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Rudolf Steiner e.Lib
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Macrocosm and Microcosm
Rudolf Steiner e.Lib Document
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Macrocosm and Microcosm
Schmidt Number: S-2201
On-line since: 7th July, 2002
FACULTIES OF THE HUMAN SOUL AND THEIR DEVELOPMENT
The lecture yesterday concluded with an allusion to the two frontiers
within which man's normal consciousness is enclosed, and today we will
begin by speaking of the regions lying beyond these frontiers. Man
finds these regions when, as the result of inner development, he
passes either the Lesser or the Greater Guardian of the Threshold.
Today we shall try to make clear what kind of experiences come to a
man when, after passing the Lesser Guardian of the Threshold, he
descends consciously into his own inner being. We know that in
ordinary life this descent occurs every day and that at the moment of
waking it becomes impossible for us to perceive or be aware of our own
inner being. To understand this it is necessary to have clearly in
mind something that is essentially and inwardly connected with the
whole of man's development.
In the course of his life man develops from one stage to another. Even
during his life between birth and death he undergoes development which
leads him beyond the initial stages of life when his faculties and
capacities are of little account, to others when they are considerably
enhanced. How does this development proceed in everyday life? Sleeping
and waking play an essential part. When we think of the daily
experiences man has in his youth in connection with learning and
picture how these experiences are transformed into faculties, we must
turn our minds to the condition of sleep which alone makes this
transformation possible.
Every night on going to sleep our souls take with them something from
daily life; what we take with us the fruit of our experiences
is transformed during sleep in such a way that it becomes our
abilities and capacities. To take a concrete example. What efforts we
were obliged to make day after day when we were young, in order to
learn to write! But we are not in the least aware of those past
experiences when we take up a pen today to give expression to our
thoughts. All our earlier efforts to shape the letters have been
transformed into the capacity to write. The power which has
transformed all these daily experiences into the faculty of writing is
actually present in the depths of the soul but can operate only when
we ourselves are not consciously there.
From this we may conclude that in our souls there is something that is
higher than all our conscious life. Forces higher than those available
in our conscious life become active during sleep; experiences are
transformed into faculties and the soul becomes more and more mature.
A deeper being is working within us at our further development; when
we go to sleep, this being receives the day's experiences and
re-moulds them, so that in a later period of life they are at our
disposal in the form of faculties.
But we bring out of sleep much more than we ourselves brought into it
through our conscious experiences. During the day we use up forces by
participating in what is going on around us. In the evening we feel
fatigue because these forces are exhausted, and during sleep they are
replenished; many forces flow into us during the night other than
those we have acquired as the result of our daily activity. Our life
during sleep is therefore the source of innumerable forces we need for
waking life.
Thus we develop from stage to stage, but there is a definite limit to
this development. Every time we wake in the morning we find the same
physical and etheric bodies, and we know that fundamentally speaking
we can do very little by means of our own forces to transform these
two bodies or to develop them to a higher stage. Admittedly, anyone
with knowledge of life realises that it is possible even for the
physical body to be transformed to a certain extent. If we observe a
person who for ten years has devoted himself to acquiring deeper
knowledge which he has not allowed to remain mere theory but which had
laid hold of his inner life, then after those ten years we can form an
idea of the inner metamorphosis that has taken place by comparing his
present with his earlier appearance and perceiving how the knowledge
acquired has produced a change even in his features; the development
which proceeded in his soul has also helped to shape his bodily
appearance. But this outer development is very limited, for we are
confronted every morning with essentially the same physical and
etheric bodies, possessing the same aptitudes as at birth. Whereas,
relatively speaking, we can do a great deal to develop our powers of
intellect, of mind and of will, we can transform our outer sheaths,
our physical and etheric bodies only to a slight extent. Nevertheless
inner forces must be active through the whole of life between birth
and death, and these forces must be continually re-kindled if life is
to continue. We see at the moment of death what becomes of the
physical body when the etheric body is no longer working in it. The
physical and chemical forces inherent in the physical body as such
assert themselves from the moment of death onwards and dissolve,
disintegrate, it. That this cannot happen during life is due to the
etheric body, which is a faithful fighter against the disintegration
of the physical body. At every moment our physical body would be ready
to disintegrate if fresh forces from the etheric body were not
continually supplied to it. The etheric or life-body in turn receives
what it needs in this respect from still deeper inner forces, from the
astral body, which is the vehicle of happiness and grief, of joy and
sorrow. Thus the corresponding inner body is perpetually working at
the outer body. The outwardly visible part of us is sustained all the
time by the inner forces. How the astral body works on the etheric
body and the etheric body on the physical-that is what a man would see
if he were able to descend consciously into the physical and etheric
bodies on waking; but he is diverted from this perception by external
objects and happenings.
However, by developing his soul to the stage enabling him to
experience consciously the moment of entry into the etheric and
physical bodies on waking, a man can acquire a certain knowledge of
what actually works creatively on his inner being during sleep.
We become conscious of the driving forces of our manhood when we are
able to descend into our inner being. What must we do if this is to be
achieved with conscious awareness? We must prepare ourselves in such a
way that at the moment of waking external impressions transmitted by
the eyes, ears, and so forth, do not disturb us, do not immediately
force themselves upon us. We must train ourselves to be able to pass
out of the state of consciousness prevailing in sleep, in such a way
that we are able to ward off all external impressions. When we can do
that we pass the Lesser Guardian of the Threshold.
What is it that we see if we pass through the portal leading into our
own inner being? As genuine mystics we learn to know something of
which hitherto we had no notion. The descriptions given in most
theosophical manuals of the astral, etheric and physical bodies are
hardly more, if viewed from an inner point of view, than very
approximate indications, although these can serve as pointers. Genuine
knowledge of these bodies into which we descend on waking is only
possible as the result of a patient and prolonged approach from every
angle to the great truths of existence. We will endeavour today to
penetrate into these mysteries from one particular side.
Although man does not need to see the external forces which work on
him, he learns to know by instinct that what is usually called the
soul is quite different from current ideas of it. He
learns to realise that the human soul is indeed little, but that it
can be compared with something very great; also that the individual
capacities which the soul may possess are very slight compared with
the capacities of that great Being with whom, however, it may feel
itself akin. The knowledge acquired on descending into the physical
and etheric bodies is that on waking we emerge from another world in
which there is a Being akin to our own soul, only infinitely mightier.
Thus on waking the human soul feels insignificant after passing the
Lesser Guardian of the Threshold and may say to itself: I am paltry
indeed, for if I now had within me nothing more than I have imparted
to myself, if I had not been outpoured in the spiritual world, and if
the beings of that world had not let forces stream into me, I should
be in a state of dire bewilderment. The soul realises its need of the
forces which have streamed into it the whole night long; and that what
has thus streamed into it is akin to its own three inherent forces.
They are: firstly, the Will. Everything of the nature of Will is one
of the fundamental forces of the soul, the force which guides us in
this way or that; secondly, Feeling. This is the force which
brings it about that the soul is attracted by one thing, repelled by
another, experiences joy or pain as the case may be; thirdly,
Thinking: the capacity to form ideas of things.
These three basic forces of the soul are the really valuable assets
which we can develop and elaborate between birth and death. By
strengthening our will we become capable of taking vigorous and
effective hold of life. If we develop the force of feeling, we shall
realise with ever greater certainty what is right and what is wrong;
to witness justice and righteousness will give us joy and we shall
feel pain at the sight of wrong-doing. If we develop our power of
thinking we shall acquire wise understanding of the phenomena of the
world.
Through the whole of our life we must work at these three basic forces
of the soul. But when we wake in the morning in the condition that has
been described, having passed the Lesser Guardian of the Threshold, we
realise that whatever qualities of willing, feeling and thinking we
can develop in our lives are trifling compared with the powers of
Thinking, of Feeling and of Will pervading the spiritual world out of
which we pass at the moment of waking. We realise too that we need
what our soul has absorbed during the night, for what we ourselves are
able to develop consciously during the life of day would not take us
very far. As a gift from spiritual worlds, from the higher forces of
Cosmic Thinking, Cosmic Feeling and Cosmic Will, there must stream
into us all night long what must descend with us into our inner being.
When we first become conscious of having absorbed Cosmic Will, Cosmic
Feeling and Cosmic Thinking, we realise that it is not we ourselves
who have acquired these three basic forces but that without our
co-operation they stream into us during sleep. Furthermore, these
three forces are transformed in our soul and assume different aspects.
We become aware that what we know in our souls as will is only
a faint reflection of the Cosmic Will that we bring with us; we know
that this, as it streams into us, is transformed into the force which
enables us to move about, to have mobile limbs. There streams into us
the faculty which can be observed in external manifestation when we
see somebody performing his daily work. What we draw into ourselves
from the Cosmic Will becomes visible in the movement of our limbs, in
our mobility. It reveals itself as an inner force, streaming into us.
We now know in very truth that Cosmic Will streams through the
universe and through us, that we become mobile beings and have
independence because this Will has streamed into us during sleep. Then
throughout the day we use up this Cosmic Will. In ordinary life we do
not feel the in-streaming of the macrocosmic Will but when we have
passed the Guardian of the Threshold we feel it working on within us,
we feel that we have become one with the Cosmic Will, that we are
membered into the Will of Cosmic Worlds.
What we know in everyday life as the power of feeling has also
been drawn from an infinite reservoir of Cosmic Feeling; this too
streams into us and is so transformed as to become inwardly
perceptible to us, provided we are sufficiently mature; it is as if
this Cosmic Feeling were permeating us with something comparable only
with what is called light. We become inwardly illumined; what
streams into us as this working of Cosmic Feeling is inner light,
although without clairvoyance it is not outwardly visible as light.
But a man who has passed the Lesser Guardian of the Threshold realises
that what is needed for his life of inner experience, namely light, is
nothing else than a product of Cosmic Feeling absorbed by him during
sleep. From this it is evident that when a man is given up to his own
inner life and being, he experiences something quite new about his
soul, namely what his inner self is able to be as a result of all that
streams to him out of the Macrocosm. And it is only when he feels the
forces of Cosmic Feeling streaming into him that the astral body is
there before him as a reality.
The forces of thinking are such that they work as a regulator
between what streams to us as the power of movement and the inner
light. A certain equilibrium must be established between the inner
light (feeling) and the will. If the right relationship between the
urge to activity and the inner light were disrupted, the bodily nature
of man would not be properly provided for from within. A man would be
doomed to perish if either the one or the other were present in
excess. Only if the true equilibrium has been established can man so
unfold his faculties that the right forces serve his outer existence.
So we see that the effects of sleep work upon our inner being and
through our outer sheaths from morning until evening, enabling us to
cope with the demands of existence. With this in mind we can say: in
truth our soul is paltry as compared with what there is in the
Macrocosm into which our being pours during sleep, yet our soul is
akin to it. The great universe is pervaded by Cosmic Will, Cosmic
Feeling, Cosmic Thinking, and thinking, feeling and willing unfold to
higher and higher stages within our own soul.
Another, immediately following, experience can be expressed by saying:
Even though today my soul is paltry as compared with the great Cosmic
Soul, it will eventually grow to be like it. My soul and its faculties
of thinking, feeling and willing are still insignificant but will
eventually grow to be comparable with this mighty Cosmic Thinking,
Feeling and Will.
This experience is followed by another which gives us the certain
knowledge that what confronts us as the mighty Macrocosm was once like
our own soul; the Macrocosm too has developed out of small beginnings
into this stupendous greatness.
A fruit of these two feelings in the soul of the true mystic is a
thought that can be expressed as follows: How would it have been if
those Beings who have created what is today outspread in the universe,
who bestow so much upon us how would it have been if they had
done nothing in the past to promote their own development? Once, in
the infinitely distant past, their forces of thinking, feeling and
will were just as trivial as our own and today their power is such
that they no longer need to receive strength from the Macrocosm; they
give, only give. What should we ourselves have become if they had done
nothing to develop to these lofty stages? Without them we could
not have existed! If we know how to value our existence, a feeling of
infinite thankfulness towards these great Beings is born in our souls
and streams through and through us. Every true mystic knows this
experience as a reality. It cannot be compared with what is felt in
everyday life as gratitude and is an experience of the very greatest
significance. What the outer world now calls Mysticism really amounts
to nothing more than a collection of phrases. The genuine mystic knows
this experience well and asks himself: What would you be if the Beings
who existed before you and were once like you had not raised
themselves to such heights that at night they are able to let stream
into you the forces you need in the bodily existence into which you
will pass when you wake in the morning? Nobody who has not in the
deepest ground of his heart this feeling of thankfulness to the
Macrocosm has become a true mystic.
And another feeling follows. If we today stand at the
beginning, as those Beings themselves once stood, in order to achieve
the goal of our existence must we not work at ourselves and do
everything possible so to transform our paltry thinking, feeling and
willing that some day we need not only take, but also
give, and become able to pour out forces such as are poured
into us when we are given over to the Macrocosm during sleep? This
feeling is then transformed into an overwhelming obligation to promote
the development of the soul. As genuine mystics we have the feeling:
You are neglecting this duty unless you try with all your might to
develop the lowly powers of your soul to the height revealed to you as
an attainable ideal when you gaze consciously into the macrocosmic
source of those powers. If you do nothing for your own development, if
you resist it, then you will be helping to prevent other beings from
developing as you have developed; you will be contributing to the
decline of the world instead of to its progress.
From this we realise that the ordinary experiences of our soul
desires, impulses, urges, passions, and so on are transformed
in a remarkable way, that what we commonly know as gratitude becomes
immeasurable thankfulness to the Macrocosm and what we commonly feel
as duty becomes a feeling of infinite obligation.
These are the feelings that stream through us when we pass the
Guardian of the Threshold and enable us to recognise the astral body
as a reality. If these feelings are really alive in a man and he gives
himself up with greater and greater intensity to the feelings of
thankfulness and obligation towards the evolving world, if he lets
these feelings pulsate through his soul, then the eyes of seership
open in him; the true form of his own astral body, which on waking in
his ordinary consciousness was hitherto hidden from him, stands before
big eyes the astral body that was born out of the Macrocosm. If
we are to see all this and to realise with sufficient strength the
truth that spirit lies behind all material existence, then we must
pass the Guardian of the Threshold.
We must also become aware of the reverse side of what has been
described as the good or light side.
We have heard that the Cosmic Will streams through us as the power of
activity, of movement, that Cosmic Feeling streams through us as
light. If this were not so we should not exist, nay we could not
exist, as men. And now let us compare these cosmic forces with those
of the thinking, feeling and will which have been developed by the
soul up to the present. To the eyes of spirit the extent to which we
have fallen short of achieving strength of will, intelligence in
thinking, sound and healthy feeling, becomes clearly evident,
especially at the moment of waking from sleep. It is found that
everything we have done in the way of acquiring intelligence may be
united with what streams into us as light out of the Cosmic Feeling,
and that what we have neglected in the development of our own
intelligence acts like a brake. The stream of Cosmic Feeling flowing
into us is diminished to the extent we have neglected to work at the
development of our own powers of thinking. If we are to make progress,
our thinking must have the right relationship to what we absorb into
ourselves from Cosmic Feeling.
Theoretical reflection might easily be tempted to believe that what
our human intelligence acquires for itself corresponds to what streams
into us from Cosmic Thinking. Only a theorist would speak in this way,
for it is not in accordance with the reality. Many mistakes are made
by combining like with like. Human intelligence actually corresponds
to Cosmic Feeling as absorbed in sleep. The greater human intelligence
becomes, the more is it illumined by the inner light that has its
source in Cosmic Feeling. But darkness streams into this light of
Cosmic Feeling if we neglect the development of our thinking, of our
intelligence. If a man is too lazy to develop his thinking properly
the punishment for such sins of omission will be that darkness streams
into the inner light. Whatever a man neglects to do in the way of
developing his intelligence brings upon him the punishment that he
himself draws something from his inner light and promotes darkness in
it.
Thus does the spirit work at our inner being. But someone may say: It
is a cause of great uneasiness that attention is beginning to be
directed to such things. Have human beings not hitherto existed quite
happily between the two frontiers, in the span of life that stretches
between the Lesser and the Greater Guardian of the Threshold? After
all, the spiritual Powers of whose existence people have hitherto had
no inkling, have taken good care of their welfare; could not this
continue as it is? Even if they do not put it into words,
people think today that they would prefer to let life remain just as
it has been hitherto. They say: If we were to look into ourselves we
should become aware how light and darkness mingle within us. Up to now
the spiritual Powers have taken care that all this proceeds as it
should; if we now try to take a hand, we may do harm, so we had
better leave it alone. The attitude of many people today is
that they will go on eating and drinking and leave everything else to
the gods.
In point of fact there would be something in this attitude if
conditions had remained as they were originally. Until their present
stage of evolution men could draw adequate forces out of sleep; these
were macrocosmic forces, stored up by great spiritual Beings. So it
was hitherto. But in these matters we must not be content with
abstractions; we must keep strictly to reality. And the reality is
that the fundamental, spiritual conditions of our life change from
epoch to epoch. Those Cosmic Powers to whom we are given over every
night during sleep have from the beginning of human existence counted
upon the expectation that light will also stream upwards from human
life itself to the light that streams down from above. The Cosmic
Powers have no inexhaustible reservoir of light; their reservoir is
one from which the stream of forces will constantly diminish unless
from human life itself, through efforts to transform thinking, feeling
and willing and to rise into the higher worlds, fresh forces, new
light, were to flow back into the great reservoir of Cosmic Light and
Cosmic Feeling. We are now living in the epoch when it is essential
for men to be conscious that they must not merely rely upon what flows
into them from Cosmic Powers but must themselves co-operate in the
Process of world-evolution.
It is no ordinary ideal that Spiritual Science is now setting before
itself; it does not work in the same way as other movements where
people enthuse about some ideal but are only capable of preaching
about it to others. No such impulse is working in those who regard
Spiritual Science as a world-mission; they are prompted by the
knowledge that certain forces in the Macrocosm are beginning to be
exhausted, that we are moving towards a future when too little would
flow down from above if men did not themselves work at the development
of their souls. Such is the epoch in which we are living. For that
reason Spiritual Science must come into existence in order to induce
men to replenish, from their side, the down-streaming forces that are
becoming exhausted. This knowledge is the source from which Spiritual
Science draws its impulse and if it were not for these facts,
Spiritual Science would leave human evolution to take care of itself.
But Spiritual Science foresees that if in the coming centuries there
are not enough human beings who strive to reach the higher worlds,
this would result in the human race receiving less and less forces
from above. Human life would wither and dry up, just as a tree
lignifies when no more living sap flows through it. Until now, forces
from outside have been instilled into the human race. Those people who
live on unthinkingly, recognising only the outer world of the senses,
know nothing about the changes that are taking place behind this
material world, one of which is that because the spiritual forces are
becoming exhausted, it is necessary for such forces to be produced by
men themselves. If the further evolution of mankind were left to those
who cling to the outer physical world alone, universal desolation
would be the result. Spiritual Science must now be promulgated in
order that men may be able to decide themselves whether they wish or
do not wish to co-operate in the necessary work.
We will now look back upon all our sins of omission, upon everything
that acts as an impediment in our soul to the forces flowing into us
from above. All sins of omission in thinking penetrate into the inner
light in the form of darkness. The same applies to sins of omission in
respect of feeling and of will. Force and strength derived from Cosmic
Will, light derived from Cosmic Feeling, order and harmony from Cosmic
Thinking all this is impaired by our sins of omission in
respect of feeling, thinking and willing.
Thus we become aware of what is working within us. Into all this there
is interpolated what we ourselves are with all our impotence
which is due to our failure to do better. In this way we reach true
self-knowledge. What we have become on account of our sins of omission
and that for which compensation has to be made, appears like a dark
shadow in a radiant picture. What we have failed to become stands
before the eyes of our soul and reveals itself clearly in that it
sends out its rays in three directions. The hindrances we cause to the
evolutionary process through what we have neglected in respect of our
will, in respect of our thinking and in respect of our feeling
all this is revealed. In these three directions our imperfections
become manifest. Each has something definite to say to us.
Firstly, there is the obstacle raying from our own will into the
stream of Cosmic Will flowing through us; what we have neglected to do
in respect of our own will now confronts us as an obstacle. We must
say to ourselves: By everything you have left undone you are fettered
to the Earth's forces of decline, to all that is driving the Earth
towards destruction. Of our sins of omission in respect of
thinking, we say to ourselves: Because of these sins of omission you
will have no possibility of establishing harmony between your will and
your feeling. And of our sins of omission in respect of
feeling, we say to ourselves: The march of world-evolution will pass
you by as if you were not there. You have done nothing to help
world-evolution and it will therefore take back what was once bestowed
upon you.
Thus we see before us, distinct from each other, all the forces
through which we are fettered to the Earth, and we see cosmic
evolution pass us by because we have contributed nothing towards it
through our own efforts. Then we feel how these forces which chain us
to the Earth and the forces which pass us by, are tearing our true
being asunder. In this moment of passing the Lesser Guardian of the
Threshold we feel our sins of omission to be the destroyers of our
soul's existence.
There is only one means of counteracting this destruction, only one
means can at this crucial moment enable us to stand firm. It is that
we ourselves must take a vow that nothing shall be neglected in
future. After all, the indications are plain enough. They tell us, at
the moment we are passing the Lesser Guardian of the Threshold: These
forces are dragging you down; therefore you must work to develop your
will, to develop your powers of thinking and of feeling. We may
even feel grateful to this terrifying vista for it makes possible the
eventual fulfillment of our vow.
Having spoken of the necessity of the feeling of thankfulness and the
feeling of obligation, we can now speak further of what is called the
mystic vow. Before the spectacle of his own inadequacy, everyone must
register the vow that in future he will work at his soul to his utmost
capacity in order to make up for past negligence. This vow gives life
a new content, in keeping with true and effective self-knowledge; a
man no longer broods but works actively at his own self. This
experience can take a twofold form. As long as we are only aware of it
as a mental process, something is still lacking in us, is still
fettering us, and there is still reason for cosmic evolution to pass
us by. In such a case the experience has been in the astral body only.
But if the feelings of thankfulness and duty are experienced over and
over again, they will be transformed ultimately into definite vision
which becomes an inner experience, and then a force, a power. This
force arises through the astral experience being mirrored in the
etheric body and reflected to us by the latter. An image of ourselves
is now before us as an external reality, standing out as it were from
a background. The background shows us how the forces of light and
activity in which we are immersed during sleep work into our sheaths.
What we have made of ourselves stands out from this background. Just
as in outer reality, animals, plants, minerals, confront us, so now
our own self confronts us in its true form. Our own inner being
becomes as it were perceptible in the outer world. Hitherto when we
descended into our own being, our attention was diverted to the outer
world. The impressions from this world flowed into us, making it
unnecessary for us to see what we are now obliged to see, if we
resolve to take our share in working for the progress of mankind.
Our own inner self is portrayed as it were against this background.
All that fetters us to the Earth, all that binds us to the perishable,
appears to us in astral vision as a definite image, the image of a
distorted bull, dragging us down. All the forces which
otherwise produce harmony, reveal in the image of a distorted
lion the disharmony consequent upon our sins of omission in
feeling. Everything that passes us by as the result of our sins of
omission in thinking, appears to us in the image of a distorted
eagle. These three images are permeated by the distorted image
of our own self, indicating what we have to correct and put right in
the future in order to contribute to world-evolution what it requires
of us. Three distortions of animal forms and one of ourselves
how these three separate images or pictures are related to one another
reveals the measure of the work lying ahead of us.
Thus when we pass the Lesser Guardian of the Threshold we have true
self-knowledge, for there stands before us an image of what we have
become; this self-knowledge is a stimulus for our whole future life.
We shall only shrink from this experience as would otherwise be
very probable if we hold the belief that what we do not see is
not there. There are people who, when a slate falls from a roof, close
their eyes instead of moving out of the way. Such people they
are like those who say they would prefer to avoid the experiences
described by Spiritual Science-do not want to see what is happening,
but nothing is altered by the fact that they do not see it! The one
and only help at this stage is self-knowledge. Hitherto the Cosmic
Powers were able to check the utter distortion of the image of our
manhood, but in the future these Cosmic Powers will no longer suffice.
We ourselves, in our image, are the Lesser Guardian of the
Threshold. It is we ourselves who hinder the possibility of
descent into our inner being; we ourselves must work at our own
development. This knowledge alone makes it possible for the future
decline of humanity into enfeeblement to be avoided, as well as the
failure to fulfil its mission on the Earth.
We have now been led in thought through the region that may be called
the region of our own Sentient Body into which we descend on waking
from sleep. But in normal existence we are not aware of it because our
consciousness is diverted. If, on waking, we refuse to admit the
impressions from outside, we experience what has been described. We
have spoken-but only very briefly-of our astral body. What has now
been described is the inner aspect presented by part of our human
nature, namely, our Sentient Body (Empfindungsleib). We have
reached the boundary where the Sentient Body borders on the Etheric
Body. The image or picture we behold shows us what we truly are. The
form we there behold is only an image but it is all that is needed.
Discussions about the non-reality of a mirror-image are worthless. If
a man wants to know what he really looks like, discussion about this
is futile. What we behold is of course only a reflection, a
mirror-image, in the etheric body, but it helps us to acquire
self-knowledge, and therein lies its value. Error would begin only if
the clairvoyant were to believe the mirror-image to be another entity,
another reality coming towards him, if he were unaware that it is only
a picture revealing his inner self. Were the clairvoyant to
take the picture to be a real bull, or some four-headed creature, he
would be like a man whose nose displeases him and who, on seeing it in
a mirror, tries to punch it! Things must not be taken to be what they
are not. A man who does not rightly understand the mirror-image lends
himself to hallucinations. Whoever regards the image as being
something in space and not a mirror-image which in fact it is, has
succumbed to hallucination. Before seership begins it is therefore
important to have acquired the faculty of grasping the true values of
things through reason. Clairvoyance should not be induced in anyone
who would be liable to take for reality what is merely a reflection,
or to confound spiritual realities with the realities of outer,
physical space. Hence it is of great importance that nobody should
embark upon genuine spiritual training without possessing the faculty
of intelligent thinking which enables him always to form a correct
estimate of what he is seeing. It is not vision alone that is
important, but also the power to appraise what is seen. We shall
encounter Beings who really do exist outside us, but to begin with we
experience only our own astral world; the pictures that have been
described today are only mirror-images of our own inner being which is
revealed to us as an external world. To realise this is the outcome of
self-knowledge. As soon as a man descends into his own inner being he
is bound to see images; but it would be hallucination if what is
simply a reflection of one's own inner being were taken to be
something different.
Along the path to be described tomorrow we shall encounter spiritual
Beings, for this path reaches down into the etheric body; the same
holds good for the path that leads past the Greater Guardian of the
threshold.
Today, then, we have reached the point of considering the stream which
passes into the realm of our experience at the moment of waking. We
have described the consciousness that deviates from the normal and is
experienced by the mystic when at the moment of waking he diverts his
attention from everything outside him in the world of the senses and
penetrates into his inner being.
Last Modified: 02-Nov-2024
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