The Experiences of Sleep
and their
Spiritual Background
Stuttgart
9th October 1922 – published in GA 218
RUDOLF STEINER
Lecture
given by Rudolf Steiner in Stuttgart 9 October, 1922. Translation
published by permission of the Rudolf Steiner
Nachlassverwaltung. This lecture is the first of sixteen
given between October and December 1922, eventually to be collected
and published in one volume of the Complete Centenary Edition of
Rudolf Steiner's works in the original German. (Vol. 218
in the Bibliographical Survey, 1961.)
In speaking of the
life of the soul, a certain expression in common use today is made to
cover a great deal. I refer to the expression: the
‘unconscious.’ On the one hand it admits that in respect
of the soul we are obliged to speak of forces or the like which do
not play into the ordinary consciousness; but on the other hand, by
the very word itself we confess our inability to say anything about
these forces. We merely label them the ‘unconscious.’
In
setting out to describe what is the essential nature of human
knowledge, we have to say that man's search for knowledge has to be
pursued in the external world by means of observation and experiment,
aided by the understanding with its power of combination. But then we
can go on to show that when we investigate our consciousness, we find
in it all manner of manifestations — thoughts, feelings,
impulses of will, etc. — of which we are aware that they cannot
be fathomed in their true nature by following the method of external
scientific investigation and working with experiment, observation and
the combining power of thought. Neither does such vision as we can
gain by practising self-observation enable us to penetrate to the
nature and being of what thus reveals itself in the life of the soul,
so long as our self-observation is carried out purely with the
ordinary forces of consciousness. We speak accordingly of the
‘unconscious,’ but while we do so, at the same time we
renounce all claim to be able to penetrate into its world. This
renunciation is entirely justified if we want to restrict ourselves
to those means of attaining knowledge which are in common acceptance
today. For as a matter of fact, no one who relies on these methods
alone can ever carry his observation of the life of the soul any
further than that during waking life, ideas, feelings, impulses of
will-expressions, that is, of the inner nature and being of man
— surge up from the depths; they are obviously closely bound up
with the external bodily nature, and it is quite impossible to
demonstrate conclusively that what shows itself to begin with in such
close dependence on bodily conditions can have any existence of its
own beyond these bodily conditions.
Now
as you know very well, in Anthroposophy we take this as our
starting-point. We fully accept the fact that with such means of
acquiring knowledge as are recognised today, the depths of man's
soul-nature can never be fathomed. We fully accept the fact that as
far as these means go we can do no other than refer simply to an
‘unconscious.’ We do not even need to consider birth and
death — the two boundaries of physical life on earth; we need
look only at the condition of ordinary sleep as it occurs every day
of a man's life, and we shall be obliged to admit that, taking what
can be learned about the experiences of the soul with the ordinary
means of attaining knowledge, it is impossible to raise any objection
when a conclusion such as the following is reached. It is asserted,
for example, from the point of view of ordinary knowledge, that all
thinking, feeling and willing, as they are present in consciousness
in ordinary day-to-day life, show so great a dependence upon bodily
conditions that it may well be inferred that experiences of soul
emerge out of the bodily conditions as out of a subconscious region,
and that what happens during sleep is simply that the purely organic
life predominates as such and during such time allows no ideas or
feelings or acts of will to flow forth from it. When such a statement
is made there is nothing to be said. At the most we can point to the
dream and suggest how dreams appear to come out of the life of sleep
and to be simply remembered in the waking life. From the way the
dream plays through the life of sleep the conclusion might be drawn
that the soul-nature does in some way or other persist during sleep.
Here, however, we are on uncertain ground; and the fact is, no
serious and open-minded person can, with no more than the ordinary
means of knowledge at his disposal, be expected to speak in any other
way about the soul than to say it exhibits phenomena which are to all
appearances absolutely dependent on bodily conditions.
Anthroposophical knowledge, however, just because it accepts in all
seriousness this capacity — or rather incapacity — of the
ordinary means of knowledge, must, on the other hand, endeavour to
find other means of knowing the world. And, as you are aware, such
have been attained; they have often been explained and described here
Imaginative, Inspired, Intuitive Knowledge. By means of these special
ways of knowing — ways of knowing that by dint of strenuous
effort have to be developed as new faculties from out of the ordinary
life of the soul we are then in a position to bring clarity into a
realm where with the ordinary means of knowledge clarity can never be
attained.
And
now, on the basis of these three stages of higher knowledge, I should
like to give you a picture of a very important region of the
subconscious or unconscious in man, namely the region of soul-life
between going to sleep and waking. I have already described this
region to you many times from various standpoints. Today I will do so
again from one particular aspect.
Let
me begin by picturing to you quite simply the condition of sleep as
seen by Imaginative, Inspired and Intuitive Knowledge. For ordinary
consciousness all that we can say is that whereas from waking to
going to sleep consciousness is filled with a content, on going to
sleep this content first of all grows dim, is then gradually
extinguished and a condition of unconsciousness ensues. During the
consciousness of daytime man cannot, with ordinary means of
knowledge, tell what his soul does during the time between going to
sleep and waking. If the soul has any experience of this condition,
the experience does not enter into ordinary consciousness. For
ordinary consciousness darkness spreads over all that the soul
undergoes — assuming, that is, that it undergoes any experience
at all in sleep. But now, with the advent of Imaginative Knowledge,
the condition of sleep begins to be lit up, the darkness begins to
change into light, and it is possible to judge clearly of what is
experienced by the soul during, at any rate, the early stages of
sleep. And in Inspired and Intuitive Knowledge one can penetrate
still farther into these experiences. Do not suppose that we can by
this means look into sleep somewhat in the way we look into a
peepshow; but through Imaginative, Inspired and Intuitive Knowledge
we can experience conditions of soul that resemble sleep inasmuch as
our relation to our body at such times is similar to the relation
during sleep; only it is experienced, not unconsciously, but in full
consciousness. And through being able thus consciously during waking
life to experience in a similar manner to the way one experiences in
sleep, the possibility is opened for us to behold what the soul of
man undergoes during sleep, and to describe it.
When
a man goes to sleep, you know how in the moment of doing so the
consciousness, already growing vague and indistinct, is often
confused by dreams. This dream-world can, to begin with, help us very
little indeed towards a knowledge of the life of the soul. For all we
can know about dreams in daytime consciousness with the ordinary
means of knowledge remains something that is quite external. Dreams
are obviously not things upon which we can build in a sure and
well-defined way, until we have a knowledge about sleep itself by
some other means. He who truly acquires a knowledge of the condition
of sleep knows very well that dreams are in reality misleading rather
than enlightening. What the soul experiences in sleep it experiences
unconsciously. But now, since I am going to place a picture of it
before you arising from Imaginative, Inspired and Intuitive
Knowledge, I must portray it as if it were experienced consciously. I
shall have to describe to you the experiences of the soul from going
to sleep to waking as if they were experienced in consciousness. They
are not; nevertheless, what I describe is truly experienced by the
soul, although without knowing anything of it. It is present as an
actual fact, and the effect of the experience is not limited to the
time between going to sleep and waking. For it works into the
physical organism of the human being, and it does so most of all
during waking life. We carry within us during the day, from waking
until going to sleep, the after-effects of the experiences of the
night; and if it is true that for the civilization in which we live
what we do with the instrumentality of consciousness is of great
significance, it is no less true that all that goes on with our own
selves depends very little indeed upon our consciousness, and very
much upon what we experience unconsciously between going to sleep and
waking.
When
we have gone to sleep, and the sense-perceptions have been gradually
paralysed and the will-impulses have ceased to work, we experience in
the first place an undifferentiated condition of soul. In this
undefined experience a strong sense of time is present, but all
feeling of space is almost completely wiped out. It is an experience
that is comparable with swimming; we are, so to speak, moving about
in a general, indefinite world-substance. One has really to coin
words to express what the soul goes through at this stage. One might
say, the soul feels as if it were like a wave in a great sea, a wave
that is organised within itself and yet feels itself surrounded on
every hand by the sea and affected by the influences of the sea much
as during the life of day the soul is affected by impressions of
colour, tone or warmth, perceiving them in a quite definite and
differentiated manner. In the life of day you feel yourself as a
human being enclosed within your skin, and having a definite position
in space. in the moment that follows the going to sleep, you feel
— I say you ‘feel,’ I describe it all as if it were
consciousness; the fact is there, it is only the consciousness of the
fact that is lacking — you feel like a wave in a universal sea;
you feel yourself now here, now there; as I said, the definite sense
of space ceases. A general sense of time, however, persists.
But
now this experience is united with another, namely, an experience of
being forsaken and alone. It is like sinking into an abyss. If a man
were to experience consciously this first stage of sleep without
right preparation, he would in truth be exposed to great risk, for he
would find it quite unbearable to lose in this way almost all sense
of space and live merely in a general, universal feeling of time, to
feel himself in this vague way merely a part of a universal sea of
substance, where scarcely anything is distinguishable — where
indeed the only thing one can distinguish is that one is a self
within a universal world-existence. If consciousness were present,
one would actually have the sensation of hovering over an abyss.
And
now a still further experience is united with this one. A tremendous
need for the support of the spiritual makes itself felt in the soul,
a great need and longing to be united with the spiritual. In the
universal sea in which one is swimming, one has, as it were, lost
that feeling of security which comes from being in contact with the
material things of the world of our waking hours. Hence one feels
— one would feel, that is, if the condition were
conscious — a deep yearning to be united with the divine and
spiritual. And one may say too that this experience of movement in an
undifferentiated world-substance carries with it the sense of being
concealed and protected within divine-spiritual reality. Please
observe the way I am describing all this. To repeat once more, I am
describing it to you as if the soul experienced it consciously. It
does not do so; but let me remind you that when you experience
something consciously in waking life, a great deal is going on at the
same time unconsciously in your organism. This is a simple fact. Let
us say, for example, you feel joy. When you feel joy, your blood
beats differently from the way it beats when you are sad. You
experience the joy or sorrow in your consciousness, but not the
difference in the pulsation of the blood. The pulsation of the blood
is, notwithstanding, a fact. And it is the same here too. What I
describe as swimming in an undifferentiated world-substance, and
again what I describe as a need of God — there is a reality in
the life of soul answering to each one of these descriptions. And
Imaginative Knowledge does nothing else than lift this reality into
consciousness, just as ordinary waking consciousness can lift into
consciousness the pulsation of the blood which lies behind joy or
sorrow. The facts are there, and they work on into our life of day;
so that when we wake in the morning our whole organism is refreshed.
The refreshment is due to the experience we have undergone during the
night in our life of soul. What takes place in the soul when it is
separated from the body during the time between going to sleep and
waking is of great significance in its after-effects during waking
life on the following day. We should not be able rightly to make use
of our body on the following day if we had not raised ourselves up
out of our connection with the external world of the physical senses
and been immersed in this undefined experience which I have
described. Nor would there rise up from the depths of our will during
waking life something like a need and longing to relate all the
differentiated world around us to a universal existence. The fact
that we feel a need to relate the world of the senses to a divine
existence is a direct result of this first stage of sleep.
The
question may well be asked: Why is man not content merely to place
the several objects of the world side by side? Why is he not content
to go through the world accepting the existence of plants, animals,
etc., without question? Why does he want to try to philosophize about
it all? For the very simplest people do so; and incidentally, I may
say they do it with far more understanding than the philosophers
themselves! Why does man want to build up a philosophy of how the
things hang together? Why does he relate the single example that
meets his eye to a universal whole, and ask how the individual is
rooted and grounded in the cosmos? He would not do so, if it were not
that during sleep he enters in an intensely real and living way into
the undefined existence I have described; nor would he ever in the
waking state come to a feeling of God, were it not that he has
experienced the corresponding fact in the first stage of sleep. We
owe to sleep something that has untold significance for our deep
inner nature as human beings.
As
man continues asleep, he comes into other stages which are not
accessible to Imaginative Knowledge, but require Inspired Knowledge
for their perception. Something else now shows itself as a fact of
the life of soul and is reflected for Inspired Knowledge in the way
that the pulsation of the blood is reflected in joy and sorrow. To
begin with, we find a disintegration of the soul into the greatest
possible number of individual entities. The soul literally splits up
its life into many parts, and this process is united with an
experience which, when it lights up into consciousness, is felt as an
experience of anxiety and fear. After the soul has passed through
what we have described as a hovering over the abyss or as a swimming
in a universal world-substance, and has experienced at the same time
a longing for the divine-spiritual, it comes into this condition of
anxiety — that is to say, into a condition that would be
anxiety, if it were consciously experienced. The experience is due to
the fact that the soul is no longer merely swimming in a general
world-substance, but has, as it were, immersed itself in individual
beings of soul-and-spirit. The soul comes into a certain relationship
with these beings, and doing so severally, is now itself not one but
manifold.
The
anxiety of this stage of sleep has to be somehow met and overcome. In
the time of the Earth's evolution that preceded the Mystery of
Golgotha, teachings were given in the places of the Mysteries and
found their way to the individual human beings; these teachings
enabled the soul to experience other feelings in addition to those
aroused by contact with the outer world of the senses. Such teachings
were given in connection with the most varied religious practices,
but they all awakened these feelings in the souls of men by giving
them ideas and conceptions of God in such a way as was right for
those ancient times. Men were then so constituted that even during
waking life the spiritual world still shone into their consciousness.
The farther we go back in the evolution of mankind on Earth, the more
evident does it become that man had a kind of clairvoyance in very
ancient times, traces of which remained on into later epochs; through
this clairvoyance he perceived inwardly how he himself, before he
began his life on Earth, had lived in pre-earthly existence as a
being of soul-and-spirit. It was not something that he merely
believed; it was for him a certainty; he experienced within himself
something left over from a pre-earthly existence.
If I
may be allowed to use a trivial comparison, I would remind you of how
when someone has inherited a certain faculty from his parents, he is
aware that this faculty has inserted itself into the course of his
life through its own immediate existence; he has not acquired it, it
has come over to him from his ancestors. In a similar way the men of
an older time knew that certain experiences they had in their soul
did not come to them from what they had seen with their eyes, but
were an inheritance from a pre-earthly existence. They knew it from
the experiences themselves. We have again and again to call attention
to the fact that in the course of evolution man has grown free from
such experiences, and that we live in an age when the ordinary
consciousness has no experiences that are explicable as an
inheritance from a pre-earthly existence. It was accordingly easier
for the men of olden times to be taught by their spiritual leaders in
the Mystery-centres how they should relate themselves in their
feelings to what they already had in their soul as spiritual
experience. Power came to them with the impulses they received from
the Mystery-centres, and they were able to carry out of ordinary day
life into the life of night, into the life of sleep, the strength to
hold their own against the anxiety described above. The anxiety rose
up out of the depths of the life of sleep. If a man was to have power
to bring away with him out of this anxiety not general fatigue or
exhaustion or the like, but instead a freshness of his whole
organism, then he had to acquire that power on the previous day
during the waking life.
Such
is the connection between day and night. Night brings, at a certain
stage of sleep, anxiety. Into this anxiety must flow power man has
gained from religious or similar experience on the day before; and
when these two things come together and unite — the power
remaining over from the day before and the new and original
experience of the night — then a reviving and refreshing force
streams into the organism for the new day that follows.
A
true spiritual science is not concerned to speak in general, abstract
phrases and affirm the presence of a universal divine ordering in the
world. It is not satisfied to describe the single objects of the
world in their sense-aspect and then add: And now within this
sense-appearance a general world-ordering holds sway. Spiritual
science has to show in concrete detail how this divine ordering of
the world works. If we would be adequate to the tasks of human
evolution in the future, we cannot be content merely to say: I feel
refreshed after a sound and healthy sleep; God has granted me
refreshment. We should have to despair of science if we must insist
upon a strict science for the world of the senses, and could not at
the same time extend this strictness to what relates to the
supersensible, but there had to remain content with phrases, such as
the general statement that a divine ordering lies at the foundation
of the world. No, on the contrary, we learn to be more and more
definite; and we can show how the anxiety which occurs in the second
stage of sleep, is as it were blended and intermingled with the power
drawn from the religious experience of the previous day that works on
into the night, and how these then give rise in their union to the
power with which the physical organism is refreshed for the next
day.
In
this way we come to see more and more clearly how the spiritual lives
in the physical. The means of knowledge that hold good today admit
only a physical content of the world, supplemented by a way of
speaking in general terms of how in, or above, this physical content
lives something spiritual. Humanity will, however, sink lower and
lower in civilization and culture if men will not learn to extend to
the spiritual world the strict exactitude practised in the study of
the external world.
When, with Inspired Consciousness, we follow up further the stages of
sleep and pass from the first to the second stage, the inner
experience of the soul becomes altogether different from what it is
in the life of day.
Now
it is quite possible to recognise by means of ordinary natural
science — if we will only follow it out to the consequences
— that our life of soul is intimately attached to the processes
of breathing and of blood-circulation, and to the process of
nutrition that permeates the circulation; we can feel that something
is taking place when, for example, we exert ourselves strongly in
movement. We feel how the soul-and-spirit within us is united with
the activities of our body, and when we try to form a picture of the
breathing process or of the circulatory process, we know that we are
picturing something in which, during waking life, dwells the
experience of the soul, in which it is, as it were, embedded. The
experience of the soul during sleep is not attached in any way to the
senses, nevertheless it too is a well-defined inner life that can
also be referred to something, in the same way that the inner life of
day can be referred to the life of breathing and the life of
circulation. Inspired Knowledge leads us to see how this inner life
of night-time is connected with an unfolding of inner forces,
comparable with the unfolding of the forces of breathing and of
circulation, and is in fact a copy of the planetary movements of our
system. Note well, I do not say that every night from going to sleep
until waking we are ourselves within, or united with, the movements
of the planets, but that we are inserted into something which is a
copy, so to speak in miniature, of our planetary cosmos or rather of
its movements. As our life of soul by day has its dwelling-place in
the circulation of the blood, so our life of soul by night is
inserted into something which is a copy of the planetary movements of
our solar system. If we must say for the day-time: the white
corpuscles, the red corpuscles circulate in us, the breathing power
revolves in us, enabling us to breathe in and breathe out —
then we must say for the night-time: there revolves in us a copy of
the movement of Mercury, of the movement of Venus, of the movement of
Jupiter. Our life of soul from going to sleep to waking is, so to
say, in a little planetary cosmos. From being personal and human our
life becomes cosmic during sleep. And Inspired Knowledge can then
discover how when we are tired in the evening, the forces which have
held our blood in pulsation during the day are able to keep vitality
going during the night through their own faculty of persistence, but
that in order to be turned again into the day life of soul, these
forces require the fresh impulse that comes from the experience of a
copy of the planetary cosmos during the night. In the moment of
waking the after-effects are implanted into us of the experience we
have received from the copies of the planetary movements.
This
it is which unites the cosmos with our individual life. When we wake
in the morning, the forces we need would not be able to stream into
us in the right way so that consciousness is properly present, if we
had not this after-working of the experiences of the night.
You
will be able to see from this how little justification there often is
when people complain bitterly of sleeplessness. As a general rule,
they are deeply self-deceived. I will not, however, enter into this
subject now. Naturally, those who labour under the delusion have
themselves no idea of it. They think they are not asleep, whereas in
reality they are in an abnormal sleep. They think that their soul is
not outside the body and cannot experience this planetary existence.
The fact is, they are in a condition which is certainly dull, but
which yet admits of their experiencing the very same that another
human being experiences when he is in a healthy sleep. But as I have
said, I will not at the present moment enter further into these
exceptional cases.
Speaking generally, the description I am now giving is true for man,
namely that in the second stage of sleep he lives a cosmic life. I
have indicated to you how in olden times before the Mystery of
Golgotha, impulses went forth from the places of the Mysteries which
gave man the power to come out of this anxiety, the power to
withstand the tendency to dispersion and pass through in a sound and
healthy way what he had to pass through at this time. That is to say,
he was imbued with a power that enabled him to enter into the
experience of the planets and not stop short at the experience of
being dismembered and scattered. The anxiety was due to this latter
experience, while the experience of being in the planets came as a
result of taking with one out of the experience of the previous day
the power I have described. Since the time of the Mystery of Golgotha
it has been possible for men to possess themselves of the same power
that was formerly given from the Mysteries, by directing their souls
to the events of the Mystery of Golgotha. Whoever enters in a right
and living way into an experience of the Mystery of Golgotha will
have Christ for his strong guide in the moment when his soul comes
into the realm of anxiety during the time between going to sleep and
waking. Thus the humanity of modern times has through the
Christ-experience what an older humanity had from the Mysteries.
Passing onward from the stage of sleep just described, man enters
upon a stage which I may be permitted to name in plain terms; for
after I have taken time to explain more fully the planetary
experience, you will not take offence when I say at once that
following on the planetary experience man has an experience of the
fixed stars. Having lived during the second stage of sleep in the
copy of the planetary movements, he now lives in the constellations,
or rather in copies of the constellations, of the fixed stars of the
zodiac. This experience is a very real fact during the third stage of
the life of man by night. He begins then also to experience the
difference between the Sun as a planet and as a fixed star. It is not
at all clear to a man of the present day why in ancient astronomies
the Sun counted at the same time as a planet and also in a sense as a
fixed star. During the second stage of sleep the Sun has actually, in
this experience, planetary qualities; we learn to know the
conspicuous and distinct relation in which it stands to the whole
life of man on Earth. In the third stage we learn to know the Sun in
its constellation in relation to the other constellations of the
stars, for example, of the zodiac.
In
short, we live our way into the cosmos with far greater intensity
than was the case in the previous stage of sleep. We have this
experience of the fixed stars, and we retain from it deeper and still
more important impulses for the life of the following day than we
should be able to have from the planetary experiences alone. We owe
it to the experience of the planets that our breathing process and
circulatory process are, if I may so express it,
‘enfired;’ but in order for these processes to be
permeated, as they need to be, with substance, in order that they may
be continually carrying the means of nourishment to the whole of the
organism, they require the stimulation that is given by the
experience of the fixed stars. The activity that results is
apparently a most material one; nevertheless it owes its origin to
the working of higher forces than the mere movement of the blood in
circulation. As physical human beings we are dependent in our
soul-and-spirit on the way in which this or that substance circulates
in us, and this dependence is connected, if I may so express it, with
the highest heavens; it is connected with the fact that we, as beings
of soul-and-spirit, feel within us during the third stage of sleep
pictures of the constellations of the fixed stars, just as by day
when we are awake we feel within us our stomach or our lung. We have
already heard that, as by day our body is in movement inwardly, is
filled with the movements of breathing and circulation, so by night
our soul, the substance of our soul, is something that has within it
copies of the planetary movements. And now we learn that as by day we
have in us stomach and lung and heart, so by night we have in us the
constellations of the fixed stars. They constitute our inner being.
Thus during sleep man becomes in very truth a cosmic being. This
third stage of sleep is the deepest of all. Out of it man emerges to
return little by little to the waking life of day. Why does he
return? He would not return into waking life, did not forces take
hold in his soul which lead him again into his physical organism.
We
have already approached these forces from many and varying points of
view and described how they may be named. Today I want to describe
them to you from their cosmic aspect. When through intuition we
attain to a knowledge of the experience of the fixed stars, then we
learn at the same time that the forces which lead man back again into
the physical organism are Moon forces; that is to say, they are what
corresponds in the realm of spirit to what appears in a physical
picture as the Moon. The action of the forces does not, of course,
depend on whether it is full Moon at the time or some other phase,
for the Moon can shine through the Earth in a spiritual sense. The
metamorphoses which come to expression in the visibility of the Moon
do, it is true, enter into the working, but to explain how they enter
in would take us to the consideration of much finer and subtler
distinctions than we want to describe today. It is in general the
forces of the Moon that lead man back.
We
may express it in this way. Just as the soul of man is permeated from
going to sleep to waking by the planetary forces and by the forces
that reveal themselves in the constellations of the fixed stars, just
as these forces permeate him through and through and remain with him
— for the effects work on in the waking life of day — so
is man permeated unceasingly with those spiritual forces which
correspond in the cosmos to the physical Moon. It is in reality a
marvellously complicated process, but if we want to find some way of
expressing it, we might say it is like stretching out a piece of
elastic. You know how if you stretch a piece of elastic, it goes a
certain distance and then springs back. In a somewhat similar way we,
as it were, stretch the Moon forces to a certain point and then are
obliged to return. The point is reached in the third stage of sleep,
and we are then led back stage by stage by the Moon forces, which are
always intimately connected with the bringing into the physical world
of soul-and-spirit. From the third, through the second and the first
stage we are gradually led back.
It
is a fact that the initiative man is able to carry in his powers of
ideation and of feeling and thought during day-waking life, is an
after-effect of the experience of the fixed stars during the night,
whilst the powers of combination he is able to carry in them, the
powers of wisdom and cleverness, are an after-effect of the planetary
experience. That which rays into the life of day from the cosmos,
coming from the experience of the night, is obliged however to enter
by way of the body. The experience of the fixed stars shoots into our
life of day by way of the metabolism of food. Our food would not
enter our head in such a way as to enable us to unfold powers of
initiative, were it not that the whole process of metabolism is fired
by what we experience at night in connection with the stars. Nor
would we be able to think intelligently unless we received into our
breathing and blood-circulation during the day the after-effects of
the planetary experience of the night.
Things like this are always correct only in a broad and general way;
and when the facts appear to be contradictory, as in the case of
people who suffer from sleeplessness, then it rests with us to
explain the corresponding abnormalities. If such cases are looked
into with real thoroughness, they will not be found to tell against
these truths. On the contrary, these truths, which are correct in the
main, open up for the first time the possibility of explaining the
single instance in its real and essential nature.
A
true understanding of the human being is alone possible when we
become conscious in the widest sense of the fact that man lives not
only in his physical body within his skin, but in the whole world.
This life in the whole world is concealed from ordinary consciousness
only because it is very much dulled and dimmed for the waking life of
day. At most we can say that in the general sensation and experience
of light we have something of an after-working of our share in the
being of a universal cosmos. And there are perhaps other feelings,
very dull and dim, wherein man has something left between waking and
going to sleep of that sense of being within the cosmos. All such
feelings, however, that are given to man remain silent within him by
day in order that he may unfold his individual consciousness, in
order that he may not be disturbed by whatever plays into his
experience from the Cosmos. During the night the case is reversed.
There man has a cosmic experience. True, it is a copy only, but it is
a faithful copy, as I have indicated. By night man has in reality a
cosmic experience and because he must pass through this cosmic
experience, therefore is his day-consciousness darkened and
paralysed.
The
future evolution of mankind will consist in this, that man will more
and more live his way into the Cosmos, and that the time will come
when he will feel himself with his consciousness in Sun and Moon and
Stars, in the same way as now he feels himself with his consciousness
upon Earth. Then he will look from the Cosmos upon the Earth, just as
now he gazes from the Earth into the Cosmos in his present waking
condition. The looking, however, will be essentially different in
kind.
If
we want to take our stand for evolution in all sincerity and in a
wide and comprehensive sense, we must recognise that human
consciousness too is subject to evolution, that the
body-consciousness man has today is a transition stage that leads
over to another consciousness, which will also be a reflection in the
soul of facts. Man already now experiences the facts every night. He
has need of them; for through them alone in their after-effects can
his life be maintained by day. Man's further evolution will consist
in this, that he will be conscious in normal life of that which today
constitutes for him the unconscious. For this, however, it is
essential that he should find his way into Spiritual Science; for
just as we need to bend our course in some direction or other when we
are swimming, so do we need to give a direction to present-day
ordinary consciousness. We cannot merely let ourselves be carried
along, as is the case in the customary methods of obtaining
knowledge. We need a clear direction. This guidance anthroposophical
Spiritual Science alone is able to give, because it unveils, in so
far as is necessary for present times, that which is living in man
and of which he is not yet conscious. He must receive it into his
consciousness, otherwise he can make no cosmic progress.
I
have here portrayed for you one section of all that is commonly
gathered up from the rubbish heap of modern knowledge and labelled
the ‘unconscious.’ Having thus described man’s
unconscious experiences during sleep, I will try in the next lecture
to describe for you the experiences that lie beyond birth and
death.
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