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Lecture I
Knowledge
of the Supersensible and Riddles of the Human Soul
A public lecture given in
St. Gallen, November 15, 1917
Anyone who follows the
evolution of the human spirit over the course of centuries, or
perhaps millenia, will come to feel that this human spirit moves on
to ever new achievements in the realm of knowing and in the realm of
doing. There is no need to place too much emphasis on the word
progress, for in the dismal time that has now befallen humanity this
might call forth bitter doubt in many. If we observe this evolution
of the human spirit, however, something else makes a clear impression
on us, namely, that the forms and configurations taken by man's
striving spirit vary essentially from century to century. And since
today in our studies we are chiefly concerned with a striving for
knowledge that wishes to penetrate humanity's evolution in a
new way, we need only bear in mind, by way of example, how such
conceptions, which are to some extent in conflict with the old ones,
have difficulty gaining access to evolving humanity.
We should continually recall, for example, how
difficult it was to bring the Copernican world view into people's
habits of thought, habits of feeling —
indeed, in certain realms this took centuries. This Copernican
world view had broken with what people for a long time believed
necessary to maintain as the truth about the structure of the
universe on the basis of their sense perception. Then came the time
when a person could no longer rely on what the eye saw as the rising
and setting of the sun, as the sun's movement. He had to accept
that, contrary to the visual appearance, the sun in a certain way, at
least in its relation to the earth, stands still. Human habits
of thought and feeling did not easily accommodate themselves to such
sudden reversals of knowledge.
In the anthroposophically oriented spiritual science to which our
considerations this evening are devoted, we have to do with an even
greater reversal of this kind. Those who believe themselves convinced
on firm scientific grounds of the content of this spiritual science
also believe it necessary for it to have a decisive influence now and
in the further evolution of human thinking, sensing, and feeling. It
could also be said, if you will allow me these few
introductory words, that the introduction of something like the
Copernican world view was a matter of dealing with countless
prejudices, with traditional opinions. People believed that if
anything else were to supersede these it would upset all kinds of
religious conceptions and things of that kind.
Many other objections concerning what we are to discuss this evening get
in the way. Here the problem is not simply the prejudices such as
those that confronted the Copernican theory, for example. In this
case there is also the problem that in our time many people, indeed
the majority of those considering themselves enlightened and
cultured, not only bring with them their prejudices and
preconceptions; they are actually ashamed of having to take seriously
the realm about which anthroposophy has to speak. Such an individual
feels he has to apologize not only to the world in general but to
himself if he admits that it is possible to know about the things
that are to be spoken of today in as thoroughly scientific a way as
about the outer structure of nature. He believes that he has to
regard himself as foolish or childish.
These things must be considered if we are to speak today about an
anthroposophically oriented spiritual science. Anyone speaking out of
knowledge of this science knows the objections that must arise today
by the hundreds and thousands. He already knows these objections,
because doubt is felt today not only concerning the specific truths
and results of this spiritual science; there is also doubt that
knowledge of any kind can be acquired concerning the realm with which
anthroposophy occupies itself. The possibility of developing
conceptual beliefs in the soul, general conceptual beliefs about the
realm of the eternal, is certainly still acknowledged as justified by
many today; but it is generally considered something dreamy or
sentimental to believe that a really factual knowledge can be
developed about the facts that can be drawn from the sense world
concerning the immortal and eternal in the nature of the human being.
This is particularly the case among those who believe themselves to
be forming their judgments out of the presently recognized mode of
scientific conception.
This evening we will have nothing to do with the dreamy and sentimental.
We will rather be dealing with a realm in which you could say that
the student, particularly the scientific student, shrinks from its
first conditions. I would like to touch very briefly on the fact that
this anthroposophically oriented spiritual science has no wish to be
sectarian. It is completely misunderstood by anyone who believes that
it wishes to arise in the way some new kind of religious faith is
founded. It has no such wish. It wishes to arise today as a necessary
result of the world view brought by natural scientific development, a
general, publicly accepted conception among the widest circles of
humanity. This natural scientific development today supplies so many
concepts, which are in their turn the source of feelings and
sensations. It provides the concepts for the most widely held world
view. This natural scientific mode of observation sets itself the
task of examining and explaining what is yielded to the outer senses,
of examining what is accessible to human understanding by way of the
natural laws about facts given to the outer senses.
If only one takes a quick look at what is living,
it is possible to see how everywhere today natural science must
consider origins, going back to what the construction of the seed
reveals concerning growing, becoming, flourishing. (Though this is
more prevalent in other realms, it is most clearly apparent in the
realm of the living.) If the natural scientist wishes to explain
animal life or human life in this sense, he goes back to birth, he
studies embryology, he studies that from which growing and becoming
evolve. The natural scientist returns to birth, to the beginning of
what unfolds before the senses. And when natural science seeks an
explanation for the world, it goes back with various hypotheses
— with the foundations laid by geology, paleontology, with what
the individual branches of natural science can reveal —
forming conceptions out of this about the birth of the
universe's structure, you could say. Even if one or another may
have doubts about the justification for such a way of thinking, it is
always being striven for.
The
thoughts are well known that people have presented in order to
fathom, if not the beginning of earthly evolution, at least far
distant epochs (those epochs, for example, before the human being
walked the earth) in order to explain in some way out of what went
before, out of what lay in a germinal state, what follows, the
consequences that the human being takes in of his surroundings
through his senses. The whole Darwinian theory, or, if one wishes to
leave that aside, the theory of evolution, is based on the search for
origins, looking for the emergence of something out of something
else, I would say that everywhere we find this thought of going back
to youth and birth for explanations.
Spiritual
science in the anthroposophical sense finds itself in another
position. And by its point of departure it calls forth a vague
opposition. Opposition without people being conscious of it; one
could say that it calls forth an unconscious opposition, an
instinctive opposition. Such opposition is often much more effective
than the opposition that is clearly recognized, clearly thought
through. In order to arrive at conceptions at all, an
anthroposophically oriented spiritual science must not begin now with
general, hazy concepts of spirit; to arrive at spiritual facts, it
must make death its starting point. It thereby stands from the
outset, you could say, in fundamental opposition to what is preferred
today, namely to proceeding from birth, youth, growth, and the
progress of development. Death encroaches upon life. And if you keep
in touch with contemporary scientific literature, you can find
everywhere that the conscientious scientist holds the view that death
as such cannot be inserted in the series of natural scientific
concepts in the same sense as other concepts.
The
spiritual scientist must make death his actual starting point, death,
the cessation, actually the opposite of birth. How death and all that
is related to it encroaches upon life in the widest sense is the
basic question. Death terminates what is perceptible to the senses;
death dissolves what is becoming, what is developing before the
senses. By the way that death encroaches on life, it can be conceived
of as having no part in what is working and flourishing here in the
sense world, springing forth and producing life. This is what yields
the opinion that nothing can be known about what is concealed by
death, as it were, cloaked by death. (Within certain limits this
opinion is perfectly comprehensible, though totally unjustifiable.)
And it is actually from this corner of human feeling that the
objections rear up their heads, objections that obviously can be
brought up against things that are the results of a science still in
its youth today. For spiritual science is young, and for precisely
these reasons just referred to, the spiritual scientist is in quite a
different position from that of the natural scientist, even when
speaking about things in the sphere of his own research. The
spiritual scientist cannot proceed in exactly the same way as the
natural scientist, who poses some fact and then proves it on grounds
by which everyone is convinced: that it can be seen. The spiritual
scientist, however, speaks about what cannot be perceived by the
senses. Hence, in speaking about the results of his research, he is
always obliged to indicate how such results can be reached.
There is a rich literature concerning the realm
about which I will be speaking with you this evening. Believing
themselves called upon to do so, critics constantly raise the
objection when reading my writings, for example, that the spiritual
scientist maintains such and such a thing but gives no proof,
although this actually shows only how superficially things are read!
He does offer proof, but in a different way. To begin with, he tells
how he arrived at his results; he must first indicate the path into
the realm of facts. This path is generally unknown, because it is not
the customary one for today's habits of thinking and feeling.
It must first be said that the spiritual investigator is forced by
his investigation to conclude that with the methods and procedures by
which the ordinary scientist comes to his brilliant results (not
rejected by the spiritual scientist but admired) we do not arrive at
the supersensible. It is precisely this experience, namely, the very
limitations of the methods of natural scientific thinking, from which
the spiritual scientist makes his start. This is not done, however,
in the way so prevalent today, which is to declare that certain
things, beyond which the ordinary scientist does not go, are the
limits of human cognition. No, it is done in such a way that an
attempt is made to come to definite experiences that can be attained
only at these limits. I have spoken about these boundaries to human
cognition particularly in my most recent written work,
Riddles of the Soul.
Those
people who have not taken knowledge as something that falls into
their laps from outside, those who have wrestled with knowledge,
wrestled with truth, have always at least certain experiences at
these limits of human cognition. Here it must be noted that times
change, that the evolution of humanity undergoes changes. Not so very
long ago, the most outstanding thinkers and those struggling for
knowledge, when they stood before boundaries of this kind, thought
that one cannot go beyond these boundaries, that one must remain
there. Those of you in the audience who have often heard me speak
here know how little it is my habit to touch on personal matters.
When the personal has a connection in any way with the question under
consideration, however, one may venture to refer to it briefly. I may
say that what I have to say about experiences of this sort at the
boundaries of cognition is the result of more than thirty years of
spiritual research. And it was more than thirty years ago that these
very problems, these tasks, these riddles that arise at the
boundaries of cognition, made a significant impression on me.
From
the many examples that can be cited about such boundaries, I would
like to take one that has been referred to by a real wrestler with
knowledge, Friedrich Theodor Vischer, the famous aesthetician who was
also a philosopher of distinction, though perhaps little known during
his lifetime and soon forgotten. A decade or so ago Friedrich Theodor
Vischer wrote a very interesting treatise about a book, also very
interesting, written by Volkelt concerning dream fantasies. Friedrich
Theodor Vischer, in the course of this treatise, touched on a variety
of subjects of no further interest to us here. But I would like to
quote one sentence, a sentence that may perhaps be passed over in
reading but a sentence that can pierce like lightning into the human
heart and soul when these are permeated by a striving for knowledge,
a true inner striving for knowledge. It is the sentence that burst
upon Vischer when he was reflecting, meditating upon the nature of
the human soul. Out of what he had gleaned about the human being from
contemporary natural science, he deduced that the human soul cannot
be merely in the body; this much is clear; but it is just as clear
that it cannot be outside the body.
Here we have a complete contradiction, a
contradiction that cannot easily be resolved. It is a contradiction
that poses itself with immutable necessity if an individual is
wrestling for knowledge in all earnest. Vischer was not yet able for
the time was not sufficiently ripe —
to press on from what we might call his position in knowledge,
at these boundaries of knowledge, to press on from cognition in the
ordinary sense of the word to inward experience of a contradiction of
this kind. Yet from all directions today, from the most knowledgeable
people, we hear a particular conclusion when they come up against
such a contradiction. (There are indeed hundreds and hundreds of such
contradictions du Bois-Reymond a physiologist of great intelligence,
has spoken about only seven world riddles, but these seven can be
multiplied by hundreds.) Our contemporary man of knowledge says that
from this point on human cognition is able to go no further. He says
this for the simple reason that at the boundaries of human cognition
he cannot determine to go on from mere thinking, from mere mental
activity, to experience.
It is necessary to begin at a place where such a
contradiction obstructs the way, a contradiction not ingeniously
thought out but one that is revealed by the riddle of the world; we
must seek to live with such a contradiction again and again, to
wrestle with it in everyday life, to immerse the soul in it entirely.
We must have no fear while immersing ourselves in this contradiction
(and a certain inner courage of thought is part of this), we must
have no fear that this contradiction will be able to split asunder
the conceptual powers of the soul, or that the soul will not be able
to penetrate through it, and so on. I have described this very
struggle at such boundaries in detail in my book,
Riddles of the Soul.
When
an individual comes to such a boundary with his whole soul, instead
of with mere mental images, with mere clever thinking and mental
strategies, he progresses further. He does not go further on a purely
logical path, however, but on the path of living knowledge. I would
like to describe what he experiences by means of a comparison, for
the paths of the spiritual investigator are really experiences of
knowledge, facts of knowledge. Language today has not yet acquired
many words for these things, because words have been coined for what
is acquired by outer sense perception. Hence what stands clearly
before the eye of the spirit can often be expressed only by means of
comparison. When we live into such contradictions, we feel as if we
were at the border where the spiritual world breaks in; this is not
to be found in sense-perceptible reality, where indeed it breaks in
but does so from outside, as it were.
Now,
whether or not this image is well-founded from a natural scientific
point of view is not important here, for it can still be used by way
of comparison. It is as if one of the lower forms of life had not yet
developed the sense of touch but experienced only inwardly,
experienced itself inwardly in constant stirrings of movement, in
this way experiencing the borders of the physical world, the surfaces
of single objects. A being that has not yet developed the sense of
touch and experiences only the surfaces of sense-perceptible objects
remains entirely shut within itself, unable as yet to feel, to touch,
what is there outside it by way of sense impressions.
In the same way, a person struggling with
knowledge feels himself purely soul-spiritually (we should not think
here of anything material) when he comes to the kind of place I have
just described. In the case of our rudimentary animal, the organism
breaks through to the outer, sense-perceptible world by its impact
with it, differentiating itself through the sense of touch, by which
surfaces are touched and knowledge gained as to their roughness or
smoothness, their warmth or cold. In the same way, when what has
lived only inwardly opens itself to what is outside, the possibility
is acquired to break through, as it were, just at the places we have
described and to acquire a spiritual sense of touch. Only when a
person has wrestled perhaps for years at these boundaries of
cognition, struggling to break through into the spiritual world, can
he first acquire real spiritual organs. I am speaking only in
an elementary way of how this sense of touch is developed. To use
these terms in a more definite way, however, we can say that by ever
greater application of inner work, working away from being enclosed
within oneself, spiritual eyes, spiritual ears develop. To many
people today it still seems absurd to say that at first the soul is
just as undifferentiated an organ as the organism of a lower animal,
forming its senses out of its own substance and out of this substance
developing soul concepts, spiritual organs differentiated as to their
soul qualities, which then bring an individual face to face with the
spiritual world.
It
may be said that a systematically presented spiritual science, which
is fully entitled to be called scientific, is something new in the
progress of knowledge in human evolution. It is not new, however, in
every respect. The struggle for it, the striving after it, is to be
seen in the outstanding individuals of knowledge from the past. I
have referred to one of these when I mentioned Friedrich Theodor
Vischer. I would like to show from his own comments how he stood at
such a border of knowledge, how he remained there, never making the
transition from being inwardly stirred to actually breaking through
the boundary to the spiritual sense of touch. Here I would simply
like to read you a passage from Friedrich Theodor Vischer's
works, in which he describes how he came to such a boundary where the
spirit breaks through into the human soul in the course of his
wrestling with natural scientific knowledge. This was at the time in
which materialistically directed natural science posed many riddles
for those struggling for knowledge in real earnest. Countless people
claimed that the soul cannot be said to be anything but a product of
material activity.
Here are his words: “No spirit where there
is no nerve center, where there is no brain —
so say our opponents. We reply: There would be no nerve
center, no brain had they not been prepared for by countless stages
from below upward; it is easy to speak mockingly of those who say
that there is an echo of the spirit in granite and limestone. This is
no harder than it would be for us to ask sarcastically how the
protein in the brain rises to the level of ideas. Human knowledge
cannot discriminate between stages. It will remain a mystery how it
comes about that nature, beneath which the spirit must be slumbering,
stands there as such a perfect counter-blow of the spirit that we
bruise ourselves against it.”
Please
take note of how this wrestler for knowledge describes how we bruise
ourselves! Here you have the inner experience of bumping against
something by one who wrestles for knowledge: “It is a forcible
separation with the appearance of such absoluteness that with Hegel's
‘differentiation’ and ‘non-differentiation’
(ingenious as this formula is, though it says as good as nothing) the
steepness of the apparent dividing wall is concealed. One finds the
right appreciation of the cutting edge and the impact of this
counter-blow in Fichte, but no explanation for it,”
Here we have a man's description of his
struggle for knowledge in the time before there could be a decision,
a spiritual scientific decision, not merely to come to this blow and
counter-blow but to break through the dividing wall into the
spiritual world. I can speak about these things only in principle
here; you will find them described in detail in my books.
Particularly in
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds
and in the second part of my
Occult Science,
you will find all the
details concerning what the soul must take upon itself in the way of
inner activity and inner exercise (if I may use the expression) in
order really to transform what is undifferentiated in the soul into
spiritual organs able to behold the spiritual world.
A
great deal is necessary, however, if an individual really wishes to
make investigations on this path. So much is necessary just because
in our age, due to the habits cultivated in the natural scientific
sphere, in the sphere of the natural scientific world view, habits
that are perfectly justified in their own field, a particular way of
thinking has taken root in human life, a way that is opposed to the
one leading to the spiritual world. Thus it goes without saying that
from the side of natural science things are heard that demonstrate an
utter lack of desire to know the actual facts about the spiritual
world.
I
will give just one example (as I have said, you can find more exact
information in the books I have mentioned) of how the human being has
to make every effort to acquire a totally different way of conceiving
things. In ordinary life people are satisfied with concepts, with
mental images of which it may be said that these concepts, these
mental images are such that they offer a likeness to some external
fact or object. This cannot satisfy the spiritual investigator. Even
mental images, concepts, become something totally different in his
soul from what they are due to modern habits of thinking. If I may
use another comparison, I would like to show how the spiritual
investigator stands today in relation to the world. Those who are
materialists, spiritualists, pantheists, individualists, or monadists,
and so on, all believe that in some way they can penetrate the world
riddle. They try with definite mental images, concepts, to reach a
picture of world processes. The spiritual investigator is totally
unable to look on concepts in this way; his attitude toward them must
be such that he is always clearly conscious of how, in a concept, in
a mental image, he has nothing beyond what can be had in the outer
sense world when, for example, one particular side of a tree or some
other object is photographed and then another picture is taken from
another side, from a third side, a fourth side, and so on. The
pictures are different from one another. If combined mentally, they
together present the tree as a formed mental image. But it can easily
be said that one picture contradicts another.
Just consider how completely different an object
looks when photographed from one side or another. The spiritual
I investigator looks at the conceptions of pantheism, monadism,
and so on as if they were simply different ways of looking at
reality. Spiritual reality does not actually reveal itself at all to
the life of mental images, the life of concepts, in such a way that
it is possible to say that any one concept is a faithful image. We
must always go all around the matter, forming manifold concepts from
various sides. By this means we become capable of developing a much
more flexible inner soul life than we are accustomed to when
regarding the outer sense world. By doing this it becomes necessary
to make our concepts far more alive. They are no longer simply
images, but by being experienced they become much more alive than
they are in ordinary life and for the things of ordinary life.
Perhaps
you will understand me better if I describe it in the following way.
Suppose you have a rose cut from the rose bush; you form your mental
image of it. You are able to form this mental image yourself. You
will often have the feeling about this mental image that it expresses
something real for you, that the rose is something real. The
spiritual investigator can never make any progress if he is satisfied
with the mental image that the rose is something real. Pictured as a
blossom on a short stalk, the rose is not real in itself. It can be
real only when on the rose bush. The rose bush is something real. And
the spiritual investigator must accustom himself to regarding every
individual thing, to remaining conscious in what limited sense an
issue is something real. People form mental images of these things,
believing them to be something real. When the rose is in front of him
on its stalk, the spiritual investigator must feel that it is not
real; he must have a feeling for, an experience of, the degree of
unreality contained in this rose as mere blossom.
By
extending this to our observation of the whole world, however, the
conceptual life itself is renewed, and we do not thereby get the
crippled, dead mental images with which the modern natural scientific
world view is satisfied; we get mental images that are living with
the objects. It is true that in proceeding from the present habits of
thinking, we at first experience a great deal of disappointment,
disappointment that arises because what is experienced in this way
differs a great deal from present habits of thinking. When speaking
out of knowledge acquired in the spiritual world, much has to be said
that seems paradoxical when compared with what is generally said and
believed today.
A person today may be very learned in the sphere
of physics, let us say; he may be an exceptionally learned person who
quite rightly excites admiration by his erudition; but such an
individual may work with clear concepts that have not been produced
nor worked upon in accordance with what I have described, that is,
without endowing the conceptual world with life. I have said
something quite elementary, but this elementary statement must in the
case of the spiritual investigator be extended over the whole
observation of the world. I will offer an example. At the beginning
of the century, Professor Dewar delivered a very important lecture in
London. This lecture could be said to
show in every sentence the great modern scholar who was as
well acquainted with the conceptions of physics as a modern physicist
can be. From his modern conceptions of physics, this scholar seeks to
speak about the final condition of the
Earth and about some future condition in which much of what is
present with us today will have died away. He describes this
correctly, because he bases his lecture on really well-founded
hypotheses: he describes how one day after millions of years a
condition of the earth will have to arise in which a great drop in
temperature will occur; this can be well calculated, and this drop in
temperature will bring about changes in certain substances. This can
be calculated, and he describes how milk, for example, will not be
able to maintain its fluid condition but will become solid; how the
white of an egg smeared on a wall will become so luminous that people
will be able to read a newspaper by its light alone, since so much
light will come from the white of an egg; and many other such details
are described. The consistency of things that can sustain hardly any
weight today will be materially strengthened so that hundreds of
pounds will be able to be supported by them. In short, Professor
Dewar gives an imposing picture of the future condition of the earth.
From the standpoint of physics there is nothing at all to be said
against it, but for anyone who has taken living thinking into his
soul, the matter has another aspect. When he turns to the conceptual
forms of the kind given by the Professor, an example enters his mind
that in its methods and manner of approach is very similar to the
Professor's deductions and way of thinking.
Suppose, for example, we were to take a man of
twenty-five and observe exactly how certain organs, the stomach for
example, change from year to year in the course of two, three, four,
five years (today such an observation can be managed; I need only
remind you of X-rays). They take on different configurations. We can
describe this in the same way that the physicist does when he
compares successive conditions of the earth and then calculates what
the earth will look like after millions of years. This can also be
done in the case of the human being. The changes in the stomach or
heart, for example, are observed, and a calculation then made of how
this man will look after perhaps 200
years according to these alterations. We get just as
well-founded a result if it is calculated what this man will look
like after 200 years by taking into account all the individual
perceptions. The only thing is that the man will have died long
before this! He will no longer be there.
You
see what I mean. What is important here is that in a particular case
we know from direct experience that calculations of this kind do not
correspond with reality, because, when 200 years have passed, the
human body with its transformations will no longer be there; yet this
same kind of calculation is made in connection with the earth. No
heed is paid to the fact that after two million years the earth as a
physical being will have been dead for a long time, will no longer be
there. Thus the whole learned calculation about this condition has no
value at all as a reality, because the reality it is applied to will
no longer be there.
These
matters are very far-reaching. In the case of the human being you can
just as well calculate backward as forward; you might, in accordance
with the small changes taking place in two years, calculate how a man
looked 200 years ago, but he was not there then either! With this
same method, however, the Kant-LaPlace theory was formulated. This
theory assumes that there was once a condition of fog, a calculation
that was based on our present condition. The calculation is entirely
correct, the perceptions are good enough; it is just that the
spiritual investigator becomes aware that at the time this primeval
fog was supposed to be there, the earth was not yet born. The entire
solar system did not yet exist.
I wanted to bring these calculations to your
notice to show you how the entire inner life of soul must be raised
out of abstractions, how it must immerse itself in a living reality,
how mental images themselves must be living. In my book,
The Riddle of Human Being,
I have made a distinction between conceptions
corresponding to reality and those corresponding to unreality. To put
the matter briefly, the spiritual investigator must point out that
his path is such that the means of knowledge that he uses must first
be awakened, that he must transform his soul before being able to
look into the spiritual world. Then the results take on a form
enabling one to see that the spiritual investigator is not
speculating as to the immortality of the soul or whether the soul
goes through birth and death. His path of investigation leads him to
the eternal in the human soul, to what goes through birth and death;
the path shows him what lives as the eternal in the human being. He
therefore seeks out the object, the thing, the being itself. If we
reach the being, we can recognize its characteristics just as
we recognize the color of a rose.
Hence it often appears as if the spiritual
investigator were asserting that such-and-such is so. For when he
presents evidence he must always indicate by what path he arrived at
these things. He has to begin where the other science ends. Then,
however, a real penetration is possible into spheres that may be said
to take death as their starting point, just as natural scientific
spheres take their start from birth and youth. We must simply be
clear that this death is in no way merely
the final event, as it is ordinarily regarded from the viewpoint of
outer sense perception. It is rather something that has its part in
existence in the same way that the forces called into life with birth
have their part in existence. We do not meet death only through its
taking hold of us as a one-time event; we carry the forces of death
in us — destructive forces, forces that are continually
destroying — just as we carry in us the forces of birth, the
constructive forces that are given to us at birth.
To have real insight into this we have to be able to pursue research at
a boundary between natural science and spiritual science. Today I am
only able to cite the results of such research, of course; I only
wish to arouse your interest. Were I to go into all the details of
what I am suggesting, I would have to offer many lectures. If an
individual is to pursue what has been suggested here, he must
approach a boundary between natural science and spiritual science.
It is widely believed today, and has been believed for some time,
that the human nervous system, the human nerve apparatus, is simply
an instrument of thinking, feeling, and willing, in short, an
instrument for soul experiences, (Science today has for the most part
gone beyond this belief, but the world view of the general public
usually remains at the standpoint abandoned by science some decades
before.) An individual who develops the soul organs — the eyes
of the spirit, the ears of the spirit — as I have described at
least in principle, comes to recognize the life of the soul.
Whoever really discovers this soul life knows that to call the brain an
instrument of our thinking is much the same as to maintain the
following. Let us say that I am walking over ground that has become
sodden, and in it I leave my footprints. These footprints are found
by someone else, who then wishes to explain them. How does he do
this? He assumes that underneath in the earth all kinds of forces are
surging up and down, and because they surge in this way they produce
these footprints. Of course the forces in the earth have nothing to
do with the fact that these footprints have been produced, for I
myself left them there, but the traces I left can now be reflected
upon. This is the way that physiologists today explain what goes on
in the brain, what originates in the brain, because all thinking, all
mental activity and feeling correspond to something in the nervous
system. Just as my tracks correspond with my footsteps, so something
actually in the brain corresponds with the impressions of the soul;
but the soul has first to leave its imprint there. The earth is just
as little an organ for my walking or footprints as the brain is the
organ for processes of thinking or mental activity. And just as I
cannot walk around without firm ground (I cannot walk on air, I need
ground if I want to walk) so the brain is necessary; this is not,
however, because it calls forth the soul element but because the soul
element needs ground and footing upon which it expresses itself
during the time that the human being is living in the body between
birth and death. It therefore has nothing to do with all that.
The brilliantly intellectual natural science of today will come to full
clarity when this revolution in thinking comes about to which I have
referred here. This revolution is more radical than the transition to
the Copernican world view from the world view held previously. In
face of the real world view, however, it is as justifiable as the
Copernican world view was in relation to what preceded it. When we
have pressed forward on the path of investigation of the soul, we
will find that the processes in the brain, in the nervous system,
that correspond to the soul life are not constructive. They are not
there so that the productive, growing, flourishing activity is
present in the nervous system as it is in the rest of the organism.
No! What the soul brings about in the nervous system is a
destructive activity. During our waking consciousness outside sleep
it is a destructive activity.
Only
by virtue of the fact that our nervous system is inserted within us
in such a way that it receives constant refreshment from the rest of
the organism can there be constant compensation for the destructive,
dissolving, disintegrating activity introduced into our nervous
system by thinking. Destructive activity is there, activity
qualitatively of the same nature as what the human being goes through
when he dies, when the organism is completely dissolved. In our
mental activity death is living in us continually. You might say that
death lives in us continually, distributed atomistically, and that
the one-time death that lays hold of us at the end of life is only
the summation of what is continually working in us destructively. It
is true that this is compensated for, but the compensation is such
that in the end spontaneous death is evoked.
We
must understand death as a force working in the organism, just as we
understand the life forces. Look today at natural science, so
thoroughly justified in its own sphere, and you will find that it
looks only for the constructive forces; what is destructive eludes
it. Hence external natural science is unable to observe what arises
anew out of the destruction, not in this case of the body, for the
bodily nature is destroyed, but of a soul and spiritual nature, now
constructive. This aspect is always lost to observation, being
accessible only to the kind of observation I have previously
described. Then it becomes evident that, having meanwhile brought our
life to this point, the whole activity of our soul does not work only
in conjunction with the ground on which it has to develop and which,
indeed, it acts upon destructively (in so far as the soul forms
mental images, in so far as it is active); instead, the whole of our
soul activity is attuned to a spiritual world always around us, in
which we stand with our soul-spiritual element just as we stand in
the physical, sense-perceptible world with our physical body.
Spiritual science is thus striving for a real connection of the human
being to the spiritual world that permeates everything physical to
the actual, concrete, real spiritual world.
Then the possibility truly arises for a more
far-reaching observation of how what is working and weaving within us
as soul, working destructively within the limits I described, is a
homogeneous whole. What I have called the development of the soul
presses on from ordinary consciousness to clairvoyant consciousness.
I have spoken about this in my book,
The Riddle of Human Being.
This clairvoyant consciousness creates the possibility of
possessing Imaginative knowledge. This Imaginative knowledge does not
yield what belongs to the outwardly perceptible; it yields to the
human being himself (I would like to look away from the other world
for the moment) what is not perceptible to his senses. To avoid
misunderstanding I recently called what can be perceived at first by
an awakened knowledge of this kind the body of formative forces.
This is the supersensible body of the human being, which is
active throughout the whole course of our life, from birth, or let us
say, conception, until our physical death. It also bears our
memories, yet it stands in connection with a supersensible entity,
with a supersensible outer world.
Thus,
our sense life with the rest of its consciousness is there as a mere
island, but around this island and even permeating it we have the
relationship of the human body of formative forces to the
supersensible outer world. Here, it is true, we reach the point of
bringing the whole conceptual world (not any different now from the
way I have described it) into connection with the physical brain that
provides the ground for all this; but we arrive at the insight that
the body of formative forces is the carrier of human thoughts, that
thoughts develop in this body of formative forces and that in
thinking the human being lives in this body of formative forces.
It
is different if we go on to another experience of the soul, namely to
feeling. Our feeling, our emotions, our passions, stand in a
different relationship to our life of soul from that of our thinking.
The spiritual investigator finds that the thoughts we usually have
are bound up with the body of formative forces. This does not apply,
however, to our feelings, our emotions. Feelings and emotions live in
us in a much more subconscious way. Thus they are connected with
something far more all-encompassing than our life between birth and
death. It is not as though the human being is without thoughts in the
part of his life about which I am now speaking; all feelings are
permeated by thoughts. But the thoughts by which feelings are
permeated do not, as a rule, enter man's ordinary
consciousness. They remain beneath the threshold of this
consciousness. What surges up as feeling is penetrated by thoughts,
but these thoughts are more far-reaching, for they are found only
when an individual progresses in clairvoyant cognition, when he
progresses to what I call the Inspired consciousness (I am not
thinking of superstitious conceptions here). You may study the
particulars of this in my books.
If
we go deeply into what is actually sleeping in regard to ordinary
Consciousness (in the same way that from going to sleep to awaking a
person sleeps in regard to the ordinary images of the senses) we see
that it surges up just as dreams surge up into our sleep. Feelings
actually surge up from the innermost depths of the soul; it sounds
strange, but it is so. But this deeper region of the soul that is
accessible to Inspired knowledge is what lives between death and a
new birth. It is what enters into connection with the physical
through our being conceived or born, what goes through the portal of
death and has a spiritual existence among other conditions until the
human being is reborn. Whoever really looks into what is living in
the world of feeling with Inspired knowledge sees the human being not
only between birth and death but also during the time the soul
undergoes between death and a new birth.
The
matter is not quite so simple as this, however; it is indeed like
this, but it is also shown how forces arise in the soul that make it
possible to look upon the feelings, emotions, passions, that make it
possible to live in them. Just as in the plant we see what has arisen
through the forces of the seed, so we see something that has not
arisen with our birth or conception but that has emerged from a
spiritual world.
I
know very well how many objections can be made to a conception of
this kind by those who accept the natural scientific world view.
Those who are familiar with this world view will find it easy to say,
“Here he comes and like a dilettante describes how the aspects
of the soul he wishes to encompass come from a spiritual world; he
even describes their special configurations, the colors of the
feelings and so on, as if, on the one hand, there were hints in these
feelings concerning our life before birth and, on the other hand,
something in these feelings that is like the seed of the plant, which
will become the plant of the next year. Doesn't this man know,”
people will say, “about the wonderful laws of heredity
presented by natural science? Is he ignorant of everything that those
who created the science of hereditary characteristics have brought
about?”
Even if the facts indicated by natural science are
entirely correct, it is nevertheless the case that concealed in the
emergence of heredity are the forces through which we have been
preparing ourselves for centuries and which we ourselves send down.
From grandparents and parents, constellations are built up that
finally lead to the material result
with which we then sheathe ourselves when we leave the spiritual
world to descend into the physical. Whoever really keeps in mind the
wonderful results of modern research into heredity will find that
what spiritual science finds out about the soul (yet in a quite
different way, it might be said, in the entirely opposite way) will
be fully confirmed by natural science, whereas what natural science
itself says is definitely not confirmed in the least by natural
science. I can only suggest this here. When we then enter the sphere
referred to as that of the will, this totally eludes the contents of
man's ordinary consciousness. What does a person know about the
processes going on in him when the thought, I want something, shapes
itself into a movement of the hand? The actual process of willing is
asleep in the human being. Regarding the feelings and emotions it
could at least be said that the human being dreams within the human
being. This is the reason that the question of freedom is so
difficult, because the will is sleeping in relation to the higher
consciousness. We come to knowledge about what is going on in the
will in clairvoyant consciousness only by reaching the stage of
actual Intuitive consciousness. By this I do not mean the vague,
everyday consciousness called intuitive, but rather what I refer to
in my writings as one of the three stages: Imaginative, Inspired, and
Intuitive cognition.
Here we come into the sphere of the will, into the realm that is supposed
to live and work within us. This must first be drawn out of the deep
regions of the soul. Then we find, however, that this element of the
will is also permeated by thoughts, by the spiritual (in addition,
the ordinary thought stands by itself). But in bearing the will
within us, there works into this will something in addition to what
we have experienced in the spiritual world in our feelings, working
between death and a new birth. Something is active there that we have
experienced in the preceding life on earth. The impulses of earlier
earthly lives work into the will nature of the human being. In what
we develop or what we cultivate in our present willing live the
impulses for our lives on earth to come. For real spiritual science,
then, the whole of human life separates into the lives lying between
birth and death and those which, because all physical existence has
to be built up out of the world, are experienced in far longer
periods in the spiritual world. Out of such lives, out of repeated
earthly lives, repeated spiritual lives, the complete human life is
composed. This is not some fantasy, it is not a capricious thought,
but rather something we find when we learn to turn the eye of the
spirit to the eternal, the imperishable, in the human soul.
These things do not preclude human freedom. If I build a house this year in
which I will live for the next two years, I will be a free man in
this house despite having built it for myself. Human freedom is not
precluded by this. One earthly life determines the other that
follows. Only through a lack of understanding could this be
represented as an infringement on the idea of human freedom.
Thus, in spiritual investigation by making death our point of departure, we
gradually arrive at the spiritual facts. If in spiritual
investigation one makes death the foundation, just as physical
investigation is based on birth and embryonic life, this observation
reveals the most varied things in individual detail. I will point to
something specific here, because I would not like to remain with the
indefinite but rather to quote concrete results of anthroposophical
research. In the ordinary life of the spirit we are able to
differentiate between the forcible entry of death due to an external
cause and death that comes from within through illness or by reason
of old age. We are therefore able to distinguish two different kinds
of death.
Spiritual
investigation that goes concretely into the nature of death discovers
the following. Let us take as an example the entrance into life of
violent death, be it through accident or some other cause. The
entrance of such an event brings about an end to life in this earthly
existence. The development of spirit consciousness for the spiritual
world after death depends on this one-time entrance of death, just as
the consciousness we are able to develop in life depends on the
forces given us at birth (in the way that I have described). The
Consciousness we develop after death is of a different kind. The
consciousness developed here on earth stands on the ground of the
nervous system, just as when I walk around on the ground my
foundation is the ground. In the spiritual world the consciousness
after death has different foundations, but it is definitely a
consciousness. If a man dies a violent death this is not something
that merely lays hold of his mental images. The mental activity of
ordinary consciousness ceases with death, and another Consciousness
begins, but this lays hold of his will which, as we have seen, passes
over into the next earthly life. The spiritual investigator possesses
the means to investigate what can arise in an earthly life if, in a
previous earthly life, there has been a violent death.
Now
when we speak of such things today, people will obviously condemn
this way of speaking as foolish, childish, fantastic. Yet the results
are attained just as scientifically (and it is only such results that
I present) as the results of natural science. If a violent death
intervenes in a life, it shows itself in the following life on earth,
where its effect produces some kind of change of direction at a
definite period in that life. Research is now being done concerning
the soul life, but as a rule only the most external things are taken
into consideration. In many human lives, at a particular moment,
something enters that changes a person's whole destiny,
bringing him into a different path in life in response to inner
demands. In America they call these things “conversions,”
wanting to have a name for such events, but we do not always need to
think in terms of religion. A person on another path of life may be
forced into a permanent change of the direction of his will. Such a
radical change of the direction of his will has its origin in the
violent death of his previous life. Concrete investigation reveals
the tremendous importance of what happens at death for the middle of
the next life. If death comes spontaneously from within through
illness or old age, then it has more significance for the life
between death and a new birth than for the next earthly life.
I would like to offer the following example so
that you may see that I am not speaking about anything vague here. In
fact, I am speaking about details arising in life's conditions
that can be gained by definite perceptions. Spiritual investigation,
which is something new even for those convinced of the immortality of
the human soul, makes us aware that we must not speak in merely a
general way about immortality. Instead, by grasping the eternal in
the human soul, human life as such becomes comprehensible. All the
strange processes that are observable if we have a sense for the
course taken by the soul life, for the course of the soul life in the
human being, all the wonderful events find their place if we know we
are dealing with repeated earthly lives and repeated spiritual lives.
In the spiritual world (I say this merely parenthetically) the human
being lives with spiritual beings —
not only other human beings who are closely connected with him
by destiny and have also passed through the portal of death, but with
other spiritual beings to whom he is related in the same way that on
earth the human being is related to three kingdoms: the mineral,
plant, and animal kingdoms. The spiritual investigator speaks of
particular individual spirits, particular individual spiritual
beings, belonging to a concrete, individualized spiritual world, just
as here we speak of individualized plant beings, animal beings, and
human beings, in so far as they are physical beings between birth and
death. It can be shattering to people when knowledge itself
approaches the human soul in a totally different way. It is difficult
to speak about these things so that they arise out of the dim depths
of the spirit in a new way.
From
what I have said you will have seen that knowledge about the
spiritual world can be acquired. This knowledge has profound
significance for the human soul; it makes the soul something
different, as it were. It lays hold of the life of the soul,
regardless of whether one is a spiritual investigator or has merely
heard and understood the results of spiritual investigation and has
absorbed them. It is of no importance whether or not one does the
research oneself; the result can be comprehensible just the same.
Everything can be understood if we penetrate it with sufficient
depth. We only need to have absorbed it. Then, however, when we have
grasped it in its full essence, it enters the human soul life in such
a way that one day it becomes more significant than all the other
events of life.
A person may have difficulties, sorrows, that have
shattered him, or joy that has elevated him, or some truly sublime
experience. It is not necessary to be indifferent to such experiences
to be a spiritual investigator, someone who knows the spirit; one can
participate as fully with the feelings as other people do who are not
investigators of the spirit. But when someone penetrates with his
essential being into what is given the soul by spirit knowledge, and
when he becomes capable of answering the question, “What are
the effects upon the soul of these spiritual results?” —
when a full answer is given to the question of what the soul
has become through this spiritual knowledge, then this event becomes
more important than anything else in destiny, more important than any
of the other experiences of destiny that approach the human being.
Not that the others become less significant, but this one becomes
greater than the others. Knowledge itself then enters through the
human soul life in accordance with destiny. If knowledge thus enters
through the human soul life, he begins to understand human destiny as
such. From this knowledge comes the light that illumines human
destiny.
From
this moment on, an individual can say this: that if one has this
experience of destiny so purely in the spiritual in this way, it
becomes clear how one is placed into life in accordance with destiny,
how our destiny hangs on threads spun out of previous lives, previous
earthly lives and lives between death and a new birth, which again
spin themselves out of this life and into a following life. Such an
individual goes on to say that ordinary consciousness only dreams
through its destiny; ordinary consciousness endures its destiny
without understanding it, just as one endures a dream. Clairvoyant
consciousness to which one awakes, just as we awake from a dream to
ordinary consciousness, acquires a new relationship to destiny.
Destiny is recognized as taking part in all that our life embraces,
in the life that goes through all our births and deaths.
This
matter should not be grasped in a trivial way, as if the spiritual
investigator were to say, “You yourself are the cause of your
own misfortune.” That would simply betray a misunderstanding
and would even be a slander of spiritual investigation. A misfortune
may not have its source at all in the previous life. It may arise
spontaneously and have its consequences only in the life to follow
and also in the life between earthly lives. We can see again and
again that out of misfortune, out of pain and suffering, emerges a
consciousness of a very different form in the spiritual world,
Meaning enters the whole of our life, however, when we learn to
understand our destiny, which otherwise we only dream our way
through.
One
thing particularly stands out when we bear in mind this knowledge of
the spirit. We can no longer say, “If, after death, the soul
enters another life, we can wait until this happens. Here we take
life as it is offered us in the physical body; we can wait for what
comes after death.” The matter is a question of consciousness.
We may be sure that what happens after death is connected with the
life we undergo in the body. Just as in a certain sense we have the
Consciousness of our ordinary waking condition by means of our body,
so after death we have a Consciousness that is no longer spatial, no
longer built up out of the nervous system, but built up out of what
has to do with time, built up out of looking backward.
Just
as our nervous system in a way is the buttress and counterpart to our
ordinary consciousness between birth and death, so our consciousness
in the spiritual world between death and a new birth is founded on
what takes place here in our consciousness Just as here we have the
world around us, so when we are dead we have before us our life as
the significant organ. Hence, a great deal depends upon our
consciousness in the physical body, which is able to extend into the
consciousness we have after death. An individual may be occupied
exclusively with physical conceptions grasped by the senses, as often
happens in the habitual thinking of the present time; he may take
into his consciousness and also in his capacity of memory, in
everything playing itself out in his soul, concerns exclusively
having to do with ordinary life. Such an individual, however, is also
building up a world for himself after death! The environment there is
built out of what a person is inwardly. A person born physically in
Europe cannot see America around him, and just as he receives what he
is born into physically as his environment, so to a certain extent he
determines the environment, the place of his existence, through what
he has built up in his body.
Let
us take an extreme case, though one unlikely to happen. Let us take
the case of someone who fights against all supersensible conceptions,
who has become an atheist, someone who doesn't even have any
inclination to occupy himself with religion. Now I know that I am
saying something paradoxical here, but it is based on good
foundations anthroposophically: such an individual condemns himself
to remaining in the earthly sphere with his consciousness, whereas
another individual who has absorbed spiritual conceptions is
transposed to a spiritual environment. The one who has absorbed only
sense-perceptible conceptions condemns himself to remaining in the
sense-perceptible environment.
Now
we can work properly in the physical body because our physical body
is, as it were, a sheath protecting us against the environment. And
though we can thus work properly in the physical body when we are
present in the physical world, we cannot do so if we hold to the
physical world after death. We become destructive if we have physical
conceptions in our consciousness after death. In speaking of the
problem of heredity, I intimated how, when the human being is in the
spiritual world, his forces lay hold of the physical world. Whoever
condemns himself, by reason of his merely physical consciousness, to
hold to the physical world becomes the center of destructive forces
that lay hold of what is happening in human life and in the rest of
universal life. As long as we are in the body, we are only able to
have thoughts based on the sense-perceptible, we are able to have
only materialistic thoughts: the body is a defense.
But
how much greater a defense than we imagine! It seems strange, but to
anyone who perceives the spiritual world in all its connections, one
thing is clear: if an individual were not shut off from the
surrounding world by his senses, if the senses were not curbed so
that in ordinary consciousness he is incapable of taking up living
concepts but takes up only those that are lifeless and designed to
prevent him from penetrating into the spiritual environment, if an
individual were able to make his conceptions active directly and did
not have them merely within him after things have already passed
through the senses, then even here in the physical world, if he were
to develop his conceptual life, his conceptions would have crippling,
deadening effects. For these conceptions are in a certain way
destructive of everything they lay hold of. Only because they are
held back in us are those conceptions kept from being destructive.
They destroy only when they come to expression in machines, in tools,
which are also something dead taken from living nature. This indeed
is only a picture, but one corresponding with a reality. If an
individual enters the spiritual world with merely physical
conceptions, he becomes a center of destruction.
Thus
I have to bring a conception to your attention as an example of many
others: we should not say that we can wait until after death, because
it depends on a person's nature whether he develops conceptions
of the sense world or of the supersensible world, whether he prepares
for his next life in this way or that. The next life is indeed a very
different one, but it is evolved from our life here. This is the
essential thing that has to be comprehended. In spiritual science, we
encounter something different from what is surmised. For this reason
I must still make a few remarks in closing.
The belief might easily arise that anyone now
entering the spiritual world must unconditionally become a spiritual
investigator himself. This is not necessarily so, although in my book,
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds,
I have described much of
how the soul must transform itself in order really to be able to
enter. And to a certain degree, everyone is able to do this today,
but it need not be everyone. What a person develops regarding the
soul element is a purely intimate concern; what arises from it,
however, is the formation of concepts of the investigated truths.
What the spiritual investigator can give is clothed in conceptions
such as I have developed today. Then it can be shared. For what a
person needs, it is quite immaterial whether things are investigated
by himself or whether he accepts them from some other credible
source. I am speaking here from a law of spiritual investigation. It
is not important to investigate the things oneself. What is important
is for us to have them within us, for us to have developed them
within. Hence, we are in error if we believe that everyone has to
become a spiritual investigator.
Today,
however, the spiritual investigator has the obligation (as I myself
have had the obligation) to render an account, as it were, of his
path of research. This is due not only to the fact that everyone
today can, to a certain extent, follow the path I have described
without harm, but it is also because everyone is justified in asking,
“How have you arrived at these results?” This is why I
have described these things. I believe that even those who have no
wish to become spiritual investigators will at least want to be
convinced of how spiritual investigators arrive at the results that
everyone needs today, the results of those who wish to lay the
foundation for the life which must develop in human souls for human
evolution today.
The
time is now over during which, in ancient times, so much was held
back regarding spiritual research that brought about the evolution of
the soul. In those ancient times, to impart what was hidden was
strictly forbidden. Even today, those who know of these mysteries of
life (of which there are not just a few) still hold these things
back. Whoever has learned about these things merely as a student from
another teacher does not under any circumstances do well to pass them
on. Today it is advisable to pass on only what an individual himself
has discovered, the results only of his own investigations. These,
however, can and must be put at the service of the rest of humanity.
Already
from the few brief indications I was able to give today it can become
evident what spiritual investigation can mean for the individual
human being, but it is not only significant for the individual. And
in order to address this other aspect in closing with at least a few
words I would like to point to something that is taken into
consideration only a little today. There is a curious phenomenon to
which I would like to direct your attention in the following way. In
the second half of the nineteenth century we have seen the rise of a
certain natural scientific orientation: the explanation of living
beings connected with the name Darwin. Enthusiastic scholarly
investigators, enthusiastic students have carried these things
through the second half of the nineteenth century. Maybe I have
already remarked upon the occurrence of a curious fact. Already in
the 1860's, under the guidance of Haeckel, there developed a
powerful movement based on a world view. This movement wanted to
overthrow everything old and to restructure the entire world view in
accordance with Darwinistic concepts. Today there are still numerous
people who emphasize how great and significant it would be if there
were no longer a wisdom-filled world-guidance but instead if the
evolution of everything could be explained out of mechanical forces
in the sense of Darwinism.
In 1867 Eduard von Hartmann published his
Philosophy of the Unconscious
(Philosophie des Urzbewussten)
and turned against the purely external view
of the world represented by Darwinism. He pointed to the necessity of
inner forces, although he did so in an inadequate way, in a
philosophical way (he did not yet have spiritual science). Naturally
those who were enthusiastic about the rise of Darwinism were ready to
say, “That philosopher is simply a dilettante; we don't
need to pay any attention to him.” Counterattacks appeared in
which the “dilettante” Eduard von Hartmann was ridiculed
and which asserted that the true, educated natural scientist need not
pay any attention to such things.
Then
there appeared a publication by Anonymous, which brilliantly argued
against the publication of Eduard von Hartmann. The natural
scientists who all thought as they did were in full agreement with
this publication because Eduard von Hartmann was completely
contradicted in it. Everything that could possibly be gathered from
the basis of natural science was there used by the anonymous author
against Eduard von Hartmann just as today so much is brought up
against spiritual science. This publication was received very
favorably. Haeckel said, “For once a real natural scientist has
written against this dilettante, Eduard von Hartmann; here one can
see what a natural scientist is able to do. I myself could write no
better. Let him identify himself and we will consider him as one of
us.” To state it briefly, the natural scientists spread a lot
of propaganda in relation to this publication, which they welcomed
highly because it solidified their position. The publication was very
soon sold out, and a second edition became necessary. There the
author revealed himself: it was Eduard von Hartmann!
In that instance someone taught the world a
necessary lesson. Whoever writes about spiritual science today and
reads what is written against it could without much effort invent
everything that is brought against spiritual science. Eduard von
Hartmann was able himself to make all the objections that the natural
scientists made against him — and he did so.
But I mention this only in introduction to my main
point. Oskar Hertwig is one of the most important students of Haeckel
who entered upon the industrious, reliable, and great path of natural
scientific investigation. Last year Hertwig published a very
beautiful book,
The Evolution of the Organism. A Rebuttal to Darwin's Theory of Chance
(Das Werden der Organismen. Eine Widerlegung von Darwins Zufallstheorie).
In this book he points to issues that were
already raised by Eduard von Hartmann. Such a matter is pretty much
without precedent: already the generation immediately following,
which still grew up under the master, had to get away from something
that had been believed could build a whole world view; it had even
been believed that it could provide elucidation of the spiritual
world. A good Darwinist contradicts Darwinism! But he does still
more, and that is what is actually important to me.
Oskar Hertwig writes at the conclusion of his
superb and beautiful book that the kind of world view that Darwinism
represented does not stand there merely as a theoretical edifice;
rather it intervenes in the totality of life, encompassing also what
people do, will, feel, and think. He says, “The interpretation
of Darwin's teaching, which because of its vagueness can have
such varied meanings, permitted also a very varied application to
other realms of economic, social, and political life. It was
possible, just as it was from the Delphic Oracles, to use what was
said as desired for specific applications to social, political,
health-related, medical, and other questions and to support one's
own assertions by basing them on the Darwinistically restructured
biology with its immutable natural laws. If these supposed laws are
not actually laws, however, could there not exist social dangers
— because of their many-sided application in other realms? We
had better not believe that human society can for centuries use
expressions like, ‘a struggle for existence,’ ‘survival
of the fittest,’ ‘the most suitable,’ ‘the
most useful,’ ‘perfection by selection,’ etc.,
applying them to the most varied realms of life, using these
expressions like daily bread, without influencing in a deep and
lasting way the entire direction of idea formation! The proof for
this assertion could easily be demonstrated in many contemporary
phenomena. For this very reason the decision concerning the truth or
error of Darwinism reaches far beyond the confines of the biological
sciences.”
What
arises in such a theory shows itself everywhere in life. Then a
question arises from the realm of spiritual science that also
intervenes in life. We live today in a sad time, in a tragic time for
humanity. It is a time that has developed out of human conceptions,
out of human ideas. Whoever studies interrelationships with the help
of spiritual science knows about the connection of what we encounter
externally today with what humanity is now tragically experiencing. A
great deal is being experienced; people believe that they can
encompass reality with their concepts, but they do not encompass it.
And because they do not encompass it, because with natural scientific
concepts reality can never be encompassed, reality grows over their
head and shows them that human beings can take part in such events
but that the result is the chaos by which we are surrounded today.
Spiritual
science does not arise only through an inner necessity, though this
is also true. It would have arisen through this inner necessity even
if the outer events did not stand there as a mighty, powerful sign.
Such signs are there, however, from the other side: that the old
world views are great in the natural sciences but can never intervene
formatively in the social, legislative, political spheres in the
world, that reality grows beyond human beings, if that is what they
want. These mighty signs point to the need for spiritual science,
which seeks concepts that correspond with reality, concepts derived
from reality and that are therefore also capable of carrying the
world in the social and political realms. No matter how much one
believes that the concepts customary outside spiritual science today
will enable us to emerge out of the chaos, it will not happen; for
within the reality the spirit prevails. And because the human being
himself intervenes with his actions in this reality, in the social,
in the political life, he requires the conceptions, the feelings, the
will impulses that are drawn from the spirit in order to come to
fruitful concepts in these realms. In the future politics and social
science will need something for which only spiritual science can
provide the foundation. This is what is particularly important for
contemporary history.
In
this lecture, which has already been long enough, I can only hope to
offer a few impulses. I only wish to point out that what appears
today as spiritual science in a systematic order is wanted by the
best. If it were only up to me, I would not give a special name to
this spiritual science. For more than thirty years I have been
working on the greater and greater elaboration of the conceptions
regarding reality that Goethe acquired in his magnificent theory of
metamorphosis, in which he had already attempted to make the concept
living as opposed to dead. At that time this was only possible in an
elementary way. if one does not consider Goethe simply as a
historical figure, however, if one considers him still as a
contemporary, then today the Goethean teaching of metamorphosis
transforms itself into what I call living concepts, which then find
their way into spiritual science. Goetheanism is the term I would
most like to use for what I mean by spiritual scientific
investigation, because it is based on sound foundations of a grasp of
reality as Goethe wanted it.
And
the building in Dornach that is to be dedicated to this spiritual
investigation, and through which this spiritual investigation has
become more well known than it would have without the building, I
would like most to call the Goetheanum, so that one would see that
what arises as spiritual investigation today stands fully in the
midst of the healthy process of the evolution of humanity. Certainly
many today who wish to acknowledge the Goethean way of looking at the
world will still say that Goethe was one who recognized nature as the
highest above all and who also permitted the spirit to emerge out of
nature. Already as a very young man, Goethe said, “Gedacht hat
sie und sinnt bestaendig” (“She did think and ponders
incessantly”), ponders incessantly although not as man but as
nature. Even if one is a spiritual investigator one can agree with
the kind of naturalism that, like Goethe, thinks of nature as
permeated by spirit. And those who always believe that one must stop
at the boundaries of knowledge, that one can't get any further
there, can be repudiated with Goethe's words. Permit me,
therefore, as I conclude here, to add the words that Goethe used
concerning another accomplished investigator who represented the
later Kantian view:
Into the inner being of nature —
No created spirit penetrates.
Blissful those to whom she only
Reveals the outer shell!
Iris Irinere der Natur —
Dringt kein erschaffner Geist
Glueckselig, wem sie nur
Die aeussere Schale weist!
Next
to these words Goethe placed others that show how well Goethe knew
that when the human being awakes the spirit within himself, he also
finds the spirit in the world and himself as spirit:
Into the inner being of nature —
No created spirit penetrates.
Blissful those to whom she only
Reveals the outer shell!
This I hear repeated for sixty years
And damn it but secretly —
Nature has neither core nor shell,
She is everything at once.
Above all simply examine yourself
To see whether you yourself are core or shell!
Ins Innere der Natur —
Dringt kein erschaffner Geist.
Glueckselig, wem sie nur
Die aeussere Schale weist! —
So hoer ich schon an die sechzig Jahre wiederholen
Und fluche darauf — aber verstojileri, —
Natur hat weder Kern noch Schale,
A lies ist sie mit einemmale,
Dich pruefe du nur zu allermeist,
Ob du selbst Kern oder Schale seist!
Spiritual
science wishes to work toward the human being learning to examine
himself as to whether he is core or shell. And he is core if he
grasps himself in his full reality. If he grasps himself as core,
then he also penetrates to the spirit of nature. Then in the
evolution of humanity in relation to spiritual science something
occurs that is similar to when Copernicus pointed from the visible to
the invisible, even of this visible itself.
For
the supersensible, however, humanity will have to stir itself to
grasp this supersensible within itself. To do this one does not need
to become a spiritual investigator. One needs, however, to remove all
prejudices that place themselves before the soul if one wishes to
understand what spiritual science intends to say out of such a
Goethean attitude.
I
wished to offer today only a few impulses to stimulate you further.
From this point of view it is always possible at least to stimulate
something, but if one wanted to go into all the details, many
lectures would be needed. But I believe these few comments will have
sufficed to show that something needs to be drawn out of the
evolutionary process of humanity, something that will first awaken
the soul to full life. No one needs to believe that this will shrivel
the soul, that it will kill off anything, not even the religious
life. As Goethe said:
Whoever possesses Science and Art,
Has also Religion,
Whoever possesses neither of the two,
Had better have Religion!
Wer Wissenschaft und Kunst besitzt
Hat auch Religion,
Werjene beiden nicht besitzt,
Der habe Religion!
So
one can say, as the modern way of thinking is evolving, whoever finds
spiritual scientific paths will also find the way to true religious
life; whoever does not find the spiritual scientific path will be in
danger of losing also the religious path so necessary for the future
of humanity!
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