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Rudolf Steiner e.Lib
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Spiritual Relationships in the Human Organism
Rudolf Steiner e.Lib Document
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Spiritual Relationships in the Human Organism
The Ear
A lecture by
Rudolf Steiner
Stuttgart, December 9, 1922
GA 218
A lecture, hitherto untranslated given at Stuttgart on December 9, 1922.
Published in The Golden Blade, 1970.
It is the sixteenth of sixteen lectures in the volume
Spiritual Relationships in the Human Organism.
In the collected edition of Rudolf Steiner's works, the volume
containing the German texts is entitled,
Geistiger Zusammenhaenge in der Gestaltung
des Menschlichen Organismus
(Vol. 218 in the Bibliographic Survey, 1961).
English version by George and Mary Adams.
Copyright © 1970
This e.Text edition is provided through the wonderful work of:
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Thanks to an anonymous donation, this lecture has been made available.
A lecture given by
RUDOLF STEINER
in Stuttgart, 9th December, 1922
English version by George and Mary Adams.
ONCE before I spoke to you of certain spiritual facts concerning the
relation of man to the super-sensible worlds or, as I might
equally well express it, the relation of man's earthly life to his
life between death and a new birth. For seen from a human point of
view man's life between birth and death interwoven as it is
with the physical world of sense may be held in the main to
represent this physical world itself. While the life of man between
death and a new birth, when he is altogether interwoven within the
super-sensible or spiritual world, represents seen from a human
standpoint once more the super-sensible world as such.
Today we will continue this line of thought for certain other facts
and conclusions of great importance to human life.
Through anthroposophical Spiritual Science we become aware, above all,
that man as he stands before himself in the physical world represents
within this physical world a true image of the
Supersensible. Consider on the other hand a mineral object. We cannot
say that, such as it is, it is an immediate image of the
Supersensible. As to what the mineral nature is, you may read of this
in my Theosophy. Of man, however, we must say that in many
respects he cannot be understood at all on the basis of what we see
around us in the world of the physical senses. On this basis we can
understand why, for example, salt assumes a cubical form. True, these
things are not yet entirely clear to science today, but from what is
already clear it can be said that a crystal of common salt is
intelligible on the foundation of what can be ascertained directly in
the realm of the sense-perceptible. A human eye or ear on the other
hand are not intelligible on the basis of what the physical senses can
perceive. Nor can they arise within this domain. The form of the eye
or of the ear both the inward form and the outer configuration
this is a thing that man brings with him as a plan or tendency
through birth. Nor does he even receive it through the forces that
work, say, in the process of fertilisation or in the body of the
mother.
True, it is customary to force all these things which are not
understood under the general title of heredity; but in so doing we do
but give ourselves up to an illusion. For the truth is that the inner
form of the eye or of the ear is already planned and laid out as it
were in advance. It is built up in the Spirit, in the pre-earthly life
of man, in communion with higher spiritual Beings, with the sublime
Beings of the Hierarchies. To a very large extent, man between death
and a new birth builds up his own physical body in a spirit-form
as it were a spiritual seed or germ. This Spirit seed, having
contracted it sufficiently (if we may use this image), he then sends
down into the line of physical inheritance. The Spiritual is thus
filled with physical, sense-perceptible material, and so becomes the
physical seed, perceptible within the world of sense. But the whole
form the inner form for instance of an eye, or of an ear
is formed and moulded by the work man does between death and a new
birth in co-operation with super-sensible, spiritual Beings. Therefore,
we may say: Observe a human eye! We cannot assert that it is
intelligible like the salt crystal, on the basis of what we see around
us with our senses; nor can we say this of the human ear. Rather must
we say: To understand a human eye or human ear we must have recourse
to those Mysteries which are only to be discovered in the
super-sensible world. We must realise that a human ear, for example, is
formed and created out of the super-sensible world; and only after it
has thus been formed can it undertake its task as a sense-organ
the task of physically hearing the sounds and notes within the
atmosphere, within the sphere of Earth. In these respects, we may
truly say, man is an image of processes and realities of Being in the
spiritual worlds.
Let us consider such a thing in detail. Observe the inner formation of
the human ear. Passing inward through the auditory canal you come to
the so-called tympanum or drum. Behind this you find a number of
minute bones, or ossicles. External science calls them
hammer, anvil and stirrup
(malleus, incus, stapes). Behind these again, you come to the
inner ear, of the configuration of which I shall not speak in detail.
Click image for large view
The names of these minute ossicles immediately behind the drum
the names, that is to say, which external science gives them
already show that this science is quite unaware of what they really
are. For this is how it appears when illuminated with anthroposophical
spiritual science. Passing now from within outward, that which adjoins
the inward portion of the inner ear, and which science calls the
stapes or stirrup, appears in the light of spiritual science as
a metamorphosis of a human thigh-bone with its attachment to the hip.
And the little bone which science calls the incus or anvil,
appears as a transformed knee-cap. Finally, that which passes from the
incus to the tympanum or drum appears as a metamorphosis
of the lower part of the leg including the foot. But the
foot in this case rests not on the earthly ground but on
the drum of the ear. Within your ear you actually have a human member
a transformed metamorphosed limb. You might also describe it
thus: First, the upper arm (only that in the arm the
knee-cap is undeveloped, that is to say there is no
anvil), and then the lower arm the other ossicle which rests
upon the drum. Just as you touch and feel the ground with your feet,
so do you touch and feel the drum of the ear with the foot of this
little ossicle. Only the foot with which you walk about is coarsely
formed. Coarsely you feel the ground with the sole of your foot, while
with this hand or foot which is there within your ear you constantly
touch and feel the delicate vibration of the drum.
Let us now go farther back, within the ear. We come to the so-called
cochlea or snail-shell. It is filled with a watery
fluid, which is necessary for the act of hearing. What the
foot touches and feels upon the drum has to be transmitted
back to this spiral cochlea, situated within the cavity of the
ear. And now once more: Above the thigh we have the inner organs, the
abdominal organs. The cochlea within the ear is none other than
a beautiful, elaborate metamorphosis of these inner organs. And so you
can imagine, there inside the ear there lies a human being, whose head
is immersed in your own brain. Indeed, we bear within us a whole
number of human beings, more or less metamorphosed or
transformed, and this is one of them.
What does all this signify? If you study the origin and growth of man
not only with the crude science of the senses; if you are aware that
this human embryo as it develops in the mother's womb is the image of
what went before it in the pre-earthly life; then you will also
realise the following. In the first stages of development in embryonic
life, it is above all the head that is planned and formed. The other
organs are comparatively small appendages. Now if it only
depended on the inner potentialities inherent in the germ, within the
mother's womb these appendages, these little stumps which
afterwards become the legs and feet, could equally become a kind of
ear. They actually have the inner tendency, the potentiality to become
an ear. That is to say, man might grow in such a way as to have an ear
not only here, and here, but an ear downward too. I admit, this is a
strange saying. Nevertheless, it is the truth. Man might become an ear
downward too. Why does he not? Because at a certain stage of embryonic
development he already comes into the domain of the earthly force of
gravity. Gravity which causes the stone to fall to Earth
gravity, implying weight weighs upon that which tends to become
the ear, transforms it and re-shapes it. And so it becomes the lower
man in his entirety. Under the influence of earthly gravity, the
ear which tends to grow downward is changed into the lower
man. Why then does not the ear itself change in this way? Why do not
its ossicles change into fine small legs right and left? For the
simple reason that through the whole position of the human embryo in
the mother body, the ear is protected from entering into the domain of
gravity, as happens with the little embryonic stumps that afterwards
become the legs. The embryonic ear does not enter the domain of
gravity. Hence it preserves the plan and tendency which it received in
the spiritual world in the pre-earthly life. It is in fact a pure
image of the spiritual worlds. Now what is there in the spiritual
worlds? I have often spoken of it. The music of the spheres is a
reality. As soon as we come into the spiritual world which lies beyond
the soul-world, we are in a world which lives altogether in sound and
song, in melody and harmony, and harmonies of spoken sound. Out of
these inner relationships of sound the human ear is formed. Hence we
may say that in our ear we have an actual recollection of our
spiritual and pre-earthly existence. In our lower human organisation
we have forgotten the pre-earthly life; we have adapted our organism
to the earthly force of gravity and to all that comes from the
principle of weight. Thus if we rightly understand how the form of man
comes into being, we can always tell, of any system of organs, how its
configuration reveals either its adaptation to the Earth or its
continued adaptation to the pre-earthly life.
And now remember: even after we are born, we still continue what was
planned and begun in the embryonic life. To walk upright, to enter
fully into the forces of gravity, is a thing we only learn to do after
our birth. Only then do we learn to orientate ourselves into the three
dimensions of space. But the ear tears itself free from the three
dimensions of space and preserves its membership of the spiritual
world. We human beings are altogether formed in this way. Partly we
are a living monument to what we did in unison with higher Beings
between death and a new birth; while on the other hand we also bear
witness to the fact that we have incorporated ourselves into this
Earth existence, wherein the forces of gravity and weight hold sway.
These transformations, however, not only take their course in the
direction I have described, but in the opposite direction too. With
your legs you walk about on Earth. And if you will forgive my
saying so you either walk to good deeds or to bad; to better or
to worse. Now as to the movements of your legs, on Earth, to begin
with, it is no doubt a matter of indifference whether you walk to good
deeds or to bad. But true as it is that the lower man is metamorphosed
from the plan of an ear into that form wherewith he stands upon the
Earth, it is also true that the moral effects which are brought about
by your walking whether you go out to do good deeds or bad
are all transformed after you pass through the gate of Death
not immediately but after a certain time transformed
into the sounds as of a heavenly speech and music.
Assume for instance that a man went out to do an evil deed. On Earth
we can at most describe and register precisely how his legs were
moving. But the evil deed clings to the movements of the legs when he
passes through the gate of Death. Then, when he has laid aside his
physical body and his etheric body, all that lay inherent in these
movements of the legs is transformed into a harsh discord in the
spiritual world. And the whole of the lower man is now transformed
again into a head-organisation. The way you move here upon Earth
taking always the moral colouring, the moral quality of it
this is transformed into a head-system after your death. And
with these ears you hear how you behaved morally down in this earthly
world. Your morality becomes a beautiful, your immorality an ugly
music. And the harmonious and dissonant sounds become the Words,
uttered as it were by the Hierarchies, the judges of your deeds, whose
Words you hear.
Thus you can see in the form of man himself, how the transformation
from the Spiritual world into the world of sense, and from this world
back again into the Spiritual, takes place by metamorphosis and
metamorphoses again. Your head-system is exhausted in the present
earthly incarnation. Here the head-system lives and thrives, in order
to perceive the Spiritual within the realms of sense. But after death
the head falls away. And the rest of the human being, with the
exception of the head, is transformed again after death into a
head-organisation in the Spirit, to become an actual head once more in
the next earthly life. Thus the fact of repeated earthly lives is
expressed in the very form and figure of man. No-one understands the
human head, who does not regard it as the transformation of a human
body the body of the last earthly life. No-one understands the
present body who does not see in it the germ of a head, for the next
earthly life. To understand man fully, all that we perceive about him
with our senses needs to be penetrated with ideas about the
Supersensible.
We may adduce many another concrete fact in this direction. Last time
I spoke to you here, I told you how man between death and a new birth
experiences a condition wherein he becomes altogether one in his inner
being with the Beings of the Hierarchies. He actually forgets himself,
he is the Hierarchies himself. Nor would he ever become aware of
himself unless he were able, in turn, to extinguish this feeling of
the Hierarchies within him. Then, as it were, he goes out of himself,
but it is just in so doing that he finds himself. Here upon Earth we
find ourselves by looking away from the outer world and concentrating
upon our inner being. Between death and a new birth we find ourselves
by looking away from what is within us that is to say, from the
Hierarchies within us. In this way we become aware of ourselves.
Now the forces which remain to us from this becoming aware of
ourselves are none other than the forces of Memory, while the
forces which remain to us from our union with the other Beings
the Beings of the Hierarchies are the moral forces of Love
whereby we on Earth expand our being in love to other beings. Thus in
the faculty of Love here upon Earth we have an echo of the living in
unison with the Hierarchies. While in Memory we have an echo of that
other condition which was ours between death and a new birth, wherein
we freed ourselves from the Hierarchies and found ourselves. As I said
last time, this is not unlike the breathing process. We have to
breathe in to fill ourselves with life. Then in a manner of speaking
we breathe out the air of death. For life is impossible in the air
which we breathe out. Likewise we breathe, as it were, in the Spirit,
in the world between death and a new birth. We unite ourselves with
the Beings of the Hierarchies and go out of them again. Here on this
Earth we have a kind of echo of that heavenly breathing. In that we
can walk here upon Earth, we adapt ourselves to earthly gravity. It is
the principle of weight. I spoke in this connection of a transformed,
metamorphosed ear. In like manner if only we are able to look
at it in the right way we can still feel that we possess in our
apparatus of speech and song a metamorphosis of what was planned in
the spiritual World through which we passed in the pre-earthly life.
It is only here on Earth that we adapt our organs of speech to human
speech. In plan and tendency, between death and a new birth we receive
unto ourselves the Logos the Cosmic Word the Cosmic
speech. Out of this Cosmic speech our whole organ of speech and song
is formed and created to begin with. Just as we transform this
ear that reaches downward, into the apparatus of walking
and orientation in space, so do we transform the organ of speech and
song. But in this case the metamorphosis is not so far-reaching. In
the former case there remains behind, in the ear itself, a faithful
image of what was formed in the pre-earthly life in spiritual worlds.
With the organ of speech there is an intermediate position.
Not until we are here on Earth do we learn to speak. Yet this, in a
deeper sense, is an illusion. In truth it is the Cosmic speech which
forms our larynx and all our organs of speech and song. We only forget
the Cosmic Logos, when we turn toward the Earth and pass through
embryonic life. And we refresh once more what was impressed in our
unconscious being, when in our early childhood we acquire human
speech.
Nevertheless, in this human speech the earthly element is clearly
perceptible, side by side with that which is formed out of the
Spiritual. We could pronounce no consonants if we could not adapt
ourselves to the things of the outer world. In the consonants we
always have after-formations, imitations of what the outer world
presents to us. Anyone who has a feeling for it will feel the one
consonant reminiscent of something hard and angular, the other
reminiscent of the quality of velvet. In the consonant we adapt
ourselves to the forms and shapes of the outer world. In the vowels we
give out our own inner being. He who says Ah, knows that in the
Ah he expresses something that lives in his inner soul as a
feeling of wonder or astonishment. Likewise in the O there is
an inner quality. Every vowel expresses some element of the inner
life.
In time to come there will be an interesting branch of knowledge,
permeated with spiritual science. It will be found that in languages
in which the consonants predominate, human beings can far less be
called to account morally, because they are much less responsible for
their deeds, than in those languages where vowels predominate. For the
vowels are an echo of our living together with the spiritual
Hierarchies. This is a thing that we bring with us, we carry it down
on to the Earth and it remains with us; it is our own revelation.
While in the consonants we adapt ourselves to the outer world. The
world of consonants is earthly; and if we could imagine a language
containing only consonants, an initiate would say of such a language:
It is for the earthly realm; and if you would possess the
Heavenly, you must add the vowels to it. But have a care! for you will
then become responsible to the Divine. You may not treat it so
profanely then, as you can treat the consonants.
The old Hebrews took this into account. Only the consonants are
written out fully, the vowels only indicated. In our language in
effect the Heavenly and Earthly sound together. Here once again we see
how we have in the middle man something that is ordered as it were in
two directions, towards the Heavenly and towards the Earthly. The head
is altogether related to the heavenly. The other pole of man is
related to the earthly, but strives towards the Heavenly
strives in such a way that it becomes the Heavenly, when man has
passed through the gate of death. The middle man, to whom the
breathing belongs and with the breathing the activity of speech
and song brings the Heavenly and the Earthly together. Hence
the middle man contains above all the artistic faculty of man, the
artistic tendency, which is always to unite the Heavenly with the
Earthly.
And so we may say: Regard the growing human being. He is born without
orientation in the outer world. He cannot yet walk or stand. True, he
has already the potentiality to enter into the ordering of earthly
gravity. For he received this tendency already in the embryonic life
before his birth, when apart from the head gravity took
hold of him. An organ like the human eye or ear has in fact been
wrested away from the incursions of gravity. The act of orientation in
space now finds expression in the little child's learning to walk and
to stand upright. We only finish learning this after our birth. For we
are born not yet orientated for walking. If we retained the
orientation we then have, we should at most perhaps be able to sleep
on Earth. For in effect, the little bone in the ear, which represents
the foot, is horizontally directed. We might at most be able to sleep,
but we could not walk. Similar things would need to be said about the
human eye.
This, then, is one thing that we finish learning here on Earth. We
adapt to the earthly forces of gravity what we acquired in the
pre-earthly life. And when we learn to speak and sing, it is a second
act of adaptation: we adapt ourselves to our environment in the
surrounding sphere, in the horizon of the Earth. Lastly we learn to
think. For we are born in truth unorientated for walking and standing,
and we are born speechless, and even thoughtless. It cannot be said
that the little baby is already able to think. These three things, we
finish learning on the Earth. Nevertheless they are metamorphoses of
other faculties which we possessed in the pre-earthly life. For each
one of the three is a living monument of what was planned in us in a
spiritual form in our pre-earthly life.
Our Memory here on the Earth is the echo of our being-within-ourselves
in the Spiritual World. And Love, in all its forms, is the echo of our
being-poured-out into the world of the Hierarchies. We have, as we
have seen, our bodily faculties: Walking, Speaking, Singing and
Thinking (for it is only prejudice to imagine that thought on the
earth is a spiritual faculty; our earthly thinking is essentially
bound to the physical body, just as our walking is) these
outstanding faculties of the body are transformations, metamorphoses,
of the spiritual. Then, in the soul, we have the outstanding faculties
of soul: Memory and Love, once more as transformations out of the
spiritual. And what have we spiritually on the Earth? It is our
faculty of sense-perception. Our seeing, hearing, smelling, tasting
and so forth: all this is sense-perception; and the organs for this
sense-perception, situated as they are at the outer periphery of our
organism, are formed and built out of the highest Spiritual regions.
Out of the harmony of the Spheres the ear is formed, so much so that
it remains protected from the force of gravity. The whole way the ear
is placed into this fluid, has the purpose of protecting it from the
force of gravity. The ear is situated in the fluid in such a way that
gravity cannot come near it. Truly the ear is no earthly citizen; in
all its organisation it is a citizen of the Spiritual world. Likewise
the eye, and the other sense-organs too. Observe then the body in its
Walking, Speaking, Singing, Thinking: we have the transformations of
the spiritual from the pre-earthly life. Lastly the senses: they are
the transformation of the highest Spiritual from the pre-earthly life.
Here it is that we with our anthroposophical spiritual science take
our start on the one hand from Goetheanism, from what was already
known to Goethe. We, of course, have to go farther, in a way entirely
consistent with Goethe. I have often quoted Goethe's saying that
the eye is formed in the Light and for the Light. Yes, my
dear friends, but not in the light or for the light that we see.
Consider a human being, a human countenance: the high forehead, the
prominent nose, the eyes, the physiognomy. We add to it the living
gesture. If we merely registered the spatial forms by some kind of
apparatus, we should still have the forms. But when we see a human
being, we are not content merely to photograph the spatial forms as
with an outward apparatus. We look through the spatial movement of the
gestures to the soul that lies behind. Likewise the sunlight: it
penetrates towards us. There is the outer sun, the sunlight comes to
us. That is only the front of it; behind it is the
other side of the sunlight the soul, the Spirit of
the sunlight, and in this soul and Spirit we ourselves indwell between
death and a new birth. There the Light is something altogether
different. When you speak of the look of a man, you mean
the life of soul that comes out to meet you through his eyes; you
really mean what lies behind the eye, within the soul. And if I now
speak of the Spiritual in the light, I too mean what lies
behind, within the sun. That is the Spirit, the soul of
the light. The finished eye sees the front of the light,
the physical aspect; but the eye itself was formed by the soul and
Spirit of the light, by that which lies behind. Thus
having understood Goethe's saying, we should put it thus: The
eye which sees the light is formed by the soul and Spirit of the
light, ere ever it assumes physical existence here on Earth.
In the whole human being we see transformed spiritual being, which is
to be transformed back again. At death you give your physical
sense-organs to the Earth, but that which is living in the physical
sense-organs lights up between death and a new birth, and becomes your
inner being-together, your communion with the spiritual Being of the
Hierarchies. Now we understand how the earthly world of sound is the
physical reflection of the heavenly harmony of the Spheres, and how
man is a product not of these earthly forces but of heavenly forces,
who places himself into the midst of the earthly. Moreover, we see
how he places himself into the midst of the earthly. He would
become an ear downward; and if he remained in this state he certainly
would not walk, but would assume another kind of movement; for he
would have to move on the waves of cosmic Harmonies, even as the tiny
image, the little bone in the ear, moves on the waves of the drum.
With the ear we learn to hear; with the larynx and other organs that
lie towards and within the mouth itself, we learn to speak and sing.
You hear some word, for instance Baum or Tree. You yourself can
speak the word Tree. In your ear, in organs formed and modelled after
heavenly activities, as I described just now, there lives what you
express in the simple word Tree. Again, you yourself can say the word.
What does it signify that you can say the word Tree? By the larynx, by
the organs of the mouth, etc., the earthly air is brought into such
formations that the word Tree is expressed. There in reality you have
a second ear, over against your hearing. And there is yet a third,
which is only insufficiently perceived. When you hear the word Tree,
you yourself with your etheric body not with your physical but
with your etheric body speak the word Tree very quietly to
yourself; and through the so-called Eustachian tube, which passes from
the mouth into the ear, the word Tree sounds forth ethereally, going
out to meet the word that comes to you from without; and the two meet,
and thus you understand the word. Otherwise you would only hear it and
it would be nothing in particular. You understand it by saying back
through the Eustachian tube what comes towards you from outside. In
that the vibrations from outside meet the vibrations from within, and
interpenetrate, the inner man understands what comes to him from
without.
You see how wonderfully all things work and weave into one another in
the human organism. But that is not all; another thing too is
connected with it. Suppose it is your intention to learn about the
human being, the organisation of his ear, his eye, his nose and so
forth. Good and well! You say to yourself: science has made
magnificent advances, and these advances of science though they
are a little expensive nowadays1 still, you can buy
them if you can obtain the necessary number of marks. You buy a
text-book of anatomy or physiology according as you want to learn
about the forms or the functions. You go to a University and listen to
what is said there about the eye or ear; or you read it for yourself.
But I think your heart will still be left cold. Let outer physical
science describe the ear to you; your heart is left cold, it is not
really interested. The thing is objective enough in that sense! But if
I describe it to you as I have done just now, if I show how your
understanding of the word Tree comes about; and how the ear is an
after-image of Heavenly activities: I should like to know the soul
whose life of feeling would not be stirred by this, who would not feel
the wonder of it, who would not really feel with such a
description. True, the description has been given imperfectly today;
it could be given more perfectly. Then it would appear still more
strongly. But in very truth, one would have to be inwardly dried up if
at such a description one did not feel wonder and reverence for the
Universe and for the way in which Man himself is placed out of the
spiritual world into the physical. Such is the quality of
anthroposophical Spiritual Science. It describes things no less
objectively than ordinary science; for nothing at all subjective is
mingled with it, when I describe how the ear is formed and shaped out
of the Heavenly spheres. And yet the heart, the life of feeling is
immediately called into play. The second member of the human life of
soul, intimately connected as it is with the wholeness of our
humanity, is called into play. Whatever the head acquires through such
a science, the heart is immediately taken hold of by it. Thus,
anthroposophical science goes to the heart of man. It is not a science
of the head, it is a science that goes straight to the heart. It fills
not only the head, it fills and fulfils the human being of the blood,
the circulation, the heart.
Or again, take in real earnest what I said just now. When we move our
legs ... well, you can study the mechanism of the movements in the
ordinary way. Take one of these textbooks of Physiology; let the
mechanism of the movements of the legs be explained to you. One thing
will certainly not be kindled in you the feeling of
responsibility. But when you discover that the good or evil purpose to
which your legs are moving rings out towards you after death from the
Divine Worlds as harmony or dissonance; that the Divine Words of
Judgment on all your actions sound towards you; the moment you
discover this, your science is accompanied by a feeling of
responsibility, and this will then accompany also the actions of your
Will. Not only our life of Feeling but our life of Will is called into
play by what we learn to begin with, for our heads just
as objectively as in outer science. Yet it strikes down into the man
of Feeling and into the man of Will. Anthroposophical science speaks
to the whole man. Increasingly in modern time we have come to regard
that alone as science which speaks only to the head; but speaking only
to the head, it leaves the Feeling cold and does not in any way call
forth the Will. This is the critical point at which we stand. It
follows that the knowledge of super-sensible worlds must be attained by
the whole man. Already when we arise to Imaginative cognition we must
come to it by inner activity. Ordinary learning is acquired in certain
circles (which are indeed well suited to this purpose) it is
acquired by swotting. Acquired thus, it is incorporated in
the memory. But let us suppose that by such exercises as are described
in
Knowledge of Higher Worlds and its Attainment,
you reach Imaginative cognition. Or suppose you are so constituted
that the world of spiritual concepts is already given to you as a
native talent and predisposition of your life, as I described it in my
book on
Goethe's World-conception.
(For already then you are in the process of etheric cognition which is
at the same time living inner experience.) Then you cannot give
yourself thus passively to the world. Spiritual science cannot be
swotted. That, maybe, is a bad joke, but after all, it is
they who are only used to swotting who chiefly look down
on spiritual science. Spiritual science, as you are well aware, must
be acquired with inner activity. We ourselves in our inner life must
do something for it, we must be inwardly alert and quick. Even then,
it will always happen that what we attain at first in spiritual
Imagination is quickly lost. It is fleeting, it disappears quickly. It
is not easily incorporated in our memory. After three days all that we
have attained in this region that is to say, only by the
ordinary effort to bring it to Imagination is certain to have
disappeared. It is for the same reason that the memory in the etheric
body after death disappears after three days. For it is the same
activity after death, when we remember through the etheric body for
about three days. The period varies; you can read about this in my
Occult Science,
but we remember for approximately three days that is to say, so
long as we possess the etheric body. In the same manner he who has
reached some discovery by etheric cognition knows that it will have
flown away after three days, if he does not make every effort to bring
it down into the ordinary concepts.
Formerly I always had recourse to the method of putting down at once,
in writing or in little drawings, all that I attained in this way. For
the head is called into play. It is not a question of mediumistic
writing, nor does one write it down in order afterwards to read it.
Indeed in my present way of life that would be immensely difficult.
Recently when I was in Berlin I saw again what quantities of notebooks
have accumulated there. If I wanted to read anything of it, I should
not have it handy when I was in Stuttgart or in Dornach. No, it is not
a question of reading it afterwards; the point is only to be engaged
in this activity, which is an activity of the head. For then we unite
the Imaginative thinking with the ordinary thinking. Then we can
remember it, give lectures on it. If we did not make such efforts we
could at most talk about it on the very next day. Afterwards it would
have disappeared, just as the panorama of our life disappears three
days after our death.
You see, therefore, that Imaginative thinking is already related to
the whole human being. The whole human being must be living in
Imaginative Knowledge. With the higher forms of Knowledge it is still
more so. Therefore you need not wonder if the appeal of such knowledge
is to the whole man. Then too we feel there is infinitely more in the
world than is perceptible to the outer senses. And above all, we feel
how it is possible to live in a world in which Space no longer has any
meaning. Musical experience is already a foretaste, if I may so
describe it, of the Non-spatial. For the spatial is outside of us; it
is outwardly existent. But in the inner experience which is realised
through music, the spatial element scarcely plays a part. There is at
most an echo of it. And in Imaginative cognition, gradually, the
spatial ceases altogether. All things become temporal. The temporal
signifies the same for the Imaginative realm as the spatial element
for the physical. Moreover, this will lead us to yet another thing,
namely, that the element of time is really permanent; it is a thing
that remains. He who arises to Imaginative knowledge gradually learns
to perceive at every point of his past Earth-existence (and this is
only the beginning). He may be quite an old man; he now becomes
eighteen years old again. He perceives his youth as vividly as he
perceived it when he was eighteen years old. Suppose for instance that
when you were eighteen years old you lost someone who was very dear to
you. Think how vivid the experience was at that time. Think how faint
it is in your memory after thirty years. There need not even be a
lapse of thirty years; it very soon grows faint, even with those who
are most rich in feeling; and in outer earthly life it must be so. But
though in the subsequent present it fades away, it
nevertheless remains, as an essential part of the human being; and we
can actually transplant ourselves into it again. Indeed, after our
death we are thus transplanted. Then we experience the same thing
again with the same intensity. Whatever a man has gone through belongs
to him. It remains; it is only for his perception, for his vision,
that it is past. Hence, too, it has its real significance.
If you were born at the age of seven if you lived till your
seventh year in some other state of existence, say as an embryo
if you were only born at the age of seven, yet so as to receive your
second teeth at once, having had the first already in the former
state; then you could never become a religious man or woman. For the
predisposition to a religious nature could not work on into an earthly
life which had begun in that way. All the religious tendency which you
possess you bear it within you because the first seven years of
your life are present in you. You do not perceive them as a living
present; nevertheless they are there in you as such. In the first
seven years of life we are absolutely devoted to the outer world;
truly that is a religious feeling. Only we afterwards transfer it to
another realm. In our first seven years we have an impulse of
imitation for all things that surround us. Afterwards we have the same
sense of devotion to the things of soul and spirit.
And if we were born in the fourteenth year of our life born in
the state of puberty we should never become moral men and
women. For the moral qualities must be acquired by the inner
development of the rhythmic life between the seventh and the
fourteenth year. Hence we can have so great an influence on the moral
education of man, in the first or elementary period of school life.
All this we afterwards bear within us. Indeed we constantly bear
everything within us. If you cut your toe, it is far removed from your
head, but you still experience through the head the pain you feel
there. If today you feel religious, there is active within you what
you experienced in soul only then it was in respect to the
outer world until your seventh year, until the change of teeth.
Just as you experience the pain in the toe through the activity of
your head, so what you experienced before your seventh year is still
active in your fortieth year; it is still there.
There is an important consequence of this. Many people say,
Anthroposophical spiritual science is all very well; it teaches us
about the spiritual worlds. But why need we know all these things
about the experiences between death and a new birth? When we die we
shall go into those worlds in any case, we shall discover it all in
good time. Why need we make an effort between birth and death? We
shall go there, presumably, whatever happens.
It is not really so. For the life of time is a reality. As the spatial
is a reality here in the physical, so is the temporal indeed,
even the super-temporal a reality in the spiritual world. Here
on Earth the child-like man is still within you in your later life.
When you pass through the gate of death the whole of time is within
you in a single moment. It belongs to you, it is part and parcel of
you. As a man of the world of space you might say: What need have I of
an eye? The light is there around me in any case. The eye is only
there to see the light, and I have the light around me anyhow. It
would be the same, in another realm, to say Why do we need a
Spiritual Science here on Earth? When we enter the realm of Spirits
the spiritual light will be around us anyhow. It is no wiser
than to say, The light is there in any case. Why should I need
an eye? For what a man learns through Anthroposophical spiritual
science is not lost to him in the spiritual world after death. It is
the eye through which he then perceives the spiritual light. And if on
Earth this applies to the present stage of human evolution
he evolves no spiritual science, he has no eye through which he
can see the spiritual world, and he is as if he were dazzled by what
he experiences.
In ancient times people still had an instinctive clairvoyance as a
late flower of their pre-earthly life. But this is past, it has died
away. The old instinctive clairvoyance is no longer there. In the
intervening stage of human evolution men have had to acquire the
feeling of inner freedom. They have now entered once more upon the
stage where they need an eye for the spiritual world into which they
will enter after death. This eye they will not have if they do not
acquire it here on Earth. As the physical eye must be acquired in the
pre-earthly life, so must the eye, for the perception of the spiritual
world, be acquired here on earth through spiritual science, active
spiritual knowledge. I do not mean through clairvoyance that is
an individual affair but through the understanding, with
healthy intelligence, of what is discovered by clairvoyant research.
It is simply untrue to say that one must see into the spiritual world
oneself in order to believe what the clairvoyants see. It is not so.
Use your healthy human understanding, and you will see that the ear is
in truth an organ of Heaven. Such a fact can only be found by
clairvoyant research. Once found it can be seen and recognised. We
need only be prepared to think the thing out, and feel it through and
through. It is this recognition by healthy human understanding, of
what is given out of the spiritual world it is not the
clairvoyance, but the activity of knowledge which provides us
with spiritual eyes after death. The clairvoyant has to acquire this
spiritual eye just the same as other men. For what we gain by
Imaginative Cognition, what we perceive in seership, falls away and
vanishes after a few days. It only does not do so if we bring it down
to the standpoint of ordinary understanding, and in that case we are
obliged to understand it in the very same way in which it is
understood by those to whom we communicate it. In effect, clairvoyance
as such is not the essential task of man on earth. Clairvoyance must
only be there in order that the super-sensible truths may be found. But
the task of man on earth is to understand the super-sensible truths
with ordinary, healthy human understanding.
This is exceedingly important. Yet this is the very thing which many
people including some of the finer spirits at the
present day will not admit. A little while ago, in Berlin, I had been
explaining this point in a public lecture. Someone then described it
as a special sin to say that the truth of Spiritual Science was to be
seen with healthy human understanding. For he declared, quite
dogmatically, that the intellect if healthy sees nothing spiritual;
and, conversely, an intellect that sees spiritual things cannot be
said to be healthy. This objection was actually made. Such a thing is
characteristic, for what it amounts to in the long run is that these
people are saying to themselves, Anyone who asserts anything
spiritual has a diseased mind. No further wisdom beyond this is
required! But such wisdom, unhappily, is widespread nowadays. You see
from this how true it is what I have always said that
the time has come again when mankind absolutely needs to receive the
spiritual, to incarnate the spiritual, and live with it. Hence, my
dear friends, we should not only acquire anthroposophical spiritual
science theoretically. In all of us who acquire spiritual science, the
consciousness should live, that we are the kernel of a humanity which
will grow and grow, until it comes about once more that only he who is
conscious of his connection with the spiritual is seen as having found
his full humanity. Then there will come over mankind a powerful
feeling, a feeling that it is above all important to put into effect
in education, in teaching. Ordinary head-knowledge is morally neutral.
But we find the spiritual sphere, as soon as we reach up to it,
permeated everywhere by morality. You need only remember what I said:
It is in being together with the higher Hierarchies that we develop
Love. Morality on Earth is only an image of the experience in heavenly
spheres. And how do we experience that which we call the Good? We
experience it thus: Man is in truth not only a physical but a
spiritual being. And if he truly lives his way into the spiritual
world, he learns to receive with the Spirit the Good
into himself.
That, too, is the essential thought of the
Philosophy of Freedom,
of
Spiritual Activity.
Man learns to receive, with the Spirit, what is Good. And if he does
not receive the Good into himself, he is not a full human being, but
stunted and crippled. It is as though both his arms had been shot
away. If his arms are taken from him he is physically crippled; if the
Good is lacking to him he is crippled in soul and spirit. Transform
this thought, with all its influence on will and feeling, into a
method of education. Educate in such a way that when the age of
puberty arrives for it must be developed by that time
man has the living feeling: If I am not good, I am not a whole
man I have not the right to call myself a man. Then you
will have good moral instruction, true moral teaching of mankind, as
against which all emphasis on moral preaching and the like is worth
nothing.
Educate the human being so that he feels the moral element within him
as an essential part of his own human individuality, and feels himself
crippled when he lacks it feels that he is not a full human
being when he does not possess it. Then, in time, he will discover the
moral life entirely within himself. Well may it be that all
your philosophic pedants will call this a dreadful principle
un-German, or what you will. In truth it is the purest product of the
German spirit.2 It is the principle that brings the Spirit
as near as possible to Man himself and not alone to Man in
general, but to the single human individual directly, for this is
necessary in our time. During the present epoch only the single human
being the individual himself reaches his full
responsibility.
1 Through the inflation of the mark.
2 To find within oneself the source of moral impulses is of course, as Rudolf Steiner indicated from his
Philosophy of Freedom
onwards, a general human task. But to those who attacked his
ethical individualism as un-German, Rudolf Steiner could
show that such thoughts had deep roots in German spiritual life
in Schiller, Goethe and Fichte, for example. (Tr.)
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