V
THE
COOPERATION OF THE SPIRITUAL, POLITICAL AND
ECONOMIC DEPARTMENTS OF LIFE FOR THE BUILDING
UP OF A UNIFIED THREEFOLD SOCIAL ORGANISM
IN the second of this
series of lectures I have sketched for you the method of constructing
the spiritual, the political, and the economic life. I have then
endeavored in the succeeding lectures to describe in detail these
three members of the body social and disentangle what has heretofore
been considered a strict unity. (a) All that related to law,
politics, and affairs of state should be administered in a democratic
parliament. (b) Everything relating to the spiritual and intellectual
department of life should be detached from the political or equity
state, and the spiritual organization should be independently
administered in freedom. (c) The economic organization, separated
from the political and legal body, should form its own
administration, instead of its own conditions and necessities,
founded upon expert knowledge and technical capacity and skill.
Now the objection is
always raised that such an arrangement of the social organism denies
the necessity of building up social lilac as a unity. For every
single institution, every separate work which can be achieved by the
individual within the social organism, should endeavor to attain to
such a unity; and this unity would be broken up, it is said, if any
attempt were made to split the social organism into three parts.
This objection is
quite reasonable and comprehensible, judged by the habits of thought
of the present day. But, as we all see today it can by no means be
justified. Yet it is comprehensible, because in the first place we
need only glance at economic life itself in order to see how to the
smallest details spiritual, political, and purely economic affairs
overlap. In view of this state of things it may well he asked: How
could a splitting-up, a dismemberment, bring about any improvement?
Let us begin by taking the problem of the origin of merchandise, of
actual commodities. We shall find that the value of a commodity, of
merchandise, is already possessed of a threefold nature, in that the
commodity is produced, distributed, and consumed within the social
organism; yet this value gives the appearance of a unity bound to the
commodity, as we shall see.
What determines the
value of a commodity which can satisfy our requirements? In the first
place we must have some personal need for the commodity in question.
But let us examine how the need is determined. To begin with, it has,
of course, to do with our bodily nature. For the bodily nature
determines the value of the various material commodities. But even
material goods are variously valued, according to the kind of
education and requirements of the individual person. But where
spiritual and intellectual products are concerned — and these
are often inseparable from the sphere of the material, physical goods
— we shall find that the method of valuing any commodity
whatever is absolutely determined by the whole make-up of the human
being, and the amount and kind of work he is willing to perform in
order to possess that commodity. Here we see that it is the spiritual
or intellectual element in man that determines the value of a
commodity, or of any sort of merchandise.
Secondly, we see that
the goods being exchanged between one man and another are limited by
the conditions of ownership. and that means neither more nor less
than that they are limited by legal conditions. Whenever one man
tries to obtain a commodity from another, he touches in some way the
other's rights to the commodity in question. So that economic life
with its circulation of commodities is permeated throughout by all
sorts of legal conditions.
And in the third
place, a commodity has not merely the value which we attach to it
through our requirements and the personal importance we give to these
requirements, which is then transferred to the commodity, it has also
an objective value in itself. It has an objective value, to the
degree that it is durable or the reverse, lasting or perishable; to
the degree that by its nature it is more or less serviceable,
plentiful, or scarce. All these things condition an objective, actual
economic value, the determination of which demands an objective
expert knowledge, and the production of which requires an objective
technical capacity. But these three determinations of value are
brought together into a unity in the commodity. Hence it may be said
with reason. How can that which is united in the commodity be
separated and come under the administration of three departments, all
concerned with the commodity and interested in its circulation?
Looking merely at the
idea, it is certainly true that in life things can and do unite which
are administered from the most diverse directions. On the one hand,
why should not the subjective value which a man personally attaches
to a commodity be determined by his education which has its own
independent administration? On the other hand, why should not legal
conditions be given a place in the economic organizations? And why
should not all the objective value that accrues to the commodity from
expert knowledge and technical skill be added to the rest and unite
in the object, in a unity? But all this is idea only and has no
special value. That which the threefold order of the social organism
aims at in this direction must have a much deeper foundation. Here it
must be said that the threefold order of the social organism is not
an idea conceived out of personal inclinations by one or more
persons; it is an impulse resulting from an impartial observation of
the historical development of humanity in modern times. We may say
that actually for centuries the most important impulses of humanity
have been tending unconsciously in the direction of this threefold
membering; only they have never gained sufficient force to carry it
through. The failure to develop this force is the cause of the
present state of things, and of the misery in our surroundings. The
time is ripe to say that the work must now be taken in hand for which
preparation has been made for centuries, the work of bringing order
into the social organism. The first thing we see is that the really
free spiritual and intellectual life has broken away from the
political and economic bodies. For that spiritual life which is
dependent on the economic, legal-political organizations is by no
means free. It is a portion of the spiritual life, torn away from the
really fertile, free life of the spirit. It would be more exact to
say that at the beginning of the period in which capitalism appeared
with its division of labor on a grand scale, the really free
spiritual life in certain spheres of art, of philosophy, and of
religious conviction tore itself away from the economic organization
and the political life, and was to a certain extent carried on
unnoticed. That free spiritual life, forming only a part of all
spiritual life, acts creatively only out of man's own impulses. In my
lecture of yesterday I claimed that freedom for the whole of
spiritual life. Detached from the free spiritual life, which is the
outcome of man's own impulses, exists all that man finds necessary
for the administration of the economic life, and for the
administration of law and order. What is necessary for the
administration of economic affairs has become dependent upon the
economic forces themselves. In the positions and circles in which
economic power exists, the possibility also exists to train the next
generation in economic science, so that it may be able in its turn to
attain economic power. But the science which has arisen out of
economic life itself is only a part of all that might flow into the
economic organization, were the whole of spiritual life to be drawn
upon for economic life. But actually, it is commercial risk alone,
and everything resulting from it, that is made the object of study;
this is worked up into a science of economics.
In regard to political
life, the state requires functionaries and even learned men to fill
its appointments, and these have been educated according to the
stereotyped pattern prescribed for them by the state. The state, in
its appointments, wishes and expects that qualities should be
cultivated in individuals which can be used to its own advantage. But
that brings about intellectual and spiritual enslavement, even if a
man imagines himself to be free. He is not aware of his dependence,
does not see that he is confined within the limits of the stereotyped
model held up to him. But the truly free spiritual and intellectual
life has won for itself a certain position in the world, independent
of the economic and the political organizations. What is this
position? I have already characterized it in part. That spiritual and
intellectual life which has preserved its independence has become
foreign to life; in one sense it has acquired an abstract character.
We need only glance at the content of the philosophies of the free
spiritual life, whether aesthetic, religious, or even scientific, in
order to see that although very much is said, it amounts to little
more than admonitions to society. This content is there merely to
appeal to the understanding and to feelings; it is there to play a
part in the inner life of men, to fill the soul with inner comfort
and well-being. But it has not the power or the impetus actually to
enter and influence external life. Hence the unbelief in that
spiritual life, to which I have already referred, proceeding from
socialist quarters and expressed in the words: No social idea however
well-intended, if it is a purely spiritual one, can ever transform
social life. To transform social life, real forces are necessary. But
this abstract spiritual life is not reckoned as a real force. How far
are the things that make up the inner life of the business man or
civil servant in his religion, or even his scientific convictions,
removed from the laws which he applies in business, in his position
in life, in the administration of public affairs! It is absolutely a
double outlook on life. On the one hand, principles which are
entirely the outcome of economic and political life; on the other, a
remnant of freedom, of spiritual life, condemned to impotence as
regards inner affairs.
Thus it may be said
that a unitary, free, spiritual life came into being centuries ago,
but because this was not recognized in the ordering of public life,
it has become abstract, devoid of reality. Now, because the influence
of the spirit is needed in external social life, spiritual life
reclaims its might, its power. That is the situation which now faces
us. Political life has followed another direction. Whereas
spiritual life has partly emancipated itself, the political
organization has completely merged itself in the course of recent
centuries in the powerful interests of the economic body. It has
happened unnoticed, but in reality the two have become one. Economic
interests and needs have found expression in public laws, and these
are often held to be human rights. But when scrutinized, they are
found to be only economic and political interests and wants in the
guise of laws. While, on the one hand, spiritual life demands its
power, we find, on the other, that confusion has arisen in regard to
the relation between legal and economic conditions. Large masses of
the population throughout the civilized world include in their
demands for the solution of the social problem a further fusion of
the legal and economic organization. The whole of economic life is to
be molded according to political and legal conceptions. If we examine
today's favorite catchwords, what do we find but the last
consequences of the fusion of political and economic life. We find
that the radical socialist party, which influences wide circles of
the population, demands that a political system, centralized, and
graded as to administration, be tacked on to the economic life, and
the economic life be hedged in on all sides by legal measures. The
power of the law is to extend over economic processes.
This is the other
aspect of the crisis which has arisen in our time, and we may say:
Through the demands for the increase of political and legal power
over the economic life, tyranny of the state, of the legal system,
over the economic system will arise. We see that the changes demanded
for the recovery of economic life are not such as arise naturally out
of economic conditions themselves; rather this demand arises out of
the quest for political power, which aims to take possession of and
dominate economic life. Proletarian dictatorship — what is it
but the last consequence of the fusion of legal and political with
economic life.
Thus we see the
necessity of thoroughly investigating the connection between law and
politics, and the economic life at present On the one hand, free
spiritual life has partly emancipated itself and demands restitution
of its original powers; on the other hand, if the legal system
continues to be more and more closely bound up with the economic
system, the whole social organism will be thrown into disorder. The
subordination of thought to the suggestion that the state is a unity,
and therefore the social body is also a unity, has lasted long
enough. The time has now come for us to realize the consequence of
that thought in the social chaos existing over a large part of the
civilized world. Economic conditions demand complete separation from
legal control, because of the evident abuses which the political
system would bring into economic affairs, were the developments of
the last centuries to be carried to their final consequence. The
impulse of the threefold social organism takes cognizance of these
facts; and I should like to give you a striking example of something
which ought to work as a unity in life, but which is torn asunder
owing to these very facts. It is said now that the aim of the
threefold order is to break up the unity of social life. In the
future, however, it will be said that the threefold order truly lays
the foundation for that unity. A striking example will show us that
an abstract endeavor to bring about unity has had just the effect of
destroying unity. At present there are some superficial people who
are extremely proud of the theoretic distinction they draw between
law and morality. These people say that morality is the valuation of
human action judged purely from the inner stand-point of the soul;
that the judgement of an action, whether good or bad, is guided only
by that inner stand-point; and precisely in questions of philosophy
the moral judgment is very carefully distinguished from the legal
judgment, which belongs to outer, public life, and should be
determined by the decrees and measures of political and social public
life.
Of this separation of
morality and law nothing was known up to the time of the rise of
modern technical science and the later capitalism. Only within the
last few centuries have the impulses of law and morality been torn
asunder. And why? Because the moral judgment was diverted into that
free spiritual life which has emancipated itself, but which has
become powerless with regard to external life. The free spiritual
life might be said to exist only for the purpose of exhortation or
judgment. It has lost the power really to lay hold on life. Those
maxims which might lay hold on life require economic impulses,
because they can no longer find purely human impulses, these having
been relegated to the sphere of morality. These economic impulses are
then turned into laws. Thus the activities of life, the determination
of justice and the warmth infused into it by human morals are torn
asunder. That which ought to be a unity is torn apart into a
duality.
A close study of the
development of modern states will show that by insisting on the
unitary character of the state, we have hastened the disunion of
those very forces which should combine to produce a unity. The
impulse of the three-membered social organism is in opposition to
this separation. If we regard in its true light the actual principle
of that impulse we shall see there can be no question of any
splitting up of life. The spiritual life should have its own
administration. And has not every human being a connection with it,
when it develops — as I have described it — in perfect
freedom? Everybody is educated in that free spiritual life, our
children are brought up in it, we find our immediate spiritual
interests in it, we are united with it. And the very people who are
thus united with that spiritual life and draw their strength from it,
those very same people live within the legal and political life, and
determine the legal order governing their relations with one another.
They establish that legal order by the help of the spiritual impulses
which they take in from the spiritual life; and this legal order is
the direct result of what has been acquired through contact with the
spiritual life. Again, the tie which is developed, binding man to man
democratically on the basis of the legal order, the impulse which he
receives as the basis of his relationship to other men, he carries
into economic life, because there are again the same human beings who
have a connection with the spiritual life, occupy a legal position,
and carry on business. On the one hand, the measures which the human
being takes, the manner in which he associates with others, the way
in which he transacts business, all that is permeated with what he
has developed in his spiritual life, and with the legal order he has
established in economic life; for they are the same men who work in
the threefold organism and the unity is not effected by any abstract
regulation, but by the living human beings themselves. Each member of
the community, however, can develop his own nature and individuality
in independence and can thus work for unity in the most effective
manner. This applies to every member. On the other hand, we can see
how, under the suggestion of the state as the principal of unity,
precisely what is inseparable in life becomes separated, even what is
so intimately connected as law and morality.
Therefore the impulse
to establish the threefold social organism is not to bring about the
separation of what belongs together, but actually the cooperation of
factors which ought to work together.
The spiritual life can
only develop on its own free and independent basis. But when allowed
to develop in this way, and granted an equal right to subsist side by
side with the two other departments of the social organism, it will
no longer be an abstract formation, like the spiritual life which has
actually been developing for centuries apart from the realities of
life; it will develop an impetus to play a direct part in the active,
real life of the legal-political and the economic organizations. It
might seem to be an absurd contradiction, a paradox, to assert, on
the one hand, that spiritual life should be fully independent and
develop from its own foundations, as I showed yesterday, and, an the
other hand, to claim that it shall play a part in the practical
fields. But precisely when the spirit is left to itself does it
develop impulses capable of embracing all spheres. For there is no
reason why the free spirit in man should defer to any stereotyped
pattern in the interest of the state; it is not to be limited by the
condition that only those shall receive education who can command
economic resources; but it will he able to develop human
individuality in any generation through the observation of human
capacities. The force, however, which strives to find expression in
any one generation will not only embrace the phenomena and facts of
nature; it will include, especially, human life itself, because the
spirit extends its interests over all life. We have been condemned to
be unpractical in the sphere of spiritual matters, because only these
regions were left to the free spiritual life; we were denied the
right to enter into external reality. As soon as the spirit is
allowed not only to register parliamentary measures, but of itself to
determine the laws of the state in freedom, in that moment it will
make the legal code its own creation. The spirit will enter into the
machinery and into the order of the law, as soon as the present
mechanical system, which functions without thought according to
certain maxims and points of view for the economic life, has been
relinquished. As soon as the human spirit is free to play its part in
the economic life it will at once prove its capacity in the practice
of life within the economic circuit. All that is needed is to admit
its power to enter actively into the practical realm. Then it will
play its part. This true view of reality is a necessity. The spirit
in man must not be hermetically sealed up in abstractions; it must be
allowed to influence life. Then at every moment it will fructify the
economic sphere, which otherwise must remain sterile, or must be
dependent on mere chance for its fructification.
Now all this must be
taken into account, if we wish to arrive at a clear understanding of
the manner in which the spiritual, the legal-political, and the
economic system should work together within the threefold social
organism. There are very clear-sighted persons to whom these things
are still quite obscure. They often see that under present economic
conditions, from which, we may say, the spirit has been banished,
circumstances have arisen which are now socially untenable. There is,
for instance, a highly respected economic thinker whose opinion is as
follows. He says: Looking at economic life today, what strikes us
most is a system of consumption by which social evils are promoted in
the highest degree. Those who possess the economic means today
consume various things which are really only luxuries. He points out
the role played by what he considers luxuries in the life of society
and in economic life. Certainly this is not difficult. We need seek
no further than the common occurrence of the purchase of a string of
pearls by a lady. Many people would regard this as a very harmless
luxury. They do not consider the actual present economic value of a
string of pearls. On the equivalent of its value, five working-class
families can live for six months. Yet this is hung by the lady in
question round her neck! Anybody can understand this, and in the
present-day attitude of mind one can seek a remedy for such things.
The esteemed thinker whom I have in mind thinks it necessary for the
state (of course, everybody is now under the obsession of the state)
to impose high taxes on luxuries; so high, indeed, that people would
cease buying them. He does not admit the validity of the argument
that if luxuries were taxed in this way, they would decrease, and the
state then would lose the benefit of the taxation. He argues that
this is just what should happen, and that the taxation has a moral
aim. Taxation would then have the effect of promoting morality!
Such is the way of
thinking today. So small is the belief in the power of the human
spirit, that it is proposed to establish the morality, which should
spring from the human soul and spirit, by means of taxation, namely,
by law! No wonder that here, at any rate, no unity of life can be
reached.
The same thinker
points out that the acquisition of property is a wrong, for the
reason that monopolies are possible in our social life; that, for
instance, social life still labors under the burden of the right of
inheritance. And again he proposes to regulate all these things by
taxation. If inherited property were taxed as highly as possible, he
thinks that justice as regards property would result. It would also
be possible to oppose monopolies and other evils of the same kind by
law, by legal promulgations of the state. What strikes one in this
thinker is that he says it is not of such importance that all these
proposals should be determined by state laws, taxation, and so on;
for it is plain that the value of such measures is by no means beyond
dispute, because state laws do not always produce the intended
result. But then he says: ‘The essential point is not that
these laws should actually raise the level of morality, or hinder
monopolies; what matters are the feelings which prompt such
laws.’
But this is an
absolutely complete example of turning in a circle! A famous
political thinker of our day does almost exactly the same thing. He
proposes to call forth an ethical mode of thought and feeling by
legislation; but, he says, it is not necessary that this legislation
should actually be in force; the main thing is that people should
have a feeling for such legislation. It is a clear case of the
Chinaman who tries to catch himself by his own pigtail! It is a
strange closing of the circle; but one which works most effectually
in our present social life. For public life is now molded under the
influence of this mode of thought. And no one sees that all these
things must lead in the end to the recognition of the fact that the
basis for a really new construction of social life is the activity of
the spiritual life in complete independence; likewise, the
independence of the legal organization and its detachment from the
economic system; and, finally, the untrammeled development of the
economic organization.
Such things strike us
very forcibly today when we see how people, who are more than
commonly well-intentioned, whose ethical sense for the need of a
reconstruction of social life is beyond doubt, show at least a faint
indication in their works of the absolute necessity for a spiritual
foundation to the social edifice, and yet give evidence everywhere of
a lack of understanding of the means by which that spiritual
foundation can be attained.
Such a person is
Robert Wilbrand, who has just written a book on the social problem.
Robert Wilbrand is no mere theorist. In the first place, he speaks
from a warm heart and enthusiastic for social things. Secondly, he
has traveled all over the world in order to acquaint himself with
social conditions, and in his book, which appeared a few weeks ago,
he faithfully depicts the terrible misery of the human being that
prevails everywhere today. He gives graphic pictures of the misery of
the proletariat, the wretchedness of the civilized world. He shows
also from his own standpoint how, in the most diverse regions in
which the social question has now become acute, people have striven
to build up a new social structure, but how they have been, or must
be, frustrated, as may be plainly seen in present-day Middle Europe
(1919). And Robert Wilbrand is quite certain that every attempt made
in the temper of the present day must fail. Having given expression
to this sentiment in various cadences in the course of his book, he
concludes in the following remarkable manner. He says: ‘These
attempts which are being made must fail; they will never succeed in
any reconstruction, because the social organism lacks a soul, and
until it has a soul, it can accomplish no fruitful work.’ The
most interesting part is that the book doses on this note, but does
not indicate how this soul is to be found. The aim of the impulse for
the threefold social organism is not to announce theoretically that
the soul is lacking, and wait till it appears of itself; but to point
out how it will develop. It will develop when the spiritual life has
been liberated from the political and economic organizations. The
spiritual life, if it can only follow the impulses which man evolves
from his spiritual nature, will then be strong enough to take its
part in all the rest of practical life. Then spiritual life will take
that form which I endeavored to describe yesterday; it will contain
reality. We can say that in the present and in the future this
spiritual life will be strong enough to bear the burden laid upon it,
which, for example, is mentioned in my book, The Threefold
Commonwealth. It is true, we can now point out, as it has been
clone in my second lecture, the way in which capital works today in
the social economic process. But those who simply say that capital
should be abolished or transformed into common property have no idea
how capital works in the economic system, especially under the
present conditions of production. They do not know that accumulations
of capital are needed in order that through the control of capital
men may work for the public good. For this reason in my book, The
Threefold Commonwealth, the administration of capital was made,
on the whole, dependent on the spiritual organization in cooperation
with the independent political and legal organization. Whereas we now
say that capital makes business, the impulse for the threefold order
of the social organism requires that, although it should always be
possible to accumulate capital, provision must be made for capital to
be administered by some one who has developed out of the spiritual
life the necessary capacity for business; and that this accumulation
of capital may be administered by the person to whom it belongs only
as long as he is able to administer it himself. When the capitalist
can no longer put his own capacities into the administration of the
capital, he must see — or if he should feel himself incapable
of such a task, a corporation of the spiritual organization must
assume the responsibility of seeing — that the management of
the business shall pass to a highly capable successor, able to carry
it on for the benefit of the community. That is to say: The
transference of a business concern to any person or group of persons
is not dependent on purchase or any other displacement of capital,
but is determined by the capacity of individuals themselves; it is a
matter of transfer from the capable to the capable, from those who
can work in the service of the community to those who can also work
in the best way far the common good. On this kind of transference the
social safety of the future depends. It will not be an economic
transference, as is now the case; this transference will result from
the impulses of the human being, received from the independent
spiritual-intellectual life and from the independent legal-political
life. There will even be corporations within the cultural
organization, united with all other departments of the cultural life,
on. which the administration of capital will devolve.
Thus, instead of
handing over the means of production to the community, we transfer it
from one capable person to another equally capable, that is, the
means of production is circulated within the community; this
circulation depends on the freedom of the cultural life by which it
is effected and upheld. So that we may say: the main factor in the
circuit of economic life is the impulse which is at work in the
spiritual, and in the equity life. It would be impossible to imagine
any unity more complete than that effected in economic life by such
measures. But the stream which unites itself with the economic
organization flows from the free spiritual and the free political
organizations. No longer will society be exposed to the chance which
is expressed in supply and demand; or in the other factors in our
present economic organization. Reasonable and just relations between
man and man will enter into this new economic life. So that the
spiritual, legal, and economic organizations will work together as
one, even though they are administered separately; man will carry
over from one sphere into another — since he belongs to all
three — what each one needs. It is true that we must free
ourselves from many a prejudice if these things are gradually to be
brought to pass. Today we are absolutely convinced that the means of
production and land are matters belonging to economic life. The
impulse of the threefold order requires that only the reciprocal
values of things shall come under the economic administration, and
that prices shall approximate values, so that ultimately what finally
proceeds from the economic administration is merely the determination
of price.
But it is impossible
to reach a just determination of price as long as the means of
production and land function as they now do within the economic
system. The disposal of land, systematized in the laws relating to
its ownership, and the disposal of the finished means of production
(for example, a factory with its machinery and equipment), should be
no matter for the economic organization; they must belong partly to
the spiritual and partly to the legal. That is to say, the
transference of land from one person or group of persons to another
must not be carried out by purchase or through inheritance, but by
transference through the legal means, on the principles of the
spiritual organization. The means of production through which
something is manufactured — a process which lies at the basis
of the creation of capital — can only be looked at from the
viewpoint of its commodity-cost while it is being built up. Once it
is ready for operation, the creator of it takes over the management
because he understands it best. He has charge of it as long as he can
personally use his capacities. But the finished means of production
is no longer a commodity to be bought and sold; it can only be
transferred by one person or group of persons to another person or
group of persons by law, or rather, by spiritual decisions confirmed
by law. Thus, what at present forms part of the economic life, such
as the laws relating to the disposal of property, to the sale of
land, and to the right of disposal of the means of production, will
he placed on the basis of the independent legal organization working
in conjunction with the independent spiritual organization. These
ideas may appear to the present-day world strange and unfamiliar. But
this fact is just what is so sad and bitter. Only when these things
find entrance into the minds and souls and hearts of men, so that the
human being orders his social life accordingly, only then can be
fulfilled what so many try to bring about in other ways, but always
without success.
It is a truth which
must now at last be recognized, that much which at present appears
paradoxical will seem a matter of course when social life is really
on the way to recovery.
The impulse for the
three-membered social organism makes no social demands on the basis
of passion, or impelled by motives and emotions which often underlie
these social demands. It puts forward its demands from a study of the
actual evolution of humanity in recent times up to the present day.
It sees how, in the course of long centuries, one form of social life
has given place to another. Let us go back to a time before the end
of the Middle Ages. We find a condition of things extending into the
latter part of medieval times, especially in civilized Europe. We
find society in a condition which we may call a social order of
might. This society of might or despotism arose in the following way,
to give one example of the manner in which such changes are brought
about. Some conqueror, with his train of followers, settled in some
locality and these became his workmen. Then, since the leader was
looked up to an account of his individual qualities, his abilities, a
social relationship was brought about between his power and that of
those whom he had once led, and who afterwards became his servants or
his workmen. Here the model for the social organism, which took its
rise in one person or in one aristocratic group, passed on to the
community at large, and lived on in that community. The will of the
community was to a certain extent only the reproduction or the
projection of the single will in that society of might, of
despotism.
Under the influence of
modern times, of the division of labor, of capitalism, of technical
culture, this despotic order of society gave place to the system of
trade, of exchange, which, however, carries on the same impulses
among individuals and in the whole life of the community. The
commodity produced by the individual becomes merchandise, which is
exchanged for something else. For financial economy is, in reality,
so far as it consists in a transaction between individuals or groups,
neither more nor less than a system of trading. Social life is a
system of trading. Whereas under the old despotic system, the whole
community had to do with the will of a single individual, which it
accepted, the system of trading, under which we are still living, and
from which a great part of the population of the world is striving to
extricate itself, has to do with the will of one individual opposed
to the will of another. And only out of the cooperation of one single
member with another arises, as if by chance, the collective will of
the community. Springing from intercourse between one individual and
another the economic community takes shape, together with wealth, and
the element which we recognize in plutocracy. In all this there is
something at work which has to do with the clashing of individual
interests with one another. It is no wonder that the old despotic
order of society could not aspire to the smallest emancipation of the
spiritual life. For on account of his superior capacity their leader
was also recognized as the authority in the spiritual, and in the
legal order. But it is quite comprehensible that the legal, the
state, the political principle has gained the upper hand, especially
in the trading system of society, for have we not seen on what
foundation law actually wills to rest, even though that will does not
find its true expression in the present social order?
Law is really
concerned with all that the individual man has to regulate with other
individual men who are his equals. The trading system is an order in
which one person has to do with another. It was, therefore, to the
interest of the society based on the trading system to transform its
economic system, in which one person has to do with another, into a
legal system; that is to say, to change economic interests into legal
statutes. Just as the old despotic system was transformed into a
society of trading, this latter system now strives, out of the
innermost impulses of human evolution, to take a new social form,
especially in the domain of economies. For the system of trading,
having appropriated to itself the spiritual life, having enslaved it
and turned it away from real life, has gradually grown into a mere
economic system of society, the form demanded by certain radical
socialists. But, out of the deepest human impulses of our day, this
trading system strives to pass, especially in the domain of economic
life, into that form which I might call, even if the term is
inadequate, the Commonwealth. The Society of Traders must be
transformed into the Commonwealth.
What form will the
Commonwealth take Just as the individual will, or the will of an
aristocracy, which is also a kind of individual will, continues in a
sense to work in the whole community, so that the impulses of the
individuals only represent an extension of the will of the one; just
as the trading system had to do with the clashing of one individual
will with another, so the economic order of the Commonwealth will
have to do with a kind of collective will, which then in reverse
fashion works back on the individual will. I explained in the second
lecture how associations of the various branches of production with
the consumers will be called into existence in the sphere of economic
life, so that everywhere there will be a combination of the producers
with the consumers. These associations will enter into contracts with
other associations. A kind of collective will then arises, within
larger or smaller groups. This collective will is an ideal for which
many socialists yearn; but they visualize the matter in a very
confused, by no means reasonable, manner. Just as in the society of
despotism, of power, the single will worked in the community, so
there must work in the future Commonwealth a common will, a
collective will.
But how will that be
possible? As we know, it must arise through the cooperation of single
wills. The single wills must give a result which is no tyranny for
the individual, but within which everyone must be able to feel
himself free. What must be the content of this collective will? In it
must he contained what every soul and every human body can accept,
something with which they are in agreement, with which they can grow
familiar. That means that the spirit and soul which live in the
individual human being must also live in the collective will of the
Commonwealth. This is possible only when those who build up the
collective will carry in themselves of their own will, in their
intentions, in their feelings, and in their thoughts, a complete
understanding of the individual man. Into that collective will must
flow all that is felt by the individual man, as his own spiritual,
moral, and bodily nature. This is imperative.
This was not so in the
society of might, which acted instinctively, in which a single person
was looked up to by the community, because the individual persons
forming the community could not make their individual will felt. Nor
was it so in the trading system of society, in which a single
individual will clashed with others, and a chance kind of common life
arose from it. But it must be otherwise when an organized collective
will influences the individual. Then, no one who shares in the
forming of that collective will must lack understanding of what is
truly human. There no one who is equipped only with abstract modern
science, which applies merely to external nature, and which can never
explain the whole man, must presume to decide questions on the
philosophy of life. Men will approach the philosophy of life with
spiritual science which embraces the whole man, body, soul, and
spirit, and provides understanding in regard to the feeling and will
of every single person. Hence. it will only be possible to establish
an economic order of the community, when the economic organization
can be inspired by the independent spiritual life. It will thus not
be possible to bring about a sound future unless what is thought in
the free life of the spirit is reflected back from the economic life.
That free spiritual life will not prove itself unpractical, but on
the contrary, prove itself very practical. Only he who lives in an
atmosphere of spiritual slavery can be content just to reflect on
Good and Evil, on the True and the False, the Beautiful and the Ugly
within his own soul. But anyone who, through spiritual science, has
learnt to behold the spirit as a living force, and who grasps it by
the aid of spiritual science, will be practical in all his actions,
especially in everything relating to human life. That which he
absorbs from his spiritual vision passes immediately into every
function of life; it actually puts on a form which enables it to live
in the immediate practice of life. Only a spiritual culture that has
been banished from practical life can become foreign to life. A
spiritual culture which is allowed to influence practical life
develops in the practice. He who really knows what spiritual life
is, knows how close to practical life that spirit element is, when it
is allowed to follow its own impulses unhindered. The man who desires
to found a new philosophy, and who does not know even how to chop
wood, should the occasion arise, is no really good philosopher. For
he who would found a philosophy, without the ability to turn his hand
to anything in the direct practice of life, can found no philosophy
of life, but only one foreign to all life. True spiritual life is
practical. Under the influences which have made themselves felt for
centuries, it is comprehensible that there should be persons
belonging to the present civilization — among them the leaders
of our intellectual life — who are of the same opinion as
Robert Wilbrand. In his book on social reconstruction, with the best
intentions, from a feeling prompted by true ethics, he says:
“No practical work of reconstruction can be accomplished
because the soul is lacking.” But people cannot bring
themselves to ask about the reality of soul-development, of
soul-building, they cannot make up their minds to ask: What is the
effect of a truly free spiritual life on the political and economic
life? That free spiritual life will, as I have shown, rightly
cooperate with the economic life. Then the economic life, which can
cooperate with the political and spiritual life, can at all times
train men who will in their turn give stimulus to the spiritual life.
Through the three-membered social organism a free, absolutely real
life of the community will be brought about. Then those persons who
now, out of instinct rather than out of a true courage in life, seek
a vague something which they call soul or spirit, may be answered in
these words: Learn to recognize the reality of your spiritual nature.
Give to the spirit the things of the spirit, and to the soul the
things of the soul; and it will then be plain also what belongs to
the economic life.
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