4
Spiritual
Geography
WE CAN
describe the features of the earth in accordance with the principles
of physical geography. In the same way, the spiritual impulses at
work on earth (and already briefly characterized in these lectures)
can be described by a kind of spiritual geography —
especially the interplay of Eastern and Western impulses in
human life, with all their various differences. What I have to
say today in this direction is bound to remain rather sketchy;
but it is more important to find a specific point of view for
looking at much that I have already outlined than to give a
detailed description.
The
relationship of East and West is often expressed
symbolically by saying that light comes from the East.
Looking at the East, Western man — the man of recent
civilization in general — receives the impression of a
dream-like spiritual life. Modem spiritual life is used to
sharply delineated concepts, closely linked to external
observation; in contrast, the notions of the Orient —
shifting, fluctuating, less closely and less sharply linked to
externals — show up as dream-like. Admittedly, from this
dream-like spiritual life, embodied in the most splendid poems,
the Vedas, there did of course then develop the clear-cut
concepts of a comprehensive philosophy — Vedanta, for
example. These concepts were not gained by examining external
data, that is analytically, but emerged from an inwardly
experienced and apprehended spiritual life.
When this dream-like spiritual life works on us, however, and
we lovingly submit to it without at first noticing how much it
differs from our own, it has a curious effect. Once we allow
its various configurations to affect our soul, we cannot stop
there. We cannot merely take over its concepts and ideas. In
absorbing them, whether from the literature or the philosophy
(including such forms of these as have survived in the East
down to the present), we feel a spiritual need to go beyond
these images, ideas and concepts. When an Oriental idea, such
as that of man's relation to the secrets and the mysterious
workings of nature and the world, affects us, it is often
accompanied in our mind by something that symbolizes it for the
Orient too: the flower of the lotus, as it folds its petals
about what must remain mysteriously hidden. We may
immerse ourselves lovingly in shifting concepts that are more
fitted gently to touch external phenomena and surround them
with a mist, than to perceive them in sharp contours, and we
may enter their intertwining branches; and if we do, there will
inevitably appear to us all the intertwining, branching
vegetation of the East and, with it, all that the human hand,
the human spirit and civilization have produced from stone and
other materials in line with these flowing, branching
concepts. We may say: in immersing itself in these
concepts, our soul inevitably sees before it a nature similar
in its life, diversity and imaginative working to the soul's
experience of the concepts themselves.
There appears to be no objective reason for man to abandon this
Oriental spiritual activity in favour of a “faithful
observation of nature;” indeed, it seems to me
rather that there is in the Oriental concepts themselves an
incentive not merely to accept them, but to apply them to the
outside world. Europeans may feel that such things cannot be
applied to the outside world, because of their vagueness, their
(to them) fantastic character. If so, we may ask: How, then,
can we track, with sharply delineated concepts, the
shapes of clouds, fluctuating and rapidly changing as they are?
Yet track them we must, if we wish to observe nature's workings
in immediate revelation, as they appear to the human senses and
the human soul.
Why
is this so? It seems to me that there can be only one reason:
that in what reaches us from this Eastern spiritual activity,
there survives an element from which it was once directly
created.
At
the time when the Oriental was developing the finest part of
his philosophy of life (which has since come down to his
descendants in a partially decadent condition), the East
created everything with devoted love. Love lives in each of its
ideas, concepts and images and in them we perceive love. The
love seeks to flow out into objects. And it flows out according
to its nature, and conjures up before our soul the symbols that
the Oriental established, with an inner understanding of much
that functions supersensibly, in seeking to establish what he
perceived as the spiritual dement in things. Of course, this is
not to assert that this configuration of spirit, if
extended over all the earth, would be an unmixed blessing for
the development of the world. But once it has appeared on
earth, and exerted its influence over other regions, it must be
considered objectively, especially at a time when we need to
foster understanding between men.
Against it, we may set the particular outlook that has
developed, certainly with no less justification, but in a
quite different form, further West — and in this
respect we ourselves belong in many ways to the West. Here, we
find, it is regarded as an ideal to stand back from what the
senses observe directly, what extends in space and time, and to
test what nature offers, and what should lead us to the world's
secret, for position, motion, dimensions and weight. What
presents itself directly to the eye is dissected and placed
under a microscope, and gives rise to notions that could only
emerge under a microscope.
Let
us imagine for a moment that we are in the laboratory: how
heavily equipped we are with these concepts, so remote from
direct observation! Look how we regard the light flooding
through the world! How we regard it by means of abstract
concepts! We need them, if we are to reach understanding.
But how remote are the observations we record on light and
colour from what we encounter in wood and meadow, cloud-shape
and sun! We may say: what we formulate in our sharply
delineated concepts — with the balance, the
measuring-rod, the most varied counting devices — takes
us into some of nature's shallows and solves some riddles, but
it does not take us to direct observation of nature. It is all
very well to say: direct your attention to sensory observation
and then try to derive your philosophy of life from it. But
this is not what happens at all! The scientific view of life we
establish is far removed from what the senses observe.
What we ought to say is this: if we establish our knowledge by
using the equipment of learning with which we have
harvested perhaps the finest fruits of present-day
natural science, we shall have to retune our soul before we can
approach nature again. If as botanists we have used the
microscope extensively and learnt about cell-life, and formed
concepts in the atomistic manner of today, we shall have to
retune our soul before we can recapture a love of the immediate
world of plants as it grows and flowers. If we have formed a
scientific concept of the structure of animal and man,
again we shall have to retune if we want to move on to direct
observation of the animal's shape and actions, and to enjoy the
way it plays in the meadow or turns its melancholy or unmoving
gaze upon us or looks at us confidingly. Equally, we
shall have to retune our soul to share in what the eye can see
when it looks at the human shape, tracing its planes with an
artistic eye. The Oriental has no retuning to do. Since what he
called his science was shot through with love, it led him out
to immediate observation. And this was a direct echo of what he
experienced in his soul.
These are differences of temper in the attitude to life of East
and West. And these different tempers multifariously combine in
the man of the region between. In what we experience
scientifically, artistically and religiously, there flows much
of the temper I have just been characterizing as the one that
comes to us from the Orient. In other respects again, we are
moved by something of the way of experiencing the world kindled
by that scientific attitude which the West has developed
— by youthful science and knowledge, so to speak, as
against the old-established ones of the East. And in every soul
in the civilization that lies between, these two currents flow
together. In the last analysis, the life that surrounds us in
Europe is a fusion — and one whose component currents we
really need to understand.
The
contact between the tempers of East and West in our present
spiritual life can be characterized in another way.
From what I have just said of the East, one thing is clear
about the Oriental. In growing into his spiritual life, he
experiences it as immediate reality; he bears it with him in
his soul as the reality self-evident to him. External nature,
and indeed the entire external world right up to the
constellations, seems to him an echo which is, however,
fundamentally the same as what he bears within him. Yet he
cannot regard as reality what strikes him as an echo, what
seems to him a reflection, as he can regard as reality what he
experiences directly in his soul. He is closely linked with
what he experiences in the spiritual sphere and can say
“It is,” because he feels its existence as if it
were his own, and in this way understands its mode of being.
When he looks out at the reflection of this existence, he knows
that it is not reality in the same sense. If he did not
illuminate it with the light that streams from within him, it
would be dumb and dark. And in becoming more and more aware of
this, he arrives at a temper of soul that says: truth and
reality reside in what the soul experiences directly. What is
reflected to it from without is illusion, maya, incomplete
reality, becoming reality only when it is touched by what must
first reveal itself through the human soul.
Thus we see how the East developed the view that the spiritual
world is reality, and the outside world, that of the senses, is
semblance, the great illusion, maya. It would, however, be
wrong to believe on this account that, in the pre-Buddhist
period for example, the Oriental averted his glance completely
from the outside world. He accepts) it, even if in a higher
sense he must admit that in what extends in space and time he
is dealing not with complete reality but with an illusion, the
great non-being, maya. But this in turn gives a particular
temper to the life of the soul in the East: the soul feels a
close link with the spiritual world and sees, in all that
exists in the external world of the senses, a replica of the
original shape of the world as it exists in the spirit. And in
the end this grows into the view that one's own human sensuous
substance is a replica of a human being whose true existence is
in the spiritual world. And here I would say: the Oriental,
quite consistently, regards the world as made up of replicas of
a spiritual world, just as he regards himself as a replica of
what he was before he descended into the physical and sensuous
world. From his standpoint, the view of man and the view of
nature are in complete harmony.
This harmony is possible; though no longer consonant with our
views, it does indeed express a truth, if somewhat one-sidedly,
as we can see once again if, with the research methods of
spiritual science, which I have been describing in the last few
days, we ourselves take a look at this Oriental mode of
knowledge.
As
I have shown, by awakening powers dormant in the soul we can
attain a view of the spiritual world that yet suits modern man;
we can look once more into a spiritual world; and find this
spiritual world unfolding before our “mind's eye”
just as the physical and sensuous world unfolds before our
physical eye. When we develop this vision, however, the
spiritual world does not remain a mere pantheistic and nebulous
embodiment of universal spirituality; it becomes just as
concrete in its individual forms as the world of the senses in
those of the realms of nature. There will then follow a view of
man that I should now like to characterize.
Let
us start with something familiar to us at every moment in our
lives: an experience of the outside world. We have entered into
this external experience through our sensory perception and
perhaps also through setting our will in motion in some
activity. We live in conjunction with the data of the outside
world. For us, this is an immediate experience. In the last
analysis, human existence on earth is composed of such
experiences. From them, we retain thought-images, which become
our memories. We can look back on our experiences through
bearing within us faded, shadowy and, in fact, mental images of
them.
Let
us be quite honest with ourselves and consider whether, at any
moment in life, our consciousness contains very much more than
memories of external, factual, sensory experiences. Of course,
many a nebulous mystic believes that he can summon up eternal
things from the depths of his soul. If he looked more closely
and could really test the structures he summons from his soul,
he would discover that as a rule they are no more than
transformed external perceptions. Within man, memories are not
only faithfully preserved; they are also transformed in many
ways, and man then fails to recognize them. He thinks that he
is acting as a mystic and summoning something from the depths
of his soul, when he has only called up from his memory a
transformed external experience. Of course, we need only
think of mathematical truths to realize that all kinds of
mental structures do establish themselves in the life of the
soul. But as a rule it is not these structures that the mystic
seeks.
However, anyone who simply wishes to accept the everyday life
of the soul, as it appears in ordinary consciousness, must say:
This life is made up of images that are the remains of our
experiences gained-through perceptions, and of other
experiences within the external sensuous world. When we look at
our soul and at the spiritual element that permeates it, as we
have it in physical life on earth, we can therefore say:
outside is the physical world extending in space, the world
that unfolds its causes and effects in time, the world, that
is, of facts. Here within is the world of shadows in the soul;
we do indeed experience it in general as something
spiritual and vital, but its content we experience only as a
replica of the world of facts and of the senses. Now,
paradoxical as the outlook of today may find it, for the
attitude that I have been expounding in the last few days, the
reverse comes about: in empty consciousness, as a result of
meditation, the spiritual in the world, the spiritual within
natural phenomena, is really experienced; it is observed also
as the soul-spiritual element in man himself, as he is before
he descends into his physical existence from a spiritual world;
the spiritual is observed concretely by the spirit-organ we
have developed; the world about us becomes spiritual, just as
to our senses it is sensuous and physical. And when all this
happens, we begin to perceive — as if in recollection of
the times when we lived as spiritual beings in purely spiritual
worlds — how in its particulars our physical organism is
a replica of the spiritual world that surrounds us. With
physiology and anatomy we can observe our lungs, heart and
other organs only as outer objects; but when we can see the
spiritual world about us, then the lungs and heart as they
really are within us will become for us a replica in the
physical sphere of what is spiritually prefigured. Just as in
our ordinary consciousness the world outside is physical, and
our soul creates replicas as its experiences; so now we learn
that there is a spiritual world outside and that the replicas
of this spiritual world exist in our own organs. We come to
know man's structure only in coming to know the spiritual
world. What is usually called matter then ceases to have the
significance it has assumed in recent civilization, just as
spirit ceases to have the significance of something abstract
that it has had in recent civilization. We can thus see that in
our organic functioning there is in fact a replica of what we
were before we descended into our earthly existence.
At
this stage, we need no longer be frightened even by
materialism, in so far as there is justification for it
— and even materialism has done some good and brought us
countless discoveries. We look at the human brain and the
human nervous system in its physical operation. Of course, we
agree that ordinary, everyday thinking is a function of these
physical organs. We are entirely in agreement with what exact
science must hold about these matters today. But on the other
hand we know that the material forms operating within us are
themselves simply a transformed reflection of the spiritual
sphere. For this reason, the material is acceptable, and
because, in transforming itself into mortal man, the spiritual
has sought out the capacity of brain and nerves to achieve in a
material replica what is spiritually prefigured.
Modern man can see this in his “mind's eye” by
developing the powers of cognition of which I have been
speaking in the last few days. Yet there is a dream-like
anticipation of it, I would say, in the Oriental philosophy of
life I have outlined. This philosophy has become old and
senile, but certain of its features still work effectively in
our heart and soul. In its instinctive clairvoyance, the
ancient Orient sensed that the spiritual world is a reality
with which it felt closely linked, and that nature, and the
natural element in man himself, is a replica of the spiritual;
it provides an external garment for the revelation of
what is inwardly spiritual.
Yet
it would be wrong to say that the Oriental did not
observe nature. His organs were finely attuned to its
observation. For him, however, from everything that he
faithfully observed and lovingly honoured as a replica,
something of the spirit shone. Nature revealed spirit to him,
shone spirit upon him at every turn. And this spirit was his
reality. What lay before him outside was maya.
Even in Buddhism, which gained a far greater influence on
Oriental life than we usually think — since it later
assumed the most varied forms — we can see how the sense
of inhabiting a spiritual world paled as man and world
developed. The gaze was increasingly directed upon what was
maya, and experience of the great illusion, the great
non-being, maya, gradually became predominant. There thus arose
an awareness of the need for redemption from what can be
experienced within maya — experienced, that is, in
the manner of Buddha, who regarded our direct experiences of
this maya as a crowd of sorrows that flow in on man.
But
it faded, this sense of inhabiting a spiritual world; and this
is what justifies us in considering the early Oriental
philosophy of life as something instinctive and even partial:
if we do return to something like it, we must do so with
complete self-possession and lucid consciousness. The
impairment of human activity relative to the demands of the
physical, external world must not occur a second time in the
world's development. Man must never again escape into spiritual
activity and so prevent himself from devoting his full strength
to earthly tasks — which are what the Oriental perceives
as maya, even if in deference to modern concepts he does
not say so; whereas he perceives as reality what reveals itself
within him. He has within him a light that is a direct
reflection of the divine and spiritual elements in the
world.
Against what I have thus described as the spiritual geography
influencing our modern life, I should now like to set another
illustration from the development of the human spirit and the
world, but this time from the immediate present. Our
civilization, which even in Europe is now of some
antiquity, is subject to pressures from certain spheres, whence
arise social longings and also social conflicts. Anyone who has
moved in these spheres will have come across the phenomenon I
am about to describe.
Although no one could properly accuse me of Socialist opinions,
I was for some long time a teacher in Socialist circles. My
intention was to do something for which in fact the time had
not yet come (it is more than twenty years ago now): to
propagate a spiritual life that could lead to theories that are
in closer accord with reality than those derived from abstract
or modified Marxism, which in many respects indeed are not
realistic at all. There exists in these circles a basic
attitude — something we can recognize as a first
step, yet which is as deeply rooted in the soul as was the
sense of maya at which the Oriental finally arrived. And in
observing this attitude, we are profoundly struck by a word
that expresses many unconscious feelings, unconscious
ideas and concepts, unconscious longings too, a word that we
hear again and again and must recognize as having characterized
wide circles of humanity for centuries. Encompassing
millions of people is a mood that this word expresses. The word
is “ideology,” by which is meant “idealistic
theorizing.” It derives from an attitude that the
proletarian class in particular has absorbed into its
education. The scientific method, with its increasing emphasis
on matter, has given rise to the view that historical reality
consists simply of economic struggles, economic patterns, class
struggles, in short of the immediate material elements,
externally sensuous and physical, in human life and history;
and that therefore economic forces are the true reality.
This economic materialism, which is far more widespread than
many upper-class people today believe, is a consequence of the
general materialistic outlook. Nowadays, this is taken to be
overcome even in science; yet it has a wide following
particularly in the West.
And
what is this “ideology?” It is law, morality, the
realm of the beautiful, religious concepts, political theory,
in short everything that makes up spiritual life. These
things are not true reality, but bubbles and baubles arising
from true reality, which resides in material struggles and
patterns. “Ideology” is a way of indicating that
what man experiences within himself — whether it is art
or science or law or maxims of state or religious
impulses — is maya, to use the Oriental term.
If
we do not just take it at its face value, but can feel what
millions of people are thinking, then the word
“ideology” points to something that must inevitably
assume the most formidable dimensions unless it can be set on
the right course in good time. What the soul experiences and
shapes within is not reality: true reality is only what exists
externally in tangible facts.
Inside Western civilization, therefore, there has developed an
outlook diametrically opposed to that which long ruled the
Orient and still survives even today as a kind of antiquated
trimming. There, true reality is what is experienced in
the spirit, and maya what proceeds outside in physical
actuality; here, maya or “ideology” (which is
indeed a translation of the word “maya,” but
applied to the spiritual sphere) is what is experienced in the
spirit, and reality what is tangibly displayed, palpably there
in the world.
In
its development, the world aims at complete realization of its
various potentialities. Just as the one extreme developed, in
the Orient, so too the other was bound in its turn to take hold
of humanity. To bring about a fruitful development of man and
world, however, and to change the forces of decline into
constructive ones, we must understand the significance of
this mood, this “ideology.” It is recent and
therefore a first step.
Let
us look once more at what modern spiritual science can tell us.
In the Orient, there was a dreamy, dark, instinctive
knowledge that there exists a spiritual reality, with a
sensory replica here in the physical realm. Because the soul's
attention was devoted primarily to this spiritual reality,
sensory reality came to be regarded as unreality, external
appearance, maya. Yet this maya is important in more than one
way. Although the world may be maya, our efforts, which are a
reality for us, must still be applied to it in the first
instance. But it is important also for the precept “Know
thyself,” for a truly human attitude. Why? Well, it is
true that we can now elevate ourselves to a life in the
spiritual world, as I have described; that we can see by means
of sharply delineated concepts and thus understand what
appeared to the Orient like a dream. But the experience
of such a world would never have created in human development
the impulse to freedom.
When man feels closely linked to the spiritual world, he feels
at the same time inwardly determined by and dependent on it.
Therefore he and his consciousness had to move out of it and,
for a passing phase of history (in which we now are), to turn
to a world of mere fact. Confronted with this external
actuality, the life of man's soul becomes an image of it. The
spirit informing this life turns into abstract concepts and
gradually becomes a mere image, to be recognized as a
replica.
I
have already suggested that, by having images within us, we can
be free. Mirror-images do not determine our actions. If we wish
to conform to mirror-images, which in themselves are powerless,
the impulse to do so must come from us. The same is true of
abstract concepts. And in making its appearance in pure
thinking, our noblest feature, the moral and religious
element, becomes for us an impulse of freedom. It is a
most valuable component of human life. But in a period
when man finds himself confronted with physical actuality, it
makes its appearance in abstract thinking.
At
the moment when the moral element, in the shape of moral
intuition, makes its appearance in pure thinking, the task of
the epoch is fulfilled. The epoch has developed from
spirit-reality to the spirit as abstraction and (I would say,
exaggerating a little) it now interprets everything spiritual
as maya, as mere illusion, as “ideology.” We have a
certain right to interpret as “ideology” everything
that is a reflection of external natural existence. At the
moment when the moral element, in the shape of intuition,
enters this maya-thinking, this “ideology,” we
reach the first stage at which we can recognize once more that
we must awaken this “ideology,” which we experience
as mere semblance, to inner life by energizing ourselves and
allowing the life that is hidden within us to stream forth. The
meaning of the world had to become “ideology” for
humanity in order that man himself could infuse it with his own
reality.
This was necessary for man's experience of freedom, which is
something that has only been attained in the West and in recent
civilization. It was necessary that man should first feel
himself to be in a sphere of unreality when in contact with
everything that is most valuable to him — his art, his
science, his moral concepts, in short his entire
spiritual life — and that everything transitory
that shone on him should appear to be the only reality. For
this reality, rightly contemplated, cannot in any way impair
his freedom — the freedom that depends on his being
himself a spiritual being who creates in physical and sensuous
actuality only a replica of the spirit.
We
see, therefore, that “ideology” represents in an
extreme form an attitude that we really need in face of such
concepts of nature as position, motion, dimensions and numbers.
If nature were to provide us with anything other than concepts,
it would never make us free. Only if we rise to concepts that
will then appear as mere “ideology” to someone who
is still stranded at the previous stage, can a new and
spiritually real form of the higher world infuse these
initially unreal concepts. This is the first step, from which
must emerge for man a new form of the spiritual world. And when
we encounter the exaggerated notion of “ideology,”
those of us who are not bogged down in the immediate
opinions of the day but can see beyond them to the world's
development, must conclude: it was necessary for man to reach a
stage of development at which, looking at only one side of the
world and himself, he could speak of “ideology;” it
is equally necessary now for him to attain the decision,
conviction, power and courage to infuse into this
“ideology” a spiritually perceived and
experienced world. Otherwise, although perhaps it may be
discussed philosophically, the “ideology” will
remain merely “ideology.” And as we shall see in
the second part of these lectures, which will be devoted to
Anthroposophy and Sociology,
in that case the forces of
decline will quite definitely proliferate.
Before us, then, are two pictures: spiritual world as reality
and world of the senses as maya — world of the senses as
reality and spiritual world as maya. We need a philosophy of
life that is capable of injecting the spiritual world, regarded
as “ideology,” with spiritual intuition,
spiritual imagination and inspiration, so that what today
appears unutterably empty is filled once more with spiritual
meaning. At the same time, it must be able to perceive that
what the Orient regards as illusion and maya is a reality in
the sense that it is a true and faithful replica, a
transformation of the spiritual world, which was
necessary for the development of humanity in freedom. If we are
to reach an understanding of these two diametrically opposed
world-pictures, we need a philosophy that can combine
them and not just add them together mechanically, one that will
develop through its own inner life, not from the one or the
other, but in a spiritual progression from human substance
itself.
And
these world-pictures do ultimately affect everything that we
experience spiritually. They certainly condition individual
features of life and of human attitudes. As a Central European
here in Central Europe, I would rather not give my own opinion
on this particular point. I prefer to pass on the opinion
expressed some years ago by an Englishman who compared Western
and
Central Europe in relation to a certain aspect of spiritual
life. This Englishman wanted to exemplify the way in which
spiritual life has revealed itself in particular phenomena. He
referred to the appearance, at the end of the fifties and
beginning of the sixties of the last century, of Buckle's
important work, The History of Civilization. Buckle, he
noted, views history mainly — if not so exclusively as do
the Marxists, for example — in terms of economic drives,
so that ultimately spiritual life is taken to arise from the
action and interaction of economic forces. We do not always
have to condemn a view of this kind; we can take a positive
attitude, and say: since man is in part an economic being, a
historical consideration of human life from this
standpoint also was needed at a certain stage in human
development. The Englishman then refers to another book that
was produced in Central Europe at the same time as Buckle wrote
his History of Civilization — Jacob Burckhardt's
Civilization of the Renaissance in Italy. The
Englishman himself observes that a quite different spirit
prevails here; Burckhardt describes how men feel, what their
attitude to one another is, and how through the opinions they
have of each other they enter into certain relationships,
which in turn determine other events occurring among them. And
the Englishman finally sums up — I am simply quoting his
opinion here — by saying that Buckle describes man as he
eats and drinks, whilst Burckhardt describes man as he thinks
and feels.
And
if I may now add something myself: if, as we have heard, the
West looks at eternal actuality and derives spiritual life from
it, and the Central European looks at what inhabits the realm
of the soul, but the soul in its earthly existence, then one
would have to add, thirdly, that Eastern man (and in many
respects even the East European) describes man as he preaches
and sacrifices.
And
so we might say, supplementing the Englishman's verdict:
in the West, man is described as he eats and drinks (I say this
in no pejorative sense); in the Middle region, as he thinks and
feels; in the East, as he preaches and sacrifices. In this
preaching and sacrificing is operative what I have described as
the attitude of the East. Similarly, in the view of history
that has become generally familiar today and that is also
reflected in the notion of “ideology,” there
operates what I have described as the attitude of the
West. But we also need to see how in the mode attributed to the
Centre, where man is presented as he thinks and feels, the two
currents meet. We are called upon today to understand this
confluence correctly, by taking a first step that will
gradually lead us onward to spirituality.
I
will try to sum up in a single image the two attitudes I have
sought to represent, in order to show where understanding is
really needed between East and West. To do so, I should like to
recall that, at a time when the physical and sensuous world,
and human existence also, was already felt as maya in the East,
he who is called the Buddha encountered in his wanderings the
most varied manifestations of human suffering on earth. Among
these manifestations was a corpse; death confronted the Buddha,
and through contemplation of death he reached his conclusion:
Life is Suffering.
This was the tenor of Oriental civilization six hundred years
before the establishment of Christianity. Six hundred years
later, Christianity was founded, and henceforward we have a
significant symbol: the crucifix, the raised cross with
the Redeemer, the human body on it. In the West, countless men
look at this body, at the image of it; just as countless men,
who have become disciples of Buddha, have looked at the body
from which Buddha drew his teaching. The East acknowledged:
Life is suffering, we long for redemption. Western men, in
looking at the image of the dead body, however, did not simply
say: Life is suffering! For them, the sight of death became a
symbol of resurrection, resurrection of the spirit through
inner human power. It became a symbol of the fact that
suffering can be redeemed by overcoming the physical;
that it is overcome, not by turning away from it in asceticism,
but by keeping it in full view, not regarding it as maya,
and overcoming it through work, activity, and the vigour of the
will. Out of the introspective life of the East arose a
contemplation of the dead body, with the conclusion: Life is
suffering, man must be redeemed from life. Out of the life of
the West, attempting always activity, there arose, at the sight
of the body, the view: Life must develop power within itself,
so that even the forces of death can be overcome, and human
work can do its task in the development of the world.
The
one philosophy is old and jaded. Yet it contains things of such
great value that, even though we may treat it as senile, we
still approach it as something venerable. We honour an old man
without expecting him to profess the views of youth. What we
encounter in the West, however, has the character of a first
step. We have shown what the “ideology” in its
attitude must become. It is young, it must develop
youthful power in itself so that it may attain spiritual
meaning in its own way, just as the Orient did.
In
honouring the Orient for its spirituality, there is something
we still need to be clear about: we must build up our own
spirituality from the first step we have taken here in the
West. We must so shape it, however, that we can achieve an
understanding with any view that may exist on earth,
especially old and venerable ones. This will be possible if, as
Central and Western men, we come to understand that, although
our philosophy of life has faults, they are the faults of
youth.
If
we do understand this, it is a summons to have the courage to
be strong. If for all our respect, love and admiration for its
spirituality, we take what we need from the East, not with
passive receptivity, but with a busy activity rooted in what,
today, is still perhaps unspiritual in the West, yet contains
the germ of spirituality — if we add strength to respect,
then we shall do the right thing for human development.
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