IX
FROM what I said
yesterday about the course of historical evolution, you will have
gathered that the way in which a human being confronts his fellow men
at present was different before the year 333 A.D.
I
assume that you are familiar with the soul principles of man
according to anthroposophical knowledge. You know that we must
differentiate in the soul between what was active in human nature up
to the fifteenth century — the so-called intellectual or mind
soul — and the consciousness soul which since that time has
been principally active in those who have developed to the level of
culture to which man has so far advanced.
In
describing a particular activity of the soul as that of the
intellectual or mind soul, it does not indicate that intellect, in
itself, as we understand it today, is a special characteristic of the
intellectual or mind soul. The intellectual or mind soul was
developed particularly by the Greeks and among them intellect was
certainly not what it is today. But you will have been able to gather
that from yesterday's lecture.
Among
the Greeks, concepts, ideas, were bestowed by the Spirit. But because
of this, their intellect was not so cold, so lifeless and dry as ours
is today when it is the result of effort. Intellectualism has first
arisen through the special development in the consciousness soul. You
can only get the right conception of the intellectual or mind soul by
transporting yourselves into the mind of a Greek. Then you will
certainly discover the difference between the relation of the Greek
towards the world and our own. This will be made clearer by our
lecture today.
These
introductory words serve as a basis to understand that in the
centuries preceding the modern age, that is, up to the fifteenth
century, human beings met and spoke to one another out of the
intellectual or mind soul. Today we face the consciousness soul. But
to feel it the developing human being had to reach the turn of the
nineteenth century. It has been brought about by circumstances
already described. But because of this the problems of life have
appeared in an entirely new way. Problems must be regarded in a new
way nowadays, otherwise the connecting bridge between consciousness
soul and consciousness soul, which means for modern humanity the
bridge between one man and another, cannot be found. We are suffering
from this at the present time — we cannot find the bridge
between human being and human being.
Above
all we must ask many of our questions in a new way, in a form that
may at first seem grotesque. But it is not meant to be so. Now let us
suppose that a three-year-old child were to resolve not to pass
through the tedious process of waiting for its second teeth until the
seventh year, but this child were to say: It is weary work to go
through four more years until I get my second teeth; I will get them
at once. (I could use other comparisons which would appear still more
grotesque, but this one will suffice,) Such a thing is impossible,
isn't it? For there are certain conditions of natural
development.
And
so, too, it is a condition of natural development, for which today
only few people have any feeling, that only from a certain age
onwards the human being can know something about the connections in
life of which he must know, but which cannot be exhausted by
information about external things. Naturally even at the age of nine
we may know, for example, that the human being has ten fingers. But
matters where a judgment formed by active thinking is necessary,
cannot be known before we reach a certain time in life, that is,
between about the eighteenth and nineteenth years. Just as it is
impossible to get the second teeth before the seventh year so it is
impossible to know something in its essential reality before the
eighteenth year. It is simply impossible before the eighteenth year
really to know about those things that are not just under our nose,
things for which active judgment is necessary. Before this one may
have heard something, may believe something on authority. But one
cannot know anything about it. Before this we cannot unfold that
inner activity of soul necessary for us to say: I know something
about this or that which does not lie in a region accessible to mere
eyes or ears. Such things are hardly mentioned today. They are,
however, exceedingly important for life. If culture is to find roots
again, one must speak about such things, and treat them in a
knowledgeable way.
What,
then, follows from the fact that before his eighteenth year the human
being cannot, properly speaking, know anything? It follows that the
human being before he is eighteen must depend upon those who are
older, just as the infant is dependent on its mother's breast —
it is in no way different. From this, however, there follows
something of the greatest significance for the intercourse between
teachers, educators, and the younger generation. If this is not
heeded the connection is simply false.
Now,
people are not conscious today that this is so; generally in the
sphere of education, an opposite direction is taken. But it was not
always so. If we look back before the first third of the fifteenth
century, a real modern youth movement would not have been possible.
At that time there could never have been a youth movement in the
present form with a justified right of existence. Why could there
have been no such thing? To answer this question we must turn to the
conditions which obtained among those preparing for life in the
monastic schools. We could also take the conditions for the young who
were being prepared for trades. We should not find much difference.
In the earliest of those times it was definitely realized that no one
could be brought before his eighteenth year to the point of real
knowledge. It would have seemed absurd had one maintained that it was
possible to give anyone real knowledge before his eighteenth year. At
that time it was known among older people, especially if they wanted
to teach or educate: “The young cannot be brought to the point
of actual knowledge. We must be capable of inducing the young to
believe in what we, according to our knowledge, hold to be true.”
And to lead the young to believe was a sacred task.
Today
this is all upside-down, because what in earlier times was demanded
only of the young, namely, belief, is now demanded in connection with
the super-sensible of those who are grown-up. At that time the concept
of belief was only there for those who were young. But it was
regarded as something sacred. A man would have reproached himself
with violating his most sacred duty if, as teacher or educator, he
had failed to make the young believe in him out of the freshness and
lively conviction of individual human nature, so that they thus
received the truth. This shade of feeling lay in all education, in
all instruction. In other respects the education and teaching of that
time may today arouse a sense of antipathy because of its division
into all kinds of classes and distinctions. But putting that aside,
the desire was there to maintain the faith of the young.
Something
else was connected with this: that teachers felt that it was first of
all necessary to justify the claim that the young should believe in
one. I shall explain this by means of an example in the monastery
schools which were the only educational institutions in the time
preceding the fifteenth century. One had first to justify the claim
that one should be taken seriously; for this was the basis upon which
the belief of the young was to be founded. A man did not think, just
because he was a grown-up or because some authority had granted him a
diploma or given him a post, that the young had to believe in him. It
is true that diplomas and the like played a certain external role
even in those days. But to justify the right to be taken seriously
meant that to begin with one avoided giving them definite knowledge.
It was not customary in those days to impart knowledge. It is so foreign
to us today to connect any definite concept with the remark: We do
not wish to impart knowledge to the young — that this saying is
quite unintelligible. But at that time it was self-understood that
before there was any wish to impart knowledge the young should be
made to see and to feel that one was capable of something. It was
only when the young people had reached a certain age that the teacher
told them what he knew. The first step was to show what one could do,
and for this reason the substance of the teaching was the trinity of
grammar, dialectic and rhetoric. These were not sciences. For it is
only in the course of time that grammar has become the present
pseudo-scientific monstrosity. In those times grammar was not at all
what it is today; it was the art of combining and separating thoughts
and words. Instruction in grammar was the teaching of an art, and all
the more so in the case of dialectic and rhetoric. Everything given
was so arranged that the pupils should feel the ability of their
teachers, that they should feel their teachers capable of speaking
and thinking and of letting beauty hold sway in their speaking.
Grammar, dialectic and rhetoric — this was instruction in
ability, in an ability closely connected with the human activity of
the teacher and educator.
Today
when we speak of the objective method of teaching, we keep the
teaching quite apart from the personality of the teacher. We drag in
every possible kind of gadget, even those dreadful calculating
machines, in order that the teaching may be as impersonal as
possible. We try to separate it entirely from the personal. Such a
separation is not really possible. The endeavour to keep the teaching
entirely apart from the personal only leads to the worst sides of the
teacher coming into play, and his good side is quite unable to unfold
when so much objectivity is dragged in.
Thus
it was a natural demand on the teacher that he should first let the
young feel what he was capable of in the very highest sense, as a
human being. He had to show his mastery of speech, his mastery of
thought, and how beauty was part of his speech. Only by letting the
young for a time witness what one could do, was the right acquired to
lead them gradually to what can be known, to arithmetic, geometry,
astronomy and music, to music as it was conceived of at that time,
that is, as a permeation of the whole world-order by harmony and
melody. Because a start was made from grammar, dialectic and
rhetoric, one was able later to pour into arithmetic, geometry,
astronomy and music as much of the artistic as was possible, having
had an artistic point of departure.
Now all this has evaporated, has vanished into
thin air, with the first dawn of intellectualism. Of everything
artistic that appeared then we have but the scantiest remains. Here
and there, in certain universities, the doctor's degree still
bears with it the title: “Doctor of Philosophy and of the Seven
Liberal Arts.” But you know the real state of affairs where the
Seven Liberal Arts are concerned! That can be established
historically; for instance, the famous Curtius who taught in Berlin
was an extraordinary personality who held a quite irregular diploma.
If you ask for what subject he actually received the venia
legendi, you would expect it to have been for history of art. But
that is not correct. His teaching certificate was for Eloquentia —
fluency of speech. But the times were such that this branch of
knowledge was out of date. He was professor of eloquence, but in
order to teach he took up history of art — and dealt with it
most excellently. Even at the time when Curtius was teaching it would
have been strange had eloquence been a branch of instruction.
Eloquence or rhetoric, however, was one of the fundamental branches
of instruction given to the young of earlier times, with the result
that something thoroughly artistic came into education. But the
introduction of the artistic into education was still in keeping with
the old order in which intellectual or mind soul encountered
intellectual or mind soul. And today people are still not able to put
the question from the new point of view: How must things be in human
affairs if consciousness soul is to meet consciousness soul? As soon
as education is considered in the wider sense this question arises of
itself. It has been put for a long time, for decades, but human
beings have not yet developed an active enough thinking to formulate
and feel it clearly. And where do we find an answer?
One
answer to this question is found by learning to perceive — for
it is a matter of the unfolding of will and not of a theoretical
solution — that when the child enters earthly existence he
brings with him the power of imitation; up to the time of the change
of teeth, the child just imitates. Out of this power of imitation
speech is learnt. Speech is, so to speak, poured into the child just
as his blood circulation is poured into him when he comes into
earthly existence. But the child should not come to a more and more
conscious education by giving him out of the consciousness soul
knowledge in the form of truth. In earlier times it was said: Before
the eighteenth year the child cannot know anything, so he must be led
through ability to knowledge which he accepts first as belief;
thereby the forces of knowledge will be awakened in him between the
eighteenth and nineteenth years. For it is out of the inner being
that the forces of knowledge must be awakened. To keep the young
waiting until their eighteenth year, adults behaved in relation to
youth so as to show what they were capable of, afterwards educating
them to experience together with the teacher in a provisional way, up
to the eighteenth year, what later they would be expected to know. Up
to the eighteenth or nineteenth year the “acquisition of
knowledge” was provisional, because before the eighteenth or
nineteenth year it is not possible really to know anything. But in
fact no teacher can convey knowledge to any boy or girl if in their
feeling there has not ripened the conviction: He is capable! A
teacher has not the right sense of responsibility towards the human
being if he wants to set to work before the young take it as a matter
of course that be knows his job.
Before
the students were given arithmetic — as arithmetic was
understood in those days, and it was not the dry, abstract stuff of
today — those who guided them into arithmetic, knowing too how
to speak and think, had also the gift of eloquence. When the young
know this out of their own feeling, it is a good reason for looking
up to those who are older. When they only know that the teacher has a
diploma, it sometimes happens that when the child is not more than
ten everything goes to pieces. The question which was a living one in
those days must again be given life. But because today consciousness
soul encounters consciousness soul in human affairs, this question
cannot be solved as formerly when human beings confronted each other
with their mind souls. Today a different solution must be found.
Naturally,
we cannot return to the liberal arts, although it would be preferable
than what is being done today. We must reckon with modern conditions
— not the external conditions but those dealing with the
evolution of the human race. Here we must find the transition from
imitation, which up to the change of teeth is natural in the child,
to the stage when we can bring knowledge to the human being,
reckoning first upon trust and belief and later upon his own
judgment.
But
there is an intermediate period, today a very critical one for the
young. For this period we must find the solution of the most
significant world-problem; upon these problems depends the future
progress or otherwise of human evolution — even its total
submergence. The question is: How must adults handle children between
the years of imitation and the years when knowledge can be given?
Today this is one of the weightiest of all cultural questions.
And what was the youth movement in so far as it is
to be taken seriously? It can be summed up in the burning question:
Have the older people an answer for this? And it became clear to the
young that no such answer was to be found in the schools, so they
drifted out — out into grove and meadow and into the fields.
They preferred, instead of being school boys and girls, to become
birds — birds of passage (Wandervögel).
We
must look at life, not at theories, when one seeks to encompass the
great problems of world-culture. If one really looks into life today
one will find that the period between the age of imitation and the
age at which the human being can receive knowledge in the form of
truth must be filled if humanity is not to pine away. This must be
done by giving the human being with artistic beauty what he needs for
head, heart and will. The seven-foldness of grammar, dialectic,
rhetoric, arithmetic, geometry, astronomy and music, grew out of an
older cultural order; it was of the nature of art. Today too we need
art but, according to the demands of the consciousness soul, it must
not be specialized in the way of the Seven Liberal Arts. During the
primary school age and far beyond it, for as long as education holds
good, the whole teaching must be warmed through and fired by the
artistic element. During the primary school years everything must be
steeped in beauty, and in later years beauty must rule as the
interpreter of truth.
Those
human beings who have not learnt to walk in the ways of beauty, and
through beauty to capture truth, will never come to the full manhood
needed to meet the challenges of life. The great German writers
divined this even if its full importance was not emphasized. They
were not met with understanding. How clearly we see this search for
truth through beauty in Goethe. Listen how he says: “Art is a
manifestation of secret forces of Nature,” which simply means
that only through an artistic grasp of the world does man reach the
living truth — otherwise it is dead. And Schiller's
words, the beautiful words: “Only through the dawn of beauty do
you penetrate to the land of knowledge.”
Unless we first
permeate ourselves with the meaning of the path, [that] only through the
artistic can we penetrate into the realm of truth, there can be no
question of acquiring a real understanding of the super-sensible world
in accordance with the age of the consciousness soul.
For
you see, with the help of the recognized sciences, today knowledge of
man is limited to the physical body alone. With modern science there
is no possibility of knowing anything about the human being beyond
his physical body. That is why science can only speak conclusively —
yet grandly — about physiology or biology so long as it is a
question of the physical body. True, people talk about psychology. It
is only known as experimental psychology; phenomena of the life of
soul are observed, but what figures as phenomena of the soul is
connected with the physical body. They cannot form the slightest
conception of any real phenomena of the life of soul. Hence they have
hit upon the idea psycho-physical parallelism. Parallel lines,
however, can meet only at infinity. So, too, the connection between
the physical body and the soul can be understood only at infinity.
Thus psycho-physical parallelism was setup.
All
this is symptomatic of the incapacity of the age to understand the
human being. For, firstly, if one seeks to understand the human
being, the power of intellectualism ceases. Man cannot be understood
out of the intellect. One may choose to adhere firmly and rigidly to
intellectualism; but then, knowledge of the human being must be
renounced. But for that one would be obliged to tear out the mind and
heart and that is impossible. If it is torn out it withers way. For
the head can renounce knowledge of man, but this entails the stunting
of mind and heart. All our present culture is expressed in a withered
life of mind and heart. And, secondly, understanding of man is not to
be achieved with concepts that lead us in the domain of outer Nature.
However much we can achieve outwardly with these concepts they cannot
lead us to the second member of the human body, to the human etheric
body, the body of formative forces.
Just
imagine that with the methods of modern science man could know as
much, let us say, as he will know at the end of earth evolution —
quite an appalling amount! I will assume the existence of a very
finished and very clever scientist. I am not saying that there are
not among us scientists already near this stage. For it is not my
belief that in the future there will be more progress in
intellectualism. A different path will be taken. I have the very
highest respect for the intellectualism of our learned men. Do not
for a moment think that I am saying this out of a lack of respect. I
mean this in all seriousness. There are vast numbers of very clever
scientists, of this there is no doubt at all! But even were I to
assume that science had reached its highest peak, it would still only
be able to understand the physical body of man, nothing at all of the
etheric body. Knowledge of the etheric body is not based upon
phantasy. But the stimulus to acquire the faculty for perceiving this
subordinate super-sensible member of man's nature can arise only
out of artistic experience of the soul. Art must become the life
blood of the soul.
The
more people wish in our objective science to avoid carefully
everything of the nature of art, the more are they led away from
knowledge of man. Through the microscope and other instruments we
have come to know a great deal. But it never leads us nearer to the
etheric body, only farther from it. Finally we entirely lose the path
to what is a prime necessity for understanding man. In the case of
plants we may get the better of this, for they do not concern us so
intimately. It does not worry the plant that it is not the product of
the laboratory which modern science makes it out to be. It still goes
on growing under the influence of the etheric force of the cosmos and
does not limit itself to the forces presumed to exist by physics and
chemistry. But when we confront men things are different. Then our
feeling, our confidence, our reverence, in short all that is in our
mind which in the age of the consciousness soul naturally rises above
instinct — for with the consciousness soul everything rises
above instinct — depends upon our having an education which
allows us to perceive something more than merely the human physical
body.
When
teachers deprive us of insight into what man really is, we cannot
expect those forces to flourish which in the right way place man over
against man. Everything depends upon the human being to free himself
from the shackles of mere observation and experiment. Indeed we can
estimate observation and experiment at their right value only when we
have become free of them, and the simplest way of breaking free is
the artistic way.
Yes,
when the teacher stands in front of the child again as — in an
earlier epoch — grammar dialectic, rhetoric stood, that is to
say, when the teacher stands before the young so that his way of
teaching is again that of the artist, and is permeated by art, there
will arise a different youth movement — it may appear
unattractive to you, but nevertheless it will arise — which
will crowd around the teachers who are artists, because there they
will draw nourishment and receive what the young must expect from
those who are older. The youth movement cannot be a mere opposition,
a mere revolt against the older generation, for then it becomes like
the infant who can do nothing because it cannot receive milk from its
mother. What is to be learnt must be learnt. But it will be learnt
when there is as natural an urge towards those who are older as the
infant has towards its mother's breast, or as the small child
feels when, by imitating, he learns to speak. This urge will be
stimulated when the young find the artistic coming from the older
generation, when truth first appears in the garb of beauty. In this
way all that is best will be kindled in the young, not the intellect
which always remains passive, but the will which stirs thinking into
activity. Artistic education will be an education of the will, and it
is upon the education of the will that everything else depends.
Tomorrow,
then, we shall continue.
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