Original Impulses for the Science of the Spirit
GA 96
8 October 1906, Berlin
VI. Spiritual Insight Offering Greatest Liberation II: The Mission of the Spiritual Science Movement
A week ago we considered the view of the world based on the science of the spirit in so far as it can have meaning for people today. modern people will of course first of all base themselves on observations made through the senses and on their rational minds. They may also base themselves on modern science, which is also based on observations made through the senses and rational thinking. We have shown that it is possible to meet all objections to the science of the spirit that may arise from the present-day scientific approach. Please do not misunderstand the reasons for considering the subject in this way. It was not done so that we might go out and enter into discussion with people who have not yet given a thought to the science of the spirit. There can be no question of this. Anyone who has not yet a mind to consider it and also is not inclined to do so will first of all have to learn to put his mind to it. It is not a question, therefore, of having arguments available for use in discussions, but everyone may in his own heart and mind raise objections that may come up in the light of modern popular science or modern life in general. You need to be reasonably sure of yourself. This, then, has been the purpose of the things we considered the last time.
It can simply never be the mission of the spiritual scientific movement merely to satisfy people’s curiosity or thirst for knowledge. It is true that among many theosophists this curiosity, or, to put it more politely, this thirst for knowledge, has been and still is the reason why they made contact with theosophical endeavours. However after a time anyone who has come purely from curiosity will be disappointed. Not that the science of the spirit does not have the amplest means of satisfying people's thirst for knowledge, down to the deepest depths of existence, but the knowledge we are concerned with in the theosophical movement will only serve a purpose if it becomes active knowledge, knowledge out of which one takes action, putting it into practice in everyday life. People should therefore at least have the urge to make this knowledge part of life.
When someone comes to the science of the spirit he can easily find himself on the horns of a dilemma. You need to see this dilemma clearly. Many of the people who come to theosophy fall into two categories. Some will say: I want to help, I want to be of value to society. They think the theosophical movement should give them the means to do this, so that they can start right away. Others may perhaps only have the illusion of wanting to help. In reality they merely want to satisfy their curiosity and hear of things they find sensational. Neither of these two categories will be the right kind of members for the Theosophical Society. Those who want to start helping right away fail to consider that you have to learn things first and acquire skills if you are to be able to help. One has to tell them that they need to be patient and develop the powers and skills that will make them helpers of humanity. They have to limit their ambitions. The people who merely want to satisfy their curiosity will have to understand that not one of the means and abilities given to them should be accepted unless they are prepared to be part of and serve the whole of human evolution. This will need a long time. The Theosophical Society should first of all generate secure knowledge and awareness of eternity and existence in the spirit. Someone who has this awareness then says to himself: It is not my intention to launch right away, from my present imperfect standpoint, into all kinds of enterprises to reform humanity, and so on.
Patience is called for on the one hand, and on the other the will to be part of and serve the whole of human evolution. The method of the Theosophical Society lies between these two things. And we must not concentrate on just one of them but pay heed to both. We need to have both patience and the will to be active, but not as an arithmetic mean of the two, for they need to be developed separately in our hearts and minds. Do not confuse the two things! It is a very different thing if one has an arithmetic mean or has the two things separately in one’s heart and mind.
The theosophical view of the world was brought to life some decades ago to meet these two requirements and has since been there for humanity. The knowledge we have taken in over the years, everything that has so far been said, is brought back to mind once more, for the more often we do this, the better it is. Knowledge should become a living power of intent. This means that some of the older members will hear some things again which they have heard before, perhaps in another context, and perhaps merely to refresh their memories. This is the way in which the theosophical view of the world was brought to life some decades ago. What was it before that? It was something we call secret or occult teaching, that is, something done in small groups by people specially admitted to them. In earlier times students were subjected to severe tests of their will intent, feeling and thinking before they were admitted to those closed groups, the esoteric or occult brotherhoods. The influence of those brotherhoods is something which in future will come from a larger group of people. More and more people will be called to have such an influence. A small group of the elect thus always had the influence which the theosophical movement is now to gain. Whether they were the disciples of Hermes or the pupils of the Eleusinian mysteries, occult schools in Egypt or Christian Gnostic schools, or the Rosicrucians in Europe—in every case, small, carefully defined brotherhoods were a major influence. Modern people with their intellectualized science know nothing, or practically nothing of this, but it is a fact that all cultivation of the mind and through this also all material civilization came from such brotherhoods.
It has been said on a previous occasion that all material civilization, everything people create using hammer, saw, axe and so on, has its foundation in cultivation of the mind. You may consider everything in this light, however large or small. Take one of the great engineering feats of our time, the Simplon Tunnel or the St Gotthard Tunnel. Very few people ever realize that these could never have been built if it had not been for a man called Leibniz.36Differential calculus makes it possible to work with differentials, i.e. infinitely small differences. Together with integral calculus it is of major importance for all the problems in the exact sciences and mechanics. Differential and integral calculus, known together as 'infinitesimal calculus', were created by Leibniz and Newton, working independently of each other, at the end of the 17th century. The tunnels could not have been built if it had not been for differential calculus. The idea which at one time inspired those thinkers to do such subtle calculations has made all these things possible in the physical world. Everything that happens on the physical plane ultimately goes back to thoughts and ideas. It is a dreadful illusion for people to think that there is anything in civilization that does not ultimately go back to the spirit, the mind. Take what you will in the fields of art, of technology, industry or trade—the most practical, most commonplace and most everyday things ultimately go back to something that happened in the human soul.
Where do the great impulses, ideas, mental creativeness originate? Here we come to a sphere in which we can begin to understand how the occult brotherhoods of earlier centuries and millennia worked. Take an example, though a modern materialistic thinker would never think of it. An ardent, enthusiastic youth living in the 18th century, someone with the gifts for great things, needed just the stimulus of something that may look like a chance happening, something utterly insignificant. He met, as if by chance, someone who seemed indifferent. This person said a few words to the young man that appeared to make no special impression. I am saying ‘appeared’, for something did happen in the enthusiastic young man’s soul. The encounter during which those seemingly insignificant words were said did have significance after all. So what did actually happen? Something of the greatest significance for civilization came from an insignificant incident that appeared to be a matter of chance. The brothers who are the true and greatest guardians of humanity’s treasure of wisdom are in this world. They may be walking about among us; we may meet them. But they wear a magic hat as far as ordinary people are concerned. It is up to them to recognize a brother, for the brothers never identify themselves. In past centuries they were even harder to recognize than they are today. What mattered, however, was their influence. Imagine such a brotherhood of occult initiates. One of the brothers approaches the young man as though by chance. But chance events like these are brought about by the wisdom of this world. A few insignificant words ignite a spark in the young man’s mind that is of the greatest conceivable importance for our civilization. The young man was Jean-Jacques Rousseau.37Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712–1778). His famous Du contrat social (1762; Engl. transl. in 1764: A Treatise on the Social Contract) was in opposition to the optimism over progress in the Age of Enlightenment. Rousseau saw the artificial world of civilization as the root of all evil and demanded that humanity should return to nature. His theory of the ‘general will’ provided the basis for the constitution of the French Revolution. (see Heyer K. Beiträge zur Geschichte des Abendlandes, VI. Band: ‘Gestalten und Ereignisse vor der Französischen Revolution’, Stuttgart 1964). An event that seemed of no significance sowed a seed that led Rousseau to develop his philosophy. There is nothing random about the powerful impulses that came into our civilization with it. They are not apparent in the ordinary history of civilization but quietly let the stream of wisdom continue that is in the care of the brotherhood. The decision as to what will serve the needs of humanity is made in the brotherhood. The brothers are wise, they are prophets. They know what humanity needs. And when the need arises they'll send one of the brethren into the world to bring a new impetus into evolution.
Another example is one I have given before. It concerns the German theosophical philosopher Jakob Böhme and can be found in any Jakob Böhme biography.38Böhme, Jakob (1575–1624), theosophical mystic. His first biography was written by Abraham von Franckenberg (died 1652). Later biographies in German: Fechner H.A., Jakob Böhme, sein Leben und seine Schriften, Gorlitz 1857; Claasen J. Jakob Böhmes Leben und seine theosophischen Werke, 3 Bde, Stuttgart 1885; Martensen H. Jakob Böhme, London 1949; in English: Hobhouse S. Jakob Böhme, His Life and Teaching 1950. As a boy he was apprenticed to a shoemaker. One day the master and his wife had gone out. They had told him not to sell anything, but merely look after the shop. Someone came in who made a deep impression on the boy. The stranger wanted to buy something but Jakob was not permitted to sell him anything. When the man had gone, Jakob heard his name called. He went to the door and the man said to him: ‘Jakob, you’re small now but one day you'll be great. You'll be someone people will be amazed at.’ This man gave the impulse for the things Jakob Böhme later wrote about.
You'll see even better what this is about if we take another example that may take you even more deeply into the secrets of the brotherhoods. Imagine that someone who is unknown—unknown in the outside world, well known to the initiates—writes a letter to a powerful privy councillor or a minister. The letter may be about something of no great importance, perhaps asking for a minor request to be granted. If an initiate were to read this letter, someone able to read it very differently from the way an ordinary person would read it, he would note something very special about it. It may be that one has to leave out every third word from the beginning of the letter, or every fourth word counting from the end. The words which remain have considerable significance, influencing the will of the person to whom it is addressed. This person may merely have read a request to have some refuse removed. But in reality the letter says something of tremendous importance. Now you may say: ‘But the man did not read that.’ That is not true. The surface self-awareness did not take it up, but the secret of such a code is that the right words remain and impress themselves on the ether body, on the subconscious mind, and the person concerned will have taken them in after all.
Impulses can be given in this way to make people do things, and it is possible to convey instructions in secret ways without people being aware of it. This is, of course, only a minor example compared to things of enormous significance that exist in the world. An initiate is able to go about in any form. He has the means of influencing not only people’s everyday level of consciousness but also the other levels of the human mind.
You know about the German philosopher and mystic Henricus Cornelius Agrippa von Nettesheim.39Agrippa von Nettesheim, Henricus Cornelius (1486–1535). De occulta philosophia, Cologne 1510; De incertitude et vanitate scientiarum, Cologne 1527 (German by F. Mauthner, Über die Eitelkeit und Unsicherheit der Wissenschaften 1913). His teacher was Johannes Tritheim, abbot at Sponheim.40Trithemius, Johannes (1462–1515), Abbot of Sponheim Benedictine Monastery at age 23, later of Schottenkloster in Wurzburg, Germany. Wrote among other things Staganographia and Polygraphia to provide instruction in an occult symbolic script; Antipalus maleficiorum, directions on how to fend off black magic practices; De septem intelligentiis libellus, the book of the second planetary spirits. See Silbernagl I. Johannes Trithemius (in German), 2. AO. Regensburg 1885. The abbot wrote books which to modern materialistic minds seem either romantic or highly Baroque, certainly something one would not find very interesting.
It is thought that these works also met with an indifferent response in the days of Johannes Tritheim of Sponheim. But there is a key to reading these books. If you omit certain things from the beginning and others from the end, something remains, and this residue represents a large part of what is today presented as elementary theosophy. Reading these books one therefore is truly reading also with the subconscious mind, reading the material which today is presented as theosophy. For centuries, many people thus unknowingly took theosophy into their hearts and minds. These have been significant influences in our civilization that may be considered together with the kind of processes we discussed a week ago concerning the effects of copper and lead.
You can see from these examples that occult brotherhoods were active in the world through the millennia for the benefit of humanity. This was right for those past times but it will no longer be right in the future. Initiates who know the meaning and significance of evolution will therefore say: ‘What happened in the past is no longer right for the future.’ It would be a poor kind of inspiration that would always look for the truth in the past and not know its living reality, which is that the truth always changes for the future. Someone who is truly inspired will not only seek to learn from the earliest teachers of humanity but reshape the truths he is given, being alive to the present time.
Something that must rise up against this old form of occult work in every human soul is the idea of freedom, the idea of its value and the dignity of man. People are unfree if influences are brought to bear on them in that way. Freedom, however, and this has been shown before, is not something finished and complete but something human beings struggle to gain in the living process of evolution. Freedom is the goal of humanity and not a birth right. And freedom depends on insight. There is no other way of overcoming the old influences that came from the brotherhoods than to make occult knowledge itself widely known. The basic aim of the theosophical movement is to make people free as they learn the spiritual truths that used to be the preserve of the occult brotherhoods. In the old days, the world knew nothing that went beyond the physical plane, and today it knows hardly any of it. Only when the world comes to know the things that go beyond the physical plane will people be able to have the mysterious influences and forces that play between one human being and another, between one nation and another, truly under their own control. That is the human mission for the future and therefore really also the mission of the theosophical movement.
The science of the spirit thus shows itself to be something very different from all other present-day movements. Many questions now arise for human beings, the facts force them to face them. Above all there is the social question, which comes up in all kinds of different forms. It includes matters of personal freedom, nationalism and racism and the colonial issue. All these issues, and also, most important, the issue of education, are shown in a special light, a different light, with the science of the spirit than is otherwise possible at the present time. Why is that so? A small example may show this.
There is a movement in psychiatry today that is little known to lay people. But as newspaper articles now present everything to the world, some of you will have taken some notice. This truly touches on important matters. Look at the latest book publications. You'll find an interesting small volume on Robert Schumann’s illness. A psychiatrist41Möbius, Paul Julius (1853–1907), neurologist and lecturer in Leipzig. Über den Begriff der Hysterie und andere Vorwürfe vorwiegend psychologischer Art, Neurologische Beiträge 1. Heft, Leipzig 1894. See also Nachrichten der Rudolf Steiner Nachlassverwaltung Nr 22 (Michaeli 1968) S. 30f. has decided to go for Robert Schumann—and also other people—and show that he suffered from the condition which alienists call dementia precox meaning premature dementia.42Möbius P.J. Über Robert Schumanns Krankheit Leipzig 1916. You may know that not only Robert Schumann but other great people have also been investigated for their mental state—Goethe, Heine and quite a few others. There are even two publications which are not without interest, though they are about investigations of the person of the Christ in this respect.43Rasmussen E. Jesus. Eine vergleichende psycho-pathologische Studie Leipzig 1905; de Loosten (G. Lomer) Jesus Christus vom Standpunkte des Psychiaters Bamberg 1905. All this is possible in our materialistic age. One such alienist says that if a mind comes to abnormal expression this is due to an abnormality in the person’s organization.44‘All forms of mental disorder had to be known, understanding their connection with physical changes... Medically speaking there is only normal and abnormal. If someone deviates from the norm, the rule, the usual, and that abnormality reaches a certain level which goes beyond the ‘range of health’, on which there are different views, the person is abnormal or, and essentially this is the same, pathological.’ Möbius, P. J. Ausgewählte Werke Bd 2, Leipzig 1903, S. 6.
One thing modern alienists are sure of is that such conditions cannot be influenced by reasoning with people. You'll see what I mean in a minute. For a time it was thought that if someone suffered from a particular form of mania that came to expression in abnormal religious ideas, it would be possible to correct this by talking sense to them, presenting sensible arguments to them. Mania sometimes takes quite a specific form. Someone imagines he is being persecuted, for example. The alienist considers this to be a symptom.45‘It may of course happen that someone with persecution mania has been subject to persecution, as was the case with Rousseau. But the majority of patients have never been persecuted and we simply do not know why persecution ideas in particular are so often signs of brain disease.’ Loc. cit. S. 22. Persecution mania is just a symptom to him, with an abnormality of the brain the true problem. You cannot overcome someone’s delusions by explaining that he is not being persecuted at all, for you cannot change the way the brain is organized Up to this point, the alienist is in fact right The spiritual scientist does not intend to judge someone else from an amateur point of view. You may present sensible ideas to the person concerned, but you'll not cure his mania. At the most it will then take another form.
Let us take the case of Hölderlin, another person who is studied by alienists.46Hölderlin, (Johann Christian) Friedrich (1770–1843). German poet. Hölderlin was destroyed by his longing for ancient Greece. An alienist would say that he suffered from a disease of the brain, and that everything else is symptomatic evidence. The disease may have been hereditary in origin. It is therefore believed that it is not possible to influence the constitution of the organism, primarily the constitution of the brain, out of the life of mind and spirit. You see, these researches in psychiatry take one to fathomless depths. The physical body is accepted as something that is given, and the mind and spirit is like a kind of vapour rising from that body. Even the greatest mental achievements, the work of people of genius—if it is abnormal, materialistic scientists will ascribe it to abnormal brain functions. That is what your alienist, your psychiatrist, will tell you. Whatever you may say to contradict him, he will insist that the whole life of the mind and spirit depends on the physical organization. As far as it goes, the positive statement is correct, but these people do not understand what is really involved here; they have no idea.
This brings us to something of which you should take careful note. It concerns an extraordinarily important secret, though perhaps not everyone would consider it to be such. The truth is that the human organ which performs its function has originally been created by that function itself. The brain has originally been created by thoughts. The blood develops the life of feelings. There can be no life of feelings without warm blood. It is a fact that the blood has originally been created by the life of feelings. This is a completely new way of looking at these things. Now we may say to ourselves that we certainly cannot change the human brain with the ideas people produce in their brains today. But behind that brain are different thoughts, thoughts unknown in materialistic science and these have originally created the brain. This is the world of thoughts we must get to know; it is the world of creative ideas. We thus have to distinguish between ordinary thoughts and a world of thoughts that floods—truly floods—the world. It is because the brain has been born out of the world of thoughts that the human mind is able not only to produce the kind of thoughts that come from the brain’s world of thought but also to have a part in the world of thoughts that lies behind the physical organization.
With this, one learns to govern the life of thoughts. And so one also does not cure people by producing logical reasons but by entering much more deeply into the realm of mind and spirit. It is possible, with thoughts taken from the true world of the spirit, to change the physical organism purely out of the realm of thoughts and make a sick organism well again.
The spirit thus exists in two ways. We have the spirit that first of all presents itself outwardly in the phenomena of nature, in art, science and the economic products of engineering and industry. This spirit is a product of physical life. But behind it is its creator, and that, too, is spirit.
An image may help to show this. Imagine I have some water here and I apply a particular procedure to cool it down so that it turns to ice. If we heat some of the ice so that it turns to water again, we have three things—the original water all around, the ice, and something that is turning to water again. You may look at the human brain like this. The spirit which fills the whole world has condensed into the brain as water does to ice. Thoughts are brought forth from the brain just as water is from ice when this is heated. Essentially, therefore, you may take all matter to be condensed spirit, contracted spirit and you can see the things of the mind and spirit that show themselves in the world to have come from the physical. Materialistic thinking considers only the condensed matter and has forgotten that the spirit is behind the world of matter, that a spiritual world exists beyond the physical that creates matter. The theosophical movement should take people back again to the spirit that is behind the material world.
We can now also return to something I mentioned the last time we met. I talked about writing. We write something down, let us say the word ‘spirit’. Someone who has no concept of the spirit clearly would not write the word. But someone else may come along who has no concept of the spirit, who is altogether unable to read, and he would describe a line curving down, then up again, then down again and so on. No one would get the idea that this means ‘spirit’, for the person giving the description is unable to read. That, however, is how the facts are described in science today. For the word to be written, a meaning had to be there that was poured into this piece of writing. The writer may go away, someone else may come along, look at what has been written, and know what the writer wanted to say. That is also how it is with the original spirit in relation to our physical world. This physical world is like writing, simply writing. In ordinary everyday science, the individual objects in this world are described in the way I said. An occultist would know, however, that these individual objects mean something else as well, apart from the description given in outer terms and that they can be read, being letters of the spirit. If we look at this world as the writing of the spirit, if we consider everything in the world around us—minerals, plants, animals and people—to be letters written by the spirit, we enter into the world of the spirit of our own accord as we read the physical world.
It is not too easy, however, to read like this. To give you an example, let me tell you the following. A chemist may take blood, analyse it and say it consists of such and such constituents. He has now done his job and he knows what blood is. Reading in the spiritual scientific and occult sense, however, you find that blood could not have come into existence in the form in which we have it if there were not the phenomena behind it which we call astral phenomena. The spirit of the world acts on matter through the astral phenomena. There could never have been such a thing as blood in the physical world if the astral world did not exist behind the physical world. All kinds of things could exist, but blood is only possible because there is the astral world behind it. You thus read the astral in the blood, just as you read the world ‘spirit’ in these letters. Reading the letters that exist here in the physical world leads to perception of the astral sphere.
This is altogether the right way of entering into the world of the spirit—to give heart and mind to the world around us. It may be less of an effort to enter the world of the spirit in a number of other ways, but it is a more certain way of doing it if we study the phenomena that surround us. A mineral has something different to say, a plant something different again, an animal, a person—all of them are indeed different letters. If you bring your heart and mind to them, they will tell you of the world of the spirit.
You will therefore find study of our world one of the first things you are directed to do in Rosicrucian schooling—devoted, dedicated study of the world. When we started our theosophical movement, some people said: ‘The things he is telling us can be found in any book on science. He is talking about origins, the struggle for existence, and so on; but we want to hear of the things that go on in the world of the spirit.’ There may in fact be more of these things in it than the people who asked to hear are able to cope with. But we should start with secure insight into our immediate reality, not mere description but real understanding.
Take what follows as an important fundamental truth—it has always been considered to be such in Rosicrucian occult schooling. The sense-perceptible world presents itself in the way our external physical senses are able to perceive it. Things look different in the astral world, very different. And they look completely different again in the devachanic world. That is how it is with our perceptions. The thoughts and logic we use to grasp the physical world, the astral world and the devachanic world are the same. Right thoughts are right in the devachan, on the astral plane and on the physical plane. If you learn the right way of thinking on the physical plane this will give you a reliable guide in all worlds. It means, however, that we have to learn to think in a way that has real significance, meaning and depth. No one should therefore save themselves the trouble of entering into this physical world with his thoughts and considering this world to be letters, writing that tells of a higher world of the spirit.
In the great process of liberating humanity, our prime concern is therefore to gain a meaningful approach to the significance of physical phenomena. They are the gate that leads to the world of the spirit. The work calls for a great deal of self-denial but it has to be undertaken. If human beings truly take on this task and gradually ascend to the world of the spirit in doing so, learning to grasp things from the point of view of that world, they play a part in the great tasks of culture and civilization. They can only do so if they are free human beings. As soon as people would seek to develop a civilization for the future on any basis other than freedom their products would all be stillborn, with ideas belonging to the past taken into the future. The tremendous difference from earlier ways will be that human beings and not principles or institutions are the active agent. It is true, in the past, too, things were done by human beings only. However it was only a small group whose principles came to be generally accepted. Some would praise those principles, believing them to be original. People were speaking of something they had derived from principles. But this was merely the impulse that had come from the initiates. Take the initiation of Heraclitus,47Heraclitus (died c. 460 BC). ‘Pre-Socratic’ Greek philosopher. for instance, in early times. He presented the truths he had discovered in external formulas that were further elaborated by countless people. They thought they were thinking original thoughts; but that was not the case. You only learn to think original thoughts by seeing what lies behind things and grasping their real significance.
I hope you have developed something of a feeling for the way human beings should make themselves part of the process of civilization, being able to walk through between one pillar, which is patience, by being prepared to learn and not act too soon, and the other pillar, which is the will to serve the progress of human evolution. They can do this if they allow things to come alive to them more and more through the senses and in this way penetrate to the creative spirit. This is something you have to feel inwardly, be alive to inwardly, and then you are a theosophist. People must reach a much greater level of freedom in future than they have in the past, and there have to be many more of them. Not that long ago only very few people in Europe were really free. Civilization radiated into the world from small centres, reaching others in the form of views and opinions, so that they came to believe everything else to be erroneous. Rousseau, too, thought he was only presenting his own views, his inmost being, when in fact he was influenced from quite a different source.
The initiates knew that life between birth and death, which is encompassed in the phenomena we perceive through the senses, is governed by forces that do not cease at death; that forces which exist also before birth merely assume a different form during physical life. This enabled the initiates to give impulses, being able to see what lies behind death. The glass standing here will never be able to move of its own accord. And what lies between birth and death is equally unable to move of its own accord. The forces which move what lies between birth and death are always present; they are the eternal. The initiates know them and a large part of the human race will have to get to know them in the future.
Make this an inner feeling, for this inner feeling is important Without it, you will not progress in occult studies. It will depend on this if you join the ranks of the theosophical movement as a rightful member. This inner feeling will also give you a degree of certainty in guiding you through something which you perceive all around you. We perceive chaos in our civilization. That is true. Theoretically speaking, materialism holds chaos in it. It is monstrous that when someone opens a book today he is presented with a mass of unconnected individual insights. Nothing but details, and chaos everywhere, also in the social life out there.
What is someone who is not part of the theosophical life going to do? He'll offer suggestions as to how things may be done in a better way. Think of the many recipes for social relationships humanity has known! The theosophical movement differs from all other movements in that it does not offer recipes, and does not say how things might be done in a better way. Efforts to find recipes do nothing for our future culture and civilization. Nor do discussions on how to create peace in the world. Setting up programmes is something that belongs to the past. The future depends on the existence of people who act in the right way out of their own resources. In theosophy we do not say what is the right thing to do, but show people how they can learn to do the right thing. If thirty people come together, it would not be theosophy to say that if they have a particular constitution they will live together in peace. Instead, every individual is shown how he needs to reach a level of inner development where he'll find the right way out of his own resources in his relationship with others. That is the mission of theosophy in a movement that serves the future.
Taking a broad view, we have been considering the world situation, and above all war and peace, in various lectures,48Berlin 12 October 1905: The present situation of the world. War, peace and the science of the spirit. Anthroposophical News Sheet 1945: 13: 35-40; Hamburg 17 Nov. 1906 (not in English); Hamburg 2 March 1908 (not in English) [all in GA 54] also the issue of women’s rights and the social question. As he becomes free, torn away from the compulsions of his environment, man is at the same time taken into the higher worlds, for he needs to be truly free to enter those higher worlds. No one can ever enter the higher world under compulsion. Here we see the good side even of chaos. If our whole civilization had not fallen into chaos, individuals could not have unfolded freely out of their own resources. They would always have been bound to their environment. The old order must break apart and become chaos. We face great changes in this respect and no one can hope to reform anything in the world except by means of inner development. Anything else would be amateurish prophecy.
We have tried in these two sessions—the last one and this one—to grasp the significance of the spiritual scientific movement as a movement for civilization. The next time we'll consider how human karma comes into play within the whole progress of civilization and look at individual karmic relationships of the human being. In other words, we'll consider what human beings take from one incarnation to the next and how they take part in the world process as they progress from incarnation to incarnation. This is the task we intend to take on in a week’s time.
Die Geistige Erkenntnis als Höchstes Befreiungswesen
Die Aufgabe der geisteswissenschaftlichen Bewegung
Vor acht Tagen betrachteten wir die geisteswissenschaftliche Weltanschauung, insofern sie dem gegenwärtigen Menschen einleuchtend sein kann. Zunächst geht dieser Mensch natürlich von seiner sinnlichen Beobachtung und vom Verstand aus, oder auch von der modernen Wissenschaft, der ebenfalls sinnliche Beobachtung und Verstand zugrunde liegen. Wir zeigten, wie die Geisteswissenschaft in der Lage ist, allen Einwänden zu begegnen, die unsere Vernunft aus dem wissenschaftlichen Gewissen der Gegenwart heraus etwa aufwerfen könnte. Ziel und Zweck dieser Betrachtung sollte nicht mißverstanden werden. Sie wurde nicht deshalb angestellt, damit wir hinausgehen und uns in Diskussionen mit denen einlassen, die sich noch nicht mit der Geisteswissenschaft befaßt haben. Darum kann es sich nicht handeln. Wer noch kein Verhältnis zur Geisteswissenschaft besitzt und auch nicht den Willen dazu hat, es zu gewinnen, wird zuerst zu lernen haben, sich damit zu beschäftigen. Also es geht nicht darum, daß wir in einer Diskussion Argumente parat haben sollen, sondern darum, daß jeder in sich selbst, in seiner eigenen Seele diejenigen Einwände machen kann, die ihm aus der populären Wissenschaft der Gegenwart und aus dem sonstigen modernen Leben aufstoßen können. Er soll vor allem eine gewisse Sicherheit in sich selbst gewinnen. Das war Ziel und Zweck unserer vorigen Betrachtungen.
Es kann nie und nimmer die Aufgabe der geisteswissenschaftlichen Bewegung sein, die bloße Neugierde oder Wißbegierde zu befriedigen. Zwar trifft es zu, daß in den weitesten Kreisen des theosophischen Betriebes bis in unsere Tage herein vielfach diese Neugierde, oder sagen wir es nobler, diese Wißbegierde die Grundlage war, welche die Menschen mit den theosophischen Bestrebungen in Berührung brachte. Aber alle, die lediglich aus bloßer Neugierde kommen, werden sich nach einiger Zeit doch enttäuscht fühlen. Nicht weil die Geisteswissenschaft nicht die ausgiebigsten Mittel hätte, die menschliche Wißbegierde bis in die tiefsten Tiefen des Daseins zu befriedigen, sondern weil das Wissen, um das es sich in der theosophischen Bewegung handelt, nur dann dem Menschen frommt, wenn es ein tätiges Wissen wird, ein Wissen, durch das er handelnd eingreift, das er im täglichen Leben anwendet; wenigstens muß er den Trieb haben, dieses Wissen ins Leben hineinzustellen.
Wenn der Mensch an die Geisteswissenschaft herankommt, gerät er leicht in einen Zwiespalt. Diesen Zwiespalt müssen Sie sich klar vor die Seele stellen. Von zweierlei Art sind viele Menschen, die zur Theosophie kommen. Die einen sagen: Ich will helfen, ich will ein wertvolles Glied der Gesellschaft sein - und sie verstehen darunter, die theosophische Bewegung soll ihnen die Mittel geben, gleich morgen anzufangen. Die anderen machen sich vielleicht nur die Illusion vot, helfen zu wollen. In Wahrheit aber wollen sie nur ihre Neugierde befriedigen, etwas für sie Sensationelles erfahren. Beide Gruppen werden nicht die richtigen Mitglieder innerhalb der Theosophischen Gesellschaft werden. Denn diejenigen, die gleich morgen helfen wollen, bedenken nicht, daß man erst lernen und etwas können muß, um zu helfen. Ihnen muß gesagt werden: Ihr müßt Geduld haben, in euch selbst diejenigen Kräfte und Mittel zu entwickeln, durch die ihr zu Helfern für eure Mitmenschen heranreift. In dieser Weise müssen sich die einen bescheiden. Die anderen aber, die nur ihre Neugierde befriedigen wollen, müssen sich klarmachen, daß kein einziges der Mittel und keine einzige der Fähigkeiten, die ihnen gegeben werden, unter einem anderen Gesichtspunkte angenommen werden sollten, als in der Absicht, ein dienendes Glied der ganzen Menschheitsentwickelung zu werden. Dafür ist eine lange Zeit notwendig. Die Theosophische Gesellschaft soll zuerst das feste Bewußtsein und das Wissen von der Ewigkeit und dem geistigen Dasein erzeugen. Wer dieses Bewußtsein in sich trägt, der sagt sich: Es ist Zeit, ich kann Geduld haben, ich entwickle mich ruhig. Ich werde nicht gleich von meinem jetzigen unvollkommenen Standpunkt aus alles Mögliche unternehmen wollen, um die Menschheit zu reformieren und so weiter.
Geduld auf der einen Seite und auf der anderen der Wille, ein dienendes Glied in der ganzen Menschheitsentwickelung zu werden, das sind die zwei Dinge, zwischen welchen die Methode der Theosophischen Gesellschaft ist. Und man darf nicht nur auf das eine sehen, sondern man muß auf beides achten. Man muß beides, Geduld und den Willen zum Wirken, in sich vereinigen, aber nicht als ein arithmetisches Mittel zwischen beiden, sondern man muß diese beiden getrennt in der Seele entwickeln. Verwechseln Sie diese zwei Dinge nicht! Es ist etwas ganz anderes, ein arithmetisches Mittel oder diese beiden Dinge getrennt in der Seele zu haben.
Im Sinne dieser zwei Erfordernisse wurde die theosophische Weltanschauung vor einigen Jahrzehnten ins Leben gerufen und der Menschheit zugänglich gemacht. Das Wissen, das wir im Laufe der Jahre aufgenommen haben, alles das, was in dieser Zeit schon gesagt worden ist, lassen wir nochmals durch die Seele ziehen, denn je öfter .man dies tut, desto besser ist es. Das Wissen soll sich in eine lebendige Kraft des Wollens verwandeln. Daher werden die älteren Mitglieder manches nochmals hören, was sie schon vernommen haben, vielleicht in einem anderen Zusammenhang, vielleicht auch nur zur Auffrischung des Gedächtnisses. Unter diesem Aspekt ist die theosophische Weltanschauung vor einigen Jahrzehnten ins Leben gerufen worden. Was war sie früher? Sie war das, was man eine Geheimlehre oder okkulte Lehre nennt, also etwas, was im engeren Kreise von besonders zugelassenen Menschen getrieben wird. Nach strengen Prüfungen des Wollens, Fühlens und Denkens wurden die Schüler in früheren Zeiten zu diesen geschlossenen Zirkeln, den esoterischen oder okkulten Bruderschaften, zugelassen. Von diesen Bruderschaften gingen jene Wirkungen aus, die in der Zukunft von einem größeren Kreise von Menschen ausgehen sollen. Immer mehr Menschen werden künftig aufgerufen, diese Wirkungen auszuüben. Ein kleiner Kreis von Auserlesenen, von Erwählten, übte die Wirkung immer aus, zu der die theosophische Bewegung befähigt werden soll. Ob es die Jünger des Hermes oder die Schüler der Eleusinien, die ägyptischen oder die christlich-gnostischen Geheimschulen oder in Europa die Rosenkreuzer waren, immer gingen von den engbegrenzten Bruderschaften gewaltige Wirkungen aus. Wenn auch der heutige Mensch in seiner verstandesmäßigen Wissenschaft nichts oder so gut wie nichts davon weiß, so ist es doch eine Tatsache, daß von solchen Bruderschaften alle Geisteskultur und durch diese wieder alle matetielle Kultur ausgegangen ist.
Schon einmal ist es hier auseinandergesetzt worden, daß alle materielle Kultur, alles, was der Mensch mit dem Hammer, der Säge, dem Beil oder sonstwie schafft, den Grund in der Geisteskultur hat. Sie können das Kleinste, das Größte daraufhin betrachten. Nehmen Sie eines der großen Bauwerke der Gegenwart, den Simplontunnel oder den Gotthardtunnel. Die wenigsten Menschen denken daran, daß man den Simplontunnel oder den Gotthardtunnel niemals hätte bauen können, wenn nicht ein Leibniz gelebt hätte. Wenn es nicht die Differentialrechnung gegeben hätte, so hätte niemand solche Bauwerke aufführen können. Der Gedanke, der diese Denker einst dazu geleitet hat, diese feinen Rechnungen auszuführen, hat das alles erst materiell möglich gemacht. Alles, was auf dem physischen Plane geschieht, führt zuletzt zum Gedanken zurück. Es ist eine arge Illusion, wenn jemand glaubt, daß es in der materiellen Kultur etwas gäbe, das nicht zuletzt auf den Geist, auf den Gedanken zurückführt. Was Sie auch nehmen, auf dem Gebiete der Kunst, auf dem Gebiete der Technik, der Industrie oder des Handels, das Praktischste, Trivialste, Alltäglichste, es führt zuletzt auf dasjenige, was sich in der Seele des Menschen abgespielt hat.
Woher kommen die großen Impulse des Gedankens, des geistigen Schaffens? Da berühren wir nun das Gebiet, durch das uns klar werden kann, wie die okkulten Bruderschaften in den verflossenen Jahrhunderten und Jahrtausenden wirkten. Nehmen wir ein Beispiel. Der materialistische Denker von heute würde allerdings auf dieses Beispiel nicht kommen. Ein feuriger, enthusiastischer Jüngling des 18. Jahrhunderts, mit einer Anlage zum Großen, brauchte nur einen Anstoß durch ein Ereignis, das wie ein Zufall, wie etwas höchst Unbedeutendes aussieht. Er begegnet wie zufällig einer anscheinend gleichgültigen Persönlichkeit. Diese spricht zu dem Jüngling Worte, die scheinbar auf ihn keinen besonderen Eindruck machen. Ich sage: scheinbar, denn es geht doch in der Seele dieses enthusiastischen Jünglings etwas vor. Die Begegnung, in deren Verlauf diese scheinbar unbedeutenden Worte gesprochen wurden, hatte doch eine Bedeutung. Was ist da eigentlich geschehen? In ein unbedeutendes Ereignis, das scheinbar vom Zufall beherrscht ist, hüllt sich etwas von höchster kultureller Bedeutung. Diejenigen Brüder, welche die eigentlichen höchsten Hüter des Weisheitsschatzes der Menschheit sind, befinden sich in dieser Welt. Sie gehen vielleicht unter uns herum, wir können ihnen begegnen. Aber für die gewöhnliche Menschheit tragen sie eine Tarnkappe. Sache der anderen ist es, sie zu erkennen. Sie selber geben sich nie zu erkennen. In den verflossenen Jahrhunderten war es noch schwerer, sie zu erkennen, als heute. Darauf kam es auch nicht an, daß man sie erkannte. Was aber das Wesentliche war, das war ihr Wirken. Denken Sie sich eine solche Bruderschaft von verborgenen Eingeweihten. Einer dieser Brüder tritt wie durch einen Zufall an den Jüngling heran. Aber solche Zufälle werden durch die Weisheit der Welt herbeigeführt. Durch einige unbedeutende Worte wird etwas in dem Jüngling entzündet, was kulturell das denkbar Wichtigste ist. Dieser Jüngling heißt Jean-Jacques Rousseau. In einem scheinbar zufälligen Ereignis wurde so der Keim dazu gelegt, daß es einen Rousseauismus geben konnte und daß durch ihn starke Impulse in das Kulturleben einflossen. Die Impulse, die von den Schriften Rousseaus ausgingen, sind nichts Zufälliges, auch nicht etwas, was sich der Betrachtungsart der äußeren Kulturhistorie erschließt, sondern sie sind das leise Fortgehen des Stromes der Weisheit, wie sie in der Bruderschaft bewahrt wird. In der Bruderschaft wird beschlossen, was der Menschheit frommt. Die Brüder sind Weise, sie sind Propheten. Sie wissen, was für die Menschheit erforderlich ist. So senden sie, wenn es notwendig ist, einen der ihren hinaus in die Welt, um der Entwickelung einen neuen Einschlag zu geben.
Ein anderes Beispiel ist hier schon erzählt worden. Es betrifft den deutschen theosophischen Philosophen Ja%ob Böhme und steht in jeder Böhme-Biographie. Als Knabe stand Jakob in der Schusterlehre. Eines Tages waren der Meister und die Meisterin ausgegangen. Sie hatten ihm verboten, etwas zu verkaufen, er sollte nur Wache halten. Da kam eine Persönlichkeit in den Laden, die auf ihn einen starken Eindruck machte, Der Fremde wollte etwas kaufen, Jakob aber durfte ihm nichts verkaufen. Als der Fremde schon hinausgegangen war, hörte Jakob seinen Namen rufen. Er trat hinaus, und der Mann sagte zu ihm: Jakob, du bist jetzt klein, aber du wirst einst groß werden. Du wirst ein Mensch werden, über den die Welt in Erstaunen geraten wird. — Dieser Mann hat den Anstoß zu dem gegeben, was in Jakob Böhmes Schriften enthalten ist.
Noch besser werden Sie verstehen, worum es sich hier handelt, wenn wir ein anderes Beispiel nehmen, das Sie noch tiefer in die Geheimnisse der Bruderschaften hineinführen kann. Man denke sich: Ein unbekannter Mensch — unbekannt in der äußeren Welt, wohlbekannt den Eingeweihten - schreibt einen Brief an einen hochvermögenden Geheimen Rat oder an den Minister. Der Brief behandelt vielleicht eine ganz gleichgültige Angelegenheit, vielleicht die Bewilligung einer unwichtigen Nebensache. Wenn diesen Brief nun ein Eingeweihter lesen würde — es sind absolute Tatsachen, die ich hier erzähle -, der ihn ganz anders zu lesen verstände als ein gewöhnlicher Mensch, so würde dieser noch etwas ganz Besonderes daran erkennen. Es kann nämlich sein, daß man in einem solchen Brief beispielsweise jedes dritte Wort vom Anfang oder jedes vierte Wort vom Schluß weglassen muß. Dann bleiben gewisse Worte übrig, die einen sehr bedeutungsvollen Sinn darstellen, etwas, was auf den ganzen Willen dessen einwirkt, an den der Brief gerichtet ist. Dieser hat vielleicht nur gelesen, daß er etwas Unrat wegschaffen lassen sollte. In Wahrheit aber steht in dem Briefe etwas äußerst Wichtiges. Nun können Sie sagen: Das hat der Mann aber doch nicht gelesen. - Das ist aber nicht richtig. Das äußere Ich-Bewußtsein hat es nicht gelesen, aber darin liegt eben das Geheimnis eines solchen Schlüssels, daß die richtigen Worte, die noch übrigbleiben, sich in den Ätherleib, in das Unterbewußtsein einprägen, so daß der Betreffende es tatsächlich doch aufgenommen hat.
So können Impulse gegeben werden, um Menschen danach handeln zu lassen, und so ist es möglich, auf geheimnisvollem Wege Direktiven zu vermitteln, ohne irgendwie erkannt zu werden. Das ist aber nur ein triviales Beispiel gegenüber Dingen von mächtiger Bedeutung, die es in der Welt gibt. Der Eingeweihte kann in jeder Gestalt wandeln. Er hat die Mittel, um nicht auf das Alltagsbewußtsein, sondern auf die anderen Glieder des menschlichen Bewußtseins zu wirken.
Sie kennen den deutschen Mystiker Cornelius Agrippa von Nettesheim. Sein Lehrer war Johannes Tritheim, Abt von Sponheim. Dieser hat Bücher geschrieben, die dem heutigen materialistischen Bewußtsein entweder als romantisch oder als etwas sehr Barockes erscheinen, jedenfalls als etwas, was man in gewisser Weise gleichgültig hinnimmt. Man glaubt von diesen Schriften, sie seien auch in der Zeit des Johannes Tritheim von Sponheim gleichgültig hingenommen worden. Doch es gibt auch einen Schlüssel zum Lesen dieser Bücher. Wenn man gewisse Dinge vom Anfang und andere vom Ende fortläßt, so bleibt wieder ein Rest, und dieser Rest gibt in den Büchern des Tritheim von Sponheim einen großen Teil dessen wieder, was heute als elementare Theosophie vorgetragen wird. Beim Lesen dieser Schriften liest man also tatsächlich im Unterbewußtsein mit, was heute als Theosophie gegeben wird. Jahrhunderte hindurch haben viele Menschen Theosophie in ihre Seele aufgenommen, ohne daß sie es gewußt haben. Dies sind bedeutsame Einflüsse im Kulturleben gewesen, die sich an solche Vorgänge, wie sie vor acht Tagen hier besprochen wurden, nämlich die Wirkungen von Kupfer und Blei, anreihen lassen.
An diesen Beispielen können Sie sehen, wie durch die Jahrtausende hindurch von okkulten Bruderschaften in der Welt gewirkt wurde, zum Heile der Menschheit. Das war richtig für die Vergangenheit, aber es ist nicht mehr richtig für die Zukunft. Diejenigen Eingeweihten, die den Sinn und die Bedeutung der Entwickelung verstehen, werden deshalb sagen: Nicht das, was in der Vergangenheit geschehen ist, ist auch in der Zukunft richtig. — Es wäre eine schlechte Inspiration, welche jederzeit nur in der Vergangenheit die Wahrheit suchte und sie nicht im lebendigen Sein erleben würde, wodurch sich diese Wahrheit immer wieder für die Zukunft umgestaltet. Ein wahrhaft Inspirierter geht nicht bloß zu den ältesten Lehrern der Menschheit in die Schule, sondern gestaltet die Wahrheiten, die er empfängt, für jede Epoche lebendig um. Was sich bei jedem in der Seele regen muß als Einwand gegen diese alte Form des okkulten Wirkens, ist der Begriff der Freiheit, der Begriff ihres Wertes und der Würde des Menschen. Die Menschen sind ja unfrei, wenn in der geschilderten Weise auf sie gewirkt wird. Die Freiheit ist aber, wie öfters gezeigt worden ist, nicht etwas, was fertig ist, sondern etwas, was der Mensch im lebendigen Entwickelungsgang immer mehr ertingt. Freiheit ist das Ziel der Menschheitsentwickelung und nicht etwas, was der Menschheit in die Wiege gelegt worden ist. Und die Freiheit beruht auf Erkenntnis. Kein anderes Mittel gibt es, wodurch die alten Wirkungen, die von den Bruderschaften ausgegangen sind, überwunden werden können, als die Verbreitung des okkulten Wissens selbst. Das liegt der theosophischen Bewegung zugrunde: den Menschen dadurch frei zu machen, daß er die spirituellen Wahrheiten lernt, welche früher den okkulten Bruderschaften vorbehalten waren. Nichts wußte damals die Welt, und kaum weiß sie heute etwas von dem, was über den physischen Plan hinausgeht. Erst wenn sie die Dinge lernt, die über den physischen Plan hinausgehen, wird sie imstande sein, die geheimnisvollen Wirkungen und Kräfte, die zwischen Mensch und Mensch, zwischen Volk und Volk spielen, wirklich selbst zu beherrschen. Das ist die Aufgabe der Zukunft und damit eigentlich auch die Aufgabe der theosophischen Bewegung.
So stellt sich die Geisteswissenschaft gegenüber allen übrigen Bewegungen in der Gegenwart als etwas ganz anderes dar. Viele Zeitfragen dringen heute an den Menschen heran. Zu diesen Fragen, die ihm durch die Tatsachen aufgedrängt werden, gehört vor allem die soziale Frage, die in den verschiedensten Formen auftritt. Dazu gehören die persönlichen Freiheitsrechte, die nationale und die Rassenfrage und die Kolonialprobleme. Alle diese Fragen, zu denen noch als wichtigste die Erziehungsfrage hinzukommt, erfahren eine besondere Beleuchtung, eine andere Beleuchtung, als dies sonst in der Gegenwart geschehen kann, durch die geisteswissenschaftliche Erkenntnis. Warum ist das so? Durch ein kleines Beispiel soll dies klargemacht werden. Es gibt heute eine gewisse Bewegung in der Psychiatrie, von der die Laien noch nicht viel wissen. Aber da alles durch die Zeitungsartikel in die Welt dringt, wird der eine oder der andere davon schon einige Notiz genommen haben. Es greift tatsächlich in wichtige Angelegenheiten ein. Sehen Sie sich einmal die neuesten Erscheinungen des Büchermarktes an. Da finden Sie ein interessantes Büchlein über Robert Schumanns Krankheit. Ein Psychiater, ein Irrenarzt, hat sich, wie auch über andere Persönlichkeiten, über Robert Schumann hergemacht und nachgewiesen, daß er von derjenigen Krankheit befallen war, die man in der Irrenkunde Dementia praecox nennt, vorzeitigen Schwachsinn. Vielleicht wissen Sie auch, daß nicht nur Robert Schumann, sondern auch andere menschliche Größen auf ihre geistige Verfassung hin untersucht worden sind, Goethe, Heine und noch eine ganze Reihe. Es gibt sogar zwei Schriften, die in gewisser Beziehung nicht uninteressant sind, obwohl sie sogar die Christus Jesus-Persönlichkeit darauf hin untersucht haben. Das alles kann in unserer materialistischen Zeit geschehen. Ein solcher Irrenarzt sagt: Wenn ein abnormer Ausdruck des Geistes stattfindet, so liegt dem eine bestimmte abnorme Organisation des Menschen zugrunde. - Nun ist sich der heutige Irrenarzt auch über eines klar: Durch das, was er geistige Mittel nennt, kann man auf eine solche Krankheit nicht einwirken. Was damit gemeint ist, werden Sie sogleich sehen. Man hat eine Zeitlang geglaubt, wenn jemand, sagen wir, von einer bestimmten Form des Wahnsinns befallen ist, die sich in abnormen Religionsvorstellungen auslebt, könne man ihn davon abbringen, indem man ihm vernünftige Begriffe beibringt, also durch Zureden und durch Vorhalten vernünftiger Argumente. Der Wahnsinn tritt ja manchmal in ganz besonderer Form auf. Da bildet sich zum Beispiel jemand ein, er wird verfolgt. Der Irrenarzt sieht das als ein Symptom an. Verfolgungswahn ist für ihn also nur ein Symptom, in Wirklichkeit liegt eine Abnormität im Gehirn vor. Man kann den Betreffenden dadurch, daß man ihm klar macht, er werde gar nicht verfolgt, nicht von seinen Wahnideen abbringen, denn die Organisation des Gehitns läßt sich ja nicht umändern. Soweit hat der Irrenarzt tatsächlich recht. Der Geistesforscher will den anderen nicht von einem dilettantischen Gesichtspunkte aus richten. Wenn Sie auch mit vernünftigen Vorstellungen an den Betreffenden herankommen, so werden Sie ihn doch nicht von dem Wahn abbringen. Dieser wird höchstens andere Formen annehmen.
Nehmen wir Hölderlin an. Das ist ebenfalls ein Fall, der von den Irrenärzten aufs Korn genommen worden ist. Hölderlin ging an der Sehnsucht nach dem alten Griechenland zugrunde. Der Irrenarzt sagt: Er litt an einer Gehirnkrankheit und alles andere ist äußeres Symptom. Die Gehirnkrankheit war vielleicht schon durch eine erbliche Anlage da. So wäre es unmöglich, von dem, was man heute Geistesleben nennt, auf die Konstitution des Organismus, zunächst auf die Konstitution des Gehirns, zurückzuwirken. Sie sehen, diese Forschungen der modernen Psychiatrie führen ins Bodenlose. Der physische Leib wird als etwas Gegebenes hingenommen, und das Geistige ist nur wie ein Dunst, der vom physischen Leibe ausgeht. Selbst die höchsten geistigen Fähigkeiten, selbst die Leistungen unserer Genies, insofern sie abnorm sind, werden von solchen materialistischen Forschern auf eine abnorme Gehirntätigkeit zurückgeführt. So wird es Ihnen der Irrenarzt, der Psychiater sagen. Was Sie ihm auch immer entgegnen - er wird dabei bleiben, daß alles Geistesleben von der physischen Organisation abhängig ist. Soweit die positive Behauptung geht, ist sie richtig, denn das, worum es sich eigentlich handelt, kennt man in diesen Kreisen gar nicht; das ist völlig unbekannt.
Da kommen wir auf eine Sache, die Sie sich recht gut einprägen mögen. Sie enthält ein außerordentlich wichtiges Geheimnis, was aber vielleicht nicht von jedem für ein wichtiges Geheimnis genommen wird. Tatsächlich ist ursprünglich das Organ des Menschen, das seine Tätigkeit ausführt, von dieser Tätigkeit selbst aufgebaut: Das Gehirn ist ursprünglich von Gedanken aufgebaut. Das Blut entwickelt das Gefühlsleben. Ohne warmes Blut gibt es kein Gefühlsleben. Tatsächlich ist aber das Blut ursprünglich von dem Gefühlsleben aufgebaut. Damit haben wir einen ganz neuen Gesichtspunkt gewonnen. Nun sagen wir uns: Gewiß, mit dem, was heute der Mensch durch sein Gehirn an diesen oder jenen Vorstellungen hervorbringt, können wir sein Gehirn nicht ändern. Aber hinter diesem Gehirn stehen die anderen Gedanken, welche die materialistische Wissenschaft gar nicht kennt und die das Gehirn erst aufgebaut haben. Diese Gedankenwelt muß man eben kennenlernen, sie ist die schöpferische Gedankenwelt. So daß man zwischen den gewöhnlichen Gedanken und einer die Welt durchflutenden - wirklich durchflutenden - Gedankenwelt zu unterscheiden hat. Weil das Gehirn aus der Gedankenwelt geboren ist, ist der menschliche Geist imstande, nicht nur solche Gedanken hervorzubringen, welche der Gedankenwelt des Gehirns entsteigen, sondern auch an jener Gedankenwelt teilzuhaben, die hinter der physischen Organisation waltet. Dadurch lernt man das Gedankenleben beherrschen. Man heilt also auch nicht mit logischen Gründen, sondern dadurch, daß man viel tiefer in die geistigen Gebiete hineindtingt. Es ist möglich, wenn die Gedanken aus der wirklichen geistigen Welt herausgeholt werden, rein vom Gedanken aus den physischen Organismus zu verändern und den kranken Organismus wieder gesund zu machen.
So haben wir es mit einem Doppelsein des Geistes zu tun. Wir haben den Geist, der uns zunächst an der Oberfläche in den Naturerscheinungen, in Kunst und Wissenschaft und in den ökonomischen Erzeugnissen der Technik und der Industrie erscheint. Dieser Geist ist ein Erzeugnis des physischen Lebens. Aber hinter diesem steht sein Schöpfer, und der ist wieder Geist. Durch ein Bild machen Sie sich das klar. Sie denken sich, ich hätte hier Wasser, das ich durch eine bestimmte Prozedur so abkühle, daß es Eis wird. Wenn wir einen Teil des Eises so erwärmen, daß es wieder zu Wasser wird, dann haben wir ein dreifach Verschiedenes: das ursprüngliche Wasser ringsherum, das Eis und das, was wiederum zu Wasser wird. So betrachten Sie das menschliche Gehirn. Der Geist, der die ganze Welt ausfüllt, hat sich zum Gehirn verdichtet wie das Wasser zum Eis, und vom Gehirn werden wieder die Gedanken abgeschieden wie das Wasser von dem erwärmten Eis. So können Sie alles Materielle im Grunde genommen wie eine Verdichtung des Geistes auffassen, wie eine Zusammenziehung des Geistes, und das Geistige, das in der Welt erscheint, können Sie betrachten als hervorgegangen aus dem Physischen. Der Materialismus sieht nur die verdichtete Materie und hat vergessen, daß hinter der materiellen Welt das Geistige steht, daß über den Dingen ein Geistiges existiert, das die Materie hervorbringt. Die theosophische Bewegung soll wieder zu dem Geiste hinführen, der hinter dem Materiellen steht.
Jetzt können wir auch an einen Gedanken anknüpfen, den wir das letzte Mal ausgesprochen haben. Ich sprach zu Ihnen von der Schrift. Wir schreiben irgend etwas auf, sagen wir das Wort «Geist». Wer nicht einen Begriff vom Geist hat, wird dieses Wort sicher nicht aufschreiben. Aber es könnte ein anderer kommen, der keinen Begriff vom Geiste hat, der überhaupt nicht lesen kann, und könnte beschreiben: Da ist eine krumme Linie, die abwärts geht, dann wieder eine krumme Linie aufwärts, dann wieder abwärts und so weiter. Kein Mensch könnte darauf kommen, daß das «Geist» heißt, denn wer so beschreibt, der kann nicht lesen. Aber so beschreibt heute die Wissenschaft die Tatsachen. Damit dieses Wort da hingeschrieben werden konnte, war ein Sinn notwendig, der sich in dem, was hier steht, ausgegossen hat. Der Schreiber kann weggehen, ein anderer kann kommen und aus dem, was materiell hier steht, erkennen, was der Schreiber ursprünglich gemeint hat. So ist es auch mit dem ursprünglichen Geist gegenüber unserer physischen Welt. Diese physische Welt ist eine Schrift, nichts anderes als eine Schrift. Die gewöhnliche Alltagswissenschaft beschreibt die einzelnen Dinge der Welt so, wie ich es gezeigt habe. Der Okkultist weiß aber, daß diese einzelnen Dinge, abgesehen davon, daß man sie äußerlich beschreiben kann, noch etwas bedeuten; daß man sie lesen kann, weil sie die Schriftzeichen des Geistes sind. Wenn man diese Welt so als Schriftzeichen des Geistes betrachtet, wenn man alles Äußere — Mineralien, Pflanzen, Tiere und Menschen - als Schriftzeichen des Geistes anschaut, dann kommt man durch das Lesen der physischen Welt von selbst in die geistige Welt hinein.
Dieses Lesen ist allerdings nicht ganz einfach. Um ein Beispiel für dieses Lesen zu zeigen, sei das Folgende angeführt. Der Chemiker nimmt Blut, analysiert es und sagt, es bestehe aus diesen und jenen Bestandteilen. Dann ist er fertig, und er weiß, was Blut ist. Das Lesen im geisteswissenschaftlich-okkulten Sinne zeigt Ihnen aber, daß das Blut in der Form, wie wir es haben, nicht hätte zustande kommen können, wenn nicht dahinter die Erscheinungen stünden, welche wir die astralen nennen. Der Geist der Welt wirkt durch die astralen Erscheinungen auf den Stoff. Niemals könnte es in der physischen Welt Blut geben, wenn nicht hinter der physischen Welt die astralische stünde. Alles mögliche könnte da sein, das Blut aber ist nur dadurch möglich, daß die astrale Welt dahinter vorhanden ist. So lesen Sie im Blute das Astrale, wie Sie in diesen Zeichen das Wort «Geist» lesen. Das Lesen der Schriftzeichen, die hier im Physischen gegeben sind, führt zum Schauen im Astralen.
Das ist überhaupt der richtige Weg, um in die geistige Welt hineinzukommen: sich recht sinnvoll in die uns umgebende Welt zu vertiefen. Bequemer ist es, auf manche andere Weise in die geistige Welt hineinzukommen, sicherer ist es aber durch das Studium der Erscheinungen, die uns umgeben. Anders spricht ein Mineral, anders eine Pflanze, anders ein Tier, anders ein Mensch — weil alle diese Wesen eben verschiedene Schriftzeichen sind. Wenn Sie sie sinnvoll betrachten, so bringen sie Ihnen Kundschaft aus der geistigen Welt. Daher werden Sie in den rosenkreuzerischen Anweisungen zu einer okkulten Schulung in erster Reihe das Studium unserer Welt angegeben finden, das hingebungsvolle, sinnvolle Betrachten der Welt. Als wir unsere theosophische Bewegung begannen, haben manche gesagt: Was uns der erzählt, kann man auch in jedem naturwissenschaftlichen Buch lesen. Er redet von Abstammung, vom Kampf ums Dasein und so weiter -— aber wir wollen doch von den Dingen hören, die in der geistigen Welt vorgehen. - Von diesen Dingen ist vielleicht viel mehr darin, als die Leute, welche es verlangt haben, vertragen könnten. Aber der Ausgangspunkt soll von einem sicheren Verständnis unserer unmittelbaren Wirklichkeit genommen werden, nicht von einem bloßen Beschreiben, sondern von dem sinnvollen Verstehen.
Betrachten Sie das Folgende als eine wichtige Grundwahrheit und die rosenkreuzerische okkulte Schulung hat das immer als eine Grundwahrheit betrachtet -: Hier in der Sinnenwelt sieht es so aus, wie es die äußeren physischen Sinne wahrnehmen können. In der astralischen Welt sieht es wieder anders aus, ganz anders. Und in der devachanischen Welt sieht es wieder ganz anders aus. So verhält es sich in bezug auf das Wahrnehmen. Nun gibt es das Denken, mit dem man die Wahrnehmungen der physischen Welt, der astralischen Welt und der devachanischen Welt begreift. Die Gedanken und Gesetze der Logik sind für alle drei Welten dieselben. Was richtig gedacht ist, ist auch richtig im Devachan, ist richtig auf dem astralischen wie auf dem physischen Plan. Lernen Sie richtig denken auf dem physischen Plan, so haben Sie in diesem richtigen Denken einen sicheren Führer durch alle Welten. Aber es handelt sich darum, bedeutungsvoll, sinnvoll, tief denken zu lernen. Daher sollte es sich niemand ersparen, in diese sinnliche Welt mit den Gedanken einzudringen und sie zu betrachten als Schriftzeichen, die Kunde bringen von einer höheren, geistigen Welt.
In erster Linie geht es bei dem großen Prozeß der Befreiung der Menschheit also darum, eine sinnvolle Lehre von der Bedeutung der physischen Erscheinungen zu bekommen. Durch dieses Tor wird man in die geistige Welt hineingeführt. Es ist gewiß eine entsagungsvolle Arbeit, aber der Mensch muß sie auf sich nehmen. Wenn er sie wirklich auf sich nimmt, wenn er auf diesem Wege allmählich zum Geistigen aufsteigt und die Dinge von der geistigen Welt aus zu erfassen lernt, dann wird er ein Mitarbeiter an den großen Kulturaufgaben. Das kann er nur als freier Mensch werden. In dem Augenblick, wo man auf einer anderen Basis als derjenigen der Freiheit die Kultur der Zukunft aufbauen wollte, würde man nichts anderes schaffen als totgeborene Produkte, indem man die Vorstellungen der Vergangenheit in die Zukunft hineinträgt. Das wird der große Unterschied gegen früher sein, daß nicht Grundsätze und nicht Institutionen wirken, sondern Menschen. Zwar haben in der Vergangenheit wirklich auch nur Menschen gewirkt. Aber diese waren nur ein kleiner Kreis, und ihre Grundsätze gingen auf die Allgemeinheit über. Manche lobten diese Grundsätze und meinten, sie wären etwas Ursprüngliches. Da redeten dann die Leute von etwas, was sie von Prinzipien ableiteten. Es waraber nichts anderes als der von den Eingeweihten herrührende Impuls. Solche Impulse wurden dann fortgesponnen; das konnte lange dauern. Nehmen wir als Beispiel eine alte Einweihung, die des Heraklit. Er faßte die von ihm gefundenen Wahrheiten in äußere Formeln, die von unzähligen Leuten fortgesponnen wurden. Sie glaubten, sie dächten ursprünglich; das war aber nicht der Fall. Ursprünglich lernt man nur denken, wenn man hinter die Dinge schaut und ihre reale Bedeutung begreifen kann.
So hoffe ich, daß Sie ein wenig empfunden haben, wie sich der Mensch in den Kulturprozeß hineinreihen soll, wie er zwischen der einen Säule, der Geduld, hindurchwandern kann, indem er lernt und nicht zu früh eingreifen will, und zwischen der andern Säule, dem Willen, ein dienendes Glied im Entwickelungsgang der Menschheit zu sein. Das kann er, wenn er immer mehr durch die Sinne die Dinge auf sich wirken läßt und so zum schöpferischen Geist vordringt. Das muß man fühlen, in sich erleben, dann ist man Theosoph. In einem weit höheren Maße müssen die Menschen in der Zukunft frei werden, als sie es in der Vergangenheit waren, und vor allem auch in einer viel größeren Anzahl. Es ist noch nicht lange her, da gab es in Mitteleuropa nur wenige Menschen, die wirklich frei waren. Kleine Zentren waren es, aus denen die Kultur herausstrahlte. Auf die anderen ging sie dann in der Gestalt von Anschauungen und Meinungen über, so daß sie glaubten, alles übrige sei irrig. Auch Rousseau glaubte, er gäbe nur seine Meinungen, sein Innerstes wieder, während er doch von ganz woandersher beeinflußt war.
Die Eingeweihten wußten, daß das Leben zwischen Geburt und Tod, das in die sinnlichen Erscheinungen eingeschlossen ist, von Kräften beherrscht wird, die im Tode nicht aufhören, die im Tode geradeso da sind wie im physischen Leben, die auch vor der Geburt da waren und während des physischen Lebens nur eine andere Form annehmen. Daher konnten die Eingeweihten der Welt Impulse geben, weil sie in das hineinschauen konnten, was hinter dem Tod ist. Das Glas, das hier steht, kann sich niemals selbst bewegen. Ebensowenig bewegt sich das, was zwischen Geburt und Tod eingeschlossen ist, von selbst. Die Kräfte, die dasjenige bewegen, was zwischen Geburt und Tod eingeschlossen ist, sind immer da; sie sind das Ewige. Die Eingeweihten kennen sie und ein großer Teil der Menschheit muß sie in der Zukunft kennenlernen.
Das nehmen Sie als eine Empfindung auf, denn diese Empfindung ist wichtig. Ohne sie kommen Sie nicht im Okkultismus vorwärts. Von ihr hängt es ab, ob Sie sich als richtiges Glied in die theosophische Bewegung einreihen. Diese Empfindung führt Sie aber auch mit einer gewissen Sicherheit durch etwas hindurch, was Sie rings um sich wahrnehmen. Wir nehmen in der Kultur ein Chaos wahr, das ist richtig. Theoretisch ist im Materialismus das Chaos. Es ist etwas Ungeheuerliches, wenn der Mensch heute ein Buch aufschlägt und ihm lauter unzusammenhängende Einzelerkenntnisse geboten werden. Lauter Einzelheiten und überall Chaos, auch draußen im sozialen Leben.
Was wird der tun, der nicht im theosophischen Leben steht? Er macht Vorschläge, wie man es besser machen kann. Wie viele soziale Rezepte hat die Menschheit schon erlebt. Dadurch aber unterscheidet sich die theosophische Bewegung von allen den anderen, daß sie mit keinen Rezepten aufwartet, daß sie nichts angibt, wie die Sachen besser zu machen sind. Das ist nicht Zukunftskultur, wenn man sich bemüht, Rezepte zu finden; das ist nicht Zukunftskultur, wenn man darüber diskutiert, wie man den Weltfrieden herstellt. Programme aufzustellen ist Sache der Vergangenheit. Die Zukunft liegt darin, daß Menschen da sind, die aus sich heraus in der richtigen Weise handeln. Die Theosophie schreibt nicht vor, was das Rechte ist, sondern sie zeigt dem Menschen, wie er dazu kommt, das Richtige zu tun. Die Theosophie wird niemals sagen, wenn dreißig Menschen beisammen sind: Diese dreißig leben friedlich zusammen, wenn sie diese oder jene Konstitution haben. Sie zeigt vielmehr jedem Einzelnen, wie er in sich selbst eine Entwickelungsstufe erreichen soll, auf der er ganz von selbst die richtige Ordnung findet, wenn er mit anderen in Wechselwirkung kommt. Das ist die theosophische Aufgabe in der Bewegung der Zukunft.
Wir haben in verschiedenen Vorträgen unsere Weltlage, namentlich Krieg und Frieden, ferner die Frauenfrage und die soziale Frage von großen Gesichtspunkten aus betrachtet. Durch das Freiwerden des Menschen, durch das Herausreißen des Menschen aus dem Zwang der Umgebung wird er zu gleicher Zeit in die höheren Welten hinaufgeführt, denn wahre Befreiung ermöglicht erst den Eintritt in die höheren Welten. Niemals kann der Mensch unter Zwang in die höhere Welt eintreten. Jetzt sehen wir das Gute selbst des Chaos. Hätte sich nicht unsere ganze Kultur in ein Chaos verwandelt, so könnten sich die einzelnen Persönlichkeiten nicht aus sich selbst frei entfalten. Sie wären immer an die Umgebung gefesselt. Es mußte die alte Ordnung zerreißen und in ein Chaos verwandelt werden. Wir stehen in dieser Beziehung vor großen Umwälzungen, und niemand darf hoffen, daß er in der Welt anders reformieren kann als durch die Entwickelung der Seelen. Alles andere wäre dilettantische Prophetie.
So versuchten wir in diesen zwei Stunden, in der vorigen und in der heutigen, den Sinn der geisteswissenschaftlichen Bewegung als einer Kulturbewegung zu erfassen. Das nächste Mal wollen wir sehen, wie sich das Karma der Menschen innerhalb der ganzen Kulturbewegung auswirkt und wie die einzelnen karmischen Zusammenhänge des Menschen sind. Mit anderen Worten, wir wollen sehen, was der Mensch aus einer Inkarnation in die nächste hinübernimmt und wie er im Fortgang von Inkarnation zu Inkarnation am Weltprozeß teilnimmt. Das ist die Aufgabe, vor der wir in acht Tagen stehen werden.
Spiritual Knowledge as the Highest Form of Liberation
The task of the spiritual science movement
Eight days ago, we considered the spiritual scientific worldview insofar as it can be comprehensible to contemporary human beings. Naturally, these human beings initially proceed from their sensory observations and their intellect, or from modern science, which is also based on sensory observation and intellect. We showed how spiritual science is able to counter all the objections that our reason might raise from the scientific conscience of the present. The aim and purpose of this consideration should not be misunderstood. It was not undertaken so that we could go out and engage in discussions with those who have not yet dealt with spiritual science. That cannot be the point. Those who have no relationship to spiritual science and no desire to gain one will first have to learn to engage with it. So it is not a matter of having arguments ready for discussion, but of each person being able to raise within themselves, in their own soul, those objections that may arise from contemporary popular science and other aspects of modern life. Above all, they should gain a certain confidence in themselves. That was the aim and purpose of our previous considerations.
It can never be the task of the spiritual science movement to satisfy mere curiosity or thirst for knowledge. It is true that in the widest circles of theosophical activity, even to this day, this curiosity, or to put it more nobly, this thirst for knowledge, has often been the basis that brought people into contact with theosophical endeavors. But all those who come out of mere curiosity will feel disappointed after a while. Not because spiritual science does not have the most extensive means to satisfy human curiosity into the deepest depths of existence, but because the knowledge that is the subject of the theosophical movement is only beneficial to people when it becomes active knowledge, knowledge through which they intervene actively, which they apply in their daily lives; at the very least, they must have the urge to put this knowledge into practice.
When people approach spiritual science, they easily find themselves in a conflict. You must clearly recognize this conflict in your soul. There are two types of people who come to theosophy. Some say: I want to help, I want to be a valuable member of society — and by that they mean that the Theosophical movement should give them the means to start tomorrow. Others perhaps only delude themselves into thinking they want to help. In truth, however, they only want to satisfy their curiosity, to experience something sensational. Neither group will become the right kind of members within the Theosophical Society. For those who want to help tomorrow do not consider that one must first learn and be able to do something in order to help. They must be told: You must have patience in developing within yourselves those powers and means through which you will mature into helpers for your fellow human beings. In this way, the former must be modest. The others, however, who only want to satisfy their curiosity, must realize that none of the means and none of the abilities given to them should be accepted from any other point of view than with the intention of becoming a serving member of the whole development of humanity. This requires a long time. The Theosophical Society should first create a firm awareness and knowledge of eternity and spiritual existence. Those who carry this awareness within themselves say to themselves: It is time, I can be patient, I am developing calmly. I will not immediately want to undertake everything possible from my current imperfect standpoint to reform humanity and so on.
Patience on the one hand and, on the other, the will to become a serving member of the whole of human development—these are the two things between which the method of the Theosophical Society lies. And one must not look only at one, but must pay attention to both. One must unite both patience and the will to act within oneself, but not as an arithmetic mean between the two; rather, one must develop these two separately in the soul. Do not confuse these two things! It is quite different to have an arithmetic mean or to have these two things separately in the soul.
In accordance with these two requirements, the Theosophical worldview was brought into being several decades ago and made accessible to humanity. We allow the knowledge we have absorbed over the years, everything that has already been said during this time, to pass through our souls once again, because the more often we do this, the better it is. The knowledge should be transformed into a living force of will. Therefore, the older members will hear some things again that they have already heard, perhaps in a different context, perhaps just to refresh their memory. It was from this perspective that the theosophical worldview was brought into being several decades ago. What was it before? It was what is called a secret teaching or occult teaching, something practiced in a small circle of specially admitted people. After rigorous testing of their will, feelings, and thinking, students in earlier times were admitted to these closed circles, the esoteric or occult brotherhoods. These brotherhoods had the kind of effect that a larger circle of people should have in the future. More and more people will be called upon to exert this effect in the future. A small circle of chosen ones, of elect, always exerted the influence that the theosophical movement is to be enabled to exert. Whether it was the disciples of Hermes or the pupils of Eleusis, the Egyptian or Christian Gnostic secret schools, or the Rosicrucians in Europe, powerful influences always emanated from these narrowly defined brotherhoods. Even if people today know nothing or virtually nothing about this in their intellectual science, it is nevertheless a fact that all spiritual culture and, through this, all material culture originated from such brotherhoods.
It has already been discussed here that all material culture, everything that man creates with a hammer, saw, axe, or otherwise, has its basis in spiritual culture. You can consider the smallest and the largest things in this light. Take one of the great structures of the present day, the Simplon Tunnel or the Gotthard Tunnel. Very few people think about the fact that the Simplon Tunnel or the Gotthard Tunnel could never have been built if Leibniz had not lived. If differential calculus had not existed, no one could have constructed such structures. The thought that once led these thinkers to perform these fine calculations made all this materially possible in the first place. Everything that happens on the physical plane ultimately leads back to thought. It is a grave illusion to believe that there is anything in material culture that does not ultimately lead back to the spirit, to thought. Whatever you take, in the field of art, in the field of technology, industry, or commerce, the most practical, the most trivial, the most everyday, ultimately leads back to what has taken place in the soul of man.
Where do the great impulses of thought and spiritual creativity come from? Here we touch on the area that can help us understand how the occult brotherhoods worked in past centuries and millennia. Let's take an example. Today's materialistic thinker would certainly not come up with this example. A fiery, enthusiastic young man of the 18th century, with a predisposition for greatness, needed only a stimulus in the form of an event that appeared to be a coincidence, something highly insignificant. As if by chance, he encounters a seemingly indifferent personality. This person speaks words to the young man that apparently make no particular impression on him. I say “seemingly” because something is happening in the soul of this enthusiastic young man. The encounter during which these seemingly insignificant words were spoken did have meaning. What actually happened there? Something of the highest cultural significance is veiled in an insignificant event that appears to be ruled by chance. Those brothers who are the true guardians of humanity's treasure of wisdom are in this world. They may walk among us, and we may encounter them. But to ordinary humanity, they wear a cloak of invisibility. It is up to others to recognize them. They themselves never reveal themselves. In centuries past, it was even more difficult to recognize them than it is today. It did not matter whether one recognized them. What was essential was their work. Imagine such a brotherhood of hidden initiates. One of these brothers approaches the young man as if by chance. But such coincidences are brought about by the wisdom of the world. A few insignificant words ignite something in the young man that is culturally the most important thing imaginable. This young man's name is Jean-Jacques Rousseau. In a seemingly coincidental event, the seed was sown for Rousseauism to exist and for it to have a powerful influence on cultural life. The impulses that emanated from Rousseau's writings are not accidental, nor are they something that can be understood by looking at external cultural history, but rather they are the quiet continuation of the stream of wisdom preserved in the brotherhood. In the brotherhood, it is decided what is good for humanity. The brothers are wise men, they are prophets. They know what is necessary for humanity. So when necessary, they send one of their own out into the world to give development a new impetus.
Another example has already been mentioned here. It concerns the German theosophical philosopher Jacob Böhme and can be found in every biography of Böhme. As a boy, Jakob was apprenticed to a shoemaker. One day, the master and mistress went out. They had forbidden him to sell anything; he was only to keep watch. Then a personage entered the shop who made a strong impression on him. The stranger wanted to buy something, but Jakob was not allowed to sell him anything. After the stranger had left, Jakob heard his name being called. He stepped outside, and the man said to him: Jakob, you are small now, but you will become great one day. You will become a person who will amaze the world. — This man provided the impetus for what is contained in Jakob Böhme's writings.
You will understand even better what this is all about if we take another example that can lead you even deeper into the secrets of the brotherhoods. Imagine this: an unknown person—unknown to the outside world, but well known to the initiates—writes a letter to a wealthy privy councilor or minister. The letter may deal with a completely indifferent matter, perhaps the approval of an unimportant side issue. If an initiate were to read this letter—I am telling you absolute facts here—who would understand it quite differently from an ordinary person, he would recognize something very special in it. It may be, for example, that every third word at the beginning or every fourth word at the end of such a letter must be omitted. Then certain words remain that have a very meaningful significance, something that affects the entire will of the person to whom the letter is addressed. The latter may have only read that he should have some rubbish removed. In truth, however, the letter contains something extremely important. Now you may say: But the man did not read that. - That is not correct. The outer ego consciousness did not read it, but therein lies the secret of such a key, that the right words that remain are imprinted in the etheric body, in the subconscious, so that the person concerned has actually taken it in after all.
In this way, impulses can be given to make people act accordingly, and in this way it is possible to convey directives in a mysterious way without being recognized in any way. But this is only a trivial example compared to things of powerful significance that exist in the world. The initiate can transform himself into any form. He has the means to influence not everyday consciousness, but the other members of human consciousness.
You are familiar with the German mystic Cornelius Agrippa von Nettesheim. His teacher was Johannes Tritheim, Abbot of Sponheim. Tritheim wrote books that appear to today's materialistic consciousness as either romantic or very baroque, in any case as something that is accepted with a certain indifference. It is believed that these writings were also accepted with indifference in the time of Johannes Tritheim von Sponheim. But there is also a key to reading these books. If one omits certain things from the beginning and others from the end, what remains reflects much of what is presented today as elementary theosophy in the books of Tritheim von Sponheim. When reading these writings, one actually reads in the subconscious what is presented today as theosophy. For centuries, many people have absorbed theosophy into their souls without knowing it. These have been significant influences in cultural life, which can be linked to events such as those discussed here eight days ago, namely the effects of copper and lead.
From these examples, you can see how occult brotherhoods have worked in the world throughout the millennia for the good of humanity. That was right for the past, but it is no longer right for the future. Those initiates who understand the meaning and significance of development will therefore say: What happened in the past is not necessarily right for the future. It would be poor inspiration to seek truth only in the past and not experience it in living being, whereby this truth is constantly transformed for the future. A truly inspired person does not merely go to the oldest teachers of humanity for instruction, but transforms the truths he receives into living forms for each epoch. What must stir in everyone's soul as an objection to this old form of occult activity is the concept of freedom, the concept of its value and the dignity of the human being. People are indeed unfree when they are influenced in the manner described. But freedom, as has often been shown, is not something that is finished, but something that human beings attain more and more in the course of their living development. Freedom is the goal of human development and not something that has been laid in the cradle of humanity. And freedom is based on knowledge. There is no other means by which the old influences emanating from the brotherhoods can be overcome than the dissemination of occult knowledge itself. This is the basis of the theosophical movement: to set people free by teaching them the spiritual truths that were formerly reserved for the occult brotherhoods. At that time, the world knew nothing, and even today it knows little about what lies beyond the physical plane. Only when it learns about things that go beyond the physical plane will it be able to truly master the mysterious effects and forces that play between people and between nations. That is the task of the future and thus also the task of the theosophical movement.
Thus, spiritual science presents itself as something quite different from all other movements of the present day. Many contemporary issues are pressing upon people today. Among these issues, which are forced upon them by the facts, is above all the social question, which arises in many different forms. These include personal freedoms, national and racial issues, and colonial problems. All these questions, to which the most important question of education must be added, are illuminated in a special way, in a different way than is otherwise possible in the present, through spiritual scientific knowledge. Why is this so? A small example will clarify this. There is a certain movement in psychiatry today that laypeople do not yet know much about. But since everything penetrates the world through newspaper articles, some people will already have taken note of it. It actually intervenes in important matters. Take a look at the latest publications on the book market. There you will find an interesting little book about Robert Schumann's illness. A psychiatrist, a doctor of mental illness, has, as with other personalities, set his sights on Robert Schumann and proven that he was afflicted with the illness known in psychiatry as dementia praecox, or premature insanity. Perhaps you also know that not only Robert Schumann, but also other great figures have been examined for their mental state, Goethe, Heine, and a whole series of others. There are even two writings that are not uninteresting in a certain respect, although they have even examined the personality of Christ Jesus in this regard. All this can happen in our materialistic age. One such psychiatrist says: When an abnormal expression of the mind occurs, it is based on a certain abnormal organization of the human being. Now, today's psychiatrist is also clear about one thing: such an illness cannot be influenced by what he calls spiritual means. You will see what is meant by this in a moment. For a while, it was believed that if someone was afflicted with a certain form of madness that manifested itself in abnormal religious ideas, they could be dissuaded from it by teaching them reasonable concepts, i.e., through persuasion and by presenting reasonable arguments. Madness sometimes occurs in a very special form. For example, someone imagines that they are being persecuted. The psychiatrist sees this as a symptom. For him, paranoia is only a symptom; in reality, there is an abnormality in the brain. You cannot dissuade the person concerned from their delusions by making it clear to them that they are not being persecuted, because the organization of the mind cannot be changed. In this respect, the psychiatrist is actually right. The mental researcher does not want to judge others from an amateurish point of view. Even if you approach the person concerned with reasonable ideas, you will not be able to dissuade them from their delusion. At most, it will take on other forms.
Let us take Hölderlin as an example. This is another case that has been targeted by psychiatrists. Hölderlin was destroyed by his longing for ancient Greece. The psychiatrist says: he suffered from a brain disease and everything else is an external symptom. The brain disease may have already been there due to a hereditary predisposition. So it would be impossible to trace back what we today call spiritual life to the constitution of the organism, and initially to the constitution of the brain. You see, this research in modern psychiatry leads into a bottomless pit. The physical body is accepted as a given, and the spiritual is only like a vapor emanating from the physical body. Even the highest mental abilities, even the achievements of our geniuses, insofar as they are abnormal, are attributed by such materialistic researchers to abnormal brain activity. This is what the psychiatrist will tell you. Whatever you say to him, he will insist that all mental life is dependent on the physical organization. As far as the positive assertion goes, it is correct, because what is actually at stake is completely unknown in these circles; it is completely unknown.
This brings us to something that you may want to remember quite well. It contains an extraordinarily important secret, but one that may not be considered an important secret by everyone. In fact, the organ of the human being that carries out its activity is originally built up by this activity itself: the brain is originally built up by thoughts. The blood develops the life of feeling. Without warm blood there is no life of feeling. In fact, however, the blood is originally built up by the life of feeling. This gives us a completely new point of view. Now let us say to ourselves: Certainly, we cannot change the human brain with the ideas that people produce today through their brains. But behind this brain are other thoughts that materialistic science does not even know about and that built the brain in the first place. We must get to know this world of thoughts; it is the creative world of thoughts. So we must distinguish between ordinary thoughts and a world of thought that permeates the world — truly permeates it. Because the brain is born of the world of thought, the human spirit is capable not only of producing thoughts that arise from the brain's world of thought, but also of participating in the world of thought that governs the physical organization. In this way, one learns to master the life of thought. So one does not heal with logical reasoning, but by delving much deeper into the spiritual realms. It is possible, when thoughts are drawn from the real spiritual world, to change the physical organism purely through thought and to restore the sick organism to health.
So we are dealing with a duality of the spirit. We have the spirit that initially appears to us on the surface in natural phenomena, in art and science, and in the economic products of technology and industry. This spirit is a product of physical life. But behind it stands its creator, who is again spirit. You can understand this clearly with an image. Imagine that I have water here, which I cool down through a certain procedure so that it turns into ice. If we heat up part of the ice so that it turns back into water, then we have three different things: the original water around it, the ice, and what turns back into water. Look at the human brain in the same way. The spirit that fills the whole world has condensed into the brain like water into ice, and thoughts are separated from the brain like water from heated ice. So you can basically understand everything material as a condensation of the spirit, as a contraction of the spirit, and you can regard the spiritual that appears in the world as having emerged from the physical. Materialism sees only condensed matter and has forgotten that behind the material world stands the spiritual, that above things there exists a spiritual realm that brings forth matter. The theosophical movement should lead us back to the spirit that stands behind the material.
Now we can also pick up on a thought we expressed last time. I spoke to you about writing. We write something down, let's say the word “spirit.” Anyone who has no concept of spirit will certainly not write down this word. But someone else might come along who has no concept of spirit, who cannot read at all, and might describe: There is a crooked line going down, then another crooked line going up, then down again, and so on. No one could guess that this means “spirit,” because someone who describes it this way cannot read. But this is how science describes facts today. In order for this word to be written there, a meaning was necessary that was poured out in what is written here. The writer can leave, someone else can come and recognize from what is materially written here what the writer originally meant. It is the same with the original spirit in relation to our physical world. This physical world is a script, nothing other than a script. Ordinary everyday science describes the individual things of the world as I have shown. But the occultist knows that these individual things, apart from being able to be described externally, also have a meaning; that they can be read because they are the characters of the spirit. If one regards this world as characters of the spirit, if one regards everything external — minerals, plants, animals, and human beings — as characters of the spirit, then by reading the physical world one automatically enters the spiritual world.
However, this reading is not entirely easy. To give an example of this reading, consider the following. The chemist takes blood, analyzes it, and says that it consists of these and those components. Then he is finished, and he knows what blood is. Reading in the spiritual-scientific-occult sense, however, shows you that blood in the form we have it could not have come into being if it were not for the phenomena behind it, which we call astral. The spirit of the world acts on matter through astral phenomena. There could never be blood in the physical world if the astral world did not stand behind the physical world. All kinds of things could exist, but blood is only possible because the astral world exists behind it. So you read the astral in blood, just as you read the word “spirit” in these signs. Reading the characters that are given here in the physical world leads to seeing in the astral.
This is the right way to enter the spiritual world: to immerse yourself meaningfully in the world around us. It is more convenient to enter the spiritual world in some other way, but it is safer to do so by studying the phenomena that surround us. A mineral speaks differently, a plant differently, an animal differently, a human being differently — because all these beings are different characters. If you observe them meaningfully, they will bring you knowledge from the spiritual world. Therefore, in the Rosicrucian instructions for occult training, you will find that the study of our world, the devoted, meaningful observation of the world, is given priority. When we started our Theosophical movement, some people said: What he tells us can also be read in any science book. He talks about ancestry, the struggle for existence, and so on — but we want to hear about the things that happen in the spiritual world. There may be much more to these things than the people who asked for them could bear. But the starting point should be taken from a secure understanding of our immediate reality, not from a mere description, but from a meaningful understanding.
Consider the following as an important fundamental truth, and Rosicrucian occult training has always considered it a fundamental truth: Here in the sensory world, things appear as they can be perceived by the outer physical senses. In the astral world, things appear differently again, quite differently. And in the devachanic world, things appear quite differently again. This is how it is with regard to perception. Now there is thinking, with which one comprehends the perceptions of the physical world, the astral world, and the devachanic world. The thoughts and laws of logic are the same for all three worlds. What is thought correctly is also correct in Devachan, is correct on the astral plane as well as on the physical plane. If you learn to think correctly on the physical plane, you will have a sure guide through all worlds in this correct thinking. But it is a matter of learning to think meaningfully, sensibly, and deeply. Therefore, no one should refrain from penetrating this sensual world with their thoughts and viewing it as characters that bring news of a higher, spiritual world.
The great process of liberating humanity is therefore primarily about gaining a meaningful understanding of the significance of physical phenomena. Through this gateway, one is led into the spiritual world. It is certainly a demanding task, but human beings must take it upon themselves. If they truly take it upon themselves, if they gradually ascend to the spiritual realm in this way and learn to comprehend things from the spiritual world, then they will become co-workers in the great tasks of culture. They can only become this as free human beings. The moment one wanted to build the culture of the future on a basis other than that of freedom, one would create nothing but stillborn products by carrying the ideas of the past into the future. The great difference from the past will be that it is not principles and institutions that will be effective, but human beings. It is true that in the past, too, it was really only human beings who were effective. But they were only a small circle, and their principles were transferred to the general public. Some praised these principles and thought they were something original. People then talked about something they derived from principles. But it was nothing more than the impulse originating from the initiates. Such impulses were then spun out; that could take a long time. Let us take as an example an ancient initiation, that of Heraclitus. He captured the truths he had found in external formulas, which were spun out by countless people. They believed they were thinking originally, but that was not the case. Originally, one only learns to think when one looks behind things and can grasp their real meaning.
So I hope you have felt a little how man should fit into the cultural process, how he can walk between the one pillar, patience, by learning and not wanting to intervene too soon, and the other pillar, the will, to be a serving member in the development of humanity. They can do this if they allow things to affect them more and more through their senses and thus advance to the creative spirit. One must feel this, experience it within oneself, then one is a theosophist. In the future, people must become free to a far greater extent than they were in the past, and above all in much greater numbers. Not long ago, there were only a few people in Central Europe who were truly free. Culture radiated out from small centers. It then passed on to others in the form of views and opinions, so that they believed everything else to be erroneous. Rousseau also believed that he was only expressing his opinions, his innermost feelings, while in fact he was influenced by something else entirely.
The initiates knew that life between birth and death, which is enclosed in sensory phenomena, is ruled by forces that do not cease at death, that are just as present in death as in physical life, that were also present before birth and only take on a different form during physical life. Therefore, the initiates were able to give impulses to the world because they could see into what lies beyond death. The glass standing here can never move by itself. Nor does that which is enclosed between birth and death move by itself. The forces that move what is enclosed between birth and death are always there; they are the eternal. The initiates know them, and a large part of humanity must come to know them in the future.
Take this in as a feeling, because this feeling is important. Without it, you will not make progress in occultism. It determines whether you will become a true member of the theosophical movement. But this feeling also guides you with a certain certainty through something you perceive around you. We perceive chaos in culture, that is true. Theoretically, there is chaos in materialism. It is something monstrous when people today open a book and are presented with nothing but disjointed individual pieces of knowledge. Nothing but details and chaos everywhere, even out there in social life.
What will those who are not involved in theosophical life do? They make suggestions on how things can be done better. How many social recipes has humanity already experienced? But the theosophical movement differs from all the others in that it does not offer any recipes, that it does not specify how things can be done better. It is not a culture of the future to strive to find recipes; it is not a culture of the future to discuss how to achieve world peace. Setting up programs is a thing of the past. The future lies in there being people who act in the right way of their own accord. Theosophy does not prescribe what is right, but shows people how to come to do the right thing. Theosophy will never say, when thirty people are together: these thirty will live together peacefully if they have this or that constitution. Rather, it shows each individual how to reach a stage of development within themselves at which they will automatically find the right order when they interact with others. That is the theosophical task in the movement of the future.
By freeing themselves, by tearing themselves away from the constraints of their environment, human beings are at the same time led up into the higher worlds, for true liberation is what enables them to enter the higher worlds. Human beings can never enter the higher world under compulsion. Now we see the good even in chaos. If our entire culture had not been transformed into chaos, individual personalities would not be able to develop freely from within themselves. They would always be bound to their environment. The old order had to be torn apart and transformed into chaos. In this respect, we are facing great upheavals, and no one can hope to reform the world other than through the development of souls. Anything else would be amateurish prophecy.
So in these two hours, yesterday and today, we have tried to grasp the meaning of the spiritual-scientific movement as a cultural movement. Next time we will see how the karma of human beings affects the whole cultural movement and what the individual karmic connections of human beings are. In other words, we want to see what human beings carry over from one incarnation to the next and how they participate in the world process as they progress from incarnation to incarnation. That is the task we will face in eight days.