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LECTURE
SIXTEEN
Dornach,
7 January 1917
These lectures on the theme of current events are particularly
suited to helping us realize what we can gain for our soul by striving
to acquaint ourselves with spiritual knowledge. I have often stressed
that this spiritual knowledge must not remain merely theoretical. We
must make it come alive by filling it with those hallowed feelings and
other impulses which belong to it, so that it can give to our souls
that impetus and mood which will enable us as scientists of the spirit
to relate to events in the human realm in a manner differing from that
of someone who is not a spiritual scientist.
We have reflected in various ways on how individual human beings
belong to particular nations, nationalities. But what the individual
bears within him that belongs to mankind as a whole — that part of him
which is not specialized and individualized with the characteristics of
a particular nation — it is of this that spiritual science helps us to
become fully aware, for the main content of anthroposophical spiritual
science is valid for every individual human being, regardless of any
differences among various groups. Indeed, even the national differences
are seen differently from an anthroposophical point of view since, in
contrast to the non-anthroposophical point of view, we are able to
consider objectively what constitutes these differences — the various
aspects can be seen objectively.
We are familiar with the threefold nature of our soul in that it
consists of the sentient soul, the intellectual or mind soul and the
consciousness soul, all three being filled, spiritually permeated,
enlivened by our egohood. When the Italian folk soul works into
individual human beings, it is the sentient soul that is influenced by
the forces and impulses with which it works. In the French individual
it is the intellectual or mind soul, and in the British individual the
consciousness soul through which the folk soul works. For the folk
souls of Central Europe it is the ego that is receptive, and for those
of the Slav peoples the spirit-self. If we could fill ourselves with an
understanding of this, we should no longer be tempted to form
judgements in the way in which they are so frequently formed.
A certain person heard this and was furious, because he understood
anthroposophical spiritual science to be saying that in the German
nation the folk soul works through the ego, as if this was something
higher than a folk soul working through the consciousness soul. This
was his own misunderstanding! For in spiritual science different
aspects of knowledge are viewed objectively, side by side. The folk
souls have tasks to do and to accomplish them they have to work into
their nations. But as regards the working of the folk souls in human
souls we must realize that in our fifth post-Atlantean period a certain
development has to take place. And those who are drawn towards
anthroposophical spiritual science ought to feel themselves in the
forefront of this development.
How does the folk soul work down into the human soul and mind? To
start with we have to note that this working is subconscious and only
partially rises up into consciousness. The individual human being feels
that he belongs to one nation or another. On the whole, the folk soul
works on the individuality via the maternal principle. It is the
maternal principle that is embedded in the realm of the folk soul. The
effect of the paternal principle is to detach the individual, as a
physical and etheric being belonging to nature, from the group. I have
frequently discussed this in past years. In the Christian world view this
is even expressed in the Gospels. This, too, I discussed some time ago.
[ Note 1 ]
As things are today, it is in the first instance
through the blood that the folk soul works into the individual, and
also through what corresponds in the etheric body to blood. Naturally,
this is more or less an animal impulse, and it remains at the animal
level for by far the greater part of mankind today. Through his blood
the individual belongs to a particular nation. The mysterious forces
and impulses working in the blood are very difficult to describe since
they are extraordinarily complex and manifold. Suffice it to say that
they lie beneath the surface of consciousness.
People are far more conscious in all those aspects of their make-up
which belong to mankind as a whole, irrespective of national
differences. That is why the pathos, the passion, the affectation of
belonging to a particular nationality bursts forth with a kind of
elemental force. People do not attempt to apply logical reasons or
judgements when it is a question of specifying or sensing their
attachment to their nationality. It is his blood, and his heart which
is influenced by his blood, that bind the individual to his nationality
and let him live within it. The impulses in question are subconscious,
and it is a good step forward if we can at least succeed in recognizing
the subconscious nature of this situation. It is important especially
for those who are approaching spiritual science if they can undergo
this development in themselves and come to feel about these things in a
way that differs from the way the rest of mankind feels.
When people who do not belong to spiritual science are asked what
binds them to their nation they will — indeed, they must — answer: My
blood! This is the sole idea which they are capable of forming about
their sense of belonging to a particular nationality. A student of
spiritual science, however, ought gradually to reach a point at which
he is able to give not this, but a different answer. If he cannot
gradually develop to a point where this different answer is possible,
this means that he sees spiritual science as something purely
theoretical, not practical and living. Someone who does not study
spiritual science can only say: I am connected to my nationality
through my blood, through my blood I defend what lives in my nation, it
is my blood that obliges me to identify with my nationality. One who
does study spiritual science, however, must answer: I am connected with
my nationality through my karma, for this is a part of my karma. As
soon as concepts of karma are brought into the question, the whole
relationship becomes much more spiritual. Someone who does not follow
spiritual science will summon his blood to account for the pathos, the
impulsiveness of everything he dces as a member of a particuiar nation.
But someone who has developed through spiritual science will feel
connected to one nation or another through his karma.
The matter becomes spiritual. Externally such a person might act in
the same way; even if he feels this more spiritual aspect he might do
the same things. But inwardly he will feel, spiritually; his feeling
will be quite different from that of a person who feels his links with
his nation purely at an animal level.
Here you see one of the points at which belonging to spiritual
science changes the soul, brings a new mood into the soul. But at the
same time you see how much the general consciousness of our time is
lagging behind what could already be known by those who want to know
it. In the general consciousness of our time the individual's
attachment to a particular nation can only be seen as something that
lives in the blood, or in that which is not at all of the blood but
which is regulated in connection with the blood and out of this
perception of the blood. A far freer view of nationality will gain
ground once the whole matter is viewed as a matter of karma. Then
certain delicate concepts will arise for someone who perhaps attaches
himself consciously to a certain nation, thus bringing about a change
of karma.
But however we view the matter, whether in the less complete sense
shared by the greater part of mankind today, or in the more complete
sense that can be attained through the study of spiritual science,
nevertheless the fact remains that the general situation of the world
today means that mankind is differentiated into groups. Nothing could
make us more painfully aware than current events that this
differentiation into groups is still for the most part prevalent. In
addition, this differentiation into groups is mingled with quite other
conditions and facts because it is to be even more difficult for human
hearts and souls to gain an understanding of the reasons for the
painful enmities, the painful disharmonies that have arisen amongst
mankind today.
In short, we are touching on something pervaded by tragedy which
should have nothing to do with ordinary logic or ordinary, superficial
judgements. For whether these things are seen as a matter of blood or
as a matter of karma, blood lies below, and karma above, logic. As a
result, what we have been discussing must of necessity result in
conflicts in human coexistence and these conflicts must be seen to be
necessary. To believe that these conflicts can be judged in accordance
with those concepts that apply to individual human beings must lead to
the greatest errors. The widespread discussion of conflicts among
nations in the same terms as those applicable to conflicts between
individuals is the gravest mistake. I have already said that concepts
such as justice and freedom apply to individual human beings. To claim
them as parts of a programme for nations proves from the start a lack
of knowledge about the characteristics of nations and a lack of will to
enter into the question of national characteristics.
For those who understand these things and are capable, through
spiritual knowledge, of seeing what is factually and naturally
necessary, there is something paradoxical about the belief expressed in
so many publications today, for it is comparable with the shark who
makes a pact with the little fishes which he normally eats, saying: It
is utterly inhumane to eat little fishes; I shall cease doing so! By
saying this, he is condemning himself to death, for it happens to be
the way of the world that sharks eat little fish!
It is necessary to come to a profound sense for the fact that it is
not possible to understand the world without seeing the reality of the
necessary conflicts leading to all that is tragic in the world. And to
believe that something like Paradise is possible on the physical plane
shows a total lack of comprehension of the peculiarities of the
physical plane. Paradise does not exist on earth. There can be no
comprehension among those who strive to realize the new Jerusalem as a
Utopia on earth or who, like the social democrats, want to bring about
some other satisfactory solution. There is a profound law which says
that human beings, in so far as they live here on the physical plane,
can only reach a satisfactory view of reality if they are aware that
higher worlds also exist, and that they are connected in their souls
with these higher worlds. Only if we understand that we are citizens of
higher worlds can a satisfactory view be attained. Therefore, when
spiritual consciousness was extinguished, a time had to come when
mankind could no longer understand why so much disaster, so many
conflicts, are present on the earth. These conflicts can only be
resolved when we feel ourselves not only to be living in the physical
world, but also in the spiritual world. Then we may begin to grasp that
just as man cannot always be young but has also to grow old, so there
has to be a breaking down of what was once built up — conflict and
destruction as well as creation. When you understand this, you also
understand that conflicts have to arise between groups of human beings.
These conflicts are the tragic element of world events, and they must
be seen to be something tragic.
In order to conjure up before your soul the living concept, the
living idea that I am trying to describe, let me remind you of a rather
caustic remark once made by the poet Friedrich Hebbel.
[ Note 2 ]
He was, as you know, a genius of a somewhat ponderous caste, one who wrote
rather laboriously, despite a considerable fund of worldly humour. I
told you on another occasion that he was not at all far from a view of
the world which would have accorded with spiritual science. Thus he
once jotted down in his notebook the following theme: Plato,
reincarnated, takes his place in a secondary school where the teacher
is dealing with the subject of Plato. He cannot understand a word of
what Plato is supposed to have said and the teacher scolds him severely
for this. Hebbel wanted to work this idea into a dramatic episode. He
never actually did so, but you see that he did indeed consider bringing
the idea of reincarnation into a play.
Hebbel was a contemporary of Grillparzer
[ Note 3 ]
and knew him. As I said, Hebbel was a somewhat sombre, melancholy genius,
but after he had seen Grillparzer's plays
The Golden Fleece, Thou shalt not lie!
and
A Dream is Life
and so on, he said
— and this is most interesting: Grillparzer depicts tragic conflicts,
but only those of which it can be said that, if people were clever
enough to see through the situations, it would be possible to resolve
them in the end. According to Hebbel, the tragic circumstances in
Grillparzer's plays only come about because the characters are not
clever enough to see through the tragic situations. This, he says, is
not really tragic. Real tragedy among human beings only comes about
when those involved are as clever as anything and yet none of their
cleverness and caution can help them, so that conflict becomes
inevitable.
What Hebbel as a dramatist calls real tragedy is something that we
ought to introduce as a concept into human evolution, human destiny, so
that we do not continue for ever to form the naive judgement that one
thing or another might have been avoided. Situations which lead to
conflicts such as the present one cannot be avoided. And all those
declamations about blame are totally out of place in face of a truly
penetrating judgement.
It was for this purpose that I arranged these lectures which we have
been conducting over the past days and weeks. I arranged them in order
to demonstrate clearly that even in the case of an event such as the
Opium Wars it is impossible to speak of blame in the way blame is meant
in situations involving individual human beings. Concepts such as
guilt, freedom, and so on, which can be applied to individual human
beings, cannot be applied to souls living on other planes, and folk
souls do not live on the physical plane but only work into the physical
plane through individual souls. Their abode lies in other spheres, on
other planes.
Such things are sensed nowadays by some isolated individuals. But
they are not understood when we judge events on the basis of concepts
which are customary today, instead of making the effort to take into
account the actual evidence. To stand up today as a member of a nation
and pronounce judgement on other nations in a manner that is only
justified when referring to individuals proves nothing except one's own
backwardness in the ability to judge. It is, though, a historical
necessity, because certain statesmen are backward in relation to what
could be known today, that this backwardness, this ignorance, is
brought to bear even in the most terrible historical documents, as a
result of which infinite rivers of blood will flow. On the other side
stands the possibility of stressing again and again, for those who want
to hear it, that the progress and salvation of mankind depend on
finding judgements from the realms of spiritual life.
There is indeed a sense in some quarters for that which is necessary
as a basis for judgement; but it cannot be brought into consciousness.
I shall give you an example, for if I may say so, spiritual science
will only be absorbed into our very flesh and blood if we learn to
observe ordinary, everyday reality from the viewpoint of spiritual
science. In England, in the seventies and eighties of the nineteenth
century, the historian Professor Seeley
[ Note 4 ]
was active. What he
taught was in many cases decisive for what later came to live in many
souls. Seeley was perhaps the first English historical imperialist. His
imperialism was historical and his history imperialistic, for he viewed
British history as it had developed over the centuries from the point
of view that the trend had always been towards the foundation of the
great British Empire which now covers one quarter of the habitable
surface of the earth. His lectures appeared in print in the seventies
and were frequently reprinted; sometimes there was a new edition every
year, for he had very many students. In these lectures he sought to
gather up all the separate facts which made the British Empire what it
is today. He saw it as something in the nature of divine providence
that all the different pieces came together in the way in which they
did, as a result of different impulses. He even asks: How did it all
happen? And answers expressly: No individuals decided all these things,
performed all these actions at just the right moment, which joined yet
another portion to the British Empire with the aim of creating the
greatest imperium that had
ever existed; no, all this happened in earlier times as though by
instinct.
The various parts came together by instinct and in Seeley's view
there is a divine and spiritual order in the way they did so. Now, he
says, it is our task to lift up into consciousness what has hitherto
taken place instinctively and to round off what arose thus
instinctively with our consciousness into an imperium
such as has never existed
on the earth before. He saw it as his task as an imperialistic
historian consciously to penetrate what had come together
unconsciously. Seeley intends, as it were, to bring into the present
consciousness of the tifth post-Atlantean period all that contributed
to the rise of the British Empire out of the still-atavistic forces
belonging to the laws of the fourth post-Atlantean period. But as we
have pointed out, it was not only reasoned, intellectual thinking which
took hold of the instinctive coming-together of the different parts. As
I have told you, during the final decades of the nineteenth century
certain members of occult streams began — not with ordinary
consciousness, but with occult consciousness — to expand this British
Empire by placing before their souls, and the souls of their pupils,
maps
[ Note 5 ]
which showed what still had to come about if the
British Empire was to beam its forces over the whole world. In these
occult circles the following idea was consciously cultivated: The fifth
post-Atlantean period belongs to the English-speaking peoples. Based on
this, all the arrangements were carried out and all the details
elaborated. No doubt the Regius Professor was not aware of this; but
others were and used all of it consciously in their impulses. This
needs to be recorded.
We shall speak more about what it was that they were aware of. But
when people are not aware of something it nevertheless creeps into
their soul and occupies them in a certain way. Thus, in our time, an
extraordinary collaboration came about between something occult
hovering in the background and pulling strings, and something of which
people are unaware, but which lives in the forefront of events on the
physical plane.
One must know such things if one wants to form judgements in the
proper way. Over the last few weeks I have quoted a number of peculiar
incidents, such as the matter of the
Almanach of Madame de Thèbes
[ Note 6 ]
and others. No doubt you
remember. Now consider the following quite objectively without taking
sides in any way. It is something extraordinary even for somebody who
only thinks in the ordinary way; but for those who observe spiritual
connections it is something that demands more than mere consideration,
it demands to be meditated upon and taken into one's impulses: Is it
not extraordinary that as early as the nineties of the nineteenth
century an English book
[ Note 7 ]
should have been published that was
written by three editors of The Times and given the title
The Great War of 189-? The timing was handled in a somewhat
dilettante fashion.
Though the date suggested is rather earlier, the reference is to the
present war. This book contains a small error, for we are told that the
war will break out as a result of the assassination of the Bulgarian
Prince Ferdinand and that it will then escalate into the European
conflagration covering the world. What is foretold in detail about this
European conflagration covering the world is remarkably prophetic and
has been confirmed in the main by subsequent events. We can truly say
that the book's greatest error is the confusion between the Bulgarian
Prince Ferdinand and Franz Ferdinand of Austria, and the placing of the
assassination in Sofia instead of Sarajevo. I consider that there is a
significance which should not be underestimated in the appearance of a
book in 1892 which so remarkably accurately portrays a future event.
Only by endeavouring to form judgements which are not abstract, but
founded on what actually exists, can we develop the capacity to see the
hidden configuration of things.
Naturally enough, even those who were able to see what was to come
misplaced certain details — this is inevitable when speaking about such
things. It is not always possible to foresee everything accurately. But
we ought to ponder on the fact that there were people at that time who
had such strong reasons for going into these matters that they even
went as far as publication. I am telling you all this, especially in
connection with all that we are considering, so that you can sharpen
your capacity for forming judgements. It is essential to have the will
to look facts in the face and see how they relate to one another. In
earlier lectures here
[ Note 8 ]
I said: In the fifth post-Atlantean
period we can only make progress if we strive on the one hand to
achieve Imagination, and on the other to let the facts speak for
themselves. All preconceived judgements are doomed increasingly to
become empty phrases. Least of all can abstract thinking — as opposed
to thinking that is bound up with actual facts — lead to judgements
about the tragic conflicts in the world, the tragic play of impulses
which work in the way I have described.
There exists today a knack, linked with world history, a knack of
saying things which seem very convincing to many people but which, in
fact, reveal nothing on which it would be worth basing a judgement. Let
us consider a judgement such as the following: Those in power in the
British Empire did not want war. To back this up, suitable
correspondence, telegrams, letters and so forth, about all sorts of
proposals for conferences and so on are are quoted. People who judge,
not
on the basis of reality but abstractly, can indeed be convinced by
these things, because the material available to back up such a
statement can sound very convincing. But for a judgement to be valid it
must not only be convincing or correct in the abstract, it must live in
reality. It is perfectly possible, under certain circumstances, to
prove that those in power in the British Empire — or rather those who
mattered — did not want a war, and with such proof the greatest
impression can be made in the whole of the periphery. In order to prove
it — I say ‘prove’ — it is not even necessary to speak a direct
untruth; yet in reality it remains an untruth. Why? Because it is, in
fact, true and can be proved to be true, and yet this truth is not
worth a snap of the fingers and is totally irrelevant.
You may be certain that those in power in the British Empire would
very much have preferred to prevent the conflict in so far as the
British Empire is a participant. But what those who matter wanted to
achieve by means of the war — this they certainly desired with every
ounce of energy at their disposal. Had it been possible to achieve this
without a war, they would obviously greatly have preferred it, and from
the beginning it was not at all out of the question that these aims
might have been achieved by means other than war. To do this it would
have been necessary to create some sort of substitute, some
international arrangement, by means of which representatives of the
various states could have come together to decide certain matters. If
you take care to ensure in advance that you have a majority in such a
body, then of course you can achieve your aims without a war, as long
as the minority are prepared to go along with you.
So you see, in the last resort it is not a matter of whether one
wanted to wage or prevent war, but of what one's aims were in the first
place. And the objective observer cannot fail to see that the aim was
indeed the one about which I have given you a number of hints — it is
only possible to hint. As always, I beg you to take into account that I
am not passing a judgement on moral grounds, but placing the concept of
tragedy on the scales; I am saying that when conflicts are tackled by
means of battles, when much blood is spilt — this stems from the
tragedy of those conflicts. In contemplating this tragedy externally,
we must, of course, have the will to be affected by these things in a
way that differs somewhat from the ordinary.
How often do we hear: A share of the blame for this war must be laid
at the door of those opinions, sensations and feelings which such
people as Treitschke and Bernhardi
[ Note 9 ]
spread among the German
people. It can be quite grotesque, for the names of these writers have
often enough been cited as belonging to deceivers, even by people who
are convinced in the most honest way that this hits the nail on the
head. Sometimes Nietzsche is included,
[ Note 10 ]
sometimes others as well. There is much to be learnt by taking into
account what such things are based on, in what I might call
‘the realm of what is true’.
But before going into this from the spiritual point of view — for much
can be learnt about the spiritual realm by attending to ordinary things
— let me draw your attention to the way in which just such phenomena as
the German historian Treitschke can illustrate for us everything that
is so tragic in human evolution. The only thing is that one must not
make judgements of an utterly superficial kind.
Had I been inclined to make judgements of a superficial nature, I
should for some time now certainly have looked upon Treitschke as a
social monster. I only met him once, at a time when he was already
totally deaf. You wrote your questions on scraps of paper and he then
replied. When I was introduced to him, he asked: Where are you from? I
wrote down that I was an Austrian. He replied: Well, well, — he was
loud-spoken, since he could hear nothing — Austrians are either
geniuses or rascals, one or the other; and so forth. With Treitschke it
was always like this: If you did not want to count yourself a genius,
you had had it. He was a vivacious man with considerable depth of
character, and he often expressed himself in sharply defined terms. He
wrote a much cited history of the German people.
[ Note 11 ]
It is quoted in a certain way, but it could easily be quoted in another
way, too, for anyone who wanted a collection of anti-German vulgarities
could just copy them straight from Treitschke. However, this is not
what people do. Instead, they seek out passages which are far less
frequent than those in which Treitschke tells his people the truth
about themselves. They seek out passages which are written, so they
think, in a ‘Prussian and militaristic’ manner.
In this connection I want to introduce you to a rather interesting
judgement. It stems from a man who was quite justified in forming it,
because he, too, was a historian. He was also particularly interested
in Treitschke's definite antipathy towards more recent history and
developments in England. Treitschke certainly entertained this
antipathy and it soon became obvious when you got to know him.
This historian, who knew Treitschke well, wrote that Treitschke's
dislike of modern England was based partly on historical, and partly on
moral grounds, for
‘Britain's world-predominance outrages
him as a man almost as much as it outrages him as a German. It outrages
him because of its immorality, its arrogance and its pretentious
security. And not without justice’
please note this
‘he delineates English policy throughout
the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries as aimed consistently at the
repression of Prussia, so soon as English politicians discovered the
true nature of that state and divined the great future reserved for it
by destiny. Had not England been Prussia's treacherous but timid enemy
in 1864 and 1866, and again in 1870–71, and, above all, in 1874–75?’
This is what this historian says in his discussion of Treitschke's
antipathy towards England. The strongest point he makes in Treitschke's
favour is his
‘conviction, which becomes more intense
as the years advance, that Britain's world-predominance is out of all
proportion to Britain's real strength and to her worth or value,
whether that worth be considered in the political, the social, the
intellectual, or the moral sphere.’
He continues:
‘It is the detestation of a sham ...
That which Treitschke hates in England is what Napoleon hated in
England — a pretentiousness, an overweening middle-class
self-satisfaction, which is not really patriotism, not the high and
serious passion of Germany in 1813 and 1870, but an insular, narrow
conceit; in fact, the emotion enshrined in that most vulgar of all
national hymns, “Rule Britannia”.’
He goes on:
‘... But Treitschke is seldom witty,
though often grossly if unintentionally offensive. He is as unable as
Heine to see anything fine in the English character.’
You see, this is another judgement about Treitschke. And while we
are just discussing this historian, let me read to you a judgement he
formed about someone else, much-maligned Bernhardi:
‘But what marks out this work’
the book in question is the one which is constantly quoted these
days as being particularly abominable
‘from all others of the same kind, giving
it something of the distinction of a really epoch-making book, is that
it represents a definite attempt made by a German soldier to understand
not merely how Germany could make war upon England most
effectively, but why Germany ought to make war upon England.’
All this is written about Treitschke and Bernhardi by the English
professor Cramb,
[ Note 12 ]
who from his own point of view could be
called the English Treitschke. If you delve into the matter, you will
find an extraordinary similarity between the tone of Cramb and that of
Treitschke, for Cramb, equally, is utterly preoccupied with making
clear that the British Empire must dominate the world and that
everything must be done to bring this about. You could say that he
speaks about England in the way Treitschke speaks about Germany,
allowing of course for the differences between an Englishman and a
German. Here you see how one of two men — each of whom, speaking from
his own point of view, must needs say the opposite of the other — is
nevertheless capable of appreciating what the other says. In a certain
sense a point had been reached at which what had to be laid aside could
indeed be laid aside, in order to come to what is above the individual
and belongs to history.
It is therefore an extremely depressing relapse, a backward step for
people, to find that now, even in the most weighty documents,
judgements come to expression which are utterly inapplicable. There is
really no need to go at all far in order to find tangible truths. But
to do so one needs the keen sense which today can only be maintained
through some connection with spiritual science. On another front there
is something equally grotesque: The Russian plan to gain possession of
the Dardanelles and Constantinople has existed and been admitted for
centuries; yet at the same time the Russians claim to be entirely
blameless, absolutely blameless. Here, in a historical document of the
first water — the Tsar's decree that has recently been going round the
world — we have the juxtaposition once again: We are absolutely
blameless, but we mean to conquer, yet we are blameless. In Russia,
too, people have not always held the opinions they hold today.
Take Kuropatkin for instance.
[ Note 13 ]
In 1910 he published a book
The Tasks of the Russian Army.
In this book there is a remarkable passage which those who speak of
Russia's great blamelessness could do well to mark and digest. It says:
[ Note 14 ]
‘If Russia does not bring to an end her
interference in something foreign to her, yet of vital interest to
Austria, then a war over the question of Serbia can be expected to
break out in the twentieth century between Russia and Austria.’
The Russian general Kuropatkin wrote this in 1910. Of course he had
in mind what existed on the Russian side that could lead to a war with
Austria over the Serbian conflict.
The question now arises: Why is the truth being so distorted at
present? The answer is that something has got to be said, yet it is not
as easy as all that to speak the truth. I hinted at this yesterday. The
things that are said are intended to spread a fog over the truth so as
to distract people's attention from the truth. That is why arguments
are chosen which will have an immediate sentimental appeal for those
who lack the will to get to the bottom of things.
If only people could come more and more to understand above all the
full significance of the many unconscious or subconscious untruths. I
have often pointed out that it is no excuse to say that one believes
something just because so and so said it. Of course I do not mean that
many people do not believe in what they are saying, but this is not the
point. These things work in the world, and those who make statements
have a duty to take the trouble to find out the truth; merely believing
something is not enough. Someone might speak quite truly when he says
that he wanted to prevent the war. But this truth is not worth a fig in
view of the fact that he intended to use other means instead to achieve
his desired aim, the aim he is striving for with all his might. To
reverse the truth in this way, whether unconsciously or subconsciously,
is something much worse than an untruth, even though it appears to be
the truth.
This is now the immensely difficult karma of mankind: that people do
not feel in duty bound to pursue the actual, real truth and
truthfulness that lives in the facts — indeed, that the very opposite
of this seems to have started to rule the world and to be all set to do
so ever increasingly. External deeds are always the consequence of what
lives in mankind in the way of thought. They are the consequence of
untruthfulness, which may indeed appear in the guise of truth because
it can be ‘proved’, though only superficially. What lives in the
judgements of human beings can become, on another plane, the thundering
of cannon and the spilling of blood. There is certainly a connection
between the two. The conclusion we have to draw from this is that we
must enter ever more deeply into the facts, that we must develop a
sense which can lead us to see in the appropriate places those things
which can really throw light and reveal what is essential.
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