Anthroposophy and the Ethical-Religious
Conduct of Life
On last Wednesday
I had the opportunity to explain to you how a super-sensible knowledge
may come into existence out of the further development of those
capacities of the human soul which belong to our every-day life, and
which are recognized also in science when methodically applied.
I undertook to show how a systematic further development of these
capacities of the soul actually brings about for the human
being a form of perception whereby he can become aware of a
super-sensible world just as he becomes aware of the physical sensible
world environing him by means of his physical senses. Through such
vision we penetrate upward not only to an abstract sort of
conviction that, in addition to the world of the senses, there
exists also a world of the spirit, but to acquisition of real
knowledge, to a real experience, of spiritual beings, which
constitute the environment of man himself to the extent that he
lifts himself up into a condition of spirituality, just as plants and
animals constitute his environment in the physical world.
Such a
super-sensible knowledge is something different in its entire nature
from that which we designate as knowledge in ordinary life and for
our every-day consciousness, as well as in ordinary science.
In this ordinary knowledge we come into possession, in a certain
sense, of ideas — for example such ideas as embrace the laws of
nature. But this possession of ideas does not really penetrate into
the soul in such a way as to become an immediate power of the soul,
comparable as a spiritual power to muscular force as this passes over
into activity. Thoughts remain rather shadowy, and every one knows
through immediate experiences how indifferent, in a certain sense, is
the reaction of the human heart to thoughts when we are dealing with
matters which affect the human heart in the profoundest
degree.
Now, I think I have shown already in the first lecture that, when
a human being actually penetrates into the spiritual world by means
of such a perception as we have in mind here, he then becomes aware
of his super-sensible being as it was before it descended to the
earthly existence. And the fact that he achieves for himself
something of this kind as regards his own self in its relationship to
the spiritual world, does not leave his heart, the needs of his
profoundest sensibilities, to the same extent unaffected, as in
the case of abstract forms of knowledge. It is certainly true that
one who has himself led a life devoted to the acquisition of
knowledge does not undervalue all the inner drama of the soul
associated with the struggle for knowledge even in the ordinarily
recognized sense, yet the knowledge that we thus acquire remains,
nevertheless, mere pictures of the external world.
Indeed, if we are scientifically educated at the present time, we are
generally proud of the fact that these pictures merely reflect,
in a certain sense, quite objectively the external world and do
not dart with such inner force through the life of the soul as, in
the case of the physical body, the circulating blood drives its
pulsing waves through man's being. The fact is that what is here
meant by super-sensible knowledge is something which acts upon the
human being in a manner entirely unlike that of ordinary
knowledge. And, in order that I may make myself perfectly clear
precisely in reference to this point, I should like to begin with a
comparison — which is, however, something more than a comparison,
something that fits the matter completely in its reality.
I
should like to begin with the fact that the human being, even in
ordinary life, lives in two states of consciousness — we might
say three states, but let us consider sleeping and dreaming as
constituting a single state of consciousness — that he is
separated completely from the external world during sleep, and that a
world existent only within him, reveals its effects in dreams in a
grotesque and often chaotic manner. Even though we are in the same
space with many other persons, our dream world belongs to us alone;
we do not share it with the other persons. And a profounder
reflection upon the world of dreams is the very thing that may show
us that what we have to consider as our own inner human nature is
connected with this dream world. Even the corporeal nature of man is
reflected in a remarkable way in dreams: it is mirrored in
fantastic pictures. One condition or another affecting an
organ, a condition of illness or of excitation, may emerge in a
special symbol during a dream; or some noise occurring near us may
appear in a dream in a very dramatic symbolism. The dream creates
pictures out of our own inner nature and out of the external
world. But all of this is intimately connected, in turn, with the
whole course of our life upon earth. From the most remote epochs of
this life the dream draws the shadows of experiences into its
chaotic but always dramatic course. And, the more deeply we penetrate
into all this, the more are we led to the conclusion that the
innermost being of man is connected, even though in an instinctive
and unconscious manner, with that which flows and weaves in dreams.
One who has the capacity, for example, for observing the moment
of waking and, from this point on, fixing the eye of the mind upon
the ordinary daily life, not in the superficial way in which this
usually occurs, but in a deeper fashion, will come to see that this
waking life of day is characterized by the fact that what we
experience in a wholly isolated manner during sleep and during
dreams, in a manner that we can share with other persons at most only
in special instances, — that this soul-spiritual element
sinks down into our corporeal being, inserts itself in a way into the
will, and thereby also into the forces of thought and the sense
forces permeated by the will, and thus enters indirectly, through the
body, into a relationship with the external world. Thus does the act
of waking constitute a transition to an entirely different state of
consciousness from that which we have in dreams. We are inserted into
the external course of events through the fact that we
participate, with our soul element, in the occurrences of our own
organisms, which are connected, in turn, with external occurrences.
Evidences of the fact that I am really describing the process
in a wholly objective way can, naturally, not be obtained by the
manner of abstract calculation, nor in an experimental way; but they
are revealed to one who is able to observe in this field —
particularly one who is able to observe how there is something like a
“dreaming while awake,” a subconscious imagining, a
living in pictures, which is always in process at the bottom of the
dry, matter-of-fact life of the soul, of the intellect. The situation
is such that, just as we may dive down from the surface of a
stream of water into its profounder depths, so may we penetrate from
our intellectual life into the deeper regions of the soul. There we
enter into something which concerns us more intimately than the
intellectual life, even though its connection with the external
world is less exact. There we come also upon everything which
stimulates the intellectual life to its independent, inventive power,
which stimulates this life of the intellect when it passes over into
artistic creation, which stimulates this intellectual life even
— as I shall have to show later — when the human heart
turns away from the ordinary reflections about the universe and
surrenders itself to a reverent and religious veneration for
the spiritual essence of the world.
In the act of waking in the ordinary life the situation is really
such that, through the insertion of our soul being into the organs of
our body, we enter into such a connection with the external world
that we can entrust, not to the dream, but only to the waking life of
day, responsibility for the judgment which is to be passed upon the
nature of the dream, upon its rightness and wrongness, its truth and
untruth. It would be psychopathic for any one to suppose that, in the
chaotic, though dramatic, processes of the dream something
“higher” is to be seen than that which his waking
experience defines as the significance of this life of
dreams.
In this waking experience do we remain also — at about the
same level of experience — when we devote ourselves to the
intellectual life, to the ordinary life of science, to
every-day knowledge. By means of that absorption, immersion, and I
might say strengthening of the soul about which I spoke on the
previous occasion, the human being exercises consciously at a higher
level for the life of his soul something similar to what he exercises
unconsciously through his bodily organization for the ordinary act of
waking. And the immersion in a super-sensible form of knowledge is a
higher awaking. Just as we relate any sort of
dream picture to our waking life of day, through the help of our
memory and other forces of our soul, in order to connect this dream
picture, let us say, with some bodily excitation or external
experience, and thus to fit it into the course of reality, so do we
arrive by means of such a super-sensible cognition as I have
described at the point where we may rightly fit what we have in our
ordinary sensible environment, what we fix by means of observation
and experiment, into a higher world, into a spiritual world in which
we ourselves are made participants by means of those exercises of
which I spoke, just as we have been made participants in the
corporeal world in the ordinary waking by means of our own organism.
Thus super-sensible knowledge really constitutes the dawn of a
new world, a real awaking to a new world, an awaking at a higher
level. And this awaking compels him who has awaked to judge the whole
sensible-physical world, in turn, from the point of view of this
experience, just as he judges the dream life from the point of view
of the waking life. What I do here during my earthly life, what
appears to me by means of my physical knowledge, I then learn to
relate to the processes through which I have passed as a spirit-soul
being in a purely spiritual world before my descent into the earthly
world, just as I connect the dream with the waking life. I learn to
relate everything that exists in physical nature, not “in
general” to a fantastic world of spirit, but to a concrete
spiritual world, to a spiritual world which is complete in its
content, which becomes a visible environment of the human being by
reason of the powers of knowledge I have described as
Imagination, Inspiration, and Intuition.
But, just as a person feels himself in ordinary life to be in
different states of soul when awake and when dreaming, so does the
whole state of soul become different when one arrives at this higher
awaking. For this reason, in describing super-sensible knowledge
in the manner that I have employed here, we do not describe merely
the formal taking of pictures of the super-sensible world, but the
transition of a person from one state of consciousness into another,
from one condition of soul into another. In this process, however,
even those contents of the soul in which one is absorbed in ordinary
life become something entirely different. Just as one becomes a
different person in ordinary life through awaking, so does one
become, in a certain sense, a different human being through
this super-sensible knowledge. The concepts and ideas that we have had
in ordinary consciousness are transformed. There occurs not
only a conceptual revolution in a person consisting in the fact that
he understands more, but also a revolution in his life. This
penetrates into the profoundest human conceptions. It is
precisely in the profoundest human conceptions, I wish to say, in the
very roots of the soul being, that a person is transformed through
the fact that he is able to enter into the sphere of this
super-sensible knowledge — something which happens, of course,
only for momentary periods in one's life.
Here I must call your attention to two conceptions that play the
greatest imaginable role in every-day life. These are conceptions
completely and profoundly valid in ordinary life which take on an
utterly different form the moment one ascends into the super-sensible
world. These are the two concepts on the basis of which we form our
judgments in the world: the concepts true and false,
right and wrong. I beg you not to imagine that
in this explanation I intend, through a frivolous handling of the
problem of knowledge, to undermine the validity of the concepts
true and false, right and wrong. To undermine something which
is wholesome in ordinary life is by no means in keeping with a
genuine super-sensible knowledge. This higher knowledge enables us to
acquire something in addition for ordinary life, but never
subtracts from it. Those persons who — whether really or
in sentimentality — become untrue in their ordinary lives,
unpractically mystical for this aspect of life, are also unsuited for
a genuine super-sensible knowledge. A genuine super-sensible knowledge
is not born out of fantastic persons, dreamers, but out of those very
persons who are able to take their places in their full humanity in
the earthly existence, as persons capable in real life. In
other words, it is not our purpose to undermine what we experience in
our every-day lives, and what is bound up in its very depths with the
concepts true and false, right and wrong; on the contrary,
truthfulness in this sphere, I should like to emphasize, is
strengthened in one's feelings by that very thing which now comes
about in connection with a higher knowledge by reason of a
metamorphosis, a transformation of the concepts true and false,
right and wrong.
When we have really entered into this higher, super-sensible
world, we do not any longer say in such an abstract way that a thing
is true or false, that it is right or wrong, but the concept of the
true and the right passes over into a concept with which we are
familiar in ordinary life, though in a more instinctive way;
only, this concept belonging to the ordinary life is transmuted into
a spiritual form. True and right pass over into the
concept healthy; false and wrong pass over
into the concept diseased. In other words, when we
reflect about something in ordinary life — feel, sense,
or will something — we say: “This is right, that is
wrong.” But, when we are in the realm of super-sensible
knowledge, we do not arrive at this impression of
right or wrong but we actually reach the
impression that something is healthy, something else is diseased.
You will say that
healthy and ill are concepts to which a certain indefiniteness is
attached. But this is attached to them only in the ordinary life or
the ordinary state of consciousness.
The indefiniteness ceases when the higher knowledge is sought for
in so exact a manner as I have explained in the first lecture.
Precision then enters also into what we experience in this realm of
higher knowledge. Healthy and ill, — these are the terms
we apply to what we experience in association with the beings of the
super-sensible world of whom we become aware through such a form of
knowledge.
Just think how deeply that which becomes an object of
super-sensible knowledge may affect us: it affects us as
intimately as health and illness of the body. In regard to one
thing that is experienced in the super-sensible, we may say: “I
enter livingly into it. It benefits and stimulates my life; it
elevates my life. I become through it in a certain way more
‘real.’ It is healthful.” In regard to something
else I say: “It paralyzes — indeed, it kills — my
own life. Thereby do I recognize that it is something
diseased.” And just as we help ourselves onward in the
ordinary world through right and wrong, just as we place our own
human nature in the moral and the social life, so do we place
ourselves rightly in the super-sensible world
through healthy and ill. But we are thus fitted into
this super-sensible world with our whole being in a manner far
more real than that in which we are fitted into the sense world. In
the sense world we separate ourselves from things in this element of
the right or the wrong. I mean to say that right does not benefit
us very intensely and wrong does not cause us much
distress — especially in the case of many persons. In the
super-sensible world it is by no means possible that experiences
shall touch us in this way. There our whole existence, our whole
reality, enters into the manner in which we experience this
super-sensible world. For this realm, therefore, all conflict of
opinion ceases as to whether things are reality or mere
phenomena; whether they manifest to us merely the effects
produced upon our own sense organs; and the like — questions
about which I do not wish to speak here because the time would not
suffice. But everything about which people can argue in this way in
relation to the physical reality, — to carry on such
discussion with reference to the spiritual world really has no
significance whatever for the spiritual, super-sensible world.
For we test its reality or unreality through the fact that we can
say: “One thing affects me wholesomely, another thing in an ill
way — causing injury,” I mean to say, taking the word in
its full meaning and weight. The moment a person ascends to the
super-sensible world, he observes at once that what was
previously knowledge void of power becomes an inner power of
the human soul itself. We permeate the soul with this
super-sensible knowledge as we permeate our bodies with blood.
Thus we learn also in such knowledge the whole relationship of the
soul and the spirit to the human body; we learn to see how the
spirit-soul being of man descends out of a super-sensible prenatal
existence and unites with the inherited body. In order to see
into this, it is necessary first to learn to know the spirit-soul
element so truly that through this reality, as healthy or diseased,
we experience the actuality in our own — I cannot say
body here, but in our own soul.
Supersensible knowledge, therefore — although we make such
a statement reluctantly, because one seems at once to fall into
sentimentality — is really not a mere understanding but an
ensouling of the human being. It is soul itself, soul content, which
enters into us when we penetrate to this super-sensible knowledge. We
become aware of our eternity, our immortality, by no means through
the solution of a philosophical problem; we become aware of them
through immediate experience, just as we become aware of external
things in immediate experience through our senses.
What I have thus described is exposed, of course, to the
objection: “To be sure, one may speak in this way, perhaps, who
participates in such super-sensible knowledge; but what shall any one
say to these things who is himself not as yet a participant in this
super-sensible knowledge?” Now, one of the most beautiful ways
in which human beings can live together is that in which one person
develops through contact with the other, when one goes through the
process of becoming, in his soul nature, through the help of the
other. This is precisely the way in which the human community is most
wonderfully established. Thus we may say that, just as it is not
possible for all persons to become astronomers or botanists and yet
the results of astronomy and botany may possess importance and
significance for all persons — at least, their primary results
— and can be taken in by means of the insight possessed by a
sound human intellect, it is likewise possible that a sound human
mind and heart can directly grasp and assimilate what is presented by
a spiritual-scientist who is able to penetrate into the
super-sensible world. For the human being is born, not for
untruth, but for truth! And what the spiritual-scientist has to say
will always be clothed, of course, in such words and
combinations of words that it diverges, even in its formulation, from
what we are accustomed to receive as pictures out of the
sensible-physical world. Therefore, as the spiritual-scientist
lays open what he has beheld, this may work in such a way upon the
whole human being, upon the simple, wholesome human mind, that
this wholesome human mind is awakened — so awakened that it
actually discovers itself to be in that state of waking of which
I have spoken today. I must repeat again and again, therefore, that,
although I have certainly undertaken to explain in such books as
Occult Science — an Outline,
and
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds and Its Attainment,
and in other volumes, how it
is possible to arrive through systematic exercises at what I must
designate as “looking into the spiritual world,” so that
every one possesses the possibility today, up to a certain degree, of
becoming a spiritual-scientist, yet it is not necessary to do this.
For a sound human constitution of soul is such that what the
spiritual-scientist has to say can be received when it comes into
contact with the human soul — provided only that the soul is
sufficiently unprejudiced — as something long known. For this
is precisely the peculiar characteristic of this spiritual
research, this super-sensible knowledge to which we are
referring: that it brings nothing which is not subconsciously present
already in every human being. Thus every one can feel: “I
already knew that; it is within me. If only I had not permitted
myself to be rendered unreceptive through the authoritarian and other
preconceptions of natural science, I should already have grasped,
through one experience or another, some part of what this spiritual
research is able to present as a connected
whole.”
But the fact of
such a thing as this transformation of the concepts true and false
into the healthy and the diseased renders the inner experience
of the soul more and more intense. At a higher level man places
himself more intensely within a reality than he places himself in the
physical reality through the ordinary waking of the daily life.
In this way, feelings, sentiments, experiences of the soul are
generated in relationship to these items of knowledge, which are
altogether exact, just as they are generated through our being
confronted by external things. That which the super-sensible knowledge
can bestow lays hold upon the whole human being whereas it is really
only the head that is laid hold of by what the knowledge of the
senses can bestow. I trust you will permit me to visualize this
relationship of super-sensible knowledge to the complete human being
by referring to something personal, although the personal in
this realm is also factual, for the facts are intensely bound up with
the personal.
In order to render it clear that super-sensible knowledge cannot
really be a mere head-knowledge, but lays hold upon the human being
in a vastly more living and intense way than head-knowledge, I should
like to mention the following. Whoever is accustomed to a living
participation in ordinary knowledge — as every true
super-sensible knower should really be — knows that the head
participates in this ordinary knowledge. If he then ascends,
especially if he has been active through his entire life in the
ordinary knowledge, to super-sensible knowledge, the situation becomes
such that he must exert all his powers in order to keep firm
hold upon this super-sensible knowledge which comes upon him, which
manifests itself to him. He observes that the power by means of which
one holds fast to an idea about nature, to a law of nature, to the
course of an experiment or of a clinical observation, is very slight
in comparison with the inner force of soul which must be unfolded in
order to hold fast to the perception of a super-sensible being. And
here I have always found it necessary not only, so to speak, to
employ the head in order to hold firmly to these items of
super-sensible knowledge, but to support the force which the head can
employ by means of other organs — for example by means of the
hand. If we sketch in a few strokes something that we have reached
through super-sensible research, if we fix it in brief
characteristic sentences or even in mere words, then this thing
— which we have brought into existence not merely by means of a
force evoked through the nerve system applied in ordinary cognition,
but have brought into existence by means of a force drawing upon a
wide expanse of the organism as a support for our cognition,
— this thing becomes something which produces the result
that we possess these items of super-sensible knowledge not as
something momentary, that they do not fall away from us like dreams,
but that we are able to retain them. I may disclose to you,
therefore, that I really find it necessary to work in general
always in this way, and that I have thus produced wagon-loads of
notebooks in my lifetime which I have never again looked into. For
the necessary thing here lies in the activity; and the result of the
activity is that one retains in spirit what has sought to manifest
itself, not that one must read these notes again. Obviously, this
writing or sketching is nothing automatic, mediumistic, but
just as conscious as that which one employs in connection with
scientific work or any other kind of work. And its only reason for
existence lies in the fact that what presses upon us in the form of
super-sensible knowledge must be grasped with one's whole being. But
the result of this is that it affects, in turn, the whole human
being, grasps the whole person, is not limited to an impression upon
the head, goes further to produce impressions upon the whole human
life in heart and mind. What we experience otherwise while the
earthly life passes by us, the joy we have experienced in
connection with one thing or another, joy in all its inner
living quality, the pain we have experienced in lesser or deeper
measure, what we have experienced through the external world of the
senses, through association with other persons, in connection with
the falling and rising tides of life, — all this appears again
at a higher level, at a soul-spiritual level, when we ascend into
those regions of the super-sensible where we can no longer speak of
the true and the false but must speak of the healthy and the
diseased.
Especially when we
have passed through all that I described the last time,
especially that feeling of intense pain at a certain level on the way
to the super-sensible, do we then progress to a level of
experience where we pass through this inner living dramatic crisis as
super-sensible experiences and items of knowledge confront us: where
knowledge can bestow upon us joy and pleasure as these are possible
otherwise only in the physical life; or where knowledge may
cause the profoundest pain; where we have the whole life of the soul
renewed, as it were, at a higher level with all the inner coloring,
with all the inner nuances of color, with all the intimate inwardness
of the life of the soul and the mind that one enjoys through being
rooted together with the corporeal organization in every-day
existence. And it is here that the higher knowledge, the
super-sensible experience comes into contact with that which
plays its role in the ordinary life as the moral existence of the
human being; this moral existence of the human being with everything
connected with it, with the religious sentiment, with the
consciousness of freedom.
At the moment when we ascend to a direct experience of the
health-giving or the disease-bringing spiritual life, we come into
contact with the very roots of the moral life of man, the roots of
the whole moral existence. We come into contact with these roots of
the moral existence only when we have reached the perception that the
physical life of the senses and that which flows out of the human
being is really, from the point of view of a higher life, a kind of
dream, related to this higher life as the dream is related to the
ordinary life. And that which we sense out of the indefinite depths
of our human nature as conscience, which enables us to conduct our
ordinary life, which determines whether we are helpful or harmful for
our fellow men, that which shines upward from the very bottom of our
human nature, stimulating us morally or immorally, becomes
luminous; it is linked up in a reality just as the dream is linked up
in a reality when we wake. We learn to recognize the conscience as
something existing in man as a dimly mirrored gleam of the sense and
significance of the spiritual world — of that
super-sensible world to which we human beings belong, after all,
in the depths of our nature. We now understand why it is necessary to
take what the knowledge of the sense world can offer us as a point of
departure and to proceed from this to a super-sensible knowledge, when
we are considering the moral order of the world and desire to arrive
at the reality of this moral world
order.
This is what I endeavored to set forth thirty years ago as an
ethical problem, merely as a moral world riddle, in my
Philosophy of Spiritual Activity.
Without taking into account
super-sensible knowledge, I sought by simply following out the moral
impulses of the human being to establish the fact that the ethical
arises in every instance, not out of the kind of thinking which
simply absorbs external things, external occurrences or the
occurrences of one's own body, but out of that thinking life of the
soul which lays hold upon the heart and the will and yet in its very
foundation is, none the less, a thinking soul life, resting upon
its own foundations, rooted in the spiritual nature of the world. I
was compelled to seek at that time in my
Philosophy of Spiritual Activity
for a life of the soul
independent of the corporeal being of man, a life that seems, indeed,
a shadowy unreality in comparison with the solid reality of the
external world of the senses, but which is rooted in its true nature
in the very spiritual foundations of the universe. And the fact that
the ethical impulses proceed from this kind of thinking, purified
from the external world of the senses but wholly alive within man,
gives to the human being his ethical character. When we learn to see
now through super-sensible knowledge that what is rooted in us as our
conscience is, in its essence, the mirroring within our inner being
of the real spiritual world which weaves and breathes throughout the
world of the senses, we then learn to recognize the moral nature of
man as that which forever unites us without our knowing this, even
when we sense it only as a still small voice within us, with that
spiritual world which can be laid open to us through super-sensible
knowledge.
But let no one say that this super-sensible knowledge is
meaningless, therefore, for our moral life for the very reason that
we have the voice of conscience, for the reason that we possess the
practical intentions of life for its individual situations.
Especially will one who sees that the ancient spiritual traditions,
super-sensible knowledge handed down from primeval times and
continuing until now, have faded away and continue their
existence today as pale religious creeds, will be able to see that
man stands in need of a new stimulus in this very sphere. Indeed,
many persons are the victims of a great delusion in this field.
We can see that scientific knowledge, which is considered by many
today as the only valid knowledge — that the form which this
scientific knowledge has taken on, with its Ignorabimus,
“We cannot know”
— has caused many persons to doubt all knowledge, in that they
say that moral impulses, religious intentions, cannot be gained out
of any knowledge whatever, but that these ethical-religious impulses
in the conduct of life must be developed out of special
endowments belonging to man, independent of all knowledge. This has
gone so far, indeed, that knowledge is declared not to possess any
capacity for setting in motion in the human being such impulses as to
enrich him in his moral-religious existence through the fact that he
takes in his own spiritual being — for this is really what he
does take in with super-sensible knowledge. It has gone so far that
people doubt this possibility! On the other hand, however, especially
if one is not such a practical person as the so-called practical
persons of our present-day life, who merely follow a routine, if one
takes the whole world into account, on the contrary, as a
genuinely practical person — the world consisting of body,
soul, and spirit — one will certainly see that, in the
individual life situations for which we may be permeated in actual
existence with moral-religious content, more is needed than the faded
traditions, which cannot really any longer inspire the human being in
a completely moral sense. One recognizes something of this sort.
Permit me to
introduce here a special example.
Out of everything
that fails to satisfy us in that which confronts us today also
in the educational life, what concerned us when the Waldorf School
was to be founded in Stuttgart on the initiative of Emil Molt was to
answer the question how a human being ought really to be
educated. In approaching this task, we addressed this question to the
super-sensible world of which I am here speaking. I will mention only
briefly what sort of purposes had then to be made
basic.
First of all, the question had to be raised: “How is a
child educated so that he becomes a real human being, bearing his
whole being within himself but also manifesting his whole being
in the ethical-religious conduct of life?” A genuine
knowledge of man in body, soul, and spirit was necessary for
this. But such a knowledge of man in body, soul, and spirit is
entirely impossible today on the basis of what is considered
valid — most of all such a knowledge as may become actually
practical so that it enables one to lay hold upon the manifold duties
of life. In connection with this let me discuss the question by
pointing out to you very briefly that what we so generally feel today
to be a just ground for our pride — external science,
dealing through observation and experimentation with material
substance — is not qualified to penetrate into the secrets of
the material itself. What I shall introduce here now will be stated
very briefly, but we can find it set forth with all necessary proofs
in my writings, especially in the volume
Riddles of the Soul
[Von Seelenratseln
— not yet translated.]
When we pay attention
nowadays to ordinary science, we receive the conception, for example,
that the human heart is a kind of pump, which drives the blood
through the organs like a pumping machine. Spirit-science, such as we
have in mind, which introduces us to a view of what constitutes not
only the physical body of the human being, but his spirit-soul
nature, shows us how this spirit-soul nature permeates the corporeal
nature, how the blood is driven through the human being, not as if by
the action of the “heart pumping machine,” but through
the direct action of the spirit-soul nature itself; how this
spirit-soul nature so lays hold upon the circulation of the blood
that it is this spirit-soul element which constitutes the force that
causes the blood to pulse through our organism. But the heart is then
looked upon as something like a sense organ. As I consciously perceive
the external world with my eyes, and through my concepts make this
something of my own, thus do I likewise perceive through this inner
sense organ of the heart — again, in an unconscious way —
that which I develop unconsciously through my spirit-soul
forces as the pulsation in my blood. The heart is no pump; the heart
is the inner sense organ through which we perceive what the
spirit-soul nature develops inwardly in connection with our
blood, just as we perceive through the external senses the
external world. The moment that we pass over from an intellectual
analysis of the human organism to a vision of the whole human being,
the heart reveals itself in its true essence, in its true
significance — as an inner sense organ. In the heart the
effects of the circulation of human blood, with its life
impulses, are manifest; the heart is not the instrument causing this
pulsation.
This is an example
of the tragic fact that the very science bearing a materialistic
coloring is not able to penetrate into the secrets of the
material life; an example of the fact that we do not penetrate into
the secrets of the material life until we do this by observing the
spirit in its true work, in its creative work upon matter.
When we become aware through such super-sensible knowledge, on the
one hand, of the creative spirit in the very course of material
occurrences, we become aware on the other hand of the power-filled
spirit — not merely of the abstractly thinking spirit —
of the real spirit in its essence. Then only does there result a
genuine knowledge of man, such a knowledge as is needed if we
wish to develop in the growing child that which can live and breathe
in the human being until death, full of power, suited to life,
corresponding with reality. Such an intensive vitalizing of the
knowledge of man causes the educator to see the child as
something fundamentally different from what he is to the merely
external observer. In a fundamental sense, from the very first moment
of the earthly life, the growing child is the most wonderful
earthly phenomenon. The emergence out of the profoundest inner
nature, at first mysteriously indeterminate, of something that
renders the indeterminate features more and more determinate,
changing the countenance, at first so expressionless, into an
expressive physiognomy, the manner in which the vague,
unskillful movements of the limbs come to correspond to purpose and
objective, — all this is something wonderful to behold. And a
great sense of responsibility is necessary in bringing this to
development. If we stand in the presence of the developing human
being in such a way that we say, with all the inner fervor associated
with super-sensible knowledge: “In this child there is manifest
that which lived as spirit and soul in the pre-earthly existence in
super-sensible beauty, that which has left behind, in a certain sense,
its super-sensible beauty, has submerged itself in the
particular body that could be given to it in the course of
physical heredity; but you, as a teacher, must release that which
rests in the human body as a gift of the gods, in order that it may
lay hold year by year, month by month, week by week upon the physical
body, may permeate this, may be able to mold it plastically into a
likeness of the soul, you have to awaken still further in the human
being that which is manifest in him,” — if we stand thus
before the child, we then confront the task of educating the child,
not with intellectual principles, but with our whole human nature,
with the fullness of our human heart and mind, with a comprehensive
sense of human responsibility in confronting the problem of
education. We then gradually come to know that we do not have to
observe only the child if we wish to know what we must do with
him at any particular time, but that we must survey the whole human
being. This observation is not convenient. But it is true that what
is manifest in a person under certain circumstances in the
period of tenderest childhood, let us say, first becomes
manifest in a special form as either health-giving or
disease-bringing only in high old age after it has long remained
hidden in the inner being. As educators, we hold in our hands not
only the immediate age of childhood but the whole earthly life of the
human being. Persons who frequently say from a superficial
pedagogical point of view that we must present to the child only what
it can already understand make a very serious mistake. Such
persons live in the moment, and not in the observation of the whole
human life. For there is a period of childhood, from the change of
teeth until adolescence, when it is exceedingly beneficial to a child
to receive something that it does not yet understand, something that
cannot yet be made clear to it, on the authority of a beloved teacher
— to the greatest blessing for this human life, because, when
the child sees in the self-evident authority of a teacher and
educator the embodiment of truth, beauty, and goodness, in a certain
sense, when it sees the world embodied in the teacher, the effect of
this is the awaking of the forces of life. This is not something
which contradicts human freedom; it is something which appeals
to self-evident authority, which in its further development becomes a
fountainhead of strength for the whole life. If, at the age of 35
years, we bring something into our heart and mind which is suited by
its nature only now to be understood by us as mature persons, but
which we took into our hearts upon the authority of a beloved teacher
personality even in our eighth year, — if we bring that up into
consciousness which we have already possessed, which lived in us
because of love and now for the first time at a mature age is
understood by us, this understanding of what was present in us
in germ is the fountain for an inner enrichment of life. This inner
enrichment of life is taken away from the human being when, in a
manner reducing things to trivialities, only that is introduced to
the child which it can already understand. We view the mode of a
child's experience in the right way only when we are able to
enter into the whole human being and, most of all, into that which
enters as yet primarily into the human heart.
For example, we become acquainted with persons who radiate a
blessing when they enter the company of other persons. Their
influence is quieting, bestowing peace even upon excited persons
whose tempers clash with one another. When we are really able to look
back — as I said, this is not convenient — and see how
such persons, apart from their innate qualities, have developed such
a quality also through education, we often go back into a very tender
age of the life where certain teacher personalities have stood very
close to these children in their inner heart life, so that they
learned to look up with reverence to these personalities. This
looking up, this capacity for reverence, is like a mountain
brook which flows into a crevice in the rock and only later appears
again on the surface. What the soul acquired then in childhood exerts
its influence below in its depths, manifesting itself only in high
old age, when it becomes a power that radiates
blessing.
What I have just
introduced to you might be indicated in a picture if we say that, in
relationship to the universe as well, the human being may be so
educated that he may transmute into forces of blessing in high
old age the forces of reverence of his tender childhood. Permit me to
indicate in a picture what I mean. No one will be able to open his
hands in blessing in old age who has not learned in tender childhood
to fold his hands in reverent prayer.
This may indicate to us that in such a special case a life task,
education, may lead to an ethical-religious attitude of mind; may
indicate how that which our hearts and minds, and our wills, become
as a result of entering livingly into spirit-knowledge may enter with
vital reality into our conduct of life, so that what we develop
otherwise, perhaps, only in an external and technical way shall
become a component part of our moral-religious conduct of life. The
fact, however, that instruction and education in the Stuttgart
Waldorf School, and in the other schools which have arisen as its
offshoots, have been brought into such an atmosphere does not by any
means result in a lack of attention to the factual, the purely
pedagogical; on the contrary, these are given full
consideration. But the task of education has really become
something here which, together with all its technique of teaching,
its practice of instruction and everything methodical, at the same
time radiates an ethical-religious atmosphere over the child.
Educational acts become ethical-religious acts, because what is done
springs from the profoundest moral impulses. Since the practice of
teaching flows from a teacher-conscience, since the God-given soul
nature is seen in the developing human being, educational
action becomes religious in its nature. And this does not necessarily
have any sentimental meaning but the meaning may be precisely
what is especially necessary for our life, which has become so
prosaic: that life may become in a wholly unsentimental sense a
form of divine service to the world, as in the single example we have
given of education, by reason of the fact that spiritual science
becomes a light illuminating the actions of our life, the whole
conduct of life. Since super-sensible knowledge leads us, not to
abstractions, but to human powers, when these forms of knowledge
gained through super-sensible cognition simply become immediate
forces of life, they can flow over, therefore, into our whole conduct
of life, permeating this with that which lifts the human being above
his own level — out of the sensible into the super-sensible
— elevating him to the level of a moral being. They may bring
him to the stage where he becomes in consecrated love one with the
Spirit of the World, thus arriving at truly religious
piety.
Indeed, this is especially manifest also in education. If we
observe the child up to his seventh year, we see that he is wholly
given over, in a physical sense, to his environment. He is an
imitator, an imitative being even in his speech. And when we observe
this physical devotion, when we observe what constitutes a
natural environment of the child, and remains such a natural
environment because the soul is not yet awake, then we feel inclined
to say that what confronts us in a natural way in the child is the
natural form of the state of religious consecration to the
world. The reason why the child learns so much is that it is
consecrated to the world in a natural-religious way. Then the human
being separates himself from the world; and, from the seventh year
on, it is his educational environment which gives a different, dimly
sensed guidance to his soul. At the period of adolescence he arrives
at the stage of independent judgment; then does he become a being who
determines his own direction and goal from within himself. Blessed is
he if now, when freed from his sensuous organism, he can follow the
guidance of thought, of the spirit, and grow into the spiritual just
as he lived in a natural way while a child in the world, — if
he can return as an adult in relationship to the spirit to the
naturalness of the child's feeling for the world! If our spirit can
live in the spirit of the world at the period of adolescence as the
body of a child lives in the world of nature, then do we enter into
the spirit of the world in true religious devotion to the innermost
depths of our human nature: we become religious human beings.
We must willingly accept the necessity of transforming ordinary
concepts into living forces if we wish to grasp the real nature, the
central nerve, of super-sensible knowledge. So is it, likewise, when
we view the human being by means of what I described the last time as
super-sensible knowledge in Imagination. When we become aware that
what lives in him is not only this physical body which we study in
physiology, which we dissect in the medical laboratory and thereby
develop the science of physiology, when we see that a super-sensible
being lives in him which is beheld in the manner I have described, we
then come to know that this super-sensible being is a sculptor that
works upon the physical body itself. But it is necessary then to
possess the capacity of going over from the ordinary abstract
concepts which afford us only the laws of nature to an artistic
conception of the human being. The system of laws under which we
ordinarily conceive the human physical form must be changed into
molded contents; science must pass over into art. The super-sensible
human being can not be grasped by means of abstract science. We gain
a knowledge of the super-sensible being only by means of a
perception which leads scientific knowledge wholly over into an
artistic experience. It must not be said that science must remain
something logical, experimental. Of course, such a demand can be set
up; but what does the world care about what we set up as
“demands!” If we wish to gain a grasp of the world, our
process must be determined in accordance with the world, not in
accordance with our demands or even with our logical thoughts; for
the world might itself pass over from mere logical thoughts into that
which is artistic. And it actually does this. For this reason, only
he arrives at a true conception of life who — by means of
“perceptive power of thought” to use the expression so
beautifully coined by Goethe — can guide that which confronts
us in the form of logically conceived laws of nature into plastically
molded laws of nature. We then ascend through art — in
Schiller's expression “through the morning glow of the
beautiful” — upwards into the land of knowledge, but also
the land of reverent devotion, the land of the religious.
We then learn to know — permit me to say this in
conclusion — what a state of things we really have with
all the doubts that come over a human being when he says that
knowledge can never bestow upon us religious and ethical impulses,
but that these require special forces far removed from those of
knowledge. I, likewise, shall never maintain, on the basis of
super-sensible knowledge, that any kind of knowledge as such can
guide a human being into a moral and religious conduct of life. But
that which really brings the human being into a moral and religious
conduct of life does not belong in the realm of the senses: it can be
investigated only in the realm of the super-sensible. For this
reason a true knowledge of human freedom can be gained only when we
penetrate into the super-sensible. So likewise do we gain real
knowledge of the human conscience only when we advance to the sphere
of the super-sensible. For we arrive in this way at that spiritual
element which does not compel the human being as he is compelled by
natural laws, but permits him to work as a free being, and yet at the
same time permeates him and streams through him with those impulses
which are manifest in the conscience. Thus, however, is
manifested to man that which he vaguely senses as the divine
element in the world, in his innocent faith as a naive human being
imbued with religious piety.
It is certainly true that one does not stand in immediate need of
knowledge such as I have described in order to be a religious and
pious person; it is possible to be such a person in complete
naiveté. But that is not the state of the case, as history
proves. One who asserts that the religious and ethical life of man
must come to flower out of a different root from that of knowledge
does not realize on the basis of historical evolution that all
religious movements of liberation — naturally, the religious
aptitudes always exist in the human being — have had their
source in the sphere of knowledge as super-sensible sources of
knowledge existed in the prehistorical epochs. There is no such thing
as a content of morality or religion that has not grown out of the
roots of knowledge. At the present time the roots of knowledge have
given birth to scientific thinking, which is incapable, however, of
reaching to the spirit. As regards the religious conduct of
life, many people cling instead to traditions, believing that what
exists in traditions is a revelation coming out of something
like a “religious genius.” As a matter of fact, these are
the atavistic, inherited traditions. But they are at the present time
so faded out that we need a new impulse of knowledge, not working
abstractly, but constituting a force for knowledge, in order that
what exists in knowledge may give to the human being the impulse to
enter even into the conduct of the practical life with
ethical-religious motives in all their primal quality.
This we need. And, if it is maintained on the one hand —
assuredly, with a certain measure of justification — that the
human being does not need knowledge as such in order to develop
an ethical-religious conduct of life, yet it must be maintained, on
the other hand, as history teaches in this respect also, that
knowledge need not confuse the human being in his religious and his
ethical thinking. It must be possible for him to gain the loftiest
stages of knowledge, and with this knowledge — such, naturally,
as it is possible for him to attain, for there will always remain
very much beyond this — to arrive at the home in which he dwelt
by the will of God and under the guidance of God before he had
attained to knowledge. That which existed as a dim premonition, and
which had its justification as premonition, must be found again
even when our striving is toward the loftiest light of
knowledge. It will be possible then for knowledge to be something
whose influence does not work destructively upon the moral conduct of
life; it may be only the influence which kindles and permeates the
whole moral-religious conduct of life. Through such knowledge,
however, the human being will become aware of the profounder meaning
of life — about which it is permissible, after all, to speak:
he will become aware that, through the dispensation of the mysteries
of the universe, of the whole cosmic guidance, he is a being willed
by the Spirit, as he deeply senses; that he can develop further as a
being willed by the Spirit; that, whereas external knowledge brings
him only to what is indefinite, where he is led into doubt and where
the unity which lived within him while he possessed only naive
intimations is torn apart, he returns to what is God-given and
permeated of spirit within himself if he awakens out of the ordinary
knowledge to super-sensible knowledge.
Only thus can that which is so greatly needed by our sorely
tested time really be furthered — a new impulse in the
ethical-religious conduct of life: in that, just as knowledge has
advanced up to the present time from the knowledge of vague
premonition and dream to the wakeful clarity of our times, we shall
advance from this wakeful clarity to a higher form of waking, to a
state of union with the super-sensible world. Thus, likewise, will
that impulse be bestowed upon the human being which he so
imperatively requires especially for the renewal of his social
existence at this time of bitter testing for humanity in all parts of
the world — indeed, we may say, for all social thinking of the
present time. As the very root of an ethical-religious conduct of
life understanding must awaken for the fact that the human being must
pass from the ordinary knowledge to an artistic and
super-sensible awaking and enter into a religious-ethical conduct of
life, into a true piety, free from all sentimentality, in which
service to life becomes, so to speak, service to the spirit. He must
enter there in that his knowledge strives for the light of the
super-sensible, so that this light of the super-sensible causes him to
awaken in a super-sensible world wherein alone he may feel himself to
be a free soul in relationship to the laws of nature, wherein
alone he may dwell in a true piety and a genuine inwardness and true
religiousness as a spirit man in the spirit world.
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