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Prefaces to the First, Second, and Third Edition
The purpose of this book is to give a description of some of the
regions of the supersensible world. The reader who is only willing to
admit the existence of the sensible world will look upon this
description as merely an unreal production of the imagination. But
whoever looks for paths that lead beyond this world of the senses will
soon learn to understand that human life only gains in worth and
significance through insight into another world. He will not, as many
fear, be estranged from the real world through this new power of
vision. For only through it does he learn to stand securely and firmly
in this life and learns to know the causes of life. Without this power
of vision he gropes like a blind man through their effects. Only
through the understanding of the supersensible does the sensible
real acquire meaning. A man therefore becomes more and not less fit
for life through this understanding. Only he who understands life can
become a truly practical man.
The author of this book describes nothing to which he cannot bear
witness from experience, the kind of experience which belongs to these
regions. Nothing will be described here which has not been personally
experienced in this sense.
This book cannot be read in the customary manner of the present day.
In certain respects every page, and even many a sentence, will have to
be worked out by the reader. This has been aimed at intentionally. For
only in this way can the book become to the reader what it ought to
be. The one who merely reads it through will not have read it at all.
Its truths must be experienced, lived. Only in this sense has
spiritual science any value.
The book cannot be judged from the standpoint of science, if the point
of view adopted in forming such a judgment is not gained from the book
itself. If the critic will adopt this point of view, he will certainly
see that the presentation of the facts given in this book will in no
way conflict with truly scientific methods. The author is satisfied
that he has taken care not to come into conflict with his own
scientific scrupulousness even by a single word.
Those who feel more drawn to another method of searching after the
truths here set forth will find such a method in my Philosophy of
Spiritual Activity.* The lines of thought taken in these two books,
though different, lead to the same goal. For the understanding of the
one, the other is by no means necessary, although undoubtedly helpful
to some persons.
Those who look for ultimate truths in this book will perhaps lay it
aside unsatisfied. The primary intention of the author has been to
present the fundamental truths underlying the whole domain of
spiritual science. It lies in the very nature of man to ask at once
about the beginning and the end of the world, the purpose of
existence, and the nature and being of God. Anyone, however, who looks
not for mere phrases and concepts of the intellect, but for a real
understanding of life, knows that in a work which deals with the
elements of spiritual knowledge, things may not be said which belong
to the higher stages of wisdom. It is indeed only through, an
understanding of these elements that it becomes clear how higher
questions should be asked. In another work forming a continuation of
this one, namely, in the author's Occult Science, an Outline, *
further particulars will be found on the subject here dealt with.
In the preface to a second edition of this book the following
supplementary remarks were inserted: Anyone who at the present time
gives a description of supersensible facts ought to be quite clear on
two points. The first is that the cultivation of supersensible
knowledge is a necessity for our age; the other is that the
intellectual and spiritual life of the day is full of ideas and
feelings which make a description like this appear to many as an
absolute chaos of fantastic notions and dreams. Knowledge of the
supersensible is a necessity today, because all that a man can learn
through current methods about the world and life arouses in him
numerous questions, which can be answered only by means of
supersensible truths. We ought not to deceive ourselves with regard to
the fact that the teaching concerning the fundamental truths of
existence given within the intellectual and spiritual currents of
today is for the deeply feeling soul a source, not of answers, but of
questions about the great problems of the universe and of life. Some
people may for a time hold firmly to the opinion that they can find a
solution of the problems of existence within conclusions from strictly
scientific facts, and within the deductions of this or that thinker of
the day. But when the soul descends into those depths into which she
must descend if she is to understand herself, what at first seemed to
be an answer appears only as the incentive to the real question. And
an answer to this question does not merely have to satisfy human
curiosity; on it depend the inner calm and completeness of the soul
life. The attainment of such an answer does not satisfy merely the
thirst for knowledge; it makes a man capable of practical work and
fits him for the duties of life, while the lack of an answer to these
questions lames his soul, and finally his body also. In fact, the
knowledge of the supersensible is not merely something that meets a
theoretical requirement; it supplies a method for leading a truly
practical life. It is just because of the nature of our present day
intellectual life that study in the domain of spiritual knowledge is
indispensable.
On the other hand it is an evident fact that many today reject most
strongly what they most sorely need. Some people are so greatly
influenced by theories built up on the basis of exact scientific
experience that they cannot do otherwise than regard the contents of a
book like this as a boundless absurdity. The exponent of supersensible
truths is able to view such a fact entirely free from any illusions.
People will certainly be prone to demand that he give irrefutable
proofs for what he states. But they do not realize that in so doing
they are the victims of a misconception; for they demand, although
unconsciously, not the proofs lying within the things themselves, but
those which they personally are willing to recognize or are in a
condition to recognize. The author of this book is sure that any
person, taking his stand on the basis of the science of the present
day, will find that it contains nothing which he will be unable to
accept. He knows that all the requirements of modern science can be
complied with, and for this very reason the method adopted here of
presenting the facts of the supersensible world supplies its own
justification. In fact, the way in which true modern science
approaches and deals with a subject is precisely the one which is in
full harmony with this presentation. And anyone who thinks thus will
feel moved by many a discussion in a way which is described by
Goethe's deeply true saying: A false teaching does not offer any
opening to refutation, for it rests upon the conviction that the false
is true. Argument is fruitless with those who allow only such proofs
to weigh with them as fit in with their own way of thinking. Those who
know the true nature of what is called proving a matter see clearly
that the human soul finds truth through other means than by argument.
It is with these thoughts in mind that the author offers this book for
publication.
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