|
LECTURE
TWENTY-FIVE
Dornach,
30 January 1917
Today it seems appropriate to mention certain thoughts on the
meaning and nature of our spiritual Movement — anthroposophical
spiritual science, as we call it. To do so will necessitate references
to some events which have occurred over a period of time and which have
contributed to the preparation and unfolding of this Movement. If, in
the course of these remarks, one or another of them should seem
somewhat more personal — it would, at any rate, only seem to be so —
this will not be for personal reasons but because what is more personal
can be a starting point for something more objective. The need for a
spiritual movement which makes known to people the deeper sources of
existence, especially human existence, can be easily recognized by the
way in which today's civilization has developed along lines which are
becoming increasingly absurd. No one, after serious thought, will
describe today's events as anything other than an absurd exaggeration
of what has been living in more recent evolution.
From what you have come to know in spiritual science, you will have
gained the feeling that everything, even what is apparently only
external, has its foundation in the thoughts of human beings. Deeds
which are done, events which take place in material life — all these
are the consequence of what human beings think and imagine. And the
view of the external world, which is gaining ground among human beings
today, gives us an indication of some very inadequate thought forces. I
have already put into words the fact that events have grown beyond
human beings, have got out of hand, because their thinking has become
attenuated and is no longer strong enough to govern reality. Concepts
such as that of maya, the external semblance which governs the things
of the physical plane, ought to be taken far more seriously by those
familiar with them than they, in fact, often are. They ought to be
profoundly imprinted on current consciousness as a whole. This alone
might lead to the healing of the damage which — with a certain amount
of justification — has come upon mankind. Those who strive to
understand the functioning of man's deeds — that is, the way the
reflections of man's thoughts function — will recognize the inner need
for a comprehension of the human soul which can be brought about by
stronger, more realistic thoughts.
In fact, our whole Movement is founded on the task of giving human
souls thoughts more appropriate to reality, thoughts more immersed in
reality, than are the abstract concept patterns of today. It cannot be
pointed out often enough how very much mankind today is in love with
the abstract, having no desire to realize that shadowy concepts cannot,
in reality, make any impact on the fabric of existence. This has been
most clearly expressed in the fourteen-, fifteen-year history of our
Anthroposophical Movement. Now it is becoming all the more important
for our friends to take into themselves what specifically belongs to
this Anthroposophical Movement. You know how often people stressed that
they would so much like to give the beautiful word ‘theosophy’ the
honour it deserves, and how much they resisted having to give it up as
the key word of the Movement. But you also know the situation which
made this necessary.
It is good to be thoroughly aware in one's soul about this. You know
— indeed, many of you shared — the goodwill with which we linked our
work with that of the Theosophical Movement in the way it had been
founded by Blavatsky,
[ Note 1 ]
and how this then continued with Besant's and Sinnett's
[ Note 2 ]
efforts, and so on. It is indeed not
unnecessary for our members, in face of all the ill-meant
misrepresentations heaped upon us from outside, to persist in pointing
out that our Anthroposophical Movement had an independent
starting-point and that what now exists has grown out of the seeds of
those lectures I gave in Berlin which were later published in the book
on the mysticism of the Middle Ages.
[ Note 3 ]
We must stress ever and
again that in connection with this book it was the Theosophical
Movement who approached us, not vice versa. This Theosophical Movement,
in whose wake it was our destiny to ride during those early years, was
not without its connections to other occult streams of the nineteenth
century, and in lectures given here
[ Note 4 ]
I have pointed to these
connections. But we should look at what is characteristic for that
Movement.
If I were asked to point factually to one rather characteristic
feature, I would choose one I have mentioned a number of times, which
is connected with the period when I was writing in the journal
Lucifer-Gnosis
what was later given the title
Cosmic Memory.
A representative of the Theosophical Society, who read this, asked me by
what method these things were garnered from the spiritual world.
Further conversation made it obvious that he wanted to know what
more-or-less mediumistic methods were used for this. Members of those
circles find it impossible to imagine any method other than that of
people with mediumistic gifts, who lower their consciousness and write
down what comes from the subconscious.
What underlies this attitude? Even though he is a very competent and
exceptionally cultured representative of the Theosophical Movement, the
man who spoke to me on this was incapable of imagining that it is
possible to investigate such things in full consciousness. Many members
of that Movement had the same problem because they shared something
which is present to the highest degree in today's spiritual life,
namely, a certain mistrust in the individual's capacity for knowledge.
People do not trust the inherent capacity for knowledge, they do not
believe that the individual can have the strength to penetrate truly to
the essential core of things. They consider that the human capacity for
knowledge is limited; they find that intellectual understanding gets in
the way if one wants to penetrate to the core of things and that it is
therefore better to damp it down and push forward to the core of things
without bringing it into play. This is indeed what mediums do; for
them, to mistrust human understanding is a basic impulse. They
endeavour, purely experimentally, to let the spirit speak while
excluding active understanding.
It can be said that this mood was particularly prevalent in the
Theosophical Movement as it existed at the beginning of the century. It
could be felt when one tried to penetrate certain things, certain
opinions and views, which had come to live in the Theosophical
Movement. You know that in the nineties of the nineteenth century and
subsequently in the twentieth century, Mrs Besant played an important
part in the Theosophical Movement. Her opinion counted. Her lectures
formed the centrepiece of theosophical work both in London and in
India. And yet it was strange to hear what people around Mrs Besant
said about her. I noticed this strongly as early as 1902. In many ways,
especially among the scholarly men around her, she was regarded as a
quite unacademic woman. Yet, while on the one hand people stressed how
unacademic she was, on the other hand they regarded the partly
mediumistic method she was famous for, untrammelled as it was by
scientific ideas, as a channel for achieving knowledge. I could say
that these people did not themselves have the courage to aim for
knowledge. Neither had they any confidence in Mrs Besant's waking
consciousness. But because she had not been made fully awake as a
result of any scientific training, they saw her to some extent as a
means by which knowledge from the spiritual world could be brought into
the physical world. This attitude was extraordinarily prevalent among
those immediately surrounding her. People spoke about her at the
beginning of the twentieth century as if she were some kind of modern
sibyl. Those closest to her formed derogatory opinions about her
academic aptitude and maintained that she had no critical ability to
judge her inner experiences. This was certainly the mood around her,
though it was carefully hidden — I will not say kept secret — from the
wider circle of theosophical leaders.
In addition to what came to light in a sibylline way through Mrs
Besant, and through Blavatsky's
The Secret Doctrine,
the Theosophical Movement at the end of the
nineteenth century also had Sinnett's book or, rather, books. The
manner in which people spoke about these in private was, equally,
hardly an appeal to man's own power of knowledge. Much was made in
private about the fact that in what Sinnett had published there was
nothing which he had contributed out of his own experience. The value
of a book such as his
Esoteric Buddhism
was seen to lie particularly in the fact that the whole
of the content had come to him in the form of ‘magical letters’,
precipitated — no one knew whence — into the physical plane — one could
almost say, thrown down to the physical plane — which he then worked
into the book
Esoteric Buddhism.
All these things led to a mood among the wider circles of the
theosophical leaders which was sentimental and devotional in the
highest degree. They looked up, in a way, to a wisdom which had fallen
from heaven, and — humanly, quite understandable — this devotion was
transferred to individual personalities. However, this became the
incentive for a high level of insincerity which was easy to discern in
a number of phenomena.
Thus, for instance, even in 1902 I heard in the more private
gatherings in London that Sinnett was, in fact, an inferior spirit. One
of the leading personalities said to me at that time: Sinnett could be
compared with a journalist — say, of the
Frankfurter Zeitung — who has been
dispatched to India; he is a journalistic spirit who simply had the
good fortune to receive the ‘Master's letters’ and make use of them in
his book in a journalistic way which is in keeping with modern mankind!
You know, though, that all this is only one aspect of a wide
spectrum of literature. For in the final decades of the nineteenth
century and the first decades of the twentieth, there appeared — if not
a Biblical deluge, then certainly a flood of — written material which
was intended to lead mankind in one way or another to the spiritual world.
Some of this material harked back directly to ancient traditions
which have been preserved by all kinds of secret brotherhoods. It is
most interesting to follow the development of this tradition.
I have often pointed out how, in the second half of the eighteenth
century, old traditions could be found in the circle led by Saint-Martin,
[ Note 5 ]
the philosophe inconnu.
In Saint-Martin's writings, especially
Des erreurs et de la vérité,
there is a very great deal of what came from ancient traditions,
clothed in a more recent form. If we follow these traditions further
back, we do indeed come to ideas which can conquer concrete situations,
which can influence reality. By the time they had come down to
Saint-Martin, these concepts had already become exceedingly shadowy,
but they were nevertheless shadows of concepts which had once been very
much alive; ancient traditions were living one last time in a shadowy
form. So in Saint-Martin's work we find the healthiest concepts clothed
in a form which is a final glimmer. It is particularly interesting to
see how Saint-Martin fights against the concept of matter, which had
already come to the fore. What did this concept of matter gradually
become? It became a view in which the world is seen as a fog made up of
atoms moving about and bumping into one another and forming
configurations which are at the root of all things taking shape around
us. In theory materialism reached its zenith at the point when the
existence of everything except the atom was denied. Saint-Martin still
maintained the view that the whole science of atoms, and indeed the
whole belief that matter was something real, was nonsense; which indeed
it is. If we delve into all that is around us, chemically, physically,
we come in the final analysis not to atoms, not to anything material,
but to spiritual beings. The concept of matter is an aid; but it
corresponds to nothing that is real. Wherever — to use a phrase coined
by du Bois-Reymond
[ Note 6 ]
— ‘matter floats about in space like a
ghost’: there may be found the spirit. The only way to speak of an atom
is to speak of a little thrust of spirit, albeit ahrimanic spirit. It
was a healthy idea of Saint-Martin to do battle against the concept of
matter.
Another immensely healthy idea of Saint-Martin was the living way in
which he pointed to the fact that all separate, concrete human
languages are founded on a single universal language. This was easier
to do in his day than it is now, because in his time there was still a
more living relationship to the Hebrew language which, among all modern
languages, is the one closest to the archetypal universal language. It
was still possible to feel at that time the way in which spirit flowed
through the Hebrew language, giving the very words something genuinely
ideal and spiritual. So we find in Saint-Martin's work an indication,
concrete and spiritual, of the meaning of the word ‘the Hebrew’. In the
whole way he conceived of this we find a living consciousness of a
relationship of the human being with the spiritual world. This word
‘the Hebrew’ is connected with ‘to journey’. A Hebrew is one who makes
a journey through life, one who gathers experiences as on a journey.
Standing in the world in a living way — this is the foundation of this
word and of all other words in the Hebrew language if they are sensed
in their reality.
However, in his own time Saint-Martin was no longer able to find
ideas which could point more precisely, more strongly, to what belonged
to the archetypal language. These will have to be rediscovered by
spiritual science. But he had before his soul a profound notion of what
the archetypal language had been. Because of this his concept of the
unity of the human race was more concrete and less abstract than that
which the nineteenth century made for itself. This concrete concept of
the unity of the human race made it possible for him, at least within
his own circle, to bring fully to life certain spiritual truths, for
instance, the truth that the human being, if only he so desires, really
can enter into a relationship with spiritual beings of higher
hierarchies. It is one of his cardinal principles, which states that
every human being is capable of entering into a relationship with
spiritual beings of higher hierarchies. Because of this there still
lived in him something of that ancient, genuine mystic mood which knew
that knowledge, if it is to be true knowledge, cannot be absorbed in a
conceptual form only, but must be absorbed in a particular mood of soul
— that is after a certain preparation of the soul. Then it becomes part
of the soul's spiritual life.
Hand in hand with this, however, went a certain sum of expectations,
of evolutionary expectations directed to those human souls who desired
to claim a right to participate in some way in evolution. From this
point of view it is most interesting to see how Saint-Martin makes the
transition from what he has won through knowledge, through science —
which is spiritual in his case — to politics, how he arrives at
political concepts. For here he states a precise requirement, saying
that every ruler ought to be a kind of Melchizedek, a kind of
priest-king.
Just imagine if this requirement, put forward in a relatively small
circle before the outbreak of the French Revolution, had been a dawn
instead of a dusk; just imagine if this idea — that those whose
concepts and forces were to influence human destiny must fundamentally
have the characteristics of a Melchizedek — had been absorbed, even
partially, into the consciousness of the time, how much would have been
different in the nineteenth century! For the nineteenth century was, in
truth, as distant as it could possibly be from this concept. The demand
that politicians should first undertake to study at the school of
Melchizedek would, of course, have been dismissed with a shrug.
Saint-Martin has to be pointed out because he bears within him
something which is a last glimmer of the wisdom that has come down from
ancient times. It has had to die away because mankind in the future
must ascend to spirituat life in a new way. Mankind must ascend in a
new way because a merely traditional continuation of old ideas never
has been in keeping with the germinating forces of the human soul.
These underdeveloped forces of the human soul will tend, during the
course of the twentieth century, in a considerable number of
individuals — this has been said often enough — to lead to true insight
into etheric processes. The first third of the twentieth century can be
seen as a critical period during which a goodly number of human beings
ought to be made aware of the fact that events must be observed in the
etheric world which lives all around us, just as much as does the air.
We have pointed emphatically to one particular event which must be seen
in the etheric world if mankind is not to fall into decadence, and that
is the appearance of the Etheric Christ. This is a necessity. Mankind
must definitely prepare not to let wither those forces which are
already sprouting.
These forces must not be allowed to wither for, if they did, what
would happen? In the forties and fifties of the twentieth century the
human soul would assume exceedingly odd characteristics in the widest
circles. Concepts would arise in the human soul which would have an
oppressive effect. If materialism were the only thing to continue,
concepts which exist in the human soul would arise, but they would rise
up out of the unconscious in a way which people would not understand. A
waking nightmare, a kind of general state of neurasthenia, would
afflict a huge number of people. They would find themselves having to
think things without understanding why they were thinking them.
The only antidote to this is to plant, in human souls, concepts
which stem from spiritual science. Without these, the forces of insight
into those concepts which will rise up, into those ideas which will
make their appearance, will be paralysed. Then, not the Christ alone,
but also other phenomena in the etheric world, which human beings ought
to see, will withdraw from man, will go past unnoticed. Not only will
this be a great loss, but human beings will also have to develop
pathological substitute forces for those which ought to have developed
in a healthy way.
It was out of an instinctive need in wide circles of mankind that
the endeavours arose which expressed themselves in that flood of
literature and written material mentioned earlier. Now, because of a
peculiar phenomenon, the Anthroposophical Movement of Central Europe
was in a peculiar position relative to the Theosophical Movement —
particularly to the Theosophical Society — as well as to that other
flood of written material about spiritual matters. Because of the
evolutionary situation in the nineteenth century and at the beginning
of the twentieth century, it was possible for a great number of people
to find spiritual nourishment in all this literature; and it was also
possible for a great number of people to be utterly astounded by what
came to light through Sinnett and Blavatsky. However, all this was not
quite in harmony with Central European consciousness. Those who are
familiar with Central European literature are in no doubt that it is
not necessarily possible to live in the element of this Central
European literature while at the same time taking up the attitude of so
many others to that flood. This is because Central European literature
encompasses immeasurably much of what the seeker for the spirit longs
for — only it is hidden behind the peculiar language which so many
people would rather have nothing to do with.
We have often spoken about one of those spirits who prove that
spiritual life works and weaves in artistic literature, in belletristic
literature: Novalis. For more prosaic moods we might equally well have
mentioned Friedrich Schlegel,
[ Note 7 ]
who wrote about the wisdom of
ancient India in a way which did not merely reproduce that wisdom but
brought it to a fresh birth out of the western cultural spirit. There
is much we could have pointed to that has nothing to do with that flood
of written material, but which I have sketched historically in my book
Vom Menschenrätsel.
People like Steffens,
[ Note 8 ]
like Schubert,
[ Note 9 ]
like Troxler,
[ Note 10 ]
wrote about all these things far more precisely and at a much
more modern level than anything found in that flood of literature which
welled up during the last decades of the nineteenth century and the
beginning of the twentieth century. You have to admit that, compared
with the profundity of Goethe, Schlegel, Schelling, those things which
are held to be so marvellously wise
are nothing more than trivia, utter trivia. Someone who has absorbed
the spirit of Goethe can regard even a work like such as
Light on the Path
[ Note 11 ]
as no more than commonplace. This ought not to be
forgotten. To those who have absorbed the inspiration of Novalis or
Friedrich Schlegel, or enjoyed Schelling's
Bruno,
all this theosophical
literature can seem no more than vulgar and ordinary. Hence the
peculiar phenomenon that there were many people who had the earnest,
honest desire to reach a spiritual life but who, because of their
mental make-up were, in the end, to some degree satisfied with the
superficial literature described.
On the other hand, the nineteenth century had developed in such a
way that those who were scientifically educated had become — for
reasons I have often discussed — materialistic thinkers about whom
nothing could be done. However, in order to work one's way competently
through what came to light at the turn of the eighteenth to the
nineteenth century through Schelling, Schlegel, Fichte, one does need
at least some scientific concepts. There is no way of proceeding
without them. The consequence was this peculiar phenomenon: It was not
possible to bring about a situation — which would have been desirable
— in which a number of scientifically educated people, however small,
could have worked out their scientific concepts in such a way that they
could have made a bridge to spiritual science. No such people were to
be found. This is a difficulty that still exists and of which we must
be very much aware.
Supposing we were to approach those who have undergone a scientific
education, with the intention of introducing them to Anthroposophy:
lawyers, doctors, philologists — not to mention theologians —
when they have finished their academic education and reached a certain stage
in life at which it is necessary for them, in accordance with life's
demands, to make use of what they have absorbed, not to say, have
learnt. They then no longer have either the inclination or the mobility
to extricate themselves from their concepts and to seek for others.
That is why scientifically-educated people are the most inclined to
reject Anthroposophy, although it would only be a small step for a
modern scientist to build a bridge. But he does not want to do so. It
confuses him. What does he need it for? He has learnt what life demands
of him and, so he believes, he does not want things which only serve to
confuse him and undermine his confidence. It is going to take some
considerable time before these people who have gone through the
education of their day start to build bridges in any great numbers. We
shall have to be patient. It will not come about easily, especially in
certain fields. And when the building of bridges is seriously tackled
in a particular field, great obstacles and hindrances will be
encountered. It will be necessary above all to build bridges in the
fields encompassed by the various faculties, with the exception of
theology.
In the field of law the concepts being worked out are becoming more
and more stereotyped and quite unsuitable for the regulation of real
life. But they do regulate it because life on the physical plane is
maya; if it were not maya, they would be incapable of regulating it. As
it is, their application is bringing more and more confusion into the
world. The application of today's jurisprudence, especially in civil
law, does nothing but bring confusion into the situation. But this is
not clearly seen. Indeed, how should it be seen? No one follows up the
consequences of applying stereotyped concepts to reality. People study
law, they become solicitors or judges, they absorb the concepts and
apply them. What happens as a consequence of their application is of no
interest. Or life is seen as it is — despite the existence of the law,
which is a very difficult subject to study for many reasons, not least
because law students tend to waste the first few terms — life is seen
as it is; we see that everything is in a muddle and do no more than
complain.
In the field of medicine the situation is more serious. If medicine
continues to develop in the wake of materialism as it has been doing
since the second third of the nineteenth century, it will eventually
reach an utterly nonsensical situation, for it will end up in absurd
medical specializations. The situation is more serious here because
this tendency was, in fact, necessary and a good thing. But now it is
time for it to be overcome. The materialistic tendency in medicine
meant that surgery has reached a high degree of specialization, which
was only possible because of this one-sided tendency. But medicine as
such has suffered as a result. So now it needs to turn around
completely and look towards a real spirituality — but the resistance to
this is enormous.
Education is the field which, more than any other, needs to be
permeated with spirituality, as we have said often enough. Bridges need
to be built everywhere.
In technology — although it may appear to be furthest away from the
spirit — it is above all necessary that bridges should be built to the
life of the spirit, out of direct practical life. The fifth
post-Atlantean period is the one which is concerned with the
development of the material world, and if the human being is not to
degenerate totally into a mere accomplice of machines — which would
make him into nothing more than an animal — then a path must be found
which leads from these very machines to the life of the spirit. The
priority for those working practically with machines is that they take
spiritual impulses into their own soul. This will come about the moment
students of technology are taught to think just a little more than is
the case at present; the moment they are taught to think in such a way
that they see the connections between the different things they learn.
As yet they are unable to do this. They attend lectures on mathematics,
on descriptive geometry, even on topology sometimes; on pure mechanics,
analytical mechanics, industrial mechanics, and also all the various
more practical subjects. But it does not even occur to them to look for
a connection between all these different things. As soon as people are
obliged to apply their own common sense to things, they will be forced
— simply on account of the stage of development these various subjects
have reached — to push forward into the nature of these things and then
on into the spiritual realm. From machines, in particular, a path will
truly have to be found into the spiritual world.
I am saying all this in order to point out what difficulties today
face the spiritual-scientific Movement, because so far there are no
individuals to be found who might be capable of generating an
atmosphere of taking things seriously. This Movement suffers most of
all from a lack of being taken seriously. It is remarkable how this
comes to the fore in all kinds of details. Much of what we have
published would have been taken seriously, would have been seen in
quite a different light, if it had not been made known that it stemmed
from someone belonging to the Theosophical Movement. Simply because the
person concerned was in the Theosophical Movement, his work was stamped
as something not to be taken seriously. It is most important to realize
this, and it is just these trifling details which make it plain. Not
out of any foolish vanity but just so that you know what I mean, let me
give you an example of one of these trifles which I came across only
the other day.
In my book
Vom Menschenrätsel
I wrote about Karl Christian Planck
[ Note 12 ]
as one of those spirits
who, out of certain inner foundations, worked towards the spiritual
realm, even though only in an abstract way. I have not only written
about him in this book, but also — over the past few winters —
spoken about him in some detail in a number of cities, showing how he went
unrecognized, or was misunderstood, and referring especially to ane
particular circumstance. This was the fact that, in the eighties,
seventies, sixties, fifties, this man had ideas and thoughts in
connection with industrial and social life which ought to have been put
into practice.
If only there had been someone at that time with the
capacity of employing in social life the great ideas this man had, ideas
truly compatible with reality, then — and I am not exaggerating —
mankind would probably not now be suffering all that is going on today
which, for the greater part, is a consequence of the totally wrong
social structure in which we are living.
I have told you that it is a real duty not to let human beings come
to a pass such as that reached by Karl Christian Planck, who finally
came to be utterly devoid of any love for the world of external
physical reality. He was a Swabian living in Stuttgart. He was refused
a place in the philosophy department of Tübingen University, where
he would have had the opportunity to put forward some of his ideas. I
entirely intentionally mentioned the fact that, when he wrote the
foreword to his book
Testament of a German,
he felt moved to say, ‘Not even my bones shall rest in
the soil of my ungrateful fatherland’. Hard words. Words such as people
today can be driven to utter when faced with the stupidity of their
fellow human beings, who refuse to see the point about what is really
compatible with reality. In Stuttgart I purposely quoted these words
about his bones, for Stuttgart is Planck's fatherland in the narrower
sense. There was little reaction, despite the fact that events had
already reached a stage when there would have been every reason to
understand the things he had said.
Now, however, a year-and-a-half later, the following notice may be
found in the Swabian newspapers:
‘Karl Christian Planck. More than one
far-seeing spirit foretold the present World War. But none anticipated
its scale nor understood its causes and effects as clearly as did our
Swabian countryman Planck.’
I said in my lecture that Karl Christian Planck had foreseen the
present World War, and that he even expressly stated that Italy would
not be on the side of the Central Powers, even though he was speaking
at the time when the alliance had not yet been concluded, but was only
in the making.
‘To him this war seemed to be the
unavoidable goal toward which political and economic developments had
been inexorably moving for the last fifty years.’
This is indeed the case!
‘Just as he revealed the damage being
done in his day, so he also pointed the way which can lead us to other
situations.’
This is the important point. But nobody listened!
‘By him we are told the deeper reasons
underlying war profiteering and other black marks which mar so many
good and pleasing aspects of the life of the nation today. He knows
where the deeper, more inward forces of the nation lie and can tell us
how to release them so that the moral and social renewal longed for by
the best amongst us can come about. Despite all the painful
disappointments meted out to him by his contemporaries, he continued to
believe in these forces and their triumphant emergence.’
Nevertheless, he was driven to utter the words I have quoted!
‘The news will therefore be widely
welcomed that the philosopher's daughter is about to give an
introduction to Planck's social and political thinking in a number of
public lectures.’
It is interesting that a year-and-a-half later his daughter should
be putting in an appearance. This notice appeared in a Stuttgart
newspaper. But a year-and-a-half ago, when I drew attention as plainly
as possible in Stuttgart to the the philosopher Karl Christian Planck,
no one took the slightest notice, and no one felt moved to make known
what I had said. Now his daughter puts in an appearance. Her father
died in 1880, and presumably she had been born by then. Yet she has
waited all this time before standing up for him by giving public
lectures.
This example could be multiplied not tenfold, but a hundredfold. It
shows once again how difficult it is to bring together the
all-embracing aspect of spiritual science with everyday practical
details, despite the fact that it is absolutely essential that this
should be done. Only through the all-embracing nature of spiritual
science — this must be understood — can healing come about for what
lives in the culture of today.
That is why it has been essential to keep steering what we call
anthroposophical spiritual science, in whatever way possible, along the
more serious channels which have been increasingly deserted by the
Theosophical Movement. The spirit that was even known to the ancient
Greek philosophers had to be allowed to come through, although this has
led to the opinion that what is written in consequence is difficult to
read. It has often not been easy. Especially within the Movement it met
with the greatest difficulties. And one of the greatest difficulties
has been the fact that it really has taken well over a decade to
overcome one fundamental abstraction. Laborious and patient work has
been necessary to overcome this fundamental abstraction which has been
one of the most damaging things for our Movement. This basic
abstraction consisted simply in the insistence on clinging to the word
‘theosophy’, regardless of whether whatever was said to be
‘theosophical’ referred to something filled with the spirituality of
modern life, or to no more than some rubbish published by Rohm
[ Note 13 ]
or anyone else. Anything ‘theosophical’ had equal justification,
for this prompted ‘theosophical tolerance’.
Only very gradually has it been possible to work against these
things. They could not be pointed out directly at the beginning,
because that would have seemed arrogant. Only gradually has it been
possible to awaken a feeling for the fact that differences do exist,
and that tolerance used in this connection is nothing more than an
expression of a total lack of character on which to base judgements.
What matters now is to work towards knowledge of a kind which can cope
with reality, which can tackle the demands of reality. Only a spiritual
science that works with the concepts of our time can tackle the demands
of reality. Not living in comfortable theosophical ideas but wrestling
for spiritual reality — this must be the direction of our endeavour.
Some people still have no idea what is meant by wrestling for
reality, for they are fighting shy of understanding clearly how
threadbare are the concepts with which they work today. Let me give you
a small example, from a seemingly unrelated subject, of what it means
to wrestle for reality in concepts. I shall be brief, so please be
patient while I explain something that might seem rather far-fetched.
There were always isolated individuals in the nineteenth century who
were prepared to take up the question of reality. For reality was then
supposed to burst in on mankind with entirely fresh ideas about life,
not only the unimportant aspects but especially the basic practical
aspects of life. Thus at a certain point in the nineteenth century
Euclid's postulate of parallels was challenged. When are two lines
parallel? Who could have failed to agree that two lines are parallel if
they never meet, however long they are! For that is the definition:
That two straight lines are parallel if they never meet, whatever the
distance to which they are extended. In the nineteenth century there
were individuals who devoted their whole life to achieving clarity
about this concept, for it does not stand up to exact thinking. In
order to show you what it means to wrestle for concepts, let me read
you a letter written by Wolfgang Bolyai.
[ Note 14 ]
The mathematician Gauss
[ Note 15 ]
had begun to realize that the definition of two
straight lines being parallel if they meet at infinity, or not at all,
was no more than empty words and meant nothing. The older Bolyai, the
father, was a friend and pupil of Gauss, who also stimulated the
younger Bolyai, the son. And the father wrote to the son:
[ Note 16 ]
‘Do not look for the parallels in that
direction. I have trodden that path to its end; I have traversed
bottomless night in which every light, every joy of my life has been
extinguished. By God I implore you to leave the postulate of the
parallels alone! Shun it as you would a dissolute association, for it
can rob you of all your leisure, your health, your peace of mind and
every pleasure in life. It will never grow light on earth and the
unfortunate human race will never gain anything perfectly pure, not
even geometry itself. In my soul there is a deep and eternal wound. May
God save you from being eaten away by another such. It robs me of my
delight in geometry, and indeed of life on earth. I had resolved to
sacrifice myself for the truth. I would have been prepared for
martyrdom if only I could have handed geometry back to mankind purified
of this blemish. I have accomplished awful, gigantic works, have
achieved far more than ever before, but never found total satisfaction.
Si paullum a summo discessit, vergit ad imum.
When I saw that the foundation of this night cannot be
reached from the earth I returned, comfortless, sorrowing for my self
and the human race. Learn from my example. Desiring to know the
parallels, I have remained without knowledge. And they have robbed me
of all the flowers of my life and time. They have become the root of
all my subsequent failures, and much rain has fallen on them from our
lowering domestic clouds. If I could have discovered the parallels I
would have become an angel, even if none had ever known of my discovery.
... Do not attempt it ... It is a
labyrinth that forever blocks your path. If you enter you will grow
poor, like a treasure hunter, and your ignorance will not cease. Should
you arrive at whatever absurd discovery, it will be for naught,
untenable as an axiom ...
... The pillars of Hercules are
situated in this region. Go not a step further, or you will be lost.’
Nevertheless, the younger Bolyai did go further, even more so than
his father, and devoted his whole life to the search for a concrete
concept in a field where such a concept seemed to exist, but which was,
however, empty words. He wanted to discover whether there really was
such a thing as two straight lines which did not meet, even in
infinity. No one has ever paced out this infinite distance, for that
would take an infinite time, but this time has not yet run its course.
It is nothing more than words. Such empty words, such conceptual
shadows, are to be found behind all kinds of concepts. I simply wanted
to point out to you how even the most thorough spirits of the
nineteenth century suffered because of the abstractness of these
concepts! It is interesting to see that while children are taught in
every school that parallel lines are those which never meet, however
long they are, there have been individual spirits for whom working with
such concepts became a hell, because they were seeking to push through
to a real concept instead of a stereotyped concept.
Wrestling with reality — this is what matters, yet this is the very
thing our contemporaries shun, more or less, because they ‘realize’, or
imagine they realize, that they have ‘high ideals’! It is not ideals
that matter, but impulses which work with reality. Imagine someone were
to make a beautiful statement such as: At long last a time must come
when those who are most capable are accorded the consideration due to
them. What a lovely programme! Whole societies could be established in
accordance with this programme. Even political sciences could be
founded on this basis. But it is not the statement that counts. What
counts is the degree to which it is permeated by reality. For what is
the use — however valid the statement, and however many societies
choose it for the prime point in their programmes — if those in power
happen to see only their nephews as being the most capable? It is not a
matter of establishing the validity of the statement that the most
capable should be given their due. The important thing is to have the
capacity to find those who are the most capable, whether they are one's
nephews or not! We must learn to understand that abstract concepts
always fall through the cracks of life, and that they never mean
anything, and that all our time is wasted on all these beautiful
concepts. I have no objection to their beauty, but what matters is our
grasp and knowledge of reality.
Suppose the lion were to found a social order for the animals,
dividing up the kingdom of the earth in a just way. What would he do? I
do not believe it would occur to him to push for a situation in which
the small animals of the desert, usually eaten by the lion, would have
the possibility of not being eaten by the lion! He would consider it
his lion's right to eat the small animals he meets in the desert. It is
conceivable, though, that for the ocean he would find it just and
proper to forbid the sharks to eat the little fishes. This might very
well happen. The lion might establish a tremendously just social order
in the oceans, at the North Pole or wherever else he himself is not at
home, giving all the animals their freedom. But whether he would be
pleased to establish such an order in his own region is a question
indeed. He knows very well what justice is in the social order, and he
will put it into practice efficiently in the kingdom of the sharks.
Let us now turn from lions to Hungaricus.
[ Note 17 ]
I told you two days ago about his small pamphlet
Conditions de Paix de l'Allemagne.
This pamphlet swims entirely with the
stream of that map of Europe which was first mentioned in the famous
note from the Entente to Wilson about the partition of Austria. We have
spoken about it. With the exception of Switzerland, Hungaricus is quite
satisfied with this map. He begins by talking very wisely — just as
most people today talk very wisely — about the rights of nations, even
the rights of small nations, and about the right of the state to be
coincident with the power of the nation, and so on. This is all very
nice, in the same way that the statement, about the most capable being
given his due, is nice. As long as the concepts remain shadowy we can,
if we are idealists, be delighted when we read Hungaricus. For the
Swiss, the pamphlet is even nicer than the map, for rather than wiping
Switzerland off the map, Hungaricus adds the Vorarlberg and the Tyrol.
So I recommend the Swiss to read the pamphlet rather than look at the
map. But now Hungaricus proceeds to divide up the rest of the world. In
his own way he accords to every nation, even the smallest, the absolute
right to develop freely — as long as he considers he is not causing
offence to the Entente. He trims his words a little, of course, saying
‘independence’ when referring to Bohemia, and obviously
‘autonomy’ with regard to Ireland. Well, this is the done thing,
is it not! It is quite acceptable to dress things up a little. He divides up
the world of Europe quite nicely, so that apart from the things I have
mentioned — which are to avoid causing offence — he really
endeavours to apportion the smallest nations to those states to which the
representatives of the Entente believe they belong. It is not so much a
question of whether these small territories are really inhabited by those
nationalities, but of whether the Entente actually believes this to be
the case. He makes every effort to divide up the world nicely, with the
exception of the desert — oh, pardon me — with the exception of
Hungary, which is where he practises his lion's right! Perfect freedom
is laid down for the kingdom of the sharks. But the Magyar nation is
his nation, and this is to comprise not only what it comprises today —
though without it only a minority of the population would be Magyar,
the majority being others — but other territories as well. Here he well
and truly acts the part of the lion.
Here we see how concepts are formulated nowadays and how people
think nowadays. It gives us an opportunity to study how urgent it is to
find the transition to a thinking which is permeated with reality. For
this, concepts such as those I have been giving you are necessary. I
want to show you — indeed, I must show you — how spiritual thinking
leads to ideas which are compatible with reality. One must always
combine the correct thought with the object; then one can recognize
whether that object corresponds to reality or not.
Take Wilson's note to the Senate. As a sample it could even have
certain effects in some respects. But this is not what matters. What
matters is that it contains ‘shadowy concepts’. If it nevertheless
has an effect, this is due to the vexatious nature of our time which can be
influenced by vexatious means. Look at this matter objectively and try
to form a concept against which you can measure the reality, the real
content with which this shadowy concept could be linked. You need only
ask one question: Could this note not just as well have been written in
1913? The idealistic nothings it contains could just as easily have
been expressed in 1913! You see, a thinking which believes in the
absolute is not based on reality. It is unrealistic to think that
something ‘absolute’ will result every time. The present age has
no talent for seeing through the lack of reality in thinking because it is
always out for what is ‘right’ rather than for what is in keeping
with reality.
That is why in my book
Vom Menschenrätsel
I emphasized so heavily the importance not
only of what is logical but also of what is in keeping with reality.
A single decision that took account
of the facts as they are at this precise moment would be worth more
than all the empty phrases put together. Historical documents are
perhaps the best means of showing that what I am saying has to do with
reality, for as time has gone on the only people to come to the surface
are those who want to rule the world with abstractions, and this is
what has led to the plight of the world today. Proper thinking, which
takes account of things as they are, will discover the realities
wherever they are. Indeed, they are so close at hand! Take the real
concept which I introduced from another point of view the other day:
Out of what later became Italy in the South there arose the priestly
cultic element which created as its opposition the Protestantism of
Central Europe; from the West was formed the diplomatic, political
element which also created an opposition for itself; and from the
North-west was formed the mercantile element which again created for
itself an opposition; and in Central Europe an opposition coming out of
the general, human element will of necessity arise. Let us look once
more at the way these things stream outwards. (See diagram.)
Even for the fourth post-Atlantean period — proceeding on from the
old fourfold classification in which one spoke of castes — we can begin
to describe this structure in a somewhat different way: Plato spoke of
‘guardian-rulers’; this is the realm for which Rome —
priestly, papal Rome — seized the monopoly, achieving a situation in
which she alone was allowed to establish doctrinal truths. She was to be
the only source of all doctrine, even the highest.
In a different realm, the political, diplomatic element is nothing
other than Plato's ‘guardian-auxiliaries’. I have shown you that,
regardless of what people call Prussian militarism, the real military
element was formed with France as its starting point, after the first
foundations had been laid in Switzerland. That is where the military
element began, but of course it created an opposition for itself by
withholding from others what it considered to be its own prerogative.
It wants to dominate the world in a soldierly way, so that when
something soldierly comes to meet it from elsewhere it finds this quite
unjustified, just as Rome finds it unjustified if something comes
towards her which is to do with the great truths of the universe.

And here, instead of mercantilism, we might just as well write ‘the
industrial and agricultural class’. Think on this, meditate on it, and
you will come to understand that this third factor corresponds to the
provision of material needs. So what is being withheld? Foodstuffs, of
course!
If you apply Plato's concepts appropriately, in accordance with
reality, then you will find reality everywhere, for with these concepts
you will be able fully to enter into reality. Starting from the
concept, you must find the way to reality, and the concept will be able
to plunge down into the most concrete parts of reality. Shadowy
concepts, on the other hand, never find reality, but they do lend
themselves exceptionally well to idealistic chatter. With real
concepts, though, you can work you way through to an understanding of
reality in every detail. Here lies the task of spiritual science.
Spiritual science leads to concepts through which you can really
discover life, which of course is created by the spirit, and through
which you will be able to join in a constructive way at working on the
formation of this life.
One concept, in particular, requires realistic thinking, owing to
the terrible destiny at present weighing down on mankind, for the
corresponding unreal concept is especially persistent in this connection.
Those who speak in the most unrealistic way of all, these days, are the
clergymen. What they express about Christianity or the awareness of God,
apropos of the war, is enough to send anyone up the wall, as they say.
They distort things so frightfully. Of course things in other connections
are distorted too, but in this realm the degree of absurdity is even
greater.
Look at the sermons or tracts at present stemming from that source;
apply your good common sense to them. Of course it is understandable
that they should ask: Does mankind have to be subjected to this
terrible, painful destiny? Could not the divine forces of God intervene
on behalf of mankind to bring about salvation? The justification for
speaking in this way does indeed seem absolute. But there is no real
concept behind it. It does not apply to the reality of the situation.
Let me use a comparison to show you what I mean.
Human beings have a certain physical constitution. They take in food
which is of a kind which enables them to go on living. If they were to
refuse food, they would grow thin, become ill, and finally starve to
death. Now is it natural to complain that if human beings refuse to eat
it is a weakness or malevolence on the part of God to let them starve?
Indeed it is not a weakness on the part of God. He created the food;
human beings only need to eat it. The wisdom of God is revealed in the
way the food maintains the human beings. If they refuse to eat it, they
cannot turn round and accuse God of letting them starve.
Now apply this to what I was saying. Mankind must regard spiritual
life as a food. It is given by the gods, but it has to be taken in by
man. To say that the gods ought to intervene directly is tantamount to
saying that if I refuse to eat God ought to satisfy my hunger in some
other way. The wisdom-filled order of the universe ensures that what is
needed for salvation is always available, but it is up to human beings
to make a relationship with it. So the spiritual life necessary for the
twentieth century will not enter human beings of itself. They must
strive for it and take it into themselves. If they fail to take it in,
times will grow more and more dismal. What takes place on the surface
is only maya. What is happening inwardly, is that an older age is
wrestling with a new one. The general, human element is rising up
everywhere in opposition to the specialized elements. It is maya to
believe that nation is fighting against nation — and I have spoken
about this maya in other connections too. The battle of nation with
nation only comes about because things group themselves in certain ways
but, in reality, the inward forces opposing one another are something
quite different. The opposition is between the old and the new. The
laws now fighting to come into play are quite different from those
which have traditionally ruled over the world.
And again it was maya — that is, something appearing under a false
guise — to say that those other laws were rising up on behalf of
socialism. Socialism is not something connected with truth; above all
it is not connected with spiritual life, for what it wants is to
connect itself with materialism. What really wants to wrestle its way
into existence is the many-sided, harmonious element of mankind, in
opposition to the one-sided priestly, political or mercantile elements.
This battle will rage for a long time, but it can be conducted in all
kinds of different ways. If a healthy way of leading life, such as that
described by Planck in the nineteenth century, had been adopted, then
the bloody conduct of the first third of the twentieth century would,
at least, have been ameliorated. Idealisms do not lead to amelioration,
but realistic thinking does, and realistic thinking also always means
spiritual thinking.
Equally, we can say that whatever has to happen will happen.
Whatever it is that is wrestling its way out, must needs go through all
these experiences in order to reach a stage at which spirituality can
be united with the soul, so that man can grow up spiritually. Today's
tragic destiny of mankind is that in striving upwards today, human
beings are endeavouring to do so not under the sign of spirituality but
under the sign of materialism. This in the first instance is what
brought them into conflict with those brotherhoods who want to develop
the impulses of the mercantile element, commerce and industry, in a
materialistic way on a grand scale. This is today's main conflict. All
other things are side issues, often terrible side issues. This shows us
how terrible maya can be. But it is possible to strive for things in
different ways. If others had been in power instead of the agents of
those brotherhoods, then we would, today, be busy with peace
negotiations, and the Christmas call for peace would not have been
shouted down!
It is going to be immensely difficult to find clear and realistic
concepts and ideas in respect of certain things; but we must all seek
to find them in our own areas. Those who enter a little into the
meaning of spiritual science, and compare this spiritual science with
other things making an appearance just now, will see that this
spiritual science is the only path that can lead to concepts which are
filled with reality.
I wanted to say this very seriously to you at this time. Despite the
fact that the task of spiritual science can only be comprehended out of
the spirit itself, out of knowledge, and not out of what we have been
discussing today, I wanted to show you the significance, the essential
nature, of spiritual science for the present time. I wanted to show you
how urgent it is for everything possible to be done to make spiritual
science more widely known. It is so necessary in these difficult times
for us to take spiritual science not only into our heads but really
into our warm hearts. Only if we take it into the warmth of our hearts
will we be capable of generating the strength needed by the present
time.
None of us should allow ourselves to think that we are perhaps not
in a suitable position, or not strong enough, to do what it is
essential for us to do. Karma is sure to give every one of us, whatever
our position, the opportunity to put the right questions to destiny at
the right moment. Even if this right moment is neither today nor
tomorrow, it is sure to come eventually. So once we have understood the
impulses of this spiritual Movement we must stand firmly and
steadfastly behind them. Today it is particularly necessary to set
aurselves the aim of firmness and steadfastness. For either something
important must come from one side or another — although this cannot be
counted upon — in the very near future, or all conditions of life will
become increasingly difficult. It would be utterly thoughtless to
refuse to be clear about this. For two-and-a-half years it has been
possible for what we now call war to carry on, while conditions
remained as bearable as they now are. But this cannot go on for another
year. Movements such as ours will be put te a severe test. There will
be no question of asking when we shall next meet, or why do we not
meet, or why this or that is not being published. No, indeed. It will
be a question of bearing in our hearts, even through long periods of
danger, a steadfast sense of belonging.
I wanted to say this to you today because it could be possible in
the not too distant future that there will be no means of transport
which will enable us to come together again; I am not speaking only of
travel permits but of actual means of transport. In the long run, it
will not be possible to keep the things going which constitute our
modern civilization, if something breaks in on this civilization which,
although it has arisen out of it, is nevertheless in absolute
opposition to it. This is how absurd the situation is: Life itself is
bringing forth things which are absolutely opposed to it.
So we must accept that difficult times may be in store for our
Movement too. But we shall not be led astray if we have taken into
ourselves the inner steadfastness, clarity and right feeling for the
importance and nature of our Movement, and if in these serious times we
can see beyond our petty differences. This, our Movement ought to be
able to achieve; we ought to be able to look beyond our petty
differences to the greater affairs of mankind, which are now at stake.
The greatest of these is to reach an understanding of what it means to
base thinking on reality. Wherever we look we are confronted with the
impossibility of finding a thinking which accords with reality. We
shall have to enter heart and soul into this search in order not to be
led astray by all kinds of egoistic distractions.
This is what I wanted to say to you as my farewell today, since we
are about to take leave of one another for some time. Make yourselves
so strong — even if it should turn out to be unnecessary — that,
even in loneliness of soul, your hearts will carry the pulse of spiritual
science with which we are here concerned. Even the thought that we
shall be steadfast will help a very great deal; for thoughts are
realities. Many potential difficulties can still be swept away if we
maintain an honest, serious quest in the direction we have here
discussed so often.
Now that we have to depart for a while we shall not allow ourselves
to flag, but shall make sure that we return if it is possible. But even
if it should take a long time as a result of circumstances outside our
control, we shall never lose the thought from our hearts and souls that
this is the place — where our Movement has even brought forth a visible
building — where the most intense requirement exists to bear this
Movement so positively, so concretely, so energetically, that together
we can carry it through, come what may. So wherever we are, let us
stand together in thought, faithfully, energetically, cordially, and
let us hear one another, even though this will not be possible with our
physical ears. But we shall only hear one another if we listen
with strong thoughts and without sentimentality, for the times are now
unsuitable for sentimentality.
In this sense, I say farewell to you. My words are also a greeting,
for in the days to come we shall meet again, though more in the spirit
than on the physical plane. Let us hope that the latter, too, will be
possible once more in the not too distant future.
|