Therapeutic Insights: Earthly and Cosmic Laws
GA 205
3 July 1921, Dornach
Lecture V
After the studies we have been conducting recently, a basic fact of human life and nature will be able to stand clearly before our soul. It is precisely when we consider a more exact relationship of the human being to his environment that the riddle always arises: how did it come to be that one cannot penetrate into the real nature of the outer world? This outer world lies before us in its phenomena, in its events, and even if we have only a feeble need for knowledge we must presume that behind these phenomena that lie before us as colored, as resounding, as warming world, and so on, the real nature of reality is concealed. There is, as it were, a veil there, and only behind this veil is the nature of reality to be found.
A similar riddle exists in relation to what is within the human being. In the last few days I have suggested that this inner element of the human being reveals the riddles of its organs only if one really arrives at this inner element. The fact is, however, that to begin with in ordinary consciousness one cannot see so deeply down into one's own inner being that one is able really to penetrate the nature of the lungs, liver, and so forth, in the way we described yesterday.
This fact of the existence of two riddles—the riddle regarding the unknowableness of the outer world and the riddle of the unknowableness of the inner world—can be understood out of the knowledge of the whole being of man, if one permits oneself to consider once the whole human nature, which shows only one side between birth and death, having its other side between death and a new birth.
Let us study the human being as he presents himself to us here between birth and death. We need only look at an aspect of the inner soul that is connected with our entire, normal daily life. We need only consider the inner fact of memory. I spoke yesterday of how this memory actually is based upon a reflecting-back on the outsides of the inner organs. We need this memory, however, for our soul life. I have often pointed out facts that show how the disturbance of this memory can undermine the entire normal life between birth and death. I told you of an example showing that the capacity for memory can extinguish itself in the human being. Such cases are well known. You can read in psychological literature of numerous such cases. It is a well-known fact that this can occur, and in a lesser degree this phenomenon is much more frequent than is generally realized. With such human beings, you need only picture that these processes—without the person knowing it in the ordinary sense of the word—are just as they are for you during sleep every night: consciousness is extinguished. Such an abnormal discontinuity of consciousness, however, has an extraordinarily significant influence upon the whole consciousness of the personality. A human being who has undergone such an experience is not quite able to get along with himself; there is something horrifying in his life afterward. From this you can see how important it is for the ordinary life between birth and death—except during the sleeping state—to have continuity of consciousness.
This continuity of consciousness is closely connected with our memory. We need this memory, therefore, in order to maintain our ordinary life normally. When one undergoes an occult development, another fact arises, the fact that it is necessary to develop soul forces that actually, during the moments of spiritual seeing, also extinguish ordinary memory. As long as one maintains this ordinary memory, one is basically unable to see into the spiritual world. Pupils of an occult development usually experience that when they begin to work on their development they have certain visions; then later they begin to complain that they no longer have these visions—the visions stay away. The reason for this is that for such visions—if they are genuine, true visions, and not hallucinations—there is really no memory. It is not possible to recall a vision, for the vision is something real. If you look at a piece of chalk and then look away, you have a memory picture. If, however, you wish to have the chalk before you, the real chalk, then you must return again to the perception; you must have the reality before you again. To experience this reality, memory is of no help at all. If you touch a hot iron, you burn yourself. Regardless of how much heat you retain in your memory, however, you cannot burn yourself. You must return to the real experience, because the vision brings you into connection with something real and not a mere picture. It is a matter, then, of returning to the vision and not merely recalling it, for a real seeing is a real occult experience and cannot become recollection; one can come to it again only in an indirect way. One can say to oneself that before the vision appeared we had gone through this or that in ordinary consciousness. This can be recalled, and one must call this stage back to the point when the vision appeared. One returns to this point. The vision cannot appear directly; rather one must retrace the path, as it were. This is not taken into account by many people, who believe that a vision can be recalled in the ordinary sense.
One must therefore undermine memory in a certain respect in occult development. This is absolutely necessary and cannot be prevented. It therefore must be said that one who strives for such an occult development must above all be certain that in ordinary life he is a reasonable person, that is, that he has no false mystical tendencies but has a healthy intellect and a sound memory. He who in ordinary life already has a tendency to wallow in unclarity and sentimentality is not fit to undergo an occult development. One absolutely must have the ability to recall the events of the day in full clarity before one can risk pressing forward to visions for which there is no such recollection.
The precautions that are recommended for an occult development are actually rooted in the nature of occult development itself. You thus can say that for the ordinary consciousness there is memory, and it is part of normal life between birth and death to have this memory.
Now I can sketch for you how human nature relates to the possession of this memory. Let me sketch it in this way (see drawing, pg. 84). What I am drawing now does not exist in this way but can be perceived in the etheric body. With this line I am indicating schematically that which is really extended over the whole body, and you would have to picture that from the head—and therefore from the sense perceptions, the sense organs—up to this line is what is outside the organs. This line represents the schematic borderline for the organs of the human being: this is the point of reflection, and beyond this line, therefore, lie heart, lungs, liver, and so on. Here (arrows) is where the reflection occurs. This line is symbolic of the human memory. You can actually picture that we have within us a kind of membrane that is really the membrane separating the etheric body from the astral body; in reality, however, it is not spatial—I have merely indicated it schematically. What is perceived is thrown back by the force of the organs that are behind it. It is thereby reflected, but reflected here, and we cannot see through it in ordinary consciousness; we cannot see through this memory membrane into the inner element of the human being; the memory conceals from us the inner element of man. It must conceal man's inner being, for otherwise the human being would not be normal in the ordinary life between birth and death. Memory is what closes off for us our ordinary consciousness from what is within. As soon as this memory is interrupted, as soon as it is torn, as happens through occult development, we see into our organs, as I described it yesterday.
Now, you see, we have the answer to the riddle of the not-being-able-to-look-within. This inner element must be concealed, for otherwise we would not be able to be normal in life between birth and death. We need this memory. The inner element of our self is thus hidden by our memory reflection. This understanding is what is necessary for a solution to this riddle.
From the other side, from the direction of the outer world, we see the veil of the senses spread out, as it were, and we do not see behind it. Let us look at the matter in this way, asking ourselves: how would it be if we were not to perceive the veil of the senses, behind which lies the essence of the world: let us say that the sense veil were perforated everywhere—if one could look through it everywhere, how would it be then? We would always flow with our perception, with our observation, into the objects. We would merge with'the objects. We would not be able to differentiate ourselves from the objects. What would be the result? We would never be able, if we were not able to differentiate ourselves from the objects, to develop feelings of love, for love is based upon the fact that one does not flow over into the other but rather remains an individuality, separated and yet “feeling across” (hinueberfuehlt). We are organized in such a way that we are capable of love between birth and death. In occult development this capacity for love must be replaced by Imagination, Inspiration, and Intuition; we must, so to speak, break through the capacity for love. It would ruin our life totally and we would become brutal and cold if in our ordinary life we did not have love. Therefore it is necessary for one who attempts an occult development from this direction to develop above all, to the highest degree, the capacity for love. If he has developed it in such a way that he cannot lose it through occult development, that he maintains it in spite of this occult development, then he can dare to penetrate through the veil of the senses and look into the real objectivity. You thus see the second riddle placed before your soul. The human being must be organized in such a way that he is able to have memory and able to love. Because he must be capable of love, he is unable with his ordinary consciousness to see behind the veil of the senses, and because he must be able to remember, he is unable to look into his own inner being.
This is really the truth of the Kantian philosophy that is so erroneous. Kant wished to investigate human subjectivity, and he concocted a few abstract concepts that actually do not say anything. In reality it is so that we must understand the human being between birth and death as a being capable of both memory and love. In this life the human being learns to know what lives in sensation; he learns to know what lives in love, and this he must carry through the portal of death. We are here on earth, therefore, in order to bring to fruition in ourselves these two faculties.
Now, if the human being, through memory, must hold apart his perceiving and thinking being, which pushes against the veil of the senses here, then he develops, primarily through the head (though the human being is head in total), the life that we designate as the life of consciousness. This life of consciousness goes no further than the thought. The thought becomes memory picture, but we do not penetrate any further than to the memory picture. There the thought is stopped. Only through the fact that it is stopped there can it return again as memory. There the thought is stopped, and our normal life between birth and death actually consists of preventing the thought from descending into the organs. Its forces do descend, as I described yesterday, but the thought as such, as it lives in us as picture, we must not allow to descend into the organs. At the moment when we die, the thought becomes what it should not become in the ordinary consciousness; the thought then becomes Imagination. This Imagination, which in occult development is striven for with all one's effort, occurs when the human being passes through death. All his thoughts become pictures; the human being then lives entirely in pictures. One therefore can understand the dead only if one learns to know this picture-language. Immediately after death the thoughts transform themselves into pictures. The human being lives with these pictures for some time between death and a new birth. Then the pictures gradually become Inspiration. The soul thus in fact grows further. The pictures become Inspiration; then the human being begins to perceive the music of the spheres. The music of the spheres becomes something real for him: he lives in the world of world-tones. Finally he grows together with the objective-spiritual universe: his soul becomes entirely Intuition. He becomes, as it were, one with the universe.
When this Intuition has existed for some time, we are at the same point at which the world Midnight Hour occurs, of which I also spoke yesterday. Now the return path begins, and Intuition is suited to take up something of what the human being has left behind in having lived here on earth. When the human being goes through the portal of death, he lives by virtue of forces other than those that here on earth we call the will. He lives into more cosmic forces. The will becomes absorbed, let me say; the will gradually disappears. When the human being has arrived at the Midnight Hour of the world, however, that is after he has gone through the Imaginative stage, the stage of Inspiration, the Intuitive stage, and arrives, as it were, at the height of life between death and a new birth, then Intuition fills itself again with will. The thought again becomes permeated by will, and this will saturates the soul more and more; the soul wrestles through again to Inspiration and then to Imagination, undergoing Imagination for some time; then it is again ripe to be embodied here. Out of the pictures is formed, in the way I have described, what appears as the transformed metabolic-limb man of the previous incarnation. You see, therefore, that through those stages that are striven for in occult development, the human being ascends to the Midnight Hour of the world and then takes the reverse path down again to Imagination, arriving again at thought formation when he embodies himself (see drawing).

During this entire time the human being absorbs the will, and now, coming again into physical existence, we see how what works in out of the cosmos, what he absorbed from the previous incarnation, is as in a picture, and the will is still within this picture. We thus have here will-saturated Imagination.
When the human being therefore arrives at a new physical life, still before his conception, he does indeed have an Imagination, but a will-saturated Imagination. Out of the Imagination, which is essentially what existed already as picture, arises the head and what belongs to it, as well as the will, which takes hold now of the new limbs and the metabolism. This thus distributes itself over the head and the rest of the human being. The head is essentially, let me say, crystallized, frozen thought; what lives in the rest of the human being is organized will. Actually the human being can truly awaken only in the head. After all, you know your thoughts—your mental images in ordinary consciousness—one can say this about all present-day human beings. What happens in the will, as I have often mentioned, is just as unknown to man as what happens in sleep. How does one know, when one lifts an arm in ordinary consciousness, what is taking place? One perceives that an arm is lifted—we have this mental image—but the act of will as such remains in sleep, similar to the period between falling asleep and awakening. One therefore can say that regarding the metabolic-limb system, man also sleeps during the day. He awakens actually only in relation to the head-man. This all works together again.
You see, official science today speaks of a certain logic. It speaks in the logic of the mental image, of making judgments, and of drawing conclusions. Picture such a conclusion. The well-known conclusion, which resides in all logic, is related to the famous logical personality: all human beings are mortal; Caesar is a human being; therefore Caesar is mortal. This is the conclusion, and every part of the conclusion is a judgment: “All human beings are mortal” is a judgment; “Caesar is a human being” is a judgment; “therefore Caesar is mortal” is a judgment. The whole is a conclusion. Man, Caesar, are mental images. If you question a person today who is one of the very clever people—we must always consider the very clever people, for they determine the prevailing tone—he says, “Everything actually takes place in the nervous system; the nervous system is the mediator of the mental image, judgment, conclusion, even of feeling and will.” Already with this kind of forming mental images, making judgments, drawing conclusions, things are not as present official thinking believes them to be. Only forming mental images as such is actually the concern of the head. When you make a judgment, then you must feel, through the mediation of the etheric body, how you stand on your legs. You do not really make judgments with your head at all; you make judgments with your legs, although with the legs of the etheric body. He who makes judgments even when he is lying down stretches his etheric legs. Making judgments is not based on the head; it is based on the legs! Of course nobody believes this today; nonetheless it is true. Drawing conclusions is based on the arms and hands, and generally upon that which lifts man out of what the animal also has. The animal stands on its legs; the animal is itself a judgment, but it does not draw conclusions. The human being draws conclusions; for that purpose his arms have been liberated; that is what his arms are there for, not for walking. The human being has his arms free so that he can be a being that can draw conclusions. What happens when one stretches one's etheric legs or when one moves one's astral arm is a judgment, is a conclusion, which merely reflects itself in the head as mental image and then actually becomes a mental image. One thus needs the entire human being, not merely the nerve-sense human being, in order to arrive at judgments and conclusions.
Now, if you take this into consideration, you will say to yourself: the human being really lifts judgments and conclusions out of his limb system. These are fundamentally already acts of will, and this comes out of a much more indefinite state than forming mental images. We basically experience the same thing when we finish drawing a conclusion as when we wake up in the morning: we have lifted it out of the depths of our being. That which has become old from the previous life to this life, which lives itself out in the head, leads us to be able to have mental images. In the head we are old in relation to the cosmos when we are born. Our will is able to renew itself because in relation to the cosmos we have become young. What we carry with us as our head is always reminiscent of the previous incarnation. It is the old element. The metabolic-limb system, however, has been conquered by the will in entering this incarnation. It is actually mediated by the mother's body. The rest of the body—this can be confirmed by an outer, empirical study of embryology—is actually constructed from out of the cosmos in the mother. The head is simply a copy of the cosmos, brought about by outer forces. Whoever wishes to deny this should also say that it is nonsense that the magnetic field of the earth positions the needle of the magnet. The physicist goes beyond the magnet's needle if he wishes to explain it; the physiologist, the embryologist, the biologist, remains in the mother's body when he wishes to explain the embryo. That is just as nonsensical as if one wished to explain the needle of the magnet only out of itself. One must proceed out to the whole cosmos.
In development we have, to begin with, the head, and the rest of the body is only attached to it; this part the will conquers for itself, having approached Imagination during the passage through life between death and a new birth from the Midnight Hour of Existence onward. Now, when we study this human being (see drawing, page 84) we find that everything pertaining to thinking and perception lies above the membrane of memory, while everything pertaining to willing lies below this membrane. The will works up from below, works up out of the unconscious, and one finds it only in the way that we explained yesterday. There the will works upward. In regard to the will, we are sleeping. We thus actually have the human being as a duality in the life between birth and death. It is true the human being is a monad, but he is this in regard to the whole world, and this monadic quality must be brought about in becoming; he must renew it again and again. In reality, however, the human being between birth and death is dualistic: the thought, to some extent, with the perception on one side, the will with the feeling (Gemüt) on the other side.
The human being is thereby actually the average, I would like to call it, of two worlds. Be honest and ask yourselves, in every moment of your lives what do you have in consciousness? Your memory pictures—what you experienced at age two, three, five, or six—are the content of your consciousness. What comes through from below, welling up out of the will, is love, the capacity for love. The human being is actually nothing other than what in the average of two worlds appears as memory pictures and love. Basically the human being is organized in such a way that above is a world that is cosmic thought, while below is a world that is cosmic will. The human being is continually a point of attack for Lucifer from the side of will and a point of attack for Ahriman from the side of thought (see drawing, page 84). Ahriman continually strives to make the human being all head. Lucifer continually strives to cut the head off so that the human being cannot think at all, so that everything streams out in warmth by way of the heart, overflows with world love, flowing into the world as world love, as an excessively sentimental cosmic being flows out.
In our age, in our highly praised civilization, it is chiefly Ahrimanic influences active in us. These Ahrimanic influences have always been sensed by sensitive human beings. When I was still a very young man, I spoke once with an Austrian poet who was quite well known at that time; he had a fine feeling for what is emerging in our civilization, and he expressed it in a half-pictorial way; this half-pictorial quality was for him, however, a reality. He said to me—and it seems to me as if it were happening today—“Considering how we human beings are today, and especially if things continue along the lines they are going now, humanity will actually be confronted by a terrible fate, for the human being will gradually lose the agility of his limbs; he will no longer be able to walk properly; he will always want to ride a bicycle and to travel mechanically. He will lose the agility of his hands, and everything will become technical. Just as a muscle atrophies if it is not used, so everything in the human body will atrophy and the human being will become merely a head. The head will become bigger and bigger until finally the human being will just roll along, with the rest of his organism totally crippled.”
This picture hovered like a nightmare before this Austrian poet—Hermann Rollett was his name—and he described it very visually, for it weighed upon him terribly, this picture that human beings will become rolling heads due to our civilization. There is something quite true underlying this picture, however. What underlies it is that, in fact, in our time the powers are extraordinarily strong that would like to develop our heads more and more. With the physical head they will not succeed so well, but with the etheric head they will be more successful. It is therefore so, in fact, that in our time the Ahrimanic powers would like to make us thoroughly head-men; they would like to transform us completely into mere thinkers.
For the human being in a healthy development, however, the other pole exists, the will pole, which always counteracts this so that when we die the will has grasped the thought. Thought must not yet be alone. You see, when we are born, we have gathered new will, but the thought separates itself and finds our head; the will takes hold of the rest of the body. While we live on the earth there is within us a continual interaction between will and thought. The will takes hold of the thought, and we must carry this fusing of will and thought through death. Ahriman would like to prevent this. He would like for the will to remain separate, for the thought alone to be particularly cultivated. We would lose our individuality if we were finally to arrive at the point toward which Ahriman strives. We would completely lose our individuality. We would arrive, in the moment of death, at an excessively, intensively cultivated thought. We human beings would be unable to hold this thought, and Ahriman could lay hold of it himself and integrate it into the rest of the world so that this thought would work further in the rest of the world. This is, in fact, the destiny that threatens humanity if we persist in the present-day materialism; then Ahrimanic powers would become so strong that Ahriman could steal thoughts from the human being and incorporate them into the earth in their effectiveness, so that the earth, which actually ought to come to an end, would become consolidated. Ahriman works toward consolidating the earth, toward the earth remaining as earth. Ahriman works against the saying, “Heaven and earth shall pass away, but my words shall not pass away.” He wishes the words to be cast aside and heaven and earth to remain. This can be accomplished only if the thoughts of human beings are stolen, if human beings are deindividualized.

If Ahriman could continue to work as he has been able to especially since the year 1845, human brains would become more and more rigid, and human beings would live as though subject to compulsive thoughts, to materialized thoughts, as I explained yesterday. This would show itself particularly in human beings being guided in their education in such a way that they would no longer have mobile thoughts; rather, when they reached a certain age, they would have completely fixed thoughts. Now ask yourselves whether that is not already true to a great extent in our time! Just think how fixed the thoughts of many human beings are today. Is it possible to teach much to human beings today? Their thoughts are so rigid, so solid, that it is almost impossible to teach them very much. This is already being used by Ahriman. Ahriman strives more and more to intensify the process of making thoughts into compulsive thoughts. An active product in the scientific realm of these compulsive thoughts is atomism. In atomism, the spirit behind the veil of the senses is not intimated but only atoms, everywhere vibrating, whirling atoms. Of course you cannot reach behind the veil of the senses in any other way than with thoughts. Ahriman, however, has confused people so much already that they have materialized their thoughts. They no longer believe that they themselves have actually merely constructed a world with thought-atoms; they consider this as reality. They therefore have externalized the thoughts. This is a thoroughly Ahrimanized world. Today we have an Ahrimanized science, Ahrimanized through and through.
That this is actually the case can sometimes be encountered in a frightening way. I received, for example—maybe thirty-five years ago—a manuscript. It was a very scholarly manuscript. It intended to give the human differential—I am telling you a true story! By the human differential was meant the differential that if one integrates it will result in the human being. If one therefore integrates from foot to head, one will get the human being. It was a very scholarly treatise, and the physician who brought it to me said, “You may meet the author personally,” for he was in his clinic. When I became acquainted with the man, he said, “Yes, this is so; I have experienced it myself. I consist altogether of differential atoms. Everywhere there are differentials, and I am only an integral.” He conceived himself as differentiated exclusively into atoms; that was an intellectual-Ahrimanic form of consciousness. In the last analysis, however, it is merely the system of atomism grown rigid. When this manuscript was brought to me, I was led to recall that there is a LaPlacian world formula: according to it, it should be possible, by integration from the processes of atoms, to calculate, by inserting a specific value, when, let us say, Caesar crossed the Rubicon, or something similar! Here one does not integrate from foot to head, but rather one merely needs to integrate from the world's beginning to its end. This can be done simply by bringing atoms into the world formula in the appropriate way. This whole way of thinking looks suspiciously similar to the treatise of the man who considered himself an integral locked in between the borders of foot and head. By viewing such matters correctly, one can receive clear insight into the progressively Ahrimanic nature of our culture.
This must, of course, be counteracted, which can happen only if our concepts are again led to have a pictorial quality, so that we do not merely work with abstract concepts but rather bring to our concepts a pictorial quality. Then, when passing through the portal of death, we will already be bringing pictures with us, and we will find the connection to what the world demands. Otherwise humanity approaches the danger of losing itself. What actually ought to be individualized by the flowing of the will into the thoughts will become mineralized, will be made into universal earth. The earth thus would become a world- being, but humanity would in terms of its soul flow into a great cemetery.
Such overviews of civilization must occasionally be made. In our time it is absolutely essential to make such overviews, for whoever is able to oversee more precisely the matters of evolution today knows how rapidly this ossification of our civilization is approaching us. On this occasion I would not like to forget to mention that until the year 869 A.D., until the Eighth Ecumenical Council in Constantinople, man's members were considered to be body, soul, and spirit. At this Eighth Ecumenical Council, the following formula, to which I have repeatedly drawn attention, was established for the West: it must not be believed that man consists of body, soul, and spirit, but only of body and soul, and the soul has a few spiritual properties. This decision then passed into the world. In the Middle Ages it was heresy to believe that man consisted of body, soul, and spirit. Today philosophy professors discover by means of "unprejudiced science" that man consists only of body and soul. This "unprejudiced science" is nothing but a decision by the Eighth Ecumenical Council. That, however, strives toward something else. One could say that through this Eighth Ecumenical Council humanity has lost the consciousness of the spirit, which must be regained. If we proceed further along the path I have just described to you, however, humanity will also lose consciousness of the soul.
Among the materialists of the nineteenth century, this consciousness of the soul had already disappeared to such an extent that it was said that the brain secretes thoughts just as the liver secretes bile. It seemed, therefore, as if only a consciousness of the bodily processes remained. In fact, already today, without people knowing it, there are all kinds of underground societies that work toward things that lead in a direction similar to the one decided upon in 869 at the Council of Constantinople. They work to explain that man does not consist of both body and soul but rather that man consists only of the body and that the soul is merely something that develops out of the body. It is therefore impossible, if you take this viewpoint, to educate man from the aspect of soul; one must find a substance, a material substance, that can be injected into a human being at a certain age; then he will develop his talents by injection. This tendency definitely exists. It is right in line with the Ahrimanic development: no longer establish schools in order to teach, but inject certain substances instead. This is possible. It is not as if it were not possible. It is indeed possible, but the human being is made thereby into an automaton. One would speed up immensely what would otherwise be achieved by means of developing ready-made thoughts, with an education that overpowers thinking. There are already such substances that can be developed, substances that if injected at seven years of age, for example, could make the public schools altogether expendable; the human being would then become a thought automaton. He would become exceptionally clever but would not have a consciousness of it. This cleverness would just run off like a machine. What do many people today care, however, whether the human being has an inner life or not, as long as outwardly he walks around and does this or that? Such human beings that submit themselves by preference to the Ahrimanic civilization—and they do exist today—strive for such ideals. After all, what could be more tempting than the attitude, such as today is spreading far and wide, which would prefer to find an injectible substance to struggling with the children for years and years? One must present these things as being drastic. If one does not present the situation as being drastic, humanity today would not notice toward what goals it is striving. By such an injectible substance, one would simply achieve a loosening of the etheric body in the physical body. As soon as the etheric body is loosened, the play between the etheric body and the universe would become exceedingly lively, and man would become an automaton. The physical body here on earth must be developed through spiritual will.
Out of the full consciousness that one faces when confronting the automization of the human being, the methods for the Waldorf School, the pedagogical methods for the Waldorf School, were discovered. In this regard they should be motors of civilization that will lead again to a spiritualization, for basically—one can already say this—today above all it is necessary for the spiritual life among human beings to be particularly nurtured. One therefore should look courageously upon all that appears as symptoms of the improvement of individual human beings. I have often mentioned before how humanity strives today to place routine in place of a real practice of life—routine, which is truly the mechanization of life.
I was overjoyed recently when I read that there are still people who, going beyond the ordinary routine of life, have already perceived the practical life as something important. Recently a news item spread through the world, describing how Edison tested the people he wished to prepare for some sort of practical work. It did not interest him at all whether or not a merchant was able to keep books. That, he said, can be learned in three weeks if one is a reasonable, intelligent person. None of these specialties interested him at all; these one can learn. When Edison wished to know whether people would be of any use in practical life, however, he tested them by asking them questions like, "How large is Siberia?" Thus when he wished to discover whether someone was a good bookkeeper, Edison did not ask whether he could conduct an audit properly, but he asked, “How large is Siberia?” or “If a room is five meters long, three meters wide, and four meters high, how many cubic meters of air are contained in this room?” and similar questions. He posed questions like, “What is standing at the place where Caesar crossed the Rubicon?” and so on, just general questions. And according to the extent to which a person could answer such questions, Edison hired him as a bookkeeper, or whatever. He knew that if a person could answer such a general question this was a proof that his schooling had not been in vain, that as a child he had developed mobile thoughts, and this is what Edison demanded.
This is how practical life really should be conducted, whereas in recent times we have steered precisely in the opposite direction, succumbing more and more to specialization, so that finally one could really despair of finding the people needed for practical life. It is impossible to get anyone to do something outside the pigeonhole into which he wants to fit. Already today it must be said that in this way too we must work toward the mobility of thoughts. If there is such a working toward the mobility of thoughts, then these thoughts will not harden, and Ahriman will be in a difficult position. You can see yourselves, if you look at life, how few Edisons there are who have such practical principles. It is necessary to work toward a pictorial quality of concepts; whoever works toward the pictorial quality of concepts will no longer be able to say that he does not understand spiritual science. It is precisely that tug which a person giyes himself in order to receive from abstractions the pictorial quality of concepts that presents on the one hand the possibility of grasping that the earth evolved out of ancient Moon, Sun, Saturn; on the other hand, for the inner life, the life of feeling intermingles with the pictorial conceptions, with the imagination. The fully human being thus will arise.


Siebenter Vortrag
[ 1 ] Nach den Betrachtungen, die wir angestellt haben, wird nun eine Grundtatsache des menschlichen Lebens und Wesens gut vor unsere Seele hintreten können. Es ist ja gerade dann, wenn man sich auf eine genauere Betrachtung des Verhältnisses des Menschen zu seiner Umwelt einläßt, immer eine Art Rätsel, wie es denn komme, daß man nicht hineinschauen kann in das eigentliche Wesen der äußeren Welt. Diese äußere Welt liegt uns vor in ihren Phänomenen, in ihren Ereignissen und auch, wenn wir nur ein schwaches Erkenntnisbedürfnis haben, müssen wir vermuten, daß hinter diesen Erscheinungen, die uns als farbige, als tönende, als wärmende Welt und so weiter vorliegen, erst das eigentliche Wesen der Wirklichkeit verborgen ist. Gewissermaßen ein Schleier ist da, und hinter diesem Schleier ist erst das eigentliche Wesen der Wirklichkeit. Auf der andern Seite liegt ein ähnliches Rätsel vor mit Bezug auf dasjenige, was menschliches Inneres ist. Ich habe ja in den letzten Tagen darauf hingedeutet, wie dieses menschliche Innere seine Organrätsel enthüllt, wenn man erst wirklich hineingelangt in dieses Innere. Aber es liegt doch zunächst für das gewöhnliche Bewußtsein die Tatsache vor, daß man nicht so tief hinunterschauen kann ins eigene Innere, um die Natur von Lunge, Leber und so weiter, wie wir das gestern besprochen haben, wirklich durchschauen zu können. Nun, diese Tatsache des Vorhandenseins zweier Rätsel, des Rätsels gegenüber der Unerkennbarkeit der äußeren Welt, des Rätsels der Unerkennbarkeit der inneren Welt, diese Tatsache versteht man aus der Erkenntnis des ganzen Wesens des Menschen heraus, wenn man sich einläßt darauf, die ganze menschliche Natur einmal ins Auge zu fassen, die ja nur die eine Seite hier zwischen Geburt und Tod uns zeigt, die andere Seite zwischen dem Tod und einer neuen Geburt hat.
[ 2 ] Aber betrachten wir zunächst den Menschen, wie er sich uns darbietet hier zwischen der Geburt und dem Tode. Wir brauchen da zunächst eine innere seelische Tatsache, die mit unserem ganzen normalen Tagesleben zusammenhängt, wir brauchen die innere Tatsache des Gedächtnisses. Ich habe gestern davon gesprochen, wie dieses Gedächtnis eigentlich beruht auf einer Rückspiegelung an den Außenseiten der inneren Organe. Aber wir brauchen ja dieses Gedächtnis für unser Seelenleben. Ich habe öfters auf Tatsachen hingewiesen, welche zeigen, wie die Störung dieses Gedächtnisses unser ganzes normales Leben hier zwischen Geburt und Tod untergraben kann. Es war dies ein Beispiel, welches zeigte, daß das Erinnerungsvermögen sich im Menschen auslöschen kann. Solche Fälle sind ja auch sonst bekannt. Sie können in psychologischen Werken von zahlreichen solchen Fällen lesen. Es ist ja eine ganz bekannte Tatsache, daß das geschehen kann, und in kleinerem Maßstabe findet sich diese Erscheinung viel häufiger, als man eigentlich denkt. Und Sie brauchen sich ja auch nichts anderes vorzustellen, als daß einfach für solche Menschen diese Vorgänge, ohne daß sie im gewöhnlichen Sinne des Wortes davon wissen, so sind, wie für Sie vom Einschlafen bis zum Aufwachen jede Nacht: das Bewußtsein ist ausgelöscht. Aber es übt eine solche abnorme Diskontinuität des Bewußtseins einen außerordentlich bedeutsamen Einfluß auf das ganze Persönlichkeitsbewußtsein aus. Es kommt der Mensch nicht mehr mit sich zurecht, wenn er so etwas durchgemacht hat; es ist ihm nachträglich im Leben eigentlich etwas Furchtbares. Daraus aber können Sie sehen, wie wichtig es ist, für das gewöhnliche Leben zwischen Geburt und Tod - mit Ausnahme der Schlafenszustände - die Kontinuität des Bewußtseins zu haben.
[ 3 ] Die Kontinuität des Bewußtseins hängt ja zusammen mit unserem Gedächtnis. Wir brauchen also das Gedächtnis, um das gewöhnliche Leben normal zu unterhalten. Nun besteht, wenn man eine okkulte Entwickelung durchmacht, eine andere Tatsache. Es besteht die Tatsache, daß man nötig hat, solche Seelenkräfte zu entwickeln, welche eigentlich für die Momente des geistigen Schauens dieses gewöhnliche Gedächtnis auch auslöschen. Solange man nämlich dieses gewöhnliche Gedächtnis hat, kann man im Grunde genommen nicht in die geistige Welt hineinschauen. Und bei Schülern der okkulten Entwickelung stellt sich gewöhnlich als ein Erlebnis dieses heraus, daß sie anfangs, wenn sie beginnen, an ihrer Entwickelung zu arbeiten, gewisse Schauungen haben und dann später darüber klagen, daß sie diese Schauungen nicht mehr haben, daß sie ausbleiben. Das beruht darauf, daß es für solche Schauungen, wenn sie echte, wahre Schauungen sind, wenn sie nicht Halluzinationen sind, eigentlich kein Gedächtnis gibt. Es ist nicht möglich, sich wiederum an eine Schauung zu erinnern, denn die Schauung ist etwas Reales. Sehen Sie ein Stück Kreide an und sehen Sie wieder weg, so haben Sie das Erinnerungsbild. Wollen Sie aber die Kreide vor sich haben, die reale Kreide, dann müssen Sie wieder zurückkehren zur Wahrnehmung, Sie müssen wiederum das Reale vor sich haben. Für dieses Reale hilft Ihnen das Gedächtnis gar nichts. Wenn Sie ein heißes Eisen berühren, so verbrennen Sie sich. Sie können noch soviel von der Hitze in der Erinnerung haben, Sie verbrennen sich nicht dabei. Sie müssen, weil die Schauung Sie in Zusammenhang bringt mit etwas Realem und nicht ein bloßes Bild ist, wiederum zu ihr zurückkehren. Es handelt sich darum, daß man zu der Schauung wiederum zurückkehrt, nicht sich bloß erinnert, denn ein wirkliches Schauen ist ein wirkliches okkultes Erlebnis und kann nicht Erinnerung werden, sondern man kann nur auf indirekte Weise wiederum dazu kommen. Man kann sich sagen: Bevor die Schauung eingetreten ist, habe ich dies oder jenes durchgemacht im gewöhnlichen Bewußtsein. Daran kann man sich dann erinnern, und man muß diese Etappe wiederum heraufrufen bis zu dem Punkte, wo die Schauung eingetreten ist; dann kommt man bei dem Punkte an. Sie kann nicht wieder unmittelbar eintreten, aber man muß den Weg gewissermaßen wiederum zurückmachen. Das berücksichtigen viele nicht; sie glauben, man könne sich an eine Schauung im gewöhnlichen Sinne erinnern. Man muß also in einer gewissen Beziehung sogar bei der okkulten Entwickelung das Gedächtnis untergraben. Das ist durchaus notwendig, es läßt sich das gar nicht verhindern. Deshalb muß man sagen: Derjenige, der eine solche okkulte Entwickelung anstrebt, der muß vor allen Dingen sicher sein, daß er im gewöhnlichen Leben ein vernünftiger Mensch ist, das heißt, daß er ohne irgendwelche falschmystischen Anwandelungen einen gesunden Verstand und ein gesundes Gedächtnis hat. Wer im gewöhnlichen Leben schon irgendwie herumschwefelt oder schwimmelt, ist nicht geeignet, eine okkulte Entwickelung durchzumachen. Man muß durchaus die Möglichkeit haben, sich an die Ereignisse des Tages mit aller Bestimmtheit zu erinnern, dann kann man es wagen, zu den Schauungen vorzudringen, für die es eben nicht ein solches Erinnern gibt. Die Vorsichten, die anempfohlen werden für eine okkulte Entwickelung, sind durchaus eben in der Sache selbst begründet. So können Sie sagen: Für das gewöhnliche Bewußtsein ist das Gedächtnis da, und es gehört zu einem normalen Leben zwischen Geburt und Tod dieses Gedächtnis.
[ 4 ] Nun kann ich Ihnen schematisch aufzeichnen, wie sich das menschliche Wesen im Besitze dieses Gedächtnisses verhält. Ich will es Ihnen etwa so aufzeichnen (siehe Zeichnung Seite 128). Es ist das, was ich jetzt aufzeichne, nicht als solches vorhanden, aber es ist im Ätherleib wahrzunehmen. Ich zeichne schematisch als diese Linie das, was eigentlich über den ganzen Leib ausgedehnt ist, und Sie müßten sich dann vorstellen, daß vom Kopf, also von den Sinneswahrnehmungen, Sinnesorganen, bis zu dieser Linie dasjenige ist, was außerhalb der Organe ist. Diese Linie soll die schematische Grenzlinie für die Organe des Menschen sein: Hier wird zurückgespiegelt, und jenseits dieser Linie liegen also Herz, Lunge, Leber und so weiter. Hier (Pfeile) wird zurückgespiegelt. Das ist symbolisch die Linie des menschlichen Gedächtnisses. Sie können sich förmlich vorstellen: Wir haben in unserem Inneren ein Häutchen; es ist eigentlich das Grenzhäutchen zwischen dem AÄtherleib und dem Astralleib, nur ist es in Wirklichkeit nicht räumlich, es ist eben schematisch gezeichnet. Es wird dasjenige, was wahrgenommen ist, durch die Kraft der Organe, die dahinter sind, zurückgeworfen; es wird dadurch gespiegelt, aber es wird eben dennoch hier gespiegelt, und wir können nicht durchschauen im gewöhnlichen Bewußtsein, wir können durch die Gedächtnishaut nicht in das Innere des Menschen hineinschauen. Das Gedächtnis deckt uns das Innere des Menschen zu. Es muß das Innere des Menschen zudecken, sonst wäre der Mensch nicht normal im gewöhnlichen Leben zwischen Geburt und Tod. Das Gedächtnis ist dasjenige, was uns unser gewöhnliches Bewußtsein nach innen zu verschließt. Sobald dieses Gedächtnis unterbrochen wird, sobald also irgendwo ein Riß entsteht, wie es durch die okkulte Entwickelung geschieht, sehen wir so, wie ich es gestern beschrieben habe, in unsere Organe hinein.
[ 5 ] Nun haben wir die Antwort auf das Rätsel des Nicht-nach-Innenschauen-Könnens. Es muß zugedeckt sein dieses Innere, sonst würden wir nicht normal sein im Leben zwischen Geburt und Tod, denn wir brauchen dieses Gedächtnis. Also das Innere unseres Selbst wird uns verhüllt durch unsere Gedächtnisspiegelung. Das ist dasjenige, was Sie als eine Lösung dieses Rätsels haben müssen.
[ 6 ] Nach der andern Seite, nach der Seite der Außenwelt, da sehen wir gewissermaßen ausgebreitet den Sinnenschleier und sehen nicht dahinter. Wir wollen einmal die Sache so auffassen, daß wir uns sagen: Wie wäre es, wenn wir dahintersehen würden, wenn wir also, nach außen schauend, nicht den Sinnenschleier hätten, hinter dem die Wesenheit der Welt liegt, sondern wenn das überall durchbrochen wäre, wenn man da überall durchschauen und durchgucken könnte, wie wäre es dann? - Wir würden stets mit unserer Wahrnehmung, mit unserer Anschauung in die Dinge hineinfließen. Wir würden mit den Dingen zusammenfließen. Wir könnten uns nicht unterscheiden von den Dingen. Und was wäre die Folge? Niemals könnten wir, wenn wir uns nicht unterscheiden könnten von den Dingen, die Gefühle der Liebe entwickeln, denn Liebe beruht darauf, daß man nicht hinüberfließt in den andern, sondern daß man eine Individualität bleibt, getrennt ist und dennoch hinüberfühlt. Wir sind so organisiert, daß wir liebefähig sind zwischen Geburt und Tod. Und in der okkulten Entwickelung muß diese Liebefähigkeit wiederum durch Imagination, Inspiration, Intuition ersetzt werden. Wir müssen gewissermaßen die Liebefähigkeit durchbrechen. Es würde unser Leben total ruinieren, wir würden kaltherzig werden, wenn wir im gewöhnlichen Leben die Liebe nicht hätten. Daher ist es wieder notwendig, daß derjenige, der nach dieser Richtung hin eine okkulte Entwickelung durchmacht, vor allen Dingen im höchsten Grade die Liebefähigkeit entwickelt. Hat er sie so entwickelt, daß er sie nicht verlieren kann durch die okkulte Entwickelung, daß er sie trotz dieser Entwickelung behält, dann kann er es wagen, den Sinnenschleier zu durchdringen und in die wirkliche Objektivität hinauszuschauen. Sie sehen das zweite Rätsel vor Ihre Seele hingestellt. Der Mensch muß so organisiert sein, daß er gedächtnisfähig und liebefähig ist. Weil er liebefähig sein muß, kann er mit dem gewöhnlichen Bewußtsein nicht hinter den Sinnenschleier hinüberschauen, und weil er gedächtnisfähig sein muß, kann er nicht in das eigene Innere hineinschauen.
[ 7 ] Das ist dasjenige, was eigentlich die Wahrheit der so falschen Kantschen Philosophie ist. Kant wollte die menschliche Subjektivität untersuchen und hat einige ganz abstrakte Begriffe hingepfahlt, die eigentlich nichts besagen. In Wirklichkeit ist es so, daß wir den Menschen zwischen Geburt und Tod als gedächtnisfähiges und liebefähiges Wesen verstehen müssen. Da lernt der Mensch das kennen, was in der Empfindung lebt, da lernt der Mensch kennen, was in der Liebe lebt. Und das hat er durch die Pforte des Todes hinüberzutragen. Aber deshalb sind wir auf der Erde, damit wir in diesen beiden Fähigkeiten uns vervollkommnen.
[ 8 ] Wenn nun der Mensch durch das Gedächtnis auseinanderzuhalten hat sein wahrnehmendes und denkendes Wesen, das außerdem hier an den Sinnenschleier stößt, dann entwickelt er, hauptsächlich durch das Haupt — aber der Mensch ist ja im Ganzen Haupt -, das Leben, das wir als das Leben des Bewußtseins bezeichnen. Dieses Leben des Bewußtseins bleibt beim Gedanken stehen. Der Gedanke wird Erinnerungsbild. Aber wir dringen nicht weiter vor als bis zum Erinnerungsbild. Da wird der Gedanke aufgehalten; nur dadurch, daß er da aufgehalten wird, kann er ja immer wiederum zurückkommen als Erinnerung. Da wird der Gedanke aufgehalten, und unser normales Leben zwischen Geburt und Tod beruht eigentlich darauf, daß wir den Gedanken nicht hinunterlassen in die Organe. Seine Kräfte kommen hinunter, wie ich das gestern geschildert habe, aber den Gedanken als solchen, wie er lebt in uns als Bild, den können wir nicht hinunterlassen. In dem Augenblicke, wo wir sterben, da wird der Gedanke das, was er im gewöhnlichen Bewußtsein nicht werden soll: da wird der Gedanke Imagination. Diese Imagination, die in der okkulten Entwickelung mit aller Mühe erstrebt wird, die tritt ein, wenn der Mensch durch den Tod geht. Alle seine Gedanken werden Bilder. Der Mensch lebt dann ganz in Bildern. Man kann daher den Toten nur verstehen, wenn man diese Bildersprache kennengelernt hat. Sofort nach dem Tode verwandeln sich die Gedanken in Bilder. Mit diesen Bildern lebt der Mensch ja einige Zeit zwischen dem Tod und einer neuen Geburt. Dann werden die Bilder nach und nach Inspiration. So wächst die Seele tatsächlich weiter. Die Bilder werden Inspiration. Da fängt der Mensch dann an, die Sphärenmusik wahrzunehmen. Da wird für ihn die Sphärenmusik etwas Reales. Er lebt in der Welt der Weltentöne. Und zuletzt wächst er zusammen mit dem objektiv-geistigen Weltenall. Seine Seele wird ganz Intuition. Er wird gewissermaßen eins mit dem Weltenall.
[ 9 ] Das ist zugleich der Punkt, wenn eine Zeitlang diese Intuition da war, wo die Weltenmitternacht eintritt, von der ich auch gestern wieder sprach. Nun beginnt der Rückweg, und die Intuition ist nun geeignet, etwas aufzunehmen, was der Mensch allmählich verlassen hat, indem er hier auf der Erde gelebt hat. Wenn der Mensch nämlich durch des Todes Pforte getreten ist, lebt er durch andere Kräfte, als diejenigen sind, die wir hier auf der Erde den Willen nennen. Er lebt sich in kosmischere Kräfte ein. Der Wille wird, ich möchte sagen, absorbiert, der Wille schwindet allmählich dahin. Aber wenn der Mensch an der Weltenmitternacht angekommen ist, also nachdem er durch den imaginativen Zustand, durch den Inspirationszustand, Intuitionszustand durchgegangen ist und gewissermaßen auf der Höhe des Lebens zwischen Tod und neuer Geburt angekommen ist, dann füllt sich die Intuition wiederum mit Wille an. Der Gedanke wird wiederum willensmäßig, und dieser Wille durchsättigt immer mehr und mehr die Seele, die nun wiederum zur Inspiration sich durchringt, dann zur Imagination. Wenn sie bei der Imagination angekommen ist und eine Zeitlang sie durchgemacht hat, dann ist sie wiederum reif, hier verkörpert zu werden. Aus dem Bilde heraus bildet sich auf die Weise, wie ich es geschildert habe, was dann als umgewandelter Gliedmaßen-Stoffwechselmensch der vorigen Inkarnation da auftritt. Sie sehen also, durch diejenigen Stufen, welche angestrebt werden bei der okkulten Entwickelung, steigt der Mensch hinauf bis zur Weltenmitternacht, und er geht dann den umgekehrten Weg wiederum herunter bis zur Imagination und kommt bei der Gedankenbildung an, wenn er sich verkörpert.
[ 10 ] Während dieser ganzen Zeit nimmt der Mensch den Willen auf. Und nun, indem der Mensch wiederum ins physische Dasein kommt, sehen wir, wie das, was aus dem Kosmos hereinwirkt, was er in sich aufgenommen hat von der vorigen Inkarnation, im Bilde ist, und im Bilde ist noch der Wille drinnen. Wir haben also jetzt hier eine willensdurchtränkte Imagination.

[ 11 ] Wenn der Mensch also vor der Konzeption ankommt bei einem neuen physischen Leben, hat er zwar eine Imagination, aber eine willensdurchtränkte Imagination. Aus der Imagination, die im wesentlichen ja dasjenige ist, was schon da war als Bild, entsteht das Haupt und was zunächst dazugehört, und der Wille, der bemächtigt sich der neuen Gliedmaßen und des Stoffwechsels. So daß sich dieses hier verteilt auf das Haupt und auf den übrigen Menschen. Das Haupt ist im wesentlichen, ich möchte sagen, kristallisierter, erstarrter Gedanke; was im übrigen Menschen lebt, ist organisierter Wille. Eigentlich kann der Mensch nur im Haupte wirklich aufwachen. Nicht wahr, Ihre Gedanken kennen Sie, Ihre Vorstellungen sind im gewöhnlichen Bewußtsein — das kann man zu allen heutigen Menschen sagen; was im Willen vorgeht, ich habe es öfter erwähnt, das ist den Menschen genau so unbekannt wie das, was im Schlafe vor sich geht. Denn wie weiß man, wenn man einen Arm hebt, im gewöhnlichen Bewußtsein, was da vor sich geht! Man nimmt wahr, daß der Arm gehoben wird, die Vorstellung hat man, aber der Willensakt als solcher bleibt im Schlaf, verhältnismäßig so, wie dasSchlafen zwischen Einschlafen und Aufwachen ist. Also kann man sagen: Mit Bezug auf den Gliedmaßen-Stoffwechselmenschen schläft der Mensch auch bei Tag; er erwacht eigentlich nur in bezug auf seinen Hauptesmenschen. - Das wirkt alles wiederum zusammen.
[ 12 ] Die offizielle Wissenschaft heute spricht von einer gewissen Logik. Sie spricht in der Logik von Vorstellung, von Urteil und von Schluß. Ja, stellen wir einen solchen Schluß vor uns hin. Der bekannte Schluß, der in allen Logiken steht, bezieht sich ja auf die berühmte logische Persönlichkeit. Also: AlleMenschen sind sterblich, Cäsar ist ein Mensch, also ist Cäsar sterblich. - Das ist der Schluß. Jedes Glied des Schlusses ist ein Urteil: Alle Menschen sind sterblich - ist ein Urteil, Cäsar ist ein Mensch - ist ein Urteil, also ist Cäsar sterblich - ist ein Urteil. Das Ganze ist ein Schluß. Mensch, Cäsar, sind Vorstellungen.
[ 13 ] Wenn Sie heute einen Menschen fragen, der nun wiederum zu den ganz Gescheiten gehört - wir müssen uns immer an die ganz Gescheiten halten, denn die geben ja den Ton an -, dann sagt er: Alles das geht so vor, daß es sich im Nervensystem abspielt. Das Nervensystem ist der Vermittler von Vorstellung, Urteil, Schluß, sogar von Gefühl und Wille. - Aber schon bei diesem Vorstellen, Urteilen und Schließen ist es nicht so, wie das heutige offizielle Denken meint. Nur das Vorstellen als solches ist nämlich eigentlich eine Kopfangelegenheit. Wenn Sie ein Urteil fällen, dann müssen Sie allerdings durch Vermittelung des Ätherleibes fühlen, wie Sie auf den Beinen stehen. Sie urteilen nämlich gar nicht mit dem Kopf, Sie urteilen mit den Beinen, allerdings mit den Beinen des Ätherleibes. Derjenige, der urteilt, auch wenn er liegt, streckt seine Ätherbeine aus. Urteilen beruht nicht auf dem Kopfe, Urteilen beruht auf den Beinen. Das glaubt einem natürlich heute keiner, aber wahr ist es doch. Und Schließen, das beruht auf den Armen und Händen, überhaupt auf dem, was sich beim Menschen heraushebt aus dem, was auch das Tier hat. Das Tier steht auf den Beinen, das Tier ist selbst ein Urteil, aber es schließt nicht. Der Mensch schließt. Dazu hat er seine Arme frei bekommen, dazu sind seine Arme da, nicht zum Gehen. Der Mensch hat seine Arme frei, damit er ein Wesen ist, das schließen kann. Und was sich vollzieht, indem man auf seine Ätherbeine tritt, und was sich vollzieht, indem man seinen Astralarm bewegt, das ist Urteil, das ist Schluß, das spiegelt sich bloß im Haupte als Vorstellung und wird dann auch zur Vorstellung. So daß man den ganzen Menschen braucht, nicht bloß den Nerven-Sinnesmenschen, damit Urteil und Schluß zustande kommen.
[ 14 ] Nun, wenn Sie das in Betracht ziehen, dann werden Sie sich sagen: Der Mensch holt aus seinem Gliedmaßensystem eigentlich Urteil und Schluß heraus. Das sind nämlich schon Willensakte im Grunde genommen, und das kommt aus einem unbestimmteren Zustande heraus, als das Vorstellen ist. Geradeso wie wir des Morgens aufwachen, so erleben wir im Grunde genommen, wenn wir mit einem Schluß fertig sind. Wir haben ihn aus der ganzen Tiefe unseres Wesens hervorgeholt. Dasjenige, was vom vorigen Leben bis zu diesem Leben alt geworden ist, was sich im Kopfe auslebt, das führt uns dazu, Vorstellungen haben zu können durch den Kopf. Da sind wir in bezug auf den Kosmos alt, wenn wir geboren werden. Und daß unser Wille sich erneuert hat, das ist, weil wir in bezug auf den Kosmos jung geworden sind. Es ist immer dasjenige, was wir als Haupt an uns tragen, erinnernd an die vorige Inkarnation. Es ist das Alte. Was der Gliedmaßen-Stoffwechselmensch ist, das hat sich der Wille erobert, indem er in diese Inkarnation hereinzieht. Das wird ihm eigentlich vermittelt durch den Mutterleib. Denn das andere - man braucht ja nur die äußere empirische Embryologie zu studieren, so wird es bestätigt - wird eigentlich aus dem Kosmos herein in die Mutter konstruiert. Das Haupt ist eben ein Abbild des Kosmos, wird durch äußere Kräfte bewirkt. Derjenige, der das leugnen will, der soll auch nur sagen, es sei ein Unsinn, daß der Magnetismus der Erde die Magnetnadel stellt. Der Physiker geht, wenn er die Magnetnadel erklären will, aus der Magnetnadel heraus; der Physiologe, der Embryologe, der Biologe, der bleibt, wenn er den Embryo erklären will, im Mutterleib drinnen. Das ist ebenso unsinnig, wie wenn man die Magnetnadel nur aus sich selbst erklären wollte. Man muß herausgehen zum ganzen Kosmos. Wir haben zunächst das Haupt in der ganzen Entwickelung und darangegliedert nur wird der übrige Leib, den sich der Wille erobert, der sich an die Imagination herangemacht hat während des Durchganges durch das Leben zwischen Tod und neuer Geburt von der Mitternachtsstunde des Daseins an.
[ 15 ] Nun, wenn wir diesen Menschen hier betrachten (siehe Zeichnung Seite 128), so finden wir alles, was sich auf das Denken und auf die Wahrnehmung bezieht, oberhalb des Gedächtnishäutchens, alles, was sich auf den Willen bezieht, unterhalb. Das wirkt herauf, wirkt aus dem Unbewußten herauf, das man erst auf die Weise findet, wie wir es gestern auseinandergesetzt haben. Da wirkt der Wille herauf. In bezug auf den Willen sind wir schlafend. Und so haben wir eigentlich den Menschen wirklich als eine Dualität im Leben zwischen Geburt und Tod. Der Mensch ist schon ein Monon, aber er ist es in bezug auf die ganze Welt, und er muß es im Werden herstellen, dieses Monadische. Er muß es immer wieder erneuern. Aber in Wirklichkeit ist der Mensch zwischen Geburt und Tod dualistisch: der Gedanke gewissermaßen mit der Wahrnehmung auf der einen Seite, der Wille mit dem Gemüt auf der andern Seite.
[ 16 ] Dadurch aber ist der Mensch eigentlich, ich möchte sagen, der Durchschnitt durch zwei Welten, Denn bitte, seien Sie ehrlich und fragen Sie sich, was haben Sie denn in jedem Momente Ihres Lebens im Bewußtsein? Ihre Erinnerungsvorstellungen, dasjenige, was Sie erlebt haben seit dem zweiten, dritten Jahr oder fünften, sechsten Jahr, das ist der Inhalt des Bewußtseins. Und was von unten da durchkommt, was aus dem Willen herausquillt, das ist die Liebe, die Liebefähigkeit. Und eigentlich ist der Mensch nichts anderes als dasjenige, was da im Durchschnitte erscheint als Erinnerungsbilder und Liebe. Es ist im Grunde genommen der Mensch so: oberhalb ist eine Welt, die kosmischer Gedanke ist, unterhalb ist eine Welt, die kosmischer Wille ist. Und immerzu ist der Mensch der Angriffspunkt für Luzifer von der Willensseite her und der Angriffspunkt für Ahriman auf der Gedankenseite (siehe Zeichnung). Ahriman möchte fortwährend den Menschen ganz zum Kopfe machen. Luzifer möchte fortwährend dem Menschen den Kopf abschlagen, daß er gar nicht denken kann, daß alles auf dem Umwege durch das Herz in Wärme herausströmt, daß er ganz überfließt von Weltenliebe und ausfließt in die Welt als Weltenliebe, als ein kosmisch-schwärmerisches Wesen ausfließt.
[ 17 ] In unserem Zeitalter, in unserer hochgepriesenen Kultur haben wir vorzugsweise ahrimanische Einflüsse tätig. Diese ahrimanischen Einflüsse, sensitivere Menschen haben sie immer verspürt. Als ich noch ein ganz junger Mensch war, redete ich einmal mit einem österreichischen Dichter, der dazumal sehr bekannt war; der hatte eine feine Empfindung für das, was in der Kultur heraufzieht, und er drückte das halbbildlich aus, aber dieses Halbbildliche war für ihn eine Wirklichkeit. Er sagte zu mir - es ist mir, als ob es heute geschehen wäre: Wie wir heutigen Menschen wären, das sei eigentlich ein furchtbares Los; ein furchtbares Los, das die Menschheit treffen wird, wenn die Dinge so fortgehen, wie sie jetzt gehen. Denn der Mensch wird allmählich die Geschicklichkeit seiner Glieder verlieren, er wird nicht mehr ordentlich gehen können, er wird immerfort radfahren und sich mechanisch weiterbewegen; er wird auch die unmittelbare Geschicklichkeit seiner Hände verlieren, alles wird technisch. Geradeso wie ein Muskel verkümmert, der nicht gebraucht wird, so wird alles das allmählich verkümmern und der Mensch wird nur Kopf werden. Der Kopf wird immer größer werden, und zuletzt wird sich der Mensch so fortkugeln mit einem ganz verkrüppelten übrigen Organismus.
[ 18 ] Dieses Bild stand, ich möchte sagen, wie ein Alpdruck vor diesem österreichischen Dichter - Hermann Rollett hieß er -, und er schilderte das ganz anschaulich, denn es bedrückte ihn ganz ungeheuer diese Vorstellung, daß die Menschen einmal rollende Köpfe werden durch unsere Kultur. Aber es liegt etwas sehr Wahres dem zugrunde. Es liegt das zugrunde, daß tatsächlich in unserer Zeit die Mächte außerordentlich stark sind, welche unseren Kopf immer mehr und mehr entwickeln möchten. Mit dem physischen Kopf gelingt es ihnen nicht gerade ganz besonders gut, aber mit dem Ätherkopf gelingt es schon besser. Also es ist tatsächlich so, daß in unserer Zeit uns die ahrimanischen Mächte zu ganzen Kopfmenschen machen möchten, daß sie uns ganz und gar umgestalten möchten zu bloßen Denkern.
[ 19 ] Aber für den Menschen in seiner gesunden Entwickelung ist der andere Pol da, der Willenspol, der immer entgegenarbeitet, wenn wir sterben, so daß der Wille den Gedanken ergriffen hat. Der Gedanke darf noch nicht allein sein. Wenn wir geboren werden, da haben wir neuen Willen gesammelt, aber der Gedanke sondert sich ab, findet unseren Kopf; der Wille bemächtigt sich des andern Leibes. Während wir auf der Erde leben, ist ein fortwährendes Wechselwirken da zwischen Wille und Gedanke in uns. Der Wille bemächtigt sich des Gedankens, und wir müssen dieses Zusammengesetzte aus Wille und Gedanke wiederum durchtragen durch den Tod. Ahriman möchte uns daran verhindern. Der möchte, daß der Wille abgesondert bleibt, daß der Gedanke nur in uns besonders ausgebildet würde. Dann verlören wir unsere Individualität, wenn es zuletzt wirklich zu dem käme, was Ahriman eigentlich will. Wir verlören vollständig unsere Individualität. Wir würden mit einem geradezu übertriebenen, instinktiv ausgebildeten Gedanken im Momente des Todes ankommen. Aber den könnten wir Menschen nicht halten, diesen Gedanken, und Ahriman könnte sich seiner bemächtigen und ihn einfügen der übrigen Welt, so daß dieser Gedanke in der übrigen Welt weiterwirkte. Das ist tatsächlich das Schicksal, das der Menschheit droht, wenn sie den gegenwärtigen Materialismus fortsetzt, daß die ahrimanischen Mächte so stark werden, daß Ahriman den Menschen die Gedanken wegstehlen kann und sie der Erde einverleiben kann in ihrer Wirksamkeit, so daß die Erde, die eigentlich zugrunde gehen sollte, konsolidiert wird. Ahriman arbeitet darauf hin, daß die Erde konsolidiert wird, daß die Erde als Erde bestehen bleibt. Ahriman arbeitet gegen das Wort: «Himmel und Erde werden vergehen, aber meine Worte werden nicht vergehen.» Er will, daß die Worte weggeworfen werden und daß Himmel und Erde bestehen bleiben. Das kann nur erreicht werden, wenn den Menschen die Gedanken gestohlen werden, wenn die Menschen entindividualisiert werden.
[ 20 ] Wenn Ahriman weiterwirken könnte, wie er es seit dem Jahre 1845 ja ganz besonders gekonnt hat, dann würden zunächst die menschlichen Gehirne immer steifer und steifer werden, und die Menschen würden wie unter Zwangsgedanken leben, unter materialisierten Gedanken, wie ich das gestern auseinandergesetzt habe. Es würde sich das besonders darin zeigen, daß die Menschen auch in der Erziehung so geführt würden, daß sie nicht bewegliche Gedanken haben, sondern daß sie, wenn sie ein bestimmtes Alter erreicht haben, ganz fixierte Gedanken haben. Nun bitte ich Sie, fragen Sie sich, ob das nicht schon im hohen Grade vielfach gegenwärtig erreicht ist! Denken Sie nur, wie fixiert die Gedanken vieler Menschen heute sind. Kann man den Menschen heute noch viel beibringen? Ihre Gedanken sind so starr, so fest, daß man ihnen nicht viel beibringen kann. Das ist schon ahrimanisch verwendet. Und Ahriman bemüht sich, das immer zu steigern, immer mehr die Gedanken zu Zwangsgedanken zu machen. Und ein solches wirksames Produkt dieser Zwangsgedanken auf wissenschaftlichem Gebiete ist der Atomismus. Da wird hinter dem Sinnenschleier nicht Geist vermutet, sondern lauter Atome, überall schwingende Atome, wirbelnde, schwingende Atome. Natürlich können Sie mit nichts anderem hinter diesen Sinnenschleier kommen als mit den Gedanken. Aber Ahriman hat die Leute schon so verwirrt, daß sie ihre Gedanken schon materialisiert haben. Sie glauben nicht mehr daran, daß sie eigentlich da nur eine Welt von Gedankenatomen konstruieren, sondern sie betrachten das als Wirklichkeit; sie setzen also die Gedanken da hinaus. Das ist durchaus ahrimanisierte Welt. Wir haben heute eine ahrimanisierte Wissenschaft, eine durch und durch ahrimanisierte Wissenschaft.

[ 21 ] Daß man das hat, tritt einem zuweilen im Leben in einer furchtbaren Weise entgegen. Ich habe zum Beispiel einmal — es ist jetzt vielleicht fünfunddreißig Jahre her - ein Manuskript bekommen. Es war ein sehr gelehrtes Manuskript. Es sollte aufstellen das Menschendifferential - ich erzähle Ihnen eine wahre Geschichte -, das heißt, dasjenige Differential, daß, wenn man integriert, man den Menschen bekommt. Wenn man also integriert vom Fuß bis zum Kopf, bekommt man den Menschen. Es war eine sehr gelehrte Abhandlung. Und der Arzt, der mir das brachte, der sagte: Sie können den Verfasser auch kennenlernen -, denn er war bei ihm auf der Klinik. Und als ich den Mann kennenlernte, sagte der: Ja, das ist so, ich habe das selber erlebt, ich bestehe ja ganz aus Differentialatomen, überall sind Differentiale, ich bin nur ein Integral. - Er hatte sich ganz differenziert vorgestellt in lauter Atomen; das war eine intellektuell-ahrimanische Bewußtseinsart. Aber sie ist ja schließlich, ich möchte sagen, nur das starr gewordene System des Atomismus. Denn als mir dieses Manuskript gebracht wurde, mußte ich mich erinnern, daß es ja eine Laplacesche Weltenformel gibt: da soll es möglich sein, aus den Vorgängen der Atome durch Integration — wobei man jetzt nicht vom Fuß bis zum Kopf integriert, sondern wo man einfach vom Weltenanfang bis zum Weltenende zu integrieren hat — auszurechnen, wenn man irgendeinen speziellen Wert einsetzt, nun, sagen wir, wann Cäsar den Rubikon überschritten hat und dergleichen! Nicht wahr, einfach indem man die Atome in der Weltenformel vorbringt, in der entsprechenden Weise behandelt. Diese ganze Denkweise sah zum Verzweifeln ähnlich der Abhandlung, die jener Mann von sich selber gemacht hat, der sich ganz als ein zwischen den Grenzen von Fuß und Kopf eingeschlossenes Integral angesehen hat. Man kann da schon, wenn man die Dinge richtig anschaut, durchaus in das Ahrimanischwerden unserer Kultur hineinschauen.
[ 22 ] Dem muß natürlich entgegengearbeitet werden, und das kann nur dadurch geschehen, daß unsere Begriffe wiederum zur Bildlichkeit gebracht werden, daß wir also nicht bloß arbeiten mit abstrakten Begriffen, sondern daß wir unsere Begriffe zur Bildlichkeit bringen. Dann werden wir, wenn wir hinausgehen durch die Pforte des Todes, schon Bilder mitbringen, und wir finden den Anschluß an dasjenige, was die Welt fordert. Sonst geht die Menschheit der Gefahr entgegen, sich selbst zu verlieren, und was eigentlich durch das Hineinfließen des Willens in die Gedanken individualisiert werden sollte, das wird mineralisiert, wird zur allgemeinen Erde gemacht, und die Erde würde ein Weltenwesen werden, aber die Menschheit würde seelisch in einen großen Friedhof einmünden.
[ 23 ] Man muß zuweilen solche Kulturausblicke machen. In unserer Zeit ist es durchaus notwendig, solche Kulturausblicke zu machen. Denn derjenige, der die Dinge der Entwickelung heute genauer zu überschauen vermag, der weiß, wie rasch wir uns im Grunde genommen dieser Verknöcherung unserer Kultur nähern. Ich möchte auch bei dieser Gelegenheit nicht unerwähnt lassen, daß man ja bis zum Jahre 869, bis zum achten allgemeinen ökumenischen Konzil in Konstantinopel die Gliederung des Menschen hatte in Leib, Seele und Geist. Nun ist ja, wie ich öfter erwähnt habe, auf diesem achten allgemeinen ökumenischen Konzil für das Abendland die Formel aufgestellt worden: Es darf nicht geglaubt werden, daß der Mensch aus Leib und Seele und Geist besteht, sondern nur aus Leib und Seele, und die Seele hat einige geistige Eigenschaften. Das ist dann allgemein übergegangen. Im Mittelalter war es ketzerisch, häretisch, zu glauben, der Mensch bestünde aus Leib, Seele und Geist. Heute finden die Philosophieprofessoren durch unbefangene Wissenschaft: Der Mensch besteht nur aus Leib und Seele. Diese «unbefangene Wissenschaft» ist nichts anderes als ein Beschluß des achten allgemeinen ökumenischen Konzils. Aber das strebt nach einem andern hin. Man kann sagen: Durch dieses achte ökumenische Konzil hat die Menschheit verloren das Bewußtsein über den Geist, das wieder errungen werden muß. Gehen wir aber auf dem Wege weiter, den ich Ihnen jetzt geschildert habe, so verliert die Menschheit auch noch das Bewußtsein über die Seele.
[ 24 ] Bei den Materialisten des 19. Jahrhunderts war dieses Bewußtsein über die Seele schon bis zu dem Grade verschwunden, daß man sagte: Das Gehirn sondert Gedanken ab wie die Leber Galle. Man hat also eigentlich nur noch das Bewußtsein der leiblichen Vorgänge gehabt. Und in der Tat, es bestehen heute schon, ohne daß es die Menschen wissen, in gewissen Untergründen, wo allerlei Gesellschaften nach solchen Dingen hinarbeiten, die Tendenzen, etwas Ähnliches herbeizuführen wie 869 auf dem Konzil von Konstantinopel, nämlich zu erklären: Der Mensch besteht nicht aus Leib und Seele, sondern der Mensch besteht aus dem Leib, und die Seele ist bloß etwas, was aus dem Leibe heraus sich entwickelt. Es ist daher unmöglich, den Menschen seelisch zu erziehen; man muß also ein Mittel, ein materielles Mittel finden, womit man den Menschen in einem gewissen Lebensalter impft, und dann wird er seine Talente ausbilden durch Impfung. - Diese Tendenz besteht durchaus. Sie liegt in der geraden Linie der ahrimanischen Entwickelung: nicht mehr Schulen zu gründen, um zu lehren, sondern mit gewissen Stoffen zu impfen. Man kann das nämlich. Es ist nicht so, als ob man es nicht könnte. Man kann es; aber man macht den Menschen zu einem Automaten. Man würde dasjenige riesig beschleunigen, was man sonst auf dem Wege des Gedankenzwanges, durch eine Erziehung, die auf Gedankenzwang hinarbeitet, erreicht. Es gibt schon durchaus Substanzen, die man gewinnen kann, wodurch der Mensch, wenn er zum Beispiel mit sieben Jahren geimpft würde, sich die Volksschule gut ersparen könnte; er würde nämlich ein Gedankenautomat.Er würde außerordentlich gescheit werden, aber er würde kein Bewußtsein davon haben. Es würde so ablaufen diese Gescheitheit. Aber was liegt vielen Menschen heute schon daran, ob der Mensch ein inneres Leben hat oder nicht, wenn er nur äußerlich herumläuft und das oder jenes tut! Diejenigen Menschen, die sich heute vorzugsweise der ahrimanischen Kultur ergeben - und die gibt es auch -, streben durchaus nach solchen Idealen hin. Schließlich, was könnte es denn Reizvolleres geben für eine Gesinnung, wie sie sich heute immer mehr verbreitet, als einen Impfstoff zu finden, statt sich mit den Kindern jahrelang abzuplagen! Man muß diese Dinge drastisch darstellen. Solange man sie nicht drastisch darstellt, merkt nämlich die Menschheit der Gegenwart nicht, zu welchen Zielen sie hinstrebt. Durch einen solchen Impfstoff würde eben einfach das erreicht werden, daß der Ätherleib gelockert würde im physischen Leibe. Sobald der Ätherleib gelockert wird, ist das Spiel zwischen dem Universum und dem Ätherleib ein außerordentlich lebhaftes und der Mensch würde Automat werden. Denn der physische Leib des Menschen muß hier auf der Erde durch geistigen Willen erzogen werden.
[ 25 ] Aus dem vollen Bewußtsein, das man vor Augen hat gegenüber der Automatisierung des Menschen, sind die Methoden für die Waldorfschule, die pädagogischen Methoden für die Waldorfschule ausfindig gemacht. Sie sollen durchaus in dieser Beziehung ein Kulturmotor sein, der wiederum zur Spiritualisierung hinführt. Denn es ist im Grunde genommen — man kann das schon sagen - heute vor allen Dingen notwendig, daß das geistige Leben unter den Menschen als geistiges Leben besonders gepflegt werde. Daher sollte man auch wacker hinsehen auf alles das, was als Symptom zur Besserung bei einzelnen Menschen hervortritt. Ich habe es bei andern Gelegenheiten oftmals hervorgehoben, wie die Menschheit heute darnach strebt, an Stelle der wirklichen Lebenspraxis die Routine zu setzen; Routine, was ja Mechanisierung des Lebens ist.
[ 26 ] Ich mußte mich neulich sehr freuen, als ich las, wie es doch noch Menschen gibt, die außer der gewöhnlichen Lebensroutine eine wirkliche Lebenspraxis auch im praktischen Leben immer schon als etwas Wichtiges angesehen haben. Es ging nämlich neulich einmal die Nachricht durch die Welt, wie Edison seine Leute geprüft hat, die er für Praktiker vorbereiten wollte. Es interessierte ihn gar nicht, ob ein Kaufmann gut buchführen kann. Das, sagte er, lernt einer in drei Wochen, wenn er sonst ein geschickter, vernünftiger Mensch ist. -Alle diese Spezialitäten, die interessieren ihn gar nicht, das bringt man schon fertig. Und es ist richtig. Aber Edison legte den Menschen, von denen er wissen wollte, ob sie auch etwas im praktischen Leben taugen, Fragen vor, Fragen von dieser Art etwa: Wie groß ist Sibirien? — Also wenn er irgendeinen prüfen wollte, ob er ein guter Buchhalter ist, fragte er nicht, ob er richtig eine Bilanz verfertigen kann, sondern: Wie groß ist Sibirien? - Oder: Wenn ein Zimmer fünf Meter lang, drei Meter breit und vier Meter hoch ist, wieviel Kubikmeter Luft faßt es dann? — und ähnliche Fragen. Er legte Fragen vor: Was steht an derjenigen Stelle, wo Cäsar den Rubikon überschritt - und so weiter, ganz allgemeine Fragen, und je nachdem der eine mehr oder weniger solche allgemeine Fragen beantworten konnte, stellte Edison ihn zum Buchhalter oder so etwas an. Ob er also gut Bücher führen kann oder nicht, das interessierte ihn gar nicht, denn das wußte er: Wenn jemand eine solche Frage beantworten kann, so ist ein Beweis dafür geliefert, daß er seine Schulzeit nicht vergebens abgesessen hat, daß er als Kind mit beweglichen Gedanken sich heranentwickelt hat; und das verlangte er.
[ 27 ] So sollte eigentlich die Praxis gestaltet werden, während wir in der letzten Zeit gerade dem Gegenteil zugesteuert haben und immer mehr in Spezialisierungen verfallen sind, so daß schließlich wirklich es zum Verzweifeln war mit den Leuten, die man für die Praxis brauchte. Sie waren überhaupt nicht mehr zu gewinnen für irgend etwas, was außerhalb der Kassette war, in die sie gerade eingepfercht sein wollten. Man muß schon sagen: Auch auf diese Weise muß in die Beweglichkeit der Gedanken hineingearbeitet werden. Wenn in solcher Weise in die Beweglichkeit der Gedanken hineingearbeitet wird, dann werden sich diese Gedanken nicht verhärten und Ahriman wird einen schweren Stand haben. Aber Sie werden selber sehen, wenn Sie das Leben betrachten, wie wenig die Edisons da sind, die gerade solche praktischen Grundsätze haben. Das, worauf es ankommt, ist, hinzuarbeiten nach der Bildlichkeit der Begriffe; wer nach der Bildlichkeit der Begriffe hinarbeitet, wird nicht mehr sagen können, er verstehe Geisteswissenschaft nicht. Denn gerade der Ruck, den sich ein Mensch gibt, um von dem Abstrakten die Bildlichkeit der Begriffe zu bekommen, der bedeutet auf der einen Seite die Möglichkeit, so etwas zu begreifen: Die Erde hat sich aus Mond, Sonne, Saturn entwickelt. Auf der andern Seite mischt sich für das innere Leben in die bildlichen Vorstellungen, in die Imaginationen, Gefühlsleben herein. Der Vollmensch tritt wirklich ein.
[ 28 ] Neulich einmal wurde hier mitgeteilt, daß ein Kritiker der Anthroposophie gesagt hat, die Anthroposophie wäre keine Wissenschaft, weil sie dasjenige, wozu sie kommt, aus dem ganzen Menschen heraus schöpft; eine Wissenschaft aber dürfe nur aus dem Intellekt heraus schöpfen. Also Sie sehen, man definiert zuerst, was eine Wissenschaft ist, daß die nicht aus dem ganzen Menschen schöpfen darf, und dann sagt man: Es ist falsch, wenn aus dem ganzen Menschen geschöpft wird. — Auf diese Weise kann man natürlich alles in Grund und Boden definieren. Darauf kommt es gerade an, daß wir die einseitige Kopfkultur wiederum ausdehnen zu einer Vollmenschenkultur. Und es ist ja eigentlich nur das falsche Bewußtsein, das zu dieser Kopfkultur kommt und das sich dann ausbildet im praktischen Leben. Denn der falsche Glaube, daß wir mit dem Kopfe urteilen, schließen, der verleitet die Menschen zu der Kopfkultur. Wir urteilen mit den Beinen und schließen mit den Armen. Weiß man das einmal, daß der ganze Mensch schon notwendig ist zu einem Urteil und zu einem Schluß, dann wird man nicht mehr sich sträuben gegen den Grundsatz: Wirkliche Wahrheit muß aus dem ganzen, aus dem vollen Menschen herauskommen. Das ist dasjenige, worauf ich Sie heute hinweisen wollte.


Seventh Lecture
[ 1 ] Following the considerations we have made, a fundamental fact of human life and nature will now become clear to our minds. It is precisely when one engages in a closer examination of the relationship between human beings and their environment that it always seems something of a mystery why it is impossible to see into the actual essence of the external world. This external world lies before us in its phenomena, in its events, and even if we have only a weak desire for knowledge, we must assume that behind these phenomena, which appear to us as a world of colors, sounds, warmth, and so on, the actual essence of reality is hidden. In a sense, there is a veil, and behind this veil lies the actual essence of reality. On the other hand, there is a similar mystery with regard to what the human inner life is. In the last few days, I have pointed out how this human inner life reveals its organ mystery when one first really enters into this inner life. But for ordinary consciousness, the fact remains that we cannot look deep enough into our own inner being to truly understand the nature of the lungs, liver, and so on, as we discussed yesterday. Now, this fact of the existence of two mysteries, the mystery of the unknowability of the external world the mystery of the unknowability of the inner world, this fact can be understood from the knowledge of the whole being of man, if one allows oneself to contemplate the whole of human nature, which shows us only one side here between birth and death, and has another side between death and a new birth.
[ 2 ] But let us first consider the human being as he presents himself to us here between birth and death. We first need an inner spiritual fact that is connected with our entire normal daily life; we need the inner fact of memory. Yesterday I spoke about how this memory is actually based on a reflection on the outer surfaces of the inner organs. But we need this memory for our soul life. I have often pointed to facts that show how the disturbance of this memory can undermine our entire normal life here between birth and death. This was an example that showed that the power of memory can be wiped out in human beings. Such cases are also known elsewhere. You can read about numerous such cases in psychological works. It is a well-known fact that this can happen, and on a smaller scale this phenomenon occurs much more frequently than one might think. And you need not imagine anything other than that for such people, without their being aware of it in the ordinary sense of the word, these processes are like falling asleep and waking up every night: consciousness is extinguished. But such an abnormal discontinuity of consciousness has an extraordinarily significant influence on the entire personality consciousness. People can no longer cope with themselves after they have gone through something like this; in retrospect, it is actually something terrible for them. From this you can see how important it is for ordinary life between birth and death—with the exception of the states of sleep—to have continuity of consciousness.
[ 3 ] The continuity of consciousness is connected with our memory. We therefore need memory in order to maintain normal everyday life. Now, when one undergoes occult development, there is another fact. There is the fact that one needs to develop soul forces which actually erase this ordinary memory for the moments of spiritual vision. For as long as one has this ordinary memory, one cannot, in essence, look into the spiritual world. And students of occult development usually experience this as follows: when they begin to work on their development, they have certain visions, and later they complain that they no longer have these visions, that they have ceased. This is because there is actually no memory for such visions, if they are genuine, true visions and not hallucinations. It is not possible to remember a vision, because a vision is something real. If you look at a piece of chalk and then look away, you have a memory image. But if you want to have the chalk in front of you, the real chalk, then you have to return to perception, you have to have the real thing in front of you again. Memory is of no help to you for this real thing. If you touch a hot iron, you burn yourself. No matter how much you remember the heat, you will not burn yourself. Because the vision connects you with something real and is not merely an image, you must return to it. It is a matter of returning to the vision, not merely remembering it, because true vision is a true occult experience and cannot become a memory; one can only return to it indirectly. You can say to yourself: Before the vision occurred, I went through this or that in my ordinary consciousness. You can then remember this, and you must recall this stage again up to the point where the vision occurred; then you arrive at that point. It cannot occur again immediately, but you must, in a sense, retrace your steps. Many people do not take this into account; they believe that one can remember a vision in the ordinary sense. In a certain sense, therefore, one must even undermine one's memory in occult development. This is absolutely necessary; it cannot be avoided. Therefore, it must be said: anyone who strives for such occult development must above all be sure that they are a reasonable person in ordinary life, that is, that they have a sound mind and a sound memory without any false mystical tendencies. Anyone who is already somehow wandering around or floating in ordinary life is not suited to undergo occult development. One must definitely be able to remember the events of the day with complete certainty; then one can dare to advance to the visions for which there is no such memory. The precautions recommended for occult development are entirely justified by the nature of the matter itself. You can say that memory is there for ordinary consciousness, and that this memory is part of normal life between birth and death.
[ 4 ] Now I can sketch for you how the human being behaves when in possession of this memory. I will sketch it for you something like this (see drawing on page 128). What I am now drawing does not exist as such, but it can be perceived in the etheric body. I am drawing schematically as this line what is actually extended over the whole body, and you must then imagine that from the head, that is, from the sense perceptions, the sense organs, to this line is what is outside the organs. This line is to be the schematic boundary line for the human organs: here there is a reflection, and beyond this line lie the heart, lungs, liver, and so on. Here (arrows) there is a reflection. This is symbolically the line of human memory. You can imagine it as follows: we have a thin membrane inside us; it is actually the boundary membrane between the etheric body and the astral body, only in reality it is not spatial, it is just drawn schematically. What is perceived is reflected back by the power of the organs behind it; it is mirrored, but it is still mirrored here, and we cannot see through it in ordinary consciousness; we cannot see into the inner being of the human being through the membrane of memory. Memory covers the inner life of the human being. It must cover the inner life of the human being, otherwise the human being would not be normal in ordinary life between birth and death. Memory is what closes off our inner life from our ordinary consciousness. As soon as this memory is interrupted, as soon as a crack appears somewhere, as happens through occult development, we see into our organs, as I described yesterday.
[ 5 ] Now we have the answer to the riddle of not being able to look inward. This inner self must be covered, otherwise we would not be normal in life between birth and death, because we need this memory. So the inner self is veiled from us by the reflection of our memory. That is what you must have as a solution to this mystery.
[ 6 ] On the other side, on the side of the external world, we see, as it were, the veil of the senses spread out before us and cannot see behind it. Let us consider the matter in this way: What would it be like if we could see behind it, if, looking outward, we did not have the veil of the senses behind which the essence of the world lies, but if it were broken through everywhere, if we could see through it everywhere, what would it be like then? We would constantly flow into things with our perception, with our intuition. We would flow together with things. We would not be able to distinguish ourselves from things. And what would be the consequence? If we could not distinguish ourselves from things, we would never be able to develop feelings of love, because love is based on not flowing over into the other, but on remaining an individuality, separate and yet feeling toward the other. We are organized in such a way that we are capable of love between birth and death. And in occult development, this capacity for love must in turn be replaced by imagination, inspiration, and intuition. We must, in a sense, break through the capacity for love. It would totally ruin our lives; we would become cold-hearted if we did not have love in ordinary life. Therefore, it is again necessary that those who undergo occult development in this direction develop the capacity for love to the highest degree. Once they have developed it to such an extent that they cannot lose it through occult development, that they retain it despite this development, then they can dare to penetrate the veil of the senses and look out into real objectivity. You see the second mystery set before your soul. Human beings must be organized in such a way that they are capable of memory and love. Because he must be capable of love, he cannot see beyond the veil of the senses with ordinary consciousness, and because he must be capable of memory, he cannot look into his own inner being.
[ 7 ] This is what is actually the truth of Kant's false philosophy. Kant wanted to investigate human subjectivity and came up with some very abstract concepts that actually mean nothing. In reality, we must understand human beings between birth and death as beings capable of memory and love. This is where human beings learn what lives in sensation, and this is where human beings learn what lives in love. And they must carry this over through the gate of death. But that is why we are on earth, so that we may perfect ourselves in these two abilities.
[ 8 ] When human beings have to distinguish between their perceiving and thinking nature, which also encounters the veil of the senses, they develop, mainly through the head — but human beings are head in their entirety — the life that we call the life of consciousness. This life of consciousness stops at the thought. The thought becomes a memory image. But we do not go further than the memory image. There the thought is held back; only because it is held back there can it always return as memory. There the thought is held back, and our normal life between birth and death is actually based on the fact that we do not let the thought descend into the organs. Its forces descend, as I described yesterday, but we cannot allow the thought as such, as it lives in us as an image, to descend. At the moment we die, the thought becomes what it should not become in ordinary consciousness: the thought becomes imagination. This imagination, which is strived for with all effort in occult development, occurs when the human being passes through death. All his thoughts become images. The human being then lives entirely in images. One can therefore only understand the dead if one has become familiar with this language of images. Immediately after death, thoughts are transformed into images. With these images, the human being lives for some time between death and a new birth. Then the images gradually become inspiration. In this way, the soul actually continues to grow. The images become inspiration. Then the human being begins to perceive the music of the spheres. The music of the spheres becomes something real for him. He lives in the world of world tones. And finally, he grows together with the objective-spiritual universe. His soul becomes entirely intuition. He becomes, in a sense, one with the universe.
[ 9 ] This is also the point when, after this intuition has been present for a while, the world midnight occurs, which I spoke about again yesterday. Now the return journey begins, and intuition is now capable of taking in something that human beings have gradually left behind while living here on earth. For when human beings have passed through the gate of death, they live through forces other than those we call the will here on earth. They live in more cosmic forces. The will is, I would say, absorbed; the will gradually fades away. But when human beings arrive at the midnight of the world, that is, after they have passed through the imaginative state, the inspirational state, the intuitive state, and have arrived, so to speak, at the height of life between death and new birth, then intuition is filled again with will. Thought becomes volitional again, and this will saturates the soul more and more, which now struggles its way to inspiration and then to imagination. When it has arrived at imagination and has passed through it for a while, it is ripe again to be embodied here. From the image, in the manner I have described, there arises what then appears as the transformed limb-metabolism human being of the previous incarnation. You see, through the stages that are strived for in occult development, the human being ascends to the midnight of the world, and then descends again in reverse through imagination, arriving at thought formation when he incarnates.
[ 10 ] During this entire time, the human being takes in the will. And now, as the human being enters physical existence again, we see how that which works in from the cosmos, that which he has taken in from his previous incarnation, is in the image, and the will is still within the image. So now we have an imagination saturated with will.

[ 11 ] So when the human being arrives at a new physical life before conception, he has an imagination, but it is an imagination saturated with will. From the imagination, which is essentially what was already there as an image, the head and what initially belongs to it arise, and the will takes control of the new limbs and metabolism. So that this is distributed here to the head and the rest of the human being. The head is essentially, I would say, crystallized, solidified thought; what lives in the rest of the human being is organized will. Actually, the human being can only truly awaken in the head. Isn't it true that you know your thoughts, your ideas are in your ordinary consciousness — this can be said of all people today; what goes on in the will, as I have often mentioned, is just as unknown to people as what goes on in sleep. For how do you know, when you raise an arm, in ordinary consciousness, what is going on there? You perceive that the arm is being raised, you have the idea, but the act of will as such remains asleep, relatively speaking, just as sleeping is between falling asleep and waking up. So you can say that, in relation to the limb-metabolism human being, the human being also sleeps during the day; he only really awakens in relation to his head human being. All of this works together.
[ 12 ] Official science today speaks of a certain logic. It speaks in terms of the logic of ideas, of judgment, and of conclusion. Yes, let us consider such a conclusion. The well-known conclusion found in all systems of logic refers to the famous logical personality. So: All humans are mortal, Caesar is a human, therefore Caesar is mortal. That is the conclusion. Each part of the conclusion is a judgment: All humans are mortal—that is a judgment; Caesar is a human—that is a judgment; therefore, Caesar is mortal—that is a judgment. The whole thing is a conclusion. Human beings, Caesar, are ideas.
[ 13 ] If you ask someone today who is considered to be very intelligent – we must always stick to the very intelligent, because they set the tone – they will say: Everything happens in the nervous system. The nervous system is the mediator of ideas, judgments, conclusions, even feelings and will. But even this imagining, judging, and concluding is not what today's official thinking believes. For imagining as such is actually a matter of the head. When you make a judgment, you must feel, through the mediation of the etheric body, how you are standing on your feet. You do not judge with your head at all, you judge with your legs, but with the legs of the etheric body. Even when lying down, the person who judges stretches out his etheric legs. Judging is not based on the head, judging is based on the legs. Of course, no one believes this today, but it is true. And reasoning is based on the arms and hands, on everything that distinguishes humans from animals. Animals stand on their legs, animals are themselves a judgment, but they do not reason. Humans reason. They have been given free arms for this purpose; that is what their arms are for, not for walking. Humans have free arms so that they can be beings capable of reasoning. And what takes place when one steps on one's etheric legs, and what takes place when one moves one's astral arm, that is judgment, that is conclusion, that is merely reflected in the head as an idea and then also becomes an idea. So that the whole human being is needed, not just the nerve-sense human being, for judgment and conclusion to come about.
[ 14 ] Now, when you consider this, you will say to yourself: Man actually derives judgment and conclusion from his limb system. These are, in fact, acts of the will, and they arise from a more indeterminate state than that of representation. Just as we wake up in the morning, so we experience, in essence, when we have reached a conclusion. We have brought it forth from the depths of our being. That which has grown old from the previous life to this life, which lives out in the head, leads us to be able to have ideas in our heads. In relation to the cosmos, we are old when we are born. And the fact that our will has been renewed is because we have become young in relation to the cosmos. It is always that which we carry as our head, reminding us of our previous incarnation. It is the old. What the limb-metabolism human being is, the will has conquered by entering into this incarnation. This is actually conveyed to it through the womb. For the rest — one need only study external empirical embryology to confirm this — is actually constructed from the cosmos into the mother. The head is precisely a reflection of the cosmos, brought about by external forces. Anyone who wants to deny this should simply say that it is nonsense that the magnetism of the earth causes the magnetic needle to point. When the physicist wants to explain the magnetic needle, he starts from the magnetic needle; the physiologist, the embryologist, the biologist, when they want to explain the embryo, remain inside the womb. This is just as nonsensical as trying to explain the magnetic needle from itself. One must go out to the whole cosmos. We first have the head in the whole development, and only then is the rest of the body attached to it, which the will conquers, which has approached the imagination during the passage through life between death and new birth from the midnight hour of existence.
[ 15 ] Now, when we look at this human being here (see drawing on page 128), we find everything that relates to thinking and perception above the memory shell, and everything that relates to the will below it. This works upward, works upward from the unconscious, which can only be found in the way we discussed yesterday. This is where the will works upward. In relation to the will, we are asleep. And so we actually have the human being as a duality in life between birth and death. Man is already a monad, but he is so in relation to the whole world, and he must establish this monadic nature in becoming. He must renew it again and again. But in reality, man is dualistic between birth and death: thought, with perception, on the one hand, and will, with the mind, on the other.
[ 16 ] But this means that human beings are actually, I would say, the average of two worlds. Because, please, be honest and ask yourself, what do you have in your consciousness at every moment of your life? Your memories, what you have experienced since the second, third, fifth, or sixth year of your life, that is the content of your consciousness. And what comes through from below, what springs from the will, that is love, the capacity to love. And actually, human beings are nothing other than what appears on average as memories and love. Basically, human beings are like this: above is a world that is cosmic thought, below is a world that is cosmic will. And human beings are constantly the target of Lucifer from the side of the will and the target of Ahriman from the side of thought (see drawing). Ahriman wants to make humans completely head-oriented. Lucifer wants to cut off the head of humans so that they cannot think that everything flows out in warmth through the heart, that they overflow with love for the world and flow out into the world as love for the world, as a cosmic, enthusiastic being.
[ 17 ] In our age, in our highly praised culture, we have predominantly Ahrimanic influences at work. More sensitive people have always felt these Ahrimanic influences. When I was still a very young man, I once spoke with an Austrian poet who was very well known at the time; he had a keen sense of what was emerging in culture, and he expressed this in a semi-figurative way, but this semi-figurative way was a reality for him. He said to me—it is as if it happened today: What we humans are today is actually a terrible fate; a terrible fate that will befall humanity if things continue as they are now. For humans will gradually lose the dexterity of their limbs, they will no longer be able to walk properly, they will constantly ride bicycles and move around mechanically; they will also lose the immediate dexterity of their hands, everything will become technical. Just as a muscle that is not used atrophies, so everything will gradually atrophy and man will become nothing but a head. The head will grow larger and larger, and in the end man will roll along with a completely crippled organism.
[ 18 ] This image stood, I would say, like a nightmare before this Austrian poet—his name was Hermann Rollett—and he described it very vividly, because he was deeply disturbed by the idea that humans would one day become rolling heads as a result of our culture. But there is something very true underlying this. It is based on the fact that in our time there are indeed extremely powerful forces that want to develop our heads more and more. They are not particularly successful with the physical head, but they are more successful with the etheric head. So it is indeed the case that in our time the Ahrimanic forces want to turn us into complete head people, that they want to completely transform us into mere thinkers.
[ 19 ] But for human beings in their healthy development, there is the other pole, the pole of the will, which always works against this when we die, so that the will has taken hold of the thought. The thought must not yet be alone. When we are born, we have gathered new will, but thought separates itself, finds our head; the will takes possession of the other body. While we live on earth, there is a constant interaction between will and thought within us. The will takes possession of thought, and we must carry this composite of will and thought through death. Ahriman wants to prevent us from doing this. He wants the will to remain separate, and thought to be developed only within us. Then we would lose our individuality if what Ahriman actually wants were to come to pass. We would completely lose our individuality. We would arrive at the moment of death with an exaggerated, instinctively developed thought. But we humans would not be able to hold on to this thought, and Ahriman could seize it and insert it into the rest of the world, so that this thought would continue to have an effect in the rest of the world. This is indeed the fate that threatens humanity if it continues with its present materialism, that the Ahrimanic forces become so strong that Ahriman can steal people's thoughts and incorporate them into the earth in their effectiveness, so that the earth, which should actually perish, is consolidated. Ahriman is working to consolidate the earth, to ensure that the earth remains as earth. Ahriman is working against the words: “Heaven and earth will pass away, but my words will not pass away.” He wants the words to be discarded and heaven and earth to remain. This can only be achieved if people's thoughts are stolen, if people are de-individualized.
[ 20 ] If Ahriman could continue to work as he has done so skillfully since 1845, then human brains would first become increasingly rigid, and people would live as if under compulsive thoughts, under materialized thoughts, as I explained yesterday. This would be particularly evident in the fact that people would also be guided in their education in such a way that they would not have flexible thoughts, but rather, once they reached a certain age, they would have completely fixed thoughts. Now I ask you to ask yourselves whether this has not already been achieved to a high degree in many cases! Just think how fixed the thoughts of many people are today. Can we still teach people much today? Their thoughts are so rigid, so fixed, that we cannot teach them much. This is already being used by Ahriman. And Ahriman strives to increase this, to turn thoughts more and more into obsessive thoughts. And one effective product of these compulsive thoughts in the scientific field is atomism. Behind the veil of the senses, they do not suspect the existence of spirit, but only atoms, atoms vibrating everywhere, whirling, vibrating atoms. Of course, you cannot get behind this veil of the senses with anything other than thoughts. But Ahriman has already confused people so much that they have materialized their thoughts. They no longer believe that they are actually constructing a world of thought atoms, but regard it as reality; they project their thoughts out there. This is a thoroughly Ahrimanized world. Today we have an Ahrimanized science, a thoroughly Ahrimanized science.

[ 21 ] That this is so sometimes strikes us in a terrible way in life. For example, once — perhaps thirty-five years ago — I received a manuscript. It was a very scholarly manuscript. It was supposed to establish the human differential — I am telling you a true story — that is, the differential that, when integrated, gives you the human being. So when you integrate from the foot to the head, you get the human being. It was a very scholarly treatise. And the doctor who brought it to me said, “You can also meet the author,” because he had been at his clinic. And when I met the man, he said, “Yes, that's right, I've experienced it myself, I consist entirely of differential atoms, there are differentials everywhere, I am only an integral.” He had imagined himself in a completely differentiated way, made up of atoms; it was an intellectual, Ahrimanic type of consciousness. But ultimately, I would say, it is just the rigid system of atomism. Because when I was given this manuscript, I had to remember that there is a Laplace world formula: it should be possible, through integration of the processes of atoms—whereby one does not integrate from foot to head, but simply from the beginning of the world to the end of the world—to calculate, if one inserts any special value, well, let's say, when Caesar crossed the Rubicon and the like! Simply by bringing the atoms into the world formula and treating them in the appropriate manner. This whole way of thinking was almost as despairing as the treatise written by the man who saw himself as an integral enclosed between the boundaries of the foot and the head. If one looks at things correctly, one can certainly see the Ahrimanic becoming of our culture.
[ 22 ] This must of course be counteracted, and this can only be done by bringing our concepts back to imagery, so that we do not merely work with abstract concepts, but bring our concepts to imagery. Then, when we go out through the gate of death, we will already bring images with us, and we will find the connection to what the world demands. Otherwise, humanity runs the risk of losing itself, and what should actually be individualized through the inflow of the will into the thoughts will be mineralized, turned into general earth, and the earth would become a world being, but humanity would end up spiritually in a large cemetery.
[ 23 ] It is necessary at times to take such a view of culture. In our time it is absolutely necessary to take such a view of culture. For those who are able to see the things of evolution more clearly today know how rapidly we are approaching this ossification of our culture. I would also like to take this opportunity to mention that until 869, until the Eighth Ecumenical Council in Constantinople, the human being was divided into body, soul, and spirit. Now, as I have often mentioned, at this eighth general ecumenical council for the Western world, the following formula was established: It must not be believed that man consists of body, soul, and spirit, but only of body and soul, and that the soul has some spiritual qualities. This then became generally accepted. In the Middle Ages, it was heretical to believe that man consisted of body, soul, and spirit. Today, philosophy professors have come to the unbiased scientific conclusion that man consists only of body and soul. This “unbiased science” is nothing more than a decision of the Eighth Ecumenical Council. But this strives toward something else. One can say that through this eighth ecumenical council, humanity has lost its awareness of the spirit, which must be regained. But if we continue along the path I have now described to you, humanity will also lose its awareness of the soul.
[ 24 ] Among the materialists of the 19th century, this awareness of the soul had already disappeared to such an extent that it was said: The brain secretes thoughts like the liver secretes bile. So people actually only had awareness of physical processes. And indeed, without people knowing it, there already exist today, in certain underground circles where all kinds of societies are working toward such things, tendencies to bring about something similar to what happened in 869 at the Council of Constantinople, namely to declare: Man does not consist of body and soul, but man consists of the body, and the soul is merely something that develops out of the body. It is therefore impossible to educate the soul of man; one must therefore find a means, a material means, with which to inoculate man at a certain age, and then he will develop his talents through inoculation. This tendency definitely exists. It lies in the direct line of Ahrimanic development: no longer to found schools in order to teach, but to inoculate with certain substances. For this can be done. It is not as if it could not be done. It can be done, but it turns people into automatons. It would greatly accelerate what is otherwise achieved through the coercion of thought, through an education that works toward coercion of thought. There are already substances that can be obtained whereby a person, if inoculated at the age of seven, for example, could well dispense with elementary school; he would become a thinking automaton. He would become extraordinarily clever, but he would have no consciousness of it. This intelligence would develop in this way. But what do many people today care whether a person has an inner life or not, as long as they run around doing this or that on the outside! Those people who today prefer to devote themselves to the Ahrimanic culture – and there are such people – strive for such ideals. After all, what could be more appealing to a mindset that is becoming increasingly widespread today than to find a vaccine instead of struggling with children for years! These things must be presented in a drastic way. As long as they are not presented in a drastic way, the people of today will not realize what goals they are striving for. Such a vaccine would simply achieve the loosening of the etheric body within the physical body. As soon as the etheric body is loosened, the interaction between the universe and the etheric body becomes extremely lively and the human being becomes an automaton. For the physical body of the human being must be educated here on earth through spiritual will.
[ 25 ] The methods for the Waldorf School, the educational methods for the Waldorf School, have been developed out of a full awareness of the automation of human beings. In this respect, they are intended to be a cultural driving force that in turn leads to spiritualization. For it is fundamentally necessary today, above all else, that spiritual life among human beings be cultivated as spiritual life. Therefore, we should also look closely at everything that emerges as a symptom of improvement in individual human beings. I have often emphasized on other occasions how humanity today strives to replace real life with routine; routine, which is, after all, the mechanization of life.
[ 26 ] I was very pleased recently when I read that there are still people who, apart from the usual routine of life, have always regarded real life practice in practical life as something important. The news recently spread around the world about how Edison tested the people he wanted to train as practitioners. He wasn't interested in whether a salesperson could keep good accounts. He said that anyone who was otherwise a skilled and sensible person could learn that in three weeks. He wasn't interested in all those special skills; anyone could learn them. And he was right. But Edison asked the people he wanted to know if they were any good in practical life questions like these: How big is Siberia? — So if he wanted to test someone to see if they were a good accountant, he didn't ask them if they could draw up a balance sheet correctly, but: How big is Siberia? Or: If a room is five meters long, three meters wide, and four meters high, how many cubic meters of air does it contain? — and similar questions. He asked questions such as: What is the location where Caesar crossed the Rubicon? — and so on, very general questions, and depending on how well a person could answer such general questions, Edison would hire them as an accountant or something similar. He wasn't interested in whether they were good at bookkeeping or not, because he knew that if someone could answer such a question, it was proof that they hadn't wasted their time at school, that they had developed as a child with a lively mind; and that was what he wanted.
[ 27 ] That is how practice should actually be organized, whereas in recent times we have been moving in the opposite direction and have become increasingly specialized, so that in the end it was really exasperating to deal with the people we needed for practical work. They could no longer be won over to anything outside the box in which they wanted to be pigeonholed. It must be said that this is also a way of working toward flexibility of thought. If flexibility of thought is cultivated in this way, then these thoughts will not harden, and Ahriman will have a difficult time. But you will see for yourselves, when you look at life, how few Edisons there are who have precisely such practical principles. What matters is to work toward the imagery of concepts; those who work toward the imagery of concepts will no longer be able to say that they do not understand spiritual science. For it is precisely the effort a person makes to obtain the pictorial nature of concepts from the abstract that, on the one hand, makes it possible to understand something like this: the earth developed from the moon, the sun, and Saturn. On the other hand, the inner life, the feelings, mingle with the pictorial ideas, the imaginations. The complete human being truly enters the picture.
[ 28 ] Recently, it was reported here that a critic of anthroposophy said that anthroposophy is not a science because it draws what it arrives at from the whole human being, whereas a science may only draw from the intellect. So you see, first one defines what a science is, that it must not draw from the whole human being, and then one says: It is wrong to draw from the whole human being. — In this way, of course, one can define everything to the ground. What is important is that we expand the one-sided culture of the head to a culture of the whole human being. And it is actually only false consciousness that leads to this culture of the head and then develops in practical life. For it is the false belief that we judge and conclude with the head that leads people to the culture of the head. We judge with our legs and conclude with our arms. Once we know that the whole human being is necessary for a judgment and a conclusion, then we will no longer resist the principle that real truth must come from the whole, from the full human being. That is what I wanted to point out to you today.

