X
YESTERDAY I wanted to
show how we must come to an education, steeped in artistic form. I
drew attention to how in earlier times the teacher took his start
from the artistic, which he did in higher education by treating as
arts what today has become entirely abstract and scientific, namely,
grammar, dialectic and rhetoric. This was done in such a way that the
young human being started by recognizing in his teacher: This man can
do something which I cannot do. And through this alone the right
relationship was established between the younger and the older
generations. For this relationship, my dear friends, can never
develop along the path of intellectuality. As soon as one stands
consciously on the ground of the intellect or without the ideas
inwardly revealed in the intellectual or mind soul, there is no
possibility of differentiating between human beings. For human nature
is so constituted that when it is a matter of making something clear
through the consciousness soul, everyone thinks that the moment he
has concepts he is capable of discussing them with anyone. Thus it
is, with the intellect. For the intellect neither man's
maturity nor his experience comes into consideration; they only do so
when it is a question of ability. But when their elders have ability
the young quite as a matter of course pay tribute to maturity and
experience.
Now,
in order to understand these things thoroughly we must consider from
a different point of view the course taken by mankind's
evolution. Let me tell you what spiritual science has discovered
about the course of history, with regard to the intercourse between
men.
External
documentary history can go back only a few thousand years before the
Mystery of Golgotha and what is to be found can never be estimated
rightly because spiritual achievements, even in the time of ancient
Greece, cannot be grasped by modern concepts. Even for the old
Grecian times quite other concepts must be used. Nietzsche felt this.
Hence the charm of his brief, unfinished essay on Philosophy in the
Tragic Age of the Greeks, where he deals with philosophy in
connection with the general development of Greek culture up to the
time of Socrates. In Socrates he saw the first flicker of pure
intellectuality; everything philosophical in the tragic age of Greek
development proceeded from wide human foundations for which, when
expressed in concepts, these were only the language through which to
convey what was experienced. In the earliest times philosophy was
quite different from what it later became. But I only want to mention
this in passing.
I
really want to point out that with spiritual Imagination, and
especially with Inspiration, we can look back much further into human
evolution and, above all, into men's souls. Then we find when
we go very far back, some seven or eight thousand years before the
Mystery of Golgotha, that the young had a natural veneration for
great age. This was a matter of course. Why? Because what exists
today only in earliest youth existed then for the whole evolution of
man.
If
we look at the human being with less superficiality than is often
done today, we find that the whole evolution of the human soul
changes at about the change of teeth, during the sixth, seventh or
eighth year. Man's soul becomes different, and again it changes
at the time of puberty. I have discussed this fully in my book The
Education of the Child from the Standpoint of Spiritual Science. On
occasion it is noticed that man's soul becomes different in the
seventh year and again in the fourteenth or fifteenth. But what
people no longer notice is that changes still take place at the
beginning of the twenties, at the end of the twenties, in the middle
of the thirties, and so on.
Whoever
is able to observe the life of soul in a more intimate way knows such
transitions in man, that human life runs its course in rhythms. Try
to perceive this, let us say, in Goethe. Goethe records how he was
cured of certain childlike religious ideas by the Lisbon earthquake,
thus about the time when he was changing his teeth, and how puzzling
everything was for him. He tells how as a small child he began to
reflect: Is there a good God ruling the world, when one sees that
countless people have been swept away through these terrible fiery
forces in the earth? — Especially in these decisive moments of
his life, Goethe was prone to let external events work upon his soul
so as to be conscious of its changes. And he says concerning this
period of his life that he became a strange kind of pantheist, how he
could no longer believe in the ideas imparted by the older people in
his home and by his parents. He tells how he took his father's
music-stand on which he set out minerals, placing on top a little
candle that he lit by holding a burning-glass to catch the first rays
of the morning sun. In later life he explained that he had wanted to
bring an offering to the great God of Nature by lighting a
sacrificial fire, kindled from Nature herself.
Take
the first period of Goethe's life, then the following one, and
so on till you piece together this whole life out of parts of about
the length of his childlike episode, and you will find that with
Goethe something always happened during such times fundamentally to
change his soul. It is extraordinarily interesting to see that the
fact of Schiller's urging Goethe to continue Faust only found
fruitful soil in Goethe because at the end of the eighteenth century,
he happened to be at a transitional period of this kind. It is
interesting too that Goethe re-wrote Faust at the beginning of a
following life-period. Goethe began Faust in his youth in such a way
that he makes Faust open the book of Nostradamus. There we have the
great scene:
“What powers
celestial, lo! ascend, descend
Each unto each the
golden vessels giving!”
But turn the page and
there we find:
“Thou, Spirit
of the Earth, to me art nearer.”
Goethe
rejects for Faust the great tableau of the macrocosm and allows only
the earth-spirit to approach him. And when at the beginning of the
nineteenth century he was persuaded by Schiller to revise Faust he
wrote the “Prologue in Heaven.” Anyone who observes his
own life inwardly will discover that these changes hold good.
Nowadays we only notice them when we deliberately train ourselves to
look deeply into our own life.
In
ancient times, six thousand, seven thousand years before the Mystery
of Golgotha, these changes were so noticeable that they were
experienced in the life of soul as the change of teeth or puberty is
today. And, indeed, approximately up to the middle of life, up to the
thirty-fifth or thirty-sixth year, life was on the up-grade. But then
it began to decline. People experienced the drying-up of life. But
while certain products of metabolism become deposited through
sluggishness in the organism and the physical organism becomes
increasingly heavy and lethargic, it was also felt that up to the
greatest age the soul and spirit were on the ascent, how the soul is
set free with the drying up of the body. And people in olden days
would not have spoken with such ardour of the patriarchs — the
word itself only arose later — had they not noticed externally
in men: True, he is getting physically old, but he has to thank his
physical aging for lighting-up his spirit. He is no longer dependent
on the body. The body withers, but the soul becomes free.
In
this modern age it is most unusual that such a thing happens, for
instance, as occurred at the Berlin University. Two philosophers were
there, the one was Zeller — the famous Greek scholar —
and the other Michelet. Zeller was seventy years old and thought he
ought to be pensioned off. Michelet was ninety and lectured with
tremendous vivacity. Eduard von Hartmann told me this himself.
Michelet is supposed to have said: “I don't understand
why that young man doesn't want to lecture any more.”
Michelet was, as I said, ninety years old!
Today
people seldom keep their freshness to such a degree. But in those
times it was so, especially among those who concerned themselves with
spiritual life. What did the young say when they looked at the
Patriarchs? They said: It is beautiful to get old. For then one
learns something through one's own development that one cannot
know before. It was perfectly natural to speak in this way. Just as a
little boy with a toy horse wants to be big and get a real horse, so,
at that time, there was the desire to get old because it was felt
that something is then revealed from within.
Then
came the following millennia. It was still experienced up to a
considerable age, but no longer as in the old Indian epoch — in
the terminology of my Occult Science. At the zenith of Greek culture,
man still had living experience of the change occurring in life in
the middle of the thirties. Men still knew how to distinguish between
body and spirit, and said: At the age of thirty, the physical begins
to decline, but then the spiritual begins to blossom forth. This was
experienced by the soul and spirit in the immediate presence of men.
The original feeling of the Greeks was based upon this, not upon that
phantasy of which modern science speaks. To understand the fullness
of Greek culture, we should bear in mind that the Greeks were still
able in consciousness to come to thirty, five-and-thirty,
six-and-thirty years, whereas a more ancient humanity grew in
consciousness to a far greater age. Herein consists the evolution of
humanity. Man has more and more to experience out of Nature
unconsciously what is for a later time; this requires him to
experience it consciously for consciously it must again be
experienced. Whoever observes himself can recognize the seven-yearly
changes; the length of time is not pedantically exact, but
approximate. A man who looks back to the period of his forty-ninth,
forty-second, thirty-fifth years can recognize quite well: At that
time something happened in me by which I learnt something which out
of my own nature I could not previously have done, just as I should
not have been able to bite with my second teeth before I had them. To
experience life concretely is something that has been lost in the
course of man's evolution. And today if anyone does not
inwardly train himself to observe, these epochs from the thirtieth
year onwards are completely blurred. Comparatively speaking, an inner
transformation can still be noticed at the beginning of the twenties
— even up to the end of the twenties, though it is then rather
less noticeable. But with the present human organization man receives
something from his natural evolution only up to his twenty-sixth or
twenty-seventh year, and this limit will recede more and more. In
earlier times men were not free in their organization, destined as
they were to have these experiences out of their own nature. Freedom
has become possible only by the withdrawal of Nature. To the extent
Nature ceases freedom becomes possible. Through his own striving,
through his own powers, man must arrive at finding the spiritual,
whereas formerly, the older he became the more did the spiritual
thrive.
Today
emphasis is no longer placed on what the old become merely by growing
older. Intellectualism is left which, between the eighteenth and
nineteenth years, can develop so that from then onwards one can know
with the intellect. But as far as intellectuality is concerned, one
can at most reach a greater degree of proficiency but make no
qualitative progress. If one has fallen a victim to the desire to
prove or to refute everything intellectually, one cannot progress. If
someone puts forward what is the result of decades of experience but
wants to prove it intellectually, an eighteen-year-old could refute
him intellectually. For whatever is possible intellectually at sixty
is equally possible at nineteen, since intellectuality is a stage
during the epoch of the consciousness soul which in the sense of
deepening is of no help to progress, but only to proficiency. The
young may say: “I am not yet as clever as you are; you can
still take me in.” But he will not believe the other to be his
superior in the sphere of intellect.
These
things must be emphasized to become intelligible. I do not wish to
criticize. I am saying this only because it is part of the natural
evolution of humanity; we should be clear about the following
characteristic of our age, namely, that if man does not strive out of
inner activity for development and maintain it consciously, then with
mere intellectualism at his twentieth year he will begin to get
rusty. He then receives stimuli only from outside, and through these
external stimuli keeps himself going. Do you think that if things
were not like that people would flock to the cinema? This longing for
the cinema, this longing to see everything externally, depends on the
human being becoming inwardly inactive, on his no longer wanting
inner activity.
The
only way to listen to lectures on Spiritual Science, as meant here,
is for those present to do their share of the work. But today that is
not to people's liking. They flock to lectures or meetings with
lantern slides so that they can sit and do as much as possible
without thinking. Everything just passes before them. They can remain
perfectly passive.
But
our system of teaching is ultimately of this character, too, and
anyone who on educational grounds objects to the triviality of the
modern object lesson is said to be behind the times. But one has to
oppose it, for man is not a mere apparatus for observing, an
apparatus that wants simply to look at things. Man can live only by
inner activity. To listen to Spiritual Science means to invite the
human being to co-operate with his soul. People do not want this
today. Spiritual Science is an invitation to this inner activity,
that is to say, it must lead all studies to the point where there is
no more support in external sense-perception because then the inner
play of forces must begin to move freely. Not before thinking moves
freely in this inner play of forces can Imagination be reached. Thus
the basis for all Anthroposophy is inner activity, the challenge to
inner activity, the appeal to what can be active when all the senses
are silent and only the activity of thinking is astir.
Here
there lies something of extraordinary significance. Just suppose you
were capable of this. I will not flatter you by saying that you are.
I only want to ask you first to assume that you are capable of it,
that you can think in such a way that your thoughts are only an inner
flow of thoughts. What I called pure thinking in my Philosophy of
Spiritual Activity was certainly not well named when judged by outer
cultural conditions. For Eduard von Hartmann said to me: “There
is no such thing, one can only think with the aid of external
observation.” And all I could say in reply was: “It has
only to be tried and people will soon learn to be able to make it a
reality.” Thus take it as a hypothesis that you could have
thoughts in a flow of pure thought. Then there begins for you the
moment when you have led thinking to a point where it need not be
called thinking any longer, because in a twinkling — in the
twinkling of a thought — it has become something different.
This rightly named pure thinking has at the same time become pure
will, for it is willing, through and through. If you have advanced so
far in your life of soul that you have freed thinking from outer
perception, it has become at the same time pure will. You hover with
your soul, so to speak, in a pure flight of thought. But this pure
flight of thought is a flight of will. Then the exercise or the
striving for the exercise of pure thought begins to be not an
exercise in thinking only but also an exercise of the will, indeed an
exercise of the will that goes right to the center of the human
being. For you will make the following remarkable observation. It is
only now, for the first time, that you can speak of thinking, as it
is in ordinary life, as an activity of the head. Before this you
really have no right to speak of thinking as an activity of the head,
for you know this only as external fact from physiology, anatomy, and
so on. But now you feel inwardly that you are no longer thinking so
high up, you begin for the first time to think with the heart. You
actually interweave your thought with the breathing process. You
actually set going of itself what the Yoga exercises have striven for
artificially. You notice that as thinking becomes more and more an
activity of the will it wrenches itself free first from the breast
and then from the whole human body. It is as though you were to draw
forth this thinking from the extremity of your big toe! And if with
inner participation you study what has appeared with many
imperfections — for I make no claims for my Philosophy of
Spiritual Activity — if you let it work upon you and feel what
this pure thinking is, you will experience that a new man is born
within you who can bring out of the spirit an unfolding of the will.
Does man know before this that he has a will? He
really has no will, for he is given up to instincts connected with
his organic development. He often dreams that he does this or that
out of an impulse of the soul, but he really does it because of the
good or bad condition of his stomach. But now you know that you have
permeated the physical organism with what fills it with
consciousness. You do not need to be a clairvoyant for this. All you
need do is to be interested in the Philosophy of Spiritual Activity
and let it work upon you. For this
Philosophy of Spiritual Activity
cannot be read as other books are today. It must really
be read so that once you get into the Philosophy of Spiritual
Activity you have the feeling that it is an organism, one member
developing out of another, that you have found your way into
something living. People immediately say: Something is going to get
into me which will take away my freedom. Something is entering me
that I do not want to have.
People
who entertain such thoughts are like those who were to say that if
the human being at two or three years has to get used to speaking a
certain language, he will thereby lose his freedom. The human being
ought to be warned against language for he will no longer be free
when brought into this chance association of ideas. He ought to be
able to speak at will now Chinese, now French, now German. Nobody
says this because it would be too absurd, and life itself refutes
such nonsense. On the other hand there are people who either hear or
see something of Eurythmy and say that it, too, rests upon the chance
association of the ideas of individuals. But one should be able to
assume that philosophers would say: One must look into this Eurythmy
and see if in evoking gestures we may not have the foundations of a
higher freedom and find that it is only an unfolding at a higher
level of what is in speech.
So
one need not be surprised — for really nothing that goes beyond
intellectualism is regarded without prejudice today — that
people get goose-flesh when one tells them that a certain book must
be read quite differently from other books, that it must be read in
such a way that from it something is really experienced. What is it
that must be experienced? It is the awakening of the will out of the
spiritual. In this respect my book was intended as a means of
education. The intention was not only to give it content but to make
it work educationally. Hence you find in my Philosophy of Spiritual
Activity an exposition on the art of forming concepts, a description
of what takes place in the soul when one does not keep with one's
concepts to the impressions from outside, but lives within the free
flow of thoughts.
That,
my dear friends, is an activity which aims at knowledge in a far
deeper sense than the external knowledge of Nature, but it is at the
same time artistic, wholly identical with artistic activity. So that
the moment pure thinking is experienced as will, man's attitude
becomes that of an artist.
And
this, my dear friends, is like-wise the attitude we need today in the
teacher if he is to guide and lead the young from the time of the
change of teeth to puberty, or even beyond puberty. The mood of soul
should be so that out of the inner life of soul one comes to a second
man, who cannot be known as is the outer physical body, which can be
studied physiologically or anatomically, but who must be livingly
experienced and may rightly be called, in accordance with the real
meaning of the terms, “life body” or “ether body”.
This cannot be known through external perception but must be inwardly
experienced. To know this second man a kind of artistic activity must
be unfolded. Hence there is this mood in the Philosophy of Spiritual
Activity which most people never discover — everywhere it
touches the level of the artistic. Only most people do not discover
this because they look for the artistic in the trivial, in the
naturalistic and not in free activity. Only out of this free activity
can education really be experienced as art, and the teacher can
become an artist in education when he finds his way into this mood.
Then in our epoch of the consciousness soul all teaching will be so
arranged as to create an artistic atmosphere between teacher and
pupil. And within this artistic atmosphere there can develop that
relation between led and leader which is an inclining towards the
leader, because he can do something which he is able to show forth
artistically, and one feels that what he can do one would like to be
able to do oneself. Thus no opposition is aroused because it is felt
that one would destroy oneself by opposing.
Because
of the way writing is taught today, it often happens that even as a
child — for in the child there is always a being who is
cleverer than the teacher — one asks: Why should I be bothered
to write? I have no kind of relationship to writing — which is
really what the North American Indians felt when they saw European
script. They felt the black signs to be witchcraft. The feeling of
the child is very similar. But let us awaken in the child what it
means to look at black, red, green, yellow, white. Let us call up in
him what it is when we surround a point by a circle. Let us call up
the great experience contained in the difference there is when we
draw two green circles and in each of them three red circles, then
two red and in each of them three green, two yellow with three blue
ones in them, then two blue containing three yellow circles. We let
the children experience in the colors what the colors as such are
saying to the human being, for in the world of color lives a whole
world. But we also let the children experience what the colors have
to say to one another, what green says to red, what blue says to
yellow, blue to green and red to blue — here we have the most
wonderful relation between the colors. We shall not do this by
showing the child symbols or allegories, but we shall do it in an
artistic way. Then we shall see how out of this artistic feeling the
child gradually puts down figures out of which the letters then
develop as writing once developed from picture-script. How foreign to
the child today are B, G, or any other sign that has developed
through inner necessity to its present form. What is a G, K, or U to
a seven-year old? He really has not the slightest kinship with it. it
has taken the human being thousands of years to acquire this
relationship. The child must acquire an aesthetic relation to it.
Everything is exterminated in the child because the written
characters are not human; and the child wants to remain human.
In
order to understand youth in its relation to the older generation we
must go right into the art of education. The cleft between age and
youth must be bridged not by hollow phrases but by education that is
an art, education which is not afraid to find its support in real
spiritual-scientific knowledge. That is why I said a few days ago:
Where does this art lead to? It leads to experience of the real
spiritual. And where goes what the age has gradually developed in
such a way that it believes it must be given as a matter of course to
the young? Where does that lead? It does not lead to the Spirit but
to that which is devoid of Spirit. It is regarded a sin to bring the
Spirit into what goes by the name of knowledge and science.
Science
does not leave the human being alone even in earliest childhood. It
cannot very well be otherwise. For the teacher is so drilled in
systematized botany (and many books are entirely given over to
systematized botany) that he believes he is committing a sin if he
speaks to the children about botany in a way that is not scientific.
But what is found in a botanical textbook cannot mean anything to a
child before he is ten, and it is not until he is at least eighteen
or nineteen that it can acquire any real significance for him.
Such
is the situation. Now I have no intention of creating another
intellectual theory about education. The aim is to create an artistic
atmosphere between the older and the younger. But when this comes
about, something happens which must occur if young people are to grow
into the world in a healthy way. What the human being of today grows
into can be described quite concretely. Between the ninth and tenth
years an undefined feeling lives in the soul of every human being who
is not a psychopath. There need not necessarily exist either a clear
or unclear concept of this. But it begins to live within the human
being from his ninth or tenth year. Up till then what is called the
astral body alone is concerned with man's life of soul. But
from that time onwards the force of the ego nature first begins to
stir. It is not formulated in concepts. But in the life of feeling,
deep within the soul, there lives unconsciously a question in the
heart of the growing human being. This question takes different forms
in different people. But a question arises which put in the form of a
concept might be expressed as follows: Up to now the astral body has
believed in other human beings; now I need something that somebody
says to me so that I may believe in him or in others in my
environment. Those who as children have most resisted this are those
who need it most. Between the ninth and tenth years the human being,
to strengthen his ego, begins to be dependent on an older person in
whom he can trust — without this trust needing to be drummed in
— in whom he can believe with the help of the artistic
atmosphere that has been created. And woe betide it if this question
which may still be one for many children up to their sixteenth or
seventeenth year and sometimes even to the years I mentioned
yesterday, the eighteenth or nineteenth — woe betide it if
nothing happens to enable this question of the young to be answered
by the old so that the young say: I am grateful that I have learnt
from the old what I can learn only from the old; what he can tell me,
he alone can tell me, for it will be different if I learn it when I
am old.
Through
this can be created something in an educational way which, applied in
the right way, can be of the greatest significance for the epoch of
the consciousness soul, which, in fact, in the earliest times of the
Patriarchs, was already alive between young and old. Then, every
young person said to himself: The old man with his snow-white hair
has experiences which can only come when one is as old as he. Before
then the necessary organs are not there. Therefore he must tell his
experiences to us. We are dependent on what he relates because he
alone can relate it. Certainly I shall one day be as old as he. But I
shall not experience what he tells for thirty-five or forty years.
The times will have progressed by then and I shall experience
something different. But what I want to learn is only to be learnt
from him.
Here
is something in the spiritual realm which may be compared with
feeding at the mother's breast. Just as the infant might say:
“I too shall one day give the breast to a child, but now it is
my mother who must give it to me” — so it is in the
spiritual life. In the foundations of the spirit life of the world it
is as though a chain were there, reaching from the past over into the
future, which must be received by each generation into itself, must
be carried onwards, re-forged, perfected. This chain has been broken
in the age of intellectualism. This was generally felt among those
growing up about the turn of the nineteenth century. Try to feel that
you did experience something of the kind, even if at the time you
were not able to express it. Try to sense that by feeling this, you
were feeling about it in the right way. And if you sense this you
will realize the true significance of the youth movement today, the
youth movement which has, and must have, a Janus-head, because it is
directed towards experience of the spiritual — an experience of
the spiritual which carries thought so far that it becomes will, that
it becomes the innermost human impulse.
We
have been seeking now for will at its abstract pole where it is
thought. In the days to follow we will seek it in the deeper spheres
of man's being.
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