Aspects of Human Evolution
GA 176
5 June 1917, Berlin
Lecture II
In the last lecture we began to consider aspects of mankind's post-Atlantean evolution which can provide a key to our present problems. Current events do indeed present a riddle to those who attempt to understand them merely by means of the materialistic concepts and ideas of our age. That we are in need of new ideas must be obvious from the many things we have considered. Concepts that sufficed in the past are no longer sufficient to understand present-day life which has become so much more complex. I have for years repeatedly emphasized in various lectures something which I believe to be of utmost importance for the present time.
I have repeatedly said in various places the following: If we survey the field and scope of thoughts and ideas, by means of which attempts are made to understand the world and attain a glimpse behind the scenes of external physical reality, we shall find that the most valuable of those ideas originated in the fourth post-Atlantean epoch. The fifth post-Atlantean epoch which began in 1413 has not produced any ideas that are fundamentally new. Certainly it has produced, in admirable fashion, an enormous amount of new facts and combinations of facts. However, they are understood in the light of the old ideas. Let us take an example: What Darwin and his successors have brought together, in order to demonstrate organic relationships, has been introduced into the concept of evolution; but the concept of evolution is in itself not new; it stems from the fourth post-Atlantean epoch. When concepts and ideas are taken seriously and their true nature and reality is understood, then it will be seen that this way of dealing with issues permeates all spheres of knowledge.
Only when Goethe brought the ideas from the past into movement can it be said that a step forward was made. He saw in the concept as such the possibility of transformation, of metamorphosis and thus introduced something quite new which as yet is not properly appreciated. Concepts of blossom, of fruit and so on he saw as transformations of the basic concept “leaf.”1Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, 1749–1832; Naturwissenschaftliche Schriften, edited by Rudolf Steiner (Rudolf Steiner Verlag, Dornach, Switzerland) 1982. Original edition by Joseph Kiirschner, 1883–1897. To recognize a living mobility in concepts and mental pictures is something new. It enables one to transform concepts within oneself so that they follow the manifold metamorphoses taking place in the phenomena of nature. I have for many years pointed out that this is Goethe's most important discovery, a discovery whose further development is to be found only in spiritual science. Spiritual science alone brings man new concepts enabling him to penetrate true reality.
It is of special importance that the concept of history should be widened. In our recent considerations we have in fact worked with a much extended concept of history. This enabled us more particularly to recognize how the constitution and whole disposition of man's soul has changed. Just a few centuries ago man's soul was fundamentally different from what, in conformity with human evolution, it is now. I drew attention to the fact that during the first, the ancient Indian epoch, man continued his bodily development right up to the ages between 56 and 48. I tried to illustrate this by saying that whereas today in the child and youth the development of the spirit-soul being takes its course parallel to the development of the physical body, in that ancient cultural epoch this continued right into the fifties of a person's life. Today man no longer notices when his body passes beyond the 30th year. All he is aware of inwardly is that in childhood his muscles become stronger and the nerve functions change. It is during this time when changes take place in muscles, nerves and blood that he notices the soul-spiritual element following a parallel development to that of the physical organism. Then comes the time when the soul and spirit cease to be dependent on the organism. However, in the ancient Indian epoch, the dependence persisted, and this is something we must consider in more detail.
Man was at that time, just as he is now, more or less consciously aware of becoming physically stronger during childhood, aware also that at the same time his life of will, of feeling and also his mental life became different. In other words, he was aware during childhood and youth of his soul's dependence on the growing, thriving, flourishing life of the organism. Then came the time when he reached the middle of life which occurs in his thirties; the 35th year must be regarded as the middle of life. Today man is not aware of going through the middle of life the way he is aware, for example, of going through puberty from 12 to 16. But in that ancient time man was aware of this; he sensed to a certain extent, that before he reached his thirties life had welled up within him, had grown ever stronger till it reached a climax and now had begun to recede. He sensed that growth had stopped, that the formation of nerves had come to an end and that from now on he would remain as he was. Those who were particularly sensitive even felt their life forces become sluggish and recede; they felt ossification taking place and that they were becoming mineralized.
When man at that time reached his forties he felt that a decisive decline began, that the organic life was withdrawing. But he also experienced something which can be experienced no longer, namely his soul's dependence on the declining life of the body. Thus, in that ancient time man experienced going through three stages of development whereas now he experiences at most going through one.
How were the three stages experienced? Let us look quite carefully at the dependence on the thriving, flourishing life forces during the body's growth; let us establish initially that an individual felt himself to be thoroughly healthy—something very few people do today—so that he strongly experienced that the healthy, flourishing, thriving life welling up within him was carried by the spirit. After all, what grows is not the merely physical substances taken in as nourishment; it is the spiritual forces underlying the body that cause growth and development. One can look at one's origin as a human being and say: My body came into being through hereditary substances; the spirit united itself with the body and caused its growth and development. In that ancient time man's spirit-soul being felt itself within the body; its healthy dependence upon the body was felt to be brought about by God, and indeed by God the Father. Man at that time said to himself something like this: I am placed into the world with forces of growth, of thriving, and provided one pays attention and has a feeling for what takes place in the body, then the soul can sense in the growing and thriving the effect of the Father God. Man felt related to nature, that human beings grow and thrive just as plants and animals do. He felt related to natural existence and felt the Father God within himself. Thus you see that something which today can take place only under exceptional circumstances was in that ancient time experienced simply as part of life. Then began the period in the life of the individual when he passed through the middle of life and therefore through the culmination, the climax of the growing, thriving life forces, and then the time of decline began.
As we have seen, the growing, thriving life of the healthy body, upon which the spirit-soul being of man knew itself dependent, called forth the feeling “ex deo nascimur,” “from God I am born.” Man felt he originated from God, who also caused his further growth and development. When he passed beyond the middle of life, he could still detect during ordinary waking consciousness the thriving life forces. This was partly because he still remembered his spirit-soul being's earlier dependence on the bodily nature and because he could observe growth and thriving of a similar kind in external nature. However, during lowered states of consciousness, such as dream or sleep and also during the state of atavistic clairvoyance, the astral body and I withdrew from the declining life forces which remained connected with the physical body. It is during sleep that the declining life forces are particularly important to man. In that ancient time those who reached the age when their life forces were declining perceived them particularly in such states of lowered consciousness. And when the physical body began to withdraw and become sclerotic, the soul began to live within the spirit of the whole cosmic environment. Thus in that ancient epoch, when man had passed the climax of the thriving life forces and the body's decline had set in, he perceived in waking consciousness the spiritual in all natural existence; in states of dream, of sleep, or of atavistic clairvoyance he perceived the spirit that pervades the whole cosmos.
Try to imagine these experiences: Man felt his awareness of the spirit-permeated, God-ensouled nature alternate with awareness of the spirit of the cosmos; one kind he experienced as ascending, the other as descending. Thus he was directly aware of the union of the spirit of the cosmos with the spirit of nature and was conscious that the spirit of nature is on earth and the spirit of the cosmos in the earth's environment. He knew that they are related, that they weave into one another and that during his life man passes from one to the other. When his life forces began to decline after having reached their climax, he experienced becoming permeated with the spirit of the cosmos, later known as the Christ.
At that time, during their forties and beyond, people experienced their spirit-soul being's dependence on their declining life forces, especially during dream, sleep and other states of semi-consciousness. If they lived beyond their forties, they became aware of the spirit itself, the spirit which is not linked to matter, but lives as spirit. From their forties onwards they perceived the Holy Spirit. Thus when we look back to that ancient time we find that people in the course of their life perceived directly the Father-God, the Christ-God—who had not yet descended to earthly existence—and the Holy Spirit. Such direct human experiences are the basis for the ancient religious traditions, to be found everywhere, of a divine Trinity.
We see in this how one truth complements another, which is something that must be recognized more and more as a feature of science of the spirit. If it were recognized, we would not hear remarks, such as those made recently to a member of our movement, to the effect that what is said in our lectures is all very beautiful but lacks all foundation. Such a statement is just about as clever, or should I say stupid, as it would be had someone said, when Copernicus established that the earth circles the sun and consequently cannot be fixed on a base; Oh, but the earth lacks all foundation—planets and stars must be sitting on something! Just as planets and stars are self-supporting physically, so it should be recognized that the science of the spirit is an edifice whose individual aspects are mutually self-supporting.
We now come to the ancient Persian epoch during which, as described, man's natural development continued only in his forties, that is, to the ages between 48 and 42. You will realize that this meant the direct vision of the spirit in its purity faded, though there was still an awareness of it. Those who lived beyond the ages between 48 and 42 could still be aware of the Holy Spirit.
Then came the Chaldean-Egyptian epoch. Mankind's general age dropped to that between 42 and 35. Vision of the spirit in its purity clouded over. Towards the end of this epoch it was really only those initiated in the mysteries who could know about the pure spirit. In the mysteries everywhere one could, of course, learn through direct vision about the secret of the Trinity. But as far as ordinary life was concerned understanding of the spirit receded. However, in this third post-Atlantean epoch man was still strongly conscious that in the cosmos, in the heavens, an ascending and descending spirit lives. Consciousness of the cosmic Christ was general. Man was still strongly conscious of his connection with the world of the Gods.
As we come to the fourth post-Atlantean epoch all this changes. During this epoch mankind's age corresponded to that of individual man between 35 and 28. At the beginning of this epoch, which began in 747 B.C. and ended in A.D. 1413, it was still the case that when a person reached the same age as that of mankind, 35, he still had imaginative knowledge of the Christ Spirit. However, at the end of the first third of that epoch, when a third of Hellenism had run its course and modern chronology began, mankind's age was about 33. Man's dependence upon the flourishing, up-thrusting life forces no longer lasted beyond the point of their culmination though the dependence was still experienced much more strongly than was the case later in the fifth epoch. Man was still conscious of the Father God, but consciousness of the cosmic Christ gradually faded. Then came the event which replaced what was lost from consciousness. Just as mankind's age dropped to that of 33, the cosmic Christ descended to the earth and entered the body of Jesus of Nazareth. The Christ force spread over the earth and, from another direction, bestowed upon man what formerly he had possessed as an immediate human experience through his spirit-soul being's dependence upon his physical-bodily nature. This is the immense significance of the Mystery of Golgotha. It explains the significance of what is understood by “the promise of the Holy Spirit.” A time had begun in which the Holy Spirit must be attained from within, independent of man's bodily development, through the impulse initiated by Christ. The connection man formerly had with the spiritual world came about purely through the way his soul and bodily natures were interrelated; this now changed. What had filled man's consciousness thanks merely to normal evolution gradually vanished.
Then came the fifth post-Atlantean epoch. Mankind's age dropped to 28 and will drop to 21 during this epoch. As I have mentioned we live at the time when mankind's general age is about 27. Therefore (and this must be continually emphasized) it is now necessary that within the soul, forces are initiated which do not arise because bodily forces shoot into the soul. Now spiritual impulses, engendered independently, must be established in the soul, impulses which further the soul in its independence from the body. A healthy person leading a healthy life can sense the dependence on the Father God up to about his 30th year; that is, as long as the forces of growth are still thriving in his body, even if only those of his muscles. As you will realize, it is essential that, as the fifth epoch progresses, there should develop a healthy sense also for the divine spiritual element that withdraws from the forces of growth. A sense and feeling for this was still vivid in the fourth post-Atlantean epoch right up to the 15th century. In that epoch mankind's general age corresponded to the middle of life spanning the ages between 35 and 28. Already mankind's age is one year less; because of this, the bodily constitution of man makes him inclined toward materialism and atheism. The spread of atheism is due to man's bodily organism. It will spread ever more unless a spiritual counterbalance is created by impulses that originate purely within the soul, developed in complete independence of the body. Man becomes an atheist when he ceases to participate in the forces of growth and thriving, and therefore no longer experiences himself as a healthy, complete human being. That is why I have said that one can only be an atheist when one does not, in a healthy way, sense one's spirit-soul being's connection with the growing and developing bodily nature. Spiritual science recognizes atheism as an illness that will increasingly take hold of man in the course of his normal evolution. This is because man will more and more lack the support provided by the bodily nature which enables him to grasp reality in general.
To deny or fail to recognize Christ must be regarded as a misfortune, a tragic destiny, for Christ—from the external world—comes to meet man full of grace. To fail to recognize the spirit must be regarded as soul blindness. To be an atheist is an illness; what is meant is, of course, illness in the widest sense. It is necessary to make these distinctions.
From what has been explained you can see that if one truly wants to understand the evolution of the human race, a completely new concept of evolution is needed. The Darwinian idea of evolution is dreadfully abstract; once its crudeness has been recognized it will be realized that along that path no progress is possible. Evolution follows, as we have seen, an ascending as well as a descending line. The view of today's superficial materialism is that evolution starts from a certain form of life which then progresses to ever higher stages, thus believing that there is a continuous trend towards ever greater perfection.
During post-Atlantean epochs man's evolution goes in the direction of his soul and spirit becoming ever more independent of the body. During the earlier epochs there burst into his soul and spirit, from his bodily nature, comprehension of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit. The first to fade was comprehension of the Holy Spirit, next that of the Son, and we are now at the stage when, in ordinary life, comprehension of the Father is fading. This fading comprehension of the Father has its origin in man's life of feeling, for as I said, man is at present more or less conscious of his soul-spirit's connection with the bodily nature. This is related to something else. Bear in mind that in general man's spirit-soul being receives less and less from the bodily nature, with the consequence that, if man wants to approach the spirit, he must do so along paths where there is no support from the bodily organism. This accounts for the fact, clearly perceptible to those able to observe such things, that man produces ever fewer concepts and ideas. The concepts and ideas at man's disposal in ancient times bubbled forth, so to speak, from his bodily nature, for all matter contains spirit and this the body simply handed over of itself. But now the body provides man with fewer and fewer concepts and mental pictures. So, expressing it somewhat drastically, he must now rack his brain more and more or, if he is too easy-going, not rack it. Either way he no longer finds concepts welling up within him; he must turn to spiritual knowledge if he wants to acquire them. Spiritual science provides mobile concepts which, in contrast to the rigid, lifeless concepts understood by means of the physical body, must be understood by means of the ether body. Thus, in the course of normal evolution, man becomes ever poorer in concepts. The way he is naturally organized prevents him, if he refuses the path of spiritual knowledge, from delving into true reality.
This explains the present situation. It makes comprehensible what must be described, without levelling any criticism, as the cause for man becoming ever more obtuse without spiritual knowledge. These are things that must be faced in deep earnestness. The brain will gradually become more and more mineralized, it will become a blunt insensible instrument with which ideas capable of delving into reality can no longer be formulated. Only people who make no effort and feel no inclination to understand what is actually taking place in the world can pass these things by. Yet it is of utmost urgency that one should try to understand.
Provided one is not asleep, one cannot be unaware of the many curious things that occur. However, most people are asleep for they are aware only of what takes place on the surface, not of the effective impulses beneath. If one pays attention to what goes on there is much that seems inexplicable, for without spiritual insight one is helpless in face of these riddles. An event that illustrates this quite aptly took place recently in Austria. A certain Robert Scheu, a man of great idealism, has tried for decades to bring about what he visualized as a movement of a cultural-political nature.2Robert Scheu, 1873–1964, Kulturpolitik, Vienna, 1901. He is concerned about the kind of issues often discussed in our circles. In his endeavour to discover new approaches to political issues, he gathered around him a group of intellectuals. His aim was that together they should discover policies that would ensure greater spiritual influence in people's lives.
This start to the project would have been commendable if by bringing intellectuals together, spiritual influences in people's destinies could be ensured. But what induced Robert Scheu to start this venture in the 1890s? The impulse arose within him from an indefinite feeling that things could not go on as they were; he felt some essential ingredient was missing in life which must be discovered. Needless to say he has not found what mankind so sorely needs. Like so many others who vaguely feel something is missing, he looks upon spiritual science as fantastic superstition. Such people consider themselves far too clever to be concerned with matters of this kind. However, Robert Scheu does feel very strongly that something is lacking. He says the following: “My fundamental conviction, which I herewith repeat, is: As far as cognition, as far as mental activity is concerned, our time is far ahead of the times.”3Ibid.
A curious expression—what does he mean? He says nothing about the fact that thoughts have become blunted; he is only aware that today's intellectuals are clever in the sense that they can produce abstract ideas like clockwork, and are so sure of their judgments because of the transparency of their abstract ideas. That is why he says that “as far as cognition, as mental activity is concerned, our time is far ahead of the times.” In other words, people are very capable of producing thoughts, but these thoughts are of the kind I have described, quite unrelated to reality. Thus one could also say: Our time is far behind the times. Scheu goes on to say: “As knowers we have become decadent, our thoughts are too rarefied.” That is certainly true of modern man. We need only look at our literature or observe everyday life. Just think of all the intricate thoughts people spin out, but thoughts that are quite incapable of penetrating reality. Hence Scheu is right when he says: “As knowers we have become decadent, our thoughts are too rarefied, too translucent; we are still dominated by the Middle Ages. The reason is that the furnace in which thoughts ought to be recast does not function.”
Scheu expresses himself with feeling in a strange way, but what he says is based on a true sense for what is lacking in our time. Indeed the “furnace” does not function in which thoughts, lost in nebulous abstraction, could become so inwardly strengthened, that they become able to unite with reality. He recognizes that thoughts have become abstract to the point of decadence and that a great number of people have poured our abstract ideas concerning socialism, social-democracy and liberalism with marvelous logic, especially in marxism. Combinations of such abstractions are also possible such as national liberalism, social liberalism and so on. We also have abstract ideas about conservatism. On the basis of all these abstractions—abstract because the furnace is missing that could transform them—one builds up parliamentary systems, representative systems and the network of ideas on which are based liberalism, social liberalism, social democracy, conservatism, nationalism and so on.
Robert Scheu has done what from his point of view is not a bad thing; he has attempted with the means at his disposal to replace the abstractions with reality. Instead of the abstract ideas he wants inquiries set up, maintaining that those who are knowledgeable about an issue should be the ones to judge what should be done about it. After all, whether one is a liberal or conservative is of no great moment when it is a question of organizing the sale of oil or arranging art galleries. What matters in such instances is insight into oil distribution or knowledge about art. Robert Scheu did in fact arrange inquiries into various issues and saw to it that people who made the inquiries spoke about them. A very ingenious start.
He attempts to decide where what he calls the “furnace” is, or ought to be, located. He asks, “Should it be the parliament, the congress? Or should one look for it in the administration? And do the parties uphold the system of representation?” He further points out that “the system contains programs of fundamentally conflicting interests; the parties do not grasp the real issues of life to which they have a purely deductive approach. They are only interested in what constitutes means for enhancing the power of the party.”
Here is someone who for once realizes that the rarefaction, the abstractness of thought—one could also call it dullness, obtuseness, for the thoughts have no contact with reality—have a direct effect on life. He links this problem with the problems of development in social conditions, whether under the system of representation or any other form of government. He is fully aware that no, solution is possible by treating the problems in the old manner. He ponders the possibility of discovering from life itself what could bring order into the structure of-social life; he has in fact done much in this direction. What is interesting is that he now looks back at his efforts and asks himself, “What did I actually attempt to achieve?” What he tried to do was to penetrate to the reality of the issues. However, he expresses this in today's abstract terminology by saying, “I replaced deduction with induction.” These kinds of expressions one meets with everywhere. But Robert Scheu is not altogether satisfied with the result of this endeavour; that is why at the end of the article in which he presents the whole story he says, “I have come to the conclusion that my inductive approach to cultural and political life needs to be completed by a deductive approach. I realize the problem is like a tunnel that must be excavated from both ends if a breakthrough is to be achieved. The mental work necessary must be a joint effort of all Europeans of good will.”
So you see that Robert Scheu comes to recognize that the problem must be approached from two sides. What he does not recognize is the source from which concepts and ideas, allied with reality, must be drawn. He comes to a standstill and does not really believe in his so-called inductive approach via all kinds of inquiries. In any case, to make inquiries is to approach reality from one side only. The approach to the other, the spiritual side, would be the search for the spiritual aspect by means of spiritual knowledge.
Everyday practical life demands spiritual science. This is not suggesting anything out of the way or difficult; rather, it is a thought that essentially belongs to this very moment in mankind's evolution. Just imagine how fruitful spiritual science could be if people would overcome the prejudices which blind them to its reality. Without spiritual knowledge one only arrives at absurdities which deteriorate into all kinds of ridiculous situations. This becomes very obvious when one lives within the mobile concepts of spiritual science. Robert Scheu, for example, wants inquiries set up into the various branches of social life; he wants people who are knowledgeable to speak on the issues. One such issue he wants altered through an inquiry is the system of registration of domicile; just imagine what that would mean at the present time.
However, he does represent a striking example of the fact that people are beginning to feel that something is lacking, but cannot make the decision to turn to what is necessary. Yet I have always tried from the beginning to prevent spiritual science from becoming abstruse and sectarian. I have tried to let it flow into life in response to human requirements. Whenever my advice was sought I tried to give it in accordance with each person's individual need. It must be said, though, that the present materialistic way of life creates huge difficulties in applying such advice. It is understandable that a manufacturer would find it strange if told that science of the spirit could help him run his business better. Yet one could hope that it would work at some point.
A man came to me some years ago who said he wanted his scientific work to be enhanced by spiritual science. We spoke about his scientific work. He was wonderfully erudite; he had really mastered Babylonian and Egyptian archeology to a remarkable degree. I tried to work out with him where the threads could be attached to today's knowledge which would allow spiritual science to flow into his endeavors, so that at least a part of his science could be fructified by spiritual science. He had what modern science can say about the subject; from us he found what spiritual science can reveal about it. He had both—but he could not bring forth the will to penetrate and illumine the one with the other.
If one does not develop this will, one will never understand what is actually intended with spiritual science. One will rather be inclined to make the science of the spirit into merely one more doubtful mysticism so beloved by those who belittle earthly life. There are those who have the view that this life is worth nothing; one must rise to a higher life. One must rise from this world of the senses into a reverie—then a higher life will arise. Why bring up one's children properly here when one can rather think about one's prior incarnations? That brings one into the higher regions and so forth. That is not what is at stake here. What is essential is that, in the area where one stands, one can make science of the spirit fruitful. It can be made fruitful everywhere. Life demands it.
One would wish to have something more than words today to make that comprehensible. Who feels today what lies in words? Who really feels into words? Feeling with words—that is something that humanity has almost lost, at least in that portion of humanity to which we belong. Let me use an example. [*This portion of Steiner's lecture used characteristics of German words unique within that language for those examples. An analogous substitution of the word “pretty” for “ziemlich” has been used in the following rendering for the English reader. The analogy is not direct, since “pretty” and “ziemlich” have diverging semantic roles and heritages; it is nevertheless imperfectly useful in grasping the speaker's train of thought. ] When someone says, “You did your job pretty well” (ziemlich gut), who feels much more today at these words than “You almost did your job well” (fast gut)? “Pretty” (ziemlich) is “almost” (fast). We say one instead of the other. Place your hand on your heart and say you don't feel “almost” when someone says “pretty” (ziemlich) in that way! But “pretty” (ziemlich) is a word which has referred to activities and products which were done properly or decently (geziemend). Who feels anymore the “proper” (geziemend) in the “pretty” (ziemlich) in this case?
Or, who feels in the word “Zweifel” (doubt) the fact that it carries the “Zwei” (two), that one stands before something which divides into two? Who feels indeed the “zw, z-w”?**Pronounced as one would pronounce the letters “ts-v” in English. This sound has not carried over into English, although a similar combination of letters, today unpronounced, remains in the word “two” (German dialect “zwo” = “zwei” = “two”). But wherever the “zw” appears, you have the same sensation as in doubting (Zweifel), which divides the things in two. “Zwischen” (between)—there you have the same! “Zweck” (goal), “Zweifel” (doubt), “zwar” (indeed)—try to feel it! Feeling can lie in all speech relations. But our words have today become an exceedingly worthless currency. Therefore one would really like to have something other than language to give a penetrating impression of what is necessary for today and what spiritual science could give. The way speech is used today deadens thinking even more than is happening anyway as an effect of natural evolution. The result is a chaos of obtuse thoughts written and printed everywhere.
One could sweat blood, as almost happened to me this morning when I picked up a book by Dr. Johann Plenge, professor of political science at the University of Munster in Westphalia.4Dr. Johann Plenge, 1874–1963, 1789 and 1914. Die symbolischen Jahre in der Geschichte des politischen Geistes, Berlin 1916. This man claims to have unraveled a great contradiction which developed between the ideas of 1789 and 1914. He regards himself as an extremely important fellow, but let that pass. On page 61 of his book one comes across an astonishing sentence. I shall now be somewhat pedantic, but the pedantry refers to something subtle, and those who can feel it, will do so. The sentence on page 61 slugged me—excuse the expression. It says: “Imagine you were a future historian who one day hears about the world catastrophe of 1914.” What is one to make of a sentence like that? He imagines a future historian who suddenly hears about the world war of 1914. So during his whole youth he has never heard of it, but only does so quite by chance when he is a writer of history! One really can no longer be living within living images to be able to produce something like that. He tried to characterize the nature and significance of ideas. He points to ideas that run through mankind's history, saying that ideas can emerge and again withdraw. In this way he attempts to discover the essence of ideas. He tries to show how ideas unconsciously emerge in primitive races and gradually become more conscious. During his attempts he comes up with the following: “A civilized nation in the making lives according to the example of an imagined ennobled humanity. The position of Homer in antiquity is the best example of such a formation of an idea-complex.”
So, the position of Homer in antiquity is an example of the formation of ideas! One might just as well say that the role of a court advisor is an example of how an idea-complex is formed. It is impossible to think along with something like that if one wants to connect living images with one's concepts. When one is used to doing so from youth, sentences containing such affectations in words are experienced like a slap in the face. They remind me vividly of a professor who began a course of lectures by raising 25 questions. He is a professor of literature who has become very famous indeed. I shall not name him, for you would not believe me. Having put his 25 questions he said: “Gentlemen, I have placed before you a forest of question marks!”—So one had to imagine a wood composed of rows of question marks. Ask yourselves what sort of thinking it is when thoughts remain unrelated to reality, when a person does not live in his thoughts, and they result in nothing but verbiage.
This is a situation that is not uncommon; one comes across the strangest assertions. Plenge, for example, says, “Like the astronomer, so the true historian is able to forecast events.” And then the good fellow proceeds to show how things developed in the period leading up to the catastrophe of the present war. Since he regards himself as a truly great historian, he should be well able to forecast such a catastrophe, but though he has written several books on external affairs, he has not done so. This troubles him; he therefore explains how he has done it after all. And how has he done it? He says, “Well, I have shown that because of the way things were developing one had to strive for peace with all one's strength and power; then I have shown that, as things were, only the war could come.” No one can deny that to be an accurate prophecy! It is comparable to my having two coats and saying, Provided I will not wear this one tomorrow, I shall be wearing the other one. And he continues in the same vein, for when he speaks about how he faltered between forecasting peace or war he says—or rather he quotes himself (quotations are a peculiar feature throughout the book), “To make such a forecast one must let one's fantasy play with the idea of war.” What a sentiment! To suggest that one should indulge in fantasy of war in the years leading up to the present catastrophe reveals an attitude of incredible irresponsibility.
As I said, quotations are a peculiar feature of this book by Plenge. The book is associated throughout with an article that appeared in a daily newspaper. The article is quite inoffensive, written by an unknown journalist who rebels against Plenge's “discovery” of the way ideas had changed by 1914. What makes the composition of Plenge's book peculiar is that on the first page one finds the newspaper article reproduced, or as much of it as Plenge found suitable for his purpose. He speaks about the article, quoting it again on page 21. So the article has now been read twice. He then continues and quotes part of it for a third time. Towards the end of the book, having quoted the article three times, he does so once again, So you have a book with a newspaper article quoted four times.
I chose such concrete examples in order to make clear how things really are and to show also what is necessary. I want to demonstrate that science of the spirit is what is needed, what must intervene in present affairs. The things I have spoken about may seem like trifles; nonetheless they are closely connected with the great issues with which we started our considerations. This I ask you to bear in mind during these lectures.
Zweiter Vortrag
Ich habe das letzte Mal hier begonnen Betrachtungen anzustellen über den Verlauf der Menschheitsentwickelung in der nachatlantischen Zeit, die uns gewissermaßen ein Schlüssel sein können zu dem Verständnisse der unmittelbaren Gegenwart, jener unmittelbaren Gegenwart, in der allerdings sehr viel Rätselhaftes sich befinden muß für denjenigen, der nicht den Versuch macht, mit Begriffen, mit Ideen, mit Vorstellungen diese Gegenwart zu verstehen, die nicht aus dem Vorstellungsquell und Vorstellungsbereiche unseres materialistisch denkenden Zeitalters genommen sind. Die Gegenwart braucht neue Begriffe, das dürfte uns ja aus mancherlei Betrachtungen schon hervorgegangen sein. Die alten Begriffe reichen nicht aus, um das kompliziert gewordene Leben zu begreifen. Was ich einmal vor Jahren nacheinander in verschiedenen Vorträgen angeführt habe, das ist, wie ich glaube, mit Bezug auf die Gegenwart von einer großen Bedeutung. Ich sagte damals zu wiederholten Malen an verschiedenen Orten: Wenn wir den Umfang der Begriffe, die wir haben, überschauen, der Begriffe, durch die wir die Wirklichkeit zu verstehen suchen, so sind im Grunde genommen die wertvollsten Begriffe, welche die Menschheit hat, um ein wenig hinter die Kulissen der äußeren Sinneswirklichkeit zu schauen, aus dem vierten nachatlantischen Zeitraum. Der fünfte nachatlantische Zeitraum, der 1413 begonnen hat, hat eigentlich im Grunde genommen neue Begriffe nicht hervorgebracht. Er hat gewiß neue Tatsachen, neue Zusammenfassungen von Tatsachen, in großartiger, in bewundernswürdiger Weise hervorgebracht; aber um diese Dinge zu verstehen, wurden eben die alten Begriffe verwendet. Man versuche an irgendeinem Beispiel sich das klarzumachen. Dasjenige, was Darwin und seine Nachfolger versucht haben über den Zusammenhang der Organismen zusammenzustellen, das wurde durch den Entwickelungsbegriff aufgereiht; aber der Entwickelungsbegriff selber ist nicht neu. Der Entwickelungsbegriff selber stammt aus der vierten nachatlantischen Periode. Und so kann man, wenn man den Begriff ernst nimmt, das Wesen des Begriffes ernst nimmt, dies durch alle unsere Auffassungsweisen, unsere Anschauungsweisen durchaus nachweisen.
Ein gewisser Schritt nach vorwärts ist im Grunde genommen nur gemacht worden, als Goethe die alten Begriffe flüssig machte, als er dadurch etwas ganz Neues brachte, das heute noch immer nicht gewürdigt ist, daß er auf den Begriff selber die Metamorphose, die Verwandlungsfähigkeit anwendete, so daß für ihn der Begriff des Blattes in seiner Verwandlung zugleich der Begriff der Blüte, der Frucht und so weiter werden konnte. Dieses Beweglichmachen des Begriffes, Beweglichmachen der Vorstellung, so daß man dieselbe Vorstellung in der Seele abändert und mit ihr die mannigfaltigen Erscheinungen der Natur, die ja auch in sich beweglich sind, mit einem in sich beweglichen Begriff, einer in sich beweglichen Idee verfolgen kann, das ist in gewisser Beziehung etwas Neues, und das ist dasjenige, was ich vor vielen Jahren genannt habe die zentrale Entdeckung Goethes. Es ist etwas wirklich Neues. Aber sie hat eine Fortsetzung erst gefunden in dem, was wir hier die Geisteswissenschaft nennen, und erst diese Geisteswissenschaft kann der Menschheit wiederum neue Vorstellungen, neue Begriffe bringen, durch die es möglich wird, in die Wirklichkeit ein- und in sie unterzutauchen.
Vor allen Dingen muß der Begriff des Geschichtlichen selbst erweitert werden, und wir haben ja in den letzten Betrachtungen immer schon, ich möchte sagen, die Sache so gemacht, daß wir mit einem eigentlich erweiterten geschichtlichen Begriff gearbeitet haben. Wir haben den geschichtlichen Begriff so erweitert, daß wir uns vor allen Dingen bekannt gemacht haben, wie das Seelenleben des Menschen in der Tat, wenn wir gar nicht weit zurückgehen in den Jahrhunderten, durch und durch verschieden war in seiner Gesamtverfassung, in seiner Gesamtstimmung, von dem Seelenleben, wie es heute nach den Notwendigkeiten der menschlichen Entwickelung sein muß. Ich habe aufmerksam gemacht das letzte Mal, daß die Menschen der ersten Kulturperiode, die Menschen der urindischen Kultur, bis zu einem Lebensalter entwickelungsfähig geblieben sind, das man begrenzen kann als vom 56. bis 48. Lebensjahr. Ich habe das dadurch zu veranschaulichen versucht, daß ich sagte: So wie heute nur das Kind und der junge Mensch in seinem seelisch-geistigen Leben einen Parallelismus zeigen mit dem physisch-leiblichen Leben, so war es in jener alten Kulturepoche der Menschheit bis in die Fünfzigerjahre hinein. Heute merkt der Mensch nichts mehr aus seinem Körper heraus, wenn er das 30. Lebensjahr überschreitet. Er merkt nur aus seinem Körper Seelisches heraus, wenn er von der Kindheit auf in den Muskeln erstarkt, in den Nerven verschiedene Formationen durchmacht. Er merkt dann, wie mit dem Erstarken der Muskeln, mit der Veränderung der Formation der Nerven, mit der Umwandlung des Blutes im Organismus, wie da die seelisch-geistigen Erscheinungen mit diesen Veränderungen im physischen Organismus parallel gehen. Dann aber hört diese Abhängigkeit des Geistig-Seelischen von dem physischen Organismus auf. Sie blieb aber vorhanden in jener alten Zeit, von der wir nun einige Worte zu sagen haben.
Gewiß nahm auch dazumal zunächst der Mensch wahr, von der Kindheit aufsteigend, in einem mehr oder weniger deutlichen Bewußtsein — auch heute geschieht das in einem mehr oder weniger deutlichen Bewußtsein nur —, wie er erstarkte körperlich, und wie damit der Wille anders wird, wie das Fühlen anders wird, wie auch das Vorstellen anders wird. Er merkte also die Abhängigkeit in der Kindheit und im Jugendalter von dem Wachsen, dem Blühen, dem Gedeihen, von dem aufsteigenden Leben in seinem Organismus. Dann kam die Zeit der Lebensmitte, die in den Dreißigerjahren liegt; das 35. Jahr ist ja die Zeit der Lebensmitte. Heute weiß sich der Mensch nicht in derselben Weise abhängig von seiner Lebensmitte, wie er sich abhängig weiß vom 12. bis zum 16. Jahr von der Geschlechtsreife zum Beispiel. Dazumal aber wußte sich der Mensch davon abhängig, daß er gewissermaßen in sich verspürte: Vorher stieg das Leben hinauf, es nahm zu, es kam in einen Höhepunkt; von diesem Höhepunkt steigt es wieder hinab, man wächst nicht mehr weiter, man wird nicht mehr größer, man hat im wesentlichen auch seine Nervenformation abgeschlossen, man beginnt so zu bleiben wie man ist. Ja, hatte man feinere Empfindungen dafür, so konnte man auch spüren, wie eben das Leben verholzt, abwärts geht, wie gewissermaßen eine Verknöcherung beginnt, wie der Mensch anfängt - wenn wir den Ausdruck brauchen dürfen -, sich zu vermineralisieren. Dann kamen die Vierzigerjahre mit dem Leben, das entschieden abzusteigen beginnt, wo man fühlt: Das Leben im Leibesorganismus geht zurück. Dafür aber hatte man in jener Zeit dasjenige, was heute der Mensch nicht mehr haben kann; man hatte das seelische Erlebnis in seiner Abhängigkeit vom Zurückgehen des physischen Leibeserlebnisses. Da machte der Mensch in jenen alten Zeiten gewissermafßen drei Stadien durch; heute macht der Mensch höchstens ein Stadium durch. Wodurch drückte sich das denn aus, was er da durchmachte in drei Stadien? Nun, sehen wir einmal ganz deutlich hin auf die Abhängigkeit von dem Wachsen, Blühen und Gedeihen im aufsteigenden Leben, und setzen wir zunächst voraus, daß der Mensch wirklich in sich gesund fühlte — was heute auch schon die wenigsten Menschen tun -, wirklich fühlte dieses gesunde, aufsteigende, wachsende und gedeihende Leben, fühlte, wie dieses aufsteigende, wachsende und gedeihende Leben geistgetragen ist. Denn die bloß physischen Substanzen, die man etwa durch die Nahrung zu sich nimmt, die wachsen ja nicht. Dasjenige, was das Wachsen, was das Zunehmen, was die aufwärtsgehende Entwickelung bewirkt, das ist das Geistige der Kräfte, das da zugrunde liegt. Man konnte hinblicken auf seinen Menschenursprung, konnte sagen: Ich bin hervorgegangen aus den Vererbungssubstanzen, ich habe da meinen Ursprung als leiblicher Mensch genommen, das Geistige hat sich mit dem Leibe vereint und es trägt mich aufwärts. — In diesem gesunden Abhängigsein des Geistig-Seelischen von dem Leiblichen, in diesem Fühlen des Drinnensteckens des Geistig-Seelischen in dem Leiblichen empfand man in der damaligen Zeit das Wirken des Gottes, und zwar des Vater-Gottes in sich. Denn man sagte sich: Ich bin in die Welt hereinversetzt mit der Kraft des Aufsteigens, mit der Kraft des Gedeihens. — Und ist man nicht gedanken- und gefühllos gegenüber dem, was da in einem aufsteigt, dann empfindet man im Seelischen das Wachsen, das Gedeihen selber, als das Wirken des Vater-Gottes in einem. Man fühlt sich verbunden mit der Natur. So wie die Pflanzen und Tiere wachsen und gedeihen, so wächst und gedeiht man selber; man fühlt sich mit dem natürlichen Dasein verwandt und man fühlt in sich den Vater-Gott. Dasjenige, was ich auseinandergesetzt habe als heute in gewissen Begegnungen auftretend, das fühlte man in jenen alten Zeiten einfach im normalen Leben in der Weise, wie ich es jetzt dargestellt habe.
Und nun begann die Periode im individuellen Leben, wo die Lebensmitte überschritten wurde, wo man von dem wachsenden, zunehmenden, gedeihenden Leben durch die Kulmination, durch den Höhepunkt, überging zu dem Herabsteigenden. So wie nun das wachsende, gedeihende Leben dem Geistig-Seelischen, das sich davon abhängig weiß, wenn alles gesund wirkt im Menschen, die Empfindung beibringt des Ex deo nascimur, aus dem Gotte bin ich geboren, aus dem Gotte habe ich meinen Ursprung genommen, der mich weiter wachsen und gedeihen läßt, so bringt dieses Hinüberschreiten über die Kulmination, dieses Übersteigen des Höhepunktes das hervor, daß der Mensch, wenn er so empfindet, wie in jenen alten Zeiten empfunden wurde, im gewöhnlichen Wachleben das Gedeihen noch spürte, zum Teil auch noch, weil er sich an das frühere Abhängigsein des Geistig-Seelischen vom Physisch-Leiblichen erinnerte und weil er dasselbe Wachsen und Gedeihen draußen in der Natur verfolgen konnte. Aber wenn er in dem dämmernden Zustande war in jenen alten Zeiten, wo noch Atavismus vorhanden war, dann wirkte das absteigende Leben — dieses absteigende Leben läßt man ja eigentlich zurück, mit dem Astralleib und Ich ist man heraus, aber sie haben Verbindung mit dem physischen Leibe; in Abhängigkeit ist man insbesondere von seinen abnehmenden Kräften, wenn man schläft -, da nahmen denn die Leute im absteigenden Leben das Göttlich-Geistige im natürlichen Dasein wahr. Im absteigenden Leben, das ihr namentlich im Traum, im Schlafe und im alten atavistischen Hellsehen erscheint, wo das Physische zurückgeht, sich zu sklerotisieren beginnt, da beginnt die Seele sich einzuleben ins Geistige, das in der ganzen kosmischen Umgebung ist.
Denken Sie, was das für ein Erlebnis ist: Man fühlt den Übergang. Geist- oder gottbeseelte Natur wechselt ab mit Wahrnehmung des Geistes aus dem Kosmos, und man weiß: das eine ist aufschwebend, das andere ist herabsteigend. Die Vereinigung des kosmischen Geistes mit dem natürlichen Geiste, das wurde ein unmittelbares Erlebnis. Man wußte: In der irdischen Umgebung ist der kosmische Geist, hier auf der Erde ist der natürliche Geist, aber die beiden haben eine Verbindung, sie wogen ineinander; und indem der Mensch lebt, geht er von dem einen zu dem anderen über. Indem er vom wachsenden Leben ausgeht, den Kulminationspunkt überschreitet, wird er durchwogt von dem kosmischen Geiste, der später als Christus gefunden worden ist.
Wurden dann die Menschen älter, über die Vierzigerjahre hinaus — weil sie bis dahin sich abhängig wußten in ihrem seelisch-geistigen Leben von dem abnehmenden körperlichen Leben, besonders in den träumenden, schlafdurchsetzten oder Dämmerzuständen -, dann wurden die Leute gewahr den Geist als solchen, der jetzt nicht an die Materie gebunden ist, sondern als Geist lebt. Sie nahmen wirklich den Geist von den Vierzigerjahren an wahr, den Geist, der nun nicht an die Natur gebunden ist, den Heiligen Geist. So daß, wenn wir in jene alten Zeiten zurückgehen, wir bei diesen Menschen eine unmittelbare Wahrnehmung durch das Leben hindurch des Vater-Gottes finden, des Christus-Gottes, der noch nicht zum irdischen Dasein heruntergestiegen war, und des Heiligen Geistes. Auf diese unmittelbare Lebenserfahrung hin ist es gebaut, daß in alten religiösen Traditionen die göttliche Trinität auftritt, daß Sie überall, wo Sie suchen, diese göttliche Trinität, Brahma, Vishnu, Shiva, finden. Die alten Traditionen sind eben durchaus auf die wirkliche menschliche Erfahrung gebaut. Wollte man nur eingehen auf dasjenige, auf was ja eingegangen werden muß in der Geisteswissenschaft, auf die Art, wie die eine Wahrheit die andere trägt, dann würde man schon dazu kommen, Geisteswissenschaft als etwas sich in sich selbst ganz Tragendes zu erkennen. Das sollte immer mehr und mehr durchschaut werden; sonst kommt es ja wirklich dahin, was vor kurzer Zeit ein Außenstehender zu einem Mitgliede gesagt hat: Ja, dasjenige, was da vorgetragen wird als Geisteswissenschaft, ist sehr schön, aber es hat keinen Boden, es steht ohne Boden da. — Der Ausspruch ist geradeso gescheit, ich könnte auch sagen ist geradeso dumm, wie wenn jemand in dem Augenblick, als Kopernikus festsetzen mußte, daß die Erde um die Sonne herumgeht, also nicht auf einem Boden aufsitzt, gesagt hätte: Ja, es fehlt ja der Erde der Boden! Wie ist das mit den Planeten und Gestirnen, die müssen doch irgendwo aufsitzen! Sie tragen sich eben dort physisch selber. Und Geisteswissenschaft ist ein Gefüge, von dem man eben nur wissen, einsehen, verstehen muß, daß die einzelnen Glieder sich selber tragen.
Dann kam die urpersische Epoche, wo die Menschen in der Art, wie ich es dargestellt habe, entwickelungsfähig blieben bis in die Vierzigerjahre, vom 48. bis 42. Jahre. Sie werden jetzt erkennen, was da zurückging. Zurück ging insbesondere die Anschauung des Geistes als solchen, aber man konnte ihn noch erkennen. Diejenigen, die das Alter vom 48. bis 42. Jahr erreichten, die konnten den Geist in seiner Reinheit, das heißt den Heiligen Geist, noch erkennen, sie konnten noch etwas wissen davon.
Dann kam aber die chaldäisch-ägyptische Epoche. Das Lebensalter der Menschheit ging zurück bis auf die Jahre vom 42. bis 35. Lebensjahr. Das reine Anschauen des Geistes trübte sich, und nur diejenigen konnten eigentlich am Schlusse dieser ägyptisch-chaldäischen Epoche noch etwas von dem reinen Geiste wissen, die in die Mysterien eingeweiht wurden; denn selbstverständlich, in den Mysterien konnte man das Geheimnis der Trinität überall anschaulich lehren. Aber für das normale Leben ging das Verständnis für den Geist zurück. Dagegen war in dieser dritten nachatlantischen Zeit, in der ägyptisch-chaldäischen Periode, wirklich noch in hohem Maße das Bewußtsein vorhanden: Im Kosmisch-Himmlischen lebt ein Geist, der aufsteigt und abwogt. Das Bewußtsein von dem kosmischen Christus war durchaus noch allgemein. Der Zusammenhang des Menschen mit den Himmeln, könnte man sagen, war im Bewußtsein vorhanden.
Das wurde nun anders, als die vierte nachatlantische Zeit kam, als in der vierten Periode das allgemeine Menschheitsalter hinunterging bis zum 35. bis 28. Lebensjahr. In den ältesten Zeiten —- 747 vor dem Mysterium von Golgatha begann ja dieses vierte Zeitalter, 1413 schließt es —, in den ältesten Zeiten, da war es noch so, daß, wenn ein Mensch das 35. Lebensjahr im allgemeinen menschlichen Lebensalter erreichte, die imaginative Erkenntnis des Christus-Geistes noch vorhanden war. Aber als das erste Drittel herum war, namentlich als das Griechentum das erste Drittel durchgemacht hatte, als der Beginn unserer Zeitrechnung zu verzeichnen war, da war ungefähr das Alter der Menschheit 33 Jahre. Da machten die Menschen nicht mehr den Kulminationspunkt durch, da machten sie nur noch durch das Abhängigsein - allerdings klarer als später im fünften Zeitraum -, das Abhängigsein von dem blühenden, aufsteigenden, gedeihenden Leben. Den Vater-Gott machten sie durchaus mit in ihrem Bewußtsein; der kosmische Christus verschwand allmählich aus dem Bewußtsein. Und da kam denn dasjenige, was als Ersatz dafür zu bezeichnen ist, da kam, als die Menschheit gerade dieses 33. Lebensjahr überschritt, der kosmische Christus in den Leib des Jesus von Nazareth auf die Erde nieder, um auf der Erde seine Kraft auszubreiten und von einer anderen Seite her dasjenige den Menschen zu geben, was sie früher durch die unmittelbare menschliche Erfahrung in der Abhängigkeit des Geistig-Seelischen von dem Leiblich-Physischen hatten. Das ist die große Bedeutung des Mysteriums von Golgatha. Das erklärt auch die Bedeutung jener Verheißung, die man die Verheißung des Heiligen Geistes nennt. Es mußte nun die Zeit beginnen, in der der Heilige Geist durch den von Christus angefachten Impuls von innen heraus, ohne die normale menschliche Erfahrung, erreicht werden muß. Sie sehen, wie der Zusammenhang mit den geistigen Welten, rein durch die physische Organisation des Menschen im Zusammenhang mit der seelischen Organisation, sich ändert, wie allmählich dasjenige, was im Bewußtsein des Menschen durch seine normale Entwickelung war, entschwand.
Dann kam der fünfte nachatlantische Zeitraum. Das allgerüeine Menschheitsalter ging bis zum 28. Jahre zurück, und es wird während des fünften Zeitraumes bis zum 21. Jahre zurückgehen. Jetzt leben wir, wie ich das letzte Mal ausgeführt habe, im Allgemein-menschheitlichen Lebensalter von ungefähr 27 Jahren. Daher, das muß immer wieder betont werden, ist es jetzt notwendig, daß im Innern der Seele etwas angefacht wird an Kräften, die nicht mehr dadurch kommen, daß Kräfte des Leibes in die Seele einschießen können, sondern daß selbständig auf die Seele gebaute spirituelle Impulse in der Seele sich festlegen können, die die Seele in dieser Selbständigkeit, nicht mehr abhängig vom Leibe, vorwärts bringen. Aber nur bis gegen das 30. Jahr hin, solange der Mensch noch irgend etwas von Wachsen und Aufsprießen, wenn es auch nur das Wachsen der Muskeln noch ist, in sich hat, fühlt er bei gesundem Leben, bei gesundem Empfinden, bei gesundem Erleben, die Abhängigkeit vom Vater-Gott. Es muß also, wie Sie leicht einsehen können, mit dem Fortschreiten des fünften nachatlantischen Zeitraumes das eintreten, daß auch das gesunde Empfinden für das in dem eigenen Wachstum lebende Göttlich-Geistige allmählich zurückgeht. Das war noch rege, absolut rege im vierten nachatlantischen Zeitraum. Davon war auch in hohem Grade noch etwas vorhanden im fünfzehnten Jahrhundert. Heute fehlt der Menschheit schon ein Jahr bis zum Lebensalter, das vom 35. bis 28. Jahr dauert und die Lebensmitte darstellt. Und in diesem Fehlen eines Jahres liegt es, daß die Menschheit heute für den Materialismus und den Atheismus natürlich organisiert ist. Der Atheismus wird sich durch die Organisation der Menschen ausbreiten, und wenn das Gegengewicht, das spirituelle Gegengewicht, durch die Entwickelung eines rein seelischen Impulses, die unabhängig vom Leibe vor sich geht, nicht geschaffen wird, wird sich der Atheismus ausbreiten, weil sich der Mensch nicht mehr als Vollmensch gesund erleben kann; es wird ihm etwas entzogen von dem Miterleben des wachsenden, blühenden, gedeihenden Lebens. Deshalb konnte ich sagen: Atheist kann man eigentlich nur sein — vor einiger Zeit habe ich es hier gesagt —, wenn man nicht in voller Gesundheit den Zusammenhang des Seelisch-Geistigen mit dem Leiblich-Physischen im ganzen aufsteigenden Leben empfindet. Atheismus ist eigentlich für die Geisteswissenschaft eine Krankheit, aber diese Krankheit ist in der Menschheit dem rein natürlichen Dasein nach im Zunehmen begriffen. Immer mehr und mehr wird fehlen von jener Unterstützung des Fassungsvermögens für die gesamte Wirklichkeit, die der Mensch durch seine Organisation hat.
Den Christus zu leugnen oder nicht zu erkennen, bezeichnete ich als ein Schicksalsunglück, weil der Christus gnadenvoll von außen an den Menschen herankommen muß. Und den Geist nicht zu erkennen, bezeichnete ich als eine Seelenblindheit. Diese Unterscheidung muß man schon haben. Eine Krankheit — natürlich den Begriff der Krankheit im umfassendsten Sinn gemeint - ist der Atheismus. Ein Schicksalsunglück ist die Leugnung oder Verkennung des Christus. Eine Seelenblindheit ist die Leugnung oder Verkennung des Geistes. Sie sehen schon hier, man muß schon einen völlig neuen Begriff von der Entwickelung haben, wenn man die Entwickelung des Menschengeschlechtes richtig verstehen will. Denn der Begriff von Entwickelung, wie er im Darwinismus herrscht, ist furchtbar abstrakt, und in dem Augenblick, wo die ganz grobe Wirklichkeit dem Darwinismus nicht mehr zur Verfügung steht, da weiß der Darwinismus eigentlich mit dem Entwickelungsbegriff nicht mehr viel anzufangen. Denn die Entwickelung hat einen aufsteigenden und absteigenden Ast, wie wir gesehen haben, während wir heute so leicht im Sinne des Materialismus denken: Nun, Entwickelung ist Ausgangspunkt von einer Form des Daseins, die nächste Form wird erreicht, die nächste und so weiter, und man glaubt, das schreitet so immer zum Vollkommeneren weiter.
Die Entwickelung der Menschen in der nachatlantischen Zeit ist so, daß allerdings die Unabhängigkeit des Seelisch-Geistigen von dem Körperlichen immer größer und größer wird; aber auf den früheren Entwickelungsstufen schießt aus dem Körperlichen herauf in das Seelisch-Geistige das Begreifen des Vaters, des Sohnes und des Heiligen Geistes. Das Begreifen des Geistes nimmt zuerst ab, das Begreifen des Sohnes schwindet dann, und jetzt stehen wir auf dem Weg, wo das Begreifen des Vater-Gottes schwinden wird für das äußere normale Leben — das gefühlsmäßige Begreifen! Denn ich sagte ja: Es ist ein mehr oder weniger deutliches Bewußtsein vorhanden von diesem Zusammenhang des Seelisch-Geistigen mit dem KörperlichPhysischen.
Aber das hängt noch mit etwas anderem zusammen. Denken Sie, daß die körperliche Organisation überhaupt immer weniger und weniger hergibt, daß der Mensch, wenn er dem Geiste nahekommen will, zu Wegen greifen muß, auf denen ihn die körperliche Organisation nicht unterstützt. Daher kommt es, daß für denjenigen, der die Dinge beobachten kann, ein deutliches Zurückgehen in dem Umfang der Vorstellungen überhaupt stattfindet. Die Vorstellungen, die dem Menschen in alten Zeiten zur Verfügung standen, ich möchte sagen, die kochte sein Leib aus, indem er aus sich heraus das Geistige hergab, das ja in allem Materiellen steckt. Aber jetzt kocht der Leib immer weniger und weniger Vorstellungen und Begriffe aus, so daß — wenn man es radikal ausdrücken will - immer mehr und mehr die Zeit eintreten muß, wo der Mensch sein Hirn zermartern wird — oder, wenn er zu bequem ist, es auch nicht zermartern wird -, aber er findet nicht Begriffe, weil sie das Gehirn nicht von selbst hergibt. Er muß sich an die Geisteswissenschaft wenden, welche ihm Begriffe gibt, die nur mit dem Ätherleib, nicht mehr mit dem physischen Leib verstanden werden können, bewegliche Begriffe, nicht jene starren, toten Begriffe, die der physische Leib hergibt. So daß die natürliche Entwickelung des Menschen dahin geht, daß er immer ärmer wird an Begriffen, daß ihn diese natürliche Organisation hindert, in die Wirklichkeit unterzutauchen, wenn er nicht die Wege des geistigen Erkennens wählen will.
Das führt auch hinein in das Verständnis der Gegenwart, das führt zum Verständnis dessen, was wirklich gesagt werden muß, ohne daß irgendwie dabei Kritik ausgeübt werden soll, nur eine Kennzeichnung soll es sein, daß die Menschheit immer stumpfsinniger und stumpfsinniger wird durch ihr natürliches Dasein, wenn sie nicht geistige Erkenntniswege wählt. Solchen Dingen muß man sich mit vollem Ernste gegenüberstellen. Das vermineralisierte Gehirn — und es wird immer mehr und mehr vermineralisieren —, das wird stumpf und kann nicht mehr Begriffe bilden, die in die Wirklichkeit wirklich untertauchen können. Nur derjenige, der sich keine Mühe gibt, hineinzuschauen in das Getriebe der Gegenwart, und der nicht das Bedürfnis hat zu verstehen, was eigentlich in der Gegenwart ist, der kann an diesen Dingen vorbeigehen. Aber es ist wirklich dringend notwendig, daß man versucht, dieses recht zu verstehen.
Und es ist merkwürdig, was einem da für Erscheinungen entgegentreten. Man muß nur die Zeit nicht verschlafen! Die meisten Menschen verschlafen jetzt die Zeit, indem sie das, was eigentlich die wirksamen Impulse sind, nicht sehen, sondern nur die Äußerlichkeiten desjenigen, was vorgeht. Man muß nur achten auf dasjenige, was vorgeht, dann wird man schon darauf kommen, daß in der Gegenwart unendlich viel Rätselvolles ist. Um es zu verstehen, braucht man die Begriffe, die aus der Geisteswissenschaft kommen, sonst fühlt man sich eben hilflos; denn irgendwo müssen ja diese Begriffe herkommen. Nehmen Sie ein Beispiel. Es ist immerhin kein schlechtes Beispiel, das ich hier anführen will. Ein strebender Mensch sucht seit Jahrzehnten in Österreich etwas zu entfachen, was er eine kulturpolitische Bewegung nennt. Scheu heißt der Mann. Was versucht er? Er charakterisiert die hier öfter schon charakterisierten Verhältnisse. Er versucht, die intellektuellen Leute zusammenzufassen, um mit ihnen neue Formen des politischen Lebens zu finden, durch welche dem Geist eine größere Macht über die Geschicke der Völker gesichert werden könnte.
Ein sehr löbliches Beginnen, wenn man es erreichen könnte, daß dem Geiste eine größere Macht über die Geschicke der Völker gesichert werden könnte, indem man die Intellektuellen zusammenfassen würde. Warum hat der Mann in den neunziger Jahren bereits begonnen mit diesen Dingen? Er hat begonnen, weil er etwas wie einen dunklen Trieb hatte, daß es so, wie es ging, nicht weitergehen könne, daß da etwas zu fehlen, etwas zu mangeln beginne, das man hereinbringen müsse in die Menschheit. Er hat selbstverständlich bis jetzt nicht dasjenige finden können, was nötig ist, in die Menschheit hereinzubringen, denn Geisteswissenschaft ist ja selbstverständlich für solche Leute, auch wenn sie schon mehr oder weniger deutlich fühlen, was mangelt, eine Phantasterei, abergläubische Hinterwäldlerei. Dazu sind sie zu gescheit, darauf wollen sie sich nicht einlassen, nicht wahr. Nun, er fühlt eigentlich recht deutlich, was in der Gegenwart mangelt, und er drückt es so aus:
«Ich will meinen Grundgedanken hier wiederholen. In der Erkenntnis, im Gedanklichen ist unsere Zeit unserer Zeit weit voraus.»
Ein merkwürdiger Satz. Was wollte denn der Mann? Daß die Gedanken etwa stumpf geworden sind, das drückt er nicht aus, sondern er weiß nur: Die heutigen Intellektuellen — abstrakte Gedanken können sie wunderbar bilden! Alles geht bei ihnen wie am Schnürchen, sie sind überzeugt, weil sie alles so klar wissen können. Also:
«In der Erkenntnis, im Gedanklichen ist unsere Zeit unserer Zeit weit voraus.»
Das heißt: Die Leute können gut denken, aber die Gedanken sind von solcher Art, wie ich es dargestellt habe. «Unsere Zeit ist weit hinter unserer Zeit zurück.» Derselbe Gedanke, nur in anderer Form.
«Als Erkennende, als Wissende, sind wir überreif und bis ins Unerlaubte verfeinert.»
Das sind wir auch, wir Menschen der Gegenwart. Man braucht ja nur in der Literatur oder sonst im Leben Umschau zu halten. Denken Sie doch, was die Leute für feine Gedanken ausdenken! Nur sind diese Gedanken nicht geeignet, die Wirklichkeit zu ergreifen, unterzutauchen in die Wirklichkeit. Also:
«Als Erkennende, als Wissende sind wir überreif und bis ins Unerlaubte verfeinert und erleuchtet; im realen Leben herrscht noch das Mittelalter. Die Ursache liegt darin, daß der Hochofen, worin die Gedanken in Realität umgeschmolzen werden sollen, nicht funktioniert.»
Er drückt die Sache gefühlsmäßig merkwürdig richtig aus. Der Hochofen funktioniert nicht, wodurch die Gedanken, die im Abstrakten, Nebulosen herumirren, nicht so innerlich durchkrafter werden können, daß sie wirklich mit der Wirklichkeit sich verbinden könnten. Das fühlte er. Und er hat eigentlich etwas getan, was von seinem Gesichtspunkte aus gar nicht schlecht ist. Er sagte sich ungefähr so: An abstrakten Gedanken sind die Menschen überreif; da haben eine Reihe von Leuten den abstrakten Gedanken des Sozialismus, der Sozialdemokratie, den drechseln sie aus. - Man kann ja wirklich sagen, es ist eigentlich mit wunderbarer Logizität durchgeführt gerade im Marzismus dieser abstrakte Gedanke des Sozialdemokratischen; da ist der abstrakte Gedanke des Sozialdemokratischen, da ist der abstrakte Gedanke des Liberalismus durchgeführt. Man kann dann auch kombinierte Gedanken abstrakt durchführen: Nationalliberalismus, sogar Sozialliberalismus. Der abstrakte Gedanke des Konservativismus, er ist da. Nach diesen abstrakten Gedanken, die abstrakt sind — denn der Hochofen fehlt, durch den sie in die Wirklichkeit eingreifen können -, bildet man den Parlamentarismus, das Repräsentativsystem, bildet alle die Ideen des Liberalismus, Sozialliberalismus, der Sozialdemokratie, des Konservativismus, des Nationalismus aus. Robert Scheu versucht einfach mit den Mitteln, die ihm zur Verfügung stehen, an die Stelle dieser Abstraktionen die Wirklichkeit zu setzen, indem er an die Stelle des abstrakten Gedankens die Enquete setzt. Er sagt: Entscheiden sollen über die Sachen diejenigen, die etwas von ihnen verstehen. Nicht wahr, ob einer liberal oder konservativ ist, das macht nicht viel aus, wenn es sich darum handelt, den Petroleumhandel zu organisieren, oder darum, Kunstanstalten einzurichten, denn da handelt es sich darum, daß er von Kunst etwas versteht. Und so hat denn in der Tat Robert Scheu Enqueten auf den verschiedensten Gebieten veranstaltet, um die Leute reden zu lassen, die etwas davon verstehen. Das war ein ganz niedlicher Anfang.
«Was ist dieser Hochofen?» sagt er. «Das Repräsentativsystem und das Parlament. Wo ist die Realität? In der Verwaltung. — Wer hält am Repräsentativsystem fest? Die Parteien. — Das sind abstrakte Gebilde mit prinzipiellen Programmen, die widerstreitende reale Interessen in sich zusammenfassen. Die Gegenstände des wirklichen Lebens werden von den Parteien nicht erfaßt, die nur aus deduktivem Denken an die Wirklichkeit herantreten. Sie interessieren sich für die wirklichen Gegenstände des Lebens nur insofern, als sie daraus einen Zuwachs ihrer Macht erwarten.»
Hier fühlt einer sogar einmal, daß dieses Verfeinertsein im Gedanken — wir können auch sagen Stumpfwerden im Gedanken, weil die Gedanken nicht mehr wirklichkeitsverwandt sind -, daß das für das Leben eine unmittelbare Bedeutung hat. Denn an diese Fragen knüpft der Mann die Frage der Weiterentwickelung des öffentlichen Lebens, ob Repräsentativsystem oder etwas anderes, wobei er natürlich nicht an Reaktion von alten Formen denkt, sondern wirklich darüber nachdenkt, wie man aus der Wirklichkeit heraus etwas finden könne, was die Struktur des sozialen Lebens in Ordnung bringen kann, Da hat er manches geschaffen im Laufe der Zeit. Aber jetzt ist es interessant, jetzt hält er wiederum einmal so eine Art Rückschau nach dem, was ihm gelungen ist. Er sagt sich: Was habe ich eigentlich versucht? — Versucht hat er an die Wirklichkeit heranzudringen, wie man heute mit stumpfen Begriffen sagt: Ich habe an die Stelle der Deduktion die Induktion gesetzt. — Nun, so drückt man es heute mit den stumpfen Begriffen aus. Man kann das überall lesen. Aber befriedigt fühlt sich der Mann nicht, wirklich nicht. Und deshalb sagt er am Schlusse des Aufsatzes, wo er die ganze Geschichte erzählt:
«Ich aber bin zu der Erkenntnis gekommen, daß meine induktive Kulturpolitik doch einer Ergänzung durch ein deduktives Programm bedarf, daß man den Tunnel von zwei Seiten anbohren muß, um den Durchbruch zu erarbeiten. Die dazu nötige Denkarbeit müßte von allen guten Europäern gemeinsam geleistet werden.»
Sie sehen, der Mann geht selbst bis zu dem Bilde, daß man den Tunnel von zwei Seiten anbohren muß, nur kann er nicht an diejenige Quelle heran, wo heute wirklichkeitsverwandte Begriffe zu holen sind. Er bleibt also zunächst stehen, würde wahrscheinlich auch nicht glauben, daß sein sogenannter induktiver Weg durch alle möglichen Enqueten denn doch eben nur die eine Anbohrung des Tunnels ist; die andere ist das Aufsuchen der geistigen Entitäten, wo die Geisteswissenschaft eben die andere Seite der Wirklichkeit enthält.
Die unmittelbare Lebenspraxis fordert dasjenige, was Geisteswissenschaft eigentlich meint. Und es ist nicht irgendein abstruser Gedanke, wenn davon gesprochen wird: Geisteswissenschaft ist dasjenige, was gebraucht wird von dem Leben! — sondern es ist durchaus aus dem Leben heraus, aber aus dem Leben, indem man es erfaßt in dem Moment, wo es in der gegenwärtigen Entwickelungsepoche der Menschheit steht. Denken Sie nur, wie fruchtbar diese Geisteswissenschaft würde, wenn die Menschen jene Binde sich von den Augen nehmen könnten, die sie heute noch so dick vor den Augen haben. Denn das ist in der Tat dasjenige, was von der anderen Seite des Tunnels die Anbohrung braucht. Ohne das wird man trotzdem nur zu Absurditäten kommen. Daß dann im einzelnen allerlei niedliche Sachen passieren, das fällt einem natürlich gleich auf, wenn man in den beweglichen Begriffen der Geisteswissenschaft lebt. Enqueten stellt Robert Scheu an, also über die verschiedenen Lebenszweige läßt er die Leute reden, die etwas davon verstehen. Er führt unter den Dingen, die durch solche Enqueten geändert werden sollen, zum Beispiel auch das Meldewesen an. Denken Sie einmal, wenn jetzt über das Meldewesen durch eine Enquete entschieden werden sollte!
Sie haben hier so recht ein Beispiel, wie die Menschen anfangen zu fühlen, daß etwas fehlt, aber sich nicht entschließen können, zu dem zu gehen, was nun wirklich notwendig ist, um die Sache weiterzuführen. Es ist sehr merkwürdig, was man gerade auf diesem Gebiet für Erfahrungen macht. Es war wirklich von vornherein mein Bestreben, Geisteswissenschaft nicht in jene abstruse Bahnen zu geleiten, wozu sie ein sektiererischer Sinn geleiten möchte, sondern sie je nach den Bedürfnissen der Menschen einzugeleiten in das Leben. Ich versuchte, jedem Menschen, wenn er einen Rat hören wollte, je nach seiner Individualität einen Rat zu geben. Nehmen wir ein Beispiel. Heute ist es ja ungeheuer schwer, ich möchte sagen, bis in die materialistische Lebenspraxis mit einem solchen Rat hineinzugehen. Denn die Fabrikdirektoren werden einem sonderbar kommen, wenn man sagt, daß durch Geisteswissenschaft ihr Betrieb besser betrieben werden könnte als durch ihre sogenannte Praxis. Aber man konnte hoffen, daß es doch an einem Punkte ginge.
Da trat vor Jahren ein Mann an mich heran und sagte, er möchte seine Wissenschaftlichkeit befruchten durch die Geisteswissenschaft. Wir sprachen nun über seine Wissenschaftlichkeit. Er war ein wunderbarer Gelehrter; babylonisch-ägyptische Altertumskunde, das wurde wirklich in hohem Grade von ihm beherrscht. Ich versuchte mit ihm zusammen, wie die Fäden gezogen werden können, wie das, was die Geisteswissenschaft gibt, befruchtend eingreifen kann, nun, wenigstens in diese Wissenschaft, so daß wenigstens ein Stück, möchte ich sagen, eben der Wissenschaft, wie sie heute getrieben wird, befruchtet werden kann. Das, was die Wissenschaft heute geben kann, das wußte er auf seinem Gebiet; Geisteswissenschaft fand er bei uns. Das Babylonische und Ägyptische war auf der einen Seite, die Geisteswissenschaft auf der anderen Seite; beides hatte er, aber den Willen, sie wirklich zu durchdringen gegenseitig, sie zu verbinden: er konnte ihn nicht aufbringen! Wenn man aber diesen Willen nicht entwickelt, so wird man niemals verstehen, was eigentlich mit der Geisteswissenschaft gemeint ist. Man wird immer mehr und mehr dazu neigen, die Geisteswissenschaft zu jener zweifelhaften Mystik zu machen, zu welcher sie die Leute, die zum Leben nicht zu brauchen sind, machen möchten, unter dem Eindruck: Das Leben ist nichts wert, man muß aufsteigen zu einem höheren Leben, man muß aus dieser Welt des sinnlichen Anschauens in die Träumerei aufsteigen, da ergibt sich das Höhere dann. Wozu denn hier ordentlich seine Kinder erziehen, lieber nachdenken, was man früher für Inkarnationen hatte! Das ist das, was einen in die höheren Regionen bringt und so weiter. - Darum handelt es sich nicht, sondern darum handelt es sich, auf dem Gebiete, auf dem man eben steht, Geisteswissenschaft fruchtbar zu machen. Sie kann überall fruchtbar gemacht werden, das Leben fordert sie.
Das ist dasjenige, wofür man, ich möchte sagen, nicht bloß Worte haben möchte, um es heute begreiflich zu machen. Denn Worte sind wirklich schon recht abgebrauchte Verkehrsmünzen geworden. Wer fühlt denn heute eigentlich noch bei den Worten, was in ihnen liegt? Wer fühlt denn so recht sich hinein in die Worte? Fühlen mit den Worten, das ist etwas, was die Menschheit fast ganz verloren hat, wenigstens in dem Teil der Menschheit, dem wir angehören. Denken Sie, wenn heute einer sagt — lassen Sie mich das Beispiel gebrauchen -: Nun, du hast deine Aufgabe ziemlich gut gemacht; wer fühlt dann viel mehr bei diesen Worten als: Du hast deine Aufgabe fast gut gemacht. Das ist das, was man heute fühlt. «Ziemlich» ist «fast» gut. Wir sagen das eine statt des anderen. Legen Sie die Hand aufs Herz, ob Sie nicht bei dem Worte «ziemlich gut» das Gefühl haben: «fast gut», und das eine für das andere gebrauchen. Und doch: «ziemlich» ist ein Wort, das derselben Familie angehört, wie «geziemend sein, sich geziemen». Wenn ich etwas ziemlich gut mache, mache ich es so, daß ich es auf die geziemende Art gut bekomme, auf eine leichte Art; ich mache es nicht bloß gut, sondern so, daß mein Tun keine Schwierigkeiten hat, sondern geziemend ist; ich habe es in der Hand. Wer fühlt denn in dem Worte «ziemlich» noch das «geziemend» drinnen? Oder wer fühlt in dem Worte Zweifel, daß darinnen steckt das Zwei, daß man da einer Sache gegenübersteht, die sich zweiteilt? Wer fühlt überhaupt dieses zw, z-w? Sie haben aber überall, wo zw auftritt, dieselbe Empfindung wie bei Zweifel, wenn sich die Sache zweiteilt. Zwischen — da haben Sie dasselbe! Zweck, Zweifel, zwar — versuchen Sie, es zu fühlen! In allen Lautzusammenhängen kann Gefühl drinnen liegen. Aber die Worte sind heute eben recht wertlose Scheidemünzen. Deshalb möchte man schon etwas anderes als die Sprache haben, um eindringlich zu machen, was heute nötig ist, und was Geisteswissenschaft geben könnte. Diese Sprache, wie sie heute getrieben wird, sie ist so, daß sie noch mehr als es ohnedies schon der Fall ist durch die natürliche Entwickelung, das Denken abstumpft, und in einem Wust von Schreibereien und Druckereien stumpfes Denken zutage tritt.
Man könnte Blut schwitzen, wie es mir heute morgen fast passiert ist, wo ich ein Buch in die Hand nahm, das geben soll die große Bedeutung des Unterschiedes der Ideen von 1789 und 1914, von Dr. Johann Plenge, ordentlicher Professor der Staatswissenschaften an der Universität Münster in Westfalen. Der Mann macht den Anspruch, den großen Gegensatz herauszuschälen aus der neueren Entwickelung, der besteht zwischen den Ideen von 1789 und 1914. Die Idee von 1914 hat er, wie er behauptet, ja eigentlich erfunden. Er hält sich für einen riesig großen Mann. Darauf wollen wir aber jetzt nicht eingehen. Seite 61 des Buches lese ich den Satz — ich will jetzt pedantisch sein, aber diese Pedanterie bedeutet etwas Feineres, und diejenigen, die das fühlen können, die werden es schon fühlen — also Seite 61 gab mir der Satz eine Ohrfeige - verzeihen Sie den Ausdruck: «Wo man also das eine kennt, muß man das andere suchen. Denken wir uns in die Seele eines Geschichtsschreibers der Zukunft, der dereinst von der Weltkatastrophe von 1914 hört.» - Was soll man sich mit diesem Satz aufbinden lassen? Einen Geschichtsschreiber der Zukunft stellt sich der Mann vor, der plötzlich hört von der Weltkatastrophe von 1914. Also er hat während seiner ganzen Jugend nichts gehört, sondern erst als Geschichtsschreiber der Zukunft hört er plötzlich davon! Man muß wirklich nicht mehr im lebendigen Vorstellen drinnenleben, um solch ein Zeug hinstellen zu können. Dann sucht er von der Bedeutung der Ideen zu sprechen, sucht zu sprechen davon, daß es Ideen in der Geschichte gibt, daß Ideen aufsteigen, Ideen zurückgehen können, und er sucht so hinter den Charakter und die Natur der Ideen zu kommen. Und während er das tut, während er das versucht, da leistet er sich denn an einer Stelle das Folgende: Er versucht zu zeigen, wie bei primitiven Völkerstämmen Ideen so unbewußt aufdämmern, dann bewußter werden. Er sagt: «Ein werdendes Kulturvolk lebt nach dem Vorbild eines vorgestellten veredelten Menschentums. Das schönste Muster einer solchen Ideenbildung ist die Stellung Homers in der Antike.»
Also denken Sie: Die Stellung Homers in der Antike ist das Beispiel einer Ideenbildung! Was ungefähr so viel heißt als: Wenn einer Hofrat ist, so ist das das Beispiel einer Ideenbildung. Es ist unmöglich, sich bei so etwas was zu denken, wenn man mit seinen Gedanken lebendige Vorstellungen verknüpfen will. Wenn man allerdings das gewohnt ist von Jugend auf, so bekommt man wirklich Ohrfeigen bei solchen Sätzen, die nur ein Wortgedrechsel sind. Sie erinnern mich sehr lebhaft an jenen Professor, der ein Kolleg begonnen hat, indem er 25 Fragen aufwarf, einen Professor, der sehr, sehr berühmt geworden ist, einen Literaturprofessor. Ich will nicht sagen, wer es ist, sonst könnten Sie mir nicht einmal glauben. Er stellte 25 Fragen, dann sagte er: Meine Herren! Ich habe Sie in einen Wald von Fragezeichen geführt! — Ich mußte mir vorstellen einen Wald von Fragezeichen hintereinander. Denken Sie nur, was das für ein Denken ist, so seine Gedanken nicht verwirklichen, nicht leben in seinen Gedanken, so mit seinen Gedanken Worte drechseln.
Das lebt sich dann allerdings in merkwürdiger Weise in der Gesinnung eines solchen Menschen aus. Da kommt man auf höchst Merkwürdiges; der Mann sagt: Der ganz richtige Historiker, der sucht eigentlich wie der Astronom die Dinge vorauszuberechnen. Und nun bemüht sich der gute Mann, zu zeigen, wie sich die Wirtschaftsverhältnisse entwickelt haben gegen diese jetzige Kriegskatastrophe zu. Da sagt er: Der wirkliche Historiker kann wie der Astronom solch eine Katastrophe vorausberechnen. — Nun, er hält sich auf der einen Seite für einen wirklich so großen Historiker, der das können müßte, aber er hat es nun nicht gekonnt, trotzdem er viele Bücher geschrieben hat über das wirtschaftliche Leben. Das stört ihn. Deshalb erzählt er, wie er es eigentlich gemacht hat. Wie hat er es gemacht? Er sagt: Nun ja, ich habe gezeigt auf der einen Seite, daß die wirtschaftliche Entwickelung so ist, daß man eigentlich mit allen Mächten und Kräften dem Frieden zustreben müßte; und dann habe ich wieder gezeigt, daß sie aber auch so ist, daß nur der Krieg kommen konnte. — Nun, das ist ja eine unzweifelhaft richtige Prophetie, nicht wahr; das ist, wie wenn ich zwei Röcke habe und sage: Wenn ich nicht den einen anziehe morgen, dann werde ich den andern anziehen. Aber glauben Sie nicht, daß solch eine innere Frivolität in Begriffen nicht Folgen hätte, denn da, wo er nun davon spricht, wie er so geschwankt hat, ob er nun den blauen Rock oder — nein, den Frieden oder den Krieg prophezeien soll, da sagt er — ja, er zitiert sich selber, es ist mit den Zitaten überhaupt eine merkwürdige Sache in diesem Buch -, er sagt: «Aber es ist notwendig, daß die Phantasie mit diesem Kriege spielt.» Nun denken Sie sich diese Gesinnung! Er hielt es eben für notwendig, nicht mit mehr Ernst zu reden, sondern daß die Phantasie mit dem Kriege spielt, in den Jahren, die zu dieser Katastrophe hingeführt haben.
Ich sagte, mit dem Zitieren ist es in diesem Buche eine eigentümliche Sache. Das ganze Buch ist nämlich eine Anlehnung an einen Artikel, der in der Tageszeitung erschienen ist. Dieser Artikel ist ein unschuldiges Ding; da hat sich einfach ein unbekannter Journalist aufgelehnt gegen die Idee von 1914, die Plenge ja «erfunden» hat. Das ist merkwürdig in seiner Buchmacherei. Denn da liest man den Artikel auf der ersten Seite, soweit Plenge ihn bringen will, um daran anzuknüpfen. Dann redet er über den Artikel; dann kommt man auf Seite 21, da zitiert er ihn noch einmal, so daß der Artikel von der Tageszeitung schon zweimal dasteht. Dann redet er weiter. Dann zitiert er einzelne Stücke aus dem Artikel; da liest man ihn also ein drittes Mal. Und am Schlusse, weil er ihn erst dreimal zitiert hat, bringt er ihn noch einmal, so daß man in diesem Buche einen Artikel der Tageszeitung viermal zitiert hat.
Ich muß schon an solchen konkreten Beispielen die Dinge, wie sie liegen, klarmachen, um zeigen zu können, was notwendig ist, und um auch zeigen zu können, wie Geisteswissenschaft wirklich das Instrument ist, das in der Gegenwart einzugreifen hat. Diese Dinge, die scheinbar Kleinigkeiten sind, hängen mit den großen Gesichtspunkten, von denen wir ausgegangen sind, durchaus zusammen, Das bitte ich Sie, aus diesen Betrachtungen festzuhalten.
Second Lecture
Last time, I began to reflect on the course of human development in the post-Atlantean era, which can, in a sense, be a key to understanding the immediate present, that immediate present in which, however, there must be many mysteries for those who do not attempt to understand this present with concepts, ideas, and images that are not taken from the source of imagination and the realm of imagination of our materialistic age. The present needs new concepts, as should already be clear from various considerations. The old concepts are not sufficient to comprehend life, which has become so complicated. What I once stated in succession in various lectures years ago is, I believe, of great significance with regard to the present. I said repeatedly at various places at that time: When we survey the scope of the concepts we have, the concepts through which we seek to understand reality, then basically the most valuable concepts that humanity has for looking a little behind the scenes of external sensory reality come from the fourth post-Atlantean period. The fifth post-Atlantean period, which began in 1413, has not really produced any new concepts. It has certainly produced new facts, new summaries of facts, in a magnificent and admirable way; but in order to understand these things, the old concepts were used. Let us try to clarify this with an example. What Darwin and his followers attempted to compile about the connection between organisms was arranged according to the concept of evolution, but the concept of evolution itself is not new. The concept of evolution itself originates from the fourth post-Atlantean period. And so, if one takes the concept seriously, takes the essence of the concept seriously, one can prove this through all our ways of understanding, our ways of seeing things.
A certain step forward was basically only taken when Goethe made the old concepts fluid, when he brought something completely new that is still not appreciated today, namely that he applied metamorphosis, the ability to transform, to the concept itself, so that for him the concept of the leaf in its transformation could at the same time become the concept of the flower, the fruit, and so on. This making of the concept mobile, the making of the idea mobile, so that one can change the same idea in the soul and with it follow the manifold phenomena of nature, which are also mobile in themselves, with a concept that is mobile in itself, an idea that is mobile in itself, is in a certain sense something new, and that is what I called many years ago Goethe's central discovery. It is something truly new. But it has only found a continuation in what we here call spiritual science, and only this spiritual science can bring humanity new ideas, new concepts, through which it becomes possible to enter into reality and immerse oneself in it.
Above all, the concept of history itself must be expanded, and in our recent reflections we have always, I would say, done this by working with an expanded concept of history. We have expanded the concept of history in such a way that we have first of all made ourselves familiar with how the soul life of human beings, even if we do not go back very far in the centuries, was in fact completely different in its overall constitution, in its overall mood, from the soul life that it must be today according to the necessities of human development. I pointed out last time that the people of the first cultural period, the people of the original Indian culture, remained capable of development until an age that can be limited to between 56 and 48 years. I tried to illustrate this by saying that just as today only children and young people show a parallelism between their spiritual life and their physical life, so it was in that ancient cultural epoch of humanity until well into the fifties. Today, people no longer notice anything from their bodies once they pass the age of 30. They only perceive the soul out of their bodies when they grow stronger in their muscles from childhood onwards and undergo various formations in their nerves. They then perceive how, with the strengthening of the muscles, with the change in the formation of the nerves, with the transformation of the blood in the organism, the soul-spiritual phenomena run parallel to these changes in the physical organism. But then this dependence of the spiritual-soul life on the physical organism ceases. It remained, however, in those ancient times, about which we now have a few words to say.
Certainly, even then, from childhood onwards, human beings perceived, in a more or less clear consciousness — even today this happens only in a more or less clear consciousness — how they grew stronger physically and how, with this, the will changed, how feeling changed, how imagination also changed. They noticed, therefore, their dependence in childhood and youth on growth, blossoming, flourishing, on the ascending life in their organism. Then came the middle of life, which lies in the thirties; the 35th year is, after all, the middle of life. Today, people are not aware of being dependent in the same way in middle age as they are between the ages of 12 and 16, for example, when they are approaching sexual maturity. At that time, however, people knew they were dependent on this because they felt it within themselves: before that, life rose, it increased, it reached a peak; from this peak it descends again, one no longer grows, one no longer becomes greater, one has essentially completed one's nervous formation, one begins to remain as one is. Yes, if one had more refined feelings for this, one could also sense how life becomes wooden, goes downhill, how a kind of ossification begins, how man begins—if we may use the expression—to mineralize. Then came the forties, with life beginning to decline decisively, when one feels that life in the physical organism is receding. But in those days, people had something that people today no longer have: they had the spiritual experience of their dependence on the decline of the physical body. In those ancient times, people went through three stages, so to speak; today, people go through one stage at most. How did what they went through in these three stages express itself? Well, let us look very clearly at the dependence on growth, blossoming, and flourishing in the ascending life, and let us first assume that human beings really felt healthy within themselves — which very few people do today — really felt this healthy, ascending, growing, and flourishing life, felt how this ascending, growing, and flourishing life is spiritually sustained. For the mere physical substances that we take in through food, for example, do not grow. What causes growth, increase, and upward development is the spiritual forces that underlie them. One could look back on one's human origin and say: I have emerged from hereditary substances, I have my origin as a physical human being, the spiritual has united with the body and carries me upward. In this healthy dependence of the spiritual-soul on the physical, in this feeling of the spiritual-soul being contained within the physical, people at that time felt the working of God, namely of the Father-God within themselves. For people said to themselves: I have been placed in the world with the power to ascend, with the power to flourish. — And if one is not thoughtless and unfeeling toward what is ascending within oneself, then one feels in one's soul the growth, the flourishing itself, as the working of God the Father within oneself. One feels connected with nature. Just as plants and animals grow and flourish, so one grows and flourishes oneself; one feels connected with natural existence and one feels God the Father within oneself. What I have described as occurring today in certain encounters was simply felt in those ancient times in normal life in the way I have now described.
And now began the period in individual life when the middle of life was passed, when one passed from the growing, increasing, flourishing life through the culmination, through the high point, to the descending. Just as the growing, flourishing life teaches the spiritual-soul, which knows itself to be dependent on it, when everything in the human being is healthy, the feeling of ex deo nascimur, I am born of God, I have my origin in God, who allows me to continue to grow and flourish, so this passing over the culmination, this transcending of the climax, that when human beings feel as they did in those ancient times, they still feel prosperity in their ordinary waking life, partly because they remember the former dependence of the spiritual-soul life on the physical-bodily life and because they can observe the same growth and prosperity outside in nature. But when they were in the twilight state in those ancient times, when atavism still existed, then the descending life had an effect — this descending life is actually left behind, with the astral body and the I, but they are connected with the physical body; one is particularly dependent on one's diminishing powers when one sleeps — then people perceived the divine-spiritual in natural existence in the descending life. In the descending life, which appears to you especially in dreams, in sleep, and in ancient atavistic clairvoyance, where the physical recedes and begins to sclerotize, the soul begins to settle into the spiritual that is in the entire cosmic environment.
Think what an experience that is: one feels the transition. Spirit or God-animated nature alternates with the perception of the spirit from the cosmos, and one knows: one is rising, the other is descending. The union of the cosmic spirit with the natural spirit became an immediate experience. One knew: in the earthly environment is the cosmic spirit, here on earth is the natural spirit, but the two are connected, they flow into each other; and as human beings live, they pass from one to the other. Starting from growing life and passing the culmination point, they are swept by the cosmic spirit, which was later found in Christ.
Then, when people grew older, beyond the age of forty — because until then they knew themselves to be dependent in their soul and spirit life on their declining physical life, especially in the dream, sleep-filled, or twilight states — then people became aware of the spirit as such, which is now no longer bound to matter, but lives as spirit. They truly perceived the spirit from the forties, the spirit that is now not bound to nature, the Holy Spirit. So that when we go back to those ancient times, we find in these people a direct perception through life of the Father-God, of the Christ-God who had not yet descended to earthly existence, and of the Holy Spirit. It is based on this direct experience of life that the divine Trinity appears in ancient religious traditions, that wherever you look, you find this divine Trinity, Brahma, Vishnu, Shiva. The ancient traditions are based entirely on real human experience. If one were to go into what must be gone into in spiritual science, into the way in which one truth carries another, then one would come to recognize spiritual science as something that is entirely self-supporting. This should be understood more and more; otherwise, we will end up with what an outsider recently said to a member: Yes, what is presented as spiritual science is very beautiful, but it has no foundation, it stands without a foundation. — The statement is just as clever, I could also say just as stupid, as if someone, at the moment when Copernicus had to establish that the earth revolves around the sun, i.e., does not sit on a foundation, had said: Yes, the Earth has no ground! What about the planets and stars, they must be sitting on something! They carry themselves physically there. And spiritual science is a structure of which one must simply know, see, and understand that the individual members carry themselves.
Then came the ancient Persian epoch, when people remained capable of development in the way I have described until their forties, from the age of 48 to 42. You will now recognize what receded at that time. What receded in particular was the view of the spirit as such, but it could still be recognized. Those who reached the age of 48 to 42 could still recognize the spirit in its purity, that is, the Holy Spirit; they could still know something about it.
But then came the Chaldean-Egyptian epoch. The lifespan of humanity declined to the years from 42 to 35. The pure vision of the spirit became clouded, and at the end of this Egyptian-Chaldean epoch, only those who had been initiated into the mysteries could still know anything about the pure spirit; for, of course, in the mysteries the mystery of the Trinity could be taught clearly everywhere. But in normal life, understanding of the spirit declined. In contrast, in this third post-Atlantean period, the Egyptian-Chaldean period, there was still a high degree of consciousness: in the cosmic-heavenly realm there lives a spirit that ascends and descends. The awareness of the cosmic Christ was still quite general. One could say that the connection between human beings and the heavens was present in consciousness.
This changed when the fourth post-Atlantean period began, when in the fourth period the general age of humanity declined to between 35 and 28 years. In the earliest times — this fourth age began in 747 before the Mystery of Golgotha and ended in 1413 — in the earliest times, when a human being reached the age of 35 in the general human lifespan, the imaginative knowledge of the Christ spirit was still present. But when the first third was over, namely when Greek civilization had passed through the first third, when the beginning of our calendar was recorded, the age of humanity was approximately 33 years. At that time, human beings no longer passed through the culmination point; they only passed through dependence — albeit more clearly than later in the fifth period — dependence on the blossoming, ascending, flourishing life. They included the Father God in their consciousness; the cosmic Christ gradually disappeared from consciousness. And then came that which which can be described as a substitute for this. When humanity had just passed this 33rd year of life, the cosmic Christ descended to earth in the body of Jesus of Nazareth in order to spread his power on earth and to give to human beings from another side what they had previously had through direct human experience in the dependence of the spiritual-soul life on the physical-bodily life. This is the great significance of the mystery of Golgotha. This also explains the meaning of the promise known as the promise of the Holy Spirit. The time had now come when the Holy Spirit had to be attained from within, without normal human experience, through the impulse kindled by Christ. You see how the connection with the spiritual worlds changes purely through the physical organization of the human being in connection with the soul organization, how gradually that which was in the consciousness of the human being through his normal development disappeared.
Then came the fifth post-Atlantean period. The entire human age lasted until the age of 28, and during the fifth period it will recede to the age of 21. Now, as I explained last time, we are living in the general human age of about 27 years. Therefore, it must be emphasized again and again that it is now necessary for something to be kindled within the soul, something that no longer comes from the forces of the body entering the soul, but rather from spiritual impulses built up independently in the soul, which can take hold in the soul and carry it forward in this independence, no longer dependent on the body. But only until around the age of 30, as long as the human being still has something of growth and sprouting within them, even if it is only the growth of muscles, they feel, in a healthy life, with healthy feelings and healthy experiences, their dependence on Father God. So, as you can easily see, with the progress of the fifth post-Atlantean epoch, the healthy feeling for the divine-spiritual living in one's own growth gradually recedes. This was still very much alive, absolutely alive, in the fourth post-Atlantean period. Something of it was still very much present in the fifteenth century. Today, humanity is already one year short of the age that lasts from 35 to 28 and represents the middle of life. And it is in this missing year that humanity today is naturally organized for materialism and atheism. Atheism will spread through the organization of human beings, and if the counterweight, the spiritual counterweight, is not created through the development of a purely soul impulse that proceeds independently of the body, atheism will spread because human beings will no longer be able to experience themselves as complete human beings in good health; something will be taken away from them, namely the experience of a growing, blooming, flourishing life. That is why I could say: One can only really be an atheist — I said this here some time ago — if one does not feel, in full health, the connection between the soul-spiritual and the physical in the whole ascending life. Atheism is actually a disease for spiritual science, but this disease is on the increase in humanity according to its purely natural existence. More and more, people will lack the support for comprehending the whole of reality that they have through their organization.
I described denying or not recognizing Christ as a misfortune of fate, because Christ must come to people from outside in a gracious way. And I described not recognizing the spirit as spiritual blindness. This distinction must be made. A disease—in the broadest sense of the word, of course—is atheism. A misfortune of fate is the denial or misrecognition of Christ. Spiritual blindness is the denial or misrecognition of the spirit. You can already see here that a completely new concept of evolution is necessary if we want to understand the evolution of the human race correctly. For the concept of development as it prevails in Darwinism is terribly abstract, and the moment the very crude reality is no longer available to Darwinism, Darwinism actually no longer knows what to do with the concept of development. For evolution has an ascending and a descending branch, as we have seen, whereas today we think so easily in terms of materialism: Well, evolution is the starting point of one form of existence, the next form is reached, then the next, and so on, and we believe that this always progresses toward greater perfection.
The development of human beings in the post-Atlantean era is such that the independence of the soul-spiritual from the physical becomes greater and greater; but at earlier stages of development, the understanding of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit shoots up from the physical into the soul-spiritual. The understanding of the Spirit diminishes first, then the understanding of the Son disappears, and now we are on the path where the understanding of God the Father will disappear for normal outer life — the emotional understanding! For I have said that there is a more or less clear consciousness of this connection between the soul-spiritual and the physical-material.
But this is connected with something else. Consider that the physical organization is yielding less and less, that if human beings want to come closer to the spirit, they must resort to ways in which the physical organization does not support them. This is why, for those who can observe things, there is a clear decline in the scope of ideas in general. The ideas that were available to people in ancient times, I would say, were cooked up by their bodies as they released the spiritual element that is contained in all material things. But now the body is boiling out fewer and fewer ideas and concepts, so that — to put it radically — the time must come when human beings will rack their brains — or, if they are too comfortable, will not rack their brains — but they will not find concepts because the brain does not produce them of its own accord. He must turn to spiritual science, which gives him concepts that can only be understood with the etheric body, no longer with the physical body, concepts that are flexible, not those rigid, dead concepts that the physical body provides. Thus, the natural development of human beings leads them to become increasingly impoverished in terms of concepts, and this natural organization prevents them from immersing themselves in reality unless they choose the paths of spiritual knowledge.
This also leads to an understanding of the present, to an understanding of what really needs to be said, without any criticism whatsoever, only a recognition that humanity is becoming more and more dull-witted through its natural existence if it does not choose spiritual paths of knowledge. Such things must be faced with complete seriousness. The mineralized brain—and it will become more and more mineralized—becomes dull and can no longer form concepts that can truly immerse themselves in reality. Only those who make no effort to look into the workings of the present and who do not feel the need to understand what is actually happening in the present can pass by these things. But it is really urgent that we try to understand this correctly.
And it is strange what phenomena we encounter there. We must not sleep through this time! Most people are now sleeping through this time by not seeing what are actually the effective impulses, but only the outward appearances of what is happening. One only has to pay attention to what is happening, and then one will realize that there is an infinite amount of mystery in the present. To understand it, one needs the concepts that come from spiritual science, otherwise one feels helpless; for these concepts must come from somewhere. Take an example. It is not a bad example that I want to give here. An ambitious man has been trying for decades in Austria to spark something he calls a cultural-political movement. The man's name is Scheu. What is he trying to do? He characterizes the conditions that have already been described here several times. He is trying to bring intellectual people together to find new forms of political life through which the spirit could be given greater power over the destinies of the peoples.
A very laudable beginning, if it could be achieved that the spirit could be assured greater power over the fate of peoples by bringing intellectuals together. Why did this man begin with these things already in the 1890s? He began because he had a kind of dark impulse that things could not go on as they were, that something was missing, something was beginning to be lacking that had to be brought into humanity. Of course, he has not yet been able to find what is necessary to bring into humanity, because spiritual science is, of course, for such people, even if they already feel more or less clearly what is lacking, a fantasy, superstitious backwoods thinking. They are too clever for that, they don't want to get involved in it, do they? Well, he actually feels quite clearly what is lacking in the present, and he expresses it as follows:
“I want to repeat my basic idea here. In terms of knowledge, in terms of thinking, our time is far ahead of our time.”
A strange sentence. What did the man want? He doesn't say that people's minds have become dull, but he knows one thing: today's intellectuals are wonderful at forming abstract thoughts! Everything runs like clockwork for them; they are convinced because they can know everything so clearly. So:
“In terms of knowledge, in terms of thought, our time is far ahead of our time.”
That means: People are good at thinking, but their thoughts are of the kind I have described. “Our time is far behind our time.” The same thought, only in a different form.
"As cognizant beings, as knowers, we are overripe and refined to the point of impermissibility.”
That is what we are, we humans of the present. One need only look around in literature or elsewhere in life. Just think of the fine thoughts people come up with! But these thoughts are not suited to grasping reality, to diving into reality. So:
“As cognizant beings, as knowledgeable beings, we are overripe and refined and enlightened to the point of impermissibility; in real life, the Middle Ages still reign. The cause lies in the fact that the blast furnace in which thoughts are to be melted down into reality does not work.”
He expresses the matter emotionally and strangely correctly. The blast furnace does not work, which means that thoughts wandering around in the abstract and nebulous cannot become so powerful within themselves that they can really connect with reality. He felt this. And he actually did something that, from his point of view, is not bad at all. He said something like this: People are overripe for abstract ideas; a number of people have the abstract idea of socialism, of social democracy, and they are turning it into something else. One can really say that this abstract idea of social democracy has been carried out with wonderful logic, especially in Marxism; there is the abstract idea of social democracy, there is the abstract idea of liberalism carried out. One can then also carry out combined ideas abstractly: national liberalism, even social liberalism. The abstract idea of conservatism is there. Based on these abstract ideas, which are abstract because they lack the blast furnace through which they can intervene in reality, one forms parliamentarianism, the representative system, and all the ideas of liberalism, social liberalism, social democracy, conservatism, and nationalism. Robert Scheu simply tries, with the means at his disposal, to replace these abstractions with reality by substituting inquiry for abstract thought. He says: Those who understand something should decide about it. It doesn't matter whether someone is liberal or conservative when it comes to organizing the petroleum trade or setting up art institutions, because what matters is that they understand art. And so Robert Scheu has indeed organized enquêtes in a wide variety of fields to let people who understand something about it have their say. That was a very nice beginning.
“What is this blast furnace?” he says. ”The representative system and parliament. Where is reality? In the administration. — Who clings to the representative system? The parties. — These are abstract entities with principled programs that bring together conflicting real interests. The objects of real life are not grasped by the parties, which approach reality only through deductive thinking. They are interested in the real objects of life only insofar as they expect to gain power from them."
Here, one even senses that this refinement of thought — we could also say dullness of thought, because thoughts are no longer related to reality — has immediate significance for life. For this man links these questions to the question of the further development of public life, whether through a representative system or something else, whereby he is not, of course, thinking of a reaction to old forms, but is really thinking about how something can be found in reality that can put the structure of social life in order. He has achieved a great deal in this regard over the course of time. But now it is interesting, now he is once again looking back on what he has achieved. He asks himself: What have I actually tried to do? — He has tried to approach reality, as people say today in blunt terms: I have replaced deduction with induction. — Well, that is how people express it today in blunt terms. You can read that everywhere. But the man does not feel satisfied, not really. And that is why he says at the end of the essay, where he tells the whole story:
"But I have come to the conclusion that my inductive cultural policy needs to be supplemented by a deductive program, that the tunnel must be drilled from two sides in order to achieve a breakthrough. The necessary intellectual work must be done jointly by all good Europeans."
You see, the man himself goes so far as to say that the tunnel must be drilled from two sides, but he cannot access the source where concepts related to reality can be found today. So he stops there for the time being, and would probably not believe that his so-called inductive path through all kinds of inquiries is in fact only one way of drilling into the tunnel; the other is to seek out the spiritual entities where spiritual science contains the other side of reality.
Immediate practical life demands what spiritual science actually means. And it is not some abstruse idea when we say that spiritual science is what life needs! — rather, it comes entirely out of life, but out of life as we grasp it at the moment when it stands in the present epoch of human development. Just think how fruitful this spiritual science would be if people could remove the blinders that are still so thickly over their eyes today. For that is indeed what needs to be tapped into from the other side of the tunnel. Without that, one will only arrive at absurdities. That all sorts of cute things happen in detail is, of course, immediately apparent to anyone who lives in the flexible concepts of spiritual science. Robert Scheu conducts surveys, that is, he lets people who understand something about the various branches of life talk about them. Among the things that such surveys are intended to change, he also mentions the registration system. Just imagine if a survey were to decide on the registration system!
Here you have a good example of how people begin to feel that something is missing, but cannot bring themselves to do what is really necessary to move things forward. It is very strange what experiences are being made in this area. It was really my intention from the outset not to lead spiritual science down those abstruse paths that sectarianism would like to take it, but to introduce it into life according to people's needs. I tried to give each person advice according to their individuality when they wanted advice. Let us take an example. Today it is extremely difficult, I would say, to apply such advice in materialistic everyday life. Factory managers will look at you strangely if you say that spiritual science could improve their business more than their so-called practical experience. But one could hope that it would work at some point.
Years ago, a man approached me and said that he wanted to enrich his scientific knowledge through spiritual science. We talked about his scientific knowledge. He was a wonderful scholar; he had a truly profound knowledge of Babylonian and Egyptian antiquities. Together with him, I tried to see how the threads could be pulled, how spiritual science could have a fruitful influence, at least in this science, so that at least a part, I would say, of science as it is practiced today could be enriched. He knew what science can offer today in his field; he found spiritual science with us. On the one hand there was Babylonian and Egyptian culture, on the other spiritual science; he had both, but he could not muster the will to truly penetrate them, to connect them. But if one does not develop this will, one will never understand what spiritual science actually means. One will increasingly tend to turn spiritual science into the dubious mysticism that people who are useless in life want to make of it, under the impression that life is worthless, that one must ascend to a higher life, that one must rise from this world of sensory perception into a world of dreams, where the higher then emerges. Why bother educating your children properly when you can think about what incarnations you had in previous lives! That is what brings you to the higher regions, and so on. That is not what it is about. What it is about is making spiritual science fruitful in the field in which you stand. It can be made fruitful everywhere; life demands it.
That is what we need, I would say, not just words to make it understandable today. For words have really become quite worn-out currency. Who today actually feels what lies behind the words? Who really feels their way into words? Feeling with words is something that humanity has almost completely lost, at least in the part of humanity to which we belong. Think about it, if someone says today—let me use this example—“Well, you did your job pretty well,” who feels much more in these words than in “You did your job almost well”? That is what people feel today. “Pretty” is “almost” good. We say one instead of the other. Be honest, when you hear the words “pretty good,” don't you feel “almost good” and use one for the other? And yet, “pretty” is a word that belongs to the same family as “befit, befit oneself.” When I do something pretty well, I do it in such a way that I do it well in a fitting manner, in an easy way; I don't just do it well, but in such a way that my actions are not difficult, but fitting; I have it under control. Who still feels the “fitting” in the word “pretty”? Or who feels in the word Zweifel (doubt) that there is a two in it, that one is faced with something that divides itself in two? Who feels this zw, z-w at all? But wherever zw occurs, you have the same feeling as with Zweifel, when the thing divides itself in two. Zwischen (between) — there you have the same thing! Zweck (purpose), Zweifel (doubt), indeed — try to feel it! Feeling can lie within all sound combinations. But words today are just worthless tokens. That is why we would like to have something other than language to make clear what is necessary today and what the humanities could provide. This language, as it is used today, is such that it dulls thinking even more than is already the case through natural development, and dull thinking comes to the fore in a jumble of writings and printed matter.
One could sweat blood, as I almost did this morning when I picked up a book that is supposed to explain the great significance of the difference between the ideas of 1789 and 1914, by Dr. Johann Plenge, professor of political science at the University of Münster in Westphalia. The man claims to have identified the great contrast between the ideas of 1789 and 1914 in recent developments. He claims to have actually invented the idea of 1914. He considers himself a hugely important man. But we won't go into that now. On page 61 of the book, I read the sentence — I want to be pedantic now, but this pedantry means something more subtle, and those who can feel it will feel it — so on page 61, the sentence slapped me in the face, if you'll pardon the expression: “Where one knows the one, one must seek the other. Let us imagine ourselves in the soul of a historian of the future who hears about the world catastrophe of 1914.” What are we supposed to make of this sentence? The man imagines a historian of the future who suddenly hears about the world catastrophe of 1914. So he heard nothing about it during his entire youth, but only suddenly hears about it as a historian of the future! You really don't have to live in a world of vivid imagination to be able to come up with something like that. Then he tries to talk about the meaning of ideas, tries to talk about the fact that there are ideas in history, that ideas can rise and fall, and in this way he tries to get to the character and nature of ideas. And while he is doing that, while he is trying to do that, he allows himself the following at one point: He tries to show how ideas dawn so unconsciously in primitive tribes and then become more conscious. He says: “A nascent civilized people lives according to the model of an imagined, ennobled humanity. The most beautiful example of such idea formation is the position of Homer in antiquity.”
So you think: Homer's position in antiquity is an example of the formation of ideas! Which means about as much as: If someone is a court councillor, that is an example of the formation of ideas. It is impossible to think anything of such a thing if you want to link your thoughts to living ideas. However, if you are used to this from your youth, you really get slapped in the face by such sentences, which are just word twisting. They remind me very vividly of a professor who began a lecture by posing 25 questions, a professor who became very, very famous, a professor of literature. I don't want to say who it is, otherwise you wouldn't even believe me. He asked 25 questions, then said: Gentlemen! I have led you into a forest of question marks! — I had to imagine a forest of question marks one after the other. Just think what kind of thinking that is, not realizing one's thoughts, not living in one's thoughts, just twisting words with one's thoughts.
This then lives on in a strange way in the mind of such a person. You come up with the most remarkable things; the man says: The true historian, like the astronomer, seeks to predict things in advance. And now the good man tries to show how economic conditions have developed towards the current catastrophe of war. He says: “The real historian can predict such a catastrophe like an astronomer.” Well, on the one hand, he considers himself to be such a great historian that he should be able to do this, but he has not been able to do so, even though he has written many books on economic life. This bothers him. That is why he tells us how he actually did it. How did he do it? He says: Well, on the one hand, I showed that economic development is such that one must actually strive for peace with all one's might and power; and then I showed again that it is also such that war was inevitable. — Well, that is undoubtedly a correct prophecy, isn't it; it's like if I have two coats and say: If I don't wear one tomorrow, I'll wear the other. But do not believe that such inner frivolity in concepts would have no consequences, for when he now speaks of how he wavered between whether he should prophesy the blue coat or—no, peace or war—he says—yes, he quotes himself, and quotations are a curious thing in this book—he says: “But it is necessary that the imagination play with this war.” Now think of this attitude! He considered it necessary not to speak more seriously, but rather that the imagination play with the war in the years that led to this catastrophe.
I said that quoting is a peculiar thing in this book. The whole book is based on an article that appeared in a daily newspaper. This article is an innocent thing; it is simply an unknown journalist rebelling against the idea of 1914, which Plenge “invented.” This is strange in his book. Because you read the article on the first page, as far as Plenge wants to bring it in to make his point. Then he talks about the article; then you get to page 21, where he quotes it again, so that the article from the daily newspaper appears twice. Then he continues talking. Then he quotes individual passages from the article, so that you read it a third time. And at the end, because he has quoted it three times, he quotes it again, so that an article from the daily newspaper is quoted four times in this book.
I have to use concrete examples like these to clarify how things stand, in order to show what is necessary and also to show how the humanities are truly the instrument that must intervene in the present. These things, which seem to be trifles, are absolutely connected with the big points of view from which we started. I ask you to keep this in mind from these considerations.