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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-2208
On-line since: 7th July, 2002
TRANSFORMATION OF SOUL-FORCES AND STAGES IN THE EVOLUTION OF PHYSICAL
ORGANS.
READING IN THE AKASHA CHRONICLE.
In these lectures I have tried to present items of knowledge which for
reasons connected with the evolution of humanity should now be
communicated, and this from a standpoint rather different from that of
books which may be accessible to you. My desire has been to illumine
this knowledge from the angle of more direct experience and we may
hope that, by adding to truths already made known facts directly
revealed by consciousness, many things will be explained in a new way.
At any rate, those who have heard only these lectures will be able to
find in books such as
Occult Science,
or
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds,
information supplementing what has here been said. When any attempt is
made to describe the higher worlds, it is quite understandable that
this can be done from different standpoints. We have heard of the
number of different standpoints from which it is possible to
contemplate our own Ego from outside as soon as we enter the higher
worlds. I should now like to continue describing things more from the
inner side, in connection with what was said yesterday about the
logic, or thinking, of the heart in contrast to what is known in
external life as the logic, or thinking, of the head or of the
intellect.
In yesterday's lecture it was made clear that the logic of the heart
may be found at two stages in the process of human evolution. Firstly,
it may be found at that stage of development where the thinking of the
heart is not yet permeated by the logic of the head and of the
intellect. Attention was called to the fact that there are still
people today who would prefer not to concern themselves at all with
the logic of the intellect. This state of development can no longer be
said to exist in the real sense at the present time, for no matter
where you were to look among the people of today, you would everywhere
find at least a few concepts and ideas born of the intellect. To find
a stage of evolution entirely devoid of intellect we should have to go
back a very long way in the evolution of humanity, to a far-off
pre-historic stage. From what has been said, therefore, it follows
that our present state of development points back to an earlier one
when the heart judged out of the sub-consciousness, out of a
consciousness not yet permeated with intellect. Today, this original
faculty of the heart is permeated with concepts, with ideas, in brief,
with what we call the logic of the intellect. But bearing in mind what
was said yesterday about man's possibilities of development, we may
point forward to a future stage of evolution even now striven for by a
few who with their present-day consciousness already have the longing,
the urge, as it were to forestall the future.
We can look towards a future humanity when the logic of the heart will
again be functioning to the fullest extent, when out of direct feeling
man will behold the truth. But he will then have assimilated the
fruits of the intermediate stage of development, the stage of the
logic of the intellect. It may therefore be said that we arc now
passing through the evolutionary stage of intellectual thinking in
order to regain, on a higher level, what had already been attained on
a lower, namely, the logic of the heart. Whereas on the lower level it
was not illumined by the intellect, on the higher level it will later
on be irradiated by what man has acquired through the logic of the
intellect.
Thus we can conceive of three stages of human evolution: one preceding
that of our present time, one of today, and one that will come in the
future. From this we can also perceive what evolution means, namely,
that to what has been acquired at an earlier stage something new is
added and is to live on into the future.
We can glean still more precise information from the experiences of
those who already now have reached what was described yesterday as an
attainable state of higher consciousness through which it is possible
to look clairvoyantly into the higher worlds. Not only is the faculty
of thinking affected by such a transformation but other soul-forces
too will assume new forms when the faculty of thinking changes. When
through spiritual-scientific training someone works his way upward to
a higher stage of cognition from the logic of the intellect to the
logic of the heart, from the thinking of the head to the thinking of
the heart, do the other faculties of the soul change too? Let us
elucidate this by taking an example the example of
memory.
Memory, like thinking, is a faculty of the soul. The character of
thinking changes when from being thinking of the head it becomes, at a
higher spiritual level, thinking of the heart. What is there to be
said of memory? In the normal consciousness of everyday life we find
that memory works in the following way. Man has consciousness
of what is around him in the immediate present. He sees the things
around him, makes his observations, forms his ideas. He can
incorporate all this in his consciousness. Then he proceeds from what
his soul can experience in the present to something it experienced in
the past. Through memory, man passes out of the present into the past.
When he recalls something he experienced yesterday, he is looking
backwards in time. Therewith he surveys something that was once in his
environment but is so no longer. Anyone who studies memory from this
point of view realises that just as our consciousness of the present
is connected with the space immediately around us, this memory,
this extension of consciousness over the past, is connected with
time. For a genuine seeker, however, the nature of this
particular activity of consciousness changes completely.
Obviously there is no need for the spiritual investigator to apply his
higher faculties at every moment of ordinary life; he possesses these
faculties but puts them into operation only when he wishes to carry
out research in the higher worlds. When he does this, head-thinking
becomes heart-thinking and his ordinary memory changes into a
different form of soul-activity. But for the experiences of everyday
life there is no need for him to be constantly passing into his higher
states of consciousness, no need to be continually using and giving
evidence of the faculties of soul that have been described. When he
returns to the everyday world he has a memory and a faculty of
thinking just like those of anyone else. It is therefore the capacity
to transpose himself from the normal into a supernormal state of
consciousness that the pupil must possess. This should always be kept
in mind.
Now whenever the pupil is in the state of consciousness in which he is
investigating the spiritual world through a faculty analogous to that
of ordinary memory, what he observes in that world presents itself not
in time, but spatially. Memory is completely transformed. Whereas
ordinary memory looks back in time in order to recall events of
yesterday, when progress in spiritual knowledge has been made the
investigator experiences the past as if, standing here, he were
looking through the door into the adjacent area. He looks at something
that is separated as if by space, as if yesterday's events are
separated spatially from those of today. We can therefore say
that for the spiritual investigator the events which usually appear to
memory one after another in time, now present themselves
beside one another (in the spatial sense), and he must as it
were move from one event to another, pass from one entity to another.
On thinking over this carefully, you will see that this statement is
entirely in accordance with what has previously been said, namely that
in the spiritual world we must become one with the beings there. We
must not go back along the line of time, for time is transformed into
a kind of space; we must pass along this line as if it were a line in
space in order to be able to unite with the beings. For the
soul-faculty of memory, Time changes into Space as soon as we
enter the spiritual world.
Memory has become an essentially new faculty. We see something
belonging to the past as though it were still there in the immediate
present; the length of time that has elapsed is estimated according to
the distance. The past presents itself to the pupil as something
placed side by side in space. When this form of memory has been
attained, it is actually a reading of events that have remained. This
is reading in the Akasha Chronicle; it is a world in which Time
has become Space. Just as our own world is known as the physical, so
the world in which Time has become Space can be termed the Akasha
World. This alters the whole attitude of the true mystic, for what in
everyday life is called Time, no longer exists in this form in the
higher world.
We can recognise from this example how wonderfully things harmonise
when viewed from the right standpoint. What would become of man in
everyday life if he were unable to harmonise his thinking with his
memory, if he were to find that his logical thinking contradicted his
memory? Suppose you had before you a document bearing the date of 26th
March. That is a perception which you have in your consciousness of
the present. But you were there when the recorded event occurred and
going back over the days, your memory says to you: It must have
happened a day earlier. There you have an obvious case where
consciousness of the immediate present conflicts with memory. In the
physical world such cases will as a rule be easily rectified, but in
the spiritual world it is much more difficult. The outer conditions of
the physical world of themselves correct such errors. When someone in
the street forgets that he must turn left to reach home and takes a
turning to the right, the mistake will soon be realised. But in the
spiritual world there is no such convenient means for correcting
mistakes. There it is necessary to have the inner certainty which will
prevent mistakes being made so easily; the most careful preparation
must be undergone in order to avoid such mistakes. In that world error
might well cost dear; a single mistake might easily lead to infinite
trouble. Harmony must prevail between the logic of the heart and the
kind of memory that has been described.
The way in which we develop in accordance with the indications of
Spiritual Science itself guarantees this harmony. And here we come to
the principle which the pupil must take to heart, namely, that
everything external and physical can only be understood if it is
regarded as a symbol, an emblem of a super-sensible reality, a
spiritual reality.
For logic of the head we have an instrument in our physical brain.
This is known to everyone through ordinary science. Admittedly we
cannot say in the same sense that in our physical heart we have an
instrument for the logic of the heart. For that is something far more
spiritual than the logic of the head, and the heart is not to the same
degree the physical organ for the thinking of the heart as is the
brain for the thinking of the head. Yet the physical heart provides us
with an analogy. When the thinking of the heart changes Time into
Space, our whole being has to move about; we have to be involved in a
perpetual circulation. Such is the definite experience of anyone who
passes from ordinary memory to the higher form of memory possessed by
the spiritual investigator. Whereas in an act of remembrance an
ordinary man looks back to the past, the spiritual investigator has
the inner experience that he is actually moving backwards in Time in
the same way as he otherwise moves in Space. And this consciousness
expresses itself outwardly in the experiencing of our blood,
which must also be in perpetual movement if we are to go on living. In
our blood we are involved all the time in the movement from the heart
through the body and back, so that what really belongs to the heart is
in perpetual movement. Not so what belongs to the head. The several
parts of the brain remain stationary, so the brain is in very truth a
physical symbol for the consciousness of Space; the flowing blood, the
fluid of the heart is in its circulation an image of the mobility of
spiritual consciousness. Thus every physical phenomenon is a symbol
for the corresponding spiritual reality. It is an extremely
interesting fact that in our very blood we have an image of certain
faculties of the spiritual investigator and also of the worlds in
which he moves.
In rising to a higher level of consciousness we actually gaze into a
quite different kind of Space, one that is unknown to ordinary
experience, one that would come into being if the flow of Time were,
so to speak, constantly to congeal, to coagulate. Think of it in this
way. If you wanted to have before you what you experienced
yesterday, one moment of yesterday would have to be as if fixed; and
the immediately present moment which has even now already passed
would have to be held as if in a snapshot, and then all these
snapshots would have to be placed side by side. That will give you an
inkling of what the spiritual investigator sees livingly before him.
He has before him not ordinary space but Space of an altogether
different character from physical space, as if the world were
perpetually being photographed and the photographs placed side by
side. This other kind of Space is essentially and fundamentally
different from the space known to man in everyday life. In this latter
space it is impossible to discern a picture of the spiritual Space
just referred to. For if one tries to draw some line in physical
space, this can only be done where lines already exist. But what the
spiritual investigator traverses in spiritual Space cannot be
inscribed at all, for there Time becomes Space; we pass from one point
to another.
Ordinary consciousness is enclosed within space and cannot emerge from
it. But the spiritual investigator does emerge from it. He knows how
he has to move to events which may have taken place four or five days
previously. He can draw a line along which he moves from today to five
days ago. Such a line cannot be traced in ordinary space. So we arrive
at a concept of Space which corresponds with the memory of the
spiritual investigator and in which lines may be drawn which do not
belong to ordinary space. This is something that may be called Space
with a new dimension, a fourth dimension. The Space which the
investigator thus enters has one more dimension than is ever found in
ordinary space. We must therefore say that the spiritual investigator
emerges from three-dimensional space the moment his higher memory
begins to operate. Such a concept of four-dimensional Space is not
only thinkable, but there is actually a higher faculty the
higher memory for which this four-dimensional Space is
absolutely real.
In a certain respect everything connected with evolution has its
reverse side, and this applies also to the development of the faculty
of soul just referred to the faculty of memory. The goal before anyone
who receives instruction with a view to developing consciousness of
the higher worlds is to attain this new, spiritual
Space-memory that is possessed by the spiritual
investigator. In the course of such development it may happen that you
hear people who do not understand what is happening, complaining:
I used to have an excellent memory, but now it has
deteriorated. Those who really understand will not complain but
will realise that this is quite natural. It is an actual experience,
for it is a fact that during the process of spiritual development the
ordinary memory is, at first, impaired. Anyone who knows this will not
let it trouble him; for he knows too that he receives full
compensation for the loss when he is close to the point where it might
become dangerous. He will have great difficulty if he has to recollect
something he experienced yesterday; but he will notice that pictures
come before his soul in which experiences of the past are revealed,
and this is naturally a much more faithful memory than is otherwise
possessed in life. Therefore we may hear such people speak of having
suffered a kind of obscuration of the memory and having then acquired
a new kind of memory, superior to the ordinary one, for that has one
great flaw: it reveals things in a shadowy way and details are lost.
But in the memory which presents pictures in space the details
appear again. Faithfulness and exactitude of memory increase
enormously.
Thus we see arising a new faculty of soul that is not like remembrance
in thought of bygone time, but like vision. Between what at present
corresponds to this faculty and what it can become a kind of clouding
of the faculty in question takes place and then the new faculty begins
to operate more and more frequently. This clouding of such a faculty
intervenes as a state of the soul between the other two states. So we
have to distinguish three states of soul-faculties: first, that of the
ordinary memory which may have a certain exactitude; secondly, a kind
of clouding; thirdly, the memory which lights up in a new form. The
state in which such a faculty is revealed at its height is called a
Manvantara of the state in question, and when clouding
sets in we speak of a Pralaya. These are expressions drawn
from Oriental philosophy. We can therefore speak of a
Manvantara of the memory of ordinary consciousness, of a
kind of Pralaya of this memory of ordinary consciousness,
and of a return into the Manvantara state when the new
kind of memory arises.
Reminding ourselves of what has been said about human evolution it may
be affirmed that in earlier epochs man already possessed a kind of
logic of the heart; at the present time he is passing through the
stage of logic of the intellect and in the future he will regain a
logic of the heart in which the logic of the intellect has been
absorbed and elaborated. But in the earlier stage of a logic of the
heart there must have been among man's other faculties of soul
something similar to what will have to be acquired in the future when
logic of the heart arises in a new form. Thus we are not only referred
back to an ancient state of the thinking of the heart when
intellectual thinking did not yet exist, but also to something,
similar to the higher kind of memory described above, only then it was
at a lower level; it was a kind of memory that worked in pictures,
just as will be the case at the stage to be reached by mankind in the
future.
And now we can really form some idea of the nature of a primeval man.
He did not think like a man of today, for thinking in ideas and
concepts was a faculty acquired much later; he had only the logic of
the heart, unillumined by intellectual reasoning or scientific
thinking in the modern sense. But with that logic of the heart a kind
of space-memory was connected: Time became Space. Nowadays, if a man
wants to look back into the past, he must exert his memory as far as
it reaches. If it does not reach far enough he is obliged to turn to
documents and records. You know how the past is investigated today. It
is investigated through the study of evidences preserved in
traditions, in stone tablets, in fossilised bones or shells or stones
whose forms indicate the transformations that have taken place since
earlier stages of evolution. All these things are explored in order
that in this way we may have a picture of the past.
We are now looking back to an earlier stage of humanity when man had
the past before him as an immediately present reality, as a picture in
Space. This gives us a clue to an earlier stage of the human soul when
man did not need to make investigations into his origin, for he was
able actually to behold it. According to the degree of his development
he could look far back or less far back into the past and see whence
he himself originated. This explains the great reverence with which in
ancient times man looked back into the past and his direct knowledge
of the past.
Having envisaged these three successive stages of humanity, we must
now look rather more closely into the nature of man if we want to
increase our understanding of human evolution. Man was not always as
he is today; he has become what he is, gradually and by degrees. He
has evolved out of other states, out of other forms of existence, into
his present state. In connection with the life of soul we have
referred to an earlier state, because it resembles one which man must
attain in the future after having known what we in the present age
call the power of head-thinking. Direct transformation from the
earlier to the future state would, of course, be inconceivable; the
fruits of the present have to be taken into the soul in order to rise
to higher stages. Anyone who wants to reach the stage of logic of the
heart must have assimilated what can be gained from logic of the
intellect, although then, admittedly, it must be forgotten.
No stage of human development can be skipped; every one of them must
be traversed. Thus in order that man's development in the future
should be made possible, in order that he should one day be able to
approach what stands as an ideal before his soul at the present time,
he had first to develop to the present stage. Before he reaches the
stage of logic of the heart, the logic of the head had to be unfolded
by means of the organs of the brain and spine. Brain and spine were
formed out of the forces that flowed into man from the World of
Reason; everything else was kept back. This was possible because
man had succeeded in excluding from the wonderful formation of his
brain all the forces of other worlds, admitting only those of the
World of Reason. Just as we must now work with the brain as a
foundation, so had the work of the World of Reason formerly to be
carried out. The brain as an instrument and the work of the World of
Reason presupposes the work of the world immediately below it. We are
here looking back upon something that developed under the influence of
the World of Spirit, when as yet the World of Reason was not
active at all. But we look into a future when forces will flow into us
from the World of Archetypal Images, or Archetypes, just
as we look back to a past when the foundation corresponding to an
earlier stage of development was formed out of the World of Spirit. We
shall find this easy to understand if we apply to it all that has been
said.
Our brain is formed out of the World of Reason. We have found that an
earlier logic of the heart preceded the logic of the intellect. The
logic of the heart was only made possible through deeds from a
spiritual realm. It thereby becomes intelligible that the present
human heart was formed at a previous stage. The ordinary,
unconscious logic of the heart is much more closely related to
the present physical heart than is the higher logic of the heart,
which is naturally much more spiritual. But the ordinary logic of the
heart actually has a kind of medium of expression in the physical
heart, as intellect or reason has in the brain.
Whenever man regards a thing as being true, beautiful, good, not
through dispassionate, intellectual reflection but by a direct
approach, a quickened pulse makes him conscious of the heart's assent.
The heart actually beats differently in response to the beautiful than
in response to the ugly or pernicious. In this original logic of the
heart there is something that may be called spontaneous sympathy. When
this logic of the heart which functions in the subconscious becomes
more clearly articulate, the heart shows quite plainly by the
circulation of the blood that it is an expression of this logic. And a
painful experience repeatedly brought before our eyes can influence
our bodily nature by way of the heart to the point of causing actual
illness. There can be physiological confirmation of this.
Our brain was formed out of the World of Reason and our spiritualised
heart of the future will be formed out of the World of Archetypal
Images; as we have heard, our present heart was formed out of the
World of Spirit. Thus the heart is revealed as an organ indicating the
foundation which existed in man before the organ of thinking
was formed. The brain, therefore, could only have been created at a
later stage than the heart. All this gives one a quite different
conception of man's external bodily nature. The several organs are not
all equally developed; the brain is a later structure than the heart;
the heart is the older organ and had to be elaborated in a certain
respect before the brain could develop on that foundation. But an
organ does not cease to evolve when another is in existence. When the
brain came into being and proceeded to develop, the heart too
continued to evolve. The heart as it now is affords evidence of two
transformations, the brain of one only. We cannot understand the heart
by equating it with the brain and regarding it as of equal
development, but only by conceiving it as the older organ of the two,
as an older ancestor of the brain. Anyone who puts the heart on a
level with the brain is like someone who puts a person of forty by the
side of a fifteen-year-old and says: These two are standing side by
side, so I will study them together and form an idea of what they are
simply by looking at them beside each other. That would be
sheer stupidity, for in order to understand them individually the
period of their development must be taken into account. To understand
the one, the life-period of 15 years must be taken as a basic factor,
and the life-period of 40 years in the case of the other. Perhaps the
boy of 15 is the son of the 40-year-old father. It is an absurdity not
to take this factor into account, yet modern anatomy has fallen into
the trap. It does not know that different organs must be differently
viewed because they are at different stages of development. As long as
we are without a science of anatomy which studies the various organs
not merely in spatial juxtaposition but according to their value as
older or younger formations, we shall not understand much about the
true nature of man. Spiritual Science must supply the key for
understanding what is shown to us by ordinary science, if true
knowledge is to be attained.
Anyone who is undergoing genuine development attains nothing at all of
importance through ordinary ratiocinative thinking, for it is not
possible from outside to detect which organ is older or which younger;
success can be achieved only by one who enters the spiritual worlds
and learns how to distinguish things there. When looking back with his
Space-memory he need not go so very far to find the beginnings of the
brain; but to find the origin of the heart be must go much farther
back. The human physical organism can be understood only when
explained by Spiritual Science.
Now we will remind ourselves of what has been said, namely that
between the soul-faculty belonging to normal consciousness, for
example the faculty of memory which points back to an earlier memory,
and the new faculty of Space-memory between these two soul-faculties
there lies a kind of darkening. The spiritual investigator finds
something corresponding to this darkening, to the Pralaya-state after
the Manvantara-state, in the process of evolution as a whole. Let us,
for example, picture the heart and the brain of a man as they co-exist
today in the physical body; for a while they have developed side by
side, but at an earlier stage there was not much connection between
them. We can therefore distinguish a state of man when the highest
forces flowing into his being were those of the World of Spirit, and
then a state when the forces of the World of Reason also flow into
him. Between the two states lies a Pralaya, when human development is
extinguished and then passes into a new phase.
So we look back from present-day man, who has both heart and brain, to
one who had a heart only, not yet a brain, and between the two is the
state of Pralaya. When some day in the future the higher state is
reached, the higher state which is attained in spirit today by the
clairvoyant investigator, we can understand that it will also express
itself in the body, that man will also have a quite different external
appearance. The clairvoyant investigator today is not yet able to
alter his bodily constitution. If a God descends he has to appear in a
human body of the present age. What we have to attain through
spiritual development has to be attained in the invisible members of
our being; but in a future state what is attained spiritually will be
expressed physically as well. This means that we must picture a man of
the future who will have a quite different external appearance; his
brain and heart will have been completely transformed and he will have
developed a new organ. Just as the brain now lies above the heart, the
transformed heart of the future will have a new position in relation
to the brain. But between these two states there will again be a
Pralaya. Man's present existence must be obliterated physically and a
new state must follow.
There are therefore three successive states of humanity. (1) Man as
heart-man; (2) Present-day man when everything is related to the brain
and its activity; (3) Man of the future, of whose nature we can have a
faint inkling.
When we contemplate man as he is today, we are bound to say that in
his present form he can be imagined only on the Earth. Anyone who
contemplates man in his connection with the whole of Earth-existence
will say: Man is as the Earth is, for he is connected with the forces
of the Earth; in his body the substances can be combined in no other
way than they actually are. Imagine the Earth only slightly altered
and man in his present form simply could not live on it. The air must
be constituted exactly as it is and substances combined as they are.
We cannot picture present-day man as a being with a physical body
without picturing the whole Earth as it is. If, therefore, reference
is made to an earlier stage of man, to the earlier heart-man, we must
picture him connected with a different planetary condition; and if at
some time in the future man acquires the faculties which the spiritual
investigator of today already possesses, we must again picture him on
a different planet, not on our Earth as it is at present. If we are to
find our bearings by means of a kind of Ariadne-thread, we must
picture to ourselves that just as man has evolved from an earlier
state, so the whole Earth has evolved with him; that it too points to
an earlier planet out of which it has evolved, to a new state in the
future. Between the two lies a period of darkening. The state out of
which the Earth has evolved and whence man derives his earlier form,
is the Old Moon-state of the Earth, and the state into which the Earth
will evolve in the future, when man will have a new form, is the
Jupiter-state. The Earth has evolved out of an Old Moon planetary
state and will evolve into a Jupiter-state.
Picture to yourselves that such transformations can only take place as
a result of all conditions in the human kingdom being changed. During
the Old Moon-state it was the forces of the World of Spirit that
flowed into man; during the Earth-state proper the forces flow from
the World of Reason; in the Jupiter-state the forces of the World of
Archetypal Images will stream in. The influences from spiritual worlds
upon these three states are in each case quite different.
Here we have a glimpse of something that modern science cannot
discover. It tries to explain the origin of a planetary system by the
illustration of a rotating drop of oil. We, however, have a conception
of how a planet arises out of a preceding form. True, we have no
professor who rotates a drop of oil but we have a picture of certain
cosmic Beings working from different spiritual realms and enabling the
various planets to come into being. We have a picture of the Spiritual
at work in the Physical.
I have shown you that the structure of man must be in conformity with
the structure of the Earth. Our present Earth is only possible at a
certain distance from the Sun and in a definite relationship with the
other planets. If anything whatever were to change in the solar
system, man too would be quite different; with the transformation of
the Old Moon into our Earth, the whole solar system changed.
So we see that a connecting thread can be found between the
transformation of the Microcosm and of the Macrocosm. Beings are
active in both cases. When our Earth becomes Jupiter the whole solar
system will change. The change will be preceded by a kind of
darkening; outwardly it appears as if there were a mist or fog in
which Beings from the realms of spirit are perpetually at work. Before
our present solar system came into existence there was an earlier
system out of which Beings brought forth the present one.
And so we go back and back and back, and finally we come to a
condition so different, so utterly unlike that of today that in face
of it ordinary questioning ceases to have meaning. We must also learn
how to frame our questions differently when we come to consider other
states of world-existence. Why do we ask questions? We ask them
because our intellect is constituted in a certain way. But our
intellect came into existence only when the brain had been formed.
Intellectual questioning therefore loses all sense when applied to
states before the intellect itself was there. In the worlds which
constituted only the foundation of the intellectual world,
intellectual questioning no longer has any meaning. There we must
resort to other means of enquiry, other means of cognition. People who
see no farther than their noses believe that it is possible to pump
the whole world dry with the ordinary kind of questioning. But each
single thing must be explored in the way that is appropriate to it. In
regard to the worlds that preceded our Earth we can find our bearings
only by means of the forces which find expression in the thinking of
the heart, in the logic of the heart.
Man needs to change in respect of his intellectual curiosity. And
although we need not be as impolite as the man who answered those who
were asking what God was doing before he created the world, by saying
that God was busy cutting rods for futile questioners, nevertheless
that answer gives a certain indication that man must also change his
mode of thinking if he desires to attain knowledge of higher worlds.
Last Modified: 02-Nov-2024
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