3
East
and West in History
GOETHE,
who gave simple expression to so much that men find great and
moving, once wrote: “Each man should consider with what
part of himself he can and will influence his time!”
When we allow such a saying — with all that we know may
have passed through Goethe's mind as he said it — to
affect us, we are initiated into the whole relationship of man
to history. For most people, of course, the search for their
own particular standpoint, from which they can deploy
their powers in the development of humanity in accordance
with the spirit of the age in which they live, is more or less
unconscious. Yet even a superficial examination of human
development shows that men have increasingly been compelled to
organize their lives in a conscious manner. Instinctive living
was a feature of earlier civilizations. The transition to
increasing consciousness is itself a factor in history.
Nowadays, indeed, we can see that the increasing
complications of life require man to participate in the
development of humanity with a certain degree of consciousness,
however humble his position. It is unfortunate that as yet we
really have very few points d'appui in the study of
mankind's historical development to help us in our
efforts to reach this point of view.
As
a scientific discipline, this study is of fairly recent origin,
after all. Its novelty is apparent, one might say, in the
historical writing that has been published.
Historians have produced magnificent things. In developing from
the unscientific chronicle-writing that still prevailed even in
the eighteenth century, however, history, falling as it did
within the age of natural science, attempted increasingly to
take on the forms appropriate to that science. Thus the
historical attitude gradually became identified with the
concept post hoc, ergo propter hoc. Although this
way of looking at human history as cause and effect does indeed
carry us a long way, yet to the unprejudiced observer
there remain countless facts in history which are not
consistent with a simple causal interpretation. And at this
point we are struck by an image that can symbolize history: the
image of a flowing river. We cannot simply derive its features
at a given point from what lies a little farther upstream, but
must realize that in its depths there operate all kinds of
forces that may come to the surface at any point, and may throw
up waves which are not determined by those that went
before.
So,
too, human history seems to point to unspoken depths, to
resemble a surface on which countless forces impinge from
below. And human observation can scarcely presume to gain
a complete picture of the particular features of a given epoch.
For this reason, the study of history will doubtless have to
come more and more to be what I would call symptomatological.
In the human organism itself, which is such a richly
differentiated whole, a great deal has to be discovered about
its health and ill-health by observing the symptoms through
which the organism expresses itself. In the same way, we must
gradually accustom ourselves to study historical
symptomatology. We must learn to interpret surface features
precisely, and, by including more and more symptoms in our
interpretation, contrive to allow the vital essence of
historical development to work on us. In this way, by a
spiritual comprehension of the forces of human history —
which in all kinds of indirect ways also affect our own soul
— we can find our own place in the development of
mankind.
A
view of the world and of life such as I have put before you is
particularly fitted to reveal how, even in one's most intimate
inner experiences, what is historically symptomatic is
manifest. What I have described to you, the awakening of
cognitive capacities that are not present in ordinary
consciousness, being dormant deep down in the soul
— this awakening of capacities appropriate to
modern man leads us to see that we must develop these cognitive
powers differently nowadays from the way they were developed in
earlier times. Not only this: when we do develop
these powers, the spiritual vision that results is something
quite different to the man of today from what it was, for
example, to the men of the ancient East, which we touched
on the day before yesterday in describing yoga exercises.
Looking at these ancient Oriental attitudes, as they were
developed by men who sought to elicit, from within,
powers of cognition reaching into the super-sensible sphere, we
conclude: everything we know about it indicates that such
knowledge, in gaining a place within the soul, took on a
permanent and enduring character there. What men think in
ordinary life, what they absorb from the experiences of earthly
existence, and what then takes root as memories — these
have permanence in the soul; and we are simply unhealthy in
spirit if we have any considerable gaps in our capacity to
remember what we have experienced in the world from a given
point in childhood onwards. To this state of mental permanence
were admitted all the insights into the spiritual world gained
by ancient Oriental methods. They deposited memories, as
the ordinary experiences of the day deposit memories. The
characteristic of the early Oriental seer was precisely
that he found himself increasingly absorbed into a lasting
communion with the spiritual world, as he made his way into it.
Once inside the divine and spiritual world, he knew himself to
be secure. He knew that it also represented something enduring
for his soul.
The
opposite, we may say, is true of anyone today who, by virtue of
the powers to which mankind has advanced since those early
days, rises to a certain spiritual vision. He develops his
views on the spiritual sphere to the point of experiencing
them; but they cannot possibly become memories for him in the
way that the thoughts we experience daily in the outside world
become memories.
It
is certainly a great disappointment to many who struggle to
gain a certain spiritual vision by modern methods to find that,
although they do gain glimpses of this spiritual world, these
are transitory, like the sight of a real object in the outside
world, which we no longer perceive when we go away from it. In
this mental activity, there is no incorporation into memory in
the ordinary sense, but a momentary contact with the spiritual
world. If we later wish to regain this contact, we cannot
simply call up the experience from our recollection. What we
can do, however, is to recollect something that was an
ordinary experience in the physical world: how by
developing our powers we achieved our experience of the
spiritual world. We can then retrace our steps and repeat
the experience, exactly as we return to a sensory perception.
This is one of the most important factors that authenticate
this modern vision: that what we see does not combine with our
physical being; for if thoughts are to gain some permanence as
memories, they must always be combined with our physical being,
held fast by our organism.
Perhaps I may interpolate a personal observation here by way of
explanation. Anyone who has some contact with the spiritual
world, and wishes to communicate what he has experienced, is
unable to make this communication from memory in the usual
sense. He always has to make a certain effort to attain again
to direct spiritual observation. For this reason, even if
someone who speaks out of the spiritual world gives a lecture
thirty times, no lecture will be an exact repetition of the one
before: each must be drawn direct from experience.
Here is something which, in my view, can remove certain
anxieties that might arise in troubled minds about this modern
spiritual vision. Many people today, with some justification,
see the grandeur of the most significant riddles of existence
in the very fact that they can never be completely solved. Such
people are frightened of a philistinism of spiritual vision
which might confront them with the assertion that the riddles
of existence could be finally “solved” by a
philosophy. Well, the view of life we are discussing here
cannot speak of such a “solution,” for the reason
that has just been given: what is always being forgotten must
constantly be re-acquired.
But
therein lies its vitality! We are brought back again to life as
it is revealed externally in nature, as opposed to what we
experience inwardly on seeing our thoughts become
memories. Perhaps what I want to say will sound banal to
many people; but it is not meant to be banal. No one can say: I
ate yesterday and so I am full, I do not need to eat today or
tomorrow or the day after; similarly, no one can say of modern
spiritual vision: It is complete, it has now become part of
memory, and we know where we are with it once and for all.
Indeed, it is not just that we must always struggle afresh to
perceive what seeks to manifest itself to man; but that, if we
dwell continuously over a long period on the same concepts from
the spiritual world, seeking them out repeatedly, it will even
happen that doubts and uncertainties appear; it is
characteristic of true spiritual vision that we should have to
conquer these doubts and uncertainties again and again
in the vital life of the soul. We are thus never condemned to
the calm of completion when we strive towards spiritual vision
in the modern sense.
There is another point, too. This modern spiritual vision
demands above all what may be called “presence of
mind.” The spiritual visionary of ancient Oriental times
could take his time. What he achieved was a permanent
possession. If man as he is today wishes to look at the
spiritual world, he must be spiritually quick-witted, if I may
so put it; he must realize that the revelations of the
spiritual world appear, only to vanish again at the next
moment. They must therefore be caught by “presence of
mind” at the moment of their occurrence. And many people
prepare themselves carefully for spiritual vision, but
fail to attain it through omitting to train this
“presence of mind.” Only by doing so can we avoid a
situation in which we only become sufficiently attentive when
the thing itself is past.
I
have now described to you many of the features that the modern
seeker after the spiritual world encounters. In the course of
my lectures, other features will become apparent. Today, I
should like to point to just one more of them, since it will
lead directly to a certain historical view of humanity.
When we try as modern men in this sense to find our way with
certainty into the spiritual world, without becoming
eccentrics, it is best for us to start from concepts and
ways of thinking we have obtained from a fundamental study of
nature and by immersion in a fundamental natural science. No
concepts are quite so suitable for the meditative life I have
described as those gained from modern science — not just
for us to absorb their content, but rather to
meditate upon it. As modern men, we have really learnt
to think through science. We must always remember that we
have learnt through science the thinking that is suited to our
present epoch. Yet what we gain in thinking techniques
from modern science is only a preparation for a true spiritual
vision.
No
logical argument or philosophical speculation will enable us to
use ordinary thinking, trained on the objects of the outside
world and on experiment and observation, as anything more than
a preparation. We must then wait until the spiritual world
approaches us in the way I have been describing. For each
step we take in the observation of the spiritual world we must
first become ripe. We cannot of our own volition do
anything except make of ourselves an organ to which the
spiritual world is willing to reveal itself. Objective
revelation is something we must wait for. And anyone who has
experience in such things knows that he has to wait years or
decades for certain kinds of knowledge. Again, it is
precisely this that guarantees the objectivity of what is real
in the spiritual world — that is, of knowledge.
This again was not so for those in ancient times in the Orient
who sought through their exercises the way into the
super-sensible world. The nature of their thinking from
the beginning was such that they needed only to extend it to
find the way into the spiritual world which I described two
days ago. Even in ordinary life, therefore, their thinking
needed only to be extended to lead to a certain clairvoyance.
But because it developed from the ordinary life of the
times, this was a rather dream-like vision, whereas the vision
towards which we as modern men strive operates with complete
self-possession, like that which is active in the solution of
mathematical problems. It is just when we turn our attention to
the intimate experiences of spiritual research that we see in
this change the expression of great transformations in human
nature as a whole in the course of historical times. I mean
times that are “historical” in the sense that they
are approachable not only by anyone who can examine the
history both of men and of the cosmos through spiritual vision,
but also by anyone who examines the external documents quite
straightforwardly. In these external documents, too, we
can look at early periods in the spiritual life of humanity and
perceive how they differ from the position within this
spiritual world which we and our time must aspire to.
By
virtue of the fact that our thinking cannot just be extended
automatically to bring us to spiritual vision, but can only
make us ready to see the spiritual world when it appears to us,
it is suited to operate within the field of experiment and
observation, within the field that natural science has made its
own. Yet just because we perceive what inner rigour and
strength our thinking has achieved, we shall be all the more
likely to apply it to our training, and thus be able to await
the revelation of the spiritual world in the true sense of the
word. Even here, it is apparent that our thinking today is
rather different from that of earlier times.
I
shall have opportunities later on for historical digressions.
Much that refers to the outside world can then be deduced from
what I have to say today. Today, I shall speak rather about the
inner powers of man's development. This is a subject that
brings us in the end to thinking and to the transformation of
this thinking in the course of man's development. But in
the last analysis all external history is dependent on
thinking, and what he achieves in history man produces from his
thoughts, together with his feelings and impulses of will; and
therefore, if we want to find the deepest historical impulses,
we must turn to human thinking.
But
the thinking employed today for natural science on the one
hand, and for achieving human freedom on the other, differs
quite considerably from that which we find in earlier ages of
mankind. There will, of course, be many people who will say:
thinking is thinking, whether it occurs in John Stuart Mill or
in Soloviev, in Plato, Aristotle and Heraclitus or in the
thinkers of the ancient East. Anyone with an intuitive insight
into the way thoughts have functioned within humanity, however,
will conclude: our thinking today is fundamentally
something very different from that of earlier epochs.
This raises an important problem in human
development.
Let
us examine our present-day way of thinking. (I shall have an
opportunity later to give evidence from natural science for
what I am now expounding historically.) What we call thinking
actually developed from the handling of language. Anyone with a
sense of what is operative in a people's language — of
the logic, familiar to us from childhood, operative in the
language — and with enough psychological awareness to
observe this in life, will find that our thinking today
actually derives from what language makes of our soul's
potentialities. I would say: from language we gradually
separate thoughts and the laws thoughts obey: our thinking
today is given us by speech.
Yet
this thinking that is given us by speech is also the thinking
that has come of age in human civilization since the days of
Copernicus, Galileo and Giordano Bruno, in periods when
humanity has been devoting its attention principally to
the observation of nature in the modern sense. The
thinking that is applied to observation and experiment
inevitably becomes a part of us; we refine what we absorb with
language as part of our common heritage until it becomes a
thought-structure by which we then apprehend the outside
world.
But
we need only go back a relatively short distance in human
history to encounter something quite different. Let us go back,
for example, to the civilization of Greece. Anyone who can
enter the world of Greek art, Greek literature, Greek
philosophy — can catch, in fact, the mood of Greece
— will discover quite empirically that the Greeks
still experienced thoughts closely interwoven with words.
Thought and word were one. By the concept logos, they
meant something different from what we mean when we speak of a
thought or a thought sequence. They spoke of thought as if the
element of speech was its natural physical aspect. Just as in
the physical world we cannot conceive our soul as spatially
separated from our physical organism, so too in Greek
consciousness thought was not separated from word. The
two were felt as a unity, and thought flowed along on the waves
of words.
But
this produces an attitude to the outside world quite
different from ours, where thought has already separated
from word. And thus, when we go back into Hellenic
civilization, fundamentally we have to adopt a quite
different temper of soul if we are to penetrate into the real
experiences of the Greek soul. By the same token, all the
science, for example, that was produced in Greece no longer
seems like science by modern standards. The scientist of today
will say: the Greeks really had no natural science; they had a
natural philosophy. And he will be right. But he will have
perceived only a quarter, so to speak, of the problem.
Something much more profound is involved. What this is we can
explore only by regaining spiritual vision.
If
we make use of the way of thinking which is particularly apt
for scientific research, and to which we now train ourselves by
inheritance and education, and develop what we call scientific
concepts, then in the nature of our consciousness we separate
these concepts strictly from what we call artistic experience
and what we call religious experience. It is a fundamental
characteristic of our age that modern man demands a
science which involves no element of artistic creation or
outlook, and nothing that claims to be the object of religious
consciousness and religious devotion to the temporal or
the divine. This, we conclude, is a characteristic of our
present civilization. And we find this characteristic
increasingly well developed the further West we go in our
examination of the foundations of human civilization. This is
the characteristic: that modern man keeps science, art and
religious life separate in his soul. He even endeavours to form
a special concept of science, to prevent art from invading
science, to exclude the imagination from everything that is
“scientific,” except for that part concerned with
inventions; and then to put forward another kind of certainty
— that of faith — to play its part in religious
life.
If
you try, in the manner I have described, to rise to a spiritual
perception, then, starting of course from the trained
scientific thought of the present, you arrive at what I have
characterized as vital, plastic thinking. With this plastic
thinking, too, you feel equipped to comprehend, in what I will
call a qualitatively mathematical way, what cannot be
comprehended with ordinary mathematics and geometry: living
things. With vital thinking you feel yourself equipped to
apprehend living things.
When we look at the purely chemical compounds in the
inorganic world, we find that all their materials and
forces are in a state of more or less unstable equilibrium. The
equilibrium becomes increasingly unstable and the
interaction increasingly complicated, the further we ascend
towards living things. And as the equilibrium becomes more
unstable, so the living structure increasingly evades
quantitative understanding: only vital thought can connect up
with a living structure in the way that mathematical thought
does with a lifeless one. We thus arrive (and as I have
previously indicated, I am saying something now that will be
shocking to many people) at an epistemological position where
ordinary logical abstract thinking is continually being
converted into a kind of artistic thinking or artistic
outlook, yet one as exact as ever mathematics or mechanics can
be.
I
know how, impelled by the modern spirit of science, people
shrink from transposing anything exact into the artistic
sphere, which represents a kind of qualitative mathesis. But
what is the good of epistemology insisting that we can only
arrive at objective knowledge by moving from one logical
deduction to the next, and by excluding from knowledge all
these artistic features — if nature and reality do in
fact operate artistically at a certain level, so that they only
yield to an artistic mode of comprehension?
In
particular, we cannot examine what it is that shapes the human
organism from within, as I described the day before
yesterday — that operates in us as a first
approximation to a super-sensible man — unless we
allow logical thinking to flow over into a kind of artistic
creation, and unless from a qualitative mathematics we
can recreate the creative human form. All we need is to retain
the scientific spirit and absorb the artistic spirit.
In
short, we must create from the science of today an artistic
outlook, whilst maintaining the whole spirit of science. In so
doing, however, we approach the reconciliation of science and
art that Goethe sensed when he said: “The beautiful is a
manifestation of secret laws of nature — laws
which, but for its appearance, would have remained
eternally hidden from us.” Goethe was well aware that, if
we seek to comprehend nature or the world as a whole solely
with the kinds of thought that prove to be healthy and correct
for the inorganic world, then the totality of the world simply
will not yield to our enquiry. And we shall not find the bridge
from inorganic to organic science until we transpose abstract
cognition into inwardly vitalized cognition, which is at the
same time an inward freedom of action.
In
thus turning, within the mental endeavour of today, to a
comprehension of living things, we also come closer to what was
present in the Greek mind, not in the controlled and conscious
way at which we aim, but rather instinctively. And no one can
really understand what was being expressed even in Plato, still
less in the pre-Socratic philosophers, unless he is aware of
the presence there of a co-operation between the artistic and
the philosophical and scientific elements in man. Only at the
end of the Hellenic age — in philosophy, for instance,
with Aristotle — does thought become separated from
language and later develop via scholasticism into scientific
thought. Only at the end of the Hellenic age is thought sifted
out. Earlier on, thought is an artistic element in
Greece. And, fundamentally, Greek philosophy can only be
understood if it is also apprehended with an artistic
understanding.
But
this now leads us to see Greece in general as the
civilization where science and art are still linked
together. This is apparent both in its art and in its
science. Naturally, I cannot go into every aspect of this in
detail. But if you will look at Greek sculpture with sound
common sense and a sound, spiritually informed eye, you
will find that the Greek sculptor did not work from a model as
is done today: his plastic creation sprang from an inner
experience. In forming the muscle, the bent arm, the hand, he
made what he felt within him. He felt an inner, living, second
man — what I will call an ethereal man; he experienced
himself through his soul and in this way felt his outward
envelope. His inner experience went over into the
sculpture. Art was a revelation of this vision. And the vision,
which was carried over into the thought living in the language,
became a science that retained an artistic character by
being one with what the spirit of the Greek language made
manifest to a Greek.
We
thus enter, with Greece, a world accessible to us otherwise
only if we advance from our own science, divorced from art, to
a kind of knowledge that flows over into the artistic sphere. I
would say: what we now evolve consciously was once
instinctively experienced. Indeed, we can actually see
how, in the course of history, this association of art and
science gradually passes into the present complete separation
of the two.
As
humanity developed through Roman times into the Middle Ages,
the higher levels of education and training had a quite
different basis from that which later prevailed. Later,
in the scientific age, the main concern was to
communicate to men the results of observation and experiment.
In our education, we live almost entirely by absorbing these
results. Looking back at the period when some influence of
Greek civilization was still at work, we can see that even
scientific training touched man closely then and was aimed
rather at developing abilities in him. We see how in the Middle
Ages the student had to work through the seven liberal arts, as
they were called: grammar, rhetoric, dialectic, arithmetic,
geometry, astronomy and music. What mattered was
abilities. What you were to become as a scientist you achieved
through the seven liberal arts — and yet these were
already well on the way to becoming knowledge and science, as
later happened.
If
you study the now much-despised scholasticism of the Middle
Ages, which stands at the meeting-place of earlier times and
our own, you will see what a wonderful training it provided in
the art of thinking. One could wish that people today would
only assimilate something of the best type of medieval
scholasticism, which fostered in men a technique and art
of thinking. This is particularly necessary if, as indeed we
must, we are to arrive at clear-cut concepts. By starting from
the attitude of today, however, with its strict
separation of science, art and religion, and tracing
human development back through the Middle Ages, we approach the
civilization of Greece. And the further we go back in this, the
more clearly we see the fusion of science and art.
Yet
even in Greek civilization there is something separate from
science and art: religious life. It affects men quite
differently from scientific or artistic experience. The vital
element in art and science exists objectively in space and
time: the content of religious consciousness is beyond
space and time. It belongs to eternity; admittedly, it is
brought to birth by space and time, but we cannot approach it
by remaining within space and time.
We
can see even from the external documents what spiritual science
today needs to discover about these things. And I should like
to draw attention to a work which has just appeared in Austria
and which is extraordinarily helpful in this connection. It is
Otto Willmann's History of Idealism, a book that stands
head and shoulders above many other currently concerned with
similar problems. (One can judge such things
dispassionately, even if they spring from views opposed to
one's own, provided that they lead to something beneficial to
spiritual life.)
In
Greece we find on the one hand this unity of art and science,
and on the other hand the religious life to which the Greek
devotes himself. In popular religion, it is true, this is
represented plastically, but in the religious mysteries it is
gained by initiation in a deeper sense. But everywhere we can
see that religion plays no part in the soul-powers evolved in
science and art. Instead, in order to partake of the religious
life, the soul must first take on that temper of piety, that
universal love, in which it can comprehend revelations of
the divine and spiritual realm with which man can unite in
religious devotion.
Let
us now look across at the Orient! The further back we go, the
more we find that its spiritual life is something different
again. Here, once more, we can be guided by what we have gained
through our modern spiritual training: we ascend from
experience of the vital concept to that inner pain and
suffering which we have to overcome in order that our whole
self may become a sense-organ or spiritual organ; and we
cease to experience the world in the physical body alone, by
existing in the world independently of our physical body. In so
doing, we exist in the world in such a way that we learn to
experience a reality outside space and time. We thus experience
the reality of the spiritual sphere and its influence on the
temporal in the way I have described. But if by
overcoming pain and suffering within ourselves we do gain
spiritual vision, we shall have brought into knowledge
something of this other element — the element which,
whilst remaining intact as real knowledge, real spiritual
cognition, is continually leading knowledge into religious
experience. And while continuing to experience what has
survived from ancient times as a religious element in venerable
traditional concepts, we also experience a similar spiritual
element of more recent origin, if we work our way up to a
cognition that can exist in the sphere of religious
devotion.
Only then do we understand how deep in man lie the springs of
the unity of religion, art and science in the ancient East.
They were once united: what man knew and admitted to his
corpus of ideas was another aspect of what he set up to shine
before him in artistic beauty; and what he thus knew and
comprehended, and made to radiate beauty, was also something
spiritual to which he made his devotions and which he treated
as subject to a higher order. Here we see religion, art and
science united.
This, however, takes us back into an age where not only did
thought live on the waves of words, but where also it was man's
experience that thought inhabited regions deeper even than
words, and was connected with the innermost texture of human
nature. For this reason, the Indian yogi elicited thoughts from
breathing, which goes deeper than words. Only gradually did
thought raise itself into words and then, in modern
civilization, beyond words. Originally, however, thought was
connected with more intimate and deeper human experience, and
that was when the unity of religious, artistic and scientific
life could unfold in complete harmony.
Today, there remains in the Orient an echo of what I have
described to you as a harmonious unity of religion, art
and philosophy, as it appears for instance in the vedas.
But it is an echo which requires to be understood — and
which we cannot easily understand simply from the standpoint of
that isolation of religion, art and science which exists
in Western civilization. We do truly understand it, however, if
by a new spiritual science we rise to an outlook that can again
produce a harmony of religion, art and science. In the Orient,
meanwhile, we still have the remnants of that early unity
before us. If you look, you will see that just where the East
touches and influences Europe, the echo still persists. A past
historical epoch remains present at a certain spot on the
earth. We can perceive this presence in a great philosopher of
Eastern Europe, in Soloviev.
This philosopher of the second half of the nineteenth century
has a quite special effect on us. When we look at the
philosophers of the West, John Stuart Mill or Herbert Spencer
or others, we find that their standpoint has grown out of the
scientific thinking I have described today. In Soloviev,
however, something survives which presents religion, art and
science as a unity. When we first begin to read Soloviev, it is
true, we notice that he uses the philosophical language
he found in Kant or Comte; he has complete command of the modes
of expression of these philosophers of Western and Central
Europe. But when we become at home in his mind and in what he
expresses by the use of these modes, our awareness of him
changes. He arouses a sense of the past; he seems like someone
who has come to life again from the discussions that
preceded the Council of Nicaea. We perceive, in fact, the tone
that prevails in the discussions of the early Christian
fathers; and in those early centuries of Christianity there
certainly did survive an echo of the unity of religion
and science. This unity, in which volition and thought also
flow together, informs Soloviev's East European
philosophy of life.
And
if we look at the culture and civilization around us today, we
do indeed find in the more Westerly parts just that separation
of religion, art and science; what really belongs to our moment
of history, the real basis of our activities and our picture of
the world, is the discipline that is strictly built up on
scientific thinking, whereas in art forms and religious
matters we take over older traditional material. We can see
today how few new styles are produced in art, and how
everywhere old ones live on. The vital element in our time is
what is vital in scientific thinking. We must wait for a time
that will have lively imaginal thinking as I have described it
— a thinking that will again lead to what is vital and
will be capable of artistic creativity in new styles,
without becoming insipidly allegorical and
inartistic.
Scientific thought, we find, is thus the motive impulse of the
immediate present, especially the further West we move; while
in the East we find an echo of an earlier unity of religion,
art and science.
This religious strain forms part of the temperament of East
Europeans, with which they look at the world. They are able to
understand the West only indirectly, via a spiritual
development like that contained in our spiritual science
movement; they have no direct understanding of the West,
precisely because people in the West attempt to distinguish
sharply religion and art from scientific thought.
We
who live between the two must allow the world of the senses to
obtrude on us and must entertain the thought appropriate
to it; but we cannot help also looking inward and
experiencing our inner self, and for the inner self we
need religious experience. But I would say: more deeply buried
in human nature than the religious experience we need within us
and the scientific experience we need for observing the outside
world, is the link between the two, artistic experience.
Artistic experience is thus something which today is not a
first demand on life. We have seen that Western civilization is
concerned with scientific thoughts, and Eastern
civilization with religious ones. We have seen that we
are part of an artistic tradition, but that we cannot
feel entirely at home in it, indeed that the artistic tradition
itself is in many ways a revival. And yet one must say: the
yearning for a balance of this kind is certainly present in the
central region between East and West. We see it, for example,
when we look at Goethe.
For
what was Goethe's great longing when, with what I would call
his predominantly artistic talents, he was faced by the riddles
of nature? His artistic sense transformed itself naturally into
his scientific outlook. One could say: in Goethe, the
representative Central European, we find art and science
all of a piece; all of a piece, too, is Goethe's life when we
follow its development and know how to locate it properly
within the history of recent times. Goethe made himself at home
in the collaboration of art and science. There thus arose in
him a longing that can only be understood historically: the
urge towards Italy, to a more southerly civilization. After
looking at the works of art he found in the South, he wrote to
his friends in Weimar something that followed on from the
philosophy and science he had come to know there in Weimar. In
Spinoza he had found divine power represented philosophically.
That did not satisfy him. He wanted an extended and
spiritualized approach to the world and to spirituality. And in
the sight of the Southern works of art he wrote to his friends:
“Here is necessity, here is God!” “I have an
idea that the Greeks operated according to the laws by which
nature herself operates; I am on their track.” Here
Goethe is trying to merge science and art.
If
in conclusion I introduce a personal note, I do so only to show
you how a single pointer can reveal the way in which the Middle
region can take up a position between East and West. I
encountered this pointer some forty years ago here in Vienna.
In my youth I made the acquaintance of Karl Julius Schröer
— he was then lecturing on the history of German
literature from Goethe onwards. In his introductory lecture he
made a number of important points; and he then said something
entirely characteristic of the longing that instinctively
inspired the best minds in Central Europe. Schröer's
words, too, were instinctive. Yet in fact he expressed a
longing to combine art and science, to combine Western
scientific thought and Eastern religious thought in artistic
vision; and he summed up what he wanted to say in the, to me,
significant words: “The Germans have an aesthetic
conscience.”
Of
course, this does not describe an actual state of affairs. It
expresses a longing, the longing to look at art and science
together. And the feeling when we do look at them
together has been finely expressed by another Central European,
one whom I have just characterized: when we can look at science
and art together, we can then raise ourselves to religious
experience, if only the science and art contain true
spirituality in Goethe's sense. This is what he meant by
saying:
Whoever has science and art.
Has
religion too;
Whoever does not have them,
Let
him have religion.
Anyone with an aesthetic conscience attains to scientific and
religious conscientiousness too. From this we can see where we
stand today.
I
do not like using the word “transition” — all
periods are transitional — but today, in a time of
transition, what matters is the kind of transition. In
our time we have experienced and developed to its supreme
triumph the separation of religion, art and science. What must
now be sought, and what alone can provide an understanding
between East and West, is the harmonization, the inner unity of
religion, art and science. And this inner unity is what the
philosophy of life of which I have been speaking seeks to
attain.
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