II
Stuttgart, January
30, 1923
A week ago I
commented here on the grievous event of the Goetheanum fire and other
current concerns of the Anthroposophical Society. Today I planned to
speak about purely anthroposophical matters, but I find it necessary
to say a few introductory words about Society problems. I was able to
attend at least the second part of yesterday's meeting, and saw how
easy it is to misunderstand matters involving the nature of the
Society such as were brought up by me last week. It is not a moment
too soon to correct these misconceptions. My introductory remarks
tonight will nevertheless still have to do with an anthroposophical
view of life and perhaps on that account prove worthwhile to this or
that listener.
I am mainly
interested in going on with yesterday's discussion about
judgment-forming in the Society. A challenge was issued, quite
independently of anything I said, to the effect that every member
should form his own independent judgments about matters affecting the
Society. Now of course nothing could be truer. But we need to concern
ourselves with the fact that when a challenge of this kind is
presented one has to consider the whole context of what is under
discussion, no matter how right the isolated statement may be in
itself nor how fully I agree with it in principle. Something can be
perfectly true but it may not necessarily apply in a given instance.
Every truth can be presented as true in itself, but it is colored by
the context in which it is brought up, and in the wrong place it can
lead to the gravest misconceptions.
Now the point of view
on judgment-forming was expressed in connection with my lecture of
December 30th last in Dornach, in which I discussed the relationship
of the Anthroposophical Society to the Movement for Religious
Renewal. The comment was made that members should make their own
judgments and not be influenced by mine. Of course they should! But
in the form in which this advice was presented, it was and is
profoundly at odds with the state of mind that comes from a real
grasp of anthroposophy. For the anthroposophical world conception is
not based on merely exchanging the view of things prevailing today
for a different view similarly arrived at. As becomes evident in the
whole posture of anthroposophy, it is not enough to think differently
about all sorts of things, but — far more importantly —
to think these different thoughts in a different way, to feel them
with a different attitude of soul. Anthroposophy requires that
thinking and feeling be utterly transformed, not just changed as to
content.
Anyone inclined to
test the great majority of my lectures in this respect will find that
I keep strictly to what I have just expressed, and that it lies in
the very nature of an anthroposophical view of the world to present
things in such a way that hearers are left wholly free to form their
own judgments. If you go through most of my lectures, including those
on subjects such as that treated in the lecture of December 30, 1922,
you will find their chief content to be simply facts, that they
present facts, either those of super-sensible realms, of the world of
the senses, or of history, and that their presentation is such that
the reader can always draw his own conclusions about them, completely
uninfluenced by me. Indeed, one of the lecture cycles held in Dornach
even carries the sub-title, “Presentation of Facts on which to
base Conclusions,” or the like. Since this is the case, the
results are such as to remove any justification for saying that
people were told what to think. For one person will draw one
conclusion from my lectures, another a quite different one, and each
thinks his is the right view of the matter. Each could be right from
where he stands, because I never try to pre-determine the outcome,
but simply to provide facts on which conclusions can be based. I thus
deliberately expose myself to the danger that a series of facts I am
presenting can be quite variously interpreted. For my interest is
solely in communicating facts, and anybody who wants to look into the
matter will find that the only time I express a judgment is when
something needs to be corrected or refuted.
This has to be the
case. A world view such as that based on anthroposophy must always be
keenly conscious of the time context to which it belongs. We are now
living in the age of consciousness soul development, a condition of
soul wherein the all-important thing is for individuals to draw their
own conclusions and learn to give facts an unprejudiced hearing, so
that they can then make fully conscious judgments. The style of my
presentations springs from an awareness that man has entered upon the
development of the conscious soul. This accounts, as I said, for the
varying conclusions that can be drawn from my words. I try to present
the facts as clearly as possible. But there is never any question of
“should” or “shouldn't.” Anthroposophy is
there to communicate truth, not to propagandize. This has often been
emphasized as, for example, in my refusal to take sides about
vegetarianism. When I describe what effects a vegetarian diet has on
people and what the effects of meat-eating are, I do so merely to
present the facts, to make the truth known. In the age of the
consciousness soul, anyone really acquainted with the facts of any
case can confidently be left free to form his own judgments. It is
essential to an anthroposophical view of things to be really clear on
this point.
So, taking my style
from the Anthroposophical Society rather than from the Movement for
Religious Renewal, I tried in my lecture at Dornach on December 30,
1922, to show what the relationship between the two groups is. On
that occasion I followed my general rule of merely presenting facts,
and anyone who reads the lecture of that date will see this to be
true. What action to take was a matter left to everyone's free
weighing. The lecture makes this clear, and I expressed myself on the
subject here a week ago as plainly as could be.
The matter of context
has to be taken into consideration if one is to make really
responsible assertions of an anthroposophical nature. One cannot make
the remark that people should form their judgments independently of
Steiner at utterances based in the strictest sense on anthroposophy.
For except when Steiner is refuting or having to correct a statement,
his hearers are even being forced by the way he puts things to form
their own judgments; they are given no chance to adopt his.
An overall view of
things anthroposophical is far better served by emphasizing this than
by what some were emphasizing here yesterday, and the
inappropriateness of what was said could encourage many seeds of
misunderstanding. It is exceedingly important that I state this here,
because it is a matter of anthroposophical principle.
There is a further
matter to consider. In forming independent judgments it is not enough
to be sure they are one's own. One must be equally sure, before
expressing them, that one has taken all the pertinent facts into
consideration. Anybody can draw his own conclusions. The point is to
arrive at the correct ones when a sufficient overview of the facts of
the case permits it or when facts that obviously do not apply have
been discarded. I must therefore emphasize — and I bring up
these introductory problems in duty bound, not because I have the
least desire to do so — that what was said yesterday about all
kinds of reports about the Movement for Religious Renewal having been
carried to Dornach, so that my words could have been influenced and
my opinions shaped thereby, is simply incorrect. The lecture in
question was completely unrelated to any such reports, as fair-minded
reviewers will see for themselves.
A third item was
brought up in connection with my lecture, namely, that one faction
was having chances to be heard while the other had none. If I am not
mistaken, the Waldorf School faculty was named as a case in point,
because I meet regularly with it. The truth is, however, that the
matter had never even been discussed with the Waldorf faculty up to
the time of giving the lecture. Here again is an example of a
judgment made in ignorance of the facts. It might easily be thought
that, since I meet frequently with the Waldorf faculty, there had
been frequent discussions of the matter. But pedagogical matters
naturally form the agenda of such meetings; anthroposophical gossip
definitely has no share in them.
As I said, I stress
these things in duty bound because they have to do with the nature of
anthroposophical work, and we are at the point of at least trying to
put that work on a healthy basis in the Society. Of course I was
able, right after the founding of the Movement for Religious Renewal,
to hand over to appropriate persons the task of giving the Society
all the necessary information about it; I didn't have to do this
myself. That was apparent to anyone who heard the closing words I
spoke on the occasion of launching the Movement for Religious
Renewal. It is always a terrible thing for me to be forced to break
off communicating facts in order to say the kind of things that I was
compelled to say yesterday. But as things are now, the whole weight
of everything connected with anthroposophical activities is burdening
my soul, and unless something really adequate is done to clear up
just those misunderstandings that are escaping notice because they
are not as crassly evident as others, our anthroposophical work
cannot progress. But the work must progress; otherwise, we would
obviously have to leave the situation of the Goetheanum as it is.
Resuming work on it depends entirely on strengthening the Society and
freeing it of misunderstandings that sap its very lifeblood.
That lifeblood is
sapped when, for example, no attention is paid to the principle
involved in speaking of ethics in the sense required by the Spirit of
the Time for the age of the developing consciousness soul and
delineated by me in the
Philosophy of Freedom.
At the time I wrote it, I did not exactly relish
exposing myself to the reproaches certain to issue from narrow-minded
quarters because of my repudiation of authoritarian ethics. But every
sentence I set down was formulated in the way I am always at pains to
do, taking the greatest care to leave the reader free, even in
relation to the development of thought and feeling under discussion
in the book mentioned. So I must point out how out of place it is to
bring up the question of a lecture like that of December 30, 1922,
influencing the conclusions drawn by members of the Anthroposophical
Society. There might be many other occasions where such a question
could be raised. But it creates misunderstandings to raise it in
connection with the lecture referred to, and to do so disregards the
fact of my sacred concern to avoid influencing people's judgment by
what I say on the subject of vitally important aspects of activities
within the Society.
So I have again
expressed my intention of formulating what I have to say in such a
way that nobody's judgment can be influenced. It is therefore
unnecessary to warn those who attend my lectures to preserve their
freedom of judgment.
Now let me continue
in the spirit of my previous comments and go on to consider how a
spiritual-scientific judgment is arrived at. I am speaking now of
judgments that express spiritual-scientific truths.
It can give one a
strange feeling to observe how little aware people are of the
seriousness with which the communication of spiritual truths is
weighted. All one has to do to form and express judgments about
things of the everyday world of the senses is to practice observation
or logic at a given moment. Observation and logic are perfectly
adequate bases for forming judgments about sense-derived and
historical data. In the realm of spiritual science, however, they are
not adequate. There, it is not enough to deal just once with forming
a particular judgment. What is required is something quite different,
something I shall call here a twofold re-casting of a judgment. This
re-casting usually takes more than a short period of time; indeed,
the period tends to be quite a long one. Let us say that one forms
some judgment or other on the basis of methods you are familiar with
from descriptions given in my book,
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds and its Attainment
and in the second part of
An Outline Of Occult Science.
Following these procedures, one arrives at this or that conclusion about
spiritual beings or processes. At this point one is obligated to keep
this conclusion to oneself and not to express it. Indeed, one is even
obligated to regard it simply as a neutral fact which, for the time
being, one neither accepts nor rejects. Then, perhaps even years
later, one comes to the point of undertaking the first re-casting of
this judgment in one's own soul life; one deepens and in many
respects even transforms it. Even though the content of the judgment
may remain the same after its re-casting, it will have taken on a
different nuance, a nuance of inner participation, perhaps, or of the
warmth one has spent on it. In any case, it will incorporate itself
in the life of the soul quite differently after this first re-casting
than on the previous occasion, and one will then have the feeling of
having separated oneself in some way from the judgment. If it has
taken a matter of years to accomplish the first re-casting, one
cannot, of course, have been turning the judgment over in one's mind
every minute of the time. The judgment naturally disappears into the
unconscious, where it carries on a life of its own quite
independently of the ego. It has to have this independent life. One
must stay away from it and let it live all to itself. Thus the ego
element is eliminated from the judgment, which is then turned over to
an objective faculty in oneself. When one first makes an observation
and draws a logical conclusion from it, the ego is invariably
involved. But when — possibly after a lapse of several years
— a judgment is re-cast for the first time, one has the
distinct experience of its emerging from the soul's depths to
confront one like any other fact of the surrounding world. All this
time it was out of sight. Now one comes across it again, one
re-discovers it, and it seems to be saying, “The first time you
formed me imperfectly, or even incorrectly, but now I have corrected
myself.”
This is the judgment
the true spiritual scientist seeks, the kind that develops its own
life in the human soul. It takes a lot of patience to re-cast it
because, as I have said, the process of re-casting can take years,
and the conscientiousness that spiritual science demands means
keeping silent while letting things speak.
But now, my dear
friends, after re-casting a judgment in this way and experiencing its
emergence out of an objective realm, one has the strong feeling that
it occupies a place somewhere in oneself despite its objective
recovery. So one can still feel that, in view of the responsibility
one has to let the thing speak while remaining silent oneself, one
should not express this kind of judgment on a spiritual-scientific
matter. One therefore waits again, and perhaps again for years, for
the second re-casting. As a result, one arrives at a third form of
the judgment, and one will find a significant difference between the
process that went on in the period between the first forming of the
judgment and its first re-casting and the process it underwent
between the first and second re-casting. One notices that it was
comparatively easy to recall the judgment in the first time-interval
described, while in the second it is extremely difficult to summon it
up again, into such soul-depths has it descended, depths into which
the easy judgments gleaned from the outer world never descend.
Re-cast judgments of the kind I mean sink to the deepest levels of
the soul, and one finds out what a struggle it costs to recall such a
re-cast judgment between its first and second re-casting. By judgment
I mean here an overview of the whole area covered by the fact in
cases where the facts are of a spiritual-scientific nature. When one
then arrives at the third form of the judgment, one knows that the
judgment has been in the realm of the thing or process under study.
In the period between its first forming and first re-casting it
remained within one's own being, but in the second such interval it
plunged into the realm of the objective spiritual fact or being. One
sees that in its third shape the thing or being itself gives back the
judgment in the form of a certain outlook one now has. Only now does
one feel equal to communicating this view or judgment of a
spiritual-scientific fact. The communication is made only after
completing this twofold re-casting and thus arriving at the certainty
that one's first view of the matter has pursued a path directly to
the facts of the case and returned again. Indeed, a judgment of
super-sensible things that is to find valid expression must be sent to
the realm where the relevant facts or beings dwell.
No one with a right
approach to presentations of basic and significant
spiritual-scientific facts will find this hard to understand. Of
course, a person who reads lecture cycles just as he would a modern
novel will not notice from the way it is presented that the
all-important thing, the real proof, lies in this twofold re-casting
of a judgment. He will then call such a statement a mere assertion,
not a proof at all. But the only proof of spiritual facts is
experience, experience conscientiously come by and based on a twofold
re-casting of judgments. Spiritual things can be proved only by
experiencing them. This does not hold true of understanding them,
however. Anyone with a healthy mind can understand any adequate
presentation. But to be adequate, it has to have supplied that
healthy mind with all the pertinent data, so pertinently arranged
that the very manner of the presentation convinces of the truth of a
given conclusion.
It makes a strange
impression to have people come and say that spiritual-scientific
truths ought to be as susceptible of proof as assertions about facts
observed in the sense world. A person who makes such a demand shows
that he is unfamiliar with the difference between perception of
things spiritual and ordinary experience on the physical or
historical level. Individuals who acquaint themselves with
anthroposophy will notice that the single truths it presents fit into
the picture of anthroposophy as a whole, and that this whole in turn
supports the further single truths they hear. These further truths
then illuminate things heard in the past. An increasing familiarity
with anthroposophy is thus constant growth in experiencing its truth.
The truth of a mathematical statement can be discerned in a flash,
but it is correspondingly lifeless. Anthroposophical truth is a
living thing. Conviction cannot be arrived at in a single moment; it
is alive, and goes on growing. Conviction about anthroposophy might
be compared to a baby just starting out in life, uncertain at first,
scarcely more than a belief. But the more one learns, the more
certain one's conviction becomes. This growing-up of anthroposophical
conviction is actually proof of its inner aliveness.
We see here,
furthermore, that what one thinks and feels about the concerns of
anthroposophy is not only different from what one thinks and feels in
other areas today, but that one must think differently, feel
differently, take a different approach than is usual elsewhere. This
different approach or attitude is basic to an understanding of
anthroposophy, and it forms the basis for an anthroposophical
fructification of all the various fields of life and learning.
This fact will have
to be kept particularly clearly in mind by scientists coming into the
movement. They should not only make it their goal as scientists to
develop a different picture of the world than that striven for by
external science, but should also be aware that their chief
responsibility consists in bringing an anthroposophical frame of mind
and an inner aliveness to bear on the various scientific fields they
enter. This would keep them from resorting to polemics against other
types of science, and instead help them to proceed in the direction
of developing aspects of those sciences that would remain undeveloped
without anthroposophy. I must stress this in a time of crisis for our
Society, a crisis due in no small measure to the way scientists have
been conducting themselves in it.
I must add here that
the battle over atomism that the journal Die Drei
[DIE DREI: an anthroposophical journal.]
has been waging can only mean the death of fruitful scientific exchange.
This debate should not be carried on with resort to the same kind of
thinking practiced by opponents and with a failure to see that in certain
vital points their assertions are correct. The all-important thing is
to realize that physics is just that field of science that has
brought out facts quite ideally suited to serving as the foundation
of an anthroposophical outlook, provided one takes physics just as it
is, without polemics. As we have seen in the polemical debate in
“Die Drei,” polemics unrelieved by an anthroposophical
approach can only lead to unfruitfulness.
I had a further
reason for stressing this: I want to make it fully clear as a matter
of principle that everything that is done in the name of
anthroposophy cannot be laid at my door! I respect people's freedom.
But when harmful things happen I must be allowed to exercise my own
judgment about bringing them up. Complete independence must be the
rule in anthroposophical concerns, not opportunism. Least desirable
of all is the comradely spirit so frequently met with in discussions
about scientific questions.
Now, my dear friends,
as I often point out, we have to be clear when we are presenting
anthroposophy that we are now living in the age of consciousness soul
development. In other words, rational and intellectual capacities
have become the most outstanding aspects of man's present state
of soul. Ever since the time of Anaxagoras, a philosopher of ancient
Greece, we have been sifting every judgment, even those based on
external observation, through our intellectuality. If you examine the
rationalistic science of today, particularly mathematics, which is
the most rationalistic of all, and consider the rationalistic working
over of empirical data by the other sciences, you will form some idea
of the actual thought-content of our time. This thought-content, to
which even the youngest children are exposed in modern schools, made
its appearance at a fairly definite point in human evolution. We can
pinpoint it in the first third of the fifteenth century, for it was
then that this intellectuality appeared on the scene in unmistakable
form. In earlier times people thought more in pictures even when they
were dealing with scientific subject matter, and these pictures
expressed the growth forces inherent in the things they thought
about. They did not think in abstractions such as come so naturally
to us today.
But these abstract
concepts educate our souls to the pure thinking described in my
The Philosophy of Freedom.
It is they that enable us to become free beings. Before people were able to
think in abstractions they were not free, self-determined souls. One
can develop into a free being only by keeping the inner man free of
influences from outside, by developing a capacity to lay hold on
moral impulses with the aid of pure thinking, as described in the
The Philosophy of Freedom.
Pure thoughts are not reality, they are pictures, and pictures exercise no
sort of compulsion on us. They leave us free to determine our own
actions.
So, on the one hand,
mankind evolved to the level of abstract thinking, on the other to
freedom. This has often been discussed here from several other
angles.
Let us now consider
how things stood with man before earthly evolution brought him to a
capacity for abstract thoughts, and so to freedom. The humanity
incarnated on the earth in earlier periods was incapable of abstract
thinking. This was true of ancient Greece, not to mention still
earlier periods. The people living in those early days thought
entirely in pictures, and were therefore not as yet endowed with the
inner sense of freedom that became theirs when they attained the
capacity for pure (that is, abstract) thinking. Abstract thoughts
leave us cold. But the moral capacity given us by abstract thought
makes us intensely warm, for it represents the very peak of human
dignity.
What was the
situation before abstract thought with its accompaniment of freedom
was conferred on man? Well, you know that when man passes through the
gates of death and casts off his physical body, he still retains his
etheric body for a few days thereafter and sees his whole life, all
the way back to the moment of his first memory, spread out before him
in mighty pictures, in an undetailed, comprehensive and harmonious
panorama. This tableau of his life confronts a person for several
days after he has died.
That is the way it is
today, my dear friends. But in the time when people living on earth
still possessed a picture consciousness, their experience immediately
after death was that of a rational, logical view of the world such as
human beings have today, but which those who lived in earlier times
did not have in the period between birth and death.
This is a fact that
proves a signal aid in understanding human nature. An experience that
people of ancient as well as somewhat later periods of history had
only after death, that is, a short looking back in abstract thoughts
and an impulse to freedom, which then remained with them during their
lives between death and rebirth, came, in the course of evolution, to
be instead an experience that they had during life on earth. This
constant pressing through of super-sensible experience into earthly
experience is one of the great secrets of existence. The capacity for
abstraction and freedom that presently extends into earthly life was
something that came into an earlier humanity's possession only after
death in the form of the looking back I have described; whereas
nowadays, human beings living on the earth possess rationality,
intellectuality and freedom, exchanging these after death for a mere
picture consciousness in their reviewing of their lives. There is a
constant passing over of this kind going on, with the concretely
super-sensible thrusting itself into sense experience.
You can see from this
example how anthroposophy obtains the facts it speaks of from
observation of the spiritual, and how subjectivity has no chance to
color its treatment of a fact. But once we arrive at these facts, do
they not affect our feelings and work on our will impulses? Could it
ever be said of anthroposophy that it is merely theory? How
theoretical it would sound to say merely that modern man is ruled by
freedom and abstraction! But how richly saturated with artistic
feeling and religious content such a statement becomes when we
realize that what gives us modern human beings freedom in our earthly
experience and a capacity for abstraction is something that comes to
us here on earth from the heavenly worlds we enter after death, but
that makes its way to us in a direction exactly counter to the one we
take to enter them! We go out through the gates of death into
spiritual realms. Our freedom and capacity for abstraction come to us
as a divine gift, given to the earth world by the spiritual. This
imbues us with a feeling for what we are as human beings, making us
warmly aware not only of the fact that we are bearers of a spiritual
element, but of the source whence that element derives. We look on
death with the realization that what lies beyond it was experienced
by people of an earlier time in a way that has now been carried over
into the modern experiencing of people here on earth.
The fact that this
heavenly element, intellectuality and freedom, has been thus
translated into earthly capacity makes it necessary to look up to the
divine in a different way from that of earlier ages. The Mystery of
Golgotha made it possible to look up in this new way. The fact that
Christ came to live on earth enables him to hallow elements of
heavenly origin that might otherwise tempt man to arrogance and
similar attitudes. We are living in a period that calls on us to
recognize that our loftiest modern capacities, the capacity for
freedom and pure concepts, must be permeated by the Christ impulse.
Christianity has not reached its ultimate perfection. It is great
just because the various evolutionary impulses of the human race must
gradually be saturated by the Christ impulse. Man must learn to think
pure thoughts with Christ, to achieve freedom with Christ, because he
will otherwise not have that relationship to the super-sensible world
that enables him to perceive correctly what it gives him. Studying
ourselves as modern human beings, we realize that the super-sensible
penetrates into earthly life through the gates of death in a
direction directly counter to that that we take on dying. We go one
way as human beings. The world goes the opposite way. With the
descent of Christ, the spiritual sun enters from spiritual heights
into the earth realm, in order that the human element that has made
its way from the super-sensible to the sense world come together with
the cosmic element that has taken the same path, in order that man
find his way to the spirit of the cosmos. He can orient himself
rightly in the world only if the spirit within him finds the spirit
outside him. The spirit that an older humanity found living in the
world beyond death can be rightly laid hold upon by people living on
the earth today only if they are irradiated by the Christ, who
descended to earth from that same world whence rationality and
intellectuality and freedom made their way into the experience of
incarnated human beings.
So we may say that
anthroposophy begins in every case at the scientific level, calls art
to the enlivening of its concepts, and ends in a religious deepening.
It begins with what the head can grasp, takes on all the life and
color of which words are capable, and ends in warmth that suffuses
and reassures the heart, so that man's soul can at all times feel
itself in the spirit, its true home. We must learn, on the
anthroposophical path, to start with knowledge, then to lift
ourselves to the level of artistry, and to end in the warmth of
religious feeling.
The present rejects
this way of doing things, and that is why anthroposophy has enemies.
These enemies have many strange qualities. I have been talking of
such serious matters today that I don't want to end on a serious
note, although these matters are a good deal more serious than is
generally realized. But we should often consider what a contrast
exists between the seriousness of genuine anthroposophical striving
and the ideas about it entertained by a good many of our fellow men.
Some of them are absolutely grotesque, though others would strike us
as simply droll were it not for the fact that we have to put up a
defense against them. Sometimes I also find it necessary to turn my
own spotlight on the outer world, with everyone free to make of it
what he will. So I am going to close today's weighty discussion with
a comment that is not to be taken too weightily.
A little while ago,
our friend Dr. Wachsmuth brought me in Dornach a rude pamphlet not
only attacking anthroposophy, but making me and those close to me its
special targets. He said at the time that he wasn't leaving the book
with me because it would be insulting even to assume that I would
read such a particularly crude piece of invention. I didn't see the
book again. Dr. Wachsmuth took it away with him, and I gave it no
further thought.
Yesterday I traveled
through Freiburg, accompanied by Frau Dr. Steiner and Herr Leinhas.
We stopped off for refreshments and were sitting at a restaurant
table. Two men were seated at the adjoining one. One of them had a
rather bulging briefcase and other such accoutrements. We took no
special notice of these people, and they left shortly before we did.
After their departure the waiter brought me a book, saying that one
of the gentlemen had asked him to give it to me. Herr Leinhas asked
who the men were, and was told that one of them was Werner von der
Schulenburg. On the book's flyleaf stood the words, “With the
author's compliments.”
You see, my dear
friends, what can happen. Perhaps this will give you some idea what a
conception of tact — not to mention other qualities —
exists nowadays among those who parade their enmity.
I have found it quite
impossible lately to pay much attention to my enemies. Anyone who has
been following my recent activities will have seen how occupied I
have been presenting new truths to add to the old. This takes time,
which one cannot afford to let anyone interrupt and waste, no matter
how savage the attacks become.
I have described to
you today how much is involved in arriving at anthroposophical
truths. If the Society becomes fully conscious of this, it will find
some of the strength it needs for its current reorganization. That,
my dear friends, is a vital need. Please do not take it amiss that I
have harped on this theme so insistently today.
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