III
TODAY I shall speak in
the most concrete way about the Spirit in order to lay a foundation
for the next few days, and I must appeal to you to try to arouse a
fundamental feeling for what is here meant by the Spirit.
What
is taken into account by the human being today? He attaches
importance only to what he experiences consciously, from the time he
wakes up in the morning until the time he goes to sleep at night. He
reckons as part of the world only that which he experiences in his
waking consciousness. If you were listening to the voice of the
present and had accustomed yourselves to it, you might say: Yes, but
was it not always so? Did human beings in earlier times include in
what they meant by reality anything in addition to what they
experienced in their waking consciousness?
I
certainly do not wish to create the impression that we ought to go
back to the conditions in earlier epochs of civilization. That is not
my intention. The thing that matters is to go forward, not back. But
in order to find our bearings we may turn back, look back, rather,
beyond the time of the fifteenth century, before the age I attempted
to describe radically to you yesterday. What men of that time said
about the world is looked upon today as mere phantasy, as not
belonging to reality. You need only look at the literature of olden
times and you will find, when men spoke of “salt,”
“mercury,” phosphorus and so on, that they included many
things in the meaning which people are anxious to exclude today.
People
say nowadays: “Yes, in those days men added something out of
their own phantasy when they spoke of salt, mercury, phosphorus.”
We
will not argue about the reason why this is so anxiously excluded
today. But we must realize that people saw something in phosphorus,
in addition to what is seen by the mere senses, in the way modern men
see color. It was surrounded by a spiritual-etheric aura, just as
around the whole of Nature there seemed to hover a spiritual aura,
although after the fourth or fifth century A.D. it was very colorless
and pale. Even so, men were still able to see it. It was as little
the outcome of phantasy as the red color we see. They actually saw
it.
Why
were they able to see this aura? Because something streamed over to
them from their experiences during sleep. In the waking Consciousness
of that time man did not experience in salt, sulphur, or phosphorus
any more than he does today; but when people in those days woke up,
sleep had not been unfruitful for their souls. Sleep still worked
over into the day and man's perception was richer; his
experience of everything around him was more intense.
Without
this knowledge as a basis we cannot understand earlier times. Later
on the experience of the ancients in connection with sulphur,
phosphorus and so on became a mere name, an abstraction. The Spirit
continued as an abstraction in tradition, until, at the end of the
nineteenth century, the word spirit conveyed nothing to the mind,
nothing by way of experience. External culture, which alleges such
great progress, naturally attaches the greatest importance to the
fact that the human being acts with his waking consciousness.
Naturally, with this he will build machines; but with his waking
consciousness he can work very little upon his own nature. if we were
obliged to be always awake we should very soon become old-at least by
the end of our twentieth year — and more repulsively old than
people today. We cannot always be awake, because the forces we need
to work inwardly upon our organism are active within us only during
sleep. it is of course true that the human being can work at
external, visible forms of culture when he is awake, but only in
sleeping consciousness can he work upon himself. And in olden times
much more streamed over from sleeping consciousness into the waking
state.
The
great change took place in the middle of the fifteenth century: this
trickling of sleep consciousness into waking consciousness ceased.
Pictorially I would say: In the tenth and eleventh centuries of
western civilization man still grew up in such a way that he felt:
Divine-spiritual powers have been performing deeds within me between
my going to sleep and waking up. He felt the influx of
divine-spiritual forces just as in waking consciousness he
experienced the health-bringing light of the sun. And before going to
sleep there was in every human being an elemental mood of prayer,
full of Nature-forces. People entered sleep — or if they were
men of knowledge they at least strove to do so — by giving
themselves over to divine-spiritual powers.
The
education of those who were destined for the spiritual life was such
that this mood was deliberately cultivated. At the end of the
nineteenth century those who regarded themselves as the most
spiritual men had for a long time replaced this by another method of
preparation. I have often witnessed how people prepare themselves for
sleep: “I must take my fill of beer to prepare for sleep.”
This sounds grotesque. Yet we see it is historically true that vision
into the spiritual world through sleep was a deliberate and conscious
striving among human beings of past epochs, apart from the fact that
the candidates for initiation — the students of those days-were
prepared in a sacred way for the temple-sleep in which they were made
aware of man's participation in the spiritual world.
At
the present time when one considers the development of civilization
people do not ask: What has come about in modern mankind from the
educational point of view? The question is not asked because people
do not think of the whole human being but only of part of him. One
has a strange impression if one sees a little further than the
nearest spiritual horizon: people believe they at last know the truth
about certain things, whereas the men of old were altogether naive.
Read any current history of physics and you will find that it is
written as if everything before this age were naive; now at last
things have been perceived in the form in which they can permanently
remain. A sharp line is drawn between what has been achieved today
and the ideas of nature evolved in “childish” times. No
one thinks of asking: What educational effect has the science that is
absorbed today, from the point of view of world-historical progress?
Let
us think of some earlier book on natural science. From the modern
point of view it is childish. But now let us put aside the modern
point of view and ask: What educational effect had such a book at
that time and what effect has a modern book? The modern book may be
very clever and the older one very phantastic, but if we consider the
educational value as a whole, we shall have to admit that when a book
was read — and it was not so easy to read books in those days,
there was something ceremonial about it — it drew something out
of the depths of men's souls. The reading of a book was
actually like the process of growing: productive forces were released
in the organism and human beings were aware of them. They felt
something real was there. Today everything is logical and formal.
Everything is assimilated by means of the head, formally and
intellectually, but no will-force is involved. And because it is all
assimilated by the head only and is thus entirely dependent upon the
physical head-organization, it remains unfruitful for the development
of the true man.
Today
there are people who struggle against materialism. My dear friends,
it would be almost more sensible if they did not. For what does
materialism affirm? It asserts that thinking is a product of the
brain. Modern thinking is a product of the brain. That is just the
secret — that modern thinking is a product of the brain. With
regard to modern thinking, materialism is quite right, but it is not
right about thinking as it was before the middle of the fifteenth
century. At that time man did not think only with the brain but with
what was alive in the brain. He had living concepts. The concepts of
that time gave the same impression as an ant-hill, they were all
alive. Modern concepts are dead. Modern thinking is clever, but
dreadfully lazy! People do not feel it, and the less they feel it the
more they love it. In earlier times people felt a tingling when they
were thinking — because thinking was a reality in the soul.
People are made to believe that thinking was always as it is today.
But modern thinking is a product of the brain; earlier thinking was
not so.
We
ought to be grateful to the materialists for drawing attention to the
fact that present-clay thinking is dependent upon the brain. Such is
the truth and it is a much more serious matter than is usually
imagined. People believe that materialism is a wrong philosophy. That
is not at all true. Materialism is a product of world-evolution but a
dead product, describing life in the condition where life has died.
This
thinking which has evolved more and more since the fifteenth century
and which has entrenched itself in civilization the farther west we
go, (oriental civilization in spite of its decadence has after all
preserved some of the older kind of thinking) has quite definite
characteristics. The farther west we come the more does a thinking,
regarded by the orientals as inferior, take the upper hand. It does
not impress the oriental at all; he despises it. But he himself has
nothing new; all he has is the old kind of thinking and it is
perishing. But the European, and more so the American, would not feel
at ease if he had to transfer himself into the thinking of the Vedas.
That kind of thinking made one tingle and the Westerners love dead
thinking, where one does not notice that one is thinking at all. The
time has come when people confess that a millwheel is revolving in
their heads — not only when someone is talking nonsense but
when they are talking about living things. They merely want to snatch
at what is dead.
Here
is an example which I am only quoting for the sake of cultural
interest, not for the sake of polemics. I described how it is
possible to see an aura of colors around stones, plants and animals.
The way in which I put this in the book Knowledge of the Higher
Worlds was such that it made living thinking, not dead thinking, a
necessity. A short time ago a professor at a University who is said
to have something to do with philosophy, came across this
description. To think livingly! Oh, no? that won't do; that is
impossible! And there is supposed to be an aura of colors around
stone, plant, animal! — He had only seen colors in the solar
spectrum and so he thinks that I too can only have seen them in the
solar spectrum and have transferred them to stone, plant and animal.
He cannot in the least follow my way of describing, so he calls it
just a torrent of words. For him, indeed, it is so. He is incapable
of understanding it at all. And for a great number of University
professors it can be the same. A millwheel is going round in their
heads, so away with the head; and then, of course, nothing can
possibly come out of it!
The
living human being, however, demands a living kind of thinking and
this demand is in his very blood. You must be clear about this. You
must get your head so strong again that it can stand not only
logical, abstract thinking, but even living thinking. You must not
immediately get a buzzing head when it is a matter of thinking in a
living way. For those whose characteristic was pure intellectualism
had dead thinking. The purpose of this dead thinking was the
materialistic education of the West. If we look into it, we get a
very doubtful picture.
The
earlier kind of thinking could be carried over into sleep when the
human being was still an entity. He was a being among other beings.
He was a real entity during sleep because he had carried living
thinking with him into sleep. He brought it out of sleep when he woke
up and took it back with him when he fell asleep. Modern thinking is
bound to the brain but this cannot help us during sleep. Today,
therefore, according to the way of modern science, we can be the
cleverest and most learned people, but we are clever only during the
day. We cease to be clever during the night, in face of that world
through which we can work upon our own being. Men have forgotten to
work upon themselves. With the concepts we evolve from the time of
waking to that of sleeping we can only achieve something between
waking and sleeping. Nothing can be achieved with the real being of
man. Man must work out of the forces with which he builds up his own
being. During the period when he has to build himself up, when he is
a little child, he needs the greatest amount of sleep. If ever a
method should be discovered for cramming into babies all that is
taught to seventeen- and eighteen-year-olds, you would soon see what
they would look like! It is a very good thing that babies are still
provided for from the mother's breast and not from the
lecturing desk. It is out of sleep that man must bring the forces
through which he can work upon his own being.
We
can carry into sleep nothing from the concepts we evolve through
science, through external observation and experiments and the
controlling of experiments; and we can bring nothing of what is
developed in sleep into these concepts of the material world. The
spiritual and the intellectual do not get on well together unless
united in the world of full consciousness. Formerly this union was
consummated, but in a more subconscious way. Nowadays the union must
be fully conscious, and to this human beings do not wish to be
converted.
What
happened when a man of earlier times passed with his soul into sleep?
He was still an entity, because he had within him what hovers around
material things. He bore this into sleep. He could still maintain his
identity when in sleep he was outside the physical body and in the
spiritual world. Today he is less and less of a real entity. He is
well-nigh absorbed by the spirituality of Nature when he leaves his
body in sleep. In true perception of the world, this is at once
evident to the soul. You should only see it! — well, you will
be able to see it if you will exert yourselves to acquire the
necessary vision. Humanity must attain this vision, for we are living
in an age when it can no longer be said that it is impossible to
speak of the Spirit as we speak of animals or stones. With such
faculties of vision you will be able to see that even though Caesar
was not very portly in physical life, yet when his soul left his body
in sleep it was of a considerable “size” — not in
the spatial sense, but its greatness could be experienced. His soul
was majestic. Today a man may be one of the most portly of bankers,
but when his soul steps out of his body in sleep into the
spirituality of Nature, you should see what a ghastly, shrunken
framework it becomes. The portly banker becomes quite an
insignificant figure! Since the last third of the nineteenth century
humanity has really been suffering from spiritual under-nourishment.
The intellect does not nourish the Spirit. It only distends it. That
is why the human being takes no spirituality with him into sleep. He
is well-nigh sucked up when with his soul as a thin skeleton, he
stretches out into the world of spiritual Nature between sleeping and
waking.
That
is why the question of materialism is far from theoretical. Nothing
is of less importance today than the theoretical strife between
materialistic, spiritualistic and idealistic philosophy. These things
are of no reality, for the refutation of materialism achieves
nothing. We may refute materialism as often as we like, nothing will
come of it. For, the reasons we bring in order to refute it are just
as materialistic as those we quote for or against idealism.
Theoretical refutations achieve nothing one way or the other. But
what really matters is that in our whole way of looking at the world
we have the Spirit once again. Thereby our concepts will regain the
force to nourish our being. To make this clear, let me say the
following.
Now,
I really do not find any very great difference between those people
who call themselves materialists and those who in little sectarian
circles call themselves, let us say, theosophists. For the way in
which the one makes out a case for materialism and another for
theosophy is by no means essentially different. It comes down to
whether people want to make out a case for theosophy with the kind of
thinking entirely dependent upon the brain. If this is so, even
theosophy is materialistic. It is not a question of words, but
whether the words express the Spirit. When I compare much of the
theosophical twaddle with Haeckel's thought, I find the Spirit
in Haeckel, whereas the theosophists speak of the Spirit as if it
were matter, but diluted matter. The point is not that one speaks
about the Spirit but that one speaks through the Spirit. One can
speak spiritually about the material, that is to say, it is possible
to speak about the material in mobile concepts. And that is always
much more spiritual than to speak un-spiritually about the Spirit.
However
many come forward today with every possible kind of logical argument
in defense of the spiritual view of the world; this simply does not
help us, does not help one bit. During the night we remain just as
barren if during the day we ponder about hydrogen, chlorine, bromine,
iodine, oxygen, nitrogen, carbon, silica, potassium, sodium and so
on, and then evolve our theories; as if we ponder about the human
being consisting of physical, etheric, and astral bodies. It is all
the same so far as what is living is concerned. To speak in a living
way about potassium or calcium, to treat chemistry as really alive,
this is much more valuable than a dead, intellectual theosophy. For
theosophy too can be taught in a dead, intellectual way. It does not
really matter whether we speak materialistically or intellectually,
what matters is that the Spirit shall be in what we say. The Spirit
must penetrate us with its livingness. But because this is no longer
understood, it is very disagreeable when anyone takes this seriously.
I
did this in one of my last Oxford lectures, and to make myself quite
clear I said: It is all the same to me whether people speak of
spiritism, realism, idealism, materialism or anything else When I
need language to describe some external phenomenon I use
materialistic language. This can be done in such a way that the
Spirit too lives within it. If one speaks out of the realm of the
Spirit, what one says will be spiritual although the language may
have materialistic form. That is the difference between what is
cultivated here as Anthroposophy and what is pursued in other places
under similar names. Every other week books against Anthroposophy are
brought out. They contain statements which are supposed to be leveled
against what I have said, but what they attack is always quite new to
me for as a rule I have never said such things. They collect all
sorts of rubbish and then write voluminous books about it. What they
attack has usually nothing whatever to do with what I actually say.
The point is not to fight materialism but to see to it that the
concepts come out of the world of the Spirit, that they are really
experienced, that they are concepts filled with life. What is here
presented and accepted as Anthroposophy is quite different from what
the world says about it.
People
fight today against Anthroposophy — and sometimes also in
defense of it — quite materialistically, un-spiritually,
whereas what really matters is that experience of the Spirit should
be made a reality in us. People easily get muddied, for when one
begins to speak of spiritual beings as one speaks of plants and
animals in the physical world, they take one for a fool. I can
understand that; but there is just this, that this folly is the true
reality, indeed the living reality for human beings! The other kind
of reality is good for machines but not for human beings.
This
is what I wanted to say quite clearly, my dear friends, that in what
I intend here and have always intended, the important thing is not
merely to speak about the Spirit, but out of the Spirit, to unfold
the Spirit in the very speaking. The Spirit can have an educative
effect upon our dead cultural life. The Spirit must be the lightning
which strikes our dead culture and kindles it to renewed life.
Therefore, do not think that you will find here any plea for rigid
concepts such as the concepts physical body, etheric body, astral
body, which are so nicely arrayed on the walls of theosophical groups
and are pointed out just as, in a lecture room, sodium, potassium and
so on are pointed to with their atomic weights. There is no
difference between pointing at tables giving the atomic weight of
potassium and pointing to the etheric body. It is exactly the same,
and that is not the point. Interpreted in this way, Theosophy —
or even Anthroposophy — is not new, but merely the latest
product of the old.
The
most incredible twaddle is heard when people suddenly feel themselves
called upon to uphold the spiritual. I do not mention these things
for the sake of criticism, but as a symptom. I will tell you two
stories; the first runs as follows. I was once at a meeting in the
West of Europe on the subject of theosophy. The lectures had come to
an end. I fell into conversation with someone about the value of
these lectures. This personality who was a good disciple of
theosophical sectarianism told me of his impression of the lectures in
these words: “There are such beautiful vibrations in this
hall.” The pleasant sensation, you see, was expressed in terms
of vibrations — in other words, materialistically.
Another
time people pestered me about some discovery that had been made on
the spiritual plane. It was stated that repeated earth-lives —
which as a matter of fact can only be revealed to the soul by
genuinely spiritual perception — must also be perceived in an
earthly guise, must be clothed in terms of materialistic thinking. So
these people began to speak of the “permanent atom” which
goes through all earth-lives. They said: If I am now living on the
Earth, and come back again after hundreds of years, the atoms will be
scattered to the four winds — but one single atom goes over
into the next earth-life. It was called the “permanent atom”.
Quite happily the most materialistic ideas were being introduced into
the truth of repeated earth-lives, into a truth that can only be
grasped by the Spirit. As if it could profit anyone to have a single
atom say from the fourth or filth century going around in his brain!
Surely it is the same as if a surgeon in the world beyond had managed
to equip me in this life by having preserved my stomach from a former
incarnation and inserted it in my present body. In principle, these
things are exactly the same.
I am
not telling you this as a joke, but as an interesting symptom of
people who, wanting to speak of the Spirit, talk of the pleasant
sensation coming from spiritual “vibrations” and have
only absorbed through imitation what others have known about repeated
earth-lives, clothe this in such a way that they talk about the
permanent atom. Books have been written by theosophists about this
permanent atom — books with curious drawings showing the
distribution of hydrogen, oxygen, chlorine and so on. And when one
looks at them they seem no less outrageous than the sketches which
materialists have made of the atoms. It does not matter whether we
say: This is spiritual, or that is material. What matters is to
realize the necessity of entering the living Spirit. I do not say
this in a polemic sense but to make it clear to you.
The
following is characteristic. There lives at the present time a very
gifted Benedictine Father Mager, one of the finest minds in the Order
— and the Benedictines have exceedingly fine minds. Mager has
written an extremely interesting little book on “The Behaviour
of Man in the Sight of God.” It belongs, in thought, to the
time when Benedict founded his Order. Had it been written then it
would have been quite in accordance with the times. When someone
writes a book about the “Behaviour of Man in the Sight of God”
one can admire it. And I do admire it. The same priest has, however,
also given his opinion on Anthroposophy. And now he becomes the
densest of materialists. It is really terribly difficult for one to
force one's way into such a rigid kind of thought in order to
describe the statements made by this priest. What he censures most is
that the perception in Imaginative knowledge, which I put first, is
of such a nature that for Father Mager it amounts to a lot of
pictures. He gets no farther. And then he says, in accordance with
his scientific conscience, that Anthroposophy materializes the world.
He takes violent exception to the fact that Anthroposophy
materializes the world, in other words, that Anthroposophy does not
confine itself to the unreal, abstract concepts he loves — for
this Father loves the most abstract concepts. Just read any Catholic
philosophy and you will find — Being, Becoming, Existence,
Beauty and so on — all in the most abstract form. Whatever you
do, don't touch the world! And the Father notices that
Anthroposophy contains living concepts which can actually come down
to real things, to the real world. That is an abomination to him.
One
ought to answer him: If knowledge is to be anything real, it must
follow the course taken by God in connection with the world. This
course started from the Spiritual and was materialized. The world was
first spiritual and then became more and more material, so that real
knowledge must follow this course. It is not sought for in
Anthroposophy, but one comes to it. The picture slips into reality;
but Father Mager condemns this. And yet it is exactly what he must
himself believe if he wants to give his faith a reasonable content.
But he calls it in our case the materialization of knowledge.
Of
course, there is no satisfying those who insist: For heaven's
sake no living concepts, for they will slip into reality, and
concepts must be kept away from that! In such cases we can only have
concepts belonging to waking consciousness and none that is capable
of working upon man from the spiritual world. And that is exactly
what we need. We need a living evolution and a living education of
the human race. The fully conscious human being feels the culture of
the present day to be cold, arid. It must be given life and inner
activity once again. It must become such that it fills the human
being, fills him with life. Only this can lead us to the point where
we shall no longer have to confess that we ought not to mention the
Spirit, but it leads us to where the good will to develop within us
the inclination not for abstract speaking, but for inward action in
the Spirit that flows into us, not for obscure, nebulous mysticism,
but for the courageous, energetic permeation of our being with
spirituality. Permeated by spirit we can speak of matter and we shall
not be led astray when talking of important material discoveries,
because we are able to speak about them in a spiritual way. We shall
shape into a force that educates humanity what we sense darkly within
us as an urge forward. Tomorrow, we will speak of these things again.
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