Soul Economy
Body, Soul and Spirit in Waldorf Education
GA 303
3 January 1922, Stuttgart
XII. Children from the Tenth to the Fourteenth Years II
From what you have heard so far, you may have gotten the impression that the art of education based on anthroposophic knowledge of the human being is intended to nurture, above all, a healthy and harmonious development of the physical body of children. You may have noticed that certain questions could be seen as guidelines for our educational aims. For example, How can we help free the development of formative forces flowing from the head, affecting and shaping the young organism? How can we work in harmony with the child’s developing lungs and blood circulation during the middle years? What must we do to cultivate, in the broadest sense, the forces working throughout a child’s musculature? How do we properly support the processes of muscle growth in relation to the bones and tendons, so that young adolescents can attain the proper position in the outer world?
These questions imply that whatever we do to enhance the development of a child’s soul and spirit is directed first toward the best possible healthy and normal development of the physical body. And this is indeed the case. We consciously try to aid and foster healthy development of the physical body, because in this way the soul and spiritual nature is given the best means of unfolding freely through a child’s own resources. By doing as little harm as possible to the spiritual forces working through children, we give them the best possibility of developing in a healthy way. This is not to be done through any preconceived ideas of what a growing human being should be like. Everything we do in teaching is an attempt to create the most favorable conditions for the children’s physical health. And because we must pay attention to the soul and spiritual element as well, and because the physical must ultimately become its outer manifestation, we must also come to terms with the soul and spiritual aspect in the way best suited for the child’s healthy development.
You may ask which educational ideal such an attitude comes from; it arises from complete dedication to human freedom. And it springs from our ideal to place human beings in the world so that they can unfold individual freedom, or, at least, in such a way that physical hindrances do not prevent them from doing so.
When we emphasize the physical development of children in our education, we are especially trying to help them learn to use their physical powers and skills fully in later life. Waldorf education is based on the knowledge and confidence that life in general has the best chance of developing when allowed to develop freely and healthily. Naturally, all this has to be taken in a relative sense, which, I hope is understood.
Children who, through educational malpractice during the school years, have been prevented from breathing properly and from using their system of bones and connective tissue properly, will not grow up to become free individuals. Likewise, students whose heads have been crammed with fixed ideas and concepts deemed important for later life will not become inwardly free. Children will not grow into a free human beings unless their childhood needs, as imposed by physical development, were both understood and catered to through the appropriate educational principles and methods. Naturally, the soul and spiritual needs of children must also be recognized and met with the right educational methods. Far from leading to any kind of false or lofty idealism, anthroposophy wishes to prove itself by enabling its followers to deal with the practical problems of life between birth and death, the span of time in which we should develop the physical body in accord with the soul and spirit.
So you see that we have no influence over the development of what belongs to the realm of soul and spirit, even if we as educators wanted it. The soul and spiritual part of the human being exists in its true being only from the moment we fall asleep until the time of awaking. This means that, if we want to educate people’s soul and spirit, we must do so while they sleep. In fact, it is impossible for us to do this. Today, we encounter a strong belief that we must educate the soul and spirit and indoctrinate people with certain concepts. All we can really do is help people toward the free use of physical capabilities through the soul and spirit.
I have often said that it is impossible to deal with educational matters without fully considering the entire life situation of our time, taking into account the general milieu into which education is placed. I will refrain from introducing any extraneous matter into our considerations here, but what I want to say now definitely belongs to our theme.
News has come to us that in Eastern Europe a new pedagogy is being worked out for the benefit of those who are still recognized there, those who belong to the Radical Socialist Party. Because nothing that was acceptable prior to the Revolution is now considered correct, new educational methods are being worked out there. This is being done by purely outward means. We are told that one of the leaders in modern Russia has been commissioned to write the history of the Communist Party. The new government has given him one month to complete his task. During this month, he will also have to do some practical work at the Moscow Center. As a result of these activities, a book is to be published that will become the official model for reeducating all those being recognized as proper Russians. Another party member has been commissioned to write a history of the workers’ movement in the West and a history of international communism. While compiling his authoritative account, he, too, has been given other work to do, and after six weeks he is supposed to have this work completed. All true Soviet Russians are supposed to study this book. Forgive me, I believe that the second writer was actually given two months. A third person was commissioned to publish a theory of Marxism, and it was he who was given six weeks to deliver the book. With this book, every true Russian will become familiar with the new conditions in the East. According to these same methods, several other persons have been assigned to write new Russian literature. They have all been allotted a fixed time schedule in which to complete their orders. And they have all been told what other work they must do during the time of writing. The party member selected to write the book about Marxism has also been made coeditor of Pravda.
Why do I bring this up today? Because, basically, what is happening in Soviet Russia today is the ultimate consequence of what lives in all of us, insofar as we represent today’s civilization. People will not admit that events in Russia are merely the ultimate consequences of our own situation, taken to extremes in Eastern Europe. The absurdity of communist ideology is that it has determined and officially declared what a citizen must know; it does not ask what people can do to become real human beings who are properly integrated into the world’s fabric.
Teachers are called on to bring the utmost respect for soul and spirit to their lessons. Without this they will fail, as though they lacked the most fundamental artistic and scientific understanding. Therefore, the first prerequisite of Waldorf teachers is reverence for the soul and spiritual potential that children bring with them into the world. When facing the children, teachers must be filled with an awareness that they are dealing with innately free human beings. With this attitude, teachers can work out educational principles and methods that safeguard the children’s inborn freedom so that in later life, when they look back at their school days, they will not find any infringement on their personal freedom, not even in the later effects of their education.
To clarify the implications of these statements, we can ask ourselves, what becomes of those whose physical idiosyncrasies are not dealt with properly during childhood? Childish idiosyncrasies continue into later life, and if you wonder what sort of effect they will have when children become adults, I will answer by saying something that may seem rather odd and surprising. Peculiar physical habits in early childhood, if left untreated, degenerate and become the causes of illnesses later on. You must realize, in all seriousness, that characteristic physical tendencies in childhood, if allowed to continue unchanged, become causes of illness. Such knowledge will give you the right impulse for a proper care that in no way conflicts with the deepest respect for human freedom.
By comparison, imagine someone who, down to the deepest fibers of her being, is enthusiastic about the inner human freedom. Imagine she falls ill and must call a doctor. The doctor cures her by using the best means available today for the art of healing. Would such a person ever feel that her personal freedom had been interfered with? Never. What meets a person in this way would never impinge upon one’s inner freedom.
A similar feeling must be present in those who are engaged in the art of education. They should have the willingness and the ability to see the nature of their own calling as being similar to that of a doctor in relation to patients. Education naturally exists in its own right, and it certainly is not simply therapy in the true sense of the word. But there is a certain relationship and similarity between the work of a doctor and that of a teacher that justifies comparison.
When students leave school in their mid-teens, it is time for us to examine again whether, during their school years from the change of teeth to the coming of puberty, we have done our best to help and equip them for later life. (During the coming days, we will deal with the esthetic and moral aspects of education and look more closely at the stage of puberty. For now, we will consider the more general human aspects.) We must realize that, during their past school years, we have been dealing mainly with their ether body of formative forces, and that the soul life (of which more will be said later) was just beginning to manifest toward the approach of graduation.
We must consider the next stage, which begins with the fourteenth to fifteenth years and continues until the beginning of the twenties, a time when a young man or woman must face the task of fitting more and more into outer life. We have already seen how children gradually take hold of the body, finally incarnating right into the skeleton, and how, by doing so, they connect more and more with the external world and adapt to outer conditions. Fundamentally, this process continues until the early twenties, after which comes a very important period of life. Although, as teachers, we no longer have any direct influence over the young person at this stage, we have in fact already done a great deal in this way during the previous years, and this will become apparent during the early to the late twenties.
After leaving school, young people must train for a vocation. Now they no longer receive what come, mainly from human nature itself, but rather what has become part of the civilization we live in, at least in terms of the chosen trade or profession. Now the young person has to be adaptable to certain forms of specialization. In our Waldorf school, we try to prepare students to step into life by introducing practical crafts such as spinning and weaving to our students of fourteen and fifteen. Practical experience in such crafts is not important only for future spinners or weavers but for all those who want to be able to do whatever a situation may demand. It is nevertheless important to introduce the right activities at the right time.
What has been cultivated in a child’s ether body during early school years emerges again in the soul sphere of young people during their twenties, the time when they must enter a profession. The way they were treated at school will play a large role in whether they respond to outer conditions clumsily, reluctantly, full of inhibitions, or skillfully and with sufficient inner strength to overcome obstacles. During their twenties, young people become aware of how the experiences of their school years first went underground, as it were, while they trained for a trade or profession, only to surface again in form of capacities, such as being able to handle certain situations or fit oneself into life in the right way. Teachers who are aware of these facts will pay attention to the critical moments in their students’ lives between the change of teeth and puberty.
I have often spoken about the important turning point that appears during the ninth to tenth years. Toward the twelfth year, another important change takes place, which I have also mentioned. Children of six or seven, when entering school, are “one great sensory organ,” as I have called them. At this stage, much has already been absorbed through imitation. Children have also been occupied with the inner processes of molding and sculpting the organs, and they bring the results to school. Now, everything that teachers do with the children, until the turning point around nine, should have a formative effect, but in a way that stimulates them to participate freely and actively in this inner shaping. I indicated this with my strong appeal for an artistic approach during the introductions to reading, writing, and arithmetic. The artistic element is particularly important at this age.
All teaching during the early school years must begin with the child’s will sphere, and only gradually should it lead over toward the intellect. Those who recognize this will pay special attention to educating the child’s will. They will know that children must learn to drive out the will forces from their organism, but in the right way. To do this, their will activities must be tinged with the element of feeling. It is not enough for teachers to do different things with the children; they must also develop sympathy and antipathy according to what they are doing. And the musical element, apart from music per se, offers the best means for achieving this. Thus, as soon as children are brought to us, we ought to immerse them in the element of music, not just through singing but also by letting them make music with simple instruments. Thus, young students will not only nurture an esthetic sense, but most of all (though indirectly), they will learn how to use and control will forces in a harmonious way.
Children bring many inborn gifts to school. Inwardly they are natural sculptors, and we can draw on these gifts as well as their other hidden talents. For instance, we can let children do all kinds of things on paper with paints (even though this might be inconvenient for teachers), and in this way we introduce them to the secrets of color. It is really fascinating to observe how children relate to color when left alone to cover a white surface with various colors. What they produce in a seemingly haphazard way is not at all meaningless, but in all the blotches and smears we can detect a certain color harmony resulting from an inborn relationship to the world of color. We must be careful, however, not to let children use the solid blocks of color that are sold in children’s paint boxes, with which they are supposed to paint directly from the blocks onto paper. This has a damaging effect, even in the case of painting as art. One should paint with liquid colors already dissolved in water or some other suitable liquid. It is important, especially for children, to develop an intimate relationship with color. If we use thick paints from a palette, we do not have the same intimate relationship to color as we do when we use liquid colors from bottles.
In a painting lesson, you might say to a child, “What you have painted is really beautiful. You put red in the middle, and all the other colors around it go well with the red. Everything you painted fits well with the red in the middle. Now try to do it the other way round. Where you have red, paint blue, and then paint around it all the other colors so that they also go well with the blue in the middle.” Not only will this child be tremendously stimulated by such an exercise, but by working out a transposition of colors—possibly with help from the teacher—the child will gain a great deal toward establishing an inner relationship to the world in general.
However inconvenient it may be for the teachers, they should always encourage young students to form all sorts of shapes out of any suitable material they can lay their hands on. Of course, we should avoid letting them get unduly dirty and messy, since this can be a real nuisance. But children gain far more from these creative activities than they would by simply remaining clean and tidy. In other words, it is truly valuable for children, especially during the early years, to experience the artistic element.
Anything required of children must be induced first in a way that is appropriate to their nature. If artistic activities are introduced as described, learning other subjects becomes easier. Foreign languages, for example, will be learned with far greater ease if students have done artistic work beforehand. I already said that children should learn foreign languages at a very early age, if possible as soon as they enter school.
Nowadays, we often encounter somewhat fanatical attitudes; something that in itself is quite right and justifiable tends to become exaggerated to the point of fanatical extremism. And teaching foreign languages is no exception. Children learn their native tongue naturally, without any grammatical consciousness, and this is how it should be. And when they enter school, they should learn foreign languages in a similar way, without grammatical awareness, but now the process of learning a language is naturally more mature and conscious.
During the tenth year, at the turning point of life mentioned several times, a new situation calls for an introduction to the first fundamentals of grammar. These should be taught without any pedantry whatever. It is necessary to take this new step for the benefit of the children’s healthy development, because at this age they must make a transition from a predominantly feeling approach toward life to one in which they must develop their I-consciousness. Whatever young people do now must be done more consciously than before. Consequently, we introduce a more conscious and intellectual element into the language that students have already learned to speak, write, and read. But when doing this, we must avoid pedantic grammar exercises. Rather, we should give them stimulating practice in recognizing and applying fundamental rules. At this stage, children really need the logical support that grammar can give, so that they do not have to puzzle repeatedly over how to express themselves correctly.
We must realize that language contains two main elements that always interact with each other—an emotional, or feeling, element and an intellectual, thinking element. I would like to illustrate this with a quote from Goethe’s Faust:
Grey, dear friend, is every theory
And green the golden tree of life.
I do not expect that our you (who have come mainly from the West) should study all the commentaries on Goethe’s Faust, since there are enough to fill a library. But if you did, you would make a strange discovery. When coming to this sentence in Faust, you would most likely find a newly numbered remark at the bottom of the page (at least a four-digit number because of all the many explanations already given), and you would find a comment about the lack of logic in this sentence. Despite the poetic license granted to any reputable author (so the commentator might point out), the colors of the tree in this stanza do not make sense. A “golden tree”—could he mean an orange tree? But then, of course, it would not be green either. If it were an ordinary tree, it would not be golden. Perhaps Goethe was thinking of an artificial tree? In any case (a typical commentary would continue), a tree cannot be golden and green at the same time. Then there is the other problem of a grey theory. How can a theory be grey if it is invisible? In this way, many commentaries point out the lack of logic in this sentence.
Of course, there are other, more artistically inclined commentators who delight in the apparent lack of logic in this passage. But what is really at the bottom of it all? It is the fact that, on the one side, the emotional, feeling element of language predominates in this sentence, whereas on the other, it stresses a more thoughtful aspect of imagery. When Goethe speaks of a golden tree, he implies that we would love this tree as we love gold. The word gold here does not have an image quality but expresses the warm feeling engendered by the glow of gold. Only the feelings are portrayed. The adjective green, on the other hand, refers to an ordinary tree, such as we see in nature. This is the logic of it. With regard to the word theory, a theory is of course invisible. Yet, right or wrong, a mere word may conjure up certain feelings in some people that remind them of London fog. One can easily transfer such a feeling to theory as a concept. A pure feeling element of language is again expressed in the adjective grey.
The feeling and thinking qualities in language intermingle everywhere. In contemporary languages, much has already become crippled, but in their earlier stages, an active and creative element lived everywhere, through which the feeling and thinking qualities came into being.
As mentioned, before the age of nine, children have an entirely feeling relationship to language. Yet, unless we also introduce the thinking element in language, their self-awareness cannot develop properly, and this is why it is so important to bring them the intellectual aspect of language. This can be done by judiciously teaching grammatical rules, first in the mother tongue and then in foreign languages, whereby the rules are introduced only after children have begun to speak the language. So, according to these indications, teachers should arouse a feeling in students around the age of nine or ten that they are beginning to penetrate the language more consciously. This is how a proper grammatical sense could be cultivated in children.
By the time children reach the age of twelve, they should have developed a feeling for the beauty of language—an esthetic sense of the language. This should stimulate “beauty in speaking” in them, but without ever falling into mannerisms. After this, until the time of puberty, students should learn to appreciate the dialectical aspect of language; they should develop a faculty for convincing others through command of language. This third element of language should be introduced only when they are approaching graduation age.
To briefly summarize the aims of language teaching, children should first develop, step by step, a feeling for the correct use of language, then a sense of the beauty of language, and finally the power inherent in linguistic command. It is far more important for teachers to find their way into an approach to language teaching than to merely follow a fixed curriculum. In this way, teachers quickly discover how to introduce and deal with what is needed for the various ages. After a mostly artistic approach, in which students up to age nine are involved very actively, teachers should begin to dwell more on the descriptive element in language, but without neglecting the creative aspect. This is certainly possible if you choose the kind of syllabus I have tried to characterize during these past few days, in which the introduction of nature study leads to geography, and animals are seen in the context of humankind. The most effective way to include the descriptive element would be to appeal mainly to the children’s soul sphere rather than claiming their entire being. This should be done by clothing the lessons in a story told in a vivid, imaginative way. Likewise, at this stage of life, teachers should present historical content by giving lively accounts of human events that, in themselves, form a whole, as already indicated.
Having gone through the stage of spontaneous activity, followed by an appreciation of the descriptive element, students approaching the twelfth year are ready for what could be called an explanatory approach. Cause and effect now come into general considerations, and material can be given that stretches the powers of reasoning.
Throughout these stages, teachers should present mathematical elements in their manifold forms, in a way appropriate to the student’s age. Mathematics, as taught in arithmetic and geometry, is likely to cause particular difficulties for teachers. Before the ninth year, this is introduced in simpler forms and subsequently expanded, since children can take in a great deal if we know how to go about it. It is a fact that all mathematical material taught throughout the school years must be presented in a thoroughly artistic and imaginative way. Using all kinds of means teachers must contrive to introduce arithmetic and geometry artistically, and here, too, between the ninth and tenth years teachers must go to a descriptive method. Students must be taught how to observe angles, triangles, quadrilaterals, and so on through a descriptive method. Proofs should not be introduced before the twelfth year.
A boring math teacher will achieve very little if anything at all, whereas teachers who are inspired by this subject will succeed in making it stimulating and exhilarating. After all, it is by the grace of mathematics that, fundamentally, we can experience the harmonies of ideal space. If teachers can become enthusiastic about the Pythagorean theorem or the inner harmonies between planes and solids, they bring something into lessons that has immense importance for children, even in terms of soul development. In this way, teachers counteract the elements of confusion that life presents.
You see, language could not exist without the constantly intermingling elements of thought and feeling. Again I have made an extreme statement, but if you examine various languages, you will discover how feeling and thinking are interwoven everywhere. This in itself, as well as many other factors, could easily introduce chaos into our lives were it not for the inner firmness that mathematics can give us. Those who can look more deeply into life know that many people have been saved from neurasthenia, hysteria, and worse afflictions simply by learning how to observe triangles, quadrilaterals, tetrahedra, and other geometrical realities in the right way.
Perhaps you will allow me a more personal note at this point, because it may help clarify the point I am making. I have a special love for mechanics, not simply because of its objective value, but for personal reasons. I owe this love of mechanics to one of my teachers in the Vienna High School and the enthusiasm he showed for this subject; such things live on into later life. This teacher glowed with excitement when searching for the resultants from given components. It was interesting to see the joy with which he looked for the resultants and the joy with which he would take them apart again in order to fit them back into their components. While doing this, he almost jumped and danced from one end of the blackboard to the other until, full of glee, he would finally call out the formula he had found, such as \(c^2 = a^2+ b^2\). Captivated by his findings, which he had written on the board, he would look around at his audience with a benign smile, which in itself was enough to kindle enthusiasm for analytical mechanics, a subject that hardly ever evokes such feelings in people. It is very important that mathematics, which is taught in various forms right through school, should pour out, as it were, its own special substance over all the students.
And so we can speak of the two poles in human development: the rhythmic and artistic pole and the mathematical and conceptual one. If, as indicated, young souls are worked on from within outward, students will gradually grow into the world in the right way.
At the approach of the graduation age, or mid-teens, teachers will again feel an inner need to survey the most significant moments in the development of their students during the last few years, this time in retrospect. Students entered school in class one at the age of six or seven. A few years later they are sent out into the world again and—as I indicated at the beginning of today’s lecture—it is the teacher’s aim to enable them to adapt to life in the world. When we receive young students in class one, they are like one great sense organ. Inwardly, they carry a kind of a copy of their parents and others who surround them and of society as a whole. It is our task to transform these adopted and specialized features into more general human features. We can do this by appealing, above all, to children’s middle system of breathing and blood circulation, which is not connected so much with their more personal side.
Yet, apart from the adopted features that children have unconsciously copied from their environment, they also bear their very own individual characteristics when they enter school. They are less pronounced than similar characteristics found in adults, features that we associate with melancholic, sanguine, phlegmatic, or choleric temperaments. Nevertheless, the children’s nature, too, is definitely colored by what could be called their temperamental disposition, so we can speak of children with melancholic, phlegmatic, sanguine, and choleric tendencies. It is essential for teachers to acquire a fine perception of the manifold symptoms and characteristics that arise from children’s temperamental dispositions and to find the right way of dealing with them.
Melancholic children are those who depend most strongly on the conditions of the physical body. Because of their special constitution, they tend to feel weighed down by their bodily nature. They easily become self-centered and, in general, show little interest in what is going on around them. Yet it would be wrong to think of melancholic children as simply inattentive, since this is true only with regard to their surroundings and what comes from their teachers. They are, on the other hand, very attentive to their own inner conditions, and this is the reason melancholic children tend to be so moody. Please note that what I am saying about the temperaments applies only to children whose symptoms cannot be automatically transferred to adults of the same temperament.
The relationship of phlegmatic children to their environment is one of complete, though entirely subconscious, surrender to the world at large. And since the world is so vast and full of things to which they have surrendered themselves, they show little interest in what is closer to them. Again, my remarks about this temperament refer only to children, otherwise they might be seen as a compliment to phlegmatic adults, and they are certainly not meant to be that. Making a rather sweeping statement, one could say that, if children with phlegmatic tendencies did not happen to live on earth but out in the heavenly world of the cosmos, such children would be full of the deepest interest in their surroundings. They feel at home in the periphery of the world. Phlegmatic children are open to immensity and anything that is vast and remote and does not make an immediate impact.
To a certain extent, sanguine children display the opposite characteristics of the melancholic or phlegmatic child. Young melancholics are immersed in bodily nature. Phlegmatic children are drawn outward to the spheres of infinity, because they are so strongly linked to their ether body. The ether body always inclines outward toward infinite totality; it disperses into the cosmos just a few days after death. Sanguine children live in what we call the astral, or soul, body. This member of the human being is different from the physical or ether bodies inasmuch as it is not concerned with anything temporal or spatial. It exists beyond the realm of time and space. Because of the astral body, during every moment of our lives we have an awareness of our entire life up to the present moment, although memories of earlier experiences are generally weaker than more recent ones. The astral body is instrumental mainly in directing our dreams. These, as you know, bear little relationship to the normal sequence of time. We may dream about something that happened only yesterday yet, mixed up in the dream, people may appear whom we met in early childhood. The astral body mixes up our life experiences and has no regard for the element of time and space, but in its chaotic ways it has its own dimension that is totally different from what is temporal and spatial.
Sanguine children surrender themselves to their astral body, and this becomes evident in their entire pattern of behavior. They respond to outer impressions as though what lies beyond time and space were directly transmitted to us through the outer world itself. They quickly respond to impressions without digesting them inwardly, because they do not care for the time element. They simply surrender to the astral body and make no effort to retain outer impressions. Or, again, they do not like to live in memories of earlier events. Because they pay so little attention to time, sanguine children live in and for the present moment. They express outwardly something that, in reality, is the task of the astral body in the higher worlds, and this gives sanguine children a certain superficiality.
Choleric children are most directly linked to their I-center. Their physical build shows a strong will that, permeated by the forces of their I-being, is likely to enter life aggressively.
It is truly important for teachers to cultivate a fine perception for these characteristic features of the temperaments in growing children. You must try to deal with them in a twofold way: first, by introducing a social element in the class, based on the various temperaments. When teachers get an idea of their students as a whole, they should place them in groups according to similarity of temperament. There are children of mixed temperaments, of course, and this has to be considered as well. In general, however, it has a salutary effect when children of the same temperament are seated together, for the simple reason that the temperaments rub up against each other. Melancholic children, for example, will have a neighbor who is also melancholic. They become aware of how this neighbor is suffering from all kinds of discomforts arising from the physical constitution. Melancholic students recognize similar symptoms in themselves, and the mere looks of their neighbors will have a healing effect on their own nature.
If phlegmatic children sit next to other phlegmatics, they become so bored with them that, in the end, their phlegmatic nature becomes stirred to the extent that they try to shake off their lethargy.
Sanguine children, when seated among other sanguines, recognize the way they flutter from one impression to the next, being momentarily interested in one thing and then in another, until they feel like brushing them away like flies. Experiencing their own traits in their neighbors, sanguine children become aware of the superficiality of their own temperament.
When choleric children are seated together, there will be such a constant exchange of blows that the resulting bruises they give each other will have an extraordinary healing effect on their temperament.
You must observe these things, and you will find that by introducing, through your choice of seating, a social element in the classroom, you will have a wholesome and balancing effect on each child. In this way, the teacher’s relationship to each of the temperaments will also find the appropriate expression. The second point to be kept in mind is that it would not be helpful to treat melancholic children—or any other temperament for that matter—by going against their inherent disposition. On the contrary, we should develop the habit of treating like with like. If, for instance, we forced a choleric to sit still and to be quiet, the result would be an accumulation of suppressed choler that would act like a poison in the child’s system. It simply would not work. On the other hand, if, for example, a teacher shows continued interest and understanding for the doleful moods of a melancholic child, this attitude will finally bring about a beneficial and healing effect. When dealing with phlegmatic children, outwardly we should also appear rather phlegmatic and somewhat indifferent, despite our real inner interest in the student. Sanguine children should be subjected to many quickly changing sense impressions. In this way, we increase the tendencies of their own temperament, with the result that they try to catch up with the many fleeting impressions. They will develop a stronger intensity. The sheer number of sense impressions will bring about an inner effort of self-intensification in the child.
By treating like with like, we can come to grips with the different temperaments. As for the choleric children, if conditions at school allow, it would be best to send them out into the garden during the afternoons and let them run about until they are exhausted. I would let them climb up and down the trees. When they reach a treetop, I would let them shout to a playmate sitting on top of another tree. I would let them shout at each other until they are tired. If we allow choleric children to free themselves in a natural way from pent-up choler, we exercise a healing influence on their temperament.
You will learn to work effectively as teachers by getting to know the qualities of the different temperaments. One thing is essential, however. It will do no good at all if teachers enter the classroom with a morose demeanor—one that, even in early life, leaves deep wrinkles carved on their faces. Teachers must know how to act with a tremendous sense of humor in the classroom. They must be able to become a part of everything they encounter in the classroom. Teachers must be able to let their own being flow into that of the children.
Questions and Answers
Rudolf Steiner: Because of the impending departure of various conference members, there is a wish that the practical application of Waldorf principles be discussed first. Thus, it is surely appropriate for me to speak of the Waldorf school. Nevertheless, I want to broaden this subject, because I believe we need a great deal of strength and genuine enthusiasm in the face of present world conditions before our educational goals can be put into practice. It seems to me that, until we recognize the need to move toward the educational impulses described here, it will be impossible to achieve any sort of breakthrough in education. I am convinced that if you are willing to observe the recent development of humankind with an open mind, you must realize that we are living in the middle of a cultural decline and that any objection to such an assessment is based on illusions. Of course it’s very unpleasant and seems pessimistic, though in fact it is meant to be optimistic to speak as I do now. But there are many indications of a declining culture in evidence today, and the situation is really very clear. And the whole question of education arises properly in hearts and souls only when this is fully recognized. In view of this, I see the establishment of the Waldorf school as only the first example of a practical application of the education we have been talking about.
How did the Waldorf school come about? It owes its existence—this much can surely be said—to the realization of educational principles based on true knowledge of the human being. But what made it happen? The Waldorf school is an indirect result of the total collapse of society all over Central Europe in 1919. This general collapse embraced every area of society—the economic, sociopolitical, and spiritual life of all people. Perhaps we could also call it a collapse of economic and political life and a complete bankruptcy of spiritual life. In 1919 the stark realities of the situation made the entire public very much aware of this. Roughly halfway through 1919, there was a general and complete awareness of it.
Today there is much talk, even in Central Europe, about how humankind will recover, how it will eventually pull itself out of the trough again, and so on. But such talk is a figment of an all too comfortable way of thinking, and in reality such thoughts are only empty phrases. The fact is that this decline will certainly accelerate. Today, the situation in Central Europe is not unlike those who have known better days, when they bought plenty of good clothes. They still have those clothes and wear them down to their last threads. The fact that they cannot buy new clothes is certainly clear. And, although they realize they cannot replenish their stock, they nevertheless live under the illusion that all is well and that they will be adequately provided for. Similarly, the world at large fails to realize that it is no longer possible to obtain “new clothes” from its cultural past.
During the first half of 1919, the people of Germany were ready for a serious reassessment of the general situation. At that time, however, a Waldorf school had not yet begun, but it was the time when I gave lectures on social and educational issues, which addressed what I have been describing during this conference (though only in rough outline). Some people saw sense in what was said, and this led to founding the Waldorf school.
I emphasize this point, because the prerequisite for a renewal of education is an inner readiness and openness to assess the real situation, which will itself clearly indicate what needs to be done. At the founding of the Waldorf school, I remarked how good it is that this school will serve as a model, but this in itself it is not enough. As the only school of its kind, it cannot solve today’s educational problems. At least a dozen Waldorf schools must be started during the next three months if we are to take the first steps toward a solution in education. However, since this has not happened, we can hardly see our achievement in Stuttgart as success. We have only a model, and even this does not yet represent what we wish to see. For example, apart from our eurythmy room, which we finally managed to obtain, we badly need a gymnasium. We still do not have one, and thus anyone who visits the Waldorf school must not see its current state as the realization of our goals. Beyond all the other problems, the school has always been short of money. Financially it stands on extremely weak and shaky legs.
You see, hiding one’s head in the sand goes nowhere in such serious matters. Therefore, I must ask you to permit me to speak freely and frankly. Often, when I speak of these things, as well as my views on money, I am told, “In England we would have to go about this in a very different way; otherwise, we would merely put people off.” Now, in my opinion, two things must be done. First, the principles of this education—based as they are on a true picture of the human being—should be made widely known, and the underlying ideas need to be thoroughly taken in and understood. Everything possible should be done in this direction.
If we were to leave it at that, however, there would be little progress. Unless we make up our minds to overcome certain objections, we will never move forward at all. For instance, people say, “In England, people must see practical results.” This is precisely what the civilized world has been saying for the past five or six hundred years. Only what people see with their own eyes has been considered truly valuable, and this drags us down. And if we insist on this stance, we will never pull ourselves out of this chaos.
We are not talking about small, insignificant matters. It is absolutely necessary that we grasp our courage and give a new impulse. Well-meaning people often think that I cannot appreciate what they are saying when they state, “In England, we would have to do things very differently.” I understand this only too well, but this does not get to the root of the issue at all. If the catastrophic conditions of 1919 had not hit the people of Central Europe so hard—though this ill fortune was really a stroke of good luck in terms of beginning the Waldorf school—if that terrible situation had not opened people’s eyes, there would be no Waldorf school in Central Europe, even today. In Central Europe, and especially in Germany, there is every need for a new impulse, because there is an innate lack of any ability to organize and so little sense of structured social organization. When people outside Central Europe speak so highly of German organization, it does not reflect the facts. There is no assertive talent for organization in Germany. Above all, there is no articulated social organization; rather, real culture is carried by individuals, not by the general public. Look, for example, at German universities. They do not represent the real character of the German people at all. They are very abstract structures, and do not at all express what is truly German. The real German spirit lives only in individuals. Of course, this is only a hint, but it shows what would probably happen if we appealed to the national mood in Germany; one meets a void and a lack of understanding for what we have been speaking of here. In other words, the Waldorf school owes its existence to an “unlucky stroke of luck.”
Now, with regard to the second point, the most important thing, besides the need to build further on what was spoken of here, is that something like a Waldorf school should be established also in countries where the populations have not been jolted into action by abysmal, cataclysmic conditions, such as Germany experienced in 1919. If, for instance, some sort of Waldorf school could be opened in England, this would mark a significant step forward. Naturally, such a school would have to be adapted to the conditions and culture of that country.
I realized that the Waldorf educational movement was not going to spread its wings, because the original Waldorf school was, in fact, still the only one. So I tried to initiate a worldwide Waldorf school movement. I did this because, during the preceding years, there had been a tremendous expansion of the anthroposophic movement, at least in Central Europe. Today this movement is a fact to be reckoned with in Central Europe. As a spiritual movement, it has made its mark. But there is no organization to direct and guide this movement. It needs to said, and generally understood, that the Anthroposophical Society is not in a position to carry the anthroposophic movement. The Anthroposophical Society is riddled with a tendency toward sectarianism, and consequently it is not capable of carrying the anthroposophic movement as it has developed and exists today.
All the same, I had wanted to make a final appeal to the stronger elements within the Anthroposophical Society, because I was hoping that some individuals might respond by making a final effort to bring about a Waldorf movement. Well, this did not happen. The world school movement is dead and buried, because it is not enough simply to talk about such things; it must be accomplished in a down-to-earth and practical way. To implement such a plan, a larger body of people is needed.
The Waldorf school in Stuttgart is one of the results of the German revolution. It is not itself a revolutionary school, but the revolution was its matrix, so to speak. It would mean a big step forward if something like a Waldorf school were started in another country also (say, in England) because the general world situation was clearly recognized. Perhaps later, when time has been given to the discussion, a little more could be said about this.
Millicent MacKenzie (Professor at University College, Cardiff: At this point, I would like to add that, among the members of this conference, there are several people from England who recognize the needs of humankind and would be in a position to work in this direction. They are in a position to exert considerable influence in an effort to realize this educational impulse. As a first step, they would like to invite Dr. Steiner to come to England some time later this year, and they are eager to create the right attitude and context for such a visit, during which they hope a number of prominent individuals and educators would also be present to welcome Dr. Steiner.
Rudolf Steiner: I wish to add that such a step must be taken only in a practical sense, and that it would be harmful if we talk too much about it. Those of you who are in a position to take a step forward in this direction would have to prepare the ground, so that when the right time has come, the appropriate action may be taken.
I am sure that Mrs. MacKenzie and her friends will agree if there are conference members from other countries who might have ideas on this subject and wish to come forward to add their suggestions.
Mrs. K. Haag: Today we have heard a great deal about England. We are pleased about this and have found it useful. But there are various other matters that we, who come from our little Holland, have on our heart. In fact, we have come with a very guilty conscience because the idea of a World school movement was just discussed for the first time in Holland. Somehow we did not do what we might have done about it, partly because of misunderstandings and partly because of a lack of strength. But we have not been quite as inactive as people might think, and I can assure you that we are more than ready to make good on our failure, as far as possible. Despite our shortcoming, I would like to ask Dr. Steiner whether the plan he outlined for England could also be implemented in Holland. And since Dr. Steiner has promised to visit us in April, I would like to ask him if he might be willing to discuss this with a larger group of people who have a particular interest in education.
Rudolf Steiner: There is already a plan for Holland, which, as far as I know, is being worked out. From the fifth to the twelfth of April this year, an academic course will be held there that are similar to courses given elsewhere. It has the task, first and foremost, of introducing anthroposophy in depth.
After the need to work for anthroposophy in Holland was repeatedly pointed out, and after the lectures and performances there during February and the beginning of March last year, it has been somewhat discouraging to see a notable decline, not in an understanding of spiritual science, but certainly in terms of the inner life of the Anthroposophical Society in Holland. Therefore it seems to me very necessary, especially in Holland, that the anthroposophic movement make a new and vigorous beginning. From which angle this should be approached will depend on the prevailing conditions, but an educational movement could certainly be the prime mover.
Another question has been handed to me, which has a direct bearing on this point.
Question: According to Dutch law, it is possible to set up a free school if the government is satisfied that the intentions behind it are serious and genuine. If we in Holland were unable to raise enough money to begin a Waldorf school, would it be right for us to accept state subsidies, as long as we were allowed to arrange our curriculum and our lessons according to Waldorf principles?
Rudolf Steiner: There is one part of the question I do not understand, and another fills me with doubts. What I cannot understand is that it should be that difficult to collect enough money for a free school in Holland. Forgive me if I am naive, but I do not understand this. I believe that, if the enthusiasm is there, it should at least be possible to begin. After all, it doesn’t take so much money to start a school.
The other point, which seems dubious to me, is that it would be possible to run a school with the aid of state subsidies. For I seriously doubt that the government, if it pays out money for a school, would forego the right to inspect it. Therefore I cannot believe that a free school could be established with state subsidies, which imply supervision by inspectors of the educational authorities. It was yet another stroke of good luck for the Waldorf school in Stuttgart that it was begun just before the new Republican National Assembly passed a law forbidding the opening of independent schools. Isn’t it true to say that, as liberalization increases, we increasingly lose our freedom? Consequently, in Germany we are living in a time of progress, whereas it is quite unlikely that we could begin a Waldorf school in Stuttgart today. It was established just in time.
Now the eyes of the world are on the Waldorf school. It will be allowed to exist until the groups that were instrumental in instituting the so-called elementary schools have become so powerful that, out of mistaken fanaticism, they will do away with the first four classes of the Waldorf school. I hope this can be prevented, but in any case we are facing menacing times. This is why I continue to emphasize the importance of putting into action, as quickly as possible, all that needs to be done. A wave is spreading all over the world, and it is moving quickly toward state dictatorship. It is a fact that Western civilization is exposing itself to the danger of one day being inundated by an Asiatic sort of culture, one that will have a spirituality all its own. People are closing their eyes to this, but it will happen nevertheless.
To return to our point: I think it only delays the issue to think it is necessary to claim state help before starting a school. Somehow this does not look promising to me at all. But perhaps others have different views on this subject. I ask everyone present to voice an opinion freely.
Question: He states that, at the present time, it is impossible to establish a school in Holland without interference by the state, which would demand, for instance, that a certain set curriculum be formulated and so on.
Rudolf Steiner: If things had been any different, I would not have decided at the time to form a world school movement, because, as an idea, it borders on the theoretical. But because the situation stands as you have described it, I thought that such a movement would have practical uses. The matter is like this: Take the example of the little school we used to have here in Dornach. For the reason already mentioned several times, we managed to have only a very small school because of our continual “overabundant lack of funds.” Children around the age of ten came together in this school. Now, in the local canton of Solothurn, there is a strict law in education that is really not much different from similar laws all over Switzerland. This law is so fixed that, when the local education authorities found out that we were teaching children under the age of fourteen, they declared it completely unacceptable; it was simply unheard of. Whatever we might have done to arrive at some agreement, we would never have received permission to apply Waldorf methods in teaching children under fourteen.
Hindrances of this kind will, of course, be placed in our way all over the continent. I dare not say how this would work in England at the moment. But if turns out to be possible to begin a totally free school there, it would really mean a marvelous step forward. But because we meet resistance almost everywhere when we try to put Waldorf education into practice, I thought that a worldwide movement for the renewal of education might have some practical value. I had hoped that it might make an impression on people interested in education, thus creating possibilities for establishing new Waldorf schools. I consider it extremely important to bring about a movement counter to modern currents, which culminated in Russian Bolshevism. These currents find their fulfillment in absolute state dictatorship in education. We see it looming everywhere, but people won’t realize that Lunatscharski is merely the final result of what lies dormant all over Europe. As long as it does not interfere with people’s private lives, the existence of such thinking is conveniently ignored. Well, in my opinion, we should react by generating a movement against Lunatscharski’s principle that the state should become a giant machine, and that each citizen should be a cog in the machine. The goal of this countermovement should be to educate each person. It is this that is needed. In this sense, one can make most painful experiences even in the anthroposophic movement.
Today it would also be possible to give birth to a real medical movement on the basis of the anthroposophic movement. All the antecedents are there. But it would require a movement capable of placing this impulse before the eyes of the world. Yet everywhere we find a tendency to call those who are able to represent a truly human medicine “quacks,” thus putting them outside the law. As an example, and entirely unconnected with the anthroposophic medical movement, I would like to tell you what happened in the case of a minister in the German government who rigorously upheld a strict law against the freedom of the healing profession, a law that still operates today. However, when members of his own family fell ill, he surreptitiously called for the help of unqualified healers, showing that, for his own family, he did not believe in official medical science, but only in what the law condemned as “quackery.”
This is symptomatic of the root causes of sectarianism. A movement can free itself of such causes when it stands up to the world, while remaining fully within the laws of the land, so that there can be no confusion in terms of the legal aspects. And this is what I had in mind with regard to a world school movement. I wanted to create the right setting for introducing laws that allow schools based entirely on the need for educational renewal. Schools will never be established correctly by majority decisions, which is also why such schools cannot be run by the state.
That’s all I have to say about the planned world school movement, an idea that, in itself, does not appeal to me at all. I do not sympathize with it, because it would have led to an international association, a “world club,” and to the creation of a platform for the purpose of making propaganda. My way is to work directly where the needs of the times present themselves. All propaganda and agitation is alien to me. I abhor these things. But if our hands are tied and if there is no possibility to establish free schools, we must first create the right climate for ideas that might eventually lead to free education. Compromises may well be justified in various instances, but we live in a time when each compromise is likely to pull us still further into difficulties.
Question: How can we best work in the realm of politics?
Rudolf Steiner: I think that we should digress too much from our main theme if we were to look at these deep and significant questions from a political perspective. Unless today’s politics experience a regeneration—at least in those countries known to me on the physical plane—they hold little promise. It is my opinion that it is exactly in this area that such definite symptoms of decadence are most obvious, and one would expect society to recognize the need for renewal—the threefold social order. Such a movement would then run parallel to the anthroposophic movement.
Where has the old social order placed us? I will indicate this only very briefly and, thus, possibly cause misunderstandings. Where did the old social order, which did not recognize its own threefold nature, land us? It has led to a situation in which the destinies of whole populations are determined by political parties whose ideological backgrounds consist of nothing but phrases. No one today can maintain that the phrases used by the various political parties contain anything of real substance.
A few days ago I spoke of Bismarck, who in later life became a rigid monarchist, although in his younger years he had been something of a bashful, closet republican. This is how he described himself. This same Bismarck expressed opinions similar to those expressed by Robespierre. People can make all sorts of statements. What matters in the end is what comes to light when the real ideology of a party is revealed.
For some years, I taught at the Berlin Center for the Education of the Working Classes, a purely social-democratic institution. I took every opportunity to spread the truth wherever people were willing to listen, no matter what the political persuasion or program of the organizers of those institutions. And so, among people who were, politically, rigid Marxists, I taught a purely anthroposophic approach to life, both in courses on natural science and on history. Even when giving speech exercises to the workers, I was able to express my deepest inner convictions. The number of students grew larger and larger, and soon the social-democratic party leaders began to take notice. It led to a decisive meeting, attended not only by party leaders but also by all my adult students, who were unanimous in their wish to continue their courses. But three to four party leaders stolidly declared that this kind of teaching had no place in their establishment, because it was undermining the character of the social-democratic party. I replied that surely the party wanted to build for a future and that, since humankind was moving inevitably toward greater freedom, any future school or educational institution would have to respect human freedom. Then a typical party member rose and said, “We don’t know anything about freedom in education, but we do know a reasonable form of compulsion.” This was the decisive turning point that finally led to closing my courses.
It may seem rather silly and egotistic to say this, but I am convinced that, had this quickly growing movement among my students at the end of the nineteenth and beginning of the twentieth century been allowed to live and expand unhindered, conditions in Central Europe would have been different during the 1920s.
So you can see that I do not have much trust in working with political parties. And you will have the least success in bringing freedom into education when dealing with socialist parties. They, above all, will strive in most incredible ways for the abolition of freedom in education. As for the Christian parties, they are bound to clamor for independent schools, simply because of the constitution of the present German government. But if they were placed at the helm, they would immediately claim this freedom in education only to suit themselves. It is a simple fact that we will be unable to make progress in public life unless we first create the necessary foundations for a threefold social order, in which the democratic element prevails exclusively in the middle sphere of rights. This in itself would guarantee the possibility of freedom in education. We will never achieve it through electioneering.
Question: If children of the present generation were educated according to the principles of anthroposophic knowledge, would this in itself be enough to stem the tide of decadence and decay, or would it be necessary to send them out into the world with the stated intent of changing society to bring about a new social organism?
Rudolf Steiner: The ideas I tried to express in Towards Social Renewal are not fully understood. The reasons for writing this book are decades old. Humanity has reached a stage when, although someone might show up with the most promising ideas for improving society and people’s social attitudes, one could not implement them simply because there is a lack of practical possibilities for such purposes. The first step would be to create the right conditions for the possibility of implementing such ideas and insights into social life.
Consequently, I do not believe it is helpful to ask, If a generation were educated in the way we have described, would the desired social conditions automatically follow? Or, Would a change of the social order one way or another still be necessary? I would say, we must understand that the best we can do in practical life is to help as many people as possible of one generation to make progress through education based on knowledge of the human being. This in itself would obviate the second question, because the thoughts and ideas needed to change society would be exactly those developed by that generation. Since their human conditions would be different from those of the general public today, they would have very different possibilities for implementing their aims.
The point is, if we want to be practical, we have to think in practical terms rather than theories. To think practically means to do what is possible, not attempt to realize an ideal. Our most promising aim would be to educate as many as possible of one generation, working from knowledge of the human being, and then trust that, in their adult lives, they would be able to bring about a desirable society. The second question can be answered only through the actions of those who, through their education, have been prepared for the task you outlined. It cannot be answered theoretically.
Question: How can one make use of what we have heard in this course of lectures to educate profoundly mentally retarded children?
Rudolf Steiner: In answer to this question I should like to give you a real and practical example. When I was twenty-three or twenty-four, I was called to work as a tutor in a family of four boys. Three of the boys presented no educational difficulties, but one, who was eleven at that time, had a particular history. At the age of seven, a private tutor had tried in vain to teach him according to the accepted methods of an elementary school. Bear in mind that this happened in Austria, where anyone was free to teach children, because the only thing that mattered was that they could pass an examination at the end of each year, and students were allowed to take these exams at any state school. No one cared whether they had been taught by angels or by devils, as long as they passed their exam, which was seen as proof of a good education.
Among those four boys, one had four to nearly five years of private tutoring behind him. He was around eleven years old when his latest drawing book was presented to me, which he had brought home from his most recent annual exam. In all other subjects he had remained either completely silent or had talked complete nonsense, but he had not put anything down on paper. His drawing book was the only document he had handed in during his exam, and all it contained was a big hole in the first page. All he had done was scribble something and then immediately erase it, until only a big hole was left as evidence of his efforts and the only tangible result of his exam. In other respects, it proved impossible—sometimes for several weeks—to get him to say even a single word to anyone. For awhile, he also refused to eat at table. Instead, he went into the kitchen, where he ate from the garbage can. He would rather eat garbage than proper food.
I am describing these symptoms in detail so you can see that we are dealing with a child who certainly belonged to the category of “seriously developmentally disabled.” I was told that not much could be done, since everything has been tried already. Even the family doctor (who incidentally was a leading medical practitioner in Vienna and a greatly respected authority) had given up on the boy, and the whole family was very discouraged. One simply did not know how to approach that boy.
I asked that this child’s education, as well as that of his three brothers, be left entirely in my hands, and that I be given complete freedom in dealing with the boy. The whole family refused to grant me such freedom, except for the boy’s mother. From their unconscious depths, mothers sometimes have the right feeling for these things, and the boy was given into my care. Above all else, when preparing my lessons I followed the principle of approaching such a child—generally called “feebleminded”—entirely in terms of physical development. This means that I had to base everything on the same principles I have elaborated to you for healthy children. What matters in such a case is that one gains the possibility of looking into the inner being of such a child. He was noticeably hydrocephalic, so it was very difficult to treat this boy. And so my first principle was that education means healing and must be accomplished on a medical basis.
After two and a half years, the boy had progressed enough to work at the curriculum of a grammar school, for I had succeeded in teaching him with the strictest economy. Sometimes I limited his academic work to only a quarter or, at most, a half hour each day. In order to concentrate the right material into such a short time, I sometimes needed as much as four hours of preparation for a lesson of half an hour. To me, it was most important not to place him under any strain whatsoever. I did exactly as I thought right, since I had reserved the right to do so. We spent much time on music lessons, which seemed to help the boy. From week to week, the musical activity was increased, and I could observe his physical condition gradually changing. Admittedly, I forbid any interference from anyone. The rest of the family, with the exception of the boy’s mother, registered objections when, time and again, they noticed that the boy looked pale. I insisted on my rights and told them that it was now up to me whether I made him look pale, and even more pale. I told them that he would look ruddy again when the time came.
My guiding line was to base the entire education of this child on insight into his physical condition and to arrange all soul and spiritual measures accordingly. I believe that the details will always vary in each case. One has to know the human being thoroughly and intimately, and therefore I must repeatedly point out that everything depends on a real knowledge of the human being. When I asked myself, What is the boy’s real age and how do I have to treat him? I realized that he had remained a young child of two years and three months, and that I would have to treat him as such, despite the fact that he had completed his eleventh year, according to his birth certificate. I had to teach him according to his mental age. Always keeping an eye on the boy’s health and applying strictest soul economy, I initially based my teaching entirely on the principle of imitation, which meant that everything had to be systematically built on his forces of imitation. I then went on to what, today, I called “further structuring” of lessons. Within two and a half years, the boy had progressed enough that he was able to study grammar school curriculum. I continued to help when he was a student in grammar school. Eventually, he was weaned of any extra help. In fact, he was able to go through the last two classes of his school entirely on his own. Afterward, he became a medical doctor with a practice for many years. He died around the age of forty from an infection he had contracted in Poland during the World War.
This is just one example, and I could cite many others. It shows that, especially in the case of developmentally disabled children, we need to apply the same principles I elaborated here for healthy children. In the Waldorf school there are quite a number of slightly and profoundly “mentally-retarded children” (to use the phrase of the question). Naturally, more serious cases would disturb their classmates, so we have opened a special remedial class for such children of various ages, whose members are drawn from all our classes. This group is under the guidance of Dr. Schubert.
Whenever we have to decide whether to send a child into this remedial class, I have the joy (if I may say it this way) of having to fight with the child’s class teacher. Our class teachers never want to let a class member go. All of them fight to keep such children, doing their best to support them within the class, and often successfully. Although our classes are certainly not small, by giving individual attention, it is possible to keep such children in the class. The more serious cases, however, must be placed in our remedial group, where it is absolutely essential to give them individual treatment. Dr. Schubert, who is freed from having to follow any set curriculum, allows himself be guided entirely by the individual needs of each child. Consequently, he may be doing things with his children that are completely different from what is usually done in a classroom. The main thing is to find specific treatments that will benefit each child.
For instance, there may be some very dull-witted children in such a group, and once we develop the necessary sense for these things, we realize that their faculty of making mental pictures is so slow that they lose the images while making them. They lose mental images because they never fully make them. This is only one type of mental handicap. We can help these children by calling out unexpected commands, if they are capable of grasping their meaning. We have also children who are unable to follow such instructions, so one has to think of something else. For instance, one may suddenly call out, “Quickly hold your left earlobe between your right thumb and second finger. Quickly grip your right arm with your left hand!” In this way, if we let them orient themselves first through their own body geography and then through objects of the world outside, we may be able to make real progress with them. Another method might get them to quickly recognize what one has drawn on the blackboard (Steiner drew an ear on the board). It is not easy at all to get such a child to respond by saying “ear.” But what matters is this flash of recognition. One has to invent the most varied things to wake up such children. It is this awakening and becoming active that can lead to progress, though, of course, not in the case of those who display uncontrollable tempers. They have to be dealt with differently. But these examples may at least indicate the direction in which one has to move. What matters is the individual treatment, and this must spring from a real knowledge of the human being.
Zwölfter Vortrag
Es dürfte meine Schilderung in den letzten Tagen auf Sie den Eindruck gemacht haben, daß gerade die auf anthroposophische Menschenerkenntnis begründete Erziehungs- und Unterrichtskunst in allererster Linie das physisch-leibliche Element im Menschen berücksichtigt. Denn Sie werden bemerkt haben, daß ich mich bemühte zu zeigen: wie kommen wir mit unserer Erziehungskunst am besten der freien Entfaltung der vom Haupte des Menschen ausgehenden, am eigenen Organismus arbeitenden plastischen Kräfte zu Hilfe? Wie kommen wir gerade bei der schulmäßigen Erziehung dem Atmungs-, dem Zirkulationssystem entgegen? Wie können wir berücksichtigen, daß sich die Muskelkräfte in der freiesten Weise ausbilden? Wie können wir berücksichtigen, daß sich in einer richtigen Weise die Muskeln an die Knochen ansetzen und der Mensch so in einer entsprechenden Weise physisch-leiblich in die Außenwelt hineingestellt ist?
Es sieht so aus, als ob alles dasjenige, was von dieser hier besprochenen pädagogischen Kunst ausgeht, insofern es seelische, geistige Maßnahmen sind, so orientiert würde, daß man die möglichst gesunde und normale physisch-leibliche Entwickelung des Menschen zustande bringt. Und das ist auch so. Tatsächlich ist das vollbewußte Ziel desjenigen, was hier als gesunde Pädagogik und Didaktik angesehen werden muß: in der freiesten Weise das Physisch-Leibliche des Menschen zu entwickeln und dem Geistig-Seelischen gewissermaßen die Möglichkeit zu bieten, sich aus sich selbst heraus zu entfalten; dem GeistigSeelischen gerade dadurch die Möglichkeit zu bieten, aus sich selbst heraus sich zu entfalten, daß man mit dem Geistig-Seelischen gerade während des schulmäßigen Alters den wenigsten Schaden anrichtet; nicht daß man sagt, der Mensch sollte so oder so werden. Man wendet gewissermaßen alles, was man im Unterricht anwendet, so an, daß man lernt, wie der Mensch am besten gesund ist. Da man eben im Unterricht auch das Geistig-Seelische berücksichtigen muß, da das Leibliche ein Ausdruck, eine Offenbarung des Geistig-Seelischen werden muß, so muß eben auf die Handhabung des Geistig-Seelischen so hingeschaut werden, wie es der gesunden Entwickelung des menschlichen Wesens entspricht.
Welcher obersten Erziehungsmaxime entspringt denn gerade eine solche Anschauung? Sie entspringt nämlich dem absoluten Hingegebensein an die menschliche Freiheit, an menschliches Freisein. Sie entspringt dem Ideal, den Menschen so in die Welt hineinzustellen, daß er seine individuelle Freiheit entfalten kann, daß er an der Entfaltung dieser individuellen Freiheit in seinem Leibe kein Hindernis hat.
Was wir also durch diese auf das Leiblich-Physische hin orientierte Erziehungs- und Unterrichtskunst ganz besonders anstreben, das ist, daß der Mensch sein Leiblich-Physisches in der richtigen Weise gebrauchen lernt im späteren Leben. Denn es beruht diese Erziehungskunst ebensosehr auf Erkenntnis wie auf einem gewissen Vertrauen, daß das Leben, gerade wenn es sich in freier Weise gesund entwickelt, am besten sich entfaltet. Natürlich sind diese Dinge alle im relativen Sinn zu nehmen, aber dieser relative Sinn kann schon verstanden werden.
Ein Mensch, der während seines schulmäßigen Alters dazu getrieben wird, sein Atmungssystem, sein Sehnen- und Knochensystem nicht in richtiger Weise gebrauchen zu können, der wird ein unfreier Mensch im Leben. Und ein Mensch, den man so dressiert, daß man sich sagt, er soll diese oder jene Begriffe, diese oder jene Vorstellung für das Leben erwerben, der wird ein unfreier Mensch. Allein derjenige wird ein freier Mensch, den man so erzieht, daß man die Erziehung von den Anforderungen der physisch-leiblichen Entwickelungsnotwendigkeit des Menschen abliest. Vom Menschen selbst muß alles abgelesen werden, was geistig-seelisch mit ihm im schulmäßigen Alter vorgenommen werden soll.
Gerade dadurch will sich anthroposophische Weltanschauung für das Leben bewähren, daß sie nicht zu einem falschen Idealismus führt, sondern gerade zu einer richtig praktischen Handhabung desjenigen, was im Leben vorhanden ist, insofern sich dieses Leben uns Menschen zeigt, die sich im Leibe zwischen Geburt und Tod entwickeln, und die in diesem Leibe dasjenige entwickelt haben müssen, was ihr Geistig-Seelisches ist.
Sehen Sie, wenn wir auch wollten, wir hätten ja auf die eigentliche Entwickelung des Geistig-Seelischen als Lehrer und Erzieher gar keinen Einfluß. Das Geistig-Seelische ist in seinem ihm angemessenen Zustande nur vom Einschlafen bis zum Aufwachen vorhanden. Dieses GeistigSeelische müßten wir nämlich eigentlich im Schlafe erziehen, wenn wir es erziehen wollten. Wir können es gar nicht erziehen. Und das ist das, was uns in einer Zeit, wie es die unsere ist, so stark entgegentritt, daß man glaubt, man müsse das Geistig-Seelische erziehen, man müsse den Menschen zu der Auffassung von dem oder jenem hinbringen, während man ihn nur zu der freien Benützung seiner physischen Leiblichkeit durch das Geistig-Seelische hinzubringen hat.
Man kann das Erziehungswesen — ich habe das oftmals angeführt — nicht ohne Zusammenhang mit der ganzen Zivilisation einer Zeit behandeln, überhaupt mit dem ganzen Milieu, in das es hineingestellt ist. Ich werde mich ganz gewiß enthalten, irgend etwas, was nicht zu unserem Gegenstande gehört, in diese Betrachtung hineinzufügen. Allein das Folgende gehört im eminentesten Sinne zu der Betrachtung unseres Gegenstandes, allerdings aus der Zeit heraus.
Wir hören jetzt, daß im europäischen Osten für die erwachsenen Menschen, die dort allein gelten gelassen werden, nämlich diejenigen, die der radikal-sozialistischen Partei angehören, eine Pädagogik ausgearbeitet wird; denn alles dasjenige, was bisher gegolten hat, betrachtet man ja dort nicht mehr als richtig, und so wird eine neue Pädagogik ausgearbeitet. Rein nach äußeren Maßnahmen wird pädagogisch vorgegangen. Und wie? Wir hören, wie eine der führenden Persönlichkeiten Rußlands gegenwärtig ausersehen ist, eine Geschichte der kommunistischen Partei zu schreiben. Er soll sich mit diesem Schreiben der Geschichte der kommunistischen Partei einen Monat beschäftigen. Das ist ihm staatsmäßig zugeschrieben. Er soll nach einem Monat fertig sein. Während dieses Monats soll er sich zu gleicher Zeit in der Moskauer Zentrale auch noch etwas praktisch beschäftigen. Dadurch soll er ein Buch zustande bringen, und daran sollen dann alle diejenigen gebildet werden, die im heutigen Sinne richtige Russen sind. Ein zweiter Mann ist damit beauftragt worden, eine Geschichte der Arbeiterbewegung des Westens und eine Geschichte der Internationale zu schreiben. Diesem Mann ist der Auftrag gegeben worden, während dieser Zeit zugleich noch etwas anderes zu machen - nach anderthalb Monaten hat er fertig zu sein, dann hat sich wiederum jeder echte Russe mit diesem Buche zu beschäftigen; verzeihen Sie, ich glaube, es sind ihm zwei Monate Zeit gelassen. Der dritte Mann ist damit beauftragt, die Theorie des Marxismus zu schreiben. Er hat anderthalb Monate dazu zu gebrauchen und hat dann ein Buch zu liefern, mit dem sich wiederum jeder, der in würdiger Weise hineinzuwachsen hat in die Verhältnisse des Ostens, zu beschäftigen hat. In solcher Weise sind etliche Menschen beauftragt, die nächstkünftige russische Literatur zu schaffen. Jedem ist vorgeschrieben, wieviel Wochen er dazu zu gebrauchen hat, auch was er mittlerweile sonst zu tun hat; derjenige, der über den Marxismus schreiben soll, soll in der Zeit zugleich die «Prawda» mitredigieren.
Warum führe ich das an? Weil es im Grunde genommen die letzte Konsequenz desjenigen ist, was in uns allen als gegenwärtige Zivilisationsmenschen steckt; man will nur nicht zugeben, daß das die letzte Konsequenz ist, die nur in ihrer Absurdität im Osten von Europa ausgebildet wird. Das Absurde geschieht darinnen, daß man eben davon ausgeht, dieses oder jenes Bestimmte müsse der Mensch wissen; daß man nicht davon ausgeht: wie muß der Mensch sein, damit er ein Mensch ist, ein Mensch, der richtig in das Weltengefüge eingegliedert ist?
Die äußerste Ehrfurcht vor dem Geistig-Seelischen muß der Lehrer in seine Schule hineintragen, und ohne diese äußerste Ehrfurcht ist im Schulmäßigen ebensowenig zurechtzukommen wie ohne eine gewisse künstlerisch-wissenschaftliche Bildung des Lehrers. Daher ist vor allen Dingen die Grundanforderung für den Lehrer, der auf Grundlage einer anthroposophisch orientierten Pädagogik wirken will, daß er Ehrfurcht habe vor den Entwickelungsmöglichkeiten desjenigen, was das Kind als sein Geistig-Seelisches in die Welt hineinträgt, und daß er sich auch dem Kinde als einem freien Wesen gegenüber fühlt, daß er daher die Maximen findet, welche das Kind so erziehen können, daß das Kind, wenn es später zurückschaut auf seine Erziehung, keine Beeinträchtigung seiner Freiheit, auch nicht in den Folgen dieser Erziehung sehen kann.
Was da gemeint ist, wird uns am besten dadurch ersichtlich sein, daß wir uns die Frage vorlegen: Was wird aus dem Menschen, wenn seine leiblich-physischen Eigentümlichkeiten im kindlichen Alter nicht richtig behandelt werden? Sie bleiben unausgebildet und gehen dann in das spätere Alter hinein. Was sind denn aber die kindlichen Eigenschaften für das spätere Alter? So paradox es klingt, es ist durchaus wahr: die kindlichen Eigenschaften für das spätere Alter sind Krankheitsursachen; das muß man in der seriösesten Gestalt wissen, daß die kindlichen Eigenschaften für das spätere Alter Krankheitsursachen sind. Dann wird man schon den richtigen inneren Impuls für eine Gesundheitslehre bekommen und auch für das Respektieren der menschlichen Freiheit im ganzen.
Denn vergleichen wir einmal, nehmen wir einen Menschen, der bis in die äußerste Faser seines Wesens für die Freiheit des Menschen enthusiasmiert ist, und er wird krank, er ruft sich den Arzt. Der Arzt kuriert ihn nach aller richtigen modernen Kunst. Wird er dadurch seine Freiheit beeinträchtigt glauben? Nie und nimmer. Dasjenige, was in dieser Weise an den Menschen herantritt, beeinträchtigt die Freiheit des Menschen nie und nimmer.
Dasselbe Gefühl muß gegenüber der Erziehungs- und Unterrichtskunst vorhanden sein. Man muß das radikal aussprechen, aber wiederum kann das radikal Ausgesprochene eben auf seine richtige Nuance hin gehört werden. Dasselbe muß in bezug auf Erziehungs- und Unterrichtskunst vorhanden sein, daß man die Erziehungs- und Unterrichtskunst in einem gewissen Verhältnisse zur ärztlichen und zur medizinischen Kunst zu denken in der Lage ist. Selbstverständlich ist die Erziehungskunst keine Therapie im wahren Sinne des Wortes. Aber das Verhältnis des Menschen zum Kinde muß in einer solchen Weise angesehen werden, daß der Vergleich mit dem therapeutischen Verhalten durchaus als gerechtfertigt erscheinen kann.
Wenn man das Kind aus der schulmäßigen Erziehung entläßt um die Zeit der Geschlechtsreife — über diesen Lebenswendepunkt werden wir ja in den nächsten Tagen bei der ästhetischen und moralischen Erziehung zu sprechen haben; wir werden jetzt mehr auf die allgemein menschlichen Gesichtspunkte eingehen -, wenn man also das Kind aus der eigentlich schulmäßigen Behandlung im vierzehnten, fünfzehnten Lebensjahre entläßt, hat man ja ganz besonders nötig, darauf zu sehen, ob nun wirklich in der Zeit zwischen dem Zahnwechsel und der Geschlechtsreife alles dasjenige an dem Kinde getan worden ist, was ihm im späteren Leben förderlich sein kann. Da muß berücksichtigt werden, daß es ja vor allen Dingen der Ätherleib, der Bildekräfteleib ist, mit dessen Kraftzusammenhängen man es in diesem schulmäßigen Alter zu tun hat, und daß dann, wenn das Kind das schulmäßige Alter verläßt, das eigentlich Seelische - von dem wir gleich nachher noch genauer sprechen wollen - erst zur wirklichen Offenbarung kommt. Und zwar ist es so, daß wir nun auf den nächsten menschlichen Lebensabschnitt hinschauen müssen, der mit dem vierzehnten, fünfzehnten Lebensjahre beginnt, bis in den Beginn der Zwanzigerjahre dauert, und der durch die menschliche Wesenheit selbst an den Menschen die Anforderung stellt, sich dem äußeren Leben immer mehr und mehr anzupassen. Wir haben ja gesehen, wie sich das Kind allmählich seinen Leib erobert, zuletzt sein Knochensystem, und dadurch durch sich selbst mit der äußeren Welt zusammenwächst, sich in die äußere Welt hineinstellt. Es muß sich dann der äußeren Welt anpassen können. Und das geschieht im wesentlichen bis zum Beginn der Zwanzigerjahre.
Dann kommt aber ein ganz besonders wichtiger Lebensabschnitt für den Menschen, ein Lebensabschnitt, in dem wir uns dem Menschen nicht mehr schulmäßig gegenüberstellen. Aber wir haben ungeheuer vieles getan in dem schulmäßigen Lebensabschnitte, was sich gerade in der Zeit der beginnenden Zwanziger- bis zum Abschluß der Zwanzigerjahre beim Menschen zeigt.
Unmittelbar nachdem wir den Menschen aus dem schulpflichtigen Alter entlassen, muß er in dasjenige eintreten, was ihn für diesen oder jenen Beruf vorbereitet. Da muß ihm dasjenige überliefert werden, was nun nicht mehr bloß allein aus der menschlichen Natur gegeben wird, sondern was in der Zivilisation als für diesen oder jenen Beruf geeignet aufgespeichert ist. Da muß der Mensch also an eine Spezialität des Lebens anpassungsfähig sein. Wir versuchen gerade in unserer Pädagogik diesem Hinausgehen in das Leben dadurch gerecht zu werden, daß wir bei den Kindern oder jungen Leuten, die eben im vierzehnten, fünfzehnten Lebensjahre stehen, nun allmählich ganz praktische Unterrichtszweige, Weberei, Spinnerei eintreten lassen, an denen wir das Hineinwachsen in das Leben heranbilden wollen. Denn so etwas zu kennen, namentlich an so etwas einmal herumhantiert zu haben, wie an Weberei, Spinnerei, das ist nicht nur für den wichtig etwa, der ein Spinner, ein Weber werden soll, sondern das ist für jeden Menschen, der lebenspraktisch sein will, von außerordentlicher Bedeutung. Es handelt sich dann nur darum, daß man es trifft, gerade im richtigen Alter die richtigen Dinge zu behandeln.
Dasjenige aber, was im schulmäßigen Alter in dem Äther- oder Bildekräfteleib ausgebildet wird, das kommt im Seelischen dann zwischen den beginnenden und den sich vollendenden Zwanzigerjahren, wenn der Mensch nun wirklich sich zunächst beruflich in das Leben hineinstellen muß, zum Vorschein. Die Art, wie wir ihn in der Schule behandelt haben, macht es ihm in den Zwanzigerjahren möglich, entweder ungeschickt, mit Widerstrebungen, mit Hemmungen sich in das Leben hineinzustellen, oder geschickt, mit einer Kraft, die Hindernisse, die Hemmnisse zu beseitigen. Der Mensch muß durchaus in seinen Zwanzigerjahren erleben, wie das, was wir im schulmäßigen Alter mit ihm gemacht haben, während der Vorbereitung für den Beruf gewissermaßen mehr in den Untergrund getreten ist, dann aber wiederum an die Oberfläche tritt, und zwar jetzt als dasjenige, was der Mensch selber handhabt, wie er sich ins Leben hineinstellt. Wenn man dies weiß, dann wird man gerade in der richtigen Weise auf die großen Abschnitte im menschlichen Leben, zwischen dem Zahnwechsel und der Geschlechtsreife, hinzuschauen vermögen. Zwischen dem neunten und zehnten Lebensjahre ist jener wichtige Lebenspunkt, von dem ich gesprochen habe. Gegen das zwölfte Jahr hin ist wiederum ein wichtiger Wendepunkt, auf den ich auch hingedeutet habe. Wenn das Kind im sechsten, siebenten Jahre aus dem Hause zu uns in die Schule kommt, dann ist es zunächst dasjenige, was ich ein totales Sinnesorgan genannt habe. Es hat durch Nachahmung vieles aufgenommen. Es hat eine gewisse innere Plastik ausgebildet. Das bringt es uns in die Schule herein. Und alles das, was wir nun bis gegen den Wendepunkt zwischen dem neunten und zehnten Lebensjahre anwenden müssen, ist ein gestaltendes Vorgehen, ein so gestaltendes Vorgehen im Erziehen und Unterrichten, daß der Mensch immer bei diesem Gestalten dabei ist. In der Schilderung, die ich gegeben habe über die Art und Weise, wie Lesen, Schreiben, Rechnen an das Kind herangebracht werden soll, drückt sich dies ja schon in der Forderung des künstlerischen Vorgehens gerade für dieses Lebensalter aus. Also das künstlerische Element zu berücksichtigen, ist auch gerade in diesem Lebensalter ganz besonders wichtig.
Derjenige, der weiß, daß das Erziehen im schulmäßigen Alter von dem Willen ausgehen muß und erst allmählich zum Intellekt hinzuführen hat, wird auf die Ausbildung des Willens ein ganz besonderes Augenmerk richten. Er wird sich sagen: Das Kind muß in der richtigen Weise lernen, seinen Willen aus seinem Organismus herauszutreiben. — Dazu muß der Wille in allen seinen Äußerungen in der richtigen Art etwas Gefühlsmäßiges aufnehmen. Wir müssen nicht nur das oder jenes tun, wir müssen auch Sympathie und Antipathie in entsprechender Weise mit dem entwickeln, was wir tun. Und das beste Element, abgesehen von seinem eigenen Werte, was das Kind in diese Strömung hineinbringt, das ist das Musikalische. Daher sollte man sofort, wenn einem das Kind in die Schule hineingebracht wird, das musikalische Element an das Kind heranbringen durch Gesangliches, aber auch durch einfaches Handhaben des Instrumentalen.
Nicht nur, daß das Kind dabei den ästhetischen Sinn pflegt, sondern vor allen Dingen, weil gerade auf diesem Umwege die innere harmonische Ausgestaltung des Willenselementes herbeigeführt wird. Und auch dazu bringt uns das Kind Anlagen mit. Es ist innerlicher Plastiker, und wir können diese innerlichen plastischen Anlagen herausholen, überhaupt die gesamten Anlagen herausholen. Auch dazu bringt uns das Kind Anlagen mit, daß wir es, wenn es auch unbequem ist, mit Farben allerlei auf dem Papier machen lassen, wodurch es in die Geheimnisse der Farbenwelt eingeführt werden kann. Es ist zum Beispiel außerordentlich interessant, wie die Kinder sich in das Farbige hineinfinden, wenn man sie einfach zunächst mit Farbe auf einer weißen Fläche hantieren läßt. Sie bedecken die einzelnen Teile dieser weißen Fläche mit Farben, in denen ja schon durch die naturgemäße Anlage des Kindes eine gewisse innere Farbenharmonie liegen wird. Es ist nicht sinnlos, was sie da herumschmieren auf dem Papier, es ist eine gewisse Farbenharmonie. Man muß nur darauf Rücksicht nehmen, daß man nun ja nicht die Kinder jene Farben verwenden läßt, die man als Kinder-Malfarben bekommt, wo sie dann die Farbe von den Farbtabletten direkt aufs Papier aufstreichen. Das ist immer, das ist sogar in der malerischen Kunst von Schaden! Gemalt soll werden aus dem Tiegel, aus der aufgelösten Farbe, aus der im Wasser oder einer sonstigen Flüssigkeit aufgelösten Farbe. Man muß ein inneres intimes Verhältnis entwickeln zur Farbe. Das muß schon das Kind. Wenn man bloß von der Palette herunterschmiert, hat man kein intimes Verhältnis zur Farbe, sondern wenn man aus der im Tiegel aufgelösten Farbe heraus malt.
Wenn man dann dem Kinde sagt: Sieh einmal, das ist sehr schön, was du da gemacht hast: da hast du in der Mitte eine rote Fläche angestrichen, und darnach hast du dich dann gerichtet. Alles, was du da drauf hast, das stimmt zu der roten Fläche. Nun mache es einmal gerade umgekehrt, auf dem Platz, auf dem du jetzt eine rote Fläche hast, mach eine blaue, und mach das andere alles entsprechend, wie du es dann machen müßtest, wenn in der Mitte nicht Rot, sondern Blau ist.
Erstens ist das Kind furchtbar angeregt von einer solchen Übung, zweitens wird vielleicht mit einiger Anleitung von seiten des Lehrers und Erziehers das Kind ganz gewiß diese Umsetzung in eine andere farbige Grundtönung so herausarbeiten, daß es in dem inneren Verhältnisse zur Welt ungeheuer viel gewinnt, wenn man eben so etwas machen läßt. Und so unbequem es auch sein mag, kleine plastische Dinge soll man vom Kinde durchaus anfertigen lassen, nun ja, aus dem Material, das Sie irgendwo finden. Es ist ja wahr, daß man nötig hat, die Kinder vor dem Sich-zu-schmutzig-Machen zu bewahren; das ist ja unbequem, aber was die Kinder dabei gewinnen, das ist ungeheuer viel mehr wert, als daß die Kinder sich nicht irgendwie dabei beschmutzen und dergleichen. Kurz, es ist notwendig, das künstlerische Element gerade in der ersten Zeit an das Kind heranzubringen. Alles dasjenige, was aus dem Kinde herauskommen muß, das ist in kindlicher Art an das Kind heranzutragen. Wenn man in dieser Weise Kunst an die Kinder heranbringt, dann geht es mit den anderen Fächern viel leichter. Sie lernen zum Beispiel die Sprachen viel leichter, wenn man Kunst an sie heranbringt. Ich habe ja angeführt, daß das Sprachenlernen schon in einem sehr frühen Lebensalter eintreten muß, womöglich wenn die Kinder in die Schule kommen.
Nun, in unserer Zeit sind viele Fanatismen herrschend, und so kann man das, was nach der einen Seite durchaus richtig ist, bis zum Fanatismus getrieben, ins Einseitige ausgebildet finden. So geht es zum Beispiel mit Bezug auf das Sprachliche. Die Muttersprache lernt das Kind zunächst natürlich ganz ohne jegliche Grammatik, und selbstverständlich soll es sie so lernen; auch wenn das Kind in das schulmäßige Alter eintritt und ihm fremde Sprachen beigebracht werden, soll das ganz ohne Grammatik geschehen, gewissermaßen in einer etwas reiferen Nachbildung des Erlernens der Muttersprache.
Aber wenn der erwähnte Wendepunkt im Leben zwischen dem neunten und zehnten Lebensjahre da ist, da ist es einfach durch das eigene Leben des Menschen gefordert, daß etwas von nicht pedantischen grammatischen Erkenntnissen an das Kind herangebracht werde, um der richtigen Entwickelung des Kindes willen, denn es muß das Kind in diesem Lebensalter den Übergang finden zu der Ich-Entfaltung. Es muß bewußter alles treiben lernen als früher. Man muß daher an der Sprache, die es schon kann, die es spricht, handhabt, in das bloße gefühlsmäßige sprachliche Element das gedankliche Element durch nicht pedantisch, sondern anregend geübtes Erkennen der Regeln doch hineinbringen. Es muß das Kind schon etwas Grammatisches haben; so daß es zwischen dem neunten und zehnten Lebensjahre, wo dieser wichtige Lebenswendepunkt da ist, sich nicht sagt: Wie soll ich das sagen, wie soll ich das sagen? — ohne daß es irgendeinen logischen Anhaltspunkt hat. Denn man muß sich klar sein, die Sprache hat eben zwei Elemente in sich, die immer ineinanderwirken: ein gedankliches Element und ein gefühlsmäßiges Element.
Ich möchte das anschaulich machen durch einen Satz, den ich Ihnen aus Goethes «Faust» zitiere:
Grau, teurer Freund, ist alle Theorie,
Und grün des Lebens goldner Baum.
Ich kann Ihnen als westlichen Menschen nicht zumuten, daß Sie etwa Kommentare über Goethes «Faust», die es gibt — sie sind eine große Bibliothek -, studieren; aber Sie würden, wenn Sie sie studierten, eine merkwürdige Entdeckung machen. Eine gewisse Klasse dieser Kommentare bringt immer wiederum, wenn der Kommentator bei diesem Satz in Goethes «Faust» anlangt, unter dem Strich so eine Bemerkung: oben steht 3526, weil 3525 Erklärungen schon vorangegangen sind; unten steht dann 3526 — etwas über das Unlogische dieses Satzes, das man dem Künstler in seiner künstlerischen Freiheit verzeihen muß, daß aber immerhin es sehr unlogisch ist, denn - ein goldner Baum, ist es ein Orangenbaum, dann ist er wieder nicht grün, und ist es ein anderer Baum, dann ist er entweder nicht golden, oder er ist bloß ein künstlicher Baum. Ein goldener Baum kann jedenfalls nicht grün sein. Und andererseits wiederum: Theorie - ja, sie kann doch nicht grau sein! Sie ist doch etwas, was man gar nicht sieht, also kann sie nicht grau sein. Logisch ist die Sache also nicht.
Es gibt allerdings dann andere Kommentatoren, die sind mehr künstlerische Menschen, die freuen sich darüber, daß es hier nicht so ganz logisch zugeht.
Nun, was liegt da eigentlich zugrunde? Das liegt zugrunde, daß hier in diesem Satze das gefühlsmäßige Element der Sprache auf der einen Seite und das gedanklich-anschauliche Element ganz besonders stark hervortreten. Indem er sagt: Ein goldner Baum -, meint er einen Baum, den man so lieb hat wie das Gold, wobei man bei golden gar nicht mehr auf die Anschauung, sondern eben auf das Gefühl, das man bei diesem eigentümlichen Erglänzen hat, hinschaut. Also ein goldner Baum ist derjenige, den man so fühlt, wie man Gold fühlt. Da ist ganz nur auf das Gefühl Rücksicht genommen. Und mit dem Grün ist eben ein richtiger Baum gemeint, wie man ihn anschauen kann: da ist der Logik Rechnung getragen. — Theorie, sie ist ja nichts, was man sieht, wobei aber schon mancher Mensch berechtigt oder unberechtigt dasjenige empfindet, was Sie empfinden können, wenn es in London gerade Nebel gibt. Nun, dieses Gefühl kann man dann auf das Erleben der Theorie übertragen. Und es ist wiederum in dem Grau das bloß gefühlsmäRige Element der Sprache.
Aber dieses gefühlsmäßige und gedankenmäßige Element in der Sprache, die mischen sich überall durcheinander. In den heutigen Sprachen ist ja sogar schon vieles abgelähmt; aber in früheren Bildungsepochen der Sprachen war überall ein tätiges, ein bildendes Element, und es ist so das Gefühlsmäßige in das Gedankenmäßige hineingebracht.
Nun, das Kind hat vor dem neunten Jahre zu der Sprache ein ganz und gar nur gefühlsmäßiges Verhältnis. Aber sein Selbstbewußtsein könnte sich nicht entwickeln, wenn wir nicht etwas das gedankliche Element hineinbrächten. Deshalb ist es so notwendig, das gedankliche Element auf dem Umwege durch vernünftig beigebrachte grammatische Regeln, vor allem an der Muttersprache, dann aber vielleicht auch an der fremden Sprache, wobei die Regeln dem Sprachelernen nachfolgen, an das Kind heranzubringen.
Dabei sollte das Folgende berücksichtigt werden: das Kind soll zwischen dem neunten, zehnten Lebensjahre das Gefühl bekommen, etwas in das Verständnis der Sprache auf diese Weise einzudringen, wie ich das eben ausgedrückt habe. So könnte man dem Kinde ein richtiges grammatisches Gefühl gegenüber der Sprache beibringen.
Gegen das zwölfte Lebensjahr, und darauf müssen wir sehen, soll das Kind ein Gefühl für die Schönheit der Sprache, ein ästhetisches Empfinden gegenüber der Sprache entwickelt haben, und es soll auch sich bemühen, gegen das zwölfte Jahr hin in einem vernünftigen Sinne wieder so zu sprechen, was man nennen könnte «schön sprechen»; von da ab bis zu dem Geschlechtsreifealter sollte das Kind erst dasjenige entwickeln, was dann zur Handhabung der Sprache gehört, um jemand anderen zu überzeugen: das dialektische Element der Sprache. An dieses Element sollte das Kind erst beim Verlassen des schulmäßigen Alters herangeführt werden. So daß man sagen könnte: Dasjenige, was uns nach und nach für die Sprache aufgehen muß, das ist zuerst ein Gefühl für das im Leben selbst liegende Richtige der Sprache, ein Gefühl für die Schönheit der Sprache, dann ein Gefühl für die Macht, die man durch die Sprache im Leben hat. So soll alles dasjenige eingerichtet werden, was zum Sprachunterricht gehört.
Es ist viel wichtiger, daß der Lehrende, der Erziehende sich in solche Dinge hineinfindet, als daß er irgendeinen fertigen Lehrplan mit Zielen bekommt. Er wird schon auf diese Weise in die einzelnen Lebensabschnitte das Richtige hineinstellen und auf diese Weise behandeln. Er wird mit Kunst und mit künstlerischer Behandlung bis zum neunten und zehnten Jahre hin zu dem Gestaltenden, woran der Mensch noch selber Anteil hat, hinzutreten lassen - ohne daß das Gestaltende dann vernachlässigt wird — das Beschreibende.
Das ist durchaus möglich, wenn man einen solchen Lehrgang wählt, wie ich ihn in diesen Tagen auseinandergesetzt habe, wo man das Naturkundliche auf der einen Seite an das Irdisch-Geographische anreiht, und dasjenige, was sich auf die Tiere bezieht, an den Menschen heranbringt. Man wird da insbesondere mit dem zunächst bloß Beschreibenden am meisten ausrichten, wird das Beschreibende so gestalten können, daß es nun nicht mehr den Menschen so ganz in Anspruch nimmt, aber noch das Seelische in Anspruch nimmt. Man wird also viel Wert darauf legen müssen, den Kindern lebendig gestaltet zu erzählen. Und ebenso wird man das Geschichtliche, wie ich schon erwähnt habe, in diesem Lebensabschnitte so behandeln, daß man abgeschlossene Bilder von menschlichen Ereignissen hinstellt.
Dann, wenn es gegen das zwölfte Jahr hingeht, kann zu dem Gestalten und Beschreiben erst das Erklären treten, das Rücksichtnehmen auf Ursache und Wirkung, dasjenige, wo der Verstand angestrengt wird. Dahinein wächst das Kind erst zwischen dem elften und zwölften Jahre.
Nun muß sich über diese ganze Zeit aber etwas ausgießen, das ist die Behandlung des Mathematischen in seinen verschiedensten Gebieten, natürlich dem kindlichen Alter angemessen. Das Mathematische, das Heranbringen von Rechnerischem und Geometrischem an das Kind, das ist etwas, was ganz besondere Schwierigkeiten für den Unterricht und die Erziehung bedeutet. Denn es ist wirklich so, daß die mathematischen Dinge, die man in ihrer einfacheren Art vor dem neunten Lebensjahre - denn das Kind kann in dieser Beziehung, wenn man richtig vorgeht, sehr viel begreifen -, dann in immer weiterer Art weiter kompliziert, das ganze schulmäßige Alter hindurch beibringt, daß man diese zunächst nun auch ganz künstlerisch machen muß, daß man durch alle möglichen Hantierungen das Rechnerische, das Geometrische künstlerisch zunächst an das Kind heranbringt, daß man auch da zwischen dem neunten und zehnten Lebensjahre zum Beschreiben der Gebiete übergeht.
Das Kind soll durchaus in der beschreibenden Art Winkel, Dreiecke, Vierecke und so weiter betrachten lernen; und zum Beweisen soll man überhaupt erst gegen das zwölfte Jahr übergehen.
Nun ist es gerade bei diesem Unterricht so, daß der langweilige Lehrer ungeheuer wenig oder gar nichts erreicht, daß derjenige Lehrer aber die Mathematik zu dem reizvollsten Unterrichtsgegenstande macht, der mit seinem ganzen Wesen bei dieser Mathematik dabei ist, die uns ja im Grunde genommen wirklich die harmonische Raumesidealität der ganzen Welt erleben läßt. Wenn ein Lehrer begeistert sein kann für den pythagoreischen Lehrsatz, wenn er schwärmen kann für innere Harmonien zwischen Flächen und Körpern, dann wird er gerade in diesen Unterricht etwas hineinbringen, was für das Kind ungeheuer wichtig ist, auch in bezug auf das Entwickelungsmoment des Seelischen. Dann wird er durch dieses Element dem Verwirrenden entgegenwirken, was das Leben ja immer hat.
Sehen Sie, es gäbe keine Sprache, wenn die Sprache nicht so durcheinanderwürfeln würde. Das ist nur ein besonders extrem herausgestellter Satz, aber wir reden eigentlich immer so im Leben, daß wir eigentlich, wenn wir die Sprachen prüfen würden, überall finden würden, wie Gefühl und Gedanke ineinander verschwimmen. Und der Mensch würde durch dieses in der Sprache schon und durch manches andere in ein gewisses Chaos des Lebens hineingeworfen, wenn er nicht jene Festigkeit bekäme, die man gerade durch die Mathematik bekommt. Derjenige, der tiefer hineinschaut in das Leben, weiß, wie viele Menschen vor Neurasthenie, vor Hysterie und noch Schlimmerem nur dadurch bewahrt bleiben, daß sie in der richtigen Weise Dreiecke, Vierecke, Tetraeder und so weiter haben anschauen lernen.
Ich darf vielleicht ein Subjektives einfügen, das nur zur symptomatischen Veranschaulichung da sein soll. Nicht bloß aus objektiven Gründen, sondern in diesem Falle durchaus auch aus subjektiven Gründen liebe ich ganz besonders die Mechanik. Und das ist eben aus dem Grunde, weil - denn solche Dinge setzen sich auch in das spätere Leben fort - ich an der Wiener Hochschule einen Lehrer erlebt habe, der die Mechanik so vorgetragen hat, daß er wirklich glühte für das Suchen von Resultierenden aus Komponenten. Es war interessant anzuschauen, wie der Mann mit innerer Begeisterung die Resultierenden aus den Komponenten suchte und wieder die Resultierenden in die Komponenten zerlegte, und wie er, nachdem er fast von einem Ende der Tafel zum anderen gesprungen ist, nur so tänzelte, sich dann immer freute, wenn er etwas sagte von der Art, etwa, daß ®=a?+b? ist. Wenn er so ergriffen war von einem solchen Fall, den er auf die Tafel gebracht hatte und sich so umschaute mit der freundlich lächelnden Miene zu dem Auditorium, dann war das wirklich etwas, was auch schon die Begeisterung mitteilen konnte für die analytische Mechanik, die ja sonst den Menschen nicht außerordentlich liegt. -— Aber es ist wichtig, daß gerade dieses Mathematische, das eben in der angedeuteten Weise über die verschiedenen Lebensepochen des Schulzeitalters verteilt sein muß, daß diese Mathematik ihr Wesen über den ganzen Menschen ausgießt.
Man hat dann diese zwei Pole in der menschlichen Entwickelung drinnen, auf der einen Seite das Musikalisch-Artistische, auf der anderen Seite das Mathematisch-Ideelle; und so wächst der Mensch nach und nach tatsächlich so in die Welt hinein, daß von innen heraus in der richtigen Weise seine Menschheitstotalität gepflegt wird.
Wenn man sich im Unterrichten und Erziehen dem Lebensalter nähert, in dem das Kind aus der gewöhnlichen Schule zu entlassen ist, fühlt man sich schon gedrängt, in der Unterrichtspraxis selber einen Überblick zu halten über dasjenige, was die wichtigsten Momente sind für die Entwickelung des Kindes in diesem schulpflichtigen Alter. Wir bekommen das Kind, wenn es sechs oder sieben Jahre alt ist, aus dem Hause in die Schule herein. Wir entlassen es gewissermaßen in die Welt, und wir müssen dafür sorgen, daß es dann — wie ich das gerade im Eingang der heutigen Betrachtungen angedeutet habe — die Möglichkeit findet, sich der Welt anzupassen. Indem wir das Kind vom Hause empfangen, ist es ja eine Art großes Sinnesorgan. Es trägt in sich eine Art Abbild, Abdruck der Eltern, anderer Personen seiner Umgebung, seines ganzen sozialen Milieus. Und wir müssen dasjenige, was das Kind zu einer Art Spezialmenschen macht — wir bekommen es wirklich als eine Art Spezialmenschen -—, wir müssen das in das allgemeine Menschentum überführen. Wir können das insbesondere dadurch, daß wir auf die Atmungs-Zirkulationssysteme, die ja dem menschlich Individuellen entrückt sind, wirken, daß wir an dieses System appellieren. Wir müssen in der Tat in einer gewissen Weise den Spezialmenschen, den wir bekommen, in einen allgemeineren Menschen überführen. Aber auch etwas Individuelles trägt das Kind durchaus in sich, schon wenn es in die Schule hereinkommt. Nicht in der ausgesprochenen Weise, wie wir dies charakteristisch finden, wenn es einseitig beim erwachsenen Menschen im späteren Menschenalter hervortritt, wenn wir von den 'Temperamenten der einzelnen Menschen reden, wenn wir vom melancholischen, vom sanguinischen, vom phlegmatischen, vom cholerischen Temperament reden; aber das Naturell des Kindes hat durchaus eine solche Färbung, daß wir von melancholisch veranlagten, phlegmatisch veranlagten, sanguinisch veranlagten und cholerisch veranlagten Kindern sprechen können. Und wir müssen uns eigentlich in der Lehr- und Erziehungskunst ein feines Verständnis aneignen für das Bemerken alles dessen, was mit dieser Temperamentsanlage des Kindes verbunden ist, und auch für die Behandlungsweise des Kindes, je nachdem es diese oder jene Temperamentsanlage hat.
Das melancholische Kind ist dasjenige, das besonders von seiner Körperlichkeit abhängig ist, das immer dazu veranlaßt ist, auf sich selbst zurückzuschauen, weil es vermöge seiner ganz besonderen Konstitution von seinem Körper in Anspruch genommen wird. Dadurch ist seine Aufmerksamkeit von der äußeren Welt abgelenkt. Das melancholische Kind braucht nicht ohne weiteres unaufmerksam genannt zu werden. Es ist nur unaufmerksam auf die äußere Welt und auch auf die Eindrücke, die vom Lehrer kommen; aber es ist sehr aufmerksam auf seine eigenen Zustände. Daher ist das melancholische Kind - ich rede immer von Kindern, es kann das nicht ohne weiteres auf erwachsene Menschen übertragen werden -, daher ist das melancholische Kind auch ein launisches Kind, ein Kind, das Stimmungswechseln unterworfen ist.
Das phlegmatische Kind ist so eingegliedert in die Welt, daß es im Unterbewußten eigentlich ganz der Welt hingegeben ist. Und weil die Welt groß ist und vieles da ist, es also an vieles hingegeben ist, so interessiert es sich nicht für das Nächste. Das, was ich nun sage, gilt wiederum nicht für den erwachsenen Menschen, denn es könnte sonst leicht scheinen, als ob ich den Phlegmatikern schmeicheln wollte; ich will das ganz gewiß) nicht. Aber indem man die Sache etwas radikal ausdrückt, kann man sagen: Wenn das phlegmatisch veranlagte Kind nicht just auf der Erde wäre, sondern im Himmel, in der Welt draußen, so würde es sich für die Umgebung außerordentlich stark interessieren, denn es ist eigentlich für die Peripherie der Welt, für das Große, das nur deshalb wenig Eindruck macht, weil es eben so umfangreich ist, für das ist es veranlagt, nicht für das Nächste.
Das sanguinische Kind ist so veranlagt, daß es in einem gewissen Sinne das Gegenteil vom Melancholischen, das Gegenteil vom Phlegmatischen offenbart. Der junge Melancholiker ist seinem physischen Leib hingegeben, der Phlegmatiker ist deshalb für die große Welt, für das Sphärische veranlagt, weil er mit seinem ganzen menschlichen Wesen besonders tief in seinem Äther- oder Bildekräfteleib lebt. Der ist dem ganzen Wesen hingegeben. Er zerstreut sich ja auch gleich in die Welt wenige Tage nach dem Tode.
Das sanguinische Kind lebt in dem, was wir den astralischen Leib oder den Seelenleib nennen. Dieser Seelenleib unterscheidet sich von dem physischen Leib und von dem Ätherleib dadurch, daß er eigentlich kein Interesse für das Zeitliche und für das Räumliche hat. Er ist außerhalb des Zeitlichen und außerhalb des Räumlichen. Der astralische Leib bewirkt, daß wir in jedem Augenblicke unseres Lebens, wenn auch die weiter in der Zeit entfernten Erlebnisse schwächer als die nächsten, aber doch unser ganzes Leben fortwährend in uns haben. Der astralische Leib ist vorzugsweise derjenige, der die Träume dirigiert. Nun wissen Sie, daß die sich auch nicht stark um den zeitlichen Lebenslauf kümmern. Wir träumen etwas, was gestern geschehen ist; da mischen sich Menschen hinein aus der allerersten. Kindheit. Der astralische Leib mischt das ganze Leben zusammen, nicht nach der Zeiten- und Raumesfolge, sondern so, wie er die Dinge durcheinanderbringt, wie sie durcheinandergebracht sein sollen, wie etwas, was ganz anders ist als das Zeitlich-Räumliche. An diesen astralischen Leib ist das sanguinische Kind besonders hingegeben, und das drückt sich in seinem ganzen Gehaben aus. Es faßt schon die äußeren Eindrücke so auf, als wenn das Zeitlose und Raumlose durch die Welt selbst uns schon gegeben wäre. Es gibt sich einem Eindruck rasch hin, verarbeitet ihn nicht, weil es nicht für die Zeit sorgt. Es ist dem astralischen Leib hingegeben. Es sorgt nicht dafür, daß der Eindruck bleibt im Wesen des Menschen. Oder auch, es erinnert sich nicht gern an das Frühere; das sanguinische Kind lebt im gegenwärtigen Augenblicke, weil es eben auf die Zeit keine Rücksicht nimmt, sondern im äußeren Leben dasjenige zum Ausdruck bringt, was eigentlich der Astralleib in einer höheren Welt entfalten soll. Das gibt dem sanguinischen Kinde eine gewisse Oberflächlichkeit.
Und das cholerische Kind ist dasjenige, das ganz mit seinem Wesen in seinem Ich oder in seiner Egoität sitzt, wo das ganze Leibliche auch so zu seinem Ausdrucke kommt in seiner Willensnatur, das in seiner Egoität sich ausdrückt, daß der Mensch vor allen Dingen aggressiv in das Leben eingreift.
Man muß sich nun als Erziehungs- und Unterrichtskünstler wirklich eine feine Empfindung für die charakteristischen melancholischen, sanguinischen und so weiter Eigenschaften beim heranwachsenden Kinde aneignen. In zweifacher Beziehung muß man versuchen, das Temperamentwesen zu behandeln. Zunächst dadurch, daß man ein gewisses soziales Element in die Schule schon gerade auf dem Umweg der Temperamente hineinträgt. Man verschafft sich einen Überblick in seiner Klasse über die melancholischen Kinder, oder die melancholisch gearteten Kinder — die Temperamente sind auch gemischt, das muß alles berücksichtigt werden -, und setzt irgendwo in der Klasse, wo man es für richtig hält, eine Gruppe melancholischer Kinder, eine Gruppe phlegmatischer Kinder, eine andere Gruppe sanguinischer Kinder und eine Gruppe cholerischer Kinder.
Es ist gut, wenn man die gleichtemperamentierten Kinder zusammenbringt, und zwar aus dem einfachen Grunde, weil, wenn die melancholischen zusammensitzen, so haben sie in der Nachbarschaft eben auch Melancholiker, so daß sich dann die Temperamente aneinander reiben. Das melancholische Kind sieht an dem anderen, wie es sich quält mit allem möglichen, wie es in seinem Körper drinnensteckt. Das sieht es dann auch an sich und es wird von dem Anblick des anderen eine heilsame Wirkung ausgeübt auf das eigene Naturell des melancholischen Kindes.
Wenn die phlegmatischen Kinder zur Nachbarschaft auch Phlegmatiker haben, werden ihnen diese so langweilig sein, daß dann selbst ihr Phlegma aufgeregt wird, und man treibt etwas Aufgeregtes aus dem phlegmatischen Kinde dadurch heraus, daß es mit anderen phlegmatischen Kindern zusammen sein muß, daß die in seiner unmittelbaren Nähe sind.
Die sanguinischen Kinder werden dadurch, daß sie in der Nachbarschaft sind von sanguinischen Kindern, die sie im Extrem von Eindruck zu Eindruck herumflattern sehen, so daß sie bald dies, bald jenes interessiert, sie wegwischen wollen wie Fliegen, welche in der Nachbarschaft flattern, da werden sie selber, indem sie das am anderen Menschen wahrnehmen, was sie selber haben, aufmerksam auf die Oberflächlichkeit ihres sanguinischen Temperamentes.
Und die Choleriker, wenn man die zusammensetzt, puffen sich gegenseitig, und dadurch wird auf ihr cholerisches Temperament in gewissem Sinne eine Art von Heilung ausgeübt; denn diese blauen Flekken, die sie da davontragen, sind etwas, was auf das cholerische Temperament außerordentlich gut wirkt.
Schauen Sie sich diese Dinge an. Sie werden sehen, wenn Sie auf diese Weise eine Art sozialen Elementes in die Schule hineinbringen, so hat das einen außerordentlich heilsamen Einfluß und auch das Verhältnis des Lehrers zu dem einzelnen Temperament kommt in einer gewissen Weise zum Ausdruck. Das melancholische Kind, überhaupt die verschieden temperamentbegabten Kinder soll man nicht so behandeln, daß man das Entgegengesetzte tut von dem, wozu sie veranlagt sind; man soll sich gewöhnen, Gleiches mit Gleichem zu behandeln. Wenn man also zum Beispiel ein cholerisches Kind dazu veranlassen würde, festzusitzen, ruhig zu sein, dann sammelt sich so viel von dem Cholerischen an, daß das erst recht vergiftend im Inneren wirkt. Das geht gar nicht. Dagegen wenn man zum Beispiel ein melancholisches Kind so behandelt, daß man auf seine Launen, auf seine Melancholie eingeht, sich dafür interessiert, dann wirkt das auf die Dauer dennoch auch sehr heilsam. Dann aber ein phlegmatisches Kind - man behandle es so, daß man zwar innerlich sich für es interessiert, aber äußerlich selber eine Art Phlegma dem phlegmatischen Kinde gegenüber anwendet. Das sanguinische Kind behandle man so, daß man ihm recht viele Eindrücke gibt, so daß man seinen Sanguinismus noch steigert. Dann wird die Intensität, die es entwickelt, noch größer sein, wenn es die Eindrücke alle aufnehmen soll, als es die Eindrücke sonst aufnimmt, und die Folge davon wird sein, daß durch die Zahl der Eindrücke die Intensität erhöht wird. Also gerade indem man Gleichem mit Gleichem beikommt, ist an die Temperamente heranzukommen.
Und die cholerischen Kinder würde ich am liebsten, wenn alle Schulverhältnisse ideal eingerichtet werden könnten, des Nachmittags hinaus in den Garten schicken, würde sie draußen herumlaufen lassen, würde sie bis zur Müdigkeit auf Bäume hinauf- und wieder hinunterklettern lassen. Wenn der eine oben sitzt, würde ich ihn hinüber schreien lassen zu dem zweiten, sie müßten sich gegenseitig anschreien, sie müßten sich ermüden. Dadurch wird in der Tat, gerade durch das Heraustreiben desjenigen, was das Cholerische herauszutreiben verlangt, der heilsamste Einfluß auf das Cholerische ausgeübt werden.
Man kann also gerade dadurch, daß man die Dinge kennenlernt, in der entsprechenden Weise in der Schule wirken. Zu einer solchen Behandlung muß allerdings der Lehrer in die Schule eines hineintragen, was ungeheuer wichtig ist. Er darf ja wirklich nicht, wenn er sich in diesen Dingen zurechtfinden will, mit einer griesgrämigen Miene hineingehen, die die Altersfalten schon im frühen Zeitalter des Berufes zeigt, sondern er muß mit Humor in der Klasse sich zu verhalten wissen. Er muß einzugehen wissen auf alles dasjenige, was ihm in der Klasse entgegentritt und sein Wesen hinüberfließen lassen können in das Wesen des Kindes.
Fragenbeantwortungen
Dr. Steiner: Meine Damen und Herren, es ist zunächst die praktische Frage, von der gewünscht wird, daß sie wegen verschiedener Abreisen zuerst behandelt werde. Wenn es sich um die praktische Ausgestaltung der in diesem Kursus angeregten Erziehungsfragen handelt, so darf wohl an die Waldorfschule angeknüpft werden. Ich meinerseits möchte aber doch noch an etwas Breiteres anknüpfen. Ich glaube, daß zum praktischen Auswirken desjenigen, was hier gemeint ist, eine wirkliche, aus dem Anblicke der heutigen Zivilisation hervorgehende Kraft und ein gewisser Enthusiasmus gehört.
Mir scheint, daß derjenige, der nicht erst einsieht, daß es notwendig ist, die Erziehungsimpulse nach den Seiten hinüberzuleiten, von denen hier gesprochen worden ist, daß dem es kaum gelingen kann, nach dieser Richtung etwas Durchgreifendes zu unternehmen.
Wenn ich sagen soll, was in dieser Beziehung meine tiefste Überzeugung ist, so ist es dies, daß wirklich für denjenigen, der die Entwickelung der neueren Menschheit innerhalb der zivilisierten Gegenden unbefangen betrachtet, ganz klar sein muß, daß wir in einer Niedergangsepoche unserer Kultur darinnenleben, und daß alle Dinge, die man gegen diesen Niedergang vorbringen kann, eigentlich nur auf Scheingründen aufgebaut sind.
Es ist ja wirklich recht unbequem und sieht pessimistisch aus, während es eigentlich optimistisch gemeint ist, wenn man so spricht, wie ich es eben jetzt getan habe; aber es sind so viele auch äußerlich sich zeigende Symptome da von niedergehender Zivilisation, daß im Grunde genommen dieser Niedergang schon gesehen werden kann. Und dann geht eigentlich erst im Herzen und in der Seele die Erziehungsfrage im richtigen Sinne auf. Und wenn ich, ich möchte sagen, an dieses Geständnis anknüpfe, dann darf ich auch von der Begründung der Waldorfschule als dem ersten Beispiel für eine praktische Auswirkung der hier gemeinten Erziehungsgrundsätze sprechen.
Warum haben wir denn eine Waldorfschule? Sehen Sie, die Waldorfschule verdankt, das darf schon gesagt werden, ihr Dasein der Geltendmachung dieser Erziehungsprinzipien, dieser rein menschlichen Erziehungsprinzipien. Wie sind denn die Dinge gekommen? Sie sind so gekommen, daß mit dem Jahre 1919 in ganz Mitteleuropa ein absoluter Zusammenbruch da war, ein Zusammenbruch des ökonomischen, des staatlichen, des geistigen Lebens. Man könnte vielleicht auch so sagen: ein Zusammenbruch des ökonomischen und des staatlichen Lebens und ein absoluter Bankerott des geistigen Lebens. Diese Dinge waren 1919 so da, daß eben das allgemeine Bewußtsein davon vorhanden war, durch ein halbes Jahr, möchte ich sagen, das völlige Bewußtsein vorhanden war, daß dies so ist. Etwa bis zur Mitte des Jahres 1919 war das absolute Bewußtsein vorhanden, daß dies so ist.
Nun wird ja viel in der Welt gefaselt davon, daß sich die Menschheit schon wieder erholen wird, auch in Mitteleuropa, daß sie nach einiger Zeit aus den alten Verhältnissen heraus schon wiederum sich hinaufarbeiten wird und so weiter. Solches Gefasel geht hervor aus bequemlicher Denkweise. In Wahrheit sind alle die Dinge, die man nach dieser Richtung sagt, bloße Phrasen. In Wahrheit nimmt der Niedergang stetig zu. Nur ist für Mitteleuropa die Sache einfach so: 1919 war die schiefe Ebene da, auf der es hinuntergeht. Und nun ist es so für Mitteleuropa, wie es für einen Menschen ist, der in besseren Verhältnissen war und sich da Kleider gekauft hat. Er hat diese Kleider, er trägt sie, bis sie vollständig kaputt sind. Die Gründe, daß er sich keine neuen kaufen kann, sind längst da. Aber weil er noch die alten tragen kann, für die er sich keine neuen mehr wird kaufen können, täuscht er sich so lange darüber, daß er sich keine neuen wird kaufen können, als von den alten noch ein Fetzen vorhanden ist. Die ganze Welt täuscht sich darüber, daß eben die Gründe, sich aus den alten Verhältnissen keine Kulturkleider mehr kaufen zu können, durchaus vorhanden sind.
Nun, sehen Sie, da war die Stimmung vorhanden im ersten Halbjahr 1919, in ernster Weise zum Menschen zu sprechen, und da wurde zuerst nicht die Waldorfschule begründet, sondern von mir wurden meine volkspädagogischen Vorträge gehalten, die zuerst dasjenige enthielten, wenn auch dazumal in skizzenhafterer Form, was ich jetzt hier auch sagte. Und es leuchtete das einigen Menschen ein. Daraus ging die Waldorfschule hervor.
Ich betone das ausdrücklich aus dem Grunde, weil die Grundvoraussetzung für das praktische Wirken auf diesem Gebiete die Einsicht ist, die Einsicht, die aus wirklicher Erkenntnis der Erziehungsbedingungen hervorgeht. Und bei der Begründung der Waldorfschule sagte ich: Es ist ja schön, daß einmal ein solches Exempel da ist, aber damit ist die Frage nicht gelöst, sondern es handelt sich darum, daß die Frage erst gelöst sein würde, oder daß es wenigstens der Faden ihrer Lösung sein würde, wenn in einem Vierteljahre mindestens ein Dutzend Waldorfschulen begründet würden.
Das ist ja nicht geschehen. Deshalb darf auch das, was bisher auf diesem Gebiete geschehen ist, nicht als ein Erfolg angesehen werden, sondern wir haben nur eine einzige, wie man es im Deutschen nennt, Musterschule. Ein Modell haben wir. Und dieses Modell steht ja heute auch noch durchaus nicht so da, wie man es gern dastehen haben möchte. Ich will ein Beispiel erwähnen.
Wir brauchten neben dem Eurythmiesaal, den wir jetzt endlich haben, für allgemeine gymnastische Übungen einen großen Saal. Den haben wir noch nicht. Also derjenige, der die Waldorfschule besucht und sich dort ansieht, was geschieht, der darf das noch nicht für das Ideal der Waldorfschule halten. Die Waldorfschule hat vor allen Dingen eben kein Geld und steht in finanzieller Beziehung auf außerordentlich schwachen Füßen!
Nun stelle ich mir vor, daß zwei Dinge notwendig sind. Das erste ist die Verbreitung des Gedankens der rein menschlichen, auf wirkliche Menschenerkenntnis gebauten Erziehung. Dieser Gedanke muß einmal gründlich gefaßt werden. Es müßte alles getan werden, um diesen Gedanken gründlich zu fassen.
Sehen Sie, es nützt nichts, wenn man sich auf einem so ernsten Gebiete gewissermaßen Sand in die Augen streut, und deshalb gestatten Sie mir, daß ich ganz frei und offen nach dieser Richtung spreche. Mir wird oftmals erwidert, wenn über diese Dinge geredet wird, und auch wenn über die ökonomischen Bestrebungen geredet wird: ja, in England muß man das oder jenes machen, damit man die Leute nicht vor den Kopf stößt.
Ja, wenn wir bei diesem Urteil eben stehenbleiben, dann kommen wir nicht weiter. Wir kommen absolut nicht weiter, wenn wir uns nicht dazu entschließen, über dasjenige hinwegzukommen, daß wir zum Beispiel sagen: ja, in England muß alles ins Praktische überserzt werden. Das haben wir ja durch fünf bis sechs Jahrhunderte überhaupt in der zivilisierten Welt getan, alles nur angenommen, wenn man es irgendwie gleich vor Augen führen konnte. Daran gehen wir ja gerade zugrunde. Und wenn wir das immer geltend machen, dann kommen wir nicht aus dem Chaos heraus.
Also es handelt sich nicht bloß um irgendwelche kleinlichen Dinge, sondern es handelt sich tatsächlich darum, daß man den Mut faßt, einen neuen Impuls zu geben. Man glaubt gewöhnlich, daß ich nicht verstehe, wenn man mir sagt: Ja, in England muß das alles anders gemacht werden. - Ich verstehe das schon ganz gut, aber es trifft das gar nicht den Kern der Frage! Und im Grunde genommen, wenn wir zum Beispiel nicht, ich möchte sagen, das Unglück, für die praktische Begründung der Waldorfschule war es ein Glück, wenn wir nicht das Unglück gehabt hätten, 1919 in einer furchtbaren Lage in Mitteleuropa zu sein und dadurch auf seriöse Gemüter zu treffen, so würden wir in Mitteleuropa aus noch ganz anderen Gründen keine Waldorfschule haben können. Denn in Mitteleuropa ist erst recht ein ganz neuer Impuls notwendig, aus dem einfachen Grunde, weil Mitteleuropa ja, insbesondere Deutschland, nicht den geringsten Sinn für Organisation - oder soziales Strukturleben eigentlich hat. Wenn außerhalb Mitteleuropas immerfort von deutscher Organisation geredet wird, so ist das ja nichts weiter als eine Unrichtigkeit. Es gibt gar kein Talent zur Organisation. Vor allen Dingen gibt es nicht einen gegliederten Volksorganismus, sondern es gibt ein in einzelnen Individuen lebendes Kulturleben, das aber gar nicht im Allgemeinen lebt. Die deutschen Universitäten zum Beispiel sind nicht im geringsten Ausdruck des wirklichen Deutschtums. Die deutschen Universitäten sind ganz abstrakte Gebilde, sind nicht im geringsten irgendwie ein Ausdruck für das Deutschtum. Das Deutschtum lebt überhaupt als Deutschtum nur in einzelnen Individuen. Das ist natürlich nur eine Andeutung, aber es ist zu gleicher Zeit eine Andeutung dafür, daß wenn man in Mitteleuropa heute noch an irgendwelche allgemeine Stimmung und dergleichen appelliert, so stößt man auf nichts, stößt man überall nur darauf, daß solchen Dingen wie denjenigen, die hier geltend gemacht worden sind, Unverstand entgegengebracht wird. Also die Waldorfschule verdankt ihr Dasein einem unglücklichen Glücksfall.
Nun handelt es sich darum, außer diesem, daß zunächst die Einsicht, die wirkliche Einsicht da sein muß für eine notwendige Weiterführung in dem Sinne, wie es hier gemeint ist, daß außerdem das eintreten sollte, daß da, wo ein solcher unglücklicher Glücksfall nicht da ist, wo man wirklich aus der Einsicht heraus, aus der unmittelbarsten menschlichen Initiative so etwas begründen könnte wie die Waldorfschule, daß es da entstünde.
Also wenn zum Beispiel in England so etwas entstehen würde wie die Waldorfschule - sie müßte natürlich jetzt im Individuellen anders gemacht werden, da kommt man dann auf die besonderen Verhältnisse des Landes und des Volksgebietes -, aber wenn sie entstehen würde, dann würde das wahrscheinlich in der Tat ein mächtiger Ruck vorwärts sein.
Nicht wahr, ich habe, als ich gesehen habe, daß es mit der Waldorfschul-Bewegung nicht geht, weil die Waldorfschule allein geblieben ist, dann den Gedanken an den « Weltschulverein» anzuregen versucht, weil ja doch immerhin das eine zu verzeichnen ist: Sehen Sie, wir haben, wenigstens in Mitteleuropa, in den letzten Jahren eine sehr starke Ausbreitung der anthroposophischen Bewegung gehabt. Die anthroposophische Bewegung ist heute ein Faktor in der mitteleuropäischen Welt. Als geistige Bewegung ist sie ein Faktor. Wir haben keine Organisation, um diese Bewegung irgendwie zu lenken und zu leiten. Die Anthroposophische Gesellschaft - das muß gesagt werden, denn es ist gut, wenn es erkannt wird -, die Anthroposophische Gesellschaft ist nicht in der Lage, die anthroposophische Bewegung zu tragen. Denn die Anthroposophische Gesellschaft ist so stark durchsetzt von sektiererischen Neigungen, daß sie die anthroposophische Bewegung, wie sie heute ist, wie sie sich herangebildet hat, eben nicht tragen kann. Aber ich wollte doch ein letztes Mal an diejenigen Kräfte appellieren, die vielleicht hätten sein können in der Anthroposophischen Gesellschaft, indem ich die Meinung hatte, vielleicht wird aus diesen Kräften doch eine letzte Anstrengung hervorgehen, um so etwas wie den «Weltschulverein» zu propagieren. Es ist nicht geschehen. Der «Weltschulverein» ist begraben. Denn, nicht wahr, man kann nicht über eine solche Sache bloß reden, sondern das muß praktisch in die Hand genommen werden. Dazu müssen eine Anzahl von Menschen da sein. Also der «Weltschulverein» als solcher ist begraben.
Die Waldorfschule in Stuttgart ist aus der deutschen Revolution hervorgegangen, nicht als eine revolutionäre Schule, aber aus der Revolutionsstimmung. Wenn aber da, wo die Weltsituation überblickt wird, mit vollem Verständnisse so etwas wie eine Waldorfschule begründet würde, wie in England, dann würden wir ein Stück vorwärtskommen.
Vielleicht kann ich nachher, wenn die Diskussion eine Weile gewaltet hat, noch einiges darüber sagen.
Frau Professor Mackenzie (von Mr. Kaufmann in Kürze übersetzt): Professor Mackenzie führt aus, daß es doch gewisse Persönlichkeiten aus England hier gibt, und zwar Persönlichkeiten, die schon in der Lage sind, etwas in der Richtung zu schaffen und einen Einfluß auszuüben, welche auch aus einer Empfindung der Entwickelung der Menschheitsnotwendigkeiten, der Weltnotwendigkeit heraus etwas in der Richtung dieser Erziehungsimpulse unternehmen wollen. Und als erster Schritt darin hoffen wir, daß es gelingen wird, Herrn Dr. Steiner im Laufe dieses Jahres nach England einzuladen, und auch gelingen wird, in den Vorarbeiten zu einer solchen Einladung wirklich diejenige Stimmung und Einsicht zu schaffen, aus welcher heraus eine Anzahl von Persönlichkeiten, von Erziehern, Herrn Dr. Steiner im richtigen Sinne wird willkommen heißen können.
Dr. Steiner: Ich möchte hinzufügen, daß so etwas selbstverständlich nur im praktischen Sinne einmal unternommen werden muß, und daß es schädlich sein würde, wenn davon viel geredet würde. Es handelt sich darum, daß diejenigen, die in der Lage sind, in dieser Richtung einen Schritt vorwärts zu unternehmen, die Vorarbeiten schaffen, und daß dann, wenn der richtige Zeitpunkt gekommen ist, in der richtigen Weise vorwärtsgegangen wird.
Es wird auch sicher im Sinne der Frau Mackenzie und der anderen sein, wenn Freunde, die aus anderen Ländern hier sind, Vorschläge und Anregungen geben wollen, an einzelne von uns herantreten und die Sache zur Sprache bringen.
Frau K., Haag: Es ist heute sehr viel über England gesprochen worden, und wir freuen uns sehr darüber, halten das für nützlich. Aber wir von unserem kleinen holländischen Lande haben Verschiedenes auf dem Herzen, sind eigentlich gekommen mit einem ganz großen Schuldbewußtsein. Zum ersten Mal ist der Gedanke des «Weltschulvereins» in Holland ausgesprochen worden, und eigentlich hat man das, was wir hätten tun können, nicht getan, teilweise ist es aus Mißverständnis, teilweise aus Mangel an Kräften nicht geschehen. Aber wir sind nicht so untätig gewesen, als man vielleicht glaubt, und ich versichere, daß wir auch in jeder Beziehung furchtbar gern bereit sind, diesen Fehler so viel als möglich wieder gutzumachen. Und ich möchte Herrn Dr. Steiner trotzdem bitten, uns zu sagen, ob der Weg, den er für England vorgeschlagen hat, auch für Holland möglich ist. Und da Herr Dr. Steiner versprochen hat, im April zu uns zu kommen, so möchte ich fragen, ob es vielleicht möglich sein würde, vor einem größeren pädagogischen Kreis zu sprechen über diese Sache.
Dr. Steiner: Für Holland ist ja ein Plan vorhanden, der, so viel ich weiß, eigentlich schon in der Verwirklichung begriffen ist, zunächst vom 5. bis 12. April dieses Jahres einen Hochschulkurs abzuhalten, der ähnlich wie Hochschulkurse, die sonst gehalten werden, auch in Holland in ernster Weise die Anthroposophie zur Geltung bringen soll.
Es ist allerdings ganz sicher etwas Deprimierendes gewesen, daß, nachdem lange Zeit auf die Notwendigkeit hingewiesen war, in Holland für die Anthroposophie etwas zu tun, dann, nachdem Vorträge, Aufführungen dort stattfanden im Februar und Anfang März letzten Jahres, daß dann allerdings sogar —- nun nicht wahrscheinlich in bezug auf Verständnis der Anthroposophie, denn das kann ich nicht meinen, wohl aber in bezug auf die innere Fassung der Anthroposophischen Gesellschaft in Holland ein Rückgang zu verzeichnen war, der sehr stark wahrzunehmen war. Und daher scheint es mir; daß allerdings es sehr notwendig wäre, daß gerade in Holland die anthroposophische Bewegung neu und frisch in die Hand genommen würde. Von welcher Ecke aus das geschieht, das wird ja dann natürlich von den vorhandenen Bedingungen abhängen, kann natürlich auch von der Seite der pädagogischen Bewegung stattfinden. Gerade mit Bezug darauf ist hier eine Frage gestellt:
X: Das holländische Gesetz läßt die Möglichkeit zu, bei einem ernsten Versuch, eine freie Schule zu gründen. Würde es, wenn wir in Holland auf andere Weise kein Geld bekommen könnten, möglich sein, mit Subsidien des Staates eine freie Schule zu errichten, unter Voraussetzung, daß wir den Unterricht ganz frei in eigener Hand halten können?
Dr. Steiner: Nun, an dieser Frage ist mir eines nicht ganz verständlich, ein anderes ist mir zweifelhaft. Nicht ganz verständlich ist mir dieses, daß man in Holland für eine wirklich freie Schule kein Geld bekommen sollte! Verzeihen Sie, wenn das vielleicht eine Naivität ist, aber es ist mir nicht verständlich. Denn ich meine allerdings, daß, wenn der Enthusiasmus groß genug ist, dann ist es möglich, wenigstens zunächst anzufangen. Es gehört ja gar nicht so viel Geld dazu, um anzufangen.
Das andere, was mir zweifelhaft ist, das ist, daß es gelingen wird, das mit Subsidien des Staates zu machen. Denn, daß es der Staat sich nicht nehmen lassen wird, eine Schulaufsicht zu üben, wenn er Subsidien gibt, das scheint mir nun eben zweifelhaft. Also ich glaube nicht, daß mit Subsidien, das heißt unter der Aufsicht des Staates, eine wirklich freie Schule gegründet werden könnte.
Es ist ja in Stuttgart auch das, möchte ich sagen, ein Glücksfall gewesen, daß die Waldorfschule gerade noch begründet wurde, bevor die republikanische Nationalversammlung ein Schulgesetz beschlossen hat, unter dessen Ägide eine solche Schule nicht begründet werden kann; denn, nicht wahr, wir verlieren ja immer mehr und mehr Freiheit, je mehr sich der Liberalismus ausbreitet. Und wahrscheinlich würde eben heute, wo der Fortschritt herrscht in Deutschland, die Waldorfschule in Stuttgart nicht mehr zu begründen möglich sein. Aber sie ist vorher gegründet worden. Und nun - heute sieht einmal die Welt auf die Waldorfschule, und man wird sie bestehen lassen, bis eben die Bewegung, welche die sogenannte Grundschule geschaffen hat, so mächtig ist, daß man aus irgendeinem Fanatismus heraus ihr ihre vier ersten Klassen wegnehmen wird. Ich hoffe, daß das zu verhindern sein wird, aber wir gehen ja auch in dieser Beziehung ganz furchtbaren Zeiten entgegen. Und das ist es ja, warum von mir so häufig betont wird, daß es notwendig ist, dasjenige, was geschehen soll, bald zu tun; denn es breitet sich über die Welt eine Welle aus, die durchaus nach dem Zwangsstaate hingeht. Und es ist tatsächlich so, daß die abendländische Zivilisation sich der Gefahr aussetzt, einmal von einer in irgendwie gearteter Weise asiatischen Kultur, die dann etwas Spirituelles hat, einfach überflutet zu werden. Das wollen die Menschen nicht sehen, aber dazu wird es kommen.
Nicht wahr, es ist eigentlich mehr oder weniger nur, glaube ich, eine Art Verzögerung der Sache, wenn man glaubt, erst auf Subsidien des Staates Anspruch machen zu sollen. Ich würde mir davon kaum etwas versprechen können. Aber vielleicht ist jemand anderer Meinung. Ich bitte heute nur alle Meinungen sehr frei zu äußern.
X führt aus, daß es im Augenblick nicht möglich sei, in Holland eine Schule zu gründen, ohne daß der Staat sich einmische, daß zum Beispiel verlangt werde, daß ein bestimmtes Pensum erreicht werde und so weiter.
Dr. Steiner: Nicht wahr, wenn diese Dinge nicht wären, dann würde ich ja niemals etwas, was doch nach einer gewissen Theorie hinneigt, wie der Weltschulverein, würde ich mich niemals für den Weltschulverein eigentlich entschieden haben dazumal. Aber gerade weil diese Dinge bestehen, meinte ich, daß der Weltschulverein zunächst etwas Praktisches wäre. Die Sache ist so:
Nehmen Sie also zum Beispiel die kleine Schule, die wir hier an diesem Orte in Dornach gehabt haben. Wir haben es ja wiederum aus dem Grund, den ich schon öfter hier angeführt habe in diesen Tagen, aus Überfluß an Geldmangel eben nur zu einer ganz kleinen Schule gebracht. Nun, in dieser kleinen Schule waren Kinder zusammen von unter zehn Jahren und über zehn Jahren. Nun besteht im Staate, man nennt es hier Kanton, Solothurn ein sehr strenges Schulgesetz, das aber nicht sehr viel abweicht von den anderen strengen Schulgesetzen in der Schweiz überhaupt, ein so strenges Schulgesetz, daß, als der Staat Solothurn darauf kam, daß hier Kinder unter vierzehn Jahren unterrichtet werden, er das einfach für eine Unmöglichkeit erklärt hat. Das gibt es nicht. Und da könnte man nun hier machen, was man wollte, man würde niemals dazu kommen können, irgend etwas von Waldorfschul-Gedanken für Kinder unter vierzehn Jahren zu verwirklichen. Und auf Hindernisse stößt die Sache natürlich mindestens auf dem Kontinente fast überall. Wie es in England ist, das wage ich im Augenblicke nicht ganz zu entscheiden; aber sollte es dort möglich sein, eine wirklich ganz freie Schule zu begründen, dann wäre das eine ganz vorzügliche Sache. Und weil eben überall eigentlich, wo man die Schulen praktisch zunächst verwirklichen will, das auf Widerstände stößt, meinte ich, daß der Weltschulverein doch zunächst ein Praktisches ist, denn ich dachte ihn ganz im großen, weil er in der Welt Stimmung machen würde gerade eben für die Möglichkeit, freie Schulen zu schaffen. Das heißt, es müßte gegen die Strömung -ihren Höhepunkt erreicht sie Ja gerade im Bolschewismus in Rußland -, gegen diese Strömung, die ihren Höhepunkt also in der absoluten Staatszwangsschule findet, die aber sonst überall ist — man sieht ja eben nicht, daß Lunatscharski nur die letzte Konsequenz desjenigen ist, was ja überall in Europa in der Anlage vorhanden ist; solange es einem paßt, sieht man nicht, daß es vorhanden ist —, also ich meine, es müßte eine Strömung eingeleitet werden, die sich in entgegengesetzter Richtung bewegt: Lunatscharski = absolut den Staat zu einer großen Maschine machend, den Menschen zu einem Glied darinnen. Die andere Strömung müßte dahin gehen, Menschen zu erziehen.
Das ist dasjenige, was notwendig ist. Sehen Sie, in dieser Richtung erlebt man tatsächlich innerhalb der anthroposophischen Bewegung Allerschmerzlichstes. Wir können ja aus dem Untergrunde der anthroposophischen Bewegung heute auch eine wirkliche medizinische Bewegung ins Leben rufen. Alle Antezedenzien sind da. Was aber notwendig wäre, das wäre auch da eine Bewegung, die die Sache vor die Welt hinstellte. Aber überall ist eine andere Bestrebung bei den Menschen vorhanden, nämlich, den einzelnen, der irgendwie etwas von einer rein menschlichen Medizin vertreten kann, zum «Kurpfuscher» zu machen, das heißt, von ihm zu verlangen, gegen das Gesetz zu handeln. Ich könnte Ihnen zum Beispiel - ich sage das nur als Beispiel, es bezieht sich das gar nicht auf die medizinische Bewegung der Anthroposophie -, aber ich könnte Ihnen einen Minister nennen, der im deutschen Reichstag ein scharfes Gesetz vertreten hat gegen das, was ja in Deutschland noch vorhanden ist, gegen die Freiheit des Heilgewerbes, und für seine eigene Familie ist er zu undiplomierten Heilern gegangen, um sie heilen zu lassen. Das heißt, er glaubte nicht an die offizielle Heilkunde für seine eigene Familie, sondern an die, die er nun durch das Gesetz als «Kurpfuscher» bezeichnen wollte.
Das ist ein Symptom für das sektiererische Bestreben. Nicht sektiererisch ist eine Bewegung, wenn sie darnach strebt, sich frei vor die Welt, und zwar vollrechtlich hinzustellen, so daß über die Rechtstitel kein Zweifel sein kann.
Das ist es, was ich gemeint habe, daß der Weltschulverein machen sollte: Stimmung in der Welt hervorrufen für solche Gesetze, die frei gestatten, Schulen aus der pädagogischen Notwendigkeit heraus zu begründen. Schulen können niemals aus Majoritätsbeschlüssen heraus begründet werden. Daher können sie auch nicht Staatsschulen sein.
Also das ist dasjenige, was ich meine, für den ja sonst mir gar nicht sympathischen Weltschulverein sagen zu müssen. Er ist mir nicht sympathisch, weil er ein Verein, eine Propaganda ist; ich habe am liebsten das Wirken ganz aus dem Sachlichen heraus, nicht das Agitieren, nicht das Propagieren. Das sind mir alles entsetzliche Sachen. Aber wenn die Hände gebunden sind, wenn es eben nirgends möglich ist, freie Schulen zu begründen, so muß man eben erst die Stimmung schaffen, die diese freien Schulen möglich macht. Kompromisse können ja natürlich auch auf diesem oder jenem Gebiete berechtigt sein, aber wir leben heute in einer Zeit, wo uns jeder Kompromiß noch mehr ins Unheil hineinführt.
Frage: Wie können wir am besten im politischen Leben arbeiten?
Dr. Steiner: ... Ich glaube nun ja, daß wir von dem, um was es sich handelt, zu stark abkommen, wenn wir die tief bedeutungsvollen Fragen, die hier vorliegen, auf das Gebiet der aktuellen Politik bringen, weil ich mir von der heutigen aktuellen Politik kaum etwas versprechen kann, bevor sie aus ganz anderen Untergründen heraus regeneriert ist, als aus denjenigen, die zunächst heute in den mir auf dem physischen Plane bekannten Ländern vorhanden sind. Ich meine, es ist so deutlich gerade auf diesem Gebiete der entschiedene Niedergang zu bemerken, daß man einsehen könnte, warum, ich möchte sagen, wie eine Nebenbewegung der anthroposophischen Bewegung, die Bewegung nach der Dreigliederung des sozialen Organismus notwendig ist.
Wozu hat es denn der nichtdreigegliederte — wenn ich jetzt kurz und daher vielleicht mißverständlich etwas darüber andeuten soll -, wohin hat es denn der nichtdreigegliederte soziale Organismus gebracht? Er hat es dazu gebracht, daß eigentlich die Geschicke der Völker von Parteien bestimmt werden, deren Meinungsinhalt im Grunde genommen die reinste Phrase ist. Es kann gar nicht behauptet werden, daß dasjenige, was heute als Phrase gebraucht wird für diese oder jene Partei, daß sie irgend etwas Reales ist.
Ich habe in diesen Tagen einmal darauf aufmerksam gemacht, wie Bismarck, der im späteren Lebensalter schon durchaus ein Ultramonarchist war — er war in seiner Jugend ein ganz verschämter, maskierter Republikaner, wie er selbst meint, aber er ist dann ein starrer Monarchist geworden —, wie Bismarck dasselbe gesagt hat, was Robespierre gesagt hat. Sagen kann man ja das Verschiedenste. Aber es handelt sich um die Partei, darum, was dann wirklich zutage tritt, wenn das Innere der Parteien, möchte ich sagen, sich entpuppt.
Sehen Sie, ich war durch Jahre Lehrer an der Berliner Arbeiterbildungsschule, die eine rein sozialdemokratische Einrichtung war. Mir war es immer willkommen, die Wahrheit auszusprechen, wo man sie hören wollte. Ich habe daher nie einen Anstoß daran genommen, da oder dort die Wahrheit auszusprechen, wenn auch die Vereinigungen, in denen ich wirkte, nach ihren Programmen oder Parteimeinungen so oder so geartet waren. Nun habe ich auch unter diesen Leuten, die ihrer Parteirichtung nach starre Marxisten waren, eine absolut anthroposophische Anschauung sowohl in der Naturwissenschaft wie auch in der Geschichte unterrichtet; sogar im Unterricht, den ich den Leuten gegeben habe in Redeübungen, sogar da konnte ich dasjenige, was meine Überzeugung ist, geltend machen. Und die Schule vergrößerte sich immer mehr und mehr. Und siehe da, es wurden dann die sozialdemokratischen Parteiführer darauf aufmerksam, und es genügte, daß drei oder vier Menschen da waren bei einer entscheidenden Versammlung, wo meine Schüler alle auch da waren, die alle einstimmig dafür waren, daß ich weiter unterrichten sollte; aber ein paar Leute als stramme Parteiführer waren da, die erklärten: solch ein Unterricht dürfe nicht gegeben werden, der untergrabe das Wesen der sozialdemokratischen Partei. Ich sagte: Ja, aber die sozialdemokratische Partei will doch auch für die Zukunft arbeiten, und die Menschheit geht einmal der Freiheit entgegen, und wenn man eine Schule der Zukunft haben will, so muß man doch wirklich auf dem Boden einer freien Schule stehen. Da erhob sich so ein richtiger Parteimann und sagte: Freiheit im Unterricht, das kennen wir nicht, wir kennen nur einen vernünftigen Zwang. — Von da aus ging eben alles weitere, was zu der Unmöglichkeit führte, jenen Unterricht fortzusetzen.
Es ist meine Überzeugung, vielleicht mag das recht albern erscheinen und hochmütig, aber es ist doch meine Überzeugung - da dieser Unterricht von mir gegeben worden ist, und sich die Klassen immer mehr vergrößert haben von Jahr zu Jahr am Ende des 19., Anfang des 20. Jahrhunderts -, es ist meine feste Überzeugung: wenn diese Bewegung dazumal hätte fortgesetzt werden können, so wären die Verhältnisse in Mitteleuropa anders gewesen im zweiten Jahrzehnt. Nun, wie gesagt, es mag albern erscheinen, aber ich möchte es doch eben sagen.
Also ich habe keine große Meinung von dem, was man auf parteimäßige Weise erreichen könnte. Mit irgendeiner sozialistischen Partei werden Sie am wenigsten in der Lage sein, irgend etwas von freiem Schulwesen zu begründen. Die sozialistischen Parteien streben in unglaublichster Weise gerade nach dem Untergang jeder Schulfreiheit. Die christlichen Parteien sind ja so, daß sie gegenüber dem gegenwärtigen Staate darauf angewiesen sind, nach freien Schulen zu rufen. Aber in dem Augenblicke, wo sie am Ruder wären, würden sie natürlich diese Freiheit nur für sich in Anspruch nehmen. So daß es schon so ist, daß wir in diesem öffentlichen Leben sagen müssen: wir kommen nicht weiter, ohne daß wir erst die Grundlage schaffen in der Dreigliederung des sozialen Organismus, wo wir eben auch das demokratische Element nur im mittleren Teile haben, auf dem Rechtsgebiete. Und dann ist ja ganz von selber praktisch die Möglichkeit eines freien Schulwesens gegeben. Aber auf dem Wege der Wahlen wird man das nicht erreichen.
Z. stellt die Frage, inwiefern, wenn die Kinder der heutigen Generation nach den Prinzipien einer anthroposophischen Erkenntnis erzogen würden, dies genügen würde, um die Kräfte des Verfalls und der Dekadenz von uns abzuleiten, oder ob, angenommen, daß die Kinder dieser Generation im großen und ganzen nach diesen Prinzipien der anthroposophischen Erkenntnis erzogen würden, es nicht doch auch notwendig würde, zu versuchen, sie in die Welt hinauszuschicken mit dem bewußten Vorsatz, die heutige soziale Ordnung umzugestalten und einen neuen sozialen Organismus zu gestalten?
Dr. Steiner: Man sieht kaum ganz, worauf gerade dasjenige basiert, was ich in meinem Buche «Die Kernpunkte der sozialen Frage» über die Dreigliederung des sozialen Organismus auszuführen versuchte; die Gründe, die zu diesem Buch geführt haben, die sind jahrzehntealt.... Es ist so gekommen, daß heute die Menschheit in einem Punkte ihrer Entwickelung ist, wo in bezug auf das soziale Leben, in bezug auf soziale Meinungen jemand kommen könnte mit den allerrichtigsten Anschauungen — es würde sich ihm nicht die Möglichkeit ergeben, daß durch irgendeines der Mittel, die einmal vorhanden sind, um Meinungen zu verwirklichen heute, auch eine richtige Meinung verwirklicht würde. Es handelt sich heute darum, daß man zunächst die Menschen in solche Verhältnisse bringt, daß sie im sozialen Zusammenwirken tatsächlich erst das Realisieren von Meinungen, von Einsichten möglich machen.
Daher glaube ich nicht, daß es gut ist, zu fragen, ob, wenn eine Generation so erzogen würde, wie es hier gemeint ist, dann die entsprechenden sozialen Zustände eintreten würden, oder ob dann noch eine Umgestaltung der sozialen Ordnung nach dieser oder jener Richtung notwendig wäre, sondern ich möchte sagen, die Sache ist so: wir müssen uns klar sein, das Beste von dem, was wir erreichen können, würde schon dadurch erreicht werden, daß es uns gelänge, möglichst viele Glieder einer Generation in dem Sinne einer allgemeinen menschlichen Erziehung vorwärtszubringen. Und dann würde die zweite Frage eigentlich vom praktischen Gesichtspunkte aus wiederum wegfallen. Denn, was da zu denken wäre über das Umgestalten, das würden eben die so erzogenen Menschen denken. Sie würden, weil sie in andere menschliche Verhältnisse gekommen wären, als sie heute möglich sind, andere Bedingungen für die Realisierung ihrer Meinung haben.
Also ich meine, es kommt wirklich darauf an, daß, wenn wir praktische Menschen sein wollen, wir wirklich praktisch, nicht theoretisch denken sollen. Und praktisch gedacht, heißt, das Mögliche machen, nicht ein Ideal verwirklichen, sondern das Mögliche machen. Das Aussichtsvollste ist, möglichst viele Menschen einer Generation zu erziehen in dem Sinne, wie es aus Menschenerkenntnis heraus möglich ist, und darauf zu vertrauen, daß dann diese möglichst richtig erzogenen Menschen auch eine soziale Ordnung herbeiführen, welche wünschenswert ist.
Die zweite Frage, die läßt sich erst mit den dafür gewonnenen Menschen praktisch beantworten, nicht theoretisch. Das ist dasjenige, was ich meine.
Ich darf vielleicht nun eine Frage, die hier schriftlich gegeben worden ist beantworten:
Frage: Wie kann man dasjenige, was wir hier gehört haben, am besten in den Unterricht für sehr schwachsinnige Kinder einfließen lassen?
Dr. Steiner: Ich möchte an ein praktisches Beispiel anknüpfen. Als ich selber etwa dreiundzwanzig oder vierundzwanzig Jahre alt war, wurde ich als Erzieher in eine Familie gerufen, in der vier Buben waren. Drei Buben waren verhältnismäßig leicht zu erziehen; einer davon war mit elf Jahren in folgendem Zustande: so im siebenten Jahre sollte er in volksschulmäßiger Weise, wenn auch privat, unterrichtet werden. Nun — die Sache war in Österreich -, in Österreich ist es ja möglich gewesen, daß jeder frei unterrichten konnte, weil nichts anderes gefordert wurde, als daß der Unterricht, auf welche Weise er auch immer gegeben wurde, nur dadurch bewiesen würde, daß man die Kinder dann am Ende des Jahres zum Examen führen mußte. Sie konnten irgendwo an einer Schule am Ende des Jahres ihr Examen ablegen; aber unterrichtet konnten sie von Engeln oder von Teufein werden, das kam nicht darauf an, wenn sie nur das Examen bestehen konnten.
Nun also, unter diesen vier Buben war einer, der hatte nun vier oder fast fünf Jahre Volksschulunterricht hinter sich. Mir wurde das letzte Zeichenheft — er war elf Jahre -, das er von seinem Examen zurückgebracht hatte, gegeben. In den anderen Lehrfächern hatte er entweder ganz den Mund gehalten oder aber Unsinn geredet, nichts aufs Papier geschrieben. Aber das Zeichenheft hat er wenigstens als das einzige Dokument bei dieser Prüfung abgegeben gehabt, und das bestand darinnen, daß auf der ersten Seite ein großes Loch war. Er hat nämlich nichts getan, als irgend etwas hingemalt und das wieder ausradiert, und so lange, bis ein großes Loch war. Das war also das Ergebnis seines Examens. Im übrigen war er manchmal wochenlang nicht dazu zu bringen, ein Wort zu reden mit jemand. Er hat auch die Gepflogenheit angenommen, eine Zeitlang nicht bei Tisch essen zu wollen, sondern ist in die Küche gegangen und hat aus den Gefäßen gegessen, wo man die Abfälle hingegeben hat, also nicht die richtigen Speisen, sondern die Abfälle.
Ich beschreibe Ihnen diese Symptome, damit Sie sehen, daß man es mit einem Kinde zu tun hatte, das in die Kategorie derjenigen gehörte, die man schon «sehr schwachsinnig» nennen kann.
Nun wurde mir gesagt: mit dem Kind wird ja natürlich nichts anzufangen sein, denn es ist alles versucht worden; und auch der Hausarzt, der übrigens einer der ersten Ärzte der betreffenden Stadt war, ein wirklich angesehener Mann, hatte ihn aufgegeben, und man war sehr unglücklich in der Familie. Man wußte nicht, was man mit ihm anfangen sollte. Ich sagte, man solle mir den Buben lassen, geradeso wie die anderen, solle mir nur absolut zugestehen, daß ich für die nächsten drei Jahre mit ihm machen könne, was mir für richtig erschien. Ich konnte das bei der Familie nirgends durchdrücken als nur bei der Mutter. Mütter haben aus gewissen Untergründen heraus manchmal ein richtiges Gefühl für solche Dinge. Es wurde mir der Knabe übergeben. Ich habe den Unterricht so eingerichtet, daß er vor allen Dingen darauf beruhte, daß das, was man mit schwachsinnig bezeichnet, ganz von der Seite der Leiblichkeit aus zu behandeln ist, daß also alles, was getan werden soll, von solchen Gesichtspunkten aus geschehen muß, wie ich sie eben auch für gesunde Kinder erörterte. Es handelt sich nur darum, daß man die Möglichkeit gewinnt, in das Innere eines Menschen hereinzuschauen. Es lag ein starker Hydrocephalus vor. Es war also sehr schwierig, das Kind zu behandeln. Aber es mußte ganz wesentlich der Grundsatz durchgefochten werden: die Erziehung muß Heilung sein, sie muß auf eine medizinische Grundlage gestellt werden.
Und nach zweieinhalb Jahren hatte ich den Jungen so weit, daß die Gymnasialstudien mit ihm begonnen werden konnten, weil es nun wirklich gelang, daß in ökonomischer Weise erzogen wurde. Ich habe zuweilen überhaupt Schulgegenstände bei dem Jungen auf eine Viertel- oder höchstens auf eine halbe Stunde im Tag beschränkt, habe mich allerdings, um in diese halbe Stunde das Richtige hineinzubringen, manchmal vier Stunden für eine solche halbe Stunde vorbereiten müssen, um alles in ökonomischer Weise zu gestalten, so daß er absolut nicht angestrengt wurde. Ich habe genau alles gemacht, wie ich es für gut fand. Ich hatte mir ja das vorbehalten, hatte also so viel Musikunterricht eintreten lassen, als ich eben für das Richtige hielt, immer mehr, ich möchte sagen, von Woche zu Woche, habe auch daran festgehalten, wie allmählich sich gerade die körperliche Konstitution umgestaltete. Und ich habe mir allerdings nichts sagen lassen. Die übrige Familie, außer der Mutter, fand manche Einwände, wenn der Junge immer wieder blaß geworden ist. Ich habe erklärt: Ich habe ihn nun einmal, und ich habe das Recht, ihn blaß werden zu lassen, ganz blaß, er wird schon wiederum rot werden, wenn die Zeit da sein wird.
Nun also, es handelte sich darum, daß der Junge in der Einsicht auf die leibliche Entwickelung erzogen wurde, daß alle geistig-seelischen Maßnahmen nach dieser Richtung getroffen wurden.
Das einzelne stellt sich ja, wie ich glaube, für jedes Kind ganz individuell ein. Man muß genau den Menschen kennen. Deshalb sage ich, es kommt auf eine wirkliche Menschenerkenntnis an. Und wenn ich mir die Frage beantworten wollte: Wie alt ist der Junge in Wirklichkeit? Wie habe ich ihn zu behandeln? — so mußte ich sagen, der Junge ist in Wirklichkeit etwa ein Kind - als ich ihn empfangen hatte -, ein Kind im Alter von zweieinviertel Jahren, und er mußte eben so behandelt werden, trotzdem er scheinbar, das heißt im bürgerlichen Geburtsregister, das elfte Jahr vollendet hatte, er mußte so behandelt werden, wie es die Wirklichkeit war. Er konnte aber bei einem seelisch-ökonomischen Unterricht, der zunächst eben absolut auf das Nachahmeprinzip aufgebaut war, so daß systematisch zuerst auf die Nachahmung hingearbeiter worden ist, und dann übergegangen wurde eben zu dem, was ich heute Gestaltung genannt habe - aber alles fortwährend mit Berücksichtigung der Gesundheitsverhältnisse —, in zweieinhalb Jahren so weit gebracht werden, daß er seinen Gymnasialunterricht hat beginnen können. Ich habe ihm dann weiter geholfen, auch noch während er den Gymnasialunterricht durchmachte. Er war dann befreit von jeder weiteren Leitung, konnte die zwei letzten Klassen selbständig durchmachen, ist dann Mediziner geworden, hat lange praktiziert, und ist dann, im vierzigsten Lebensjahre etwa, während des Weltkrieges an einer Infektion, die er sich im Kriege zugezogen hatte, in Polen gestorben.
Das ist ein Fall - ich könnte manchen anderen auch noch anführen -, der eben zeigt, wie sehr es sich gerade für schwachsinnige Kinder darum handelt, auf dieses gerade auch am heutigen Morgen für gesunde Kinder hervorgehobene Prinzip hinzuarbeiten. Wir haben in der Waldorfschule eine ganze Anzahl von leichten, und, wie es hier heißt, sehr schwachsinnigen Kindern. Die ganz schwachsinnigen stören natürlich die anderen Kinder in der Klasse. Daher haben wir unter der Leitung von Dr. Schubert eine besondere Klasse für Schwachsinnige eingerichtet, und zwar kommen da die Schwachsinnigen aller Klassen zusammen. Aber ich habe immer, wenn es sich darum handelt, irgendein Kind für die Schwachsinnigenklasse zu designieren, ich habe immer, ich möchte sagen, die Freude, einen Kampf bestehen zu müssen mit dem Lehrer der betreffenden Klasse. Kein Lehrer will eigentlichgern ein Kind hergeben, und jeder kämpft um dieses Kind; er bemüht sich bis zum letzten Ende, dieses Kind unter den anderen mitzubekommen, und es gelingt auch häufig. Denn wenn auch unsere Klassen nicht klein sind, dadurch, daß individuell unterrichtet wird, gelingt es, auch solche Kinder mitzubringen. Sehr schwachsinnige Kinder sind also wirklich da beisammen in unserer Schwachsinnigenklasse. Aber notwendig ist es, sie absolut individuell zu erziehen. So daß Dr. Schubert jedes Kind nach dessen eigenen Anforderungen selbst behandelt, und vor allen Dingen bei solchen Kindern keine Lehrziele hat, sondern es sich ganz von der Beschaffenheit des Kindes diktieren läßt und unter Umständen etwas ganz anderes als das gewöhnlich Schulmäßige mit dem Kinde macht. Es handelt sich da darum, daß man nun wirklich die entsprechende, ich möchte sagen, Hilfe für das eine oder das andere Kind findet.
Es gibt zum Beispiel Kinder, die sehr schwachsinnig sind, und man findet heraus, wenn man sich allmählich den Blick dafür aneignet, daß sie einfach mit ihrem Vorstellungsvermögen so langsam arbeiten, daß sie die Vorstellungen verlieren. Sie verlieren die Vorstellungen, sie kommen nicht zum Vorstellen. Es ist das nur ein Fall. Man erreicht schon etwas mit diesen Kindern, mit einer gewissen Sorte von Kindern, wenn man mit ihnen nun gar nichts gewöhnlich Schulmäßiges macht, sondern zum Beispiel nur das, daß man einem Kinde sagt, falls es die Worte auffaßt — wir haben auch solche, die nicht einmal die Worte auffassen, dann muß man es anders machen: Nimm rasch mit dem Daumen und dem Zeigefinger der rechten Hand dein linkes Ohrläppchen! Greife rasch mit deiner linken Hand an den rechten Oberarm! — Läßt man sie auf diese Weise sich an sich selber orientieren, und dann wiederum an der Außenwelt orientieren, dann erreicht man auch manches mit solchen Kindern, wenn man sie rasch etwas erkennen läßt: Was ist das? (Es wird ein Ohr gezeichnet.) Es ist wirklich nicht so leicht herauszukriegen, daß das Kind sagt: Ohr. Aber in dem Rekognoszieren und so weiter liegt es: also es liegt in den verschiedensten Dingen, die man aussinnen muß, und durch die man zunächst das Kind weckt. Auf dieses Wecken, auf dieses Aktivwerden kommt bei sehr vielen Kindern etwas an, selbstverständlich nicht bei den tobenden, da muß man dann andere Mittel anwenden. Aber in dieser Richtung liegt es. Es handelt sich um individuelle Behandlung, und die muß auf einer wirklichen Menschenerkenntnis beruhen.
Twelfth Lecture
My descriptions over the last few days may have given you the impression that the art of education and teaching based on anthroposophical knowledge of human nature takes into account first and foremost the physical element in human beings. For you will have noticed that I have endeavored to show how we can best use our art of education to assist the free development of the plastic forces that emanate from the human head and work on the organism itself. How can we accommodate the respiratory and circulatory systems, particularly in school education? How can we ensure that the muscular forces develop in the freest possible way? How can we take into account that the muscles attach to the bones in the right way and that the human being is thus physically and bodily placed in the outside world in an appropriate manner?
It seems as if everything that emanates from the pedagogical art discussed here, insofar as it involves soul and spirit measures, is oriented toward bringing about the healthiest and most normal physical development of the human being. And that is indeed the case. In fact, the fully conscious goal of what must be regarded here as healthy pedagogy and didactics is to develop the physical body of the human being in the freest possible way and, as it were, to offer the spiritual-soul the opportunity to unfold from within itself; offering the spiritual-soul the opportunity to unfold from within itself, precisely by doing the least possible harm to the spiritual-soul during school age; not by saying that the human being should become this or that. In a sense, everything that is used in teaching is applied in such a way that one learns how the human being is best kept healthy. Since the spiritual-soul aspect must also be taken into account in teaching, since the physical aspect must become an expression, a revelation of the spiritual-soul aspect, attention must be paid to the handling of the spiritual-soul aspect in a way that corresponds to the healthy development of the human being.
What supreme educational maxim gives rise to such a view? It arises from an absolute devotion to human freedom, to human liberty. It arises from the ideal of placing human beings in the world in such a way that they can develop their individual freedom, that they have no obstacles to the development of this individual freedom in their bodies.
What we therefore strive for in particular through this art of education and teaching oriented toward the physical body is that human beings learn to use their physical bodies in the right way in later life. For this art of education is based as much on knowledge as on a certain confidence that life develops best when it is allowed to develop freely and healthily. Of course, these things must all be taken in a relative sense, but this relative sense can already be understood.
A person who, during their school years, is driven to use their respiratory system, their tendons and bones in the wrong way, will become an unfree person in life. And a person who is trained in such a way that they are told to acquire this or that concept, this or that idea for life, will become an unfree person. Only those who are educated in such a way that their education is based on the requirements of the physical and bodily development of the human being will become free human beings. Everything that is to be done with the human being spiritually and soulfully during their school years must be read from the human being themselves.
It is precisely in this way that the anthroposophical worldview wants to prove itself in life, not by leading to a false idealism, but precisely to a correct practical handling of what is present in life, insofar as this life shows itself to us humans who develop in the body between birth and death and who must have developed in this body what is spiritual and soul-related.
You see, even if we wanted to, we would have no influence whatsoever on the actual development of the spiritual-soul as teachers and educators. The spiritual-soul is only present in its proper state from falling asleep to waking up. We would actually have to educate this spiritual-soul in sleep if we wanted to educate it. We cannot educate it at all. And that is what confronts us so strongly in a time like ours that one believes one must educate the spiritual-soul aspect, one must bring people to the understanding of this or that, while one must only bring them to the free use of their physical body through the spiritual-soul aspect.
As I have often said, education cannot be dealt with in isolation from the civilization of an era, or indeed from the whole milieu in which it is situated. I will certainly refrain from adding anything to this discussion that does not belong to our subject. However, the following belongs in the most eminent sense to the consideration of our subject, albeit from the perspective of the times.
We now hear that in Eastern Europe, a new educational system is being developed for adults who are considered to be the only valid members of society, namely those who belong to the radical socialist party. This is because everything that has been considered valid up to now is no longer regarded as correct there, and so a new educational system is being developed. The approach is purely pedagogical in terms of external measures. And how? We hear that one of Russia's leading figures is currently being chosen to write a history of the Communist Party. He is to spend a month writing this history of the Communist Party. This is assigned to him by the state. He is to be finished after a month. During this month, he is also to engage in some practical work at the Moscow headquarters. The aim is for him to produce a book, which will then be used to educate all those who are true Russians in today's sense. A second man has been commissioned to write a history of the labor movement in the West and a history of the International. This man has been given the task of doing something else at the same time during this period—he must be finished after a month and a half, and then every true Russian must study this book; excuse me, I believe he has been given two months. The third man has been commissioned to write the theory of Marxism. He has a month and a half to do so and then has to deliver a book with which everyone who wants to grow into the circumstances of the East in a dignified manner will have to concern themselves. In this way, a number of people have been commissioned to create the Russian literature of the near future. Each is prescribed how many weeks he has to use for this, as well as what else he has to do in the meantime; the one who is to write about Marxism is also to co-edit Pravda during this time.
Why am I mentioning this? Because it is basically the ultimate consequence of what is in all of us as people of the present civilization; we just don't want to admit that this is the ultimate consequence, which is only developed in its absurdity in Eastern Europe. The absurdity lies in the assumption that people must know this or that specific thing; that we do not assume: how must a person be in order to be a person, a person who is properly integrated into the structure of the world?
Teachers must bring the utmost reverence for the spiritual and soul aspects into their schools, and without this utmost reverence, it is just as difficult to cope with school life as it is without a certain artistic and scientific education on the part of the teacher. Therefore, the basic requirement for a teacher who wants to work on the basis of anthroposophically oriented pedagogy is, above all, that he or she has reverence for the developmental possibilities of what the child brings into the world as its spiritual and soul life, and that they also feel that the child is a free being, so that they can find the principles that can educate the child in such a way that, when the child later looks back on their education, they cannot see any impairment of their freedom, not even in the consequences of this education.
What is meant here will become clear to us if we ask ourselves the question: What becomes of a person if their physical characteristics are not treated properly in childhood? They remain undeveloped and then carry over into later life. But what are the characteristics of childhood that carry over into later life? As paradoxical as it sounds, it is absolutely true: childhood characteristics in later life are causes of illness; it is important to understand in the most serious way that childhood characteristics in later life are causes of illness. Then one will already have the right inner impulse for a health education and also for respecting human freedom as a whole.
Let us compare, for example, a person who is enthusiastic about human freedom to the very core of his being, and who becomes ill and calls the doctor. The doctor treats him according to all the correct modern methods. Will he believe that his freedom is impaired as a result? Never. What approaches people in this way never, ever impairs human freedom.
The same feeling must exist with regard to the art of education and teaching. This must be stated radically, but then again, what is stated radically can be heard in its proper nuance. The same must be true of the art of education and teaching, that one is able to think of the art of education and teaching in a certain relationship to the art of medicine. Of course, the art of education is not therapy in the true sense of the word. But the relationship between human beings and children must be viewed in such a way that the comparison with therapeutic behavior can appear entirely justified.
If children are released from school education at the time of puberty — we will be discussing this turning point in life in the next few days in relation to aesthetic and moral education; we will now go into more detail on the general human aspects — if, therefore, the child is released from actual school treatment at the age of fourteen or fifteen, it is particularly necessary to see whether everything that can be beneficial to the child in later life has been done for the child in the period between the change of teeth and puberty. It must be taken into account that it is above all the etheric body, the formative body, whose power connections we are dealing with at this school age, and that when the child leaves school age, the actual soul – which we will discuss in more detail shortly – only really comes to the fore. We must now look at the next stage of human life, which begins at the age of fourteen or fifteen and lasts until the early twenties, and which requires the human being to adapt more and more to external life. We have seen how the child gradually conquers its body, finally its skeletal system, and thereby grows together with the outer world through itself, placing itself in the outer world. It must then be able to adapt to the outer world. And this essentially happens until the beginning of the twenties.
But then comes a particularly important stage of life for human beings, a stage of life in which we no longer deal with them in a school-like manner. However, we have done an enormous amount during the school-like stages of life, which is particularly evident in human beings from the beginning of their twenties to the end of their twenties.
Immediately after we release people from compulsory schooling, they must enter into what prepares them for this or that profession. They must be taught what is no longer given solely by human nature, but what is stored in civilization as suitable for this or that profession. People must therefore be adaptable to a specialty of life. In our pedagogy, we try to do justice to this transition into life by gradually introducing children or young people who are just fourteen or fifteen years old to very practical subjects such as weaving and spinning, through which we want to prepare them for growing into life. For knowing something like this, especially having had a go at something like weaving or spinning, is not only important for those who want to become spinners or weavers, but is also of extraordinary importance for anyone who wants to be practical in life. It is then only a matter of ensuring that the right things are taught at the right age.
But what is formed in the etheric or formative body during school age then comes to the fore in the soul between the beginning and the end of one's twenties, when one really has to enter life professionally. The way we treated them at school enables them in their twenties either to enter life clumsily, with resistance and inhibitions, or skillfully, with a power to remove obstacles and inhibitions. In their twenties, people must experience how what we did with them during their school years, while preparing them for their careers, has in a sense receded into the background, but then resurfaces, now as something that people themselves handle, as they enter into life. If we know this, we will be able to look at the major stages of human life, between the change of teeth and sexual maturity, in just the right way. Between the ages of nine and ten is the important point in life that I have spoken of. Around the age of twelve is another important turning point, which I have also pointed out. When the child comes to us at school from home at the age of six or seven, it is initially what I have called a total sensory organ. It has absorbed a great deal through imitation. It has developed a certain inner plasticity. It brings this with it to school. And everything we now have to apply until the turning point between the ages of nine and ten is a formative approach, an approach to education and teaching that is so formative that the human being is always involved in this formative process. In the description I have given of the way in which reading, writing, and arithmetic should be taught to the child, this is already expressed in the demand for an artistic approach, especially for this age group. So taking the artistic element into account is also particularly important at this age.
Those who know that education at school age must start with the will and only gradually lead to the intellect will pay particular attention to the training of the will. They will say to themselves: the child must learn in the right way to drive its will out of its organism. To do this, the will must take in something emotional in all its expressions in the right way. We must not only do this or that, we must also develop sympathy and antipathy in a manner appropriate to what we do. And the best element, apart from its own value, that the child brings into this stream is music. Therefore, as soon as the child is brought into school, the musical element should be introduced to the child through singing, but also through simple handling of instruments.
Not only does this cultivate the child's aesthetic sense, but above all, it is precisely this indirect route that brings about the inner harmonious development of the element of will. And the child also brings us predispositions for this. It is an inner sculptor, and we can bring out these inner sculptural predispositions, indeed all of its predispositions. The child also brings us predispositions for this, so that, even if it is inconvenient, we can let it do all kinds of things with colors on paper, thereby introducing it to the secrets of the world of colors. It is extremely interesting, for example, how children find their way into color when they are simply allowed to play with paint on a white surface. They cover the individual parts of this white surface with colors, in which there will already be a certain inner harmony of color due to the child's natural predisposition. What they smear around on the paper is not meaningless; it is a certain harmony of color. One must only take care not to let the children use the paints that are available as children's paints, where they then apply the paint directly from the paint tablets onto the paper. That is always, even in the art of painting, detrimental! Painting should be done from the pot, from the dissolved paint, from the paint dissolved in water or some other liquid. One must develop an inner, intimate relationship with color. Even children must do this. If one merely smears paint from the palette, one has no intimate relationship with color, but if one paints from the paint dissolved in the pot, one does.
Then you say to the child: Look, what you've done here is very beautiful: you've painted a red area in the middle, and then you've worked your way out from there. Everything you have there matches the red area. Now do the opposite: in the place where you now have a red area, make a blue one, and do everything else accordingly, as you would have to do if there were blue in the middle instead of red."
Firstly, the child is terribly excited by such an exercise, and secondly, with some guidance from the teacher and educator, the child will certainly work out this conversion into a different basic color tone in such a way that it gains an enormous amount in its inner relationship to the world when you let it do something like this. And as inconvenient as it may be, you should definitely let children make small plastic things, well, from whatever materials they can find somewhere. It is true that it is necessary to protect children from getting dirty; that is inconvenient, but what the children gain from it is worth much more than the children not getting dirty and so on. In short, it is necessary to introduce the artistic element to the child, especially in the early stages. Everything that has to come out of the child must be brought to the child in a childlike way. If you introduce art to children in this way, then the other subjects are much easier. For example, they learn languages much more easily if you introduce them to art. I have already mentioned that language learning must begin at a very early age, if possible when children start school.
Now, in our time, many forms of fanaticism prevail, and so what is perfectly correct on the one hand can be taken to extremes and become one-sided. This is the case, for example, with regard to language. Children naturally learn their mother tongue without any grammar at first, and of course they should learn it that way; even when children reach school age and are taught foreign languages, this should be done without any grammar, in a somewhat more mature imitation of the way they learned their mother tongue.
But when the aforementioned turning point in life occurs between the ages of nine and ten, it is simply required by the child's own life that some non-pedantic grammatical knowledge be imparted to the child for the sake of the child's proper development, because at this age the child must make the transition to ego development. It must learn to do everything more consciously than before. Therefore, in the language that it already knows, that it speaks and uses, the intellectual element must be introduced into the purely emotional linguistic element through the recognition of rules that is not pedantic but stimulating. The child must already have some knowledge of grammar; so that between the ages of nine and ten, when this important turning point in life occurs, they do not say to themselves: How should I say this, how should I say that? — without having any logical point of reference. For we must be clear that language has two elements that always interact: a mental element and an emotional element.
I would like to illustrate this with a sentence I quote from Goethe's “Faust”:
Gray, dear friend, is all theory,
And green is the golden tree of life.
As a Westerner, I cannot expect you to study the commentaries on Goethe's “Faust” that exist — they fill a large library — but if you did study them, you would make a remarkable discovery. A certain class of these commentaries always makes a remark like this when the commentator comes to this sentence in Goethe's “Faust”: 3526 is written above because 3525 explanations have already preceded it; below it says 3526 — something about the illogicality of this sentence, which one must forgive the artist in his artistic freedom, but which is nevertheless very illogical, because — a golden tree, if it is an orange tree, then it is not green, and if it is another tree, then it is either not golden, or it is merely an artificial tree. In any case, a golden tree cannot be green. And on the other hand: theory—yes, it can't be gray! It's something you can't see at all, so it can't be gray. So the thing is not logical.
However, there are other commentators who are more artistic people, who are happy that things are not entirely logical here.
Well, what is actually behind this? What lies behind it is that in this sentence, the emotional element of language on the one hand and the conceptual-illustrative element on the other are particularly prominent. When he says: A golden tree – he means a tree that is as beloved as gold, whereby one no longer looks at the visual aspect of gold, but rather at the feeling that one has when seeing this peculiar gleam. So a golden tree is one that one feels in the same way as one feels gold. Here, only the feeling is taken into account. And by green, a real tree is meant, as one can see it: here, logic is taken into account. — Theory is not something one can see, but some people, rightly or wrongly, feel what you can feel when there is fog in London. Well, this feeling can then be transferred to the experience of theory. And in the gray, it is again the purely emotional element of language.
In today's languages, much of this has already been lost; but in earlier periods of language development, there was an active, formative element everywhere, and it is this emotional element that is brought into the intellectual element.
Well, before the age of nine, children have a completely emotional relationship with language. But its self-awareness could not develop if we did not introduce the intellectual element. That is why it is so necessary to introduce the intellectual element to the child indirectly, through rationally taught grammatical rules, first and foremost in the mother tongue, but then perhaps also in a foreign language, whereby the rules follow the language learning process.
The following should be taken into account: between the ages of nine and ten, the child should get the feeling of penetrating the understanding of language in the way I have just described. In this way, the child could be taught a proper grammatical feeling for language.
By the age of twelve, and we must pay attention to this, the child should have developed a feeling for the beauty of language, an aesthetic sense of language, and should also strive, by the age of twelve, to speak in a reasonable sense in what could be called “beautiful speech”; From then until puberty, the child should first develop what is needed to use language to convince someone else: the dialectical element of language. The child should only be introduced to this element when they leave school age. So one could say: what we must gradually learn about language is first a feeling for the rightness of language in life itself, a feeling for the beauty of language, then a feeling for the power that language gives us in life. This is how everything that belongs to language teaching should be arranged.
It is much more important for the teacher, the educator, to find their way into such things than to be given some ready-made curriculum with objectives. In this way, they will already be able to put the right things into the individual stages of life and treat them in this way. Through art and artistic treatment, they will allow children up to the age of nine or ten to approach the creative aspect in which the individual still has a share, without neglecting the descriptive aspect.
This is entirely possible if one chooses a course of study such as the one I have outlined in recent days, where natural history is linked to earthly geography on the one hand, and that which relates to animals is brought closer to humans on the other. In particular, one will achieve the most with what is initially merely descriptive, and will be able to shape the descriptive in such a way that it no longer demands the whole person, but still demands the soul. It will therefore be necessary to attach great importance to telling the children stories in a lively way. And, as I have already mentioned, history will be treated in this stage of life in such a way that complete pictures of human events are presented.
Then, as they approach the age of twelve, explanation can be added to the creative and descriptive elements, taking into account cause and effect, which is where the intellect is exercised. The child only grows into this between the ages of eleven and twelve.
Now, however, something must be poured out over this entire period, and that is the treatment of mathematics in its various fields, appropriate to the child's age, of course. Mathematics, introducing arithmetic and geometry to the child, is something that poses particular difficulties for teaching and education. For it is really the case that mathematical concepts, which in their simpler form can be taught before the age of nine – because children can understand a great deal in this regard if the right approach is taken – then become increasingly complicated throughout the school years, so that these must first be taught in a very artistic way, using all kinds of manipulations to introduce the child to arithmetic and geometry artistically, and then, between the ages of nine and ten, move on to describing the areas.
The child should definitely learn to look at angles, triangles, quadrangles, and so on in a descriptive way; and one should only move on to proving around the age of twelve.
Now, it is precisely in this teaching that a boring teacher achieves very little or nothing at all, but that the teacher who makes mathematics the most exciting subject, who is fully engaged in this mathematics, which, after all, allows us to experience the harmonious spatial idealism of the whole world, will achieve a great deal. If a teacher can be enthusiastic about the Pythagorean theorem, if he can rave about the inner harmonies between surfaces and bodies, then he will bring something to this lesson that is tremendously important for the child, also in relation to the development of the soul. Then, through this element, he will counteract the confusion that life always has.
You see, there would be no language if language did not cause such confusion. That is just a particularly extreme statement, but we actually always talk like that in life, so that if we were to examine languages, we would find everywhere how feelings and thoughts blur into one another. And human beings would be thrown into a certain chaos of life by this in language and by many other things if they did not acquire the stability that mathematics provides. Those who look deeper into life know how many people are saved from neurasthenia, hysteria, and even worse things only by learning to look at triangles, squares, tetrahedrons, and so on in the right way.
Perhaps I may insert a subjective point, which is only meant to serve as a symptomatic illustration. Not only for objective reasons, but in this case also for subjective reasons, I particularly love mechanics. And that is precisely because – since such things continue into later life – I had a teacher at the Vienna University who taught mechanics in such a way that he was truly passionate about finding resultants from components. It was interesting to watch how the man searched for the resultants from the components with inner enthusiasm and then broke the resultants down into components again, and how, after jumping from one end of the blackboard to the other, he would dance around, always delighted when he said something like, for example, that ®=a?+b? is. When he was so moved by such a case that he had brought to the blackboard and looked around with a friendly smile to the auditorium, it was really something that could communicate enthusiasm for analytical mechanics, which is not usually a strong point for people. — But it is important that precisely this mathematics, which must be distributed in the manner indicated across the various stages of school age, that this mathematics pours its essence over the whole person.
One then has these two poles in human development, on the one hand the musical-artistic, on the other hand the mathematical-ideal; and so the human being gradually grows into the world in such a way that his total humanity is cultivated from within in the right way.
When, in teaching and education, one approaches the age at which the child is to be released from ordinary school, one already feels compelled to keep an overview in teaching practice itself of what are the most important moments for the development of the child at this school age. We receive the child from home into school when it is six or seven years old. We send them out into the world, so to speak, and we must ensure that they then find the opportunity to adapt to the world, as I indicated at the beginning of today's reflections. When we receive the child from home, it is a kind of large sensory organ. It carries within itself a kind of image, an imprint of its parents, other people in its environment, its entire social milieu. And we must transfer that which makes the child a kind of special human being — we really receive it as a kind of special human being — into general humanity. We can do this in particular by acting on the respiratory and circulatory systems, which are removed from the human individual, by appealing to this system. In a certain sense, we must indeed transform the special human being we receive into a more general human being. But the child also carries something individual within itself, even when it enters school. Not in the pronounced way that we find characteristic when it emerges one-sidedly in adults in later life, when we talk about the ‘temperaments of individual people’, when we talk about the melancholic, sanguine, phlegmatic, and choleric temperaments; but the child's nature has such a coloring that we can speak of melancholic, phlegmatic, sanguine, and choleric children. And in the art of teaching and education, we must acquire a subtle understanding of everything connected with the child's temperament, and also of how to treat the child, depending on whether it has this or that temperament.
The melancholic child is one who is particularly dependent on their physicality, who is always inclined to look back on themselves because they are preoccupied with their body due to their very special constitution. This distracts their attention from the outside world. The melancholic child should not automatically be called inattentive. It is only inattentive to the outside world and to the impressions coming from the teacher; but it is very attentive to its own states. Therefore, the melancholic child—I am always talking about children, this cannot be readily transferred to adults—therefore, the melancholic child is also a moody child, a child that is subject to mood swings.
The phlegmatic child is so integrated into the world that it is actually completely devoted to the world in its subconscious. And because the world is big and there is so much in it, it is devoted to many things and is therefore not interested in its neighbor. What I am about to say does not apply to adults, because otherwise it might easily seem as if I wanted to flatter phlegmatic people, which I certainly do not want to do. But to put it somewhat radically, one could say: if the phlegmatic child were not on earth but in heaven, in the world outside, it would be extremely interested in its surroundings, because it is actually predisposed to the periphery of the world, to the big things that make little impression precisely because they are so extensive, not to what is immediately at hand.
The sanguine child is predisposed in such a way that, in a certain sense, it reveals the opposite of the melancholic, the opposite of the phlegmatic. The young melancholic is devoted to its physical body, while the phlegmatic is predisposed to the greater world, to the spherical, because it lives with its entire human being particularly deeply in its etheric or formative body. He is devoted to the whole being. He also disperses into the world a few days after death.
The sanguine child lives in what we call the astral body or the soul body. This soul body differs from the physical body and the etheric body in that it has no interest in the temporal and the spatial. It is outside of time and space. The astral body causes us to have our entire life within us at every moment of our existence, even if experiences further back in time are weaker than those closer at hand. The astral body is primarily the one that directs dreams. Now you know that dreams do not concern themselves greatly with the temporal course of life. We dream about something that happened yesterday; people from our earliest childhood get mixed up in it. The astral body mixes up our whole life, not according to the sequence of time and space, but in such a way that it confuses things, as they are meant to be confused, like something that is completely different from the temporal and spatial. The sanguine child is particularly devoted to this astral body, and this is expressed in its entire behavior. It already perceives external impressions as if the timeless and spaceless were already given to us by the world itself. It quickly surrenders to an impression, does not process it, because it does not care about time. It is devoted to the astral body. It does not ensure that the impression remains in the human being's essence. Or rather, it does not like to remember the past; the sanguine child lives in the present moment because it does not take time into account, but expresses in its outer life what the astral body is actually supposed to develop in a higher world. This gives the sanguine child a certain superficiality.
And the choleric child is the one who is completely centered in its ego or egoity, where the whole physical body also finds expression in its will nature, which expresses itself in its egoity, so that the person intervenes aggressively in life above all else.
As an educator and teacher, one must acquire a keen sensitivity to the characteristic melancholic, sanguine, and so on, qualities in the growing child. One must try to deal with temperament in two ways. First, by introducing a certain social element into the school precisely through the medium of temperaments. One gains an overview of the melancholic children or the melancholic-type children in one's class — temperaments are also mixed, all of which must be taken into account — and places a group of melancholic children, a group of phlegmatic children, another group of sanguine children, and a group of choleric children somewhere in the class where one considers it appropriate.
It is good to bring children of the same temperament together, for the simple reason that when melancholic children sit together, they also have melancholics in their neighborhood, so that their temperaments rub against each other. The melancholic child sees in the other how they torment themselves with all kinds of things, how they are trapped inside their own body. They then see this in themselves, and the sight of the other has a healing effect on the melancholic child's own nature.
If phlegmatic children also have phlegmatic neighbors, they will find them so boring that even their phlegm becomes agitated, and something agitated is driven out of the phlegmatic child by the fact that it has to be with other phlegmatic children who are in its immediate vicinity.
Sanguine children, because they are in the neighborhood of sanguine children, whom they see flitting from one impression to another, so that they are soon interested in this, soon in that, want to brush them away like flies fluttering in the neighborhood, become aware of the superficiality of their sanguine temperament by perceiving in others what they themselves have.
And when choleric children are put together, they push each other around, and this has a kind of healing effect on their choleric temperament in a certain sense; for the bruises they carry away are something that has an extremely beneficial effect on the choleric temperament.
Take a look at these things. You will see that when you bring a kind of social element into the school in this way, it has an extremely beneficial influence, and the teacher's relationship to the individual temperament is also expressed in a certain way. The melancholic child, and indeed children of all temperaments, should not be treated in a way that is contrary to their disposition; one should get used to treating like with like. If, for example, one were to induce a choleric child to sit still and be quiet, then so much of the choleric nature would accumulate that it would have an even more poisonous effect internally. That is not acceptable. On the other hand, if, for example, you treat a melancholic child in such a way that you respond to their moods and melancholy and take an interest in them, this will have a very healing effect in the long run. But then there is the phlegmatic child – treat them in such a way that you are interested in them internally, but externally you apply a kind of phlegmatic attitude towards the phlegmatic child. Treat the sanguine child in such a way that you give it a lot of impressions, so that you increase its sanguine nature. Then the intensity it develops will be even greater when it has to take in all the impressions than it would otherwise, and the result will be that the intensity is increased by the number of impressions. So it is precisely by treating like with like that one can approach the temperaments.
And if all school conditions could be ideally arranged, I would prefer to send the choleric children out into the garden in the afternoon, let them run around outside, let them climb up and down trees until they are tired. When one is sitting up high, I would have him shout over to the second one; they would have to shout at each other, they would have to tire themselves out. In this way, precisely by driving out what the choleric temperament demands to be driven out, the most beneficial influence on the choleric temperament will be exerted.
It is precisely by getting to know things that one can have the appropriate effect in school. For such treatment, however, the teacher must bring something into the school that is extremely important. If they want to find their way in these matters, they really must not go in with a grumpy expression that shows the wrinkles of age at an early stage of their career, but must know how to behave with humor in the classroom. They must know how to respond to everything that comes their way in the classroom and be able to let their nature flow into the nature of the child.
Questions and Answers
Dr. Steiner: Ladies and gentlemen, first of all, there is a practical question that needs to be dealt with first due to various departures. When it comes to the practical implementation of the educational issues raised in this course, we can probably refer to the Waldorf School. For my part, however, I would like to link to something broader. I believe that the practical implementation of what is meant here requires a real force that arises from the view of today's civilization and a certain enthusiasm.
It seems to me that anyone who does not first recognize the necessity of transferring the educational impulses to the areas mentioned here will hardly be able to undertake anything decisive in this direction.
If I am to say what my deepest conviction is in this regard, it is this: that for those who view the development of modern humanity within civilized regions with an open mind, it must be quite clear that we are living in an era of decline in our culture, and that all arguments that can be put forward against this decline are actually based on false premises.
It is indeed quite uncomfortable and seems pessimistic, even though it is actually meant to be optimistic, to speak as I have just done; but there are so many outward signs of a declining civilization that, basically, this decline can already be seen. And then the question of education in the true sense of the word really begins to arise in the heart and soul. And if I may follow up on this confession, I would also like to mention the founding of the Waldorf School as the first example of a practical application of the educational principles referred to here.
Why do we have a Waldorf School? You see, the Waldorf school owes its existence, it must be said, to the assertion of these educational principles, these purely human educational principles. How did things come about? They came about in such a way that in 1919 there was an absolute collapse throughout Central Europe, a collapse of economic, state, and spiritual life. One could perhaps also say: a collapse of economic and state life and an absolute bankruptcy of spiritual life. These things were so present in 1919 that there was a general awareness of them, for half a year, I would say, there was complete awareness that this was the case. Until about the middle of 1919, there was absolute awareness that this was the case.
Now, there is a lot of talk in the world that humanity will recover again, even in Central Europe, that after some time it will work its way up again from the old conditions, and so on. Such talk stems from a comfortable way of thinking. In truth, all the things that are said in this vein are mere phrases. In truth, the decline is steadily increasing. But for Central Europe, the situation is simply this: in 1919, the slippery slope began. And now Central Europe is like a person who was better off and bought clothes. He has these clothes, and he wears them until they are completely worn out. The reasons why he cannot buy new ones have long been there. But because he can still wear the old ones, for which he will no longer be able to buy new ones, he deceives himself that he will not be able to buy new ones as long as there is still a shred of the old ones left. The whole world deceives itself that the reasons for no longer being able to buy new clothes from the old circumstances are indeed present.
Now, you see, in the first half of 1919, there was a mood of speaking seriously to people, and at first the Waldorf School was not founded, but I gave my lectures on popular education, which initially contained what I have just said here, albeit in a more sketchy form at that time. And it made sense to some people. This gave rise to the Waldorf School.
I emphasize this explicitly because the basic prerequisite for practical work in this field is insight, insight that comes from a real understanding of the conditions of education. And when the Waldorf School was founded, I said: It is wonderful that such an example exists, but that does not solve the problem. The problem would only be solved, or at least the thread of its solution would be found, if at least a dozen Waldorf schools were founded within three months.
That has not happened. Therefore, what has been achieved in this area so far cannot be regarded as a success; we only have a single, what we call in German, a model school. We have a model. And this model is still not quite what we would like it to be. Let me give you an example.
In addition to the eurythmy hall, which we finally have, we needed a large hall for general gymnastics exercises. We don't have that yet. So anyone who visits the Waldorf school and sees what is happening there should not yet consider it the ideal Waldorf school. Above all, the Waldorf school has no money and is in an extremely weak financial position!
Now I imagine that two things are necessary. The first is the dissemination of the idea of a purely human education based on real knowledge of human beings. This idea must first be thoroughly grasped. Everything must be done to grasp this idea thoroughly.
You see, it is of no use to throw sand in our eyes, so to speak, in such a serious area, and therefore allow me to speak quite freely and openly in this direction. When these things are discussed, and also when economic aspirations are discussed, I am often told: yes, in England you have to do this or that so as not to offend people.
Yes, if we stick to this judgment, we will not make any progress. We will make absolutely no progress if we do not decide to get over the fact that, for example, we say: yes, in England everything must be translated into practical terms. That is what we have done throughout five or six centuries in the civilized world, only accepting things if they could be demonstrated in some way. That is precisely what is destroying us. And if we continue to insist on this, we will never escape from chaos.
So it is not just a matter of petty things, but actually of having the courage to give a new impulse. People usually think that I don't understand when they say to me: Yes, in England everything has to be done differently. I understand that very well, but it doesn't get to the heart of the matter! And basically, if we hadn't had the misfortune, for example, I would say it was fortunate for the practical establishment of the Waldorf school, if we hadn't had the misfortune of being in a terrible situation in Central Europe in 1919 and thus encountering serious minds, we would not have been able to have a Waldorf school in Central Europe for quite other reasons. For in Central Europe, a completely new impulse is necessary, for the simple reason that Central Europe, especially Germany, does not have the slightest sense of organization – or social structural life, for that matter. When people outside Central Europe constantly talk about German organization, this is nothing more than an inaccuracy. There is no talent for organization whatsoever. Above all, there is no structured national organism, but rather a cultural life that exists in individual people, but does not exist in general. German universities, for example, are not in the least an expression of true Germanness. German universities are completely abstract constructs and are not in the least an expression of Germanness. Germanness exists as Germanness only in individual people. This is, of course, only a suggestion, but at the same time it is a suggestion that if one still appeals to any general mood or the like in Central Europe today, one encounters nothing but incomprehension toward things such as those that have been asserted here. So the Waldorf school owes its existence to an unfortunate stroke of luck.
Now the question is that, apart from this, there must first be understanding, real understanding, for a necessary continuation in the sense meant here, and that, in addition, where such an unfortunate stroke of luck does not exist, where something like the Waldorf school could be established out of understanding, out of the most immediate human initiative, that it should come into being.
So if, for example, something like the Waldorf school were to arise in England—it would of course have to be done differently in individual cases, because of the special circumstances of the country and the people—but if it were to arise, then it would probably indeed be a powerful leap forward.
Isn't that right? When I saw that the Waldorf school movement was not working because the Waldorf school remained alone, I tried to stimulate the idea of a “world school association,” because after all, one thing can be noted: you see, at least in Central Europe, we have had a very strong spread of the anthroposophical movement in recent years. The anthroposophical movement is now a factor in the Central European world. As a spiritual movement, it is a factor. We have no organization to guide and direct this movement in any way. The Anthroposophical Society—this must be said, because it is good to recognize it—the Anthroposophical Society is not in a position to support the anthroposophical movement. For the Anthroposophical Society is so strongly permeated by sectarian tendencies that it cannot support the anthroposophical movement as it is today, as it has developed. But I wanted to appeal one last time to those forces that might have been present in the Anthroposophical Society, thinking that perhaps these forces would make a final effort to promote something like the “World School Association.” This did not happen. The “World School Association” is buried. For, you see, one cannot merely talk about such a thing; it must be taken up in practical terms. This requires a number of people to be involved. So the “World School Association” as such is buried.
The Waldorf School in Stuttgart emerged from the German Revolution, not as a revolutionary school, but from the revolutionary spirit. But if, where the world situation is viewed with full understanding, something like a Waldorf School were to be established, as in England, then we would make some progress.
Perhaps I can say more about this later, when the discussion has been going on for a while.
Professor Mackenzie (translated briefly by Mr. Kaufmann): Professor Mackenzie explains that there are certain personalities from England here, personalities who are already in a position to create something in this direction and exert an influence, who also want to undertake something in the direction of these educational impulses out of a sense of the development of human needs, of world needs. As a first step in this direction, we hope that we will succeed in inviting Dr. Steiner to England in the course of this year, and that we will also succeed in creating, in the preparatory work for such an invitation, the right atmosphere and understanding, so that a number of personalities, educators, will be able to welcome Dr. Steiner in the right spirit.
Dr. Steiner: I would like to add that something like this must of course only be undertaken in a practical sense, and that it would be harmful to talk about it too much. It is a matter of those who are in a position to take a step forward in this direction doing the preparatory work, and then, when the right time has come, moving forward in the right way.
It will certainly also be in line with Mrs. Mackenzie's and the others' wishes if friends who are here from other countries and wish to make suggestions and proposals approach individual members of our group and raise the matter.
Mrs. K., The Hague: A great deal has been said about England today, and we are very pleased about that and consider it useful. But we from our little Dutch country have various things on our minds and have actually come with a great sense of guilt. The idea of the “World School Association” was first expressed in Holland, and in fact what we could have done was not done, partly due to misunderstanding and partly due to a lack of resources. But we have not been as inactive as one might think, and I assure you that we are very willing in every respect to make up for this mistake as much as possible. And I would nevertheless like to ask Dr. Steiner to tell us whether the path he has proposed for England is also possible for Holland. And since Dr. Steiner has promised to come to us in April, I would like to ask whether it might be possible to speak about this matter before a larger educational circle.
Dr. Steiner: There is a plan for Holland which, as far as I know, is already being implemented, namely to hold a university course from April 5 to 12 this year, which, similar to other university courses, is intended to promote anthroposophy in Holland in a serious manner.
It was certainly somewhat depressing that, after the necessity of doing something for anthroposophy in Holland had been pointed out for a long time, then, after lectures and performances took place there in February and early March of last year, there was actually a noticeable decline—not in terms of understanding of anthroposophy, because I don't think that's the case, but in terms of the inner composition of the Anthroposophical Society in Holland. And so it seems to me that it would be very necessary for the anthroposophical movement to be taken up again in a new and fresh way, especially in Holland. From which corner this will happen will of course depend on the existing conditions; it can of course also take place from the side of the educational movement. Precisely in relation to this, a question is asked here:
X: Dutch law allows for the possibility of a serious attempt to establish a free school. If we were unable to obtain funding in Holland by other means, would it be possible to establish a free school with state subsidies, provided that we were able to keep the teaching entirely in our own hands?
Dr. Steiner: Well, there is one thing about this question that I do not quite understand, and another that I find doubtful. What I do not quite understand is that one should not be able to obtain money in Holland for a truly free school! Forgive me if this is perhaps naive, but I do not understand it. For I do believe that if the enthusiasm is great enough, then it is possible to at least get started. It doesn't take that much money to get started.
The other thing I find doubtful is that it will be possible to do this with state subsidies. Because it seems doubtful to me that the state will not insist on exercising school supervision if it provides subsidies. So I do not believe that a truly free school could be founded with subsidies, that is, under the supervision of the state.
I would like to say that it was also a stroke of luck in Stuttgart that the Waldorf School was founded just before the Republican National Assembly passed a school law under which such a school could not be established; because, as we know, we lose more and more freedom the more liberalism spreads. And probably today, when progress reigns in Germany, it would no longer be possible to establish the Waldorf School in Stuttgart. But it was founded before that. And now – today the world is looking at the Waldorf School, and it will be allowed to exist until the movement that created the so-called elementary school becomes so powerful that, out of some kind of fanaticism, it will take away its first four grades. I hope that this can be prevented, but we are heading toward terrible times in this regard. And that is why I so often emphasize that it is necessary to do what needs to be done soon, because a wave is spreading across the world that is definitely moving toward a coercive state. And it is indeed the case that Western civilization is exposing itself to the danger of being simply flooded by some kind of Asian culture, which then has something spiritual about it. People don't want to see that, but that is what will happen.
Isn't it true, I think, that it is more or less just a kind of delay in the matter if one believes that one must first claim subsidies from the state? I would hardly expect anything from that. But perhaps someone else has a different opinion. Today, I ask everyone to express their opinions very freely.
X explains that it is not possible at the moment to found a school in Holland without the state interfering, for example, by demanding that a certain workload be achieved, and so on.
Dr. Steiner: It's true, if these things did not exist, I would never have decided in favor of the World School Association, which is based on a certain theory. But precisely because these things exist, I thought that the World School Association would initially be something practical. The situation is as follows:
Take, for example, the small school we had here in Dornach. For the reason I have mentioned here several times in recent days, namely a lack of funds, we were only able to establish a very small school. Now, in this small school there were children under the age of ten and children over the age of ten. Now, in the state, or canton as it is called here, of Solothurn, there is a very strict school law, which does not differ greatly from the other strict school laws in Switzerland in general, a school law so strict that when the state of Solothurn realized that children under the age of fourteen were being taught here, it simply declared it impossible. That is not allowed. And no matter what one might do here, it would never be possible to realize any of the Waldorf school ideas for children under the age of fourteen. And of course, the matter encounters obstacles almost everywhere, at least on the continent. I don't dare to say at the moment how things are in England; but if it were possible to establish a truly free school there, that would be an excellent thing. And because everywhere where one wants to realize schools in practice, one encounters resistance, I thought that the World School Association was primarily a practical thing, because I thought of it on a large scale, because it would create a mood in the world precisely for the possibility of creating free schools. That is to say, it would have to go against the tide—which is reaching its peak in Bolshevism in Russia—against this tide, which finds its peak in the absolute state-imposed school system, but which is everywhere else—one does not see that Lunacharsky is only the ultimate consequence of what is already present everywhere in Europe; as long as it suits you, you don't see that it exists — so I mean, a trend should be initiated that moves in the opposite direction: Lunacharsky = absolutely turning the state into a big machine, turning people into cogs in it. The other trend should be to educate people.
That is what is necessary. You see, in this direction, one actually experiences the most painful things within the anthroposophical movement. We can also bring a real medical movement into being today from the underground of the anthroposophical movement. All the antecedents are there. But what would also be necessary would be a movement that presented the matter to the world. But everywhere there is a different tendency among people, namely to make the individual who can somehow represent something of a purely human medicine into a “quack,” that is, to demand that he act against the law. I could give you an example – I say this only as an example, it does not refer to the medical movement of anthroposophy – but I could name a minister who advocated a harsh law in the German Reichstag against what still exists in Germany, against the freedom of the healing profession, and yet for his own family he went to unlicensed healers to have them treated. In other words, he did not believe in official medicine for his own family, but in what he now wanted to designate as “quackery” through the law.
This is a symptom of sectarianism. A movement is not sectarian if it strives to present itself freely to the world, with full legal rights, so that there can be no doubt about its legal title.
That is what I meant that the World School Association should do: to create a mood in the world for laws that freely allow schools to be established out of pedagogical necessity. Schools can never be established on the basis of majority decisions. Therefore, they cannot be state schools.
So that is what I mean when I say this about the World School Association, which I otherwise do not find at all appealing. I don't like it because it is an association, a propaganda machine; I prefer to work purely on the basis of facts, not agitation or propaganda. I find all of that appalling. But when your hands are tied, when it is simply not possible to establish free schools anywhere, then you first have to create the mood that makes these free schools possible. Compromises may of course be justified in this or that area, but we are living in a time when every compromise leads us further into disaster.
Question: How can we best work in political life?
Dr. Steiner: ... I believe that we are straying too far from the point when we bring the deeply significant questions at hand into the realm of current politics, because I can hardly expect anything from today's current politics before it has been regenerated from foundations that are completely different from those that currently exist in the countries known to me on the physical plane. I think that the decisive decline is so clearly noticeable in this area that one can understand why, I would say, as a side movement of the anthroposophical movement, the movement toward the threefold social organism is necessary.
What has the non-threefold social organism achieved, if I may briefly and perhaps somewhat misleadingly allude to it? It has led to the fate of nations being determined by parties whose opinions are, in essence, pure rhetoric. It cannot be claimed that what is used today as rhetoric for this or that party is anything real.
I recently pointed out how Bismarck, who in his later years was already a staunch monarchist—in his youth he was, as he himself says, a very bashful, masked republican, but then became a rigid monarchist—how Bismarck said the same thing that Robespierre said. One can say all sorts of things. But it is about the party, about what really comes to light when the inner workings of the parties, I would say, are revealed.
You see, for years I was a teacher at the Berlin Workers' Education School, which was a purely social democratic institution. I was always happy to speak the truth where people wanted to hear it. I therefore never took offense at speaking the truth here or there, even if the associations in which I worked were of one kind or another according to their programs or party opinions. Now, even among these people, who were rigid Marxists in their party orientation, I taught an absolutely anthroposophical view of both natural science and history; even in the lessons I gave people in speech exercises, even there I was able to assert what I believed to be true. And the school grew larger and larger. And lo and behold, the Social Democratic party leaders became aware of it, and it was enough that three or four people were present at a decisive meeting, where all my students were also present, who were unanimously in favor of my continuing to teach; but a few people who were staunch party leaders were there and declared that such teaching should not be given, that it undermined the essence of the Social Democratic Party. I said: Yes, but the Social Democratic Party also wants to work for the future, and humanity is moving towards freedom, and if you want to have a school of the future, you really have to stand on the ground of a free school. Then a real party man stood up and said: Freedom in teaching, we don't know that, we only know reasonable coercion. — From there, everything else that led to the impossibility of continuing those lessons followed.
It is my conviction, and perhaps it may seem rather silly and arrogant, but it is my conviction nonetheless – since I gave these lessons and the classes grew larger and larger from year to year at the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th century – it is my firm conviction that if this movement had been able to continue at that time, conditions in Central Europe would have been different in the second decade. Well, as I said, it may seem silly, but I would like to say it anyway.
So I don't think much of what can be achieved through party politics. With any socialist party, you will be least able to establish anything like a free school system. The socialist parties are striving in the most incredible way for the downfall of all school freedom. The Christian parties are such that they are dependent on the current state to call for free schools. But the moment they were at the helm, they would naturally claim this freedom only for themselves. So it is already the case that we have to say in this public life: we cannot move forward without first creating the foundation in the threefold social organism, where we also have the democratic element only in the middle part, in the legal sphere. And then the possibility of a free school system will arise quite naturally. But this will not be achieved through elections.
Z. asks to what extent, if the children of today's generation were educated according to the principles of anthroposophical knowledge, this would be sufficient to divert the forces of decay and decadence from us, or whether, assuming that the children of this generation were educated on the whole according to these principles of anthroposophical knowledge, it would not also be necessary to try to send them out into the world with the conscious intention of transforming the present social order and creating a new social organism?
Dr. Steiner: It is difficult to see exactly what my book “The Key Points of the Social Question” is based on in terms of the threefold social order; the reasons that led to this book are decades old.... It has come to pass that humanity is now at a point in its development where, with regard to social life and social opinions, someone could come along with the most correct views — but they would not have the opportunity to realize a correct opinion through any of the means that are available today for realizing opinions. The issue today is that we must first bring people into such circumstances that they can actually realize opinions and insights through social interaction.
Therefore, I do not believe it is good to ask whether, if a generation were educated in the manner intended here, the corresponding social conditions would then arise, or whether a restructuring of the social order in this or that direction would still be necessary. Rather, I would say that the situation is as follows: we must be clear that the best we can achieve would already be achieved if we succeeded in advancing as many members of a generation as possible in the sense of a general human education. And then the second question would actually disappear again from a practical point of view. For what would need to be thought about the transformation would be thought by the people educated in this way. Because they would have entered into different human relationships than are possible today, they would have different conditions for realizing their opinions.
So I think it really depends on the fact that if we want to be practical people, we should think practically, not theoretically. And thinking practically means doing what is possible, not realizing an ideal, but doing what is possible. The most promising thing is to educate as many people of a generation as possible in the sense that is possible based on human knowledge, and to trust that these people, who have been educated as correctly as possible, will then bring about a social order that is desirable.
The second question can only be answered practically, not theoretically, with the people who have been won over for this cause. That is what I mean.
Perhaps I may now answer a question that has been submitted in writing:
Question: How can we best incorporate what we have heard here into the teaching of very mentally disabled children?
Dr. Steiner: I would like to refer to a practical example. When I myself was about twenty-three or twenty-four years old, I was called to be a tutor in a family with four boys. Three of the boys were relatively easy to teach; one of them, at the age of eleven, was in the following condition: at the age of seven, he was to be taught in the manner of a public school, albeit privately. Now — the thing was in Austria — in Austria it was possible for anyone to teach freely, because the only requirement was that the teaching, however it was given, had to be proven by having the children take an exam at the end of the year. They could take their exam at any school at the end of the year; but they could be taught by angels or devils, it didn't matter, as long as they passed the exam.
Now, among these four boys, there was one who had had four or almost five years of elementary school education. I was given the last sketchbook — he was eleven years old — that he had brought back from his exam. In the other subjects, he had either kept completely quiet or talked nonsense, writing nothing on paper. But he had at least handed in the sketchbook as the only document for this exam, and it consisted of a large hole on the first page. He had done nothing but draw something and then erase it again, until there was a large hole. That was the result of his exam. Incidentally, he sometimes refused to speak a word to anyone for weeks on end. He also took to refusing to eat at the table for a while, instead going into the kitchen and eating from the containers where the leftovers were kept, i.e., not the proper food, but the leftovers.
I am describing these symptoms to you so that you can see that we were dealing with a child who belonged to the category of those who can already be called “very feeble-minded.”
Now I was told that, of course, nothing could be done with the child, because everything had been tried; and even the family doctor, who was, incidentally, one of the leading physicians in the town in question, a truly respected man, had given up on him, and the family was very unhappy. They did not know what to do with him. I said they should leave the boy with me, just like the others, and just allow me to do with him for the next three years whatever I thought was right. I couldn't get the family to agree to this except for the mother. Mothers sometimes have a real feeling for such things for certain reasons. The boy was handed over to me. I structured the lessons in such a way that they were based above all on the principle that what is referred to as mental deficiency must be treated entirely from the physical point of view, so that everything that is to be done must be done from the same perspective as I discussed for healthy children. It is simply a matter of gaining the ability to look into the inner world of a person. There was severe hydrocephalus. So it was very difficult to treat the child. But the principle had to be fought for: education must be healing, it must be based on medical principles.
And after two and a half years, I had brought the boy to the point where he could begin his high school studies, because it was now really possible to educate him in an economical way. At times, I limited the boy's schoolwork to a quarter of an hour or at most half an hour a day, but in order to make the most of that half hour, I sometimes had to spend four hours preparing for it, so that everything was organized in an economical way and he was not overworked. I did everything exactly as I thought was best. I had reserved the right to do so, and had therefore allowed as much music instruction as I thought was right, more and more, I would say, from week to week, and I also noticed how gradually his physical constitution was changing. And I certainly didn't let anyone tell me what to do. The rest of the family, except for his mother, had many objections when the boy kept turning pale. I explained: I have him now, and I have the right to let him turn pale, very pale; he will turn red again when the time comes.
So, the point was that the boy was educated with an understanding of physical development, that all mental and spiritual measures were taken in this direction.
I believe that each child is unique. You have to know the person well. That is why I say that it depends on a real understanding of people. And when I wanted to answer the question: How old is the boy really? How should I treat him? — I would have to say that the boy was in reality a child — when I received him — a child of two and a quarter years of age, and he had to be treated accordingly, even though he had apparently, that is, according to the civil birth register, reached the age of eleven. He had to be treated according to reality. However, with emotional and economic instruction, which was initially based entirely on the principle of imitation, so that systematic work was first done on imitation and then moved on to what I have today called formation — but always with consideration for health conditions — he was able to progress in two and a half years to the point where he could begin his secondary school education. I continued to help him even while he was attending secondary school. He was then freed from any further guidance, was able to complete the last two grades independently, became a doctor, practiced for a long time, and then, at the age of about forty, died in Poland during the World War from an infection he had contracted in the war.
This is one case – I could cite many others – that shows how important it is, especially for mentally disabled children, to work toward the principle that was emphasized this morning for healthy children. We have a number of mildly and, as it is called here, severely mentally disabled children at the Waldorf School. The severely mentally disabled children naturally disturb the other children in the class. That is why, under the direction of Dr. Schubert, we have set up a special class for mentally disabled children, which brings together mentally disabled children from all classes. But whenever it comes to assigning a child to the class for mentally disabled children, I always have, I would say, the pleasure of having to fight with the teacher of the class in question. No teacher really wants to give up a child, and everyone fights for that child; they try their best to keep that child among the others, and they often succeed. Because even though our classes are not small, individualized instruction makes it possible to bring such children along. So there really are very mentally disabled children in our class for the mentally disabled. But it is necessary to educate them on an absolutely individual basis. Dr. Schubert treats each child according to its own requirements and, above all, has no teaching goals for such children, but allows himself to be dictated to entirely by the nature of the child and, under certain circumstances, does something completely different with the child than what is usual in school. The point is to find the appropriate, I would say, help for each individual child.
For example, there are children who are very mentally disabled, and when you gradually learn to recognize this, you discover that they simply work so slowly with their imagination that they lose their ideas. They lose their ideas; they cannot imagine anything. That is just one case. You can achieve something with these children, with a certain type of child, if you do not do anything conventional with them, but instead, for example, just tell a child, if it understands the words — we also have children who do not even understand the words, then you have to do it differently: Quickly take your left earlobe with the thumb and index finger of your right hand! Quickly grab your right upper arm with your left hand! — If you let them orient themselves in this way, and then orient themselves to the outside world, then you can also achieve something with such children if you quickly let them recognize something: What is this? (An ear is drawn.) It is really not so easy to get the child to say: ear. But it lies in the reconnaissance and so on: it lies in the most diverse things that one has to think up and through which one first awakens the child. This awakening, this becoming active, is important for many children, but of course not for the raging ones, where other means must be used. But that's the direction it lies in. It's a matter of individual treatment, and that must be based on a real understanding of human nature.