8
The
Problem (Asia-Europe)
WHEN
the conversation turns to what is lacking in society today, there is
scarcely anyone who does not have something really significant to
contribute, from his own particular position in life. My purpose here,
however, is not to draw up a list of all the various deficiencies that
a survey would reveal. It is rather to direct attention to some
of the antecedents of a phenomenon that has, quite justifiably,
attracted comment on many sides and has led a large part of
mankind into a mood of extraordinary pessimism and
hopelessness.
One
of the most extreme expressions of this hopelessness came from
a man of whom it might perhaps have been least expected —
a man, moreover, who belonged to a period for which such an
opinion cannot help striking us as something out of the
ordinary. In one of his last books, the influential
art-historian Herman Grimm, who did not live to experience the
most fearful war in history, but died at the turn of the
century, makes this surprising statement: “When we survey
the international situation today, and observe, with the
`mind's eye' I would say, how the various nations of the
civilized world behave to one another, how they attack one
another, and how they hold within them the seeds of further
conflicts, then we feel ready to set a date for mass suicide,
since we cannot envisage where all these things that bring men
and nations into conflict, strife and combat, are to lead, if
not to the utter collapse of civilization.” I regard this
statement as striking precisely because it comes from Herman
Grimm — since his philosophy of life was in itself a
joyous one; throughout his life, he kept his eyes fixed on all
the things that can elevate mankind and that exist in man
as creative and productive forces. It is striking, moreover,
that he did not make this statement under the influence of the
sense of gloom that was to be experienced in the years just
before the outbreak of the Great War, or during it. His
observation sprang entirely from the spirit of the nineteenth
century, at the end of which it was made. Nothing that has
happened since then seems likely in any way to cushion the
impact on us of such a statement.
Yet
at the same time it can never be the business of mankind to get
bogged down in mere hopelessness; we must rather be on the
look-out for anything that can lead to revival, to
reconstruction, to a new dawn. This being so, it is
necessary for us to look more deeply into the causes of the
extraordinarily difficult situation that has gradually
developed inside European civilization. Even if we believe that
these causes can only be economic ones, we shall still have to
look to the spiritual life of modern civilization for the
main reason underlying this economic decline.
In
my lectures here, I have pointed out more than once how our
present temper of soul — together with all the
soul-powers we can acquire at present — is affected by
historical forces, and to understand these we have to go back a
long way in human development. Specifically, I pointed out
yesterday how at the threshold of the spiritual life of the
West, looked at historically, there stands a figure who still
has one eye on Asia, whilst the other is already directed at
the perspectives of Europe. I mean Plato.
When we examine Plato's social theories, they appear to our
modern consciousness extraordinarily alien in many respects. We
find that he sees the ideal social system in the creation of a
community even at the expense of the development
of individual human beings who have been born into this
earthly life. Plato thinks it quite feasible that children who
appear unfit for life should simply be abandoned, so that they
may not occupy a place in the community and thus disturb the
social organism. He also manages to regard as an ideal social
organism one in which only members of a certain caste enjoy the
full privileges of citizenship. Apart from the fact that
slavery appears quite natural to him, he would also grant those
responsible for trade and commerce only a precarious position
within his social system. All those who are not fixed within
this system by virtue of having been born — by right, as
he sees it — into its fabric, are not in fact completely
accepted into the organization. Much else might be said, too,
on the question: How does Plato's ideal relate to the
individual human being? And here, from the standpoint of
modern consciousness, we must conclude that there is present as
yet little understanding of this human individuality. Attention
is still directed entirely to the community, which is seen as
primary. The man who is to live in it is regarded as secondary.
His life is accepted as justified only in so far as he can
match the social ideal that exists outside his own
personality.
To
discover what led Plato to this concept of community, we must
look once more at Oriental civilization. And when we do so, we
realize how, in the last analysis, the historical
development of Europe's spiritual life is like a small
peninsula jutting out from a great continent.
When we look at Asia, we find that there the idea of
community is the primary one, and that Plato simply took
it over from the East. To what has been said already about this
idea, one thing must be added, if the social situation
throughout the world is to be illuminated.
When we come to examine the basic character of spiritual life
in the Orient, we find that it embraced a humanity quite
different in type from the Europeans of later
civilization. In many psychic and spiritual matters, indeed, we
can say that there prevailed in Asia a high level of
civilization, one to which many Europeans, even, long to
return. I have already mentioned the often-quoted expression:
Light comes from the East. What is most striking of all,
however, is that these men of different type did not have the
feature that has been typical of Europeans since they first
began to play a civilized part in the world's
development. What we observe there in Asia is a subdued
sense of self, a sense of personality that is still quiescent
in the depths of the soul. The European's awareness of
personality is not as yet found in Asia. If on the other hand
this high level of Asian civilization is adopted by an
individual who still lacks this sense of
personality — and it is a civilization suited for
adoption by a human community — then he
experiences it as in a dream, without sense of personality.
Obviously, in an age when human individuality had not yet
attained its full development, communities were more receptive
to and capable of a high level of culture than were
individuals. In communal life, human capacities for absorbing
this civilization increased not simply in an arithmetical
but in a geometrical progression. Meanwhile, the particular
ideal that Oriental civilization had set before itself,
as it gradually passed over into Europe, was minted by European
spirits in a simple formula — the Apolline dictum:
“Know thyself!”
We
can, in a sense, regard the entire Ancient East as
developing towards the realization in Greece, as the
ultimate intention of Oriental self-less civilization, of that
sentence: “Know thyself!” — a sentence
which has since survived as a spiritual and cultural motto to
direct mankind. Yet we can also see, there in the East, that it
is regarded as desirable, for the attainment of a higher stage
of development in mankind, to penetrate to the self after all.
On the spiritual side, I have already indicated this in
characterizing yoga. On the social side, it reveals itself when
we look at the theories current in the East with regard to
leadership of the masses. Everywhere we find that the man
who was the teacher and the leader was at the same time, in the
spiritual sphere, the priest, but also at the same time the
healer. We find in the East an intimate connection between all
that mankind sought as knowledge and as higher spiritual life,
on the one hand, and healing, on the other. For early Oriental
civilization, the doctor cannot be separated from the teacher
and the priest.
This is, of course, connected with the fact that Oriental
civilization was dominated by a feeling of universal
human guilt. This feeling introduces something pathological
into human development, so that the cognitive process
itself, and indeed every effort to reach a higher spirituality,
is regarded as having the function of healing man as nature
made him. Education to a higher spirituality was also healing,
because man in his natural state and thus uneducated was
regarded as a being who stood in need of healing. Connected
with this were the early Oriental mysteries.
The
cult of mysteries sought to achieve, in institutions that were,
I would say, church and school and source of social
impulses combined, the development of the individual to a
higher spiritual life. They did this in such a way that, as I
have already indicated in my previous lectures, religion, art
and science were combined: in performing the ritual actions,
men were religious beings; and here what mattered was not the
articles of faith, still less the dogmas, that occupied the
soul, but the fact that the individual was participating in a
socially organized rite, so that man's approach to the divine
was made principally through sacrifice and ritual act.
Yet the ritual act and its foundations in turn involved an
aesthetic element. And this combination of aesthetic and
religious elements gave to knowledge its original form.
The
man who was to attain this unified triad of religion, art and
science, however, had not merely to accept something that
represented a step forward in his development; he had also to
undergo a complete transformation as a man, a kind of
rebirth.
The
description of the preparations that such a student of the
higher spiritual life had to undertake makes it clear that he
had consciously to undergo a kind of death. He experienced,
that is, something that set him apart from life in the ordinary
world, as death sets men apart from this life. Then, when he
had left behind everything in his inner experience that
appertained to earthly life, he would, after passing through
death, experience the spiritual world in a complete rebirth.
This is the old religious form of catharsis, the purification
of man. A new man was to be born inside the old. Things that
man can so experience in the world as to arouse in him passions
and emotions, desires and appetites, notions that are of this
world — all these he was to experience within the
mysteries in such a manner that they were left behind and he
emerged as one purified of these experiences. Only then, as a
man reborn, was he credited with being capable of exerting any
social influence on his fellow-men. Even the academic
scholarship of our time has quite correctly observed that the
surviving remnants of this cult have been of enormous
importance for social life, and that the impulses aroused in
those who have experienced such a catharsis in these very
secret places have exerted the greatest conceivable influence
on social life outside. As I say, this is not merely a
pronouncement of spiritual science, it is something that even
academic scholarship has arrived at. You can see this by
looking at Wilamowitz. What we find is that, in Oriental
civilization, the aim was to cure man by knowledge and by all
the efforts to achieve a spiritual education.
What existed in the East passed over in another form to Greece
and thus to Europe, and it has continued to affect Europe to
the extent that Greek culture itself has influenced European
spiritual life and civilization. Let me mention a point that is
not usually emphasized. In his study of Greek tragedy, from
which the West has derived so much of artistic importance for
its spiritual life, Aristotle produced a description that is
usually taken far too much at its face value. People are always
quoting the familiar sentence in which Aristotle says that the
aim of tragedy is to arouse fear and pity, so that the
excitation of these and other emotions shall bring about a
purification, or catharsis, of them. In other words, Aristotle
is pointing to something in the aesthetic sphere — the
effect that tragedy should produce. Armed for the
interpretation of Aristotle's dictum, not with academic
philology, but with an understanding of Oriental spiritual life
— with a knowledge, that is, of its roots in the past
— we can interpret what
Aristotle means by pity and fear more extensively than it is
usually interpreted. He means in fact, as we come to perceive,
that the spectator is brought by tragedy to mental
participation in the sorrow, pain and joy of others, and that
in this way the spectator in his mental life escapes from the
narrow confines that he naturally occupies. Through the
contemplation of the suffering of others, there is aroused in
the spectator — for here man goes outside his physical
existence, if only vicariously — that fear which always
arises when a human being is confronted with something that
takes him outside himself, and creates in him a transport of
faintness and breathlessness. We can say, therefore: Aristotle
really means that, in looking at tragedy, man enters a world of
feeling that takes him out of himself; that he is
overcome by fear; and that a purification or catharsis
ensues. In this way he learns to bear what in the natural state
he cannot bear; through purification he is strengthened for the
sympathetic experience of alien sorrow and alien joy; he
is no longer overcome by fear when he has to go outside himself
and into social life. In ascribing a function of this kind to
tragedy, Aristotle, we perceive quite clearly, is really
demonstrating that tragedy also educates man towards a
strengthening of his sense of self and his inner security of
soul.
I
am well aware that to introduce the aesthetic element into
social life in this way strikes many people today as a
devaluation of art, as if one were trying to attribute some
kind of extrinsic purpose to it. Objections of this kind,
however, often really betray a certain philistinism, resting as
they do on the belief that any attempt to assimilate art into
human life as a whole, into all that the human soul can
experience, implies its subordination to a merely utilitarian
existence. This is not what it meant for the Greeks; it meant
rather the inclusion of art in the life that carries man above
himself, not just beneath himself into mere utility.
If
we can look beyond the mere utility that typifies our time, we
shall be able to understand the precise significance of the
Greek view of art: that the Greeks saw in tragedy, side by side
with its purely artistic aspect, something that brought man
face to face with himself, drawing him away from a dream, a
half-conscious perception of the world, nearer and nearer to a
complete awareness of himself. We may say: in the social
sphere, tragedy was certainly intended to make its contribution
to the all-important precept: “Man, know
thyself!”
If,
moreover, from this extension of art into the social sphere we
pass on to a consideration of the position of the individual
vis-à-vis society, and from this perspective look
back at the Orient, we find that, in the mysteries too, what
was sought through therapeutic treatment — the rebirth of
man as a higher being — represented a strengthening of
the sense of self. From an awareness that the soul was not then
attuned to a sense of self, and that such a sense still
remained to be developed, the mysteries attempted a
rebirth in which man emerged to individuality. For this
ancient society, therefore, experience of self was really
something that had still to be attained. It was seen as a
social duty to foster the birth of this sense of self in
individuals who could become leaders in the social sphere. Only
when we comprehend this can we gain an understanding of the
strong sense of community persisting in Plato's ideal state,
and of his belief that man is entitled to develop his
individuality fully only if he does so through the rebirth that
was accessible to the wisdom of the time. This shows that
humanity at that time had no awareness of the claims of
individuality in the fullest sense.
What grew out of this kind of society in Asia then established
itself in Europe, combined with Christianity, passed over into
the Middle Ages and even survived here for a long period. The
manner of its survival, however, was determined by the fact
that the hordes which, mainly from Northern and Central Europe,
streamed into this civilization — South European now, but
inherited from Asia — were endowed by nature with a
strong sense of self. These tribes acquired the important
historical task of carrying over what Oriental man had achieved
with a still subdued sense of self, into complete
self-consciousness and a full sense of self. For the brilliant
civilization of the Greeks, “Know thyself!” was
still an ideal of human cognition and society. The peoples who
descended from the North during the Middle Ages brought with
them, as the central feature of their being, this sense of
self. It was theirs by nature. Though they lived in groups,
they none the less strove to incorporate into their own
personality what they absorbed in the cognitive and social
sphere. It was in this way, then, that there came to be
established the contrast between community life and individual
life. The latter only appeared in the course of history, and
did so, I would say, with the assistance of man-made
institutions.
In
thus making its appearance in human development, the sense of
self was bound to link up with something else, with which it
certainly has an organic connection. Looking back once more at
the features of Oriental-Greek civilization even as it
appeared to Plato, we are nowadays very much aware that
this whole civilization was in fact built on slavery, on the
subjugation of large numbers of people. A great deal has
been said from various standpoints about the significance of
slavery in earlier times, and if we are willing to sift this
properly, we shall naturally find a great deal that is
significant in it. But the point that above all others is still
relevant for our life today is precisely the one that I said
has actually received little attention. For community
life — and also for the social life which sprang from the
mysteries, and for the development of which the Greek regarded
his art as providing an impetus — the full significance
of human labour within the social order was quite unrealized.
In consequence, they had to exclude human labour from
their discussion of the ideal image of man.
When we describe Oriental-Greek man, with the dignity that gave
him his authority, we are describing something that was in fact
constructed over the heads of the masses, who were actually
doing the work. The masses merely formed an appendage to the
social system, which developed within a society that had not
absorbed labour into its being, since it regarded labour and
those who performed it as a natural datum. Human society really
only began where labour left off. At a higher level, in a
higher psychic sense, man experienced something that also finds
expression in the world of animals. In their world, the food
supply, which with us forms part of the social organization, is
provided by nature. The animal does not calculate; it does what
it does out of its inmost being; and specialization is
unnecessary for animals. Where apparent exceptions occur, they
must be regarded as proving the rule. We can therefore say: in
transplanting itself to Europe and entering further and further
into the demands of individuality, Oriental civilization
also took on the task of integrating human labour into
the social system. When man's awareness of self is fully
wakened, it is quite impossible to exclude labour from that
system.
This problem — which did not exist as yet in Greece
— became the great social question round which countless
battles were fought in Rome. It was felt instinctively that
only by integrating labour into the social system can man
experience to the full his personality. In this way, however,
the entire social organization of humanity took on a different
aspect. It has a different appearance in civilized Europe
from what it had in civilized Asia. Only by looking back at the
development of individuality in Europe shall we
understand something of what has repeatedly, and rightly, been
emphasized as significant when we come to describe the source
of the deficiencies of our time.
It
is rightly pointed out here that the specific shape of the
social order in our time was actually only decided with the
emergence of modern technology and division of labour. It is
also pointed out that modern capitalism, for instance, is
merely a result of the division of labour. What the traditional
teaching of modern Western civilization has to say in this
respect, in characterizing division of labour and its
consequences in the social deficiencies of our time, is
extraordinarily significant. But when something like this is
said, and from one point of view rightly said, the unprejudiced
observer cannot help looking at, say, ancient Egypt or Ancient
Babylon, and observing that these states contained cities of an
enormous size, and that these achievements too were only made
possible by a division of labour. I was able yesterday to show
that, as early as the eleventh century, a kind of Socialism
existed in China, yet that similarity of surface features is
not what really matters. In the same way, I must point out that
division of labour, too, which in modern times has rightly been
seen as the central social problem, was also found in earlier
epochs of human development; it was in fact what made the
Oriental social systems possible, and these in turn have since
affected Europe. In Europe, division of labour, after being
less common at first, gradually evolved. I would say: division
of labour in itself is a repetition of something that also
occurred in earlier times; but in the Oriental civilizations it
bore the stamp of a society in which individuality was still
dormant. The modern division of labour, which makes its
appearance along with technology, on the other hand, impinges
on a society of men who are now seeking to expand their
individuality to the full. Once again, then, the same
phenomenon turns out to have a quite different significance in
different ages.
For
the Oriental social order, the first consideration was thus to
allow man to grow clear of social restrictions and of
communal life. If he was to move up to a higher spiritual
life, man really had to find his individuality. The European of
a later age already had this sense of self, and needed to
integrate it into the social order. He had to follow precisely
the opposite path from that followed in the East.
Everywhere in Europe we find evidence of the difficulty men
experience in accommodating their individuality to the social
order, whereas at one time the social system had been such that
men sought to rescue their individuality from it. This
difficulty still faces us on every side today as an underlying
social evil.
When, some years ago, I was often called upon to lecture to
audiences of working men, I saw a good deal of evidence that
there did exist in men's souls this problem of articulating the
ego into the general social order. Men are unable to find the
way from a highly developed sense of self into the social
order. And in attempting repeatedly to show proletarian
audiences, for instance, what this way would need to be
like — how it would have to be different from the ways
that Socialist or Communist agitators commonly offer
nowadays — one came across very curious views in the
ensuing discussions. They might appear trivial; but a thing is
trivial no longer when it provides the motive power for
innumerable people in life. Thus, I once attempted to talk
about social problems in a working men's club. A man came
forward and introduced himself straight away as a
cobbler. Naturally, it can be extremely pleasant to hear
what such a man thinks; in this case, however, what he was
unable to think was much more revealing than what he did think.
First of all he set forth, in marked opposition to my own
views, his conception of the social order; and then he
reiterated that he was a simple cobbler: in the social order
that he had outlined, therefore, he could never rise to be a
registrar of births, marriages and deaths. Underlying his
outlook, however, was the quite definite assumption that
he might perfectly well be a Cabinet Minister! This shows the
kind of bewilderment that ensues when the question arises: How
is the ego, strengthened within spiritual life, to articulate
itself into a social order?
In
another working men's association (I am giving one or two
examples, which could be multiplied indefinitely), someone
said: “Oh, we don't really want to be foremen; we don't
want to manage the factory; we want to remain what we
are, simple workmen; but as such we want all our
rights.” Justified as such a statement may be from one
point of view, it displays, in the last analysis, no interest
in social organization, only an interest in the strongly
developed self.
I
am well aware that many people today will not consciously admit
that this particular discrepancy between the experience of self
and the social order lies at the root of many, indeed almost
all of our social deficiencies and shortcomings. But anyone who
looks at life with unclouded vision cannot escape the
conclusion: We have certainly managed to develop the feeling of
self, but we cannot connect it with a real insight into man. We
say the word “I;” but we do not know how to relate
this “I” to a human personality that is fully
comprehended and fully self-determining.
We
can experience this once again when we come across views that
are very much of the present, as opposed to what, on the basis
of spiritual science, we regard as necessary for the health of
humanity. A leading figure in present-day educational circles
once said something very curious to me during a visit to the
Waldorf School. I showed our visitor round personally, and
explained to him our educational methods and their social
significance. I pointed out that, with a sound
educational method of this kind, education of the spirit and
the soul must be linked with that of the body. Anyone wishing
to teach and educate must first of all know the effect of this
or that action on the forces of recovery or decline in the
human organism, the human body; he must know how the exercise
or neglect of memory expresses itself later in life in
physical symptoms, and how, simply by treating the life of the
soul, we can gradually bring about an improvement in physical
ailments. The teacher, I concluded, must certainly understand
the body's association with the soul and the spirit in health
and sickness. And the reply I got was that, to do this, the
teacher would have to be a doctor!
Well, up to a certain point it would indeed be desirable if
this were the case. For when we look at our social system, with
the difficulty of integrating the self into it, we are reminded
once more of what I have touched on today in connection with
the civilization of two regions: the Orient, where the doctor
was also the teacher and leader of the people; and Greece,
where, as I have shown, art had an educative influence. The art
of medicine was associated with every aspiration of the spirit,
because at that time man was regarded, if only instinctively,
as a physical, mental and spiritual whole; in the
treatment that was then applied to the soul, forces were
brought into play which yielded knowledge for a general therapy
of man.
The
leaders at that time told themselves: I must attempt to cure
man by leading him to true spirituality. To do this, I must
bring healing forces to bear on a fairly normal life. Once I
understand these forces thoroughly and can follow out their
effects, this knowledge will tell me what to do when a man is
ill.
From observation of the healthy man, I learn what forces to
employ when confronted by the sick man. The sick man is
simply one whose organism has deviated further in one direction
or the other than it does in everyday life. Knowing how to
bestow health on man in his normal state, I also know how to
cure him when sick. Knowing which drink, which cordial affords
me this or that insight into connections between man and nature
— knowing, that is, the effect of a natural product in
the sphere of knowledge — I shall also know what effect
it has on a sick man, if used in greater strength.
The
intimate association of medical art with education and
development towards spirituality in general, which was the goal
of the Ancient Orient and had an important rôle there,
appears once more as a spiritual residuum in the Greek
experience of art. Here, the aim is that the soul should be
healed through art. Armed with this knowledge, we can still
perceive in the use of the word “catharsis” in
connection with tragedy how — because the same word was
used in connection with the early mysteries, for the complete
purification of man on entry to a new life — something of
this sense is taken over. We are, however, also reminded
that, for Greek doctors in the early period, knowledge and
medicine still went together, and that in education, but also
in popular culture in general, people saw something on a more
spiritual level that was related to medicine, something that in
a sense sprang from medicine.
We
need to examine these phenomena of a bygone age, if we are to
gain a strength of soul such that, when we contemplate the
social systems in our own age, we can keep in view the whole
man, and also such that, when we meet our fellow-men, we not
only unfold a strong sense of self, but also connect this with
a perception of the whole man in body, soul and spirit. If by
an advance in spiritual science we can do this, there will
become available, simply through the temper of soul that
ensues, ways and means of integrating this whole man, but also
all men, into the social order, thus annexing labour for
society in the way that historical evolution in any case makes
necessary. For this is what we are still suffering from today:
the need to fit labour properly into the social order.
It
is true that people often regard labour as something that goes
into the article produced, being crystallized in it, so to
speak, and giving it its value. Those who look more closely,
however, will observe that what matters is not simply that a
man should work, devoting to society his physical strength. The
important factor in determining price and value is rather
how the work fits into social life as a whole. We can certainly
conceive of a man doing a job of work that is fundamentally
uneconomic in the social order. The man may work hard and may
believe that he is entitled to payment for his work; but when
his work exists in the context of an inadequate social system,
it often does more harm than good. And one ought to examine in
this light a great deal of labour within society which, though
exhausting, is really worthless. Consider how our
literature is constantly accumulating; it has to be
printed; a tremendous amount of work is involved in the
manufacture of paper, the printing, etc., and then, apart from
the tiny proportion that survives, it all has to be pulped once
more: work is being done here which, I would say, disappears
into thin air. And if you consider how much work has
disappeared into thin air during the butchery of the recent
war, you will gradually come to see that labour as such cannot
lay claim to any absolute value, but derives its value from its
contribution to the life of society.
The
disease that most affects our age, however, is precisely the
lack of this basic capacity to integrate labour into the social
organism, taking account of the fact that everything men do,
they really do for others. We need to win through to this by
learning to integrate our own individual selves into the
community. Only by achieving a true understanding between
man and man, so that what the other man needs becomes part of
our own experience and we can transpose our self into the
selves of others, shall we win through to those new social
groupings that are not given us by nature, but must be derived
from the personality of man.
All
our social needs certainly spring from the self. People sense
what is lacking in the social order. What we need to find,
however, is a new understanding of what human fellowship in
body, soul and spirit really means. This is what a social order
ought really to be able to bring forth out of the self.
The
great battle that is being fought over the division of labour
— fought quite differently from the way such battles have
ever previously been fought under the influence of human
individuality — is what underlies all our social
shortcomings. Nowadays, we found associations for
production; we participate in them, concerned not with their
rôle in the social organism, but with our own personal
position — and this is understandable. It is not my aim
here to complain, pedantically or otherwise, about human
egotism. My aim is to understand something for which there is
considerable justification. Without this sense of self, we
should not have advanced to human freedom and dignity. The
great spiritual advances have been possible only because we
have attained this sense of self. But this in turn must also
find a way to imaginative identification with others.
There is a great deal of talk nowadays about the necessity of
conquering individualism. This is not what matters. The
important thing is to find society in man himself. The
Oriental had to discover man in society. We have to discover
society in man. We can do so only by extending on every side
the life of the soul.
That is why I tried, at the close of one of my mystery-plays,
to present a scene showing how a man wins through to an inner
experience of the different forms of mankind. These differences
exist outside us. In society, differentiation is necessary; we
must each have our profession. If we find the right bridge
between man and man, however, we can experience within us all
that is separate in the social world outside — each
individual profession. Once this social system comes into being
within us, once we can experience the reality of society inside
ourselves, we shall be able to follow that opposite way of
which I have spoken: the way from the self to the social order.
This will also mean, however, that everything connected with
the individual — today we can point to labour; in the
next two days we shall be looking at capital — is capable
of finding its place in human society. In co-operatives, in the
formation of trusts and combines, in the trade union movement,
everywhere we feel a need to find a way out of the self into
association with others. But here precisely is the great
struggle of the present day: to enable what exists around us
really to take root within us.
As
already indicated, there was a time, not so very far behind us
— we need only go back to the thirteenth century —
when man had a bond with the product of his labour, and the
making of every key and every lock gave pleasure, because the
maker poured into it something of his own substance. The legacy
of an earlier social order still made its mark upon the
product. With their individuality as yet not fully awakened,
people still accepted society. Since then, individuality has
reached its zenith with the advance of technology. In the last
analysis, the man of today is often extraordinarily remote from
the product of his labour, even when his work lies in the
spiritual sphere. What we perform in the outside world needs to
take root in us and to link up with our individuality. This,
however, will only happen if we develop the life of the soul on
every side in the way I have described in the last few days.
For if we do develop the life of the soul, our interest in all
that has its being around us will be fired once more.
You
encounter many people in this purely intellectual age who find
their own profession uninteresting. It may have become so,
perhaps. There must come a time, once more, when every detail
of life becomes of interest. Whereas formerly what was
interesting was the nature of objects, in the future the
interest will lie in our knowing how our every activity is
articulated into the social organization of mankind. Whereas
formerly we looked at the product, we shall now look at the man
who requires the product. Whereas formerly the product was
loved, the love of man and the brotherhood of man will now be
able to make their appearance in the soul that has developed,
so that men will know the reason for their duties.
All
this, however, needs to take hold of the soul before people try
to reach an understanding about the particular social
deficiencies of our time. From this standpoint, too, we
must consider that Europe is still engaged in its battle for
human individuality against the forces in its spiritual
tradition that continue to flow from Asia — from
foundations quite unlike those that exist today,
foundations that took root in the souls of men, but at a time
when full individuality had not yet been attained.
Thus the present time occupies a position not only between
abstract concepts of individuality and community, but also in
the centre of something that pervades man's soul and brings
every individual human being today into action in defence of
his individuality. We are only at the beginning of the road
that leads to the discovery of the right relationship between
self and community. It is from this fact that the shortcomings
of the time, which for this reason I do not need to enumerate,
derive.
Perceiving this psychological basis, this spiritual foundation,
we shall be able to view in their proper light many of the
needs, deficiencies and miseries that confront us in society
today. To win our way through to this light, we need courage.
Only then shall we know whether the pessimism that Herman Grimm
expressed in so extreme a form is justified, and whether people
are justified in saying: There remain only forces of decline
in
European civilization, one can only be pessimistic, even: The
date for mass suicide ought to be fixed.
That is, indeed, the question: whether all the Asiatic features
that Europe had to conquer have in fact been
conquered, so that after finding itself Europe can now, from
the centre of the world's development, also reach an
understanding with the East.
It
is from a standpoint such as this that we must consider whether
what we ought to see is the kind of thing Herman Grimm had in
mind, or whether we are not justified in thinking that mankind
can still, through the development of what lies dormant in its
soul, prove capable of choosing a time when understanding shall
be achieved, and that what faces us is not the death of this
European civilization, but its rebirth.
Whether and how far this is possible will be examined, at least
in outline, in the remaining lectures.
|