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LECTURE
TWENTY-TWO
Dornach,
21 January 1917
Let me start by drawing your attention to a number of things which might
be of interest to you, beginning with an article in yesterday's issue of
Schweizerische Bauzeitung,
[ Note 1 ]
reporting on the Johannesbau
in Dornach, near Basel. This is the result of a recent visit of a group
of Swiss engineers and architects. The article is most gratifying and
fair. Indeed, it is like an oasis in the midst of other things which
have recently appeared in print about our efforts which had their
source in our very midst. It is most satisfying to find such a fair
discussion that gives the building its due, especially since it comes
from specialist, objective quarters outside our own circle. Do read it.
Herr Englert,
[ Note 2 ]
who acted as guide for that group of Swiss
engineers and architects who showed such genuine interest in our
building from the technical and also the aesthetic point of view, has
just reported that the article is also due to be published in French in
the Geneva journal
Bulletin de technique.
Further, I should like to draw your attention to a book — you will
excuse my inability to tell you the title in the original language —
just published by our friend Bugaev under his pen-name of Andrei Belyi.
[ Note 3 ]
The book is in Russian and gives a very detailed account in
great depth of the relationship between spiritual science and Goethe's
view of the world. In particular it goes into the connections between
Goethe's views and what I said in Berlin in the lecture cycle
Human and Cosmic Thought
[ Note 4 ]
about various world views, but it also discusses a good deal that is
contained in spiritual science. Its connections to Goethe's views are
discussed in depth and in detail and it is much appreciated that our
friend Bugaev has published a revelation of our spiritual-scientific
view in Russian.
Herr Meebold,
[ Note 5 ]
too, has just published a book in Munich to
which I should also like to draw your attention. The title is
The Path to the Spirit. Biography of a Soul.
You will find it interesting because Herr Meebold describes in it a
number of experiences he had in connection with the Theosophical
Society.
These are the oases in the desert of attacks. It seems that another
has just appeared, written by one of our long-standing older members.
It is said to be particularly scandalous, but I have not yet seen it.
These attacks from among our members are particularly unwelcome because
we realize that it is precisely these long-standing older members who
ought to know better.
Yesterday we spoke about aspects of the human being's connections
with the supersensible world, particularly with regard to the fact that
our dead, and indeed all those who have left their bodies and gone
through the gate of death, must be thought of as being in that world.
In our present context it is particularly important to understand that
in the world through which man passes between death and a new birth an
evolution, a development is taking place just as much as is the case
here on the physical plane.
Here on the physical plane, taking a shorter span to start with,
such as the post-Atlantean time, we speak of the Indian, the Persian,
the Egypto-Chaldean, the Greco-Latin, the modern period, and so on. And
we consider that during the course of these periods an evolutionary
process takes place — in other words, that human souls and the manner
in which these souls manifest in the world during this sequence of
periods differ in characteristic ways.
Similarly, if only one can find sufficiently graphic concepts, one
can speak of an evolution that takes place for these periods of time in
the sphere through which the dead pass. There, too, an evolution takes
place. On all kinds of occasions, where this has been possible, this
evolution has been discussed in different ways.
[ Note 6 ]
But relatively easy though it is to speak of evolution on the physical
plane — and as you know it is not all that easy in this materialistic
age — it is naturally less easy to do so with regard to the spiritual
world, since for that world we lack sufficiently graphic concepts. Our
language was created for the physical plane, and we are forced to use
all kinds of paraphrases and graphic substitutes in order to describe
the spiritual sphere in which the dead are living, especially with
regard to evolution.
Naturally, of particular interest now is the fact that life between
death and a new birth in our fifth post-Atlantean period is suitably
different from what it was in earlier times. While the materialistic
cultural period is running its course here on earth, a great deal is
also taking place in the spiritual world. Since the dead have a far
more intense experience of everything connected with evolution than is
the case for people living on the physical plane, their destiny is most
intensely dependent on the manner in which a certain evolution takes
place in definite periods. The dead react far more intimately, far more
subtly, to what lives in evolution than do the living — if we may use
these expressions — and this is perhaps more noticeable in our
materialistic age than has ever been the case before.
Now, to assist our understanding of a number of things we shall be
discussing, I want to introduce into these lectures something that has
emerged in relation to this, as a result of careful observation of the
actual situation. To do this I shall have to widen our scope somewhat
and speak today about various aspects in preparation for the statements
towards which our train of thought is leading.
I have already pointed out that the right way to look at the human
being in relation to the universe is to consider the individual parts
of his being separately. From the spiritual point of view, what exists
here on the physical plane is more a kind of image, a manifestation.
Thus we may regard as fourfold the physical human being we see before
us.
First we see the head. As you know from earlier discussions, the
head as it appears in a particular incarnation is supposed to have
reached its final stage in that incarnation. The head is the part most
strongly exposed to death. For the way our head is formed is, for the
most part, the consequence of our life in our previous incarnation. On
the other hand, the formation of our next head in our next incarnation
is the consequence of the life of our present body. A while ago I
expressed this briefly by saying: Our body, apart from our head,
metamorphoses itself into our head in our next incarnation, while our
next body is growing towards us; whereas our present head is the
metamorphosed body of our previous incarnation, the rest of our body
has grown towards us more or less — there are varying degrees — out of
what we have inherited.
This is how the metamorphosis takes place. Our head, as it were,
falls away in one incarnation, having been the outcome of our body in
our previous incarnation. And our body transforms itself, metamorphoses
itself — as does leaf to petal in Goethe's theory of metamorphosis —
into our head in our next incarnation. Now because our head is formed
from the earthly body of our previous incarnation, the spiritual world
has a great amount of work to do on this head between death and our new
birth, for its archetypal form must be fashioned by the spiritual world
in accordance with karma. That is why, even in the embryo, the head
appears before anything else in its complete form, for more than any
other part it has been influenced by the cosmos. The body, on the other
hand, is influenced for the
most part by the human organism. So this appears later than the head
in the embryo. Apart from its physical substance, which has of course
been gathered through heredity, our head, in its form, its archetypal
form, is indeed shaped by the cosmos, by the sphere of the cosmos. It
is not for nothing that your head is more or less spherical in shape,
for it is an image of the sphere of the universe; the whole sphere of
the universe works to form your head. Thus we can say that our head is
formed from the sphere.
Just as here on earth people busily work to construct machines and
build up trade and commerce, so in the spiritual world human beings are
busy, though not exclusively, developing all the technical
requirements, the spiritual technical requirements for building the
head for their next incarnation from out of the sphere of the universe,
the whole cosmos, in accordance with the karma of their earlier
incarnations. We glimpse here a profound mystery of evolution.
The second aspect we must consider, if we want to view man as a
revelation of the whole universe, comprises all the organs of his
breast, centred around lung and heart. Let us look at them without the
head. The head is an image of the whole spherical cosmos. Not so, the
organs of the breast. These are a revelation of all that comes from the
East. They are formed out of what might be called the hemisphere. (See
diagram).
Imagine the cosmos like this. Then you can see the head as an image
of the cosmos. And the organs of the breast can be seen as an image of
what streams in from the East — the hemisphere I am shading green. This
hemisphere alone works on the organs of the breast. Or, expressed as a
paradox: The breast organs are half a head.
This is the basic form. The head is based on the sphere, the breast
organs on part of a circle, a kind of semicircle, only it is bent in
various ways so that you can no longer recognize it exactly. You would
be able to see that your head really is a sphere had luciferic and
ahrimanic forces never worked on man. And you would see that the organs
of the breast are really a hemisphere, had these forces never exercised
their influence. The direction in relation to the centre — one would
have to say for ordinary earthly geometry, the infinitely distant
centre — is eastwards. An eastward-facing hemisphere.
Now we come to the third part of the human being, excluding head and
breast organs: the abdominal organs and the limbs attached to the
abdomen. Although this is not an exact term, I shall call all this the
abdominal organs. Everything I comprehensively call the abdominal
organs can also be related, like the other parts, to forces which work
and organize from without. In this realm they work, of course, on man
from the outside via embryological development in the way they do
because during pregnancy the mother is dependent on the forces which
have to be gathered together to form the abdomen, just as forces have
to be collected from the sphere to form the head and from the East, the
hemisphere, to form the organs of the breast.
The forces that work on the organs of the abdomen must be imagined
as coming from the centre of the earth, but differentiated, with all
that this entails, according to the region inhabited by the parents or
ancestors. The forces all come from the centre of the earth, but with
differentiations depending on whether a person is born in North
America, Australia, Asia or Europe. The organs of the abdomen are
determined by forces from the centre of the earth with differentiations
according to region.
Seen from the occult point of view, the complete human being also
has a fourth aspect. You will say that we have already dealt with the
whole human being, and this is so, but from the occult point of view a
fourth aspect must be considered. We have examined three parts, so now
all that is left is the total human being. This totality, too, is a
part. Head, chest and abdomen all together form the fourth aspect, the
totality, and this totality is in turn formed by certain forces. This
totality is formed by forces that come from the whole circumference of
the earth. They are not differentiated according to region. The total
human being is formed by the total circumference of the earth.
Herewith I have described to you the physical human being as an
image of the cosmos, an image of the forces of the cosmos working
together. Other aspects, too, might be considered in connection with
the cosmos. For this we would have to think of the spiritual cosmos in
relation to the human being, not only the physical cosmos. We have just
been examining the physical human being, so we were able to remain with
the physical cosmos. Once we start to consider the discarnate human
being between death and a new birth we cannot remain with the elements
of space, for the three-dimensional space that we have — though it
determines the measure of the physical human being living between birth
and death — does not determine the measure of the spiritual human being
living between death and a new birth. We have to realize that those who
are dead have at their disposal a world that is different from the one
which lives in three dimensions.
To turn now to the discarnate human being, the one we call a dead
human being, perhaps we need a different kind of consideration. Our
method of consideration must remain more mobile. Also there are various
points of view from which we could conduct our considerations, for life
between death and a new birth is just as complicated as life between
birth and death. So let us start with the relationship between the
human being here on earth and the human being who has entered the
spiritual world through death.
Once again we have the first part, but it is temporal rather than
spatial. We could call it the first phase of a development. The dead
human being goes, you might say, out into the spiritual world in a
certain way; he leaves the physical world but, especially during the
first few days, is still very much connected with it. It is very
significant that the dead person leaves the physical world in close
connection with the constellation arising for his life from the
positions of the planets. For as long as the dead person is still
connected with his etheric body, the constellation of planetary forces
resounds and vibrates in a wonderful way through this etheric body.
Just as the territorial forces of the earth vibrate very strongly with
the waters of the womb that contains a growing physical human being, so
in a most marked way do the forces of the starry constellations vibrate
in the dead person who is still in his etheric body at the moment —
which is, of course, karmically determined — when he has just left the
physical world.
Investigations are often made — unfortunately not always with the
necessary respect and dignity, but out of egoistic reasons — into the
starry constellation prevailing at birth. Much less selfish and much
more beautiful would be a horoscope, a planetary horoscope made for the
moment of death. This is most revealing for the whole soul of the human
being, for the entry into death at a particular moment is most
revealing in connection with karma.
Those who decide to conduct such investigations — the rules are the
same as those applied to the birth horoscope — will make all kinds of
interesting discoveries, especially if they have known the people for
whom they do this fairly well in life. For several days the dead person
bears within himself, in the etheric body he has not yet discarded, an
echoing vibration of what comes from the planetary constellation. So
the first phase is that of the direction in the starry constellation.
It is meaningful as long as the human being remains connected with his
etheric body.
The second phase in the relationship of the human being to the
cosmos is the direction in which he leaves the physical world when he
becomes truly spiritual, after discarding his etheric body. This is the
last phase to which terms can be applied in their usual, rather than in
a pictorial, meaning to describe what the dead person does, terms which
are taken from the physical world. After this phase the terms used must
be seen more or less as pictures.
So, in the second phase the human being goes in the direction of
whatever is the East as seen from his starting point — here, direction
is still used in a physical sense, even though it is away from the
physical world. Through whatever is for him an easterly direction the
dead person journeys at a certain moment into the purely spiritual
world. The direction is to the East. It is important to be aware of
this. Indeed, an old saying found in various secret brotherhoods,
preserved from the better days of mankind's occult knowledge, still
points to this. Various brotherhoods speak of one who has died as
having ‘entered into the eternal East’. Such things, when they are not
foolish trappings added later, correspond to ancient truths. Just as we
had to say that the organs of the breast are formed out of the East, so
must we imagine the departure of the dead as going through the East. By
stepping out of the physical world through the East into the spiritual
world, the dead person achieves the possibility of participating in the
forces which operate, not centrifugally as here on earth, but
centripetally towards the centre of the earth. He enters into the
sphere out of which it is possible to work towards the earth.
The third phase may be described as the transition into the
spiritual world; and the fourth as working or having an effect out of
the spiritual world, working with the forces from the spiritual world.
Such ideas bring us intimately close to what here binds the human
being to the spiritual worlds. The table below shows that the
conclusion of number 4 meets up with the beginning of number 1, namely
working on the head out of the realm of the sphere. This work is done
by the human being himself after he has entered into the spiritual
world by way of the East.
1
|
2
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3
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4
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Head:
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Breast organs:
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Abdominal organs:
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The totality:
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from the sphere
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from the East
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from the centre of the earth, differentiated according to territory
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by the circumference of the earth
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First Phase: Direction in the starry constellation
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Second Phase: Towards the East
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Third Phase: Transition into the spiritual world
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Fourth Phase: Working out of the spiritual world
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In our dealings with the dead we can perceive strongly that those
who have died have to leave the physical world in an easterly
direction. They are to be found in the world which they reach via the
door of the East. They are beyond the door of the East. And in this
connection the experiences we undergo now, in the fifth post-Atlantean
period, in the sphere of development of materialism are very
significant.
For you see, in this fifth post-Atlantean period, the dead now lack
a great deal because of the materialistic culture prevalent in the
world. Some aspects of this will be clear to you from what we said
yesterday. When, by suitable means, we come to know the life of the
dead today, we discover that they have a very strong urge to intervene
in what human beings do here on earth. But in earlier times, when there
was less materialism on the earth than there is today, it was easier
for the dead to intervene in what took place on the earth. It was
easier for them to influence the sphere of the earth through what those
on earth felt and sensed of the after-effects of the dead.
Today it can be experienced very frequently — and this is always
surprising in the actual case — that people who have been intensely
involved in certain events during their life are unable, in their life
after death, to have any interest in the events which take place after
their death, because they lack any kind of link. Amongst us, too, there
are souls who showed great interest for events on earth while they were
here but who now, having gone to the spiritual world, find the events
taking place since their death quite foreign to them. This is
frequently the case, even with distinguished souls who here on earth
were greatly gifted and filled with the liveliest interest.
This has been going on for a long time, indeed it has been on the
increase during the whole of the fifth post-Atlantean period, ever
since the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. Expressed in commonplace
terms — which are unfortunately all we have in our language — our
experience is that, because they are less and less able to intervene in
what human beings do, the dead have instead to intervene in the way
people manifest as individual personalities. So we see that since the
fifteenth and sixteenth centuries the interest and the work of the dead
has been concentrated increasingly on individual personalites rather
than on the wider contexts concerning mankind. Since I have occupied
myself closely with this very aspect, I have reached the conviction
that it is connected with a certain phenomenon of modern times that is
very noticeable to those who are interested in such things.
In recent history, unlike former times, we have the remarkable
phenomenon of people being born with outstanding capacities. In general
they work with tremendous idealism and distinguished endeavour but are
incapable of gaining a broader view of life or of widening their
horizons. In the whole of literature this has been expressing itself
for some time. Individual ideas, concepts, and feelings, expressed
either in literature or art, or even science, sometimes display strong
promise. But an overall view is not achieved. This is also the reason
why people find it so difficult to achieve the broader view needed in
spiritual science. It happens chiefly because the dead approach
individuals and work in them on capacities for which the foundations
are laid during childhood and youth. The faculties which enable
individuals to gain a broader view when they reach maturity are more or
less untouched by the activities of the dead in this materialistic age.
Incomplete talents, unfinished torsos — not only in the wide world, but
also in individual situations — are therefore very prevalent because
the dead can more readily approach individual souls rather than what
lives socially in human evolution today. The dead have a strong urge to
reach what lives socially in human evolution, but in our fifth
post-Atlantean period this is exceedingly difficult for them.
There is another phenomenon today of which it is most important to
become aware. There exist today many concepts and ideas which have to
be very definite if they are to be of any use. Modern, more mercantile,
life demands clearly defined concepts based on calculations. Science
has become accustomed to this, but so has art. Think of the development
art has undergone in this connection! It is not so long ago that art
was concerned with great ideals on a wide scale, when, thank goodness,
concepts were insufficient for an easy interpretation of great works
which were full of meaning. This is no longer the case to the same
extent. Today, art strives for naturalism, and concepts can easily
encompass works of art because now they have often arisen merely from
concepts instead of from an elemental, all-embracing world of feeling.
Mankind is today filled to the brim with commonplace, naturalistic
concepts which are determined by the fact that they have been conceived
entirely in relation to the physical plane where it is in the nature of
things to be sharply defined and individualized.
Now it is significant that the so-called dead do not appreciate such
concepts. They do not appreciate sharply-defined concepts which are
immobile and lifeless. One can learn some extraordinary things, some
very interesting things in this connection — if I may be permitted to
use such commonplace and banal expressions for these venerable
circumstances. As you know, for we have gone through all this together
here, I have recently been endeavouring to discuss, using lantern
slides, all kinds of considerations about periods in the history of art.
[ Note 7 ]
I have been endeavouring to find concepts for all kinds
of artistic phenomena. To communicate through speech one has to find
concepts. Yet I have constantly felt the need to avoid firm,
clearly-defined concepts for artistic matters. Of course, for the
lectures I had to attempt to define the concepts as far as possible,
for they have to be defined if they are to be put into words. But while
I was preparing the lectures and formulating the concepts I must say I
had a certain aversion, if I may use this word, to expressing what had
to be said in such meagre concepts as have to be used if things are to
be expressed in words. Indeed, we shall only understand one another in
these realms if you translate what has been expressed in close-textured
concepts back into concepts of which the texture is less clearly
defined.
If one comes up against this experience at a time when one is also
concerned with the world of discarnate souls, the following can happen.
One may be attempting to comprehend a phenomenon which gives one the
feeling of being far too unintelligent to grasp it in concepts. One
looks at the phenomenon but has insufficient understanding with which
to bind it properly into concepts. This experience, which is
particularly likely when one is contemplating a work of art, can bring
one into especially intimate contact with discarnate souls, with the
souls of the dead. For these souls prefer concepts which are not
sharply defined, concepts which are more mobile and can mingle with the
phenomena. Sharply defined concepts, concepts similar to those formed
here on the physical plane under the influence of the physical
conditions of the sense-perceptible world, give the dead the feeling of
being nailed to one particular spot, whereas what they need for their
life in the spiritual world is freedom of movement.
Therefore it is important that we occupy ourselves with spiritual
science so that we may enter those intimate spheres of experience
where, as was said yesterday, the living can encounter the dead;
because the concepts of spiritual science cannot be as closely defined
as can those of the physical plane. That is why malevolent or
narrow-minded people can easily discover contradictions in the concepts
of spiritual science. The concepts are alive, and what is alive is
mobile, though it does not, in fact, harbour contradictions. We can
achieve this by concerning ourselves with spiritual matters, and to do
so we have to approach things from various sides. And approaching
things from various sides really does bring us close to the spiritual
world. That is why the dead feel comfortable when they enter a realm of
human concepts which are mobile and not pedantically defined.
Indeed, the dead feel most ill at ease of all when they enter the
realm of the most pedantic concepts. These are the ones that have
recently come to be defined in relation to the spiritual world for
those people who do not want to live in anything spiritual, but who
want the concepts for sense-perceptible things to apply to the
spiritual world as well. These people conduct spiritualistic
experiments in order to imprison spiritual concepts in the world
perceptible to the senses. They are, in fact, more materialistic than
any others. They seek rigid concepts in order to hold commerce with the
dead. Thus they torture the dead most of all, for if they want to
approach they force them to enter the very realm most disliked by them.
The dead love mobile concepts, not rigid ones.
These are experiences to which the fifth post-Atlantean period seems
to be particularly prone, given the two circumstances of materialism
here on earth and the peculiar situation of the dead as described. One
and the same thing determines materialism here on earth and a certain
kind of life in the spiritual world. In the Greco-Latin period the dead
most definitely approached the living in a manner which differed from
that of today. Nowadays, in the fifth post-Atlantean period, there is
what I would like to call a more earthly element — but you must imagine
this of course in a more pictorial sense — a more earthly composition
in the substantiality of the dead than there used to be. The dead
appear in a form that is much more like those of earthly conditions
than used to be the case. They are more like human beings, if I may put
it this way, than formerly. Because of this they have a somewhat
paralysing effect on the living. It is nowadays so difficult to
approach the dead because they bring about a numbness in us. Here on
earth materialistic thoughts reign supreme. In the spiritual world, as
a karmic result, the materialistic consequence reigns supreme, for
there the spiritual corporeality of the dead has assumed earthly
qualities. It is because the dead are super-strong, if I may put it
thus, that they numb us. To overcome this numbness it is necessary to
develop the strongest possible feelings for spiritual science. This is
the difficulty today, or one of the difficulties, standing in the way
of our relationship with the spiritual world.
For the earthly realm seen spiritually — indeed the earthly realm
can be seen spiritually — things appear different from what might be
assumed when they are not seen spiritually. It is correct to say, as we
have done many a time, that we live in the age of materialism. Why? It
is because human beings in this materialistic age — human beings in
general, rather than those who understand these things — are too
spiritual — paradoxical though this may sound. That is why they can be
so easily approached by purely spiritual influences such as those of
Lucifer and Ahriman. Human beings are too spiritual. Just because of
this spirituality they easily become materialistic. It is so, is it
not, that what the human being believes and thinks is something quite
different from what he is. Those very people who are most spiritual are
the ones most open to the whisperings of Ahriman, as a result of which
they grow materialistic.
Strongly though one must combat materialistic views and
materialistic ways of life, nevertheless one may not maintain that the
most unspiritual people belong to the circles of materialists. I have
personally met many spiritual people, that is, people who are
themselves spiritual, not just in their views, among the monists and
suchlike, and equally many coarse materialists especially among the
spiritualists. Here, though they may speak of the spirit, are to be
found the most coarsely materialistic characters. Haeckel, for
instance, is a most spiritual person, regardless of what he often says.
He is most spiritual, and just because of this can be approached by an
ahrimanic world view. He is a most spiritual person, entirely permeated
by the spirit. This once became clearly apparent to me in a cafe in
Weimar. I have told this story before, perhaps more than once. Haeckel
was sitting at the other end of the table with his beautiful, spiritual
blue eyes and his marvellous head. Nearer to me sat the well-known
bookseller Herz, a man who has done great service to the German book
trade and who knew quite a bit about Haeckel in general. But he did not
know that that was Haeckel sitting at the other end of the table. At
one point Haeckel laughed heartily. Herz asked: Who is that man
laughing so much down there? When I told him it was Haeckel he said: It
can't be, evil people can't laugh like that!
Thus the concepts entertained by present-day materialists are so
bare of spirituality that they are unable to discern the revelations of
the spirit in the material world. So spiritual and material worlds fall
apart and the spiritual world becomes no more than a set of concepts.
Anyway, the biggest materialistic blockheads are often found today in
societies and associations that call themselves spiritualistic. Here
are the materialistic blockheads who on occasion have even succeeded in
tracing mankind's descent from the apes, even from a particular ape, to
the greater glory of the human race. These people were not satisfied
with the descent of man from the apes in general, they even traced the
lines back to particular apes. For those of you have not heard about
this, let me explain. A few years ago a book appeared
[ Note 8 ]
in which Mrs Besant and Mr Leadbeater described exactly which apes of
ancient days they were descended from. They traced their family trees
back to particular apes and you can read all about this. Such things
are possible, even in much-read books today.
We need the concepts I have elaborated today in order to penetrate
more deeply into certain aspects of the theme we are discussing. For
our world is definitely dependent on the spiritual world in which the
dead live; it is connected with the spiritual world. That is why I have
endeavoured to unfold for you certain concepts which relate directly to
observations of the immediate present. Everything that takes place here
in the physical world has certain effects in the spiritual world.
Conversely, the spiritual world with the deeds of the dead shows itself
either in what the dead can do for the physical world or in what they
cannot do because of the present materialistic age. I also described
this present materialistic age in so far as it has been made
excessively materialistic by certain secret brotherhoods, as I showed
yesterday. The type of materialism that underlies all world events to a
high degree today is what we might call the mercantile type.
I ask you to take good note for tomorrow of the concepts I have put
before your souls today, concerning the life of the dead. But also
please note how little the present age takes certain things for granted
which were taken much more for granted in earlier times. We shall see
tomorrow how all these things are linked. However, it is characteristic
for our time that certain conceptual views are extended to mercantile
life which would escape someone who fails to pay attention to such
features of our time. We ought not to let them escape us. Mercantilism
is all very well as long as it is put in the right light in the way it
stands within social life. For this to happen it is necessary for us to
have certain yardsticks for everything. Today, however, much conceptual
chaos reigns. Yet within this conceptual chaos, concepts are given
quite clear definitions, as is our way in the age of materialism in
which concepts are fixed to ideas based on what the senses can
experience. And when a chaos of concepts then results, as happens in
today's materialism, this really does draw the sharpest possible line
between the physical world in which human beings live between birth and
death, and the supersensible world in which they live between death and
a new birth.
Only consider in this connection the fact that in Central Europe —
in contrast to other regions where the inclination to philosophize is
less pronounced — there is a tendency to philosophize about the
mercantile system even though this is not at home in Central Europe. In
Central Europe there is a tendency to make a philosophy of everything.
Thus people also philosophize about what aspects of materialism are
typical for our time. An interesting book by Jaroslav
[ Note 9 ]
was published long before the war:
Ideal and Business.
Certain chapters interested me particularly
because of their significance with regard to cultural history. It was
not the content that interested me but their relation to cultural
history; so, for instance, the chapter entitled ‘Plato and Retail
Trade’. This deals with everything to do with commerce, with the
mercantile system. Another interesting chapter is ‘The Astrological
System Applied to the Price of Pepper’. Not uninteresting is also
‘Wholesale Trade as Described by Cicero’. Another chapter is
entitled ‘Holbein's and Liebermann's Portraits of Merchants’.
Not uninteresting, too, is the chapter ‘Jakob Böhme and the Problem
of Quality’. Very interesting is ‘The Goddess Freya in Germanic
Mythology in Relation to Free Competition’. And finally, especially
interesting is ‘The Spirit of Commerce as Taught by Jesus’.
As you see, everything is thrown in the pot together. But by this
very fact things gain that characteristic which makes for materialism.
Let us take all this as a preparation for our considerations tomorrow.
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