V
YESTERDAY
I tried to characterize the spiritual life at the end of the
nineteenth and the beginning of the twentieth centuries; to describe
it as I experienced it, and as it led to the writing of my
Philosophy of Spiritual Activity
(The Philosophy of Freedom).
The
Philosophy of Spiritual Activity
was to point to moral intuitions as that within man which, in the evolution
of the world, should lead to the founding of the moral life of the
future. In other words, through my
Philosophy of Spiritual Activity,
I wanted to show that the time has come, if morality is
to continue in the evolution of mankind, to make an appeal to what
the individual is able to call forth from his inmost nature. I
mentioned that the
Philosophy of Spiritual Activity
was published at a time when it was universally said that at last it had
been recognized that moral intuitions were an impossibility and that
any discussion about moral intuitions must once and for all be
silenced. I therefore considered it essential to establish the
reality of moral intuition. Thus there was a distinct cleft between
what the age, among many of its most eminent minds considered to be
truth, and what I was obliged to maintain as truth out of the
principles of human evolution.
But
on what is this difference really based? Let us look into the depths
of man's life of soul, as we see it today in the West. In
earlier times people also spoke of moral intuitions, that is to say,
it was said that, as an individual entity, man could call forth from
within himself independently of external life the impetus to action.
But when the new age dawned, in the first third of the fifteenth
century and more powerfully in subsequent centuries, what had been
said about moral intuitions was no longer quite true. It was said:
Morality cannot be established by the observation of external facts;
men were no longer aware of a real light when they looked into their
inner being. So they declared that moral intuitions were there, but
that actually nothing more was known about them. For centuries
statements were such that one might say: The thinking, which had been
natural before the fifteenth century, moved onwards automatically and
facts formerly justified had ceased to be so.
Traditions,
of which I have spoken, persisted through the centuries and
contributed towards such statements. Before the fifteenth century,
men did not speak in indefinite terms as was current later, and this
very indefiniteness was untruthful. When speaking of intuitions, of
moral intuitions he spoke of that which rose up in his inner being,
of which he had a picture as real as the world of Nature when he
opened his eyes in the morning. Outside he saw Nature around him, the
plants and the clouds; when he looked into his inner being, there
arose the Spiritual, the Moral as it was given to him. The further we
go back in evolution the more we find that the rising tip of an inner
realm into human experience was a matter of course. These facts, as I
have explained them to you, are the outcome of Spiritual Science;
they may also be studied historically by considering external
symptoms. In the days when speech, from being an inner reality was
lapsing into untruthfulness, proof for the existence of God came into
evidence.
Had
anyone during the first centuries of Christianity spoken about proofs
for the existence of God, as Anselm of Canterbury, people would not
have known what was meant. In earlier times they would have known
still less! For in the second or third century before Christ, to
speak of proofs for the existence of God would have been as if
someone sitting there in the first row were to stand up and I were to
say: “Mr. X stands there,” and someone in the room were
to assert “No, that must first be proved!” What man
experienced as the divine was a Being of full reality standing before
his soul. He was endowed with the faculty of perception for what he
called divine; this God appears primitive and incomplete in the eyes
of modern man. They could not get beyond the point they were then
capable of reaching. But the men of that age had no desire to hear
about proofs, for that would have seemed absurd. Man began to “prove”
the existence of the divine when he had lost it, when it was no
longer perceived by inner, spiritual perception. The introduction of
proofs for the existence of God shows, if one looks at the facts
impartially, that direct perception of the divine had been lost. But
the moral impulses of that time were bound up with what was divine.
Moral impulses of that time can no longer be regarded as moral
impulses for today. When in the first third of the fifteenth century
the faculty of perception of the divine-spiritual in the old sense
was exhausted, perception of the moral also faded and all that
remained was the traditional dogma of morals which men called
“conscience.” But the term was always applied in the
vaguest manner.
When,
therefore, at the end of the nineteenth century it was said that all
talk about moral intuitions must be silenced, it was the final
consequence of a historical development. Until then human beings had
a feeling, however dim, that such intuitions had once existed. But
now they began to put themselves to the test. Intelligence had at
least brought them to the point of being able to do this; they
discovered that with the methods they were accustomed to use to think
scientifically, they were unable to approach moral intuitions.
Let
us consider the moral intuitions of olden times. History has become
very threadbare in this respect. We have a history of outer events
and in the nineteenth century a history of culture was established.
But this age has been incapable of producing a history which takes
man's inner life of soul into account; there is no knowledge of
how the life of soul developed from the earliest times until the
first third of the fifteenth century. But if we go back in time and
consider what was spoken of as moral intuition, we find that it did
not arise as a result of inner effort. For this reason the Old
Testament, for instance, is right not to feel what figured then as
moral intuition as begotten from within, but as divine commandments,
coming to the soul from outside. And the further back we go the more
the human being felt what he saw when he beheld the moral, to be a
gift to his inner nature from some living divine being outside him.
Moral intuitions held good as divine commands — not in a
figurative or symbolic sense, but in an absolutely real sense.
There
is a good deal of truth in contemporary religious philosophies when
they allude to a primal revelation preceding the historical age on
earth. External science cannot get much beyond, shall I say, a
paleontology of the soul. Just as in the earth we find fossils,
indicating an earlier form of life, so in fossilized moral ideas we
find forms pointing back to the once living, God-given moral ideas.
Thus we can get to the concept of primal revelation and say: This
primal revelation faded out. Human beings lost the faculty for being
conscious of primal revelation. And this loss reached its culminating
point in the first third of the fifteenth century. Human beings
perceived nothing when they looked within themselves. They preserved
only the tradition of what they had once beheld. Religious
communities gradually seized upon this tradition and turned its
externalized content, this purely traditional content, into dogmas
which people were expected merely to believe, whereas formerly they
had living experience of their truth, though as coming from outside
man.
This
was the very significant situation at the end of the nineteenth
century: Certain circles realized that the old intuitions, the
God-given intuitions, were no longer there; that if a man wants to
prove with his head the ideas of the people of old, moral intuitions
simply disappear; science has silenced them. Human beings even when
receptive are no longer capable of receiving moral intuitions. To be
consistent, one would have had to become a kind of Spengler, and to
say: — There are no moral intuitions; man in future will have
no alternative but gradually to wither up — perhaps asking
one's grandfather: “Have you heard that there were once
moral intuitions, moral influences?” And the grandfather would
answer: “One would have to search the libraries; at second or
third-hand one might still glean some knowledge of moral intuitions
but no longer from actual experience.” So there is no
alternative but to wither up and become senile, not to have youth any
more. — That would have been consistent. But people did not
dare, for consistency was not an outstanding quality of the dawning
age of the intellect.
Indeed,
there were many things that one did not dare! If a judgment were
pronounced it was only half given, as in the case of du Bois-Reymond
[a leading German physiologist at the turn of the nineteenth
century] who delivered a speech about the boundaries to the
knowledge of Nature. He said that supernaturalism could not be
mentioned in connection with natural science, for supernaturalism was
faith and not knowledge. Science stops short at the supernatural —
and nothing further was said by him on the subject. If mentioned,
people got excited and said that this was no longer science;
consistency was not a characteristic of the century then ending.
So,
on one hand, there was the alternative of withering. The Spiritual
passes over gradually into the life of soul, the life of soul into
the physical. As a result, after some decades, souls would only have
been able to ferret out antiquated moral impulses. After some years,
not only the thirty-year-olds but also the twenty-year-olds would
have been going about with bald heads, and the fifteen-year-olds with
grey hair! This is a figurative way of speaking, but Spenglerism
would have become an impulse carried into practice. That was one
alternative.
The
other alternative was to become fully conscious of the following:
With the loss of the old intuitions we are facing Nothingness. What
can be done? In this Nothingness to seek the “All”! Out
of this very Nothingness try to find something that is not given, but
which we ourselves must strenuously work for. This was no longer
possible with passive powers of the past, but only with the strongest
powers of cognition of this age: with the cognitional powers of pure
thinking. For in acts of pure thinking, this thinking goes straight
over into the will. You can observe and think, without exerting your
will. You can carry out experiments and think: it does not pass right
over into the will. You can do this without much effort. Pure
thinking, by which I mean the unfolding of primary, original
activity, requires energy. There the lightning-flash of will must
strike directly into the thinking itself. But the lightning-flash of
will must come from each single individual. Courage was needed to
call upon this pure thinking which becomes pure will; it arises as a
new faculty — the faculty of drawing out of the human
individuality moral impulses which have to be worked for and are no
longer given in the form of the old impulses. Intuitions must be
called up that are strenuously worked for. Today what man works for
in his inner being is called “phantasy.” Thus in this
present age which has, apart from this, silenced inner work, moral
impulses for the future must be produced out of moral phantasy, moral
Imagination; the human being had to be shown the way from merely
poetical, artistic phantasy, to a creative moral Imagination.
The
old intuitions were always given to groups. There is a mysterious
connection between primal revelation and human groups. It was always
to groups of human beings in association that the old intuitions were
given. The new intuitions must be produced in the sphere of each
single, individual human soul; in other words, each single human
being must be made the source of his own morality. This must be
brought forth through the intuitions out of the Nothingness by which
man is confronted.
That
was the only possibility left, if as an honest man one was not
willing to turn to a kind of Spenglerism — and to work in the
Spengler way is far from alive. It was a question of finding a living
reality out of the Nothingness which confronted men, and it goes
without saying that at first one could only make a beginning. For a
creative power in the human being had to be called upon, the
creation, as it were, of an inner man within the outer man. In
earlier times the outer man received moral impulses from outside. Now
the human being has to create an inner man and with this inner man
there came, or will come, the new moral intuition. So, out of the
times themselves there had to be born a kind of Philosophy of
Spiritual Activity — something that must inevitably be in sharp
opposition to the times.
Let
us complete this survey of the condition of the soul of modern man by
considering another aspect. You see, as a preparation for
intellectualism in western civilization, the consciousness of man's
pre-earthly existence had for a long time been wiped out. Western
civilization had lost it in very early times. So that in the West
there was not this consciousness: “When I issue from the
embryonic state of physical development something unites itself with
me, something that descends from the heights of spirit and soul and
permeates this physical earth-being.”
Now
in this connection the following presents itself quite clearly to our
vision. I have already given you a picture to elucidate it. I said
that when we look at a corpse we know that it cannot have its form
through the forces of nature, but must be the remains of a living
human being. It would be foolish to speak about the human form as if
it were itself something living. We must go back to what was the
living human being. In the same way, looked at impartially, man's
intellectual thinking presents itself as dead. People naturally will
say: “Prove this for us.” It proves itself in the very
beholding and the kind of proofs necessary for the side issues are
indeed available. But to demonstrate it I would have to go into a
good deal of philosophy and this lies outside the scope of our
present task. To anyone looking at it without prejudice, intellectual
thinking, out of which our whole modern civilization flows, bears the
same relation to living thinking as the corpse to the living human
being. Just as the corpse is derived from the living man, so the
thinking we have today is derived from the living thinking of an
earlier time. But upon sound reflection I must say to myself: “This
dead thinking must have originated in a living thinking which was
there before birth. The physical organism is the tomb of the living
thinking, and the receptacle of dead thinking.”
But
the strange fact is that during the first two periods of human life,
up to the sixth, seventh or eighth years, to the end of the change of
teeth, and then further, up to the thirteenth, fourteenth, fifteenth
years — that is to say, to the age of puberty — the human
being has a thinking not yet entirely dead; but in process of dying.
It was only living thinking in pre-earthly existence. During the
first two periods of life it comes to the point of dying, and for
modern man, since the first third of the fifteenth century, thinking
is quite dead by the time of puberty. It is then the corpse of living
thinking. It was not always so in the evolution of mankind. If we go
back before the fifteenth century, it becomes evident that thinking
still was something living. There existed livingly the kind of
thinking which human beings today do not like because they feel as if
ants were swarming in their brain. They do not like it when something
is really alive within them. They want their head to behave in a
quiet and comfortable way.
And
the thinking in it, too, should take a peaceful course so that all
one needs is to help things along with the laws of logic. But pure
thinking — that is just as if an ant-heap were let loose in
one's head, and that, people say, is not as it should be. At
the beginning of the fifteenth century the human being was still able
to endure living thinking. I am not saying this in order to
criticize; that would be out-of-place, just as out-of-place as to
criticize a cow because she is no longer a calf. It would have been
the greatest disaster for humanity if this had not happened. There
had to be human beings who could not endure having an ant-heap in
their head! For what was dead had to be brought to life again in a
different way.
And
so it came about after the middle of the fifteenth century that human
beings inwardly experienced a dead thinking once puberty was passed.
They were filled out with the corpse of thinking. Go really deeply
and seriously into this idea and you will understand that it is only
since that time that an inorganic natural science could arise,
because the human being began to grasp purely inorganic laws. Now for
the first time man could grasp what is dead in the way striven for
since Galileo and Copernicus. The living had first to die inwardly.
When man was still inwardly alive in his thinking, he could not grasp
the dead in an external way for the living kind of knowledge imparted
itself to what was external. Natural science became increasingly pure
science and nothing more, and this continued until, at the end of the
nineteenth century, it was well-nigh only mathematics. That was the
ideal towards which it strove — it strove to be Phoronomy, a
kind of system of pure mechanics.
So,
in the modern age, man began more and more to make what is dead into
the actual object of knowledge. That was the whole aim. This lasted
for some centuries; evolution took this direction. Men of genius like
de Lamettrie, for example, anticipated the idea that the human being
was really a machine. Yes, the human being who only wants to grasp
what is dead avails himself of what is merely a machine within him,
of what is dead within him. And this makes the development of natural
science easy for modern man. For his thinking is dead by the time of
puberty, whereas in earlier days he had God-given intuitions;
thinking preserved the forces of growth within itself far beyond
puberty. In later times, living thinking was lost; human beings in
later life learnt nothing more; they simply repeated mechanically
what they had assimilated in earlier youth.
You
see, this suited the old, who held the control of culture in their
hands: to comprehend a dead world with their dead thinking. On this
dead thinking, science can be founded, but with it the young can
never be taught and educated. And why? Because up to puberty the
young preserve the livingness of thinking, in an unconscious way. And
so, in spite of all the thought given today to principles of
education, if rigidified objective science which comprehends only
what is dead becomes the teacher of the living, the youthful feel it
like a thorn in the flesh. This thorn enters their heart and they
have to tear out from their heart what is living. Many still overlook
what has had to come about out of the depths of human evolution: a
definite cleavage between young and old. And this cleavage is due to
the fact that the young cannot allow the dead thorn to be thrust into
their living heart — the thorn which the head produces out of
intellectualism. The young demand the livingness that can only come
out of the Spirit as the result of strenuous effort by the
individual. We are making a beginning in the sphere of moral
intuitions.
A beginning has been made in what I have tried to
present in my
Philosophy of Spiritual Activity
in regard to this purely spiritual matter — for such are moral
intuitions, striven for by the human individuality. Because one has dared
to open one's mouth while others were saying that nothing should be
said — the powers which ordained that one should be stopped
from speaking of moral intuitions will themselves be silenced. And so
I called upon the living, the purely Spiritual Science is dead.
Science cannot make what is living flow from the mouth. And without
this one cannot build on it. One must appeal to an inner livingness,
and so begin to seek in the right way. The divine lies precisely in
the appeal to the original, moral, spiritual intuitions. But if one
has once grasped the spiritual then one can unfold the forces which
enable one to grasp the Spiritual in wider spheres of cosmic
existence. And that is the straight path from moral intuitions to
other spiritual contents.
In my book
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds,
I have tried to show that knowledge of the super-sensible worlds is
built up gradually out of Imaginative, Inspired and Intuitive
experience. If we look at outer Nature, we reach first Imagination,
then Inspiration, and lastly Intuition. In the moral world it is
different. If in that world we reach picture-consciousness,
Imaginations as such, then with Imaginations of Nature we have at the
same time developed the faculty for moral intuitions. Already at the
first stage we acquire what, in the other sphere, is not attained
until the third stage. In the moral world, intuition follows
immediately upon outer perception. In the world of Nature, however,
there are two intermediate stages. So that if, in the moral world one
speaks of intuitions not in mere phrases but honestly, truthfully,
one simply cannot do otherwise than recognize these intuitions as
being purely spiritual. But then one must work on to discover other
realms of the Spirit. For qualitatively one has grasped in moral
Intuition the same as the evolution of the natural world, filled with
content by a book such as
Occult Science.
But,
my dear friends, we must proceed as follows. On the one hand, we must
acknowledge that outer science by its very nature can only comprehend
what is material; hence perception of the material is not only
materialism but also phenomenalism. On the other, we must work to
bring back life into what has been made into dead thinking by natural
science.
Thus
certain Bible words become alive on a higher level. I do not want to
intersperse what I say in a sentimental way with words from the Bible
but only to elucidate things for our better mutual understanding.
Why
is it that today we no longer have any real philosophies? It is
because thinking, as I have described it, has died; when based merely
upon dead thinking, philosophies are dead from the very outset. They
are not alive. And if like Bergson one seeks in philosophy for
something living, nothing comes of it because, although spasmodic
efforts are made, one cannot lay hold of the living. To grasp the
living means first to attain vision. What we need to reach the living
is what after our fifteenth year we can add to what has worked within
us before our fifteenth year. This is not disturbed by our intellect.
What works within us, a spontaneous, living wisdom — we must
learn to carry this over into the dead thinking. Dead thinking must
be permeated with forces of growth and with reality. For this reason
— not out of sentimentality — I want to refer to the
words. from the Bible: “Except ye become as little children ye
cannot enter the Kingdom of Heaven.”
For
it is always the Kingdom of Heaven that one is seeking. But if one
does not become like the child before puberty, one cannot enter the
Kingdom of Heaven. Childlikeness, youthfulness, must be brought into
dead thinking. Thereby it becomes alive, it comes once more to
intuitions; thus we learn to speak out of the primal wisdom of the
child. Out of a science of language such as Fritz Mauthner has
written, moral intuitions not only become dumb, but actually all talk
about the world is silenced. People ought to stop talking about the
world because Mauthner proves that all talk about the world consists
only of words and words are incapable of expressing reality!
Such
thinking has made its appearance only since the first third of the
nineteenth century. But supposing our words and concepts not only
meant something but had real existence. Then indeed they would not be
transparent; then, like clouded lenses before our eyes, they would
conceal what is material; because they are realities they would hide
the world from us. Something splendid would be made of man had he
concepts and words which signify something in themselves! He would
have been held fast by them. But concepts and words must be transparent
so that we may reach things through them. It is imperative
when the desire is almost universal to silence all talk about
reality, that we learn to speak a new language.
In
this sense we must return to childhood and learn a new language. The
language we learn in the first years of childhood gradually becomes
dead, because it is permeated by dead intellectual concepts. We must
quicken it to new life. We must find something that strikes into what
we are thinking, just as when we learnt to speak an impulse arose in
us out of the unconscious. We must find a science that is alive. We
should consider it a matter of course that the thinking which reached
its apex in the last third of the nineteenth century silences our
moral intuitions. We must learn to open our mouth by letting our lips
be moved by the Spirit. Then we shall become children again, that is
to say, we shall carry childhood on into our later years. And that we
must do. If a youth movement wants to have truth and not only
phraseology, then such a movement is imbued of necessity with the
longing for the human mouth to be opened by the Spirit, a longing for
the quickening of human speech by the Spirit which wells forth from
the individual. As a first step, individual moral intuitions must be
brought out of the human individuality; we shall see how as a result,
the true Science of the Spirit, which makes all Anthropology into
Anthroposophy, is born.
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