9
Prospects
of its Solution (Europe-America)
IF YOU
are seeking, within the present social system, forces that inspire
confidence, you will have to look in hidden places. Social distresses
and deficiencies are only too evident; prospects, genuine ones at
any rate, rather less so.
There are, of course, self-deceivers, on a greater or lesser
scale, who even in face of the grave difficulties of the
present seek salvation in this or that recipe; they devise all
kinds of social institutions in which they claim that mankind,
or at any rate a section of mankind, would prosper better than
it ever has before. It seems to me, however, that nowadays we
have become so clever, if I may so express it, that it is
relatively easy to work out, on a would-be national basis, any
kind of social system. It is possible today to be familiar with
quite a lot of social systems advocated by the various shades
of party opinion, wthout finding anything really bad
about them; and yet, we do not expect anything very much from
them, either. Certainly, anyone who considers the society of
today, not simply as raw material for sociological theories,
but from the standpoint of a knowledge of man, can only talk of
the emergence of social prospects when man is able once again
to come close to his real self.
The
most important thing at this stage is not the excogitation of
institutions, but the possibility of discovering man and
including him in the social institutions we inhabit. And
at this point it must even be admitted that, when it does
become possible to discover man within the social order —
or, at the present day, within the social chaos —
then any given institution can serve the same purpose, more or
less. The fact is that mankind can prosper socially in all
kinds of different ways, within the most varied
institutions.
What matters today is human beings, not just institutions. For
this reason, I evoked a certain amount of satisfaction,
particularly in circles where they feel the social
problem more than they think about it, with my book
The Threefold Commonwealth,
by not merely showing how a
given institution might be different. Instead, I argued that a
great deal nowadays depends on whether the man who has to
run a business, for instance, is able to bring his whole
personality to bear, either directly or through assistants, on
his work-people, so that he comes close to them by really
discussing with them, as man to man, everything that goes on in
the business, from the purchase of the raw material to the
marketing of the finished product and the means by which it
reaches the consumer. If you repeatedly discuss this
chain of production with your employees, in a way that is
attuned to human considerations, you establish a basis on which
you can build the other things that are socially desirable and
worth striving for today.
Yet
it is still not enough to talk to people technically, in this
way; something further is needed. What is needed, if we are to
have hope in the prospects of society once more, is what I want
to talk about today.
For
a long time, the view has been widespread that the man who is a
leader in the social sphere must first and foremost establish
contact with the masses. Efforts in this direction were made
throughout the nineteenth century. And as the social
problem became more and more of a burning question, you
could see people working in factories for months on end, in an
attempt to get to know the life of the workers. There have been
senior civil servants who, after reaching the retiring age and
so completing their work in society, have gone among the
working people and been astonished to discover what it is
really like there. In short, there have long been efforts to
get to know the common man, and in particular the proletariat.
We may say, too, that the achievements of our literature and
art in this respect have been considerable. The mode of
existence of the workers and the masses in general, often
impressively presented through works of art and literature,
certainly deserves full recognition. With the major problems of
the present, however, the most important point is not really
that the leaders should know what goes on among the workers or
the masses in general. Fundamentally, very little depends on
our artistic depiction, from the inside, of the life of the
masses: the miseries and cares that beset them, their
struggles, their ideas and goals, and so on. I would say:
What we need today is not so much a way of understanding the
masses, as a way of being understood by them; of going
into the factory and business, whatever its kind, and being
able to speak in such a way that we are not felt to be academic
or “educated” or theoretical, but are taken as men
who have something to say that appeals to men's souls.
For
a long time now there have been laudable attempts to establish
institutions for adult education, up to university level. What
is made available to the people in this way does, it is true,
interest them for a while by virtue of the piquancy of many
scientific results; there is some excitement if the lecture is
illustrated by lantern slides, or if we take people to
zoos and the like. But we ought not to be under any illusion
that this really appeals to their souls or touches their
hearts. To do this, we must have something to say about
man's relation to existence as a whole. On this point, it is
true, leading personalities today still have rather odd
opinions. They consider that the masses are not really
interested in “philosophical questions,” as they
call them. But they are! If you can only find the right
language to express it, then eyes light up and hearts unfold.
For example, if you start with quite simple scientific facts,
and know how to handle them in such a way that, out of your
reflections, human essence and human destiny ultimately
emerge; and if you show people that what you say is well
founded, and at the same time that it is not fragmentary
knowledge that at best can occupy us in our moments of leisure,
but something a man can absorb as nourishment for his soul
— only if you succeed in doing this will you have made a
start on the creation of confidence between the people,
as they are called, and the leaders. It is possible today to
speak from a party viewpoint, to provide the people with
concepts such as “capitalism,”
“labour,” “surplus value” and the
like: the people will gradually assimilate these concepts, and
then you can talk on party lines. But by doing so you will not
provide men with systems in which they can participate with all
their humanity, or enable them to co-operate in the creation of
the society we must hope for if the forces of advancement, and
not those of decline, are to prevail.
If
you want to, you can soon see what the real situation is today,
and where the real obstacles and restrictions occur. I was for
some years a teacher at a workers' educational college, where I
had to teach all kinds of subjects. I never kowtowed to any
party dogma; at the same time, I never encountered any
resistance on the part of a worker to understanding, when
I presented history, for example, in such a way as to
reveal at every point that it is not something that can be
comprehended by a historical materialist interpretation, but
something in which spiritual forces and spiritual impulses are
operative. I was even able to evoke some understanding of why
it was that Marx, whose ideas were thoroughly familiar to the
members of my audiences, arrived at the view that is called
“historical materialism,” the view that
regards all spiritual phenomena as merely the effect of
mechanistic and economic factors and the like. I was able to
show them that this is because in fact, from about the
sixteenth century onwards, there have increasingly come into
play the forces that have made economic life dominant
and decisive. In consequence, art and science and the rest
really seem like — and in a sense even are — the
results of economic life, mechanistic life. Marx made the
mistake he did because he was only familiar with modern
history.
It
is not my wish to argue for one view or the other, however, but
simply to observe that even this point was understood. It was
not a lack of confidence on the part of the audiences that made
my kind of popular instruction impossible, but the fact that
one day the authorities noticed: the teaching here is not in
accord with party dogma; instead, what is presented by way of
illustration is drawn, to the best of the teacher's knowledge
and judgment, from what appeals to human nature. And they grew
anxious lest the audience should increase. One day, their
emissary appeared at a meeting that was summoned for the
purpose, to investigate whether I was fit to be a teacher at
the workers' educational college. One of the workers' leaders
appeared. And when I commented that, if the principle of
progress was to be established in these circles, then the
teacher must at least have freedom to teach as he wished, the
representative replied: “Freedom is something we
don't recognize! We recognize only a proper
compulsion.”
This was the attitude that led to my expulsion from the
teaching staff of that workers' educational college. From
my point of view, however, it was really an illuminating
experience. Not so much the expulsion itself, as the preceding
acquaintance with the wide variety of people that make up the
modern proletariat. An illuminating experience, because you
could see that, if only you will speak out of your full
humanity, so that your hearers
feel you are saying something to them that reaches into their
hearts and affects their human and earthly being, they will
regard thinking, when it springs from a philosophy of life, as
the most important thing they can be offered. There exists
today a feeling that enlightenment — not in any party
sense, but in a general human sense — must spread among
the masses. People long, more or less unconsciously, for
something that springs from a really far-reaching philosophy of
life.
And
how should it be otherwise? For, after all, vast sections of
mankind today are employed in such a way that their work cannot
conceivably interest them. They perform it as if faced with
something that has no relationship whatever with their
humanity. Hence, although the clubs, guilds and unions that
tend to be formed in these circles are indeed organized on the
basis of the various trades — there are metal workers'
unions, printers' unions, and so on — fundamentally they
have surprisingly little to do with the business of
production. They are primarily concerned with the element
in the material sphere of life which is of general human
interest — with consumption and the satisfaction of human
needs. Mankind has had to become resigned about
production, but not to anything like the same extent about
consumption. And so large numbers of people are faced at
present with work that turns them back upon themselves.
Their environment cannot interest them, nor what they do from
morning till night, unless it be so presented to them that they
can find it interesting; what interests them first and
foremost — and this is where we must begin — is
what confronts a man when he is alone with himself after work
and can simply concentrate his attention on his own humanity.
We must also admit that, when we examine the social chaos of
our time, we can see quite clearly that there are also many
people in executive positions who are cut off from a direct
interest in and relationship with what they are doing. It
should be, not just an open secret, but something known to the
widest possible circles, that even people whose work is
intellectual often have so little interest in their
profession that they too are reduced to waiting until after
working hours in order to pursue their genuine and human
interests. For that very reason it is obvious that we must
provide human beings with things of human significance, if we
wish to establish a basis for social optimism.
In
the intellectual sector of civilization, we have accomplished
an extraordinary amount. Today, we can point to all the things
that human intelligence has achieved. And undoubtedly, people
can learn an enormous amount when we acquaint them with the
results of man's achievements in science and art. But that is
not the point; the point is that we should be capable not only
of disseminating intellectual culture, as a foundation for
social structures, but also of exciting people, of inspiring
them — not by producing grandiose utterances or
well-rounded periods, but by having something to say, something
that makes men feel: This touches my humanity.
If,
on the other hand, we go to people with a philosophy of life
derived from what is now popular and from what is
recognized as true by our excellent natural sciences, you
can see at once how impossible it is really to grip men's
hearts with it and give them something that touches their
humanity. Men will always regard the sort of thing they are
usually given, as something superficial. In particular,
what a man will say if he is willing to speak freely —
because you have gained his confidence in other ways —
is: “That's all very well: but in the first place we
can't really understand what you say, because so much of it
needs special preparation; and secondly it isn't
straightforward enough for us; there is something that says to
us: No thoroughfare!” I have heard many people talk
like this about adult education colleges, public
libraries and the like, as they are today. If now we seek to
base on this experience an approach to society, we must look
more deeply for the causes of the difficulty. And here once
more I am compelled to introduce — in parenthesis, so to
speak — part of a philosophy of life.
When, as we have often done during the last few days, we look
at the Asiatic civilizations, so many legacies from which
survive in our schools (even our secondary schools and
universities), we find there, at any rate where the
culture was at its height, something that must still be of
inestimable value to us today. Its characteristic feature is
that the knowledge of the world and philosophy of life
discovered there were apprehended by the human spirit;
and this in turn developed into the intellect, which I
have described as the specific force of modern times. Our
modern highly-developed intellect is, fundamentally, a late
development of what, in the East, was dream-like clairvoyance.
This dream-like clairvoyance has cast off its direct insight
into the outside world and evolved into our inner logical order
— into the great modern means of acquiring knowledge of
nature.
And
in the last analysis we must recognize, in the medium of
philosophical communication in Europe today, yet another legacy
from the Orient. It is not only the medieval schoolmen who
still made use of words and concepts and ideas imbued with
powers of the soul which derived from the East; we
ourselves, however much we may deny it, speak, even in
chemistry and physics, in language that we should not use if
our education, right up to university level, were not
conditioned by something derived from the Orient.
But
in becoming intellect, this early clairvoyance has thrown off
at the same time another shoot, which has affected the
outlook on life of the masses in many ways. It has
given rise to views which for the most part have already died
out in Europe today, views which have been eradicated by modern
elementary school education, and of which only vestiges survive
among the most uneducated classes. While on the one hand the
intellect has been developing to amazing heights, there has
also developed deep down among the people (and far more than
present-day psychology has yet revealed) something that
projected certain subjective experiences, quite involuntarily,
on to the outside world. These assumed the most varied forms,
but they can all be covered by the single word
“superstition.” Superstition, which signifies the
projection of subjective experiences outwards into space and
time, played a much greater rôle in mankind's
development than is thought today. Even people who are
only half-educated can now recognize the belief in ghosts as a
superstition; yet there still persist in us,
atavistically, many of the feelings that developed under
the influence of this belief. In so far as we are the
descendants of Oriental humanity in this respect too, we
operate in our art and in other branches of life with at least
the feelings that spring from this current in human
development.
It
is possible to examine what is emerging from the depths of
social humanity, so to speak, at the present time; to look at
the man who has developed out of the technical and mechanical
world of modern times; to look into his heart and his quality
of soul. And anyone who does so will see that this man —
who has not gone through the process that makes the intellect
supremely valuable to us today, the process of secondary and
university education — has no genuine personal interest
in all that can be achieved within the sphere of intelligence;
what he has is something quite different. I would say:
Something elemental reveals itself in such a man, welling up
from depths that are rising to the surface in our social order
— something elemental which, in Europe today, is quite
inadequately understood, because fundamentally it is
something new. But, when it is understood, it can show
us the right way to bring a philosophy of life to the
masses.
Anyone today who, growing up within mankind, has no
contact with our inheritance from the Orient and is thus
thrown back upon himself, as the working-man is and very many
members of the upper classes too, is not interested first
and foremost in the intellect. For him, it is above all the
will that he is interested in — and will is
something which rises up into the soul from deep below,
something which emerges exclusively from man himself. Since
this fact has, of course, been noticed in a superficial way,
there exists today a certain longing to regard man as a being
of will. Many people, indeed, believe that they can speak to
the masses in terms of philosophy only if they deal primarily
with the element of will in man. As a result of
hankerings of this kind, it has come about — as
frequently happens — that people have described to the
masses “primitive culture,” in which man is still a
creature of instinct. They describe to the working-man how
these primitive people lived in simple circumstances, and
then attempt to draw inferences about what the social order
should be like today. In primary education today, a great deal
of time is spent in describing the living conditions of these
primitive, instinctive people. And there is a good deal of
other evidence for the existence of a certain instinctive
tendency to put forward the element of will, when people are
called upon to expound a philosophy of life.
Out
of a certain appetite for the sensational, the man of today
does, it is true, accept these descriptions; to some extent,
too, he feels in his own being, which has not advanced to a
higher level of education, something akin to this instinctive
element in human nature. But if you want to warm people, if you
want to preserve their souls from desiccation, if you want to
make contact with the whole man, then accounts of this
kind will not help you.
Why
is this? It is because, when you have scaled the peaks of
science and acquired what science currently accepts as true,
you develop, simply by doing so, something that really
constitutes a modern superstition. Admittedly, it is not yet
recognized as such; but just as the educated man of more recent
times has learnt to regard the old belief in ghosts as a
superstition, so to some extent the masses today — as it
were prophetically, looking into the future — regard as a
kind of superstition the ideas and concepts and notions that we
assert about these primitive conditions of humanity.
What do we assert? We assert that mankind was originally
governed by instinctive drives. These are something quite
obscure, operating in unconscious regions that people are
unwilling to define more precisely; they include the
instincts, which are also found in animals, and all that is
indefinite in man's feelings and expressions of will. People
point to the element of natural creature active in man.
Many thinkers today regard it as an ideal to depict man in such
a way that what is inside him is presented as far as possible
in terms of material processes, only elevated into those
indefinite concepts that we call drives or instincts.
Let
us, however, remember the view of man's inner make-up that I
have developed in the last few days. I have shown how the
exercises of spiritual science, by developing man, enable him
to really see inside himself. He thereby reaches the stage of
contemplating his inner organism, not as does the modern
physiologist or anatomist from without, but in such a way
that the parts of the organism can be inwardly experienced.
When you have broken through the reflector of memory, you can
look down upon the lungs, heart, etc., as something whose
physical structure is merely the outward expression or
manifestation of the spiritual — of that spiritual
element which I have been able to represent as a world-memory
linked with the great cosmos.
This can be sensed by the very man who today is thrown back by
his work on to himself. Everywhere he longs to attain an
understanding of it. But we achieve this understanding only
when we clearly perceive what we are actually doing, when we
perceive in its spiritual essence the element of spirit and
soul which lies within us — which is not even our
property and does not belong to our human personality, but
which is the gulf, so to speak, that the cosmos sends into us
as human beings. Man can come to know man only when, looking
into himself, he finds as the basic substance of his physical
being a spiritual element. Once we realize this, however, we
also know that to speak of drives, instincts, and all the other
things that people are always speaking of nowadays, is to
interpose something in front of our real inner nature, just as
superstition formerly interposed ghosts in front of external
nature. When we speak of drives, instincts and the like in man,
we mean only the psyche obscured, so to speak, by our own
outlook. In speaking of our human make-up as it really is, we
must ignore these spectres that we call instinctive
drives, passions and the like, and see through them to reality.
We must leave behind the spectres within us, represented by all
these definitions of drives, lusts, passions, will and the
like, in the same way as we have left behind the ghosts in the
sphere of the external, natural order. With those ghosts, we
interposed something from within us in front of external
nature, and so projected what was subjective on to the
objective sphere. Nowadays, we are setting up something that
is, objectively, of a spiritual nature, as if it were something
material; our drives and instincts, as usually defined, are
materialized and internalized ghosts that obscure the
true spiritual sphere. This is something which, as a
matter of cognitive fact, is little understood nowadays,
although it is felt when, with a true knowledge of man,
we seek to approach anyone who, from the depths of his
unconscious — and in the depths of this unconscious lies
the spiritual sphere — instinctively feels: Don't talk to
me about your materialized ghosts! You ought to be telling me
something about the way in which man and the cosmos have
grown up together.
If
you have a feeling for society, you will rejoice over
experiences like the one I had a few weeks ago, when I
was lecturing to a group of working-men. I was originally
supposed to speak about political economy. But I always arrange
for the audience to choose the subject themselves; before the
lecture begins, I let them hand it up to me or tell me, so that
the knowledge imparted to them is of a kind that they
themselves determine. On this occasion, a working-man took out
a copy of our periodical The Three. He said he had read
an article of mine in it, but couldn't quite understand what
the planet was actually like which preceded the earth,
subsequently went over into darkness, and eventually gave
rise to the earth. I was able to lay before this man, in a
straightforward and simple manner, an explanation in terms of
spiritual science. And you could see that, whereas if you speak
drily, in abstract concepts, they may feel: There's nothing
much for us here! Yet when you speak of this kind of thing,
their eyes light up, because they feel that here is something
their souls can feed on, just as their bodies feed on what they
eat. How their eyes light up when you give them something that
grips their whole personality, their heart and soul —
something that is not simply a concept of life, but an
outlook, a philosophy of life in the sense
that it really contains life and can excite enthusiasm, even
when the worker comes straight from the machine.
And
I certainly believe that social influence of this kind must be
exerted first, before we can win men over in any other way
— and they must be won over — to establish
the appropriate social structures. How long this will take
depends on men's determination. I know that many people
say: “Oh, you are fobbing us off with something that will
only be realized in four or five hundred years time.” To
this I always reply: “Quite true, if not enough people
want it; but in affairs of this kind, the important thing is
not to calculate how long it may take for men to reach these
social structures, but to forsake calculation and put our trust
in the will.” If the will is present in a sufficiently
large number of men, we may hope to attain, in not too great a
length of time, what we might otherwise intellectually suppose
would take centuries. Nothing is more of an obstacle to
our reaching these social configurations than the hesitation
that derives from such calculations. You should start,
not by worrying about the results of intellectual calculation,
but by attempting to come close to man. Then, you will see
that, with a philosophy of life that does not interpose
materialized ghosts before people's souls, but reveals to them
man's link with the cosmos, you will soon meet with an
appreciative reception.
Today, the usual reception you will get is as follows: If you
take this kind of philosophy of life to those who are
professionally qualified to judge it, they will compare
it with what is already in existence, and will then take the
view that it is amateurish, dilettante and so forth. Or the
converse will happen: You wish to speak about these
things, which so affect man's innermost self that drives,
instincts and the like become spiritualized, and you feel
obliged to adopt the scientific forms of expression customary
today; otherwise what you have to say will be rejected before
you start. But if you do adopt them, you are then told that you
are speaking a language that is not for the people. You already
knew this. That was why, when speaking to people who expect a
great deal from those with scientific education, you set
it in quite different contexts of ideas. What is said, however,
is exactly the same. And that is how you come to realize that
the man whose intellect has not been taught to run along a few
particular lines by his specific intellectual training,
will understand it. We shall, it is true, first have to
leave behind an age in which, for doing this, a man can be
thrown out of workers' educational colleges by those who regard
themselves as the authentic leaders of the people.
I
have had to demonstrate to you, then, that because of the very
nature of the masses of humanity, there must exist today a
philosophy of life in the form of an anthroposophically
orientated spiritual science. For only out of such a
philosophy, which can really talk about the spiritual sphere in
speaking of man, can there arise any hope of attaining a social
understanding. And then, from this social understanding, with
people understanding one another, we can go forward to other
things.
We
can hope for this. This hope is native to us in Central Europe
where, throughout the nineteenth century, the best minds sought
a method of education by which it would be possible to lay hold
of the child, so to speak, in the sphere of the will. They had
perceived that a modern human being must be taken hold of in
his will. They had not, of course, seen this as clearly as it
can be seen with the aid of the philosophy of life I am
propounding. But they had a notion of it. That is why they
exerted themselves to find intellectual methods which would
enable them to reach the child's will by way of his ideas, to
lay hold of his will through his thought-forces. And an
enormous amount of good was achieved in Central Europe, as a
result of the German spirit — this is fully acknowledged
in the West, or was at least until the Great War. Attention has
always been drawn, in England, to the way in which, in Central
Europe, people tried to take hold of the will indirectly, via a
pedagogic method, and how this has been transplanted to
England. This has always been recognized and described.
When we go still further West, to America, however, we find
that, by the circumstances of spiritual geography, they have
developed over there a distinct form of primitive
philosophy of life — if I may so put it without offence
— which yet carries within itself striking
potentialities for the future. We find, for example, that
in America, when educated people sum up what they think about
human beings, they will say: What a man works out
intellectually depends on the political party into which
circumstances have led him, and on the church he belongs
to. In reflecting the opinions of his church, his class, or his
party, he does of course make use of his intellect; the real
source, however, is not the intellect but the will. Again
and again we can see American writers pointing to man's will as
his primary substance. Present-day Americans like to quote
writers who say: The intellect is nowadays nothing but a
minister of state, and the will is the ruler — even
though, as Carlyle said, the intellect may be an expensive
minister.
This view, moreover, is not an invented abstraction, but
something that is in the bones of educated Americans.
Even the physiologists there talk in these terms. Anyone who
has an ear for such things can perceive a marked difference
between the language of physiologists in Europe and that of
physiologists in America. Over there, people explicitly discuss
how a man's brain is shaped by his situation in the world. They
consider the brain to be a mechanism which is dependent, even
down to its speech-centres, on the company a man keeps, the
extent to which he gets on in life, and so forth. They
therefore see the development of the will within the world as
the primary aspect of man, and regard all the products of the
brain as subordinate, as something which, fundamentally, has
very little to do with a man's individuality. These
people say: If you want to discover a man's individuality, you
must examine his will and see how it developed in his
childhood, in the context of his family, his church, his
political allegiance, etc.; and then consider how he acquires
an intellect which — as an American has said — has
about as much to do with his essential being as the horse you
ride has to do with the rider.
Although the legacy of the East has also extended as far as
America, then, we have there, emerging directly from educated
circles, something that in Europe lies in the subterranean
depths of human existence. Our own America so to speak, the
America that is within Europe, is the instinctive direction of
humanity towards the will, and thus towards a very large class
of people here. This also gives us the ground on which Europe
must in fact reach an understanding with America, if a
world-wide social rapprochement is to come about.
We
do indeed find that a good deal of what the Americans have
developed represents a primitive form of the exercises by which
a spiritual vision is attained. Thus, we find Americans
repeatedly commending self-control, self-discipline,
self-education as all-important: what matters is not having
learned something, but implanting it in your will by the
constant repetition of a given exercise. We know the effect of
rhythmically repeating concepts, and we know how the influence
thus brought to bear on man's true centre in turn affects the
will. It sometimes takes curious forms, this conscious
direction to what, for modern man, must represent the innermost
kernel of his being.
And
precisely from a rapprochement of this kind we shall be able to
develop the further recognition that we must pass through
contemplation of the will to reach the spiritual element of
man. There follows the prospect of a philosophy of life which
(even though the working man cannot help being materialistic at
present) can yet be such as I have expounded here — a
power that can be developed from the social conditions
themselves, so to speak, precisely through a rapprochement
between Europe and America.
It
was in Central Europe that the finest minds sought for
intellectual topics that would be capable of taking hold
of the temperament, the volitional side of children. Central
European educators in the nineteenth century tried to discover
the art of capturing the will by starting from the intellect.
But they did not get beyond abstract thinking, which had not
then advanced to the living thought. They were still caught up
in the Oriental world and its legacy, and on the basis of this
early Oriental heritage they sought to take hold of the
will.
Then came a great mass of humanity who made will
sovereign everywhere. And today we live in a period that
contrasts with an earlier age when forces existed to uphold the
social order. Even those of us whose outlook is not reactionary
cannot help understanding that, in earlier times, a prince
attended the same sermon as the lowest peasant in the district;
and the man who spoke from within the spiritual life, on behalf
of all, had something to say that affected everyone. A
perfectly clear public image of the consolidation of the social
orders by means of the spirit was definitely there in those
earlier periods. It was a definite legacy from the
Orient, this image which is apprehended by the head and only
later sinks down into the heart. Now something else,
something that springs from the will, has appeared. We must
find once more a way of speaking philosophically out of a
spirit that embraces us all, from the most uneducated to the
most educated. Only in this way can we work together, think,
feel and will together, so as to establish, in the present,
social prospects for the future.
This will come about if we can create a rapprochement
between the embryonic beginnings in Europe, as they have
been described in the last few days, and what has emerged in
America, at a higher level of civilization, so to speak, among
educated people in general. A rapprochement aimed at moving
westwards will create a basis for an understanding of the
development of spirit in the West.
Only if we as Western men show that we are able, out of what we
can apprehend within ourselves, to summon up something
spiritual and to counter the Oriental spirit, which today is in
a state of decadence, with a European-American spirit, will a
world economy and a world commerce, such as exists only
externally today, be possible, in a framework of genuine
confidence between men. Today, even though the Asiatic trades
in one form or another with us Western men, in his heart there
is still the feeling: Your machines do not impress us! With
them, you are turning yourselves into intellectualized
machines; that is the kind of men you are, inside. Even X-rays
do not impress them. The Oriental will say: With their aid, you
can look inside man physically; but what is really
important requires no apparatus, it arises from our clairvoyant
inner self. Whether legitimate or not, this is the attitude of
the Orient. They have a profound belief in the spirit in
human nature, and look down with contempt on anything that
accepts the constraint, as it seems to them, of technology and
the machine, in such a way that man himself operates, in
society, like a cog in a machine.
The
gap between us and the Orient will be bridged only when we
ourselves create a spiritual dimension in our philosophy of
life, on foundations such as I have described, combining the
spirit of Europe and America. This, however, will require the
world to look more closely at Central Europe, which has gone
furthest in the evolution of the intellect towards living
thought. It is the men of the early part of the nineteenth
century — Hegel, Fichte, Schelling — who have gone
furthest in the evolution of thought towards life. At least
they believed that in what they experienced as the
substance of the world, albeit in thoughts that were still
abstract, they had something vital and spiritual. What they
had, of course, was only the germ of vital thought. That
is why Central Europe itself forsook the paths it had been
following. They need to be rediscovered by making thought
genuinely vital. A rapprochement with Central Europe can bring
this about.
When the West has brought forth spirit once again, and when the
East not only sees its own spirit, but can also see, even in
the trader and merchant, the representative of a spiritual
philosophy of life, then the Oriental will no longer look down
on us in arrogance; he will be able to reach an
understanding. This is what we must seek if we are to have
hopes for society. We cannot have them at all unless we realize
what has to disappear.
There existed in Central Europe a spirit which proclaimed that
everything ultimately collapses but that a new life springs up
from the ruins. This is a hope we shall realize only when we
look past the externals of society to its inner being. But then
we must cease to try to maintain the old order at all costs,
and instead have the courage to regard as expendable the
things that must be overthrown. The old saying remains true:
Nothing can come to fruition which has not first been cast into
the earth as a seed, so that it may decay. Well, the word
“decay” is not quite accurate here, but the image
still holds. In discerning what we need to abandon as decayed,
we must move forward to new impulses and to the new life that
must blossom out of the ruins. Only in this way can we, in this
age, have social hopes for the future.
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