Donate books to help fund our work. Learn more→

The Rudolf Steiner Archive

a project of Steiner Online Library, a public charity

Anthroposophy as a Demand of the Times
GA 231

15 November 1923, Dornach

Translated by Luise Boeddinghaus

At present there is a general opinion that there are certain limits to human knowledge, not only temporary knowledge owing to the fact that one had not achieved everything in the time that has already passed, and one would have to leave some things for the future, but in quite a general sense one speaks today of limits of perception, limits to knowledge for humanity. One thinks that man is constituted in such a way that he can only know about certain things, while other things are above his ability to know about them; and that it is mainly the facts of the so-called supersensible world which man is supposed not to be able to perceive and for which he has to be satisfied with what is called a belief, an assumption arising out of obscure feelings and such like. Particularly the endeavours of the past centuries and of the present time, which have yielded the greatest successes in the field of natural science and which have also brought about the greatest practical results, are considered proof by contemporary humanity that one has to come to a halt at that which can be observed by the senses, which can be proved by experiments and so forth, namely the sense perceptible real world. This is, when one speaks of man, only that world which man traverses between birth and death, or conception and death.

Now it cannot be denied that natural science owes its great successes to the fact that it has limited itself to the exploration of every aspect of the sense world and does not in any way draw any conclusions from the sense world to the supersensible world. But on the other hand there is connected with this, as one believes, fully proven acceptance of limits to knowledge altogether, something inwardly immeasurably tragic for the sensitive human being, something tragic which today does not yet come to the consciousness of many people, but which lives in many human souls in vague feelings, in all sorts of subconscious sensations, making them unsure in life, even unsure and unable in outward actions, in relationships to their fellow human beings and so on. For it is gradually felt more and more that the limits at which one wants to stop in this way are not only those of an outward supersensible world, but that with these limits to knowledge, if rightly perceived, there is still something quite different involved. Man gradually feels that his own true being must be of supersensible nature, that his true being which as man gives him his value and dignity must be found in the spiritual, in the not-sensible. If one calls a halt to all knowledge before the supersensible, then one calls a halt before human self-knowledge. Then one renounces insight into the most precious, the most valuable in the human being himself.

But thereby one also undermines one's real inward self-confidence. Whereby does man feel himself to be part of the natural world which today has been so successfully explored? Only because he bears this world of nature within himself in his outer physical body. Everything that exists in our surroundings as natural substances and natural laws we carry within us, at least most of it. Through this we can feel connected with physical nature. We would not feel that we existed in this physical nature if we were not part of it with our own body, or if we could not explore ourselves as physical beings. But in the same way it is with the supersensible, with the as truly felt spiritual inner being of man, even though men do not as yet bring it to full consciousness. If we cannot feel ourselves as belonging to a spiritual world, as beings who take into themselves and bear within themselves the forces and substances of the spiritual, then we cannot accept ourselves as spiritual human beings at all. But then we must lack the self-confidence towards that which after all we feel to be our most precious, our most dignified, that by which we actually are human beings, indeed want to be human beings. This has another side to it. We feel that that which we call our moral impulses, which we call the content of our moral-spiritual forces, does not flow out of natural life, certainly not out of what takes place in muscles and bones. We feel them to be coming from a spiritual world, but we experience uncertainty about this whole spiritual world if we have to call a halt before the supersensible with our perception.

And in this way present day humanity cannot really build a bridge between that which in outer nature is to it a brutal - as I would like to call it—fact, and that which flows to it out of the most intimate spiritual inner life as the content of the moral world order. One does not have the courage to bring to full clarity what it is that the human soul has to contend with here. Natural science has worked thoroughly towards being able to say something, albeit hypothetically, about the present day creatures out of which man is supposed to have developed. One describes, at least hypothetically, how once upon a time our present world is supposed to have developed out of the world mist. Hypotheses are also made about the end of our planetary system or the system altogether to which we belong. One imagines this whole system which exists in time as somehow contracting, constituting itself out of natural substances and natural forces. One imagines physical man then emerging out of a part of these forces at a certain time. Electricity, magnetism, warmth and so on, they can be outwardly observed, there the thinking human being feels safe with the content of his consciousness. But when the need arises in him to think of that which does not come from his physical nature, the moral spiritual impulses as working in the world, when he must think of as working in the world what he brings about out of a spiritual elemental force, what now must also be in the world, when he must have experiences in the world which must not pass away together with that which passes away with the physical—then man has no stand to say to himself out of that which is accepted by the limits to knowledge: these moral forces are just as valid as that which comes out of the brute forces of physical nature.

From this there come to man today not only theoretical doubts but insecurity of the whole soul life, insecurity apparent everywhere even though people deceive themselves about this. For this is the very character of present civilization that one deludes oneself about the deepest questions of civilization. But in the subconscious these questions are nevertheless active, they express themselves—albeit not in theories, but in the whole tenor of soul, in the confidence and capability of the soul life. That is the inner tragedy which can actually be noticed in the depths of every soul, even of the most superficial. And this is where then that arises which can seem paradoxical in the present time, there arises the longing in many people just for supersensible knowledge! One might say in the spiritual realm it is just the same as with hunger and thirst. One doesn't long for food and drink when one is satisfied, but one longs for them when one is hungry. And from an inmost need present humanity longs for the supersensible because it doesn't have it. While on the one hand philosophers and natural scientists today want to prove more and more that there are unsurpassable limits and borders before the supersensible, we see on the other hand an insatiable thirst of already many human souls for supersensible knowledge, and the number of these people will get ever greater.

To come to this supersensible perception there is a point of view, or I could rather say a method of investigation of which I would like to speak to you today. But I do not want to speak to you of a method of investigation of the supersensible which today one often wants to achieve in a very easy way, but I shall speak to you of a method of perception which, although it is an absolutely intimate matter of the human soul, but in this just as scientific, indeed as exact, not only as an outer scientific result, but as the mathematical or geometric results of science itself.

But while one is striving towards such knowledge and just comes to a knowledge of that which is the supersensible in man, one immediately enters something which right from the start causes all kinds of doubts, causes uncertainties right from the start.

When we look outside we soon notice that the natural scientists and philosophers who speak of limits to knowledge are right as concerns the immediate outer perception. So we must look inside. But when we look inside and we remain within the ordinary consciousness, with that which we have in ordinary life and also in the usual science, then in the beginning nothing confronts us either than a kind of thought picture of the outer world again. When one is completely honest in one's striving for self-knowledge and asks oneself: What is there, when instead of looking out into the world you look back into yourself, what is there actually inside you?—Then one will have to realize that one finds the world inside again, albeit in a picture. What one has experienced has imprinted itself onto our life of concepts, of feeling. We experience as it were a thought picture and feeling picture of that which is outside as well. We have only directed our gaze backwards. This gives us at first nothing new, but only in a dimmed down way in picture form that which is outside too. Only as a general feeling man senses that he is present in these weaving thoughts, ideas and sensations as an I, as a self. But that is so general and undefined, that initially he cannot do much with it.

That is why in the Middle Ages, in the times when one approached self-knowledge, knowledge of the human soul, in a more intensive way, one didn't initially pay much attention to that which one can gain by a merely backward directed self-observation during the ordinary consciousness, but one tried to achieve knowledge of the soul in a different way. This different way is actually interesting, and I must start from this different, often much desired way of knowledge of the soul, so that we can understand one another about the knowledge of soul which I actually mean. But I mention beforehand that I only start from this other knowledge of soul in order to explain what I want to bring, but that I don't want to attribute a special value to it. Therefore nobody should believe that because I start from the dream I already give it value for knowledge. However, this dream life is immensely meaningful.

Those who at some stage have sought knowledge of soul through the dream life, will have noticed that in a certain sense the soul life appears much more characteristically in a dream than when one merely looks into oneself and, as one often says, wants to observe oneself. You have observed the dreams and have initially found two types of dream. As you know, the dream conjures up weaving pictures of a fantastic reality which is initially not as abstract as the thoughts we have in our day consciousness.

But the dream creates initially something which appears enigmatical, on the one side by its composition, on the other side by its content.

There are two things which man experiences as pictures in a dream. Initially pictures of experiences which we went through during our life on earth, reminiscences from life. This arises and shows us the one or other thing which we experienced many years ago. But what there asserts itself rises up next to other things in a connection with was not supplied by life. Occurrences which took place ten years ago are tied together with others which took place the other day. The most removed from one another comes together. By putting together fragments of life, dreams create impossible pictures, chaotic pictures. Everything which outer life gave to us by way of occurrences which we experienced is conjured up to us in dream in a chaotic fashion. That is one kind of dream. The other kind is that in which our own bodily condition is conjured up before us in a kind of symbolic image. Who would not have dreamt of suffering from the heat of a boiling hot stove? He has seen the flickering flames; he awakes and has strong palpitations of the heart. Or we dream that we are walking past a fence. We see how one or two poles are damaged and then we wake up with toothache. In the one case, when we dreamt of the boiling hot stove with its heat, it was a picture of our heart which was palpitating strongly. In the other case, when we dreamt of the fence, it was a picture of our row of teeth which somehow gave us pain. And someone who can penetrate more deeply into these things knows that a certain area of dreams is characterised by inner organs being shown to us symbolically in the dream. However, one must be quite knowledgeable about all the facts which come into play, if one wants to recognise in the symbols what actually expresses itself of the inner being of man in them. Then one will find that there is hardly an organ or an inner process which cannot be conjured up for us inwardly by dreams.

Now former psychologists who have worked with dreams have developed a very valid view about the relationship of man to dreams. They said to themselves: that which we bear within us, we can only feel, but we do not see it, we don't have it in front of us like an outer object. But when we have our own heart beat in front of us in the picture of a boiling hot stove, then we have at least a picture in our consciousness that we make for ourselves, that looks like the picture of an outer object. We have to be separated from the outer object if a picture of it is to arise in us. That which one is oneself, even if it is one's own body, one feels, one feels it sometimes painfully when something organic is not in order, but one does not look at it. When one looks at something in picture form one must be outside of it. And so the former psychologists, which still existed in the 19th century, argued: If I am dreaming in symbols about my own body and its processes, I cannot be in my body, for then I would not experience it. Therefore I must be outside my body in such a case. The picture in any case shows me something of an independent soul-spiritual life over against the body. And furthermore they argued: When I dream in any, however hidden way, of reminiscences of life, then the outer natural existence as it is would have to present itself to me. But there something is constantly changing; there the dream conjures up for me the most fantastic relationships. There again I must be inside, for nature as it usually surrounds me would not be able to show me the occurrences which I have experienced with it, nor the occurrences of human life which I have experienced, in quite a different order.

In this way something was put together of which one could say: It was a valid conviction for these former psychologists, that there they caught something of the soul in a condition where it is separated from the physical body. For firstly man cannot be united with his body if the occurrences of the body, even though only in symbols, in the dream appear to be separated. He must then be outside his body. But again, we must also be inside the reminiscences of our experiences, be together with them, when we have the second kind of dream, for nature does not alter the connection in which experiences have occurred. That we must alter ourselves. Therefore we must be outside, outside our body, when we have the first kind of dreams, and in the same way we must be inside our experiences in the second kind. That means we must actually be outside our physical body with our experiences of soul when we dream. In so far that which former psychologists said to themselves is absolutely indisputable, one cannot say anything against it.

But something else has to be said. The dream cannot give me any sure knowledge about the self. It can lead us to the way of how one can come to such a certainty. Because what we are inside during the time between going to sleep and awakening when we are outside the body: that, which the dream is showing us there, that we certainly are not; for those are on the one hand pictures of our bodily interior, even symbols of this bodily interior, thus that again which is taken from our bodily interior. How can we, when sleeping we are outside our body, be the same which we are in the interior of our physical body? So something else must be the case. We must be something outside our body, but that does not assert itself. We are initially not able to lay hold of the actual nature of the soul in the sleeping state. That conceals itself and masks itself at first; it surrounds itself with pictures of its own bodily nature and shows itself in relationship to its own life in arbitrary compositions of its experiences. The former psychologists have rightly deduced that we are outside our body when we dream, but that the dream shows us something about this being which is outside our body, that is not the case, although they believed it. Because it doesn't show us anything except what we have formerly experienced within the body, and our own body in symbols. Therefore if we are something outside our body, then this is masked in the dream, then the dream is wearing a mask in respect of this. If we want to discover our own being, then we must be able to take this mask off the dream, that is off the soul—for the dream is this mask.—Up to here a more intimate view of the dream leads us onto a path. As former psychologists realised that the dream ultimately doesn't show anything besides what it takes out of the sense world, they of course also had their doubts. And just as one could not believe to have certainty by means of an ordinary backward looking self-observation, so one was also not satisfied with that which the observation of the dream world could give one. Over against this there now appears that which I always call the anthroposophical world view or anthroposophical way of investigation. This initially maintains: If the dream shows us that we are something outside our body, then it proves itself to be too weak by itself to show, to reveal its own being. To reveal itself it uses bits and pieces of reminiscences of life, of symbols of its own bodily nature. Therefore we have to strengthen the soul life so that we come to that which in the soul life stands masked before us in the dream. This one can do. One can do it by copying the dream in full consciousness by a systematically exact so-called meditative life as I have described it in my book “Knowledge of Higher Worlds” and other writings. But not copying it by artificially creating dreams, but awakening in the soul in full consciousness that which in dream arises spontaneously from the subconscious. One comes to this by accustoming oneself to proceed in the same way as the dream proceeds spontaneously—to proceed by imagining things which one knows well symbolically in inner meditation. The dream conjures up symbolically for us our own bodily nature.

One now practices—as neither our own inner being nor outer nature give us symbols—strictly systematically to imagine symbolically. In this way concepts are by force of will brought into a symbol by us, just as the dream conjures it up or us spontaneously. It must be created by inner activity, but that means, the dream must be strengthened.

In outer life we give ourselves over to passive observations and perceptions. Then the inner activity is shadowy. Everyone really senses how shadowy the abstract concepts are, how the thoughts are given over to the outer world and then proceed in a shadowy way. Everyone speaks of the shadowy thought compared to concrete reality. But when one now rises to imagine symbolic things, one has to create these symbols.

And when one is a fully conscious human being and no fool, then one knows that one makes them oneself. Then one is by no means a dreamer but a normal waking person, nay even more than a normal waking person. To the dreamer the symbols come spontaneously, to the waking person the conceptual images come through outer stimulation. The waking person who makes alive within himself that which dreams give, who places before the soul symbols with all inner strength and imitates the dream in full consciousness, awakens himself as it were to a higher activity of thinking and imagining and with this to an altogether higher activity of soul than one has in ordinary consciousness. That however must then be really practiced quite systematically.

And likewise the other side of dream can be imitated. We take experiences from our life that can be separated from one another by years. We can combine them in such a way that the one stands next to the other, but now not chaotically as in dream but from a point of view which may perhaps be from fantasy, but which we quite consciously determine, which is not imposed on us by our inner being, but which we ourselves create inwardly. And in this way we gradually educate ourselves to remain in an inner life of soul; to remain strongly in a life of soul which proceeds totally from the inner activity.

Today one usually underestimates what actually happens there with the human being when he does such exercises, because one does not love the inner activity of thinking, because one already finds it very active when one lives in thoughts induced by outer observation. But he who in all seriousness becomes a true imitator of dream in full consciousness, experiences that he strongly intensifies his inner mobility of soul, that he definitely strengthens it. But he is, if he is no fool but a sensible human being, fully conscious that he himself is making all these pictures and life associations, that is, that he is living in illusion. With a dream one first has to wake up in order to realize the illusion of the dream from the point of view of waking life. The dream can only be unmasked from the point of view of waking; the dreamer imagines the content of the dream to be reality, although his feeling for reality is not such a fictitious one. He who becomes an imitator of dream becomes aware of how a living inner being, something active, quickening is awakened in him, but how he has a content which is absolutely self-image, illusion. Therefore he comes to the point of not bothering with that which is present in him as content, but to concentrate on that which works within him, is active within him. In short, that which we usually only have as a general feeling of ego or self becomes a strongly felt inner activity. If one wants to become a spiritual scientist and not a vague mystic, one must remain conscious and exact. But if one persists in this one will also come more and more to experience the nature of the illusionary. One knows: You imagine nothing, but you have an imagination. Through this one will also the possibility one day to develop the capacity of soul with which one truly doesn't imagine anything and is yet as active as one has learnt it in the imitation of dream.

I point you here to an activity of soul which must absolutely be cultivated by the investigator of spirit. One usually believes, and those who judge things superficially often say it: spiritual investigation is something where man gives himself up to his thoughts and fantasies—that is easy, while to do research in the laboratory, the clinic and the observatory is difficult, something where you have to renounce things.—But this is not so. Because that which one has to acquire as such an inner capacity of soul requires at least just as much time, nay sometimes much longer time of inner work than any outwardly acquired scientific ability as is common in natural science today. Those who want to gain knowledge about that which is here called spiritual investigation should not raise the objection: In natural science one must not be a dilettante if one wants to have a say, there one must really understand something.—What the spiritual investigator alleges is usually regarded as though it were gained effortlessly compared to that which in natural science is reached with much trouble. But it is only the path which is different. In natural science outer observations and facts are used to come to a conclusion, while the spiritual scientist must first develop his own inner capacity for observation. He develops it as an imitator of dreams but in such a way that in the meditative activity that which in dream is conjured up is overcome by him. In dream we do not become conscious of an activity, the images of the dream conjure it up for us; but on the first step of supersensible knowledge the illusion is totally perceived. One knows: you don't imagine anything—but one notices the inner strengthened, empowered activity and in the end learns by a lot of practicing how one can call up this activity without first needing an illusionary activity for this, without first having to imitate the dream. So it is in imitation that one develops this capacity of soul. Once the capacity is there, one knows what one can do with it. Because then one is in a state where one has an empty but very much awake consciousness, but also inner activity. After one has discarded the illusion of this activity, one has initially no content. But the state in which one lives just as one gets to the point of developing the capacity of inner activity without initially also having a content, this state demands a strong inner struggle. And actually this struggle which one needs for this is the touchstone and test whether this spiritual investigation is an honest and true one. For at that moment when one just gets ready to live with empty consciousness, with normal waking consciousness without this waking consciousness having a content, at this moment an unspeakable pain, an unlimited privation spreads itself over the whole soul life. All that one can otherwise experience as pain in the world is really insignificant compared with this spiritual soul pain which one experiences at this moment of cognition. And one has to overcome this pain. For it is this pain which is the expression of a force which has its physical counter image in all sorts of forms of deprivations: in hunger, which instructs us to eat, in thirst, which forces us to drink and so on. Now we feel something in the soul which has to come towards us and we feel it as an unspeakable pain. But when we live for a while in this pain, when we feel our inner being itself as one filled with pain, that is, when we are for a while pain, when our own human being is for our consciousness for a while nothing else but a conglomerate of pain, then this consciousness no longer remains empty, then this consciousness fills itself, and it now fills itself not with sense content which we receive through eyes, ears and so on, but it now fills itself with spiritual content. And we receive as the first thing which comes to us as spiritual content in this way our own spiritual being as a unified spiritual organisation—but living in time, not in space—as it extends from birth or conception up to the present moment to which we have lived the earthly life. Just as we can look into a spatial perspective and see objects which are far away again in perspective, so we can learn to look from the present moment of our life into our own past. We don't see the bodily at that moment, we only remember it, but we have to remember it, otherwise we are destroyed in our consciousness. But he who wants to become an investigator or spirit may not become a person inclined to fantasy nor a confused mystic, he must use his consciousness and his good sense just as a mathematician would for a mathematical problem. But just as we normally see objects of space in perspective, so we now look into a time perspective.

Everything that we have experienced in our existence now stands before us in a time tableau, but in a living time tableau. But not only that which we ourselves have experienced now stands before us thus, but also that which shows us how we have come into being, how inner spiritual soul forces have built up our body from birth or conception, how the sculptural forces are which have worked on our body. We see ourselves outwardly. But that which we see there, through which our own soul life stands before our soul, that now also differs qualitatively from the experience of this time tableau.

When one looks back on one's life in the usual way, one experiences the happenings as they come towards one: one experiences for instance how a person has come towards one, how he has approached one, lovingly or with hatred, how he did this or that as he came towards one. One experiences oneself in this memory picture in the way the outer world has come towards one.

In this other memory picture however, which now stands there in real pictures of which one knows that they reflect the own spiritual nature of the human being just as the usual memory pictures reflect the outer nature, in this other memory tableau is reflected to us how we have approached the outer world. There is shown how one was oneself when for instance one approached another personality. How in our soul forces unfolded which found their satisfaction, their delight, their happiness just through that personality. One really looks at oneself how one was as earthly human being. And then one sees how now in the reality both sides in which the dream was masked flow together.

Now the dream becomes a fully conscious reality. It even becomes more than the ordinary consciousness sees. One initially sees the spiritual entity which lives inside the body, which during sleep is independent of it, indeed which is the creator of the body. This one sees. And then one realises, this spiritual entity also contains, but in a spiritual way, metamorphosed, something like the laws of nature but—you are already protesting against it—in a spiritual existence. Into that which one here experiences the moral world is already entering. In this the moral laws are already present in such a way that one now knows: in the same way in which one's own spirituality works, the moral laws are working. There the moral laws begin to stand with equal validity next to the laws of nature.

But with this one only gets as far as the experience of man's own spiritual existence in earthly being. If one wants to go further one has to develop still other capacities in the soul.—The particulars about this you can read up in the above mentioned books, for this can only be achieved by the practicing of many details. Here only the principle shall be described.—Imagine that at a certain time of day you are remembering back to the morning when you got up, or woke up. If you try hard, the course of the day up to this moment can stand before your soul. Now if you don't place the course of the day in such a way before your soul that you start with the morning, then go on to the experiences of the forenoon and so on, but if you place the course of the day backwards before your soul, so that you start at the certain time and now trace it backwards, then you can also say that you get up to the night when you have slept. But there you then don't add anything, there something remains empty, and that which connects again with the backwards imagined happenings is the last experience before going to sleep, and then you can again place the course of the previous day before your soul.

In short, when the human being remembers in this way in ordinary life, there always remain gaps between the conscious experiencing—the gaps which we lived through unconsciously during sleep. Now in order to go further with the exercises which can link up with this backward experiencing, it is necessary to develop a very strong sense of reality. Such a sense of reality is initially not very prevalent among present day people. It is even something which is not all that easy to achieve, because in relation to remembering people usually remain with that which in some way is closely connected with their personality. In their thoughts they do not connect the threads towards the outer world so strongly, that these threads to the outer world connect with their memories. The human being usually has no inclination at all to live in the outer world, in reality in the outer world, with his memories. How much this is the case, of this one can convince oneself in daily life. I have known people who for instance have seen a lady in the morning who had interested them very much, and when one asks them: What colour was the lady's dress?—they don't know it. Therefore it is as though they had not seen the lady at all, for if they had seen her, they would surely also have seen the colour of her dress. How tenuously is one thus connected with the outer world, if in the afternoon one doesn't even know what colour the dress of a person was whom one had seen in the morning! Indeed, I have even known people who had been in a room and who didn't know afterwards whether there were pictures in the room or not.

One can have the most unbelievable experiences in this regard. Therefore he who wants to acquire a sense of reality must first train himself to live fully also in the outer sense reality, so that that which he passes by stands before him as it is out there in the real world. Truly, the investigator of spirit does not become a man of phantasy; he must acquire a sense of reality to the point that it cannot happen to him that he doesn't know in the afternoon what dress the lady was wearing to whom he was speaking in the morning. He must really be able to live with a sense of reality already in the sense world.

Only when one trains oneself to connect that which one remembers of things to the outer world of reality, then one develops the sense which can achieve a fruitful remembering back for such a spirit knowledge. Because for human beings' usual capacity of remembering the memory picture before the last going to sleep can very easily be joined to that after the last awakening. Without any difficulty people simply leave out that which lies between these two pictures as a night-abyss, they tie the picture of the first happening after waking up directly onto the last happening before going to sleep. They usually don't even notice with a lively consciousness that something lies between the two. But if one wants to acquire such a consciousness that one connects that which one has experienced inside with the picture which is there from the outer world, then one must realise that that which one experiences in the morning after waking up is connected with the whole of nature which makes an impression on us, is connected with the rising sun, with all the impressions one has through the rising sun and so on—and that which one has as the last happenings before the last going to sleep is connected with something which in nature doesn't belong together, namely with that which one experienced after the last awakening. There one will notice with the pictures that are standing next to each other: there is something missing!—But by practicing this, by awakening again capacities of soul that don't exist in ordinary life, one gains the strength that as one looks back to where one now has the first picture after the last awakening and wants to proceed to the last picture before the last going to sleep, one now does not see a stretch of darkness in between, but sees that this darkness is beginning to light up spiritually, that something places itself into this darkness.

Just as in the day waking states one only follows that which one has experienced, so there suddenly comes something in between the first experience after the last awakening and the last experience before the last going to sleep of which one now says: you remember something—only something which you haven't known before. It is just the same as in normal remembering, except that one hadn't known anything before of that which now surfaces. Now one begins to remember that which one has previously missed by sleeping through it, even while sleeping through it in dreamless sleep. The empty time which one is conscious of between the last experience before going to sleep and the first after waking up, this is now filling up. And just as our ordinary consciousness is filled with the experiences of natural existence, so our consciousness is now filled with that which surfaces like a remembrance, but of a remembrance of which one now knows that one has experienced it in the unconscious.

Our consciousness is now filled with the soul content which hasn't taken part in the outer experiences but has withdrawn from the outer experiences, has gone asleep. Now one learns to recognise how the sleeping soul is in reality when it doesn't have the strength to bring its experiences which it has during sleep in the spiritual world to consciousness in such a way as man in day waking life brings to consciousness the happenings of physical life. Now one really gets to know the inner being of man as spirit and soul, and at this moment one sees beyond the earthly life. And one will only now be able to connect that, which one sees in the described way like a great but concrete memory tableau of one's earthly life up to this point, to that which one was as a soul-spiritual human being in a purely spiritual world before one descended into this physical world through birth or conception.

And in the same way another experience joins this one. If one develops another capacity together with all this during one's practicing, a capacity which normally is not seen as a capacity of knowledge but which is one too, if one develops that which is love of soul, full devotion to that which meets one, so strongly that this love remains with one even when one now looks at one's own self, that one can love that which appears as something new in the soul with a truly devoted love—then the possibility develops to free oneself in the waking state in full consciousness in one's inner experiencing from the bodily. But at this moment when one has freed oneself from the bodily in one's inner experiencing, one knows how it is with the human being when he lives his life without his body. And in a picture the fact of the passing through the gate of death, of dying, stands before one's soul. If one has once realised what it means to experience oneself free of the body in one's spiritual forces, then one also knows what one is in the spiritual existence after one has left the body and has passed through the gate of death. And one also gets to know the environment which will then be there for man. One learns to know how together with the body when it has been laid aside that falls away which connects us to the sense world. But that remains, which formerly has fashioned us as a human being, the soul-spiritual of man.

In this way one gets to know the experiences which one has had with other people. But that which was within these sense experiences, how soul has found soul, what happened in the relationships with other people, those that were closer to one and those who were more distant, that which happened in space and time—the eternal-spiritual one gets to know, how it rids itself of the earthly form of experiencing.

And more and more the soul now experiences that which was spiritually present within it as relationships to other people. And that which otherwise is only the object of belief, certainty of knowledge. This human beings experience when they themselves have passed through the gate of death. That which the human soul usually longs for as immortality, only enters real human knowledge in this way. But only by recognising the truly eternal in man by exercising our forces to such an extent that we recognise this eternal in our existence in the pre-earthly, spiritual-soul existence, we also gain that for ourselves which gives us certainty about life after death. There is no longer a word for the pre-earthly as something eternal in the human soul in today's civilisation because we only know the one half of eternity, we speak of immortality. Older languages had the other side, the not-yet-being-born, that is, our existence before we entered earthly life. But only both sides—not-yet-being-born and immortality constitute eternity. And it is a fact that man has to pay for his longing for immortality, that it becomes a mere belief if he wants to forgo knowledge of not-yet-being-born, because he will only understand eternity when he recognises both sides of eternity, the not-yet-being-born as well as the immortality of his being in unity. With this then man has advanced to a real taking hold of that which he is, to a real self-knowledge.

I have to emphasise again and again on such occasions that such a spiritual investigation can indeed only be made by someone who has acquired the relevant capacities by exercising or in another way through destiny, but when the results of such an investigation are made known, they can be as plausible to everyone as for instance the results of astronomy. And just as one doesn't have to be a painter in order to experience the beauty of a picture—for if that would be necessary, only the painters would be able to experience it—just as little does one necessarily have to be a spiritual investigator oneself in order to take up the knowledge of spiritual investigation, although one can become one up to a certain degree, because man wants truth and not confusion and error. Just as one can stand before a painting and admire its beauties with one's healthy judgement, so one can experience that which is presented by spiritual investigation, if one does not oneself put obstacles in one's way, such as prejudices and the like. One can understand it when one dedicates oneself to it with one's sense of truthfulness, and the accusation of those who say of the adherents of spiritual science that they only believe blindly is absolutely unjustified. Especially in the present time Anthroposophy will be able to give human souls if by using their sense of truth or by investigation in the indicated way to come to a self-knowledge of the human being, that for which they pine as I have said in the introduction to today's lecture. Even though this demand of the times does not yet come to consciousness in many people, even if it only shows itself undefined or even just in unfitness in life—it is there in that which expresses itself so clearly in the civilization of the present time. Natural science and many philosophical word views speak of insurmountable borders of knowledge. With this the border which leads to man himself is insurmountable. But man cannot in perpetuity do without true self-knowledge.

In tomorrow's lecture I shall continue where I have left off today and depict the ethical-religious life, how it is enriched and made more inward within the human being. With this I shall then tomorrow give the application to the immediate practical life. In today's lecture I wanted first to show how this demand of our time, which as a demand of heart and soul appears in ever more and more people in the present civilisation with its boundaries to knowledge, can be met by a real spiritual knowledge, by a knowledge of that which man wants to know about his own immortality and that which is connected with it, nay must know, because only in this way a true self-knowledge can be achieved, and only with this true self-knowledge a getting hold of oneself and a feeling of self can be connected. Because only through this man will be able to stand before his own soul with its eternal nature, that he acquires knowledge of how he as spiritual-soul being is woven into the spiritual-soul sphere of the world, just as he has his existence in the physical world a physical being. Only when he has acquired a knowledge of himself as spirit amongst spirits, will he also be able to acquire true inner security. Only when the human being knows his worth and dignity in the world, he stands in the world with that consciousness of himself as man, which out of an undefined feeling he can acknowledge as the only right human consciousness. And only because human beings will seek again for such a light of self-knowledge and spiritual knowledge of the world, only through this the hunger of the present time for a true penetrating of the own human nature will be able to be satisfied. For humanity will not be able to manage with all the demands of the progressing civilisation unless it realises: self-knowledge of man cannot be anything else but knowledge of spirit, for man can only feel himself as true man if he recognises himself as spirit amongst spirits, just as he can feel himself in his transient earthly existence as physical being amongst physical beings.

Anthroposophie als Zeitforderung

Es ist in der Gegenwart eine allgemeine Anschauung, daß die menschliche Erkenntnis gewisse Grenzen habe, nicht nur zeitliche Grenzen, die darin bestehen würden, daß man im Verlaufe der schon abgelaufenen Zeit nicht alles erreicht hat und noch manches der Zukunft überlassen muß, sondern in einem ganz allgemeinen Sinne spricht man heute von «Erkenntnisgrenzen», von Wissensgrenzen für die Menschheit. Man meint, es sei der Mensch nun einmal so veranlagt, daß er nur gewisse Dinge einsehen könne, nur über gewisse Dinge Bescheid wissen könne, während andere Dinge eben über seine Erkenntnisfähigkeit hinaus lägen. Und man bezeichnet wohl am meisten die Dinge der sogenannten übersinnlichen Welt als diejenigen, die der Mensch durch Erkenntnis nicht erreichen könne, für die er sich begnügen müsse mit dem, was man oftmals einen Glauben, eine Annahme aus dunklen Gefühlen und dergleichen heraus nennt. Gerade die Bestrebungen der letzten Jahrhunderte und der Gegenwart, welche in wissenschaftlicher Beziehung die größten Erfolge gebracht haben, die naturwissenschaftlichen, die auch den denkbar weitesten praktischen Nutzen gebracht haben, hält die heutige Menschheit dafür beweisend, daß man stehenbleiben müsse bei dem, was Sinne beobachten können, was durch Experimente festgestellt werden könnte und dergleichen, und das ist eben nur die sinnlich-wirkliche Welt. Das ist, wenn man vom Menschen spricht, nur diejenige Welt, die der Mensch im physischen Leibe zwischen Geburt und Tod oder Empfängnis und Tod durchläuft.

Nun soll ja nicht geleugnet werden, daß gerade die Naturwissenschaft ihre so großen Erfolge dem Umstande verdankt, daß sie sich in dieser Weise beschränkt hat, daß sie sich darauf beschränkt, die Sinneswelt nach allen Seiten zu durchforschen und nicht sich herbeiJäßt, in irgendeiner Weise von der Sinneswelt aus Schlüsse zu ziehen für eine übersinnliche Welt. Aber auf der anderen Seite ist für den sinnigen Menschen gerade mit dieser, wie man glaubt, voll bewiesenen Annahme von Erkenntnisgrenzen überhaupt etwas innerlich ungemein Tragisches verbunden, etwas Tragisches, das: heute\noch nicht zum Bewußtsein vieler Menschen kommt, das aber in unbestimmten Gefühlen, it allerlei unterbewußten Empfindungen in zahlreichen Menschenseelen spielt, sie unsicher im Leben, ja, sie oftmals unsicher und untüchtig im äußeren Handeln, im Verhältnis zu ihren Mitmenschen und so weiter macht. Denn es wird allmählich immer mehr und mehr gefühlt, daß die Grenzen, vor denen man in dieser Art haltmachen will, nicht bloß die einer äußeren übersinnlichen Welt sind, sondern daß mit diesen Erkenntnisgrenzen, wenn sie in richtiger Weise angenommen werden sollen, noch etwas ganz anderes verbunden ist. Der Mensch fühlt allmählich, daß ja sein wahres Wesen selber übersinnlicher Natur sein müsse, daß sein wahres Wesen, durch das er sich als Mensch seinen Wert und seine Würde zuerkennt, im Geistigen, also im Nicht-Sinnlichen liegen müsse. Wenn man mit aller Erkenntnis vor dem Übersinnlichen haltmacht, dann macht man ja vor der menschlichen Selbsterkenntnis halt. Dann verzichtet man darauf, das Wertvollste, das Würdigste im Menschen selbst zur Einsicht zu bringen.

Damit aber untergräbt man sich auch das richtige innerliche Selbstvertrauen. Wodurch fühlt sich denn der Mensch als ein Angehöriger der heute mit so großen Erfolgen durchforschten Naturwelt? Nur dadurch, daß er diese Naturwelt in sich selber, zunächst in seinem äußeren physischen Leibe trägt. Alles was in unserer Umgebung an Naturstoffen und Naturgesetzen ist, tragen wir, wenigstens zum großen Teile, in uns. Wir können uns dadurch verbunden fühlen mit der sinnlichen Natur. Wir würden uns gar nicht als existierend fühlen in dieser sinnlichen Natur, wenn wir ihr nicht mit unserem eigenen Leibe angehörten, oder wenn wir uns selber nicht als Sinneswesen erforschen könnten. Ebenso aber, wenn auch die Menschen sich das noch nicht voll zum Bewußtsein bringen, ist es mit dem Übersinnlichen, mit dem als wahrhaftem Menschenwesen gefühlten mensch lichen geistigen Inneren. Können wir uns nicht fühlen als angehörig einer geistigen Natur, können wir uns nicht fühlen als Wesen, welche die Kräfte, die Substanzen des Geistigen in sich aufnehmen und an sich tragen, dann können wir uns nicht als geistige Menschenwesen überhaupt anerkennen. Dann aber muß in uns fehlen das Selbstvertrauen zu dem, was wir doch fühlen als unser Wertvollstes, als unser Würdigstes, als das, wodurch wir eigentlich Menschen sind, ja Menschen sein wollen.

Das hat noch nach einer anderen Seite hin eine gewisse Verbindung. Wir fühlen, wie nicht aus dem Naturhaften heraus, ganz gewiß nicht aus den Vorgängen, die in Muskeln und Knochen oder im Blute vor sich gehen, dasjenige fließt, was wir die moralischen Impulse nennen, was wir den Inhalt unserer moralisch-geistigen Kräfte nennen. Wir fühlen sie hervorgehen aus einer geistigen Welt, wir kommen aber über diese ganze geistige Welt in Unsicherheit, wenn wir vor den Grenzen des Übersinnlichen mit der Erkenntnis haltmachen müssen.

Und so kann die heutige Menschheit von dem aus, was ihr, ich möchte sagen, brutal feststeht im äußeren Naturdasein, keine rechte Brücke schlagen zu dem, was ihr aus dem intimsten geistigen Inneren fließt als der Inhalt der moralischen Weltordnung. Man hat gar nicht den Mut, sich das, was da für das menschliche Gemüt vorliegt, immer richtig klarzumachen. Die Naturwissenschaft hat gründlich danach hingearbeitet, wenigstens hypothetisch irgend etwas sagen zu können über die heutigen Lebewesen, aus denen sich der Mensch entwikkelt habe. Man schildert, wenigstens hypothetisch, wie sich einmal aus dem Weltennebel heraus unsere jetzige Welt gestaltet habe; man stellt auch Hypothesen auf über das Ende unseres Planetensystems oder des Systems, zu dem wir überhaupt gehören. Man denkt sich dieses ganze in der Zeit verlaufende System als aus Naturstoffen und durch Naturkräfte in irgendeiner Weise sich zusammenballend, sich konstituierend. Man denkt sich aus einem Teil dieser Kräfte dann in einer gewissen Zeit den physischen Menschen aufsteigend. Elektrizität, Magnetismus, Wärmekraft und so weiter, sie drängen sich der äußeren Beobachtung auf, in ihnen fühlt sich der denkende Mensch mit seinem Bewußtseinsinhalt sicher. Aber wenn dann in ihm das Bedürfnis entsteht, das, was nicht aus seiner physischen Natur kommt, die moralisch-geistigen Impulse, als wirksam in der Welt zu denken, wenn er wirksam denken soll, was er aus einer geistigelementaren Kraft verwirklicht, was nun auch da sein soll in der Welt, wenn er Erlebnisse haben soll in der Welt, die nicht vergehen sollen mit dem, was mit dem Physischen vergeht - dann hat der Mensch keinen Anhaltspunkt, um aus dem, was als Erkenntnisgrenzen anerkannt wird, sich zu sagen: Diese moralischen Kräfte sind ebenso wirksam wie das, was die brutalen physischen Naturkräfte als ihr Ergebnis haben.

Daraus entspringen dem Menschen heute nicht bloß theoretische Zweifel, sondern Unsicherheit der ganzen Seele, Unsicherheit des Gemütes, die für den, der eine unbefangene Beobachtung unseres Zivilisationslebens hat, überall durchschaubar ist, wenn auch die Menschen sich darüber hinwegtäuschen. Denn das ist ja das Charakteristikon der heutigen Zivilisation, daß man sich gerade über die tiefsten Fragen der Zivilisation hinwegtäuscht. Aber im Unterbewußtsein sind diese Fragen doch tätig, da äußern sie sich - zwar nicht als Theorien, aber in der ganzen Seelenstimmung, in der Zuversichtlichkeit und Tüchtigkeit des Seelenlebens. Da liegt die innere Tragik, die eigentlich auf dem Grunde jeder Seele, selbst der oberflächlichsten, zu bemerken ist. Und da entspringt dann das, was uns in der Gegenwart paradox erscheinen kann, es entspringt die Sehnsucht vieler Menschen gerade nach einer übersinnlichen Erkenntnis! Man möchte sagen, auf geistigem Gebiete geht es damit ebenso, wie es mit Hunger und Durst geht. Man verlangt nicht nach Speise und Trank, wenn man gesättigt ist, sondern verlangt nach ihnen, wenn man eben ungesättigt ist. Und aus einem innersten Bedürfnis heraus verlangt die gegenwärtige Menschheit nach dem Übersinnlichen, weil sie das Übersinnliche nicht hat. Während auf der einen Seite Philosophen und Naturforscher heute immer mehr und mehr beweisen wollen, daß es gegenüber dem Übersinnlichen unübersteigbare Schranken und Grenzen gäbe, sehen wir gerade auf der anderen Seite einen unstillbaren Durst schon sehr vieler Menschenseelen nach über sinnlicher Erkenntnis, und die Zahl dieser Menschen wird immer größer werden.

Dieser übersinnlichen Erkenntnis will entgegenkommen eine Anschauung, ich könnte besser sagen eine Forschungsart, von der ich Ihnen heute sprechen will. Aber ich will Ihnen nicht von einer solchen Forschungsart sprechen, wie man sie heute vielfach auf eine sehr leichte Weise für das Übersinnliche erlangen will, sondern ich werde Ihnen sprechen über eine Erkenntnisart, die zwar eine durchaus innere, intime Angelegenheit der Menschenseele ist, aber darin ebenso wissenschaftlich, ja so exakt sicher ist, nicht einmal wie ein äußeres naturwissenschaftliches Ergebnis nur, sondern wie die mathematischen oder geometrischen Ergebnisse der Wissenschaft selber. Aber indem man nach einer solchen Erkenntnis strebt und gerade an eine Erkenntnis desjenigen herantritt, was im Menschen das Übersinnliche ist, kommt man sogleich in etwas hinein, das von Anfang an alle möglichen Zweifel erregt, von Anfang an Unsicherheiten bewirkt.

Wenn wir nach außen schauen, dann bemerken wir sehr bald, daß gegenüber der nächsten äußeren Anschauung die Naturwissenschafter und die Philosophen, die von Erkenntnisgrenzen reden, recht haben. Wir müssen also nach innen schauen. Wenn wir aber nach innen schauen, und wenn wir beim gewöhnlichen Bewußtsein bleiben, bei demjenigen, das wir im gewöhnlichen Leben und auch in der gebräuchlichen Wissenschaft haben, dann tritt uns da zunächst auch gar nichts anderes entgegen als in einer Art Gedankenbild wiederum die Außenwelt. Wenn man mit seiner erstrebten Selbsterkenntnis ganz ehrlich ist und sich fragt: Was ist da, wenn du, statt hinauszuschauen in die Welt, zurückschaust in dich, was ist da in dir eigentlich drinnen? - so wird man sich klar sein müssen, daß man die Welt, nur eben im Bilde, drinnen wiederfindet. Was man erlebt hat, das hat sich unserem Vorstellungsleben, unserem Empfindungsleben eingeprägt. Wir erleben sozusagen ein gedankliches und empfindungsgemäßes Bild von dem, was draußen auch ist. Wir haben nur den Blick nach rückwärts gewendet. Der bietet uns zunächst gar nichts Neues, sondern nur in einer abgeschwächten Weise bildhaft dasjenige, was draußen auch ist. Nur ein allgemeines Gefühl bemächtigt sich da des Menschen, daß er in diesen wogenden Gedanken, Ideen und Empfindungen als ein Ich, als ein Selbst da ist. Aber das ist so allgemein und unbestimmt, daß er damit zunächst nicht viel anfangen kann.

Daher hat man im Mittelalter in den Zeiten, in denen man in einer intensiveren Weise an die Selbsterkenntnis, an die menschliche Seelenerkenntnis herangegangen ist, zunächst nicht so sehr auf das geachtet, was man durch eine bloß nach rückwärts gewendete Selbstbeobachtung während des gewöhnlichen Bewußtseins gewinnen kann, sondern man hat vielmehr gesucht, die Seelenerkenntnis auf eine andere Art zu gewinnen. Diese andere Art ist immerhin interessant, und ich muß, damit wir uns über diejenige Seelenerkenntnis, die ich eigentlich meine, verständigen können, von dieser anderen, oftmals sehr begehrten Seelenerkenntnis ausgehen. Ich bemerke aber von vornherein, daß ich nur zur Verdeutlichung dessen, was ich darlegen will, von dieser anderen Seelenerkenntnis ausgehen, ihr aber nicht einen eigentlichen Wert beimessen will. Also, es darf niemand glauben, daß ich, weil ich vom Traume ausgehe, diesem schon einen Erkenntniswert beilege. Dieses Traumleben aber ist ungemein bedeutungsvoll. Diejenigen, welche einmal Seelenerkenntnis durch das Traumleben gesucht haben, sie haben schon bemerkt, daß in einer gewissen Beziehung das Seelische im Traume viel charakteristischer erscheint, als wenn man bloß in sich hineinbrütet und, wie man oftmals sagt, sich selber beobachten will. Sie haben die Träume verfolgt und haben zunächst zweierlei Art von Träumen gefunden. Es ist ja so, daß der Traum auf und ab wogende Bilder ausbildet von einer phantastischen Anschaulichkeit, die zunächst nicht so abstrakt ist wie die Gedanken, die wir beim Tagesbewußtsein haben. Aber der Traum bildet zunächst etwas, was rätselhaft erscheint, auf der einen Seite durch seine Zusammensetzung, auf der anderen Seite durch seinen Inhalt.

Zweierlei Dinge sind es, die dem Menschen im Traume als Bilder sich ergeben. Zunächst Bilder von Erlebnissen, die wir im Erdendasein durchgemacht haben, Reminiszenzen aus dem Leben. Das steigt herauf und zeigt dies oder jenes, was wir vor vielen Jahren erlebt haben. Aber was sich da geltend macht, das steigt herauf neben anderem, in einem Zusammenhange, den das Leben nicht dargeboten hat. Ereignisse, die vor zehn Jahren stattgefunden haben, werden zusammengeballt mit solchen, die sich vorgestern abgespielt haben. Das Entfernteste kommt zueinander. Dadurch, daß der Traum die Lebensfetzen zusammenstellt, bildet er unmögliche Bilder, chaotische Bilder. Alles, was das äußere Leben an Ereignissen, die wir durchgemacht haben, darbot, wird im Traume in einer chaotischen Weise uns vorgezaubert. Das ist die eine Form der Träume. Die andere Form ist die, wo wir in einer Art symbolischer Bilder unser eigenes Innere vom Traume vörgegaukelt erhalten. Wer hätte es nicht geträumt, daß er gelitten hat unter der Wärme eines kochenden Ofens? Er hat die Flammen flackern gesehen, er wacht auf und hat ein heftiges Herzklopfen. Oder wir träumen davon, wie wir an einem Zaune vorbeigehen; wir sehen die einzelnen Pfähle des Zaunes, wir sehen, wie zwei Pfähle oder ein Pfahl beschädigt sind, und dann wachen wir auf mit Zahnschmerzen. In dem einen Falle, wo wir von dem kochenden Ofen mit seiner Hitze geträumt haben, war es ein Bild unseres Herzens, das heftig gepocht hat. Im anderen Falle, wo wir vom Zaune geträumt haben, war es ein Bild unserer Zahnreihe, die uns irgendwie Schmerzen machte. Und wer genauer auf diese Dinge eingehen kann, der weiß, daß sich ein gewisses Gebiet der Träume dadurch charakterisiert, daß innere Organe oder Vorgänge sinnbildlich durch den Traum uns vorgestellt werden. Aber man muß schon ein wenig kundig auf alle die Verhältnisse, die darin walten, eingehen können, wenn man oftmals in den Sinnbildern des Traumes das wiedererkennen will, was sich eigentlich in ihnen ausdrückt vom Inneren des Menschenwesens. Dann wird man aber finden, wie es fast kein Organ oder keinen inneren Prozeß gibt, der nicht einmal in einer inneren Weise uns vom Traume vorgegaukelt werden kann.

Nun haben ältere Seelenforscher, die sich an den Traum herangemacht haben, eine sehr richtige Anschauung entwickelt über das Verhältnis des Menschen zum Traum. Sie haben sich gesagt: was wir in uns tragen, das fühlen wir eigentlich höchstens nur, aber wir schauen es nicht an, wir haben es nicht wie einen äußeren Gegenstand vor uns. Wenn wir aber unser eigenes Herzklopfen in dem Bilde eines kochenden Ofens vor uns haben, so haben wir ein Bild wenigstens in unserem Bewußtsein, das so aussieht wie das Bild eines äußeren Gegenstandes, das wir uns machen. Wir müssen von dem äußeren Gegenstande getrennt sein, wenn von ihm ein Bild in uns entstehen soll. Das, was man selber ist, auch wenn es der eigene Körper ist, das fühlt man an sich, man fühlt es schmerzhaft zuweilen, wenn irgend etwas Organisches nicht in Ordnung ist, aber man schaut es nicht an. Wenn man etwas anschaut in bildhafter Form, dann muß man außerhalb desselben sein. Und so haben die älteren Seelenforscher, die aber durchaus noch solche des 19. Jahrhunderts waren, sich gesagt: Träume ich in Sinnbildern von meinem eigenen Körper und seinen Vorgängen, so kann ich nicht in meinem Körper sein, denn sonst würde ich ihn nicht erleben. Ich muß daher in einem solchen Falle außerhalb meines Körpers sein. Das Bild stellt mir jedenfalls etwas dar von einem unabhängigen seelisch-geistigen Leben gegenüber dem Körper. Und wiederum sagten sie sich: Wenn ich in irgendeiner, wenn auch noch so verborgenen Weise Reminiszenzen des Lebens träume, so müßte das äußere Naturdasein doch so, wie es ist, sich mir darbieten. Aber da wird fortwährend etwas verändert, da gaukelt mir der Traum die phantastischsten Zusammenhänge vor. Da muß ich wieder drinnen stecken, denn die Natur, die mich sonst umgibt, kann mir doch nicht die Ereignisse, die ich mit ihr erlebt habe, auch nicht die Ereignisse des Menschenlebens, die ich erlebt habe, in einer ganz anderen Ordnung zeigen.

So stellte sich etwas zusammen, von dem man sagen konnte: Es war eine berechtigte Überzeugung für diese älteren Seelenforscher, daß sie da etwas erhaschten von der Seele in einem Zustande, wo sie getrennt ist von dem physischen Leib. Denn erstens kann der Mensch nicht mit seinem Leibe vereinigt sein, wenn ihm die Vorgänge des Leibes, wenn auch nur im Sinnbilde, im Traume getrennt erscheinen, er muß dann außerhalb seines Leibes sein. Aber wir müssen auch wiederum drinnen sein, zusammen sein mit den Erinnerungen an unsere Erlebnisse, wenn wir die zweite Art Träume haben; denn die Natur ändert nicht den Zusammenhang, in dem Erlebnisse stattgefunden haben. Den müssen wir selber ändern. Wir müssen daher draußen sein, außerhalb unseres Körpers, bei der ersten Art Träume, und wir müssen ebenso drinnen stecken in unseren Erlebnissen bei der zweiten Art. Das heißt, wir müssen tatsächlich außerhalb des physischen Leibes sein mit unseren seelischen Erlebnissen, wenn wir träumen. Insofern ist das, was sich ältere Seelenforscher gesagt haben, absolut unanfechtbar; es läßt sich gar nichts dagegen einwenden.

Aber etwas anderes muß gesagt werden. Irgendeine Erkenntnissicherheit über das Selbst kann mir der Traum nicht geben, er kann uns nur hinführen, wie man auf den Weg zu einer solchen Sicherheit kommt. Denn was wir innen sind, während der Zeit vom Einschlafen bis zum Aufwachen, wo wir außerhalb des Körpers sind: das, was uns der Traum da zeigt, das sind wir ja ganz gewiß nicht; denn das sind auf der einen Seite Bilder unseres körperlichen Inneren, noch dazu Sinnbilder dieses körperlichen Inneren, also das, was wiederum von unserem körperlichen Inneren genommen ist. Wir können doch nicht, wenn wir schlafend außerhalb unseres Körpers sind, sozusagen dasselbe sein, was wir im Inneren sind, im physischen Leibe sind. Es muß also etwas anderes vorliegen. Wir müssen da etwas sein außerhalb unseres Körpers, aber das macht sich nicht geltend. Dazu sind wir zunächst nicht fähig, das eigentliche Wesen des Seelischen im schlafenden Zustande zu erfassen. Das verbirgt sich und maskiert sich zunächst; es umhüllt sich mit Bildern der eigenen Körperlichkeit und zeigt sich in bezug auf sein Eigenleben in willkürlichen Zusammenstellungen des Erlebten. Daß wir außerhalb unseres Leibes sind, wenn wir träumen, das haben die älteren Seelenforscher gut geschlossen; aber daß uns der Traum etwas zeige über das außer unserem Körper befindliche Wesen, das haben sie zwar geglaubt, aber das ist nicht der Fall. Denn er zeigt uns gar nichts als das, was wir sonst erlebt haben im Leibe, und unseren eigenen Leib in Sinnbildern. Also, wenn wir außerhalb unseres Leibes etwas sind, so maskiert sich das im Traume, so trägt der Traum in bezug darauf eine Maske. Wollen wir hinter unser eigenes Wesen kommen, so müssen wir dem Traume, das heißt der Seele, diese Maske - denn der Traum ist diese Maske — herunternehmen können. - Bis hierher leitet uns auf einen Weg eine intimere Anschauung vom Traume. Indem ältere Seelenforscher durchaus bemerkt haben, daß der Traum schließlich nichts anderes zeigt als das, was er selbst wiederum aus der Sinneswelt nimmt, kamen ihnen natürlich auch darüber die Zweifel. Und ebensowenig wie man Sicherheit zu haben glaubte durch eine gewöhnliche, rückwärtsgewendete Selbstbeobachtung, ebensowenig war man befriedigt von dem, was die Beobachtung der Traumwelt geben konnte.

Demgegenüber tritt nun das auf, was von mir immer genannt wird die anthroposophische Weltanschauung oder anthroposophische Forschungsart. Diese stellt sich zunächst auf den Standpunkt: Wenn uns der Traum zeigt, daß wir etwas außerhalb unseres Leibes sind, so erweist er sich ja für sich zu schwach, um sein eigenes Wesen zur Anschauung, zur Offenbarung zu bringen. Um sich zu offenbaren, bedient er sich der Erinnerungsfetzen des Lebens, der Sinnbilder der eigenen Körperlichkeit. Wir müssen daher das Seelenleben verstärken, erkraften, damit wir an das herankommen, was im Seelenleben maskiert im Traume vor uns steht. Das kann man. Man kann es dadurch, daß man, wie ich in meinem Buche «Wie erlangt man Erkenntnisse der höheren Welten?» und in anderen Schriften ausgeführt habe, mit vollem Bewußtsein durch ein systematisch-exaktes sogenanntes «meditatives» Leben den Traum nachahmt, aber ihn nicht etwa dadurch nachahmt, daß man künstlich Träume erzeugt, sondern daß man dasjenige, was aus dem Unterbewußtsein unwillkürlich im Traume heraufsteigt, mit vollem Bewußtsein in der Seele erweckt. Dazu kommt man dadurch, daß man sich gewöhnt, ebenso zu verfahren, wie der Traum unwillkürlich verfährt - so zu verfahren, daß man in innerer Meditation Dinge, die man gut kennt, sinnbildlich vorstellt. Der Traum gaukelt uns sinnbildlich unsere eigene Körperlichkeit vor. Man übt sich nun - da uns weder unser eigenes Inneres noch die Natur Sinnbilder gibt - streng systematisch, bildlich vorzustellen. So werden Vorstellungen von uns willkürlich in ein Sinnbild gebracht, wie der Traum es uns unwillkürlich vorgaukelt. Durch innere Aktivität muß es erzeugt werden, das heißt aber, es muß der Traum verstärkt werden.

Wenn wir im äußeren Leben sind, geben wir uns passiv den äußeren Beobachtungen und Wahrnehmungen hin. Dann ist die innere Tätigkeit eine schattenhafte. Jeder empfindet eigentlich, wie schattenhaft das abstrakte Vorstellen ist, wie die Gedanken hingegeben sind an die Außenwelt und dann schattenhaft verlaufen. Jeder spricht von den schattenhaften Gedanken gegenüber der konkreten Wirklichkeit. Wenn man aber dazu aufsteigt, jetzt Sinnbildliches vorzustellen, so muß man diese Sinnbilder machen. Und wenn man nun ein vollbewußter Mensch ist und kein Narr, so weiß man, daß man sie selbst macht. Man ist dann durchaus kein Träumer, sondern ein gewöhnlich Wachender, ja noch mehr als ein gewöhnlich Wachender. Dem Träumer kommen die Sinnbilder unwillkürlich, dem Wachenden die Vorstellungsbilder durch äußere Anregung. Der Wachende, der selber sich rege macht, was die Träume geben, der Sinnbilder mit aller inneren Kraft sich vor die Seele hinstellt und in voller, bewußter Besonnenheit den Traum nachahmt, der erweckt sich sozusagen zu einer höheren Denk- und Vorstellungsaktivität und damit zu einer höheren Seelenaktivität überhaupt, als man sie im gewöhnlichen Bewußtsein hat. Das muß dann aber wirklich ganz systematisch durchgeführt werden.

Und ebenso kann die andere Seite des Traumes imitiert werden. Wir nehmen Ereignisse aus unserem Leben, die jahrelang voneinander abstehen können. Wir stellen sie nach Gesichtspunkten zusammen, so daß das eine neben dem anderen steht, aber jetzt nicht chaotisch wie im Traume, sondern nach Gesichtspunkten, die vielleicht auch durchaus aus der Phantasie sind, die wir aber ganz bewußt überschauen, die nichts Inneres uns aufdrängt, sondern die wir selber innerlich machen. Und so schulen wir uns allmählich, in einem inneren Seelenleben zu verharren; stark zu verharren in einem Seelenleben, das ganz aus der inneren Tätigkeit, aus der inneren Aktivität hervorgeht.

Was da eigentlich mit dem Menschen vorgeht, wenn er solche Übungen macht, unterschätzt man heute vielfach, weil man die innere Aktivität des Denkens nicht liebt, weil man es schon sehr aktiv findet, wenn man unter der Anleitung der äußeren Beobachtung in Gedanken lebt. Aber der, der im Ernste zu einem wirklichen Imitator des Traumes mit vollem Bewußtsein wird, der erlebt, daß er seine innere Seelenregsamkeit stark intensiviert, daß er sie durchaus erkraftet. Er ist aber, wenn er kein Narr, sondern ein vernünftiger Mensch ist, sich dessen voll bewußt, daß er sich selber alle diese Bilder und diese Lebenszusammenhänge macht, das heißt, daß er also in Illusion lebt. Beim Traume muß man erst aufwachen, um vom Gesichtspunkte des Wachlebens aus das Illusorische des Traumes zu durchschauen. Der Traum läßt sich nur vom Standpunkte des Wachens aus durchschauen, der Träumende hält den Trauminhalt für Wirklichkeit, obwohl sein Gefühl für Wirklichkeit kein so erdichtetes ist. Wer zum Imitator des Traumes wird, der wird gewahr, wie ein lebendiges Inneres, Aktives in ihm regsam erweckt wird, wie er aber einen Inhalt hat, der durchaus Selbstbild, Illusion ist. Daher kommt er dazu, gar nichts darauf zu geben, was als Inhalt in ihm anwesend ist, sondern das ins Auge zu fassen, was in ihm arbeitet, regsam ist. Kurz, was wir sonst nur als ein allgemeines Ich- oder Selbstgefühl haben, das wird eine stark gefühlte innere Tätigkeit. Will man ein Geistesforscher werden und kein verschwommener Mystiker, so muß man besonnen und exakt bleiben. Bleibt man das aber, so wird man immer mehr und mehr dazu kommen, auch die Natur des Illusorischen zu erleben. Man weiß: Du stellst nichts vor, aber du stellst vor. Dadurch kommt man auch zu der Möglichkeit, einmal die Seelenfähigkeit zu entwickeln, mit der man wirklich nichts vorstellt und dennoch so tätig ist, wie man es in der Nachahmung des Traumes gelernt hat.

Ich verweise Sie hier auf eine Seelentätigkeit, die durchaus beim Geistesforscher ausgebildet werden muß. Man glaubt gewöhnlich, und diejenigen, die die Sachen oberflächlich beurteilen, sprechen es oft aus: Geistesforschung ist etwas, wobei der Mensch sich so seinen Gedanken hingibt und etwas ausphantasiert — das ist leicht, während im Laboratorium, in der Klinik und auf der Sternwarte zu forschen, etwas Schwieriges, Entsagungsvolles ist. - Aber so ist es nicht. Denn was der Mensch als eine solche innere Seelenfähigkeit ausarbeiten muß, das nimmt zum mindesten eine ebensolange, ja auch viel längere innere Arbeit in Anspruch als irgendeine äußerlich angeeignete Wissenschaftlichkeit, wie sie heute in der Naturwissenschaft etwa üblich ist. Es sollte von denjenigen, die sich bekannt machen wollen mit dem, was hier Geistesforschung genannt wird, überhaupt nicht der Einwand erhoben werden: In der Naturforschung darf man kein Dilettant sein, wenn man mitreden will, da muß man wirklich etwas verstehen. - Was der Geistesforscher vorbringt, wird gewöhnlich so betrachtet, als ob es nur so leicht erworben würde gegenüber dem, was in der Naturforschung mit vieler Mühe erreicht wird. Aber es ist nur der Weg ein anderer. Bei der Naturforschung handelt es sich um das Verarbeiten der äußeren Wahrnehmungen und Tatsachen. Der Geistesforscher dagegen muß zuerst daran gehen, seine eigene innere Anschauungsfähigkeit zu entwickeln. Er entwickelt sie als Imitator des Traumes, aber indem in der meditativen Tätigkeit von ihm überwunden wird, was uns im Traume vorgegaukelt wird. Einer Tätigkeit werden wir uns im Traume nicht bewußt, die Traumbilder gaukelt sie uns vor; auf der ersten Stufe einer übersinnlichen Erkenntnis aber wird die Illusion vollständig durchschaut. Man weiß: Du stellst nichts vor - aber man wird die innere verstärkte, ermächtigte Tätigkeit gewahr und gelangt am Schluß dazu, an vielem Üben zu lernen, wie man diese Tätigkeit hervorrufen kann, ohne daß man erst eine illusorische Tätigkeit dazu braucht, ohne daß man erst den Traum nachahmen muß.

In der Nachahmung also entwickelt man diese Seelenfähigkeit. Wenn die Fähigkeit da ist, weiß man, was man mit ihr anfangen kann. Denn dann ist man in einem Zustande, wo man leeres aber durchaus waches Bewußtsein hat, aber auch innere Tätigkeit. Nachdem man das Illusorische dieser Tätigkeit abgeworfen hat, hat man zunächst keinen Inhalt. Doch der Zustand, den man durchlebt, gerade wenn man dazu kommt, die Fähigkeit der inneren Aktivität zu entwickeln, ohne zunächst auch einen Inhalt zu haben, dieser Zustand erfordert eine starke Überwindung. Und eigentlich ist diese Überwindung, die man dabei nötig hat, der Probier- und Prüfstein dafür, ob diese Geistesforschung eine ehrliche und echte ist. Denn in dem Moment, wo man sich dazu nur anschickt, mit leerem Bewußtsein, mit einfachem Wachbewußtsein, ohne daß dieses Wachbewußtsein einen Inhalt hat, zu leben, in diesem Moment breitet sich über das ganze Seelenleben ein unsäglicher Schmerz, eine unbegrenzte Entbehrung aus. Alles, was man sonst als Schmerzen in der Welt erleben kann, ist eigentlich gering gegenüber diesem geistig-seelischen Schmerz, den man in diesem Augenblicke der Erkenntnis erlebt. Und über diesen Schmerz muß man hinwegkommen. Denn dieser Schmerz ist eben der Ausdruck einer Kraft, die ihr physisches Abbild in allen möglichen Formen der Entbehrung hat: im Hunger, der uns zum Essen anleitet, im Durst, der uns zum Trinken zwingt und so weiter. Jetzt fühlen wir in der Seele etwas, was an uns herankommen muß, und wir fühlen es als einen unsäglichen Schmerz. Aber leben wir in dem Schmerz eine Weile, fühlen wir so recht unser Inneres selbst als ein schmerzerfülltes, das heißt, sind wir eine Weile Schmerz, ist unser eigenes Menschenwesen für unser Bewußtsein eine Weile nichts anderes als ein Zusammenhang von Schmerz, dann bleibt dieses Bewußtsein nicht länger leer, dann erfüllt sich dieses Bewußtsein, und es erfüllt sich nun nicht mit sinnlichem Inhalt, wie wir ihn durch Augen, Ohren und so weiter erhalten, sondern es erfüllt sich das Bewußtsein jetzt mit geistigem Inhalt. Und wir erhalten als das erste, was sich uns als geistiger Inhalt auf diese Art ergibt, unser eigenes geistiges Wesen, wie es als eine einheitliche Geistorganisation — aber in der Zeit, nicht im Raume lebend - sich ausdehnt zwischen der Geburt oder der Empfängnis und dem gegenwärtigen Augenblick, bis zu dem wir das Erdenleben durchlebt haben. Wie wir sonst in eine Perspektive des Raumes hineinschauen, unter der Perspektive Gegenstände, die fern sind, wieder sehen, so lernen wir von unserem gegenwärtigen Lebensaugenblicke aus hineinschauen in unsere eigene Vergangenheit. Das Körperliche schauen wir nicht in diesem Augenblicke, wir erinnern uns nur daran, wir müssen uns jedoch daran erinnern, denn sonst sind wir in unserem Bewußtsein zerstört. Der aber, der ein Geistesforscher werden will, darf kein Phantast werden, auch kein verworrener Mystiker, er muß sein Bewußtsein und seine Besonnenheit ganz so anwenden wie ein Mathematiker bei einem mathematischen Problem. Aber so, wie wir sonst die Dinge des Raumes in der Perspektive sehen, so schauen wir jetzt hinein in eine Zeitperspektive. Alles, was wir in unserem Dasein erlebt haben, steht jetzt vor uns in einem Zeittableau, aber in einem lebendigen Zeittableau. Doch nicht nur dasjenige, was wir selbst durchlebt haben, steht so vor uns, sondern auch dasjenige, was uns zeigt, wie wir geworden sind, wie innere geistig-seelische Kräfte von der Geburt oder Konzeption an unseren Körper aufgebaut haben, wie die plastischen Kräfte sind, die an unserem Leibe gearbeitet haben. Wir schauen uns äußerlich. Aber das, was wir da schauen, wodurch unser eigenes Seelenleben vor unserer Seele dasteht, das unterscheidet sich jetzt auch qualitativ von dem Erleben dieses Zeittableaus. Wenn man sonst auf sein Leben zurückblickt, dann erlebt man die Ereignisse, die an einen herankommen. Man erlebt zum Beispiel, wie ein Mensch an einen herangekommen ist, wie er einem entgegengetreten ist, liebevoll oder mit Haß, wie er dieses oder jenes vollbracht hat, indem er an einen herangekommen ist. Man erlebt sich in diesem Erinnerungsbilde so, wie die Außenwelt an einen herangetreten ist. In diesem anderen Erinnerungstableau dagegen, das aber jetzt in wirklichen Bildern dasteht, von denen man weiß, daß sie die eigene geistige Natur des Menschen wiedergeben, so wie sonst die gewöhnlichen Erinnerungsbilder die äußere Natur wiedergeben, in diesem anderen Erinnerungstableau blickt uns entgegen, wie wir uns der Außenwelt genähert haben. Da steht drinnen, wie man selber war, als man sich zum Beispiel einer anderen Persönlichkeit genähert hat, wie sich in unserem Gemüte Kräfte entfaltet haben, die gerade durch diese Persönlichkeit ihre Befriedigung, ihr Genüge, ihr Entzücken, ihre Froheit gefunden haben. Man schaut wirklich auf sich hin, wie man als Erdenmensch war. Und man sieht dann, wie jetzt in der Wirklichkeit die beiden Seiten, in denen der Traum maskiert war, zusammenfließen.

Jetzt wird der Traum zu einer vollbewußten Wirklichkeit. Er wird sogar mehr, als das gewöhnliche Bewußtsein sieht. Man schaut zunächst das geistige Dasein, das im Körper drinnen lebt, das im Schlafe von ihm unabhängig ist, ja, das der Schöpfer des Körperlichen ist. Das schaut man. Und da merkt man schon, dieses geistige Dasein enthält auch noch, aber auf geistige Art, metamorphosiert, etwas wie die Naturgesetze, aber - Sie protestieren schon dagegen - in einem geistigen Dasein. In das, was man da erlebt, spielt schon die moralische Welt hinein. Da drinnen stecken schon die moralischen Gesetze, und sie stecken so darinnen, daß man jetzt weiß: so wie die eigene Geistigkeit wirkt, so sind die moralischen Gesetze wirksam. Da fangen die moralischen Gesetze an, sich ebenbürtig neben die Naturgesetze hinzustellen.

Aber man kommt damit nur bis zum Erleben des eigenen geistigen Daseins des Menschen im Erdendasein. Will man weiterkommen, so muß man noch andere Fähigkeiten in der Seele entwickeln. — Das Genauere darüber können Sie in den schon angeführten Büchern nachlesen, denn das Genauere ist nur durch das Üben vieler Einzelheiten zu erreichen. Hier soll nur das Prinzipielle erörtert werden. — Denken Sie sich, Sie erinnern sich an einen Zeitpunkt des Tages bis zum Morgen, wo Sie aufstanden, ja aufgewacht sind. Wenn Sie sich Mühe geben, kann der Tagesverlauf bis zu diesem Zeitpunkte vor Ihrer Seele stehen. Wenn Sie nun nicht in der Weise den Tagesverlauf sich vor die Seele stellen, daß Sie beim Morgen anfangen, dann zu den Erlebnissen des Vormittags und so weiter gehen, sondern wenn Sie den Tagesverlauf in rückwärtigem Ablauf vor die Seele stellen, so daß Sie bei dem bestimmten Zeitpunkte anfangen und ihn nun weiter rückwärts verfolgen, dann können Sie auch sagen, Sie kommen dann bis zu der Nacht, wo Sie geschlafen haben. Aber da stückeln Sie dann nichts an, da bleibt etwas unausgefüllt, und was sich dann an die rückwärts vorgestellten Ereignisse wieder anschließt, ist das letzte Erlebnis vor dem Einschlafen, und dann können Sie wieder den Tagesverlauf des vorigen Tages sich vor die Seele rücken. Kurz, wenn der Mensch in dieser Weise im gewöhnlichen Leben erinnert, so bleiben immer Abgründe zwischen dem bewußten Erleben - die Abgründe, die wir im bewußtlosen Zustande während des Schlafens durchgemacht haben.

Um nun weiterzukommen mit den Übungen, die sich an dieses Rückwärts-Erleben anknüpfen können, handelt es sich darum, daß man einen recht starken Wirklichkeitssinn sich aneignet. Ein solcher Wirklichkeitssinn ist zunächst nicht das, was die Menschen der Gegenwart stark auszeichnet. Es ist sogar etwas, was nicht ganz leicht zu erringen ist, denn mit Bezug auf das Erinnern bleiben die Menschen zumeist bei dem stehen, was im engsten Sinne irgendwie an ihrer Persönlichkeit haftet. Sie ziehen in ihren Gedanken nicht so stark die Fäden nach der Außenwelt, daß sich diese Fäden nach der Außenwelt mit ihren Erinnerungen verknüpfen. Der Mensch hat zumeist überhaupt nicht die Neigung, mit seinen Erinnerungen in der Außenwelt zu leben, real in der Außenwelt zu leben. Wie sehr das der Fall ist, davon kann man sich im alltäglichen Leben überzeugen. Ich habe schon Menschen kennengelernt, die zum Beispiel am Vormittag eines Tages eine Dame gesehen haben, die sie sehr interessiert hat, und wenn man sie fragt: Wie war die Farbe des Kleides der Dame? - wissen sie es nicht. Also ist es so, als wenn sie überhaupt die Dame nicht gesehen hätten, denn wenn sie sie gesehen haben, so haben sie doch damit auch die Farbe des Kleides gesehen. Wie locker ist man also mit der Außenwelt verbunden, wenn man am Nachmittage nicht einmal weiß, welche Farbe das Kleid eines Menschen hatte, den man am Vormittag gesehen hat! Ja, ich habe schon Leute kennengelernt, die haben sich in einem Raume aufgehalten und wußten nachher nicht, ob Bilder oder keine Bilder in dem Raume waren. Die unglaublichsten Erfahrungen kann man da machen. So muß daher der, der sich einen Wirklichkeitssinn aneignen will, sich erst darauf trainieren, auch in der äußeren sinnlichen Wirklichkeit voll zu leben, so daß das, an dem er vorübergeht, so vor ihm steht, wie es da draußen in der Wirklichkeit ist. Der Geistesforscher wird wahrhaftig kein Phantast; er muß sich Wirklichkeitssinn bis zu dem Grade aneignen, daß es ihm nicht passieren kann, am Nachmittage nicht zu wissen, was für ein Kleid die Dame trug, die er am Vormittag gesprochen hat. Er muß wirklich schon in der Sinneswelt mit Wirklichkeitssinn leben können.

Nur wenn man sich darauf trainiert, dasjenige, was einem von den Dingen in der Erinnerung bleibt, anzuknüpfen an die äußere Welt der Wirklichkeit, dann entwickelt man den Sinn, für eine solche Geist-Erkenntnis eine fruchtbare Rückschau zustande zu bringen. Denn für das gewöhnliche Erinnerungsvermögen der Menschen schließt sich sehr leicht das Erinnerungsbild vor dem letzten Einschlafen an dasjenige nach dem letzten Aufwachen an. Ganz ohne Schwierigkeiten lassen die Menschen einfach das, was als Nachtabgrund zwischen diesen beiden Bildern liegt, weg, sie stükkeln das Bild des ersten Ereignisses nach dem Aufwachen unmittelbar an dasjenige des letzten Ereignisses vor dem Einschlafen an. Sie bemerken es meistens gar nicht mit einem lebhaften Bewußtsein, daß etwas dazwischen liegt. Will man sich aber ein solches Bewußtsein aneignen, daß man das, was man im Inneren erlebt hat, verknüpft mit dem Bilde, das von der Außenwelt da ist, dann muß man sich klarmachen, daß ja das, was man am Morgen nach dem Aufwachen erlebt, verbunden ist mit der ganzen Natur, die auf uns einen Eindruck macht, verbunden mit der aufgehenden Sonne, mit all den Eindrücken, die man durch die aufgehende Sonne hat, und so weiter - und was man als die letzten Ereignisse vor dem letzten Einschlafen hat, ist verbunden mit etwas, was in der Natur nicht zusammengehört, nämlich mit dem, was man nach dem letzten Aufwachen erlebte. Da wird man an den Bildern, die da nebeneinander stehen, gewahr werden: Da fehlt ja etwas! - Aber indem man so übt, indem man wiederum Seelenfähigkeiten erweckt, die im gewöhnlichen Leben nicht da sind, erlangt man die Kraft, daß man beim Rückwärtsschauen, wo man jetzt das erste Bild nach dem letzten Aufwachen hat und vordringen will zu dem letzten Bilde vor dem letzten Einschlafen, nun nicht eine Strecke Finsternis dazwischen erblickt, sondern daß diese Finsternis anfängt, sich geistig aufzuhellen, daß etwas sich hineinstellt in diese Finsternis. Wie man sonst für die tagwachen Zustände nur das verfolgt, was man erlebt hat, so tritt da plötzlich zwischen dem ersten Erlebnis nach dem letzten Aufwachen und dem letzten Erlebnis vor dem letzten Einschlafen etwas dazwischen, wovon man sich jetzt sagt: Du erinnerst dich ja an etwas - nur an etwas -, was du bisher nicht gewußt hast. - Es ist genau so wie im gewöhnlichen Erinnern sonst, nur daß man von dem, was nun herauftaucht, vorher nichts wußte. Jetzt fängt man an, zu erinnern, was man sonst verschlafen hat, selbst im traumerfüllten Schlafe verschlafen hat. Die leere Zeit, die man sonst im Bewußtsein hat zwischen dem letzten Erlebnis vor dem Einschlafen und dem ersten nach dem Aufwachen, sie füllt sich aus. Und wie sich unser gewöhnliches Bewußtsein ausfüllt mit den Erlebnissen des Naturdaseins, so füllt sich jetzt unser Bewußtsein aus mit dem, was wie eine Erinnerung heraufsteigt, aber wie eine, von der man jetzt weiß, du hast es im Unbewußten erlebt. Unser Bewußtsein füllt sich jetzt aus mit dem Seeleninhalt, der die äußeren Erlebnisse nicht mitgemacht, sondern sich vor den äußeren Erlebnissen zurückgezogen hat, schlafend geworden ist. Jetzt lernt man erkennen, wie die schlafende Seele wirklich ist, wenn sie nicht die Kraft hat, ihre Erlebnisse, die sie während des Schlafes in der geistigen Welt hat, so sich bewußt zu machen, wie der Mensch im Tagesleben sich die Ereignisse des physischen Lebens bewußt macht. Jetzt lernt man die menschliche Innerlichkeit als Geist und Seele wirklich kennen, und in diesem Augenblicke blickt man über das Erdenleben hinaus. Und man wird jetzt dasjenige, was man auf die geschilderte Weise wie ein großes aber konkretes Erinnerungstableau seines bisherigen Erdenlebens erblickt, nun angliedern können an das, was man war als seelisch-geistiger Mensch in einer rein geistigen Welt, bevor man durch die Geburt oder Konzeption in diese physische Welt heruntergestiegen ist.

Und ebenso gliedert sich an dieses Erleben ein anderes. Wenn man während des ganzen Übens zu alledem hinzuentwickelt eine Fähigkeit, die gewöhnlich nicht als eine Erkenntnisfähigkeit angesehen wird, die aber doch eine solche auch ist - wenn man das entwickelt, was Liebe der Seele ist, volle Hingabe an das, was einem entgegentritt, so stark, daß einem diese Liebe bleibt, wenn man auch auf das eigene Selbst jetzt sieht, daß man das, was als Neues in der Seele auftritt, lieben kann mit einer wirklich hingebungsvollen Liebe -, dann entwickelt sich die Möglichkeit, mit vollem Bewußtsein im Wachzustande sich freizumachen im innerlichen Erleben von dem Körperlichen. In dem Augenblick aber, wo man sich im inneren Erleben frei gemacht hat von dem Körperlichen, da weiß man, wie es mit dem Menschen ist, wenn er ohne seine Körperlichkeit sein Leben durchlebt. Und im Bilde tritt einem vor die Seele die Tatsache des Durchgehens durch die Todespforte, des Sterbens. Hat man einmal erkannt, was es heißt, unabhängig vom Leibe in seinen geistigen Kräften sich zu erfassen, dann weiß man auch, was man ist im geistigen Dasein, wenn man den Leib abgelegt hat und durch die Todespforte geschritten ist. Und man lernt auch die Umgebung kennen, die dann für den Menschen vorhanden ist. Man lernt erkennen, wie mit dem Leibe, wenn er abgelegt ist, dasjenige von uns abfällt, was uns mit der Sinneswelt verbindet. Es bleibt aber das, was uns erst selbst gestaltet hat als Mensch, das Seelisch-Geistige des Menschen. So lernt man erkennen die Erlebnisse, die man mit anderen Menschen gehabt hat. Das aber, was in diesen Sinneserlebnissen gesteckt hat, wie sich Seele zu Seele gefunden hat, was sich ausgelebt hat in den Beziehungen zu anderen Menschen, zu näher und ferner stehenden, was sich im Raume und in der Zeit abspielte, das Ewig-Geistige lernt man erkennen, wie es die irdische Form des Erlebens abstreift. Und um so mehr erlebt dann die Seele das, was geistig in ihr gesteckt hat an Beziehungen zu anderen Menschen. Und es wird das, was sonst nur Gegenstand des Glaubens ist, Erkenntnisgewißheit.

Das erleben die Menschen, wenn sie selber durch die Todespforte gegangen sind. Was von der Menschenseele gewöhnlich als Unsterblichkeit ersehnt wird, das tritt nur auf diese Weise in die wirkliche Menschenerkenntnis herein. Aber nur indem wir das wirklich Ewige im Menschen erkennen, dadurch, daß wir unsere Kräfte so weit anspannen, dieses Ewige in unserem Dasein im vorirdischen, geistig-seelischen Sein zu erkennen, erringen wir uns auch das, was uns das Fortleben nach dem Tode zur Gewißheit werden läßt. Das [Vorirdische] hat selbst als Ewiges in der Menschenseele in der heutigen Zivilisation kein Wort mehr, denn wir kennen nur die eine Hälfte der Ewigkeit, wir sprechen von Unsterblichkeit. Ältere Sprachen haben die andere Seite gehabt, die Ungeborenheit, das heißt unser Dasein, ehe wir ins Erdenleben eintreten. Aber erst die beiden Seiten - Ungeborenheit und Unsterblichkeit - machen die Ewigkeit aus. Und es ist so, daß der Mensch seine Sehnsucht nach der Unsterblichkeit damit bezahlen muß, daß sie ein bloßer Glaube wird, wenn er in der Erkenntnis verzichten will auf die Ungeborenheit, denn die Ewigkeit wird ihm nur klar, wenn er die beiden Seiten der Ewigkeit, die Ungeborenheit sowie die Unsterblichkeit seines Wesens in einer Einheit erkennt. Damit ist dann der Mensch vorgeschritten zu einem wirklichen Ergreifen desjenigen, was er ist, zu einer wirklichen Selbsterkenntnis.

Immer wieder muß ich bei solchen Gelegenheiten betonen, gewiß, eine solche Geistesforschung kann nur der ausüben, der die entsprechenden Fähigkeiten durch Übung oder sonst irgendwie durch das Schicksal sich angeeignet hat, aber wenn die Ergebnisse einer solchen Forschung ausgesprochen werden, dann können sie eigentlich von jedem ebenso plausibel gefunden werden wie zum Beispiel die Ergebnisse der Astronomie. Und so, wie man kein Maler zu sein braucht, um die Schönheit eines Bildes zu erleben - denn wenn das nötig wäre, könnten es nur die Maler -, ebensowenig braucht man, um die Erkenntnisse der Geistesforschung aufzunehmen, selbst unbedingt ein Geistesforscher zu werden, obwohl man es bis zu einem gewissen Grade werden kann, denn der Mensch ist auf die Wahrheit und nicht auf die Verworrenheit und auf den Irrtum hin angelegt. Wie man mit seinem gesunden Erleben einem Bilde gegenüberstehen und seine Schönheiten bewundern kann, so kann man, wenn man sich nur nicht selber Steine in den Weg legt als Vorurteile und dergleichen, dasjenige erleben, was von der Geistesforschung dargestellt wird. Man kann es einsehen, wenn man sich nur tatsächlich mit seinem Wahrheitssinn der Sache hingibt, und durchaus unberechtigt ist der Vorwurf derjenigen, die von den Bekennern der Geisteswissenschaft sagen, sie huldigten nur einem blinden Glauben. Gerade in der heutigen Zeit wird die Anthroposophie, wenn die Menschen durch Anwendung ihres Wahrheitssinnes oder durch Forschung in der geschilderten Weise zu einer Selbsterkenntnis des Menschenwesens kommen, den Menschenseelen dasjenige bringen können, wonach, wie ich in der Einleitung des heutigen Vortrages gesagt habe, diese Seelen in der jetzigen Zeit hungern. Wenn sich auch diese Zeitforderung noch gar nicht vielen Menschen zum Bewußtsein bringt, wenn sie auch nur unbestimmt oder auch nur in der Untüchtigkeit im Leben sich zeigt - da ist sie in dem, was sich in der Zivilisation der Gegenwart so deutlich ausdrückt.

Die Naturwissenschaft und viele philosophische Weltanschauungen sprechen von unübersteiglichen Erkenntnisgrenzen. Damit ist ihnen unübersteigbar die Grenze, die zum Menschen selber führt. Der Mensch aber kann der wirklichen Selbsterkenntnis für die Dauer nicht entbehren.

Ich werde im morgigen Vortrage dort anknüpfen, wo ich heute aufgehört habe, und das sittlich-religiöse Leben schildern, wie es sich im Menschen bereichert und verinnerlicht. Ich werde damit die Anwendung auf das unmittelbar praktische Leben dann morgen zu geben haben. Im heutigen Vortrage wollte ich zunächst zeigen, wie dieser Zeitforderung, die als eine Gemüts- und Seelenforderung bei immer mehr und mehr Menschen gegenüber der gegenwärtigen Zivilisation mit ihren Erkenntnisgrenzen auftaucht, Genüge getan werden kann durch eine wirkliche Geisteserkenntnis; durch eine Erkenntnis dessen, was der Mensch über seine eigene Unsterblichkeit und das, was mit ihr zusamrnenhängt, wissen will, ja, wissen muß, weil nur auf diese Art eine wahre Selbsterkenntnis erlangt wird und nur mit dieser wahren Selbsterkenntnis ein sich selbst Erfassen und sich selbst Erfühlen verbunden sein kann. Denn nur dadurch wird der Mensch vor der eigenen Seele mit ihrer Ewigkeitsnatur stehen können, daß er sich eine Erkenntnis dessen verschafft, wie er als geistig-seelisches Wesen eingewoben ist in die geistig-seelische Sphäre der Welt, so wie er als körperhaftes Wesen in der Welt des Körperhaften sein Dasein hat. Nur dann, wenn er sich von sich selbst eine Erkenntnis als Geist unter Geistern verschafft, wird er sich auch eine wirkliche innere Sicherheit verschaffen können. Weiß der Mensch, wessen er in der Welt wert und würdig ist, erst dann steht er mit dem Bewußtsein von sich als Mensch in der Welt, das er aus unbestimmtem Gefühl heraus als das einzig richtige Menschenbewußtsein anerkennen kann. Und erst dadurch, daß die Menschen wiederum nach einem solchen Licht der Selbsterkenntnis und der geistigen Welterkenntnis suchen werden, erst dadurch wird der Hunger der Gegenwart nach einem wirklichen Durchdringen der eigenen Menschennatur gestillt werden können. Denn die Menschheit wird gegenüber allen Anforderungen der fortschreitenden Zivilisation nicht anders zurechtkommen können, als wenn sie begreift: Selbst-Erkenntnis des Menschen kann nicht etwas anderes sein als Geist- Erkenntnis, denn der Mensch kann sich als wahrer Mensch nur erfühlen, wenn er sich als Geist unter Geistern erkennt, wie er sich in seinem vorübergehenden Erdendasein nur empfinden kann als körperliches Wesen unter körperlichen Wesen.

Anthroposophy as a Challenge of the Times

It is a general view in the present day that human knowledge has certain limits, not only temporal limits, which would consist in the fact that not everything has been achieved in the course of the time that has already passed and some things must still be left to the future, but in a very general sense one speaks today of “limits of knowledge”, of limits of knowledge for mankind. It is thought that human beings are so disposed that they can only see certain things, can only know about certain things, while other things are beyond their capacity for knowledge. And the things of the so-called supersensible world are probably most often described as those which man cannot reach through knowledge, for which he must be content with what is often called a belief, an assumption based on dark feelings and the like. The very endeavors of the last centuries and of the present, which have brought the greatest successes in scientific matters, the scientific endeavors, which have also brought the widest conceivable practical benefits, are held by mankind today to prove that one must stop at what the senses can observe, what can be ascertained by experiment and the like, and that is only the sensual-real world. When one speaks of man, this is only that world which man passes through in the physical body between birth and death or conception and death.

Now it should not be denied that natural science owes its great successes to the fact that it has limited itself in this way, that it confines itself to investigating the sensory world in all directions and does not allow itself to draw conclusions in any way from the sensory world for a supersensible world. But on the other hand, for the sensible human being there is something inwardly immensely tragic connected with this, as one believes, fully proven assumption of the limits of knowledge, something tragic that: today\noch does not come to the consciousness of many people, but which plays in vague feelings, with all kinds of subconscious sensations in numerous human souls, makes them insecure in life, indeed, often makes them insecure and ineffective in external action, in relation to their fellow human beings and so on. For it is gradually felt more and more that the limits before which one wants to stop in this way are not merely those of an outer supersensible world, but that something quite different is connected with these limits of knowledge, if they are to be accepted in the right way. Man gradually feels that his true nature itself must be of a supersensible nature, that his true nature, through which he recognizes his value and dignity as a human being, must lie in the spiritual, that is, in the non-sensible. If one stops at the supersensible with all knowledge, then one stops at human self-knowledge. Then one refrains from bringing the most valuable, the most worthy in man himself to insight.

But this also undermines the right inner self-confidence. By what means does man feel himself to be a member of the natural world, which today has been researched with such great success? Only by the fact that he carries this natural world within himself, first of all in his outer physical body. We carry within us, at least to a large extent, all the natural substances and laws of nature in our environment. We can thus feel connected with sensual nature. We would not feel that we exist in this sensual nature if we did not belong to it with our own body, or if we could not explore ourselves as sensual beings. In the same way, however, even if people do not yet fully realize this, it is the same with the supersensible, with the human spiritual inner being felt as a true human being. If we cannot feel ourselves as belonging to a spiritual nature, if we cannot feel ourselves as beings who absorb and carry the forces and substances of the spiritual within themselves, then we cannot recognize ourselves as spiritual human beings at all. But then we must lack self-confidence in that which we do feel to be our most valuable, our most worthy, as that through which we are actually human beings, indeed want to be human beings.

There is another side to this that has a certain connection. We feel that what we call moral impulses, what we call the content of our moral-spiritual powers, does not flow out of the natural, certainly not out of the processes that take place in muscles and bones or in the blood. We feel them emerging from a spiritual world, but we become uncertain about this whole spiritual world when we have to stop our cognition at the limits of the supersensible.

And so today's humanity cannot build a proper bridge from what is, I would say, brutally fixed in its external natural existence to what flows from its most intimate spiritual inner being as the content of the moral world order. One does not have the courage to always make clear to oneself what is there for the human mind. Natural science has worked hard to be able to say something, at least hypothetically, about the living beings from which man has evolved. They describe, at least hypothetically, how our present world was once formed out of the nebula; they also hypothesize about the end of our planetary system or the system to which we belong in general. We think of this whole system, which runs in time, as being made up of natural substances and constituted in some way by natural forces. One then imagines the physical human being rising from a part of these forces in a certain time. Electricity, magnetism, thermal power and so on, they impose themselves on external observation, in them the thinking man feels secure with the content of his consciousness. But if then the need arises in him to think that which does not come from his physical nature, the moral-spiritual impulses, as effective in the world, if he is to think effectively what he realizes from a spiritual elemental force, what is now also to be there in the world, if he is to have experiences in the world which are not to pass away with that which passes away with the physical - then man has no point of reference to say to himself from that which is recognized as the limits of knowledge: These moral forces are just as effective as that which the brutal physical forces of nature have as their result.

From this arise for man today not merely theoretical doubts, but insecurity of the whole soul, insecurity of the mind, which is everywhere transparent to those who have an unbiased observation of our civilized life, even if people deceive themselves about it. For that is the characteristic of today's civilization, that the deepest questions of civilization are being ignored. But these questions are nevertheless active in the subconscious; there they express themselves - not as theories, but in the whole mood of the soul, in the confidence and efficiency of the life of the soul. There lies the inner tragedy, which is actually to be noticed at the bottom of every soul, even the most superficial. And this is the source of what may seem paradoxical to us today: the longing of many people for supersensible knowledge! One might say that in the spiritual realm it is the same as with hunger and thirst. One does not crave food and drink when one is satiated, but craves them when one is not satiated. And out of an innermost need, contemporary humanity craves the supernatural because it does not have the supernatural. While on the one hand philosophers and natural scientists today want to prove more and more that there are insurmountable barriers and limits to the supersensible, we see on the other hand an unquenchable thirst of many human souls for supersensible knowledge, and the number of these people will continue to grow.

This supersensible knowledge is to be met by an approach, I could better say a type of research, of which I want to speak to you today. But I do not want to speak to you of such a kind of research as is often sought today in a very easy way for the supersensible, but I will speak to you about a kind of knowledge which is indeed a thoroughly inner, intimate matter of the human soul, but which is just as scientific, indeed as exactly certain, not even like an external scientific result, but like the mathematical or geometrical results of science itself. But by striving for such knowledge and by approaching a knowledge of that which is the supersensible in man, one immediately enters into something that arouses all kinds of doubts from the outset, that causes uncertainties from the outset.

If we look outwards, we soon realize that the natural scientists and philosophers who talk about the limits of knowledge are right about the closest external view. We must therefore look inwards. But if we look inwards, and if we remain with ordinary consciousness, with that which we have in ordinary life and also in common science, then at first we are confronted with nothing other than the outer world in a kind of mental image. If you are completely honest with your desired self-knowledge and ask yourself: What is there when you, instead of looking out into the world, look back into yourself, what is actually inside you? - then you have to realize that you will find the world inside, only in the image. What we have experienced has impressed itself on our imaginative life, our sensory life. We experience, so to speak, a mental and sensory image of what is outside. We have only turned our gaze backwards. At first it offers us nothing new, but only a weakened image of what is outside. Only a general feeling takes possession of man that he is there in these surging thoughts, ideas and sensations as an ego, as a self. But this is so general and vague that he cannot do much with it at first.

Therefore, in the Middle Ages, when people approached self-knowledge, the knowledge of the human soul, in a more intensive way, they did not initially pay so much attention to what could be gained through a mere backward-looking self-observation during ordinary consciousness, but rather sought to gain knowledge of the soul in a different way. This other way is, after all, interesting, and in order for us to be able to agree on the knowledge of the soul that I actually mean, I must start from this other, often much sought-after knowledge of the soul. I note from the outset, however, that I only want to start from this other soul knowledge in order to clarify what I want to explain, but I do not want to attach any actual value to it. Thus, no one should believe that because I start from the dream, I already attach a cognitive value to it. But this dream life is immensely significant. Those who have once sought knowledge of the soul through the dream life have already noticed that in a certain respect the soul appears much more characteristic in dreams than when one merely broods within oneself and, as one often says, wants to observe oneself. You have followed the dreams and found two kinds of dreams. It is indeed the case that the dream forms up and down undulating images of a fantastic vividness that is initially not as abstract as the thoughts we have in daytime consciousness. But the dream initially forms something that appears enigmatic, on the one hand through its composition and on the other through its content.

There are two things that arise as images in dreams. Firstly, images of experiences that we have gone through in our earthly existence, reminiscences from life. This comes up and shows this or that which we experienced many years ago. But what makes itself felt there rises up alongside other things, in a context that life has not presented. Events that took place ten years ago are brought together with those that took place the day before yesterday. The most distant things come together. By putting together the scraps of life, the dream forms impossible images, chaotic images. All the events we have experienced in outer life are conjured up for us in a chaotic way in dreams. This is one form of dreams. The other form is that in which we receive our own inner life in a kind of symbolic imagery conjured up by the dream. Who has not dreamed that he has suffered under the heat of a boiling stove? He has seen the flames flickering, he wakes up and has a violent palpitation. Or we dream of walking past a fence; we see the individual poles of the fence, we see two poles or one pole damaged, and then we wake up with a toothache. In the one case where we dreamed of the boiling stove with its heat, it was an image of our heart throbbing violently. In the other case, where we dreamed of the fence, it was an image of our teeth, which somehow caused us pain. And anyone who can go into these things in more detail knows that a certain area of dreams is characterized by the fact that inner organs or processes are symbolically presented to us through the dream. But one must be a little knowledgeable about all the relationships that prevail in them if one often wants to recognize in the symbols of the dream what is actually expressed in them from the inner being of the human being. But then one will find that there is almost no organ or inner process that cannot be simulated to us in an inner way by the dream.

Now older soul researchers who have approached the dream have developed a very correct view of the relationship of the human being to the dream. They said to themselves: what we carry within us, we actually only feel at most, but we do not look at it, we do not have it before us like an external object. But if we have our own palpitations in the image of a boiling stove before us, then we have an image at least in our consciousness that looks like the image of an external object that we make for ourselves. We must be separated from the external object if an image of it is to arise in us. What we are ourselves, even if it is our own body, we feel in ourselves, we feel it painfully at times when something organic is not right, but we do not look at it. If you look at something in a pictorial form, then you have to be outside of it. And so the older soul researchers, who were certainly still those of the 19th century, said to themselves: "If I dream in images of my own body and its processes, then I cannot be in my body, otherwise I would not experience it. I must therefore be outside my body in such a case. In any case, the image represents to me something of an independent soul-spiritual life in relation to the body. And again they said to themselves: If I dream reminiscences of life in any way, however hidden, then the outer existence of nature would have to present itself to me as it is. But something is constantly being changed, the dream makes me believe in the most fantastic connections. I have to get back into it, because the nature that otherwise surrounds me cannot show me the events that I have experienced with it, nor the events of human life that I have experienced, in a completely different order.

So something came together of which one could say: It was a justified conviction for these older soul researchers that they had caught something of the soul in a state where it is separated from the physical body. For, firstly, man cannot be united with his body if the processes of the body appear to him separately in dreams, even if only in a symbolic image; he must then be outside his body. But we must also be inside again, be together with the memories of our experiences, when we have the second kind of dreams; for nature does not change the context in which experiences have taken place. We have to change that ourselves. We must therefore be outside, outside our body, in the first kind of dreams, and we must also be inside our experiences in the second kind. This means that we must actually be outside the physical body with our spiritual experiences when we dream. In this respect, what older soul researchers have said is absolutely incontestable; nothing can be said against it.

But something else must be said. The dream cannot give me any certainty of knowledge about the self, it can only lead us to the way to such certainty. For what we are inside, during the time from falling asleep to waking up, when we are outside the body: that which the dream shows us there, that is certainly not us; for on the one hand these are images of our physical inner being, and moreover symbols of this physical inner being, i.e. that which is in turn taken from our physical inner being. When we are asleep outside our body, we cannot, so to speak, be the same as we are inside, in our physical body. So there must be something else. We must be something outside our body, but this does not assert itself. At first we are not capable of grasping the actual nature of the soul in a sleeping state. It hides itself and masks itself at first; it envelops itself with images of its own corporeality and shows itself in relation to its own life in arbitrary combinations of what it has experienced. That we are outside our body when we dream was well concluded by the older researchers of the soul; but that the dream shows us something about the being outside our body, they believed, but this is not the case. For it shows us nothing but what we have otherwise experienced in the body, and our own body in symbols. So, if we are something outside our body, this is masked in the dream, so the dream wears a mask in relation to this. If we want to get behind our own being, we must be able to remove this mask from the dream, that is, from the soul - for the dream is this mask. - A more intimate view of dreams leads us to this point. Older researchers of the soul have certainly noticed that the dream ultimately shows nothing other than what it in turn takes from the sensory world. And just as little as they thought they had certainty through an ordinary, backward-looking self-observation, they were just as little satisfied by what the observation of the dream world could provide.

In contrast to this, what I always call the anthroposophical world view or anthroposophical way of research now emerges. This initially takes the standpoint that if the dream shows us that we are something outside our body, then it proves to be too weak in itself to bring its own essence to view, to revelation. In order to reveal itself, it makes use of the memories of life, the symbols of its own corporeality. We must therefore strengthen and empower the life of the soul so that we can reach that which is masked in the life of the soul and stands before us in dreams. This can be done. It can be done, as I have explained in my book “How to Attain Knowledge of the Higher Worlds” and in other writings, by imitating dreams with full consciousness through a systematic-exact so-called “meditative” life, but not by imitating them by artificially producing dreams, but by awakening in the soul with full consciousness that which rises involuntarily from the subconscious in dreams. This is achieved by becoming accustomed to proceeding in the same way as the dream proceeds involuntarily - to proceed in such a way that in inner meditation one imagines things that one knows well. The dream symbolizes our own physicality. Since neither our own inner being nor nature provides us with symbols, we now practise imagining in a strictly systematic way. In this way, ideas of ours are arbitrarily brought into a symbolic image, just as the dream involuntarily conjures it up for us. It must be created through inner activity, which means that the dream must be reinforced.

When we are in outer life, we passively surrender to outer observations and perceptions. Then the inner activity is shadowy. Everyone actually feels how shadowy the abstract imagination is, how thoughts are surrendered to the outer world and then run in shadows. Everyone speaks of shadowy thoughts in relation to concrete reality. But when one rises to the point of imagining symbolic things, one must make these symbols. And if you are a fully conscious person and not a fool, you know that you make them yourself. One is then by no means a dreamer, but an ordinary waker, indeed even more than an ordinary waker. To the dreamer the images come involuntarily, to the waking man the images come through external stimulation. The waking person, who stimulates himself to do what the dreams give him, who places symbolic images before the soul with all his inner strength and imitates the dream in full, conscious deliberation, awakens himself, so to speak, to a higher activity of thought and imagination and thus to a higher soul activity in general than one has in ordinary consciousness. But this must then really be carried out quite systematically.

And the other side of the dream can also be imitated. We take events from our life which can be years apart. We put them together according to points of view, so that the one stands next to the other, but now not chaotically as in the dream, but according to points of view which are perhaps also quite from the imagination, but which we overlook quite consciously, which nothing inwardly imposes on us, but which we ourselves make inwardly. And so we gradually train ourselves to persevere in an inner soul life; to persevere strongly in a soul life that emerges entirely from inner activity, from inner activity.

What actually happens to a person when he does such exercises is often underestimated today because people do not love the inner activity of thinking, because they already find it very active when they live in thought under the guidance of outer observation. But he who in earnest becomes a real imitator of the dream with full consciousness, experiences that he greatly intensifies his inner soul activity, that he definitely strengthens it. But if he is not a fool, but a rational person, he is fully aware that he is creating all these images and these connections of life for himself, that is, that he is living in illusion. In a dream one must first wake up in order to see through the illusory nature of the dream from the point of view of waking life. The dream can only be seen through from the standpoint of waking life; the dreamer takes the dream content for reality, although his feeling for reality is not such a fictitious one. Whoever becomes an imitator of the dream becomes aware of how a lively inner, active being is awakened in him, but how it has a content that is definitely self-image, illusion. Therefore he comes to pay no attention at all to what is present in him as content, but to focus on what is working and active within him. In short, what we otherwise have only as a general sense of self or ego becomes a strongly felt inner activity. If you want to become a spiritual researcher and not a vague mystic, you must remain level-headed and precise. But if you remain so, you will increasingly come to experience the nature of the illusory. You know: you are not imagining anything, but you are imagining. This also enables you to develop the ability of the soul with which you really do not imagine anything and yet are active in the same way as you have learned in the imitation of the dream.

I refer you here to an activity of the soul which must certainly be developed in the spiritual researcher. It is usually believed, and those who judge things superficially often say so: Spiritual research is something in which a person devotes himself to his thoughts and fantasizes something - that is easy, whereas research in the laboratory, in the clinic and in the observatory is something difficult and difficult. - But it is not like that. For what man has to work out as such an inner soul faculty requires at least as long, indeed much longer, inner work than any externally acquired scientificity, such as is common in natural science today. Those who wish to familiarize themselves with what is called spiritual research here should not raise any objections at all: You can't be a dilettante in natural science if you want to have a say, you really have to understand something. - What the spiritual researcher puts forward is usually regarded as if it were only so easily acquired compared to what is achieved with much effort in natural research. But it is only the path that is different. Natural research is about processing external perceptions and facts. The spiritual researcher, on the other hand, must first develop his own inner capacity for perception. He develops it as an imitator of the dream, but by overcoming in meditative activity what we are led to believe in the dream. We do not become aware of an activity in a dream, the dream images are an illusion; but at the first stage of supersensible knowledge the illusion is completely seen through. One knows: You are not imagining anything - but one becomes aware of the inner intensified, empowered activity and finally comes to learn through much practice how to evoke this activity without first needing an illusory activity, without first having to imitate the dream.

In imitation, therefore, one develops this soul ability. When the ability is there, one knows what one can do with it. For then one is in a state where one has an empty but fully awake consciousness, but also inner activity. Once you have thrown off the illusory nature of this activity, you initially have no content. But the state that one lives through, just when one comes to develop the ability of inner activity without initially having any content, this state requires a strong overcoming. And this overcoming that is necessary is actually the test and touchstone for whether this spiritual research is honest and genuine. For the moment one merely sets out to live with empty consciousness, with simple waking consciousness, without this waking consciousness having any content, at that moment an unspeakable pain, an unlimited deprivation, spreads over the whole life of the soul. Everything else that one can experience as pain in the world is actually small compared to this spiritual-soul pain that one experiences in this moment of realization. And you have to get over this pain. For this pain is precisely the expression of a force that has its physical image in all possible forms of deprivation: in hunger, which leads us to eat, in thirst, which forces us to drink, and so on. Now we feel something in the soul that must come to us, and we feel it as an unspeakable pain. But if we live in the pain for a while, if we really feel our inner being as one filled with pain, that is, if we are in pain for a while, if our own human being is for a while nothing but a context of pain for our consciousness, then this consciousness no longer remains empty, then this consciousness is filled, and it is now not filled with sensual content, as we receive it through eyes, ears and so on, but the consciousness is now filled with spiritual content. And the first thing we receive as spiritual content in this way is our own spiritual being, as it expands as a unified spiritual organization - but living in time, not in space - between birth or conception and the present moment up to which we have lived through life on earth. Just as we otherwise look into a perspective of space and see objects that are far away from us, so we learn to look into our own past from our present moment of life. We do not see the physical in this moment, we only remember it, but we must remember it, otherwise we are destroyed in our consciousness. But he who wants to become a spiritual researcher must not become a fantasist, nor a confused mystic; he must apply his consciousness and his prudence in the same way as a mathematician to a mathematical problem. But just as we usually see the things of space in perspective, so now we look into a time perspective. Everything that we have experienced in our existence now stands before us in a time tableau, but in a living time tableau. But it is not only that which we ourselves have lived through that stands before us, but also that which shows us how we have become, how inner spiritual-soul forces have built up our body from birth or conception, what the plastic forces are that have worked on our body. We look at ourselves externally. But what we see there, through which our own soul life stands before our soul, is now also qualitatively different from the experience of this time tableau. Otherwise, when you look back on your life, you experience the events that come to you. For example, you experience how a person approached you, how he approached you, lovingly or with hatred, how he accomplished this or that by approaching you. In this memory picture you experience yourself as the outside world has approached you. In this other memory tableau, however, which now stands there in real pictures, of which one knows that they reflect man's own spiritual nature, just as otherwise the ordinary memory pictures reflect the outer nature, in this other memory tableau we see how we have approached the outer world. It shows how we were ourselves when we approached another personality, for example, how forces unfolded in our mind that found their satisfaction, their contentment, their delight, their joy precisely through this personality. One really looks at oneself as one was as an earthly human being. And then you see how the two sides in which the dream was masked now flow together in reality.

Now the dream becomes a fully conscious reality. It becomes even more than the ordinary consciousness sees. First we see the spiritual existence that lives within the body, that is independent of it in sleep, indeed, that is the creator of the physical. That is what one sees. And then you realize that this spiritual existence also contains something like the laws of nature, but - you are already protesting against this - in a spiritual existence, but in a spiritual way, metamorphosed. The moral world already plays a part in what one experiences there. The moral laws are already in there, and they are in there in such a way that one now knows that the moral laws are effective in the way one's own spirituality works. There the moral laws begin to place themselves on an equal footing with the laws of nature.

But this only takes us as far as the experience of man's own spiritual existence in earthly existence. If you want to go further, you have to develop other abilities in your soul. - You can read about this in more detail in the books already mentioned, because more detail can only be achieved by practicing many details. Only the principles will be discussed here. - Imagine that you remember a point in the day until the morning when you got up, even woke up. If you make an effort, the course of the day up to this point in time can stand before your soul. If you do not place the course of the day before your soul in such a way that you start in the morning, then go on to the experiences of the morning and so on, but if you place the course of the day before your soul in a backward sequence, so that you start at the particular point in time and now follow it further backwards, then you can also say that you then come up to the night when you slept. But then you do not piece anything together, something remains unfilled, and what then follows the events imagined backwards is the last experience before falling asleep, and then you can again put the course of the day of the previous day in front of your soul. In short, when a person remembers in this way in ordinary life, there are always abysses between the conscious experience - the abysses that we have gone through in the unconscious state during sleep.

In order to make progress with the exercises that can be linked to this backward experience, it is a matter of acquiring a fairly strong sense of reality. Such a sense of reality is not initially something that strongly characterizes people today. In fact, it is something that is not easy to acquire, because when it comes to remembering, people usually stick to what is somehow attached to their personality in the narrowest sense. In their thoughts they do not pull the strings to the outside world so strongly that these strings to the outside world become intertwined with their memories. For the most part, people do not have the tendency to live with their memories in the outside world, to really live in the outside world. You can see for yourself how much this is the case in everyday life. I've met people who, for example, have seen a lady they were very interested in one morning, and when you ask them: What was the color of the lady's dress? - they don't know. So it's as if they hadn't seen the lady at all, because if they had seen her, they had also seen the color of the dress. So how loosely connected you are to the outside world if in the afternoon you don't even know what color the dress of someone you saw in the morning was! Yes, I've met people who have been in a room and afterwards didn't know whether there were pictures or no pictures in the room. You can have the most incredible experiences there. Therefore, anyone who wants to acquire a sense of reality must first train himself to live fully in external sensory reality, so that what he passes stands before him as it is out there in reality. The spiritual researcher really does not become a fantasist; he must acquire a sense of reality to such an extent that it cannot happen to him in the afternoon not to know what kind of dress the lady he spoke to in the morning was wearing. He must really be able to live in the sensory world with a sense of reality.

Only when one trains oneself to connect that which remains in one's memory to the outer world of reality, then one develops the sense to bring about a fruitful retrospection for such a spirit-knowledge. For in people's ordinary memory, the memory before the last time they fell asleep is very easily linked to the memory after the last time they woke up. Without any difficulty, people simply leave out what lies between these two images as the night abyss, they connect the image of the first event after waking up directly to that of the last event before falling asleep. They usually do not even notice with a vivid awareness that there is something in between. But if you want to acquire such an awareness that you connect what you have experienced inside with the image of the outside world, then you must realize that what you experience in the morning after waking up is connected with the whole of nature, which makes an impression on us, connected with the rising sun, with all the impressions one has through the rising sun, and so on - and what one has as the last events before the last time one went to sleep is connected with something that does not belong together in nature, namely with what one experienced after the last time one woke up. You become aware of the images that stand next to each other: Something is missing! - But by practicing in this way, by awakening soul faculties that are not present in ordinary life, one attains the power that when looking backwards, where one now has the first image after the last awakening and wants to penetrate to the last image before the last falling asleep, one does not see a stretch of darkness in between, but that this darkness begins to lighten spiritually, that something is placed in this darkness. In the same way that one normally only follows what one has experienced in the day-waking states, something suddenly intervenes between the first experience after the last waking and the last experience before the last falling asleep, of which one now says to oneself: You remember something - only something - that you did not know before. - It is exactly the same as in ordinary remembering, except that you didn't know anything about what is coming up now. Now one begins to remember what one has otherwise slept through, even in dream-filled sleep. The empty time that one usually has in consciousness between the last experience before falling asleep and the first after waking up, it fills up. And just as our ordinary consciousness fills up with the experiences of the natural world, so now our consciousness fills up with what comes up like a memory, but like one that you now know you have experienced in the unconscious. Our consciousness now fills itself with the content of the soul that has not participated in the outer experiences, but has withdrawn from them, has become dormant. Now one learns to recognize what the sleeping soul is really like when it does not have the strength to become conscious of the experiences it has in the spiritual world during sleep, just as a person becomes conscious of the events of physical life during the day. Now one really gets to know human inwardness as spirit and soul, and at this moment one looks beyond earthly life. And one will now be able to link that which one sees in the way described like a large but concrete memory tableau of one's previous life on earth to that which one was as a soul-spiritual human being in a purely spiritual world before one descended into this physical world through birth or conception.

And this experience is followed by another. If during the whole practice one develops in addition to all this a faculty which is not usually regarded as a faculty of knowledge, but which nevertheless is such a faculty - if one develops that which is love of the soul, full devotion to that which confronts one, so strong that this love remains with one, if one also looks at one's own self now, that one can love that which arises as new in the soul with a truly devoted love - then the possibility develops to free oneself from the physical in the inner experience with full consciousness in the waking state. But the moment one has freed oneself from the physical in the inner experience, then one knows how it is with man when he lives through his life without his physicality. And in the image, the fact of passing through the gate of death, of dying, appears before the soul. Once one has recognized what it means to grasp oneself in one's spiritual powers independently of the body, then one also knows what one is in spiritual existence when one has laid aside the body and has passed through the gate of death. And you also get to know the environment that then exists for the human being. One learns to recognize how, when the body is laid aside, that which connects us with the sense world falls away from us. What remains, however, is that which first formed us as human beings, the soul and spirit of the human being. This is how we learn to recognize the experiences we have had with other people. But what has been in these sensory experiences, how soul has found itself to soul, what has lived itself out in relationships with other people, with those closer and further away, what has taken place in space and in time, the eternal-spiritual is learned to recognize how it strips off the earthly form of experience. And the soul then experiences all the more that which was spiritually in it in relationships with other people. And that which is otherwise only the object of faith becomes certainty of knowledge.

This is what people experience when they themselves have passed through the gate of death. That which is usually longed for by the human soul as immortality only enters into the real knowledge of man in this way. But only by recognizing the truly eternal in man, by straining our powers to such an extent that we recognize this eternal in our pre-earthly, spiritual-soul existence, do we also attain that which makes survival after death a certainty for us. The [pre-earthly] itself, as the eternal in the human soul, no longer has a word in today's civilization, because we only know one half of eternity, we speak of immortality. Older languages had the other side, the unborn, that is, our existence before we enter earthly life. But only the two sides - unbornness and immortality - make up eternity. And it is so that man must pay for his longing for immortality with the fact that it becomes a mere belief if he wants to renounce unbornness in knowledge, for eternity only becomes clear to him when he recognizes the two sides of eternity, unbornness as well as the immortality of his being in a unity. With this, man has then progressed to a real grasp of that which he is, to a real self-knowledge.

On such occasions I must always emphasize that, of course, such spiritual research can only be carried out by those who have acquired the corresponding abilities through practice or otherwise through fate, but when the results of such research are expressed, they can actually be found by everyone just as plausible as, for example, the results of astronomy. And just as one does not need to be a painter to experience the beauty of a picture - for if that were necessary, only painters could do it - just as one does not necessarily need to become a spiritual researcher in order to absorb the findings of spiritual research, although one can become one to a certain extent, for man is designed for truth and not for confusion and error. Just as one can face a picture with one's healthy experience and admire its beauties, so one can experience that which is presented by spiritual research if one does not put obstacles in one's own way in the form of prejudices and the like. You can see it, if only you really devote yourself to the matter with your sense of truth, and the reproach of those who say of the professors of spiritual science that they only pay homage to a blind faith is quite unjustified. It is precisely at the present time that anthroposophy, if people come to a self-knowledge of the human being through the application of their sense of truth or through research in the manner described, will be able to bring to human souls that which, as I said in the introduction to today's lecture, these souls hunger for at the present time. Even if many people are not yet aware of this demand of the times, even if it only manifests itself vaguely or only in the inefficiency of life - it is there in that which expresses itself so clearly in the civilization of the present.

Natural science and many philosophical worldviews speak of insurmountable limits to knowledge. For them, the limit that leads to man himself is insurmountable. But man cannot do without real self-knowledge in the long term.

In tomorrow's lecture, I will pick up where I left off today and describe the moral-religious life as it enriches and internalizes itself in man. I will then have to apply this to immediate practical life tomorrow. In today's lecture I first wanted to show how this challenge of the times, which is emerging as a challenge to the mind and soul of more and more people in the face of present-day civilization with its limits of knowledge, can be met through a true knowledge of the spirit; through a realization of what man wants to know, indeed must know, about his own immortality and that which is connected with it, because only in this way can a true self-knowledge be attained and only with this true self-knowledge can a grasping and feeling of oneself be connected. For only in this way will man be able to stand before his own soul with its eternal nature, that he obtains a realization of how he as a spiritual-soul being is interwoven into the spiritual-soul sphere of the world, just as he as a corporeal being has his existence in the world of the corporeal. Only then, when he gains knowledge of himself as a spirit among spirits, will he be able to gain real inner security. If man knows what he is worth and worthy of in the world, only then will he stand in the world with the consciousness of himself as a man, which he can recognize out of vague feeling as the only true human consciousness. And only when people will again seek such a light of self-knowledge and spiritual knowledge of the world, only then will the hunger of the present for a real penetration of their own human nature be satisfied. For humanity will not be able to cope with all the demands of advancing civilization other than when it understands: Self-knowledge of man cannot be anything other than spirit-knowledge, for man can only feel himself as a true man when he recognizes himself as a spirit among spirits, just as he can only feel himself in his temporary earthly existence as a physical being among physical beings.