality — and on the other hand to look for
a reality existing at the opposite pole, a reality arising out of pure
empiricism, pure observation and experience a reality rooted in the
intuitive experience of moral impulses.
It is my purpose, in presenting
these observations, to show you the different levels of perception that
lead to the spiritual world, ‘spiritual world’ meaning nothing
more than the world that makes up the whole of reality when combined
with our sense-perceptible world. We have to start with object-based
perception in the world of matter, which I placed at one pole in my
Philosophy of Freedom, and advance to imaginative and inspired perception.
There we are touched by the spiritual truth. Then we advance to Intuition,
and in Intuition we are not merely touched by the spiritual truth that
is outside the physical world — I shall describe this in the lectures
that follow — but live into it, become one with it.
We live in Intuition when
we are at one with spiritual reality. This means nothing else but that
in man as he is today, in this period of world [ Note
3 ] evolution, perception of physical things is at one pole and
intuitive perception at the other. Between these two poles lie Imagination
and Inspiration. Yet if we wish to describe man as he is in ordinary
life, as someone who does things, someone who is morally active, it
will be necessary to look for the moral Intuition relating to this clearly
defined area, the area of ethical motivation, if for no other reason
but to establish a philosophy of freedom. If the basis for human actions
provided out of such a philosophy of freedom is then developed to apply
to the whole cosmos, we shall find Intuition realized throughout the
whole cosmos, whereas normally one finds it merely in the limited field
of human actions. Here in the physical world, any moral person merely
joins moral Intuition to everyday perception of material things, for
the simple reason that it is part of man's natural constitution
to do so. Yet if we wish to arrive at true perception of the universe,
if we want to ‘land’ on cosmic Intuition — if I may
put it like this — which in the cosmos corresponds to the moral
Intuition for man's inner life, it is necessary to pass through
the two stages of Imagination and Inspiration. In other words, it is
possible to describe man in terms of a philosophy of freedom. This merely
necessitates arriving at the limited field of intuitive experience for
human actions. Looking for a cosmic philosophy to match this philosophy
of freedom, it is necessary to expand what has previously been done
with reference to a limited field, by evolving the different stages
of perception: object-based perception. Imagination, Inspiration and
Intuition.
In principle, therefore, what
I mean by Imagination and Inspiration lies between the first part of
my Philosophy of Freedom, where I establish the reality of object-based
perception, and the second part of the book, where moral Intuition is
defined in the chapter on moral imagination. [ Note
4 ] At the time when the Philosophy of Freedom was in the process
of being written, this could only be hinted at. It was hinted at when
I wrote the words: ‘The individual human being is not truly separate
from the world. He is part of the world, and there is a connection with
the cosmos as a whole that is a reality and is broken only in our eyes,
the way we perceive it. We see this part initially as something existing
by itself because we do not see the “ropes and belts” used
by the basic forces of the cosmos to move the wheel of our life.’*
If we want to know man only in the terms of this world, we are not aware
of the direct transition from physical perception to moral Intuition.
There is something this type
of description only touches on — the ‘ropes and belts’
are of course mere metaphor — and that is that there is something
within man that links his essential nature to the whole cosmos. This
really needs further elucidation. It would be necessary to show that,
just as man is able to skip the two middle stages by an empirical approach
and get from object-based perception to moral Intuition, he is also
able to progress from his perceptive experience as a human being to
cosmic Intuition. In his human nature, he is linked to the cosmos through
‘ropes and belts,’ that is, through spiritual entities.
Yet man is only able to perceive this connection if he now goes through
the intermediate stages between object-based perception and Intuition,
stages that are not required for ordinary reflection. He needs to ascend
from object-based perception through Imagination and Inspiration to
reach cosmic Intuition.
That is how the whole of the
anthroposophical science which has been evolved relates to the seed
that was given in my
Philosophy of Freedom.
It must of course
be understood that anthroposophy is something alive. It had to be a
seed before it could develop further into leaves and all that follows.
This fact of being alive is what distinguishes anthroposophical science
from the deadness many are aware of today in a ‘wisdom’
that still wants to reject anthroposophy, partly because it cannot,
and partly because it will not, understand it.
Notes:
1. ‘How did you get as far as that?
They say you have done well indeed.’
‘Ah, child, I did a clever thing:
I never gave a thought to thought.’
Goethe, Works published posthumously (1833), Poems.
Zahme Xenien (VII)
2. Mechanist — someone holding a mechanical
view of the unviverse.
See also notes on page 62.
3. Here, Rudolf Steiner used the German world
for ‘imagination’ in the everyday sense. (Translator)
4. Page 245 of the 12th German edition.
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