Karma of Untruthfulness II
GA 173b
7 January 1917, Dornach
Lecture XVI
These lectures on the theme of current events are particularly suited to helping us realize what we can gain for our soul by striving to acquaint ourselves with spiritual knowledge. I have often stressed that this spiritual knowledge must not remain merely theoretical. We must make it come alive by filling it with those hallowed feelings and other impulses which belong to it, so that it can give to our souls that impetus and mood which will enable us as scientists of the spirit to relate to events in the human realm in a manner differing from that of someone who is not a spiritual scientist.
We have reflected in various ways on how individual human beings belong to particular nations, nationalities. But what the individual bears within him that belongs to mankind as a whole—that part of him which is not specialized and individualized with the characteristics of a particular nation—it is of this that spiritual science helps us to become fully aware, for the main content of anthroposophical spiritual science is valid for every individual human being, regardless of any differences among various groups. Indeed, even the national differences are seen differently from an anthroposophical point of view since, in contrast to the non-anthroposophical point of view, we are able to consider objectively what constitutes these differences—the various aspects can be seen objectively.
We are familiar with the threefold nature of our soul in that it consists of the sentient soul, the intellectual or mind soul and the consciousness soul, all three being filled, spiritually permeated, enlivened by our egohood. When the Italian folk soul works into individual human beings, it is the sentient soul that is influenced by the forces and impulses with which it works. In the French individual it is the intellectual or mind soul, and in the British individual the consciousness soul through which the folk soul works. For the folk souls of Central Europe it is the ego that is receptive, and for those of the Slav peoples the spirit-self. If we could fill ourselves with an understanding of this, we should no longer be tempted to form judgements in the way in which they are so frequently formed.
A certain person heard this and was furious, because he understood anthroposophical spiritual science to be saying that in the German nation the folk soul works through the ego, as if this was something higher than a folk soul working through the consciousness soul. This was his own misunderstanding! For in spiritual science different aspects of knowledge are viewed objectively, side by side. The folk souls have tasks to do and to accomplish them they have to work into their nations. But as regards the working of the folk souls in human souls we must realize that in our fifth post-Atlantean period a certain development has to take place. And those who are drawn towards anthroposophical spiritual science ought to feel themselves in the forefront of this development.
How does the folk soul work down into the human soul and mind? To start with we have to note that this working is subconscious and only partially rises up into consciousness. The individual human being feels that he belongs to one nation or another. On the whole, the folk soul works on the individuality via the maternal principle. It is the maternal principle that is embedded in the realm of the folk soul. The effect of the paternal principle is to detach the individual, as a physical and etheric being belonging to nature, from the group. I have frequently discussed this in past years. In the Christian world view this is even expressed in the Gospels. This, too, I discussed some time ago. As things are today, it is in the first instance through the blood that the folk soul works into the individual, and also through what corresponds in the etheric body to blood. Naturally, this is more or less an animal impulse, and it remains at the animal level for by far the greater part of mankind today. Through his blood the individual belongs to a particular nation. The mysterious forces and impulses working in the blood are very difficult to describe since they are extraordinarily complex and manifold. Suffice it to say that they lie beneath the surface of consciousness.
People are far more conscious in all those aspects of their make-up which belong to mankind as a whole, irrespective of national differences. That is why the pathos, the passion, the affectation of belonging to a particular nationality bursts forth with a kind of elemental force. People do not attempt to apply logical reasons or judgements when it is a question of specifying or sensing their attachment to their nationality. It is his blood, and his heart which is influenced by his blood, that bind the individual to his nationality and let him live within it. The impulses in question are subconscious, and it is a good step forward if we can at least succeed in recognizing the subconscious nature of this situation. It is important especially for those who are approaching spiritual science if they can undergo this development in themselves and come to feel about these things in a way that differs from the way the rest of mankind feels.
When people who do not belong to spiritual science are asked what binds them to their nation they will—indeed, they must—answer: My blood! This is the sole idea which they are capable of forming about their sense of belonging to a particular nationality. A student of spiritual science, however, ought gradually to reach a point at which he is able to give not this, but a different answer. If he cannot gradually develop to a point where this different answer is possible, this means that he sees spiritual science as something purely theoretical, not practical and living. Someone who does not study spiritual science can only say: I am connected to my nationality through my blood, through my blood I defend what lives in my nation, it is my blood that obliges me to identify with my nationality. One who does study spiritual science, however, must answer: I am connected with my nationality through my karma, for this is a part of my karma. As soon as concepts of karma are brought into the question, the whole relationship becomes much more spiritual. Someone who does not follow spiritual science will summon his blood to account for the pathos, the impulsiveness of everything he dces as a member of a particuiar nation. But someone who has developed through spiritual science will feel connected to one nation or another through his karma.
The matter becomes spiritual. Externally such a person might act in the same way; even if he feels this more spiritual aspect he might do the same things. But inwardly he will feel, spiritually; his feeling will be quite different from that of a person who feels his links with his nation purely at an animal level.
Here you see one of the points at which belonging to spiritual science changes the soul, brings a new mood into the soul. But at the same time you see how much the general consciousness of our time is lagging behind what could already be known by those who want to know it. In the general consciousness of our time the individual's attachment to a particular nation can only be seen as something that lives in the blood, or in that which is not at all of the blood but which is regulated in connection with the blood and out of this perception of the blood. A far freer view of nationality will gain ground once the whole matter is viewed as a matter of karma. Then certain delicate concepts will arise for someone who perhaps attaches himself consciously to a certain nation, thus bringing about a change of karma.
But however we view the matter, whether in the less complete sense shared by the greater part of mankind today, or in the more complete sense that can be attained through the study of spiritual science, nevertheless the fact remains that the general situation of the world today means that mankind is differentiated into groups. Nothing could make us more painfully aware than current events that this differentiation into groups is still for the most part prevalent. In addition, this differentiation into groups is mingled with quite other conditions and facts because it is to be even more difficult for human hearts and souls to gain an understanding of the reasons for the painful enmities, the painful disharmonies that have arisen amongst mankind today.
In short, we are touching on something pervaded by tragedy which should have nothing to do with ordinary logic or ordinary, superficial judgements. For whether these things are seen as a matter of blood or as a matter of karma, blood lies below, and karma above, logic. As a result, what we have been discussing must of necessity result in conflicts in human coexistence and these conflicts must be seen to be necessary. To believe that these conflicts can be judged in accordance with those concepts that apply to individual human beings must lead to the greatest errors. The widespread discussion of conflicts among nations in the same terms as those applicable to conflicts between individuals is the gravest mistake. I have already said that concepts such as justice and freedom apply to individual human beings. To claim them as parts of a programme for nations proves from the start a lack of knowledge about the characteristics of nations and a lack of will to enter into the question of national characteristics.
For those who understand these things and are capable, through spiritual knowledge, of seeing what is factually and naturally necessary, there is something paradoxical about the belief expressed in so many publications today, for it is comparable with the shark who makes a pact with the little fishes which he normally eats, saying: It is utterly inhumane to eat little fishes; I shall cease doing so! By saying this, he is condemning himself to death, for it happens to be the way of the world that sharks eat little fish!
It is necessary to come to a profound sense for the fact that it is not possible to understand the world without seeing the reality of the necessary conflicts leading to all that is tragic in the world. And to believe that something like Paradise is possible on the physical plane shows a total lack of comprehension of the peculiarities of the physical plane. Paradise does not exist on earth. There can be no comprehension among those who strive to realize the new Jerusalem as a Utopia on earth or who, like the social democrats, want to bring about some other satisfactory solution. There is a profound law which says that human beings, in so far as they live here on the physical plane, can only reach a satisfactory view of reality if they are aware that higher worlds also exist, and that they are connected in their souls with these higher worlds. Only if we understand that we are citizens of higher worlds can a satisfactory view be attained. Therefore, when spiritual consciousness was extinguished, a time had to come when mankind could no longer understand why so much disaster, so many conflicts, are present on the earth. These conflicts can only be resolved when we feel ourselves not only to be living in the physical world, but also in the spiritual world. Then we may begin to grasp that just as man cannot always be young but has also to grow old, so there has to be a breaking down of what was once built up—conflict and destruction as well as creation. When you understand this, you also understand that conflicts have to arise between groups of human beings. These conflicts are the tragic element of world events, and they must be seen to be something tragic.
In order to conjure up before your soul the living concept, the living idea that I am trying to describe, let me remind you of a rather caustic remark once made by the poet Friedrich Hebbel. He was, as you know, a genius of a somewhat ponderous caste, one who wrote rather laboriously, despite a considerable fund of worldly humour. I told you on another occasion that he was not at all far from a view of the world which would have accorded with spiritual science. Thus he once jotted down in his notebook the following theme: Plato, reincarnated, takes his place in a secondary school where the teacher is dealing with the subject of Plato. He cannot understand a word of what Plato is supposed to have said and the teacher scolds him severely for this. Hebbel wanted to work this idea into a dramatic episode. He never actually did so, but you see that he did indeed consider bringing the idea of reincarnation into a play.
Hebbel was a contemporary of Grillparzer and knew him. As I said, Hebbel was a somewhat sombre, melancholy genius, but after he had seen Grillparzer's plays The Golden Fleece, Thou shalt not lie! and A Dream is Life and so on, he said—and this is most interesting: Grillparzer depicts tragic conflicts, but only those of which it can be said that, if people were clever enough to see through the situations, it would be possible to resolve them in the end. According to Hebbel, the tragic circumstances in Grillparzer's plays only come about because the characters are not clever enough to see through the tragic situations. This, he says, is not really tragic. Real tragedy among human beings only comes about when those involved are as clever as anything and yet none of their cleverness and caution can help them, so that conflict becomes inevitable.
What Hebbel as a dramatist calls real tragedy is something that we ought to introduce as a concept into human evolution, human destiny, so that we do not continue for ever to form the naive judgement that one thing or another might have been avoided. Situations which lead to conflicts such as the present one cannot be avoided. And all those declamations about blame are totally out of place in face of a truly penetrating judgement.
It was for this purpose that I arranged these lectures which we have been conducting over the past days and weeks. I arranged them in order to demonstrate clearly that even in the case of an event such as the Opium Wars it is impossible to speak of blame in the way blame is meant in situations involving individual human beings. Concepts such as guilt, freedom, and so on, which can be applied to individual human beings, cannot be applied to souls living on other planes, and folk souls do not live on the physical plane but only work into the physical plane through individual souls. Their abode lies in other spheres, on other planes.
Such things are sensed nowadays by some isolated individuals. But they are not understood when we judge events on the basis of concepts which are customary today, instead of making the effort to take into account the actual evidence. To stand up today as a member of a nation and pronounce judgement on other nations in a manner that is only justified when referring to individuals proves nothing except one's own backwardness in the ability to judge. It is, though, a historical necessity, because certain statesmen are backward in relation to what could be known today, that this backwardness, this ignorance, is brought to bear even in the most terrible historical documents, as a result of which infinite rivers of blood will flow. On the other side stands the possibility of stressing again and again, for those who want to hear it, that the progress and salvation of mankind depend on finding judgements from the realms of spiritual life.
There is indeed a sense in some quarters for that which is necessary as a basis for judgement; but it cannot be brought into consciousness. I shall give you an example, for if I may say so, spiritual science will only be absorbed into our very flesh and blood if we learn to observe ordinary, everyday reality from the viewpoint of spiritual science. In England, in the seventies and eighties of the nineteenth century, the historian Professor Seeley was active. What he taught was in many cases decisive for what later came to live in many souls. Seeley was perhaps the first English historical imperialist. His imperialism was historical and his history imperialistic, for he viewed British history as it had developed over the centuries from the point of view that the trend had always been towards the foundation of the great British Empire which now covers one quarter of the habitable surface of the earth. His lectures appeared in print in the seventies and were frequently reprinted; sometimes there was a new edition every year, for he had very many students. In these lectures he sought to gather up all the separate facts which made the British Empire what it is today. He saw it as something in the nature of divine providence that all the different pieces came together in the way in which they did, as a result of different impulses. He even asks: How did it all happen? And answers expressly: No individuals decided all these things, performed all these actions at just the right moment, which joined yet another portion to the British Empire with the aim of creating the greatest imperium that had ever existed; no, all this happened in earlier times as though by instinct.
The various parts came together by instinct and in Seeley's view there is a divine and spiritual order in the way they did so. Now, he says, it is our task to lift up into consciousness what has hitherto taken place instinctively and to round off what arose thus instinctively with our consciousness into an imperium such as has never existed on the earth before. He saw it as his task as an imperialistic historian consciously to penetrate what had come together unconsciously. Seeley intends, as it were, to bring into the present consciousness of the tifth post-Atlantean period all that contributed to the rise of the British Empire out of the still-atavistic forces belonging to the laws of the fourth post-Atlantean period. But as we have pointed out, it was not only reasoned, intellectual thinking which took hold of the instinctive coming-together of the different parts. As I have told you, during the final decades of the nineteenth century certain members of occult streams began—not with ordinary consciousness, but with occult consciousness—to expand this British Empire by placing before their souls, and the souls of their pupils, maps which showed what still had to come about if the British Empire was to beam its forces over the whole world. In these occult circles the following idea was consciously cultivated: The fifth post-Atlantean period belongs to the English-speaking peoples. Based on this, all the arrangements were carried out and all the details elaborated. No doubt the Regius Professor was not aware of this; but others were and used all of it consciously in their impulses. This needs to be recorded.
We shall speak more about what it was that they were aware of. But when people are not aware of something it nevertheless creeps into their soul and occupies them in a certain way. Thus, in our time, an extraordinary collaboration came about between something occult hovering in the background and pulling strings, and something of which people are unaware, but which lives in the forefront of events on the physical plane.
One must know such things if one wants to form judgements in the proper way. Over the last few weeks I have quoted a number of peculiar incidents, such as the matter of the Almanach of Madame de Thèbes and others. No doubt you remember. Now consider the following quite objectively without taking sides in any way. It is something extraordinary even for somebody who only thinks in the ordinary way; but for those who observe spiritual connections it is something that demands more than mere consideration, it demands to be meditated upon and taken into one's impulses: Is it not extraordinary that as early as the nineties of the nineteenth century an English book should have been published that was written by three editors of The Times and given the title The Great War of 189-? The timing was handled in a somewhat dilettante fashion. Though the date suggested is rather earlier, the reference is to the present war. This book contains a small error, for we are told that the war will break out as a result of the assassination of the Bulgarian Prince Ferdinand and that it will then escalate into the European conflagration covering the world. What is foretold in detail about this European conflagration covering the world is remarkably prophetic and has been confirmed in the main by subsequent events. We can truly say that the book's greatest error is the confusion between the Bulgarian Prince Ferdinand and Franz Ferdinand of Austria, and the placing of the assassination in Sofia instead of Sarajevo. I consider that there is a significance which should not be underestimated in the appearance of a book in 1892 which so remarkably accurately portrays a future event. Only by endeavouring to form judgements which are not abstract, but founded on what actually exists, can we develop the capacity to see the hidden configuration of things.
Naturally enough, even those who were able to see what was to come misplaced certain details—this is inevitable when speaking about such things. It is not always possible to foresee everything accurately. But we ought to ponder on the fact that there were people at that time who had such strong reasons for going into these matters that they even went as far as publication. I am telling you all this, especially in connection with all that we are considering, so that you can sharpen your capacity for forming judgements. It is essential to have the will to look facts in the face and see how they relate to one another. In earlier lectures here I said: In the fifth post-Atlantean period we can only make progress if we strive on the one hand to achieve Imagination, and on the other to let the facts speak for themselves. All preconceived judgements are doomed increasingly to become empty phrases. Least of all can abstract thinking—as opposed to thinking that is bound up with actual facts—lead to judgements about the tragic conflicts in the world, the tragic play of impulses which work in the way I have described.
There exists today a knack, linked with world history, a knack of saying things which seem very convincing to many people but which, in fact, reveal nothing on which it would be worth basing a judgement. Let us consider a judgement such as the following: Those in power in the British Empire did not want war. To back this up, suitable correspondence, telegrams, letters and so forth, about all sorts of proposals for conferences and so on are are quoted. People who judge, not on the basis of reality but abstractly, can indeed be convinced by these things, because the material available to back up such a statement can sound very convincing. But for a judgement to be valid it must not only be convincing or correct in the abstract, it must live in reality. It is perfectly possible, under certain circumstances, to prove that those in power in the British Empire—or rather those who mattered—did not want a war, and with such proof the greatest impression can be made in the whole of the periphery. In order to prove it—I say ‘prove’—it is not even necessary to speak a direct untruth; yet in reality it remains an untruth. Why? Because it is, in fact, true and can be proved to be true, and yet this truth is not worth a snap of the fingers and is totally irrelevant.
You may be certain that those in power in the British Empire would very much have preferred to prevent the conflict in so far as the British Empire is a participant. But what those who matter wanted to achieve by means of the war—this they certainly desired with every ounce of energy at their disposal. Had it been possible to achieve this without a war, they would obviously greatly have preferred it, and from the beginning it was not at all out of the question that these aims might have been achieved by means other than war. To do this it would have been necessary to create some sort of substitute, some international arrangement, by means of which representatives of the various states could have come together to decide certain matters. If you take care to ensure in advance that you have a majority in such a body, then of course you can achieve your aims without a war, as long as the minority are prepared to go along with you.
So you see, in the last resort it is not a matter of whether one wanted to wage or prevent war, but of what one's aims were in the first place. And the objective observer cannot fail to see that the aim was indeed the one about which I have given you a number of hints—it is only possible to hint. As always, I beg you to take into account that I am not passing a judgement on moral grounds, but placing the concept of tragedy on the scales; I am saying that when conflicts are tackled by means of battles, when much blood is spilt—this stems from the tragedy of those conflicts. In contemplating this tragedy externally, we must, of course, have the will to be affected by these things in a way that differs somewhat from the ordinary.
How often do we hear: A share of the blame for this war must be laid at the door of those opinions, sensations and feelings which such people as Treitschke and Bernhardi spread among the German people. It can be quite grotesque, for the names of these writers have often enough been cited as belonging to deceivers, even by people who are convinced in the most honest way that this hits the nail on the head. Sometimes Nietzsche is included, sometimes others as well. There is much to be learnt by taking into account what such things are based on, in what I might call ‘the realm of what is true’. But before going into this from the spiritual point of view—for much can be learnt about the spiritual realm by attending to ordinary things—let me draw your attention to the way in which just such phenomena as the German historian Treitschke can illustrate for us everything that is so tragic in human evolution. The only thing is that one must not make judgements of an utterly superficial kind.
Had I been inclined to make judgements of a superficial nature, I should for some time now certainly have looked upon Treitschke as a social monster. I only met him once, at a time when he was already totally deaf. You wrote your questions on scraps of paper and he then replied. When I was introduced to him, he asked: Where are you from? I wrote down that I was an Austrian. He replied: Well, well,—he was loud-spoken, since he could hear nothing—Austrians are either geniuses or rascals, one or the other; and so forth. With Treitschke it was always like this: If you did not want to count yourself a genius, you had had it. He was a vivacious man with considerable depth of character, and he often expressed himself in sharply defined terms. He wrote a much cited history of the German people. It is quoted in a certain way, but it could easily be quoted in another way, too, for anyone who wanted a collection of anti-German vulgarities could just copy them straight from Treitschke. However, this is not what people do. Instead, they seek out passages which are far less frequent than those in which Treitschke tells his people the truth about themselves. They seek out passages which are written, so they think, in a ‘Prussian and militaristic’ manner.
In this connection I want to introduce you to a rather interesting judgement. It stems from a man who was quite justified in forming it, because he, too, was a historian. He was also particularly interested in Treitschke's definite antipathy towards more recent history and developments in England. Treitschke certainly entertained this antipathy and it soon became obvious when you got to know him.
This historian, who knew Treitschke well, wrote that Treitschke's dislike of modern England was based partly on historical, and partly on moral grounds, for
‘Britain's world-predominance outrages him as a man almost as much as it outrages him as a German. It outrages him because of its immorality, its arrogance and its pretentious security. And not without justice’
please note this
‘he delineates English policy throughout the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries as aimed consistently at the repression of Prussia, so soon as English politicians discovered the true nature of that state and divined the great future reserved for it by destiny. Had not England been Prussia's treacherous but timid enemy in 1864 and 1866, and again in 1870–71, and, above all, in 1874–75?’
This is what this historian says in his discussion of Treitschke's antipathy towards England. The strongest point he makes in Treitschke's favour is his
‘conviction, which becomes more intense as the years advance, that Britain's world-predominance is out of all proportion to Britain's real strength and to her worth or value, whether that worth be considered in the political, the social, the intellectual, or the moral sphere.’
He continues:
‘It is the detestation of a sham ... That which Treitschke hates in England is what Napoleon hated in England—a pretentiousness, an overweening middle-class self-satisfaction, which is not really patriotism, not the high and serious passion of Germany in 1813 and 1870, but an insular, narrow conceit; in fact, the emotion enshrined in that most vulgar of all national hymns, “Rule Britannia”.’
He goes on:
‘... But Treitschke is seldom witty, though often grossly if unintentionally offensive. He is as unable as Heine to see anything fine in the English character.’
You see, this is another judgement about Treitschke. And while we are just discussing this historian, let me read to you a judgement he formed about someone else, much-maligned Bernhardi:
‘But what marks out this work’
the book in question is the one which is constantly quoted these days as being particularly abominable
‘from all others of the same kind, giving it something of the distinction of a really epoch-making book, is that it represents a definite attempt made by a German soldier to understand not merely how Germany could make war upon England most effectively, but why Germany ought to make war upon England.’
All this is written about Treitschke and Bernhardi by the English professor Cramb, who from his own point of view could be called the English Treitschke. If you delve into the matter, you will find an extraordinary similarity between the tone of Cramb and that of Treitschke, for Cramb, equally, is utterly preoccupied with making clear that the British Empire must dominate the world and that everything must be done to bring this about. You could say that he speaks about England in the way Treitschke speaks about Germany, allowing of course for the differences between an Englishman and a German. Here you see how one of two men—each of whom, speaking from his own point of view, must needs say the opposite of the other—is nevertheless capable of appreciating what the other says. In a certain sense a point had been reached at which what had to be laid aside could indeed be laid aside, in order to come to what is above the individual and belongs to history.
It is therefore an extremely depressing relapse, a backward step for people, to find that now, even in the most weighty documents, judgements come to expression which are utterly inapplicable. There is really no need to go at all far in order to find tangible truths. But to do so one needs the keen sense which today can only be maintained through some connection with spiritual science. On another front there is something equally grotesque: The Russian plan to gain possession of the Dardanelles and Constantinople has existed and been admitted for centuries; yet at the same time the Russians claim to be entirely blameless, absolutely blameless. Here, in a historical document of the first water—the Tsar's decree that has recently been going round the world—we have the juxtaposition once again: We are absolutely blameless, but we mean to conquer, yet we are blameless. In Russia, too, people have not always held the opinions they hold today.
Take Kuropatkin for instance. In 1910 he published a book The Tasks of the Russian Army. In this book there is a remarkable passage which those who speak of Russia's great blamelessness could do well to mark and digest. It says:
‘If Russia does not bring to an end her interference in something foreign to her, yet of vital interest to Austria, then a war over the question of Serbia can be expected to break out in the twentieth century between Russia and Austria.’
The Russian general Kuropatkin wrote this in 1910. Of course he had in mind what existed on the Russian side that could lead to a war with Austria over the Serbian conflict.
The question now arises: Why is the truth being so distorted at present? The answer is that something has got to be said, yet it is not as easy as all that to speak the truth. I hinted at this yesterday. The things that are said are intended to spread a fog over the truth so as to distract people's attention from the truth. That is why arguments are chosen which will have an immediate sentimental appeal for those who lack the will to get to the bottom of things.
If only people could come more and more to understand above all the full significance of the many unconscious or subconscious untruths. I have often pointed out that it is no excuse to say that one believes something just because so and so said it. Of course I do not mean that many people do not believe in what they are saying, but this is not the point. These things work in the world, and those who make statements have a duty to take the trouble to find out the truth; merely believing something is not enough. Someone might speak quite truly when he says that he wanted to prevent the war. But this truth is not worth a fig in view of the fact that he intended to use other means instead to achieve his desired aim, the aim he is striving for with all his might. To reverse the truth in this way, whether unconsciously or subconsciously, is something much worse than an untruth, even though it appears to be the truth.
This is now the immensely difficult karma of mankind: that people do not feel in duty bound to pursue the actual, real truth and truthfulness that lives in the facts—indeed, that the very opposite of this seems to have started to rule the world and to be all set to do so ever increasingly. External deeds are always the consequence of what lives in mankind in the way of thought. They are the consequence of untruthfulness, which may indeed appear in the guise of truth because it can be ‘proved’, though only superficially. What lives in the judgements of human beings can become, on another plane, the thundering of cannon and the spilling of blood. There is certainly a connection between the two. The conclusion we have to draw from this is that we must enter ever more deeply into the facts, that we must develop a sense which can lead us to see in the appropriate places those things which can really throw light and reveal what is essential.
Sechzehnter Vortrag
Gerade bei unseren jetzigen Betrachtungen über die Zeitereignisse kann es uns so recht zum Bewußtsein kommen, was wir für unsere Seele gewinnen können dadurch, daß wir uns einzuleben versuchen in geisteswissenschaftliche Erkenntnis. Es ist ja oftmals betont worden, daß geisteswissenschaftliche Erkenntnis nicht Theorie bleiben, sondern lebendig werden soll dadurch, daß sie sich gewissermaßen mit den ihr naturgemäß heiligen Gefühlen, Empfindungen und sonstigen Impulsen durchdringt und unserer Seele einen gewissen Schwung, eine gewisse Stimmung gibt, so daß wir uns als Geisteswissenschafter anders in den Menschenzusammenhang hineinfügen, als dies ein Nichtgeisteswissenschafter tut.
Wir haben verschiedene Erwägungen angestellt über die Zugehörigkeit des Menschen zu diesem oder jenem Volkstum, oder, wie man auch sagt in der neueren Zeit, zu dieser oder jener Nation oder Nationalität. Nun ist gerade das Allgemein-Menschliche das, was der Mensch an sich trägt, ohne daß es sich in dieses oder jenes Volkstum individualisiert, spezifiziert, was man sich durch die Geisteswissenschaft voll zum Bewußtsein bringen kann, weil ja alles das, was den Hauptinhalt der anthroposophisch orientierten Geisteswissenschaft ausmacht, wirklich für jeden Menschen gilt, ohne irgendeinen Gruppenunterschied. Und wenn man vom anthroposophischen Standpunkte aus nationale Differenzierungen betrachtet, so betrachtet man sie ja auch anders als vom nichtanthroposophischen Standpunkte, indem man gewissermaßen objektiv ins Auge faßt, worauf diese Differenzierungen beruhen. Die Dinge können objektiv ins Auge gefaßt werden.
Wir sind uns ja der Dreigliedrigkeit unserer Seele in Empfindungsseele, Verstandes- oder Gemütsseele und Bewußtseinsseele bewußt, welche drei Glieder ausgefüllt, durchgeistigt, durchlebt werden von der Ichheit. Die Empfindungsseele ist dasjenige, was von der italienischen Volksseele besonders beeinflußt wird, wenn die Kräfte und Impulse der Volksseele in die einzelne Menschenseele hineinwirken. Die Verstandes- oder Gemütsseele im einzelnen Menschen ist für die französische, die Bewußtseinsseele für die britische Volksseele, das Ich für die mitteleuropäischen und das Geistselbst für die Volksseelen der slawischen Völker besonders empfänglich. Wenn wir dies erkennen und durchdringen, so sollten wir nicht mehr dazu verführt werden, Urteile zu fällen, wie sie eben sehr häufig gefällt werden.
Jemand, der diese Dinge gehört hat, ist nun gewissermaßen wütend geworden aus dem Grunde, weil er vernommen hat: Durch die anthroposophisch orientierte Geisteswissenschaft wird das deutsche Volkstum so interpretiert, als ob die Volksseele hereinwirkt in das Ich. — Sein Irrtum war, daß er dies für etwas Höheres gehalten hat, als wenn die Bewußtseinsseele von der Volksseele beeinflußt wird. Das lag an ihm! In der Geisteswissenschaft werden die Dinge in ihrer Objektivität nebeneinander hingestellt. Die Volksseelen haben ihre Aufgaben, und die bestehen in diesem Hereinwirken. Aber bei diesem Hereinwirken der Volksseele in die Menschenseele müssen wir uns durchaus klar sein, daß gerade in unserem fünften nachatlantischen Zeitraum eine gewisse Entwickelung vor sich gehen muß. Und als das erste Glied dieser Entwickelung müßten eigentlich diejenigen sich fühlen, die jetzt zur anthroposophisch orientierten Geisteswissenschaft hinneigen.
Wodurch wirkt denn eigentlich die Volksseele in das Menschengemüt herein? Wenn wir so, wie die Menschheit einmal ist, betrachten, was in bezug auf diese Sache geschieht, so müssen wir sagen: Das Hereinwirken der Volksseele in die individuelle Menschenseele ist zunächst ein unterbewußtes, das nur teilweise heraufsteigt in das Bewußtsein. Der Mensch fühlt sich diesem oder jenem Volkstum angehörig, und in der Hauptsache geschieht ja die Einwirkung der Volksseele auf die Individualität des Menschen durch den Umweg des mütterlichen Prinzips. Das mütterliche Prinzip ist eingebettet in das Volksseelentum. Was den Menschen als physisch-ätherisches Naturwesen mehr herausreißt aus dem Gruppenhaften, ist die Einwirkung des väterlichen Impulses. Das habe ich in früheren Jahren öfter auseinandergesetzt. Für die christliche Weltanschauung liegt das schon in den Evangelien ausgedrückt. Auch darüber ist in früheren Jahren gesprochen worden. Im wesentlichen wird, so wie die Dinge heute noch liegen, zunächst durch das Blut vom Volkstume aus in den Menschen hereingewirkt, und durch dasjenige, was im Ätherleibe dem Blute entspricht. Natürlich haben wir es da mit einem mehr oder weniger animalischen Impulse zu tun, und er bleibt animalisch für den weitaus größten Teil der heutigen Menschen. Der Mensch gehört einem gewissen Volkstum an durch sein Blut. Welche geheimnisvollen Kräfte und Impulse in das Blut hineinwirken, ist schwierig im einzelnen auseinanderzusetzen, weil diese Impulse außerordentlich vielgestaltig, mannigfaltig sind. Aber sie liegen unter der Oberfläche des Bewußstseins.
Viel bewußter lebt der Mensch in all dem, was an Menschlichkeit ohne Unterschied der Nation in ihm lebt. Daher wird auch das Pathos, die Leidenschaft, der Affekt, mit dem sich der Mensch einer Nationalität angehörig fühlt, mit einer gewissen elementaren Kraft hervortreten. Der Mensch wird nicht versuchen, logische Gründe oder Urteile geltend zu machen, wenn es sich für ihn darum handelt, seine Zusammengehörigkeit mit seiner Nationalität zu bestimmen oder zu empfinden. Das Blut und das Herz, das unter dem Einflusse des Blutes steht, bringt den Menschen mit seiner Nationalität zusammen, läßt ihn in der Nationalität drinnen leben. Die Impulse, die da in Betracht kommen, sind unterbewußt, und es ist schon viel gewonnen, wenn man sich dieses unterbewußten Charakters bewußt ist. Gerade in bezug darauf ist es wichtig, wenn der Mensch, der an die Geisteswissenschaft herantritt, in sich selber eine Entwickelung durchmacht, wenn er in bezug auf diese Dinge gewissermaßen anders empfindet als die übrige Menschheit. Wenn Menschen, die nicht der Geisteswissenschaft angehören, gefragt werden, wie sie mit ihrer Nationalität zusammenhängen, so werden und müssen sie sagen: Durch das Blut! — Das ist die einzige Idee, die sie sich über die Zugehörigkeit zu ihrer Nationalität machen können. Der Geisteswissenschafter soll allmählich dazu kommen, sich nicht diese Antwort zu geben, sondern eine andere. Würde er sich nicht allmählich zu dieser andern Antwort entwickeln können, so würde er die Geisteswissenschaft nur theoretisch nehmen, nicht im eigentlichen Sinne praktisch und lebendig. Während also der Nichtgeisteswissenschafter sich nur die Antwort geben kann: Durch mein Blut hänge ich mit meiner Nationalität zusammen, durch mein Blut verteidige ich dasjenige, was in der Nation lebt, durch mein Blut fühle ich die Verpflichtung, mich zu identifizieren mit meiner Nationalität —, muß der Geisteswissenschafter sich die andere Antwort geben: Durch mein Karma bin ich mit der Nationalität verbunden, denn es ist ein Teil des Karma. — Sobald man Karmabegriffe einführt, vergeistigt man allerdings das gesamte Verhältnis. Und während der Nichtgeisteswissenschafter für alles das, was er als Angehöriger eines bestimmten Volkes tut, das Pathos, die Impulsivität, das Blut aufrufen wird, wird derjenige, der die geisteswissenschaftliche Entwickelung durchgemacht hat, sich durch das Karma verbunden fühlen mit diesem oder jenem Volkstum.
Das ist eine Vergeistigung der Sache. Außerlich mag dasselbe ablaufen, äußerlich mag der Mensch, wenn er diese Vergeistigung empfindet, das gleiche geltend machen; aber innerlich wird die Sache vergeistigt sein, und er wird ganz anders empfinden als derjenige, der die Zugehörigkeit gewissermaßen nur animalisch empfindet.
Da sehen Sie gerade einen Punkt, in dem Zugehörigkeit zur Geisteswissenschaft die Seele zu etwas anderem macht, eine andere Stimmung in die Seele hineinbringt. Sie sehen aber zugleich, wie weit das allgemeine Zeitbewußtsein zurück ist hinter dem, was heute von den willigen Leuten wohl gewußt werden könnte. Das allgemeine Zeitbewußtsein kann gar nicht anders, als die Zugehörigkeit des Menschen zur Nationalität nach dem Blute, oder nach dem, was sehr wenig blutsmäßig, aber eben im Zusammenhange mit dem Blut und aus diesem Anschauen des Blutes heraus geregelt wird, auffassen. Es wird eine viel freiere Auffassung dieser Zugehörigkeit Platz greifen, wenn die ganze Angelegenheit als eine Karmaangelegenheit betrachtet wird. Dann werden gewisse feine Begriffe auftauchen für denjenigen, der sich vielleicht der oder jener Nationalität bewußt anschließt und dadurch eine Karmaschwenkung vollzieht.
Aber wie wir die Sache auch nehmen, ob in dem unvollkommenen Sinn, in dem der größte Teil der Menschheit es heute empfinden muß, oder in dem vollkommeneren Sinn, in dem man es empfinden kann als Angehöriger der Geisteswissenschaft, es bleibt bestehen, daß durch die allgemeinen Weltenverhältnisse die Menschheit heute in Gruppen differenziert ist. Und nichts kann uns schmerzlicher als die gegenwärtigen Ereignisse zum Bewußtsein bringen, daß diese Gruppendifferenzierung heute in hohem Maße noch vorhanden ist. Dabei wird diese Gruppendifferenzierung vielfach vermischt mit ganz andern Verhältnissen und Tatsachen, um den menschlichen Gemütern eine Aufklärung darüber zu erschweren, warum solch schmerzliche Gegensätze, solche schmerzlichen Disharmonien in der Menschheit auftreten können, wie sie jetzt aufgetreten sind.
Kurz, in dem, was da berührt wird, liegt ein Tragisches, das mit der gewöhnlichen Logik, den äußerlichen oberflächlichen Urteilen nichts zu tun haben sollte; denn ob man die Sache auffaßt als eine Blutsache oder als eine Karmasache: das Blut liegt unterhalb, das Karma oberhalb des Logischen. Daher müssen durch dasjenige, was da ins Auge gefaßt wird, notwendigerweise Konflikte im menschlichen Zusammenleben resultieren, und diese Konflikte muß man eben als notwendige verstehen. Zu glauben, daß diese Konflikte sich beurteilen lassen nach denselben Begriffen, die gültig sind zwischen einzelnen Menschen, führt zu den größten Irrtümern, und darinnen besteht der große Irrtum, daß heute im weitesten Umfange über Völkerkonflikte so gesprochen wird, wie wenn es sich um Menschenkonflikte, um Konflikte zwischen menschlichen Individuen handelte. Ich habe schon darauf aufmerksam gemacht: Begriffe wie Recht und Freiheit sind anwendbar auf die einzelnen menschlichen Individualitäten; sie als Programmpunkte für Völker anzugeben, bedeutet von vornherein, nichts zu wissen von den Eigentümlichkeiten des Volkstümlichen, gar nicht den Willen haben, auf das Eigentümliche des Volksmäßigen einzugehen.
Für denjenigen, der die Dinge durchschaut und sachliche, naturgemäße Notwendigkeiten aus der geistigen Erkenntnis heraus zu durchblicken vermag, ist der Glaube, der heute aus vielen Publikationen spricht, ganz gleich mit dem Glauben, den ein Haifisch haben würde, wenn er sagt: Ich will ein Abkommen treffen mit den kleinen Fischen, die ich sonst fresse! Es ist unmenschlich, es ist inhuman, die kleinen Fische zu fressen; ich werde das abstellen! - Er stellt sich damit sein Todesurteil aus, denn es ist in der Welt eben einmal so eingerichtet, daß der Haifisch die kleinen Fische frißt!
Man muß eine gründliche Empfindung dafür bekommen, daß man die Welt nicht verstehen kann, wenn man nicht im Realen die notwendigen Konflikte sieht, die zum Tragischen in der Welt führen. Und es heißt zugleich, die Eigentümlichkeit des physischen Planes überhaupt nicht zu verstehen, wenn man meint, innerhalb des physischen Planes könne so etwas sein wie ein Paradies. Das Paradies ist nicht auf der Erde. Es muß notwendigerweise Unverstand herrschen bei denjenigen, die entweder in der physischen Welt das neue Jerusalem als eine Utopie realisieren, oder wie ein Sozialdemokrat irgendeinen andern allgemein befriedigenden Zustand herbeiführen wollen. Es ist ein tiefes Gesetz, daß der Mensch, insofern er hier auf dem physischen Plane lebt, nur dann zu einer befriedigenden Auffassung der Wirklichkeit kommen kann, wenn er sich bewußt ist, daß es höhere Welten gibt, daß er mit seiner Seele mit höheren Welten zusammenhängt. Nur wenn wir wissen, daß wir Bürger höherer Welten sind, ist eine Befriedigung möglich. Daher würde auch mit dem Auslöschen des geistigen Bewußtseins der Menschheit eine Zeit heraufkommen müssen, in der diese nicht mehr verstehen könnte, warum so viel Unheil, so viel Konflikte hier in der Welt sind. Lösen können sich diese Konflikte nur, wenn man sich nicht nur in der physischen, sondern auch in der geistigen Welt lebendig darinnen fühlt. Dann fängt man an zu begreifen: Ebenso wie der Mensch nicht immer jung sein kann, sondern auch altern muß, so muß es auch ein Abtragen dessen geben, was aufgebaut wurde, daß zugleich mit der Entstehung Konflikte, Zerstörung da sein müssen. Wenn man dieses versteht, so versteht man, daß auch zwischen Menschengruppen Konflikte eintreten müssen. Diese Konflikte sind das Tragische im Weltengeschehen, und als Tragisches muß man sie auffassen.
Ich möchte, um den lebendigen Begriff, die lebendige Idee, die ich damit meine, so recht vor Ihre Seele hinzustellen, an einen etwas herben Ausspruch erinnern, den der Dichter Friedrich Hebbel getan hat. Hebbel war ja ein Genie von einer etwas schwerfälligen Art, der, trotz eines reichlichen Welthumors, schwer produzierte. Ich habe Ihnen ja schon ausgeführt, daß er der geisteswissenschaftlichen Auffassung der Welt nicht sehr fern stand. Er hat zum Beispiel als Plan in sein Tagebuch die Behandlung des folgenden Stoffes eingetragen: Der wiederverkörperte Plato sitzt als Schüler in einer Gymnasialklasse, wo der Lehrer gerade den Plato durchnimmt, und versteht gar nichts von dem, was im Plato enthalten sein soll, so daß der Professor ihn hart anfährt. Diese Idee wollte Hebbel dramatisch behandeln. Er ist nicht dazugekommen; aber man sieht, daß ihm selbst die Wiedergabe des Reinkarnationsgedankens in der Dramatik vorschwebte.
Nun hat Hebbel Grillparzer erlebt, der sein Zeitgenosse war. Hebbel war, wie gesagt, ein etwas schwerfälliges, schwerblütiges Genie, und als er sich die Grillparzerschen Dramen «Das Goldene Vlies», «Weh dem, der lügt!», «Der Traum ein Leben» und so weiter angeschaut hatte, sagte er - und das ist eben sehr interessant: Grillparzer bringt tragische Konflikte zur Darstellung, aber solche, bei denen man immer sagen kann, wenn die Menschen nur ganz klug wären und die Verhältnisse durchschauten, so würden sich diese Konflikte zuletzt ausgleichen müssen. — Bei Grillparzer kommt eigentlich nach Hebbel das Tragische dadurch zustande, daß die Menschen nicht genügend klug sind, um das Tragische zu durchschauen. Das aber sei nicht das richtige Tragische; das richtige Tragische zwischen Menschen entsteht erst dann, wenn die Beteiligten so klug, so umsichtig sein mögen, wie sie nur wollen, und ihnen alle Klugheit, alle Umsichtigkeit nicht helfen: es muß der Konflikt herauskommen.
Was Hebbel als Dramatiker für sich in Anspruch nimmt, was er das eigentlich Tragische nennt, das müssen wir als eine Kategorie, als einen Begriff in die Menschheitsentwickelung, in das eigentlich Menschliche einführen, sonst wird man immer zu dem einfältigen Urteil kommen, daß sich dies oder jenes hätte vermeiden lassen. Die Dinge lassen sich nicht vermeiden, wenn sie zu solchen Konflikten führen, wie der gegenwärtige es ist. Und alle Deklamationen über den Schuldbegriff nehmen sich vor einer eindringlichen Beurteilung recht deplaciert aus.
Deshalb stellte ich diese Betrachtungen an, die wir in den letzten Tagen und Wochen gepflogen haben, um klar hervortreten zu lassen, daß man selbst einer solchen Erscheinung wie dem Opiumkrieg gegenüber nicht in dem Sinne von Schuld spricht, wie man in dem Verhältnisse von Mensch zu Mensch, von Einzelmensch zu Einzelmensch von Schuld spricht. Denn diese Begriffe: Schuld, Freiheit und so weiter, wie sie auf den einzelnen Menschen anwendbar sind, sind nicht anwendbar für Seelen, die auf andern Planen leben, und die Volksseelen leben eben nicht auf dem physischen Plan, sondern wirken nur durch die individuelle Seele auf den physischen Plan herein; sie haben ihren Sitz eben in andern Sphären, auf andern Planen.
Diese Dinge werden heute schon von einzelnen Menschen gefühlt. Aber man versteht diese nicht, wenn man mit den Begriffen, die heute gang und gäbe sind, die Ereignisse beurteilen will und nicht versucht, die sachlichen Unterlagen ins Auge zu fassen. Sich heute als ein Angehöriger irgendeiner Nationalität hinzustellen und über andere Nationalitäten so zu urteilen, wie man nur über einen einzelnen Menschen urteilen könnte, das zeigt nichts anderes als ein Zurückgebliebensein in der Urteilsfähigkeit. Daß allerdings bis in die furchtbarsten historischen Dokumente hinein, von denen unendliche Blutmengen abhängen werden, die Ignoranz, die Zurückgebliebenheit spricht, weil gewisse Staatsmänner hinter dem zurückgeblieben sind, was man heute schon wissen kann, dies ist natürlich eine historische Notwendigkeit. Aber auf der andern Seite kommt dazu, daß für diejenigen, die es hören wollen, immer wieder betont werden muß, daß der Fortschritt und das Heil der Menschheit darinnen bestehen, das Urteil aus dem spirituellen Leben herauszuholen, um weiterzukommen.
Aber gefühlt wird an manchen Stellen, was heute zum Urteilen notwendig ist. Nur kann es nicht zum Bewußtsein gebracht werden. Dafür ein Beispiel, denn Geisteswissenschaft wird uns wirklich erst, wenn ich so sagen darf, in unser geistiges Fleisch und Blut übergehen, wenn wir die äußere, alltägliche Wirklichkeit betrachten lernen unter dem Gesichtspunkte der Geisteswissenschaft. In England wirkte in den siebziger, achtziger Jahren des 19. Jahrhunderts der Historiker Professor Seeley. Was er lehrte, war vielfach bestimmend für dasjenige, was später in den Gemütern vieler Menschen lebte. Seeley ist vielleicht der erste historische Imperialist Englands, historisch als Imperialist, imperialistisch als Historiker, denn er betrachtete die britische Geschichte, wie sie sich in den Jahrhunderten entwickelt hat, unter dem Gesichtspunkt, daß sie hintendiert hat nach der Begründung des großen britischen Weltreiches, das ja heute ein Viertel der bewohnbaren Erde einnimmt. In seinen Vorträgen, die in den siebziger Jahren gedruckt erschienen sind, viele Auflagen erlebt haben - es gab Jahre, in denen jedes Jahr eine neue Auflage erschien, er hat viele Schüler gehabt -, ging er darauf aus, all die einzelnen Tatsachen zusammenzustellen, durch die das Britische Reich das geworden ist, was es heute ist. Und er sah darin etwas wie eine göttliche Fügung, daß die einzelnen Stücke sich so zusammengeschlossen haben auf Grund dieser oder jener Impulse. Er stellt auch die Frage: Wie ist das eigentlich alles gekommen? — und sagt ausdrücklich: Menschen, die das alles beschlossen haben, die zu irgendeinem Zeitpunkt etwas getan haben, um wiederum ein Stück zum Britischen Reich dazuzufügen, in der Absicht, ein Imperium allergrößten Stiles zustande zu bringen, solche Menschen hat es nicht gegeben; sondern das alles ist in früheren Zeiten wie instinktiv geschehen. — Instinktiv sind diese einzelnen Teile zusammengekommen, und es liegt nach Seeleys Anschauung wie eine göttlich-geistige Ordnung in diesem Zusammenkommen. Jetzt, sagte er, ist unsere Aufgabe, das, was bisher instinktiv geschehen ist, ins Bewußte heraufzuheben und das instinktiv Gewordene zu einem festgefügten, noch niemals in der Welt dagewesenen Imperium abzurunden. Und seine Aufgabe als imperialistischer Historiker sah er gerade darin, mit Bewußtsein zu durchdringen, was unbewußt zusammengefügt worden ist. Seeley will gewissermaßen in das gegenwärtige Bewußtsein des fünften nachatlantischen Zeitraums heraufheben, was aus noch atavistischen Kräften gemäß den Gesetzen des vierten nachatlantischen Zeitraums zu der Entstehung des britischen Imperiums beigetragen hat. Aber wir haben darauf hingewiesen, daß es nicht nur das verstandesmäßige, vernunftgemäße Denken ist, welches das instinktive Zusammenströmen der Teile ergreift, sondern ich konnte Ihnen sagen, daß in den letzten Jahrzehnten des 19. Jahrhunderts auch gewisse Angehörige von okkultistischen Strömungen da waren, welche nun nicht nur mit dem gewöhnlichen Bewußtsein, sondern mit dem okkulten Bewußtsein sich darangemacht haben, dieses britische Imperium auszubauen, indem sie geradezu Landkarten vor ihre Seelen und die ihrer Zuhörer, ihrer Schüler, hinstellten, welche zeigten, was entstehen muß, wenn das britische Imperium über die Welt hin seine Kräfte strahlt. Mit Bewußtsein wurde in diesen okkulten Zusammenhängen die Idee vertreten: Der fünfte nachatlantische Zeitraum gehört den englisch sprechenden Menschen. Und unter diesem Gesichtspunkte wurden alle Einteilungen vorgenommen und alle Details eingerichtet. Gewiß hat der «Regius-Professor» das nicht durchschaut; aber andere haben es durchschaut und bewußt zu ihren Impulsen gemacht. Das muß durchaus festgehalten werden.
Über das Durchschaute wollen wir noch sprechen; aber das Nichtdurchschaute dringt doch in die Menschengemüter ein und macht sich in gewisser Weise darin zu schaffen. Und so entstand in unserer Zeit schon ein merkwürdiges Zusammenwirken dessen, was gewissermaßen okkult im Hintergrunde lauert und an Fäden zieht, und dessen, was, nichts wissend von diesen Dingen, vorne auf dem Schauplatz der Ereignisse des physischen Planes lebt.
Solche Dinge muß man wissen, um Urteile in der richtigen Weise fällen zu können. Ich habe Ihnen schon in der letzten Zeit einzelne merkwürdige Tatsachen angeführt, die Sache von dem «Almanach der Madame de Thebes» und ähnliche; Sie erinnern sich, daß ich diese Dinge angeführt habe. Aber ohne nach irgendeiner Seite hin Partei zu ergreifen, sondern rein objektiv: Ist es nicht eine eigentümliche Sache, die für denjenigen, der bloß denkt, zu denken gibt, für denjenigen, der spirituelle Zusammenhänge ins Auge faßt, aber mehr fordert als bloßes Nachdenken, schon ein Nachsinnen und ein Aufnehmen der Sache in seine Impulse, — ist es nicht eigentümlich, daß schon in den neunziger Jahren des 19. Jahrhunderts ein englisches Buch erschienen ist, das drei Redakteure der «Times» zu Verfassern hatte und den Titel trägt: «Der Krieg von 189. .»? Die Zeiträume, die man da ins Auge faßte, waren allerdings etwas dilettantisch behandelt. Gemeint ist schon der jetzige Krieg, nur wollte man ihn etwas verfrüht ansetzen. In diesem Buch wird ein kleiner Fehler gemacht, es wird nämlich erzählt, daß durch ein Attentat auf den bulgarischen Fürsten Ferdinand der Krieg seinen Anfang nehmen soll, und dann werde daraus der europäische Weltenbrand entstehen. Und über die Details dieses europäischen Weltenbrandes wird mit merkwürdiger Prophetie so gesprochen, daß in den Hauptzügen die Dinge, die sich abgespielt haben, bestätigt werden. Man kann sagen, der größte Irrtum dieses Buches ist der, daß der bulgarische Fürst Ferdinand mit dem Franz Ferdinand von Österreich verwechselt worden ist, und daß die Sache sich nicht in Sofia, sondern in Sarajewo zugetragen hat. Aber ich meine, es ist doch von einer nicht zu unterschätzenden Bedeutung, daß dieses Buch 1892 erschienen ist und in einer so merkwürdigen Weise ein kommendes Ereignis darstellt. Wenn man versucht, sich nicht abstrakte Urteile zu bilden, sondern sein Urteil zu bilden auf Grundlage dessen, was da ist, dann kommt man allein dazu, die Fähigkeit zu entwickeln, ein wenig hineinzuschauen in die Konfiguration der Dinge.
Natürlich haben auch diejenigen, die etwas sehen konnten von den Ereignissen, die da geschehen sollten — wie das ja immer ist, wenn man über solche Dinge spricht -, in den Einzelheiten das oder jenes verschoben. Man sieht nicht immer alles genau. Aber das sollte zu denken geben, daß immerhin Menschen da waren, die so viel Veranlassung hatten, sich mit den Dingen zu beschäftigen, daß sie bis zu ihrer Publikation gegangen sind. Ich will Ihnen alles dieses nur vorlegen, und zwar gerade in dem Zusammenhange, in dem wir sind, damit Sie Ihr Beurteilungsvermögen daran schärfen. Man muß ja tatsächlich den Willen dazu haben, auf die Tatsachen hinzusehen, die Tatsachen im Zusammenhang miteinander zu sehen. Ich habe in früheren Betrachtungen, die hier angestellt worden sind, gesagt: Man kommt im fünften nachatlantischen Zeitraum nur zurecht, wenn man auf der einen Seite nach Imagination strebt, und auf der andern Seite danach, die Tatsachen für sich sprechen zu lassen. Alle vorgefaßten Urteile werden immer mehr und mehr bloße Phrasen sein, werden verurteilt sein, immer mehr und mehr zu bloßen Phrasen zu werden. Aber was man am wenigsten mit dem bloßen abstrakten Denken beurteilen kann, ohne sich auf ein mit den Tatsachen verbundenes Denken einzulassen, das sind eben die tragischen Konflikte der Welt, das tragische Zusammenspielen der Impulse, die so wirken, wie ich es vorhin charakterisiert habe.
Heute besteht, ich möchte sagen, ein welthistorischer Trick darin, Dinge zu sagen, die einleuchtend sind, die auf viele Menschen überzeugend wirken, aber eigentlich gar nichts besagen, gar nicht dieGrundlage für ein gültiges Urteil abgeben können. Greifen wir ein Urteil heraus wie dieses, das oft ausgesprochen wird: Die Machthaber des Britischen Reiches haben den Krieg nicht gewollt. - Dafür werden die entsprechenden Korrespondenzen, Telegramme, Briefe und so weiter über allerlei Konferenzvorschläge und dergleichen angeführt. Menschen, die nicht wirklichkeitsgemäß, die abstrakt urteilen, können ja unter Umständen davon überzeugt sein, weil die Sache nach dem vorhandenen Material sogar sehr einleuchtend gemacht werden kann. Aber bei einem Urteil kommt es nicht bloß darauf an, ob es einleuchtend, ob es abstrakt richtig ist, sondern ob es in der Wirklichkeit lebt. Daß die Machthaber des Britischen Reiches — oder vielmehr gewisse Machthaber, auf die es ankam — den Krieg nicht gewollt haben, das kann man unter Umständen sehr leicht beweisen, und mit diesem Beweis auf die ganze Welt der Peripherie den allergrößten Eindruck machen. Man braucht, indem man dieses beweist — ich sage: «beweist» —, gar nicht einmal unmittelbar eine Unwahrheit zu sagen; aber eine reale Verlogenheit bleibt es doch. Warum? Gerade weil es wahr ist und sich als wahr beweisen läßt, diese Wahrheit aber keinen Firlefanz wert ist, es auf sie gar nicht ankommt. Denn man kann überzeugt sein, daß die Machthaber des Britischen Reiches den Konflikt sogar gern verhindert hätten, insofern das Britische Reich daran beteiligt ist. Aber was sie jetzt erreichen wollen durch den Krieg, das haben sie mit aller Energie gewollt — diejenigen, auf die es ankommt. Hätte sich das ohne Krieg erreichen lassen, so wäre es ihnen selbstverständlich viel lieber gewesen, und von vornherein war es gar nicht so ausgeschlossen, diese Ziele durch andere Mittel als den Krieg zu erreichen. Dazu hätte man nur, bevor es zum Krieg kam, irgendein Surrogat einer zwischenstaatlichen Einrichtung schaffen müssen, so etwas, wo sich die Repräsentanten der verschiedenen Staaten zusammensetzen und über gewisse Dinge entscheiden. Wenn man vorher dafür gesorgt hat, daß man in einer solchen Körperschaft die Majorität hat, so kann man selbstverständlich seine Ziele auch ohne Krieg erreichen, sofern die Minorität darauf eingeht.
Also Sie sehen: darauf kommt es gar nicht an, ob man zuletzt den Krieg führen oder verhindern wollte; sondern darauf, was man überhaupt wollte. Und daß man das wollte, was aus den verschiedenen Andeutungen, die ich gemacht habe — es können ja immer nur Andeutungen sein —, hervorgeht, das wird dem objektiven Betrachter wohl klar sein. Aber immer bitte ich Sie, dabei zu berücksichtigen, daß ich nicht moralisch urteile, sondern den Begriff der Tragik in die Waagschale werfe, und daß, wenn die Leute Konflikte miteinander ausfechten, wenn viel Blut vergossen wird, dies aus der Tragik der Konflikte hervorgeht. Da muß man dann allerdings, wenn man äußerlich diese Tragik sehen will, schon den Willen haben, die Dinge ein wenig anders an sich herankommen zu lassen, als man sie gewöhnlich an sich herankommen läßt.
Wie oft tönt uns entgegen: Mitschuldig an diesem Krieg sind jene Urteile, Empfindungen und Gefühle, die Menschen, wie zum Beispiel Treitschke und Bernhardi, im deutschen Volke verbreitet haben. — Nehmen wir gerade das Groteske heraus: Wie oft haben wir diese Namen als die Namen ganz abenteuerlicher Kerle nennen hören, auch von Menschen, die in der ehrlichsten Weise überzeugt sind, damit das Richtige zu treffen. Manchmal wird noch Nietzsche hinzugefügt, manchmal noch einige andere. Man kann viel lernen, wenn man das, was, ich möchte sagen, im «Reich des Wahrhaftigen» solchen Dingen zugrunde liegt, in Betracht zieht. Aber bevor ich gewissermaßen vom spirituellen Standpunkte gerade hierauf eingehe - man kann viel über das Spirituelle lernen, wenn man das Alltägliche betrachtet —, möchte ich Sie doch darauf aufmerksam machen, daß gerade bei Erscheinungen wie dem deutschen Historiker Treitschke einem das Tragische der Menschheitsentwickelung vor Augen treten kann. Man muß nur nicht nach der äußersten Oberfläche urteilen.
Wenn ich nach der äußersten Oberfläche geurteilt hätte, so hätte ich den Treitschke seit einer gewissen Zeit wahrhaftig für ein gesellschaftliches Ungetüm halten müssen. Ich bin nur einmal mit ihm zusammengewesen, zu der Zeit, als er schon vollständig taub war. Man schrieb auf Zettelchen, was man ihm sagen wollte, und er antwortete dann. Als ich ihm vorgestellt wurde, fragte er mich: Woher sind Sie? — Ich schrieb ihm auf, daß ich Österreicher sei. Er antwortete: Ja, ja-er war ein Polterer, er hörte ja selber nichts —, die Österreicher, die sind entweder Genies oder Lumpen, eines von beiden -, und so fort. So ging es eigentlich bei Treitschke immer: Wenn man sich nicht zum Genie rechnen wollte, so hatte man, nicht wahr, sein Fett weg. Ein temperamentvoller Mann, der schon einen gewissen Fond hatte, aber in oftmals scharf konturierten Begriffen sich äußerte. Er hat eine «Geschichte des deutschen Volkes» geschrieben, die viel zitiert wird. Sie könnte auch anders zitiert werden, als sie gewöhnlich zitiert wird, denn wenn man im Auslande eine Sammlung von Grobheiten gegen die Deutschen zusammenstellen wollte, so könnte man sie aus Treitschke abschreiben. Aber das wird man unterlassen, vielmehr sucht man dasjenige auf, was im geringeren Maße vorhanden ist als die Wahrheiten, die Treitschke seinem eigenen Volke sagt: man sucht nach Stellen, wo er, wie man glaubt, besonders «preußisch-militaristisch» geschrieben hat.
Da möchte ich Ihnen ein Urteil anführen, das immerhin nicht uninteressant ist. Es stammt von einem Manne, der schon ein Urteil haben konnte, weil er auch Historiker war, und den Treitschkes ja gewiß vorhandene Antipathie gegen die neuere englische Geschichte und Entwickelung besonders interessierte. Diese Antipathie hatte Treitschke nun einmal, sie trat auch sehr bald hervor, wenn man ihn kennenlernte.
Dieser Historiker, der Treitschke gut kannte, schreibt nun: Treitschkes Unwillen gegen das moderne England habe teils seinen geschichtlichen, teils seinen moralischen Grund; Englands Weltmacht kränke Treitschke als Mensch wegen ihrer Unmoralität, ihrer Arroganz, wegen ihrer Prätentionen. «Nicht ohne Gerechtigkeit» — ich bitte, das wohl zu beachten - «schildert Treitschke Englands Politik im 18. und 19. Jahrhundert als konsequent darauf gerichtet, Preußen niederzuhalten, sobald die englischen Politiker das wahre Wesen dieses Staates entdeckten und die große Zukunft, die ihm das Schicksal vorbehalten hatte, ahnten. War England nicht 1864 und 1866, dann 1870/71 und vor allem 1874/75 Preußens verräterischer aber furchtsamer Feind?»
So sagt dieser Historiker, indem er Treitschkes Antipathie gegen England bespricht. Das Stärkste, was er zu Treitschkes Gunsten anführt, ist dessen «Überzeugung, daß Englands Weltoberherrschaft in gar keinem Verhältnis zu Englands wirklicher Kraft und wirklichem Werte in politischer, sozialer, intellektueller und moralischer Hinsicht stehe.» Er sagt weiter: «Sein Abscheu ist der Widerwille gegen Humbug... Was Deutschland an England haßt, ist dasselbe, was Napoleon an England haßte -— eine anmaßende, arrogante, kleinbürgerliche Selbstgerechtigkeit, diein Wirklichkeit keineswegs Patriotismus oder so hohe, ernste Vaterlandsliebe wie die deutsche in den Jahren 1813 und 1870, sondern nur eine engbrüstige insulare Eigenliebe ist. ... Das sagt ja im Grunde genommen das Lied «Rule Britannia».» Er fährt fort: «Aber Treitschke ist selten witzig, hingegen oftmals sehr, obgleich unabsichtlich, beleidigend. Er ist ebenso unfähig wie Heine» — den der Historiker im Eingang mit Treitschke anführt —, «irgend etwas Schönes im englischen Charakter zu sehen.»
Das ist auch ein Urteil über Treitschke. Und weil wir gerade bei diesem Historiker sind, möchte ich von ihm noch ein anderes Urteil anführen, das er über den vielgeschmähten Bernhardi gefällt hat: «Was das Buch», sagt er - und das Buch, von dem er spricht, ist gerade das, welches jetzt immer als ein besonders abscheuliches Buch zitiert wird — «als wirklich epochemachend kennzeichnet, ist, daß es uns einen definitiven Versuch eines deutschen Offiziers gibt, sich nicht nur klarzumachen, wie Deutschland mit Aussicht auf Erfolg Krieg gegen England führen könne, sondern auch warum es einen derartigen Krieg führen müsse.»
Dieses alles schreibt über Treitschke und über Bernhardi der englische Professor Cramb, der von seinem Standpunkte aus der Treitschke Englands genannt werden kann. Wer auf die Sache eingeht, findet in der ganzen Tonlage zwischen Cramb und Treitschke außerordentliche Ähnlichkeit, denn Cramb ist zu gleicher Zeit mit ganzem Gemüte dabei, klarzumachen, daß das britische Imperium die Welt beherrschen muß, daß alles getan werden muß, um das britische Imperium zur Weltherrschaft zu bringen. Und man kann sagen, daß er nicht anders über England redet, als Treitschke — selbstverständlich mit den Verschiedenheiten des Engländers und des Deutschen — über Deutschland redet. Da sehen wir, wie von zwei Männern, von denen jeder von seinem Gesichtspunkte aus das Gegenteil des andern sagen muß, wenigstens der eine den andern durchaus würdigen kann. Man war in gewissem Sinne wirklich schon so weit, daß man für das Überindividuelle, Historische, das abgestreift hatte, was abgestreift werden muß.
Daher ist es ein ungemein betrübsamer Rückfall, ein Zurückgeworfenwerden der Menschen, wenn jetzt sogar in den allerschwerwiegendsten Dokumenten völlig unzutreffend geurteilt wird. Man braucht wirklich nicht weit zu gehen, sondern man braucht nur, ich möchte sagen, den Spürsinn — den man aber heute nur durch irgendeine Verbindung mit der Geisteswissenschaft aufrechterhalten kann - zu haben, um das Richtige aufzusuchen; dann kann man die Wahrheiten schon mit Händen greifen. Es ist allerdings einfach grotesk, wenn, nachdem Jahrhunderte hindurch das russische Programm von der Erwerbung der Dardanellen und Konstantinopels vorhanden war, und dieses Programm auch eingestanden wird, gleichzeitig gesagt wird: Wir sind unschuldig, höchst unschuldig! -— Wiederum haben wir diese Zusammenstellung: Wir sind höchst unschuldig — aber wir wollen eben erobern, trotzdem sind wir höchst unschuldig -, in einem historischen Dokument allerersten Ranges, das in der letzten Zeit durch die Welt gegangen ist, dem Zarenerlaß. Aber sehen Sie, auch in Rußland haben die Leute nicht immer so geurteilt wie heute.
Da ist zum Beispiel von Kuropatkin 1910 ein Buch erschienen über die «Aufgaben der russischen Armee». In diesem Buche ist eine merkwürdige Stelle, die sich, ich möchte sagen, diejenigen ein wenig in das Gehirn klopfen sollten, die von der großen Unschuld Rußlands sprechen. Da steht: «Wenn Rußland der Einmischung in eine für es fremde und zu gleicher Zeit für Österreich ein so nahes Lebensinteresse bildende Sache nicht ein Ende setzt, so kann man im 20. Jahrhundert der serbischen Frage wegen den Ausbruch eines Krieges zwischen Rußland und Österreich erwarten.» Das sagt 1910 der russische General Kuropatkin, der natürlich dasjenige vor sich hat, was von Rußlands Seite her wegen des serbischen Konfliktes zu einem Kriege mit Österreich führen mußte.
Nun entsteht die Frage: Warum das heutige Entstellen der Wahrheit? — Einfach darum, weil man nicht ohne weiteres die Wahrheit sagen kann und doch etwas sagen muß. Ich deutete das schon gestern an. Die Dinge, die gesagt werden, sind eben dazu gesagt, um einen Nebel um die Wahrheit zu verbreiten, gerade um die Blicke der Menschen von der Wahrheit abzulenken. Dazu muß man natürlich solche Argumente wählen, die den Leuten, die nicht den Willen haben, auf der Dinge Gründe wirklich einzugehen, unmittelbar aus der Sentimentalität heraus einleuchtend sind.
Das wäre zu wünschen, daß vor allen Dingen immer mehr und mehr Menschen die ganze, volle Bedeutung auch der unbewußten oder unterbewußten Unwahrheit verstünden. Ich habe es oft ausgesprochen: Damit kann man sich nicht entschuldigen, daß der oder jener etwas gesagt habe, und man habe es geglaubt. - Zwar werde ich niemals den Standpunkt vertreten, daß viele von den Leuten, die heute das oder jenes sagen, es nicht auch glauben. Diesen Standpunkt will ich nicht ohne weiteres vertreten, aber es kommt darauf gar nicht an. Die Dinge wirken in der Welt, und derjenige, der etwas sagt, hat die Verpflichtung, sich um die Wahrheit zu kümmern; da genügt nicht der bloße Glaube. Wenn jemand unbewußt oder auch unterbewußt etwas in der Weise umkehrt, wie ich es angedeutet habe, indem er sogar sagt, er habe den Krieg verhindern wollen, so ist diese Wahrheit angesichts dessen, daß man dann eben durch andere Mittel als den Krieg dasjenige erreichen wollte, was man zu erreichen hoffte und mit aller Intensität anstrebte, keinen Pfifferling wert und etwas viel Schlimmeres als eine Unwahrheit, trotzdem sie äußerlich scheinbar eine Wahrheit ist. Und dieses ist das ungeheuer schwere Karma der Menschheit in der Gegenwart, daß man sich nicht verpflichtet fühlt zu der wirklichen, realen, in den Tatsachen lebenden Wahrheit und Wahrhaftigkeit, ja daß heute schon das ihr Entgegengesetzte weltregierend geworden ist und, wie es scheint, immer mehr und mehr weltregierend werden soll. Die äußerlichen Taten sind immer die Konsequenz dessen, was in der Menschheit als Gedanke lebt; sie sind die Konsequenz der Unwahrhaftigkeit, die vielleicht gerade mit dem Schein des Wahren auftritt, weil sie sich, wie man sagt, «beweisen» läßt, aber eben nur für die Oberflächlichkeit. Das, was so im Urteil der Menschen lebt, das kann gewissermaßen auf einem andern Plane Kanonendonner und Blut sein. Da besteht schon ein Zusammenhang. Es ergibt sich daraus aber die Konsequenz, daß wir immer mehr und mehr auf das Tatsächliche eingehen, daß wir einen Sinn uns aneignen müssen, der uns dahin führt, an den rechten Orten diejenigen Dinge zu sehen, die wirklich aufklärend sind, die das Wesentliche enthüllen.
Sixteenth Lecture
Especially in our current reflections on world events, we can become truly aware of what we can gain for our souls by trying to live in spiritual scientific knowledge. It has often been emphasized that spiritual scientific knowledge should not remain theory, but should become alive by permeating itself, as it were, with the feelings, sensations, and other impulses that are naturally sacred to it, and by giving our soul a certain momentum, a certain mood, so that we, as spiritual scientists, fit into human relationships differently than non-spiritual scientists do.
We have considered various aspects of the question of man's belonging to this or that ethnic group, or, as we say nowadays, to this or that nation or nationality. Now, it is precisely the universal human nature that human beings carry within themselves, without it becoming individualized or specified in this or that ethnic group, which can be brought to full consciousness through spiritual science, because everything that constitutes the main content of anthroposophically oriented spiritual science is truly valid for every human being, without any group differences. And when one views national differences from an anthroposophical standpoint, one views them differently than from a non-anthroposophical standpoint, in that one looks objectively at what these differences are based on. Things can be viewed objectively.
We are aware of the threefold nature of our soul, consisting of the sentient soul, the intellectual or emotional soul, and the conscious soul, which are filled, permeated, and lived through by the ego. The sentient soul is that which is particularly influenced by the Italian national soul when the forces and impulses of the national soul work into the individual human soul. The intellectual or emotional soul in the individual human being is particularly receptive to the French national soul, the consciousness soul to the British national soul, the ego to the national souls of the Central European peoples, and the spiritual self to the national souls of the Slavic peoples. If we recognize and understand this, we should no longer be tempted to make judgments such as those that are so frequently made.
Someone who has heard these things has now become angry, so to speak, because he has heard that anthroposophically oriented spiritual science interprets German folklore as if the folk soul were influencing the ego. His mistake was to consider this something higher than the consciousness soul being influenced by the national soul. That was his fault! In spiritual science, things are presented side by side in their objectivity. The national souls have their tasks, and these consist in this influence. But in this influence of the folk soul on the human soul, we must be quite clear that a certain development must take place, especially in our fifth post-Atlantean period. And those who are now inclined toward anthroposophically oriented spiritual science should actually feel themselves to be the first link in this development.
How does the soul of a people actually influence the human mind? If we consider what happens in relation to this matter, as humanity once was, we must say that the influence of the soul of a people on the individual human soul is initially subconscious, rising only partially into consciousness. Human beings feel that they belong to this or that nationality, and the influence of the national soul on the individuality of human beings occurs mainly through the maternal principle. The maternal principle is embedded in the national soul. What pulls human beings, as physical-etheric beings of nature, out of the group is the influence of the paternal impulse. I have discussed this frequently in earlier years. For the Christian worldview, this is already expressed in the Gospels. This has also been discussed in earlier years. Essentially, as things still stand today, the influence of the folk spirit first enters the human being through the blood and through that which corresponds to the blood in the etheric body. Of course, we are dealing here with a more or less animalistic impulse, and it remains animalistic for the vast majority of people today. Human beings belong to a certain ethnic group through their blood. It is difficult to analyze in detail the mysterious forces and impulses that work into the blood, because these impulses are extremely diverse and manifold. But they lie beneath the surface of consciousness.
Humans live much more consciously in all that lives in them as humanity, regardless of nationality. That is why the pathos, the passion, the emotion with which humans feel they belong to a nationality emerges with a certain elemental force. People will not try to assert logical reasons or judgments when it comes to determining or feeling their belonging to their nationality. Blood and the heart, which is influenced by blood, bring people together with their nationality and allow them to live within that nationality. The impulses that come into play here are subconscious, and much is already gained when one is aware of this subconscious character. Precisely in this regard, it is important that people who approach spiritual science undergo a development within themselves, that they feel somewhat differently about these things than the rest of humanity. When people who do not belong to spiritual science are asked how they relate to their nationality, they will and must say: Through blood! That is the only idea they can form about belonging to their nationality. The spiritual scientist should gradually come to give himself a different answer. If he were unable to develop this other answer, he would take spiritual science only theoretically, not practically and alive in the true sense. So while the non-humanities scholar can only give himself the answer: Through my blood I am connected to my nationality, through my blood I defend what lives in the nation, through my blood I feel the obligation to identify with my nationality — the humanities scholar must give himself the other answer: Through my karma I am connected to my nationality, for it is part of karma. As soon as one introduces concepts of karma, however, one spiritualizes the entire relationship. And while the non-spiritual scientist will invoke pathos, impulsiveness, and blood for everything he does as a member of a particular people, those who have undergone spiritual scientific development will feel connected to this or that people through karma.
This is a spiritualization of the matter. Outwardly, the same thing may happen; outwardly, when a person feels this spiritualization, he may assert the same thing; but inwardly, the matter will be spiritualized, and he will feel quite differently from someone who feels his belonging in a purely animalistic way.
Here you see precisely a point at which belonging to spiritual science transforms the soul into something else, brings a different mood into the soul. But at the same time you see how far behind the general consciousness of the times is behind what could be known today by willing people. The general consciousness of the times cannot help but understand human belonging to a nationality in terms of blood, or in terms of something that has very little to do with blood, but is regulated in connection with blood and from this view of blood. A much freer understanding of this belonging will take hold when the whole matter is viewed as a matter of karma. Then certain subtle concepts will emerge for those who perhaps consciously join this or that nationality and thereby bring about a shift in their karma.
But however we look at the matter, whether in the imperfect sense in which the majority of humanity must perceive it today, or in the more perfect sense in which one can perceive it as a member of spiritual science, it remains true that, due to the general world conditions, humanity today is differentiated into groups. And nothing can make us more painfully aware than the present events that this differentiation into groups still exists to a high degree today. This differentiation into groups is often mixed with completely different circumstances and facts, making it difficult for the human mind to understand why such painful contrasts, such painful disharmonies can arise in humanity as they have now arisen.
In short, there is something tragic in what is being touched upon here that should have nothing to do with ordinary logic or superficial external judgments; for whether one regards the matter as a matter of blood or as a matter of karma, blood lies beneath and karma above the logical. Therefore, what is being considered here must necessarily result in conflicts in human coexistence, and these conflicts must be understood as necessary. To believe that these conflicts can be judged by the same concepts that are valid between individual human beings leads to the greatest errors, and therein lies the great error that today, to the greatest extent, people speak of conflicts between nations as if they were conflicts between human beings, conflicts between human individuals. I have already pointed out that concepts such as right and freedom are applicable to individual human beings; to use them as programmatic points for peoples means from the outset to know nothing about the peculiarities of the national character, to have no desire whatsoever to enter into the peculiarities of the national character.
For those who see through things and are able to discern objective, natural necessities from spiritual knowledge, the belief that speaks from many publications today is no different from the belief a shark would have if it said: I want to make an agreement with the small fish that I otherwise eat! It is inhuman to eat the little fish; I will stop doing so! In doing so, he is signing his own death warrant, because that is simply the way the world is arranged: sharks eat little fish!
One must gain a thorough understanding that one cannot understand the world if one does not see the necessary conflicts in reality that lead to tragedy in the world. And at the same time, it means not understanding the peculiarity of the physical plane at all if one thinks that something like paradise can exist within the physical plane. Paradise is not on earth. There must necessarily be a lack of understanding among those who either want to realize the New Jerusalem as a utopia in the physical world or, like a social democrat, want to bring about some other generally satisfactory state of affairs. It is a profound law that human beings, insofar as they live here on the physical plane, can only arrive at a satisfactory understanding of reality if they are aware that higher worlds exist, that their souls are connected with higher worlds. Only when we know that we are citizens of higher worlds is satisfaction possible. Therefore, with the extinction of the spiritual consciousness of humanity, a time would have to come when humanity would no longer be able to understand why there is so much evil and so many conflicts here in the world. These conflicts can only be resolved if one feels alive not only in the physical world but also in the spiritual world. Then one begins to understand: Just as human beings cannot always remain young but must also grow old, so too must there be a dismantling of what has been built up, so that conflicts and destruction must exist at the same time as creation. When one understands this, one understands that conflicts must also arise between groups of people. These conflicts are the tragedy of world events, and they must be understood as tragic.
In order to convey the living concept, the living idea that I mean here, I would like to recall a somewhat harsh statement made by the poet Friedrich Hebbel. Hebbel was a genius of a somewhat ponderous nature who, despite his rich sense of humor, found it difficult to produce work. I have already explained to you that he was not very far removed from the spiritual scientific view of the world. For example, he entered the following subject in his diary as a plan: Plato, reincarnated, sits as a student in a high school class where the teacher is teaching Plato, and understands nothing of what Plato is supposed to contain, so that the professor rebukes him harshly. Hebbel wanted to treat this idea dramatically. He never got around to it, but one can see that he himself had in mind the reproduction of the idea of reincarnation in drama.
Now Hebbel had experienced Grillparzer, who was his contemporary. Hebbel was, as I said, a somewhat ponderous, melancholic genius, and when he had seen Grillparzer's dramas “Das Goldene Vlies” (The Golden Fleece), “Weh dem, der lügt!” (Woe to him who lies!), “Der Traum ein Leben” (The dream of a life), and so on, he said – and this is very interesting: Grillparzer depicts tragic conflicts, but ones in which one can always say that if only the people were clever enough and understood the circumstances, these conflicts would ultimately be resolved. According to Hebbel, the tragic in Grillparzer's work arises from the fact that people are not clever enough to understand the tragic. But that is not true tragedy; true tragedy between people only arises when the people involved are as clever and prudent as they want to be, and all their cleverness and prudence do not help them: the conflict must come out.
What Hebbel claims for himself as a playwright, what he calls the true tragic, we must introduce as a category, as a concept in human development, in what is truly human, otherwise we will always come to the simplistic conclusion that this or that could have been avoided. Things cannot be avoided if they lead to conflicts such as the present one. And all declamations about the concept of guilt seem quite out of place in the face of a penetrating assessment.
That is why I made these observations, which we have been discussing in recent days and weeks, in order to make it clear that even when faced with a phenomenon such as the Opium War, one does not speak of guilt in the same sense as one speaks of guilt in the relationship between human beings, between individuals. For these concepts: guilt, freedom, and so on, as they apply to individual human beings, are not applicable to souls that live on other planes, and the souls of peoples do not live on the physical plane, but only influence the physical plane through the individual soul; they are located in other spheres, on other planes.
These things are already felt by individual people today. But they are not understood if one tries to judge events using the concepts that are common today and does not attempt to look at the factual evidence. To present oneself today as a member of any nationality and to judge other nationalities as one would judge an individual human being shows nothing more than a backwardness in one's judgment. However, the fact that even the most terrible historical documents, on which endless amounts of blood will depend, speak of ignorance and backwardness because certain statesmen lagged behind what we already know today is, of course, a historical necessity. But on the other hand, it must be emphasized again and again to those who are willing to hear it that the progress and salvation of humanity lie in bringing judgment out of spiritual life in order to move forward.
But in some places, people sense what is necessary for judgment today. Only it cannot be brought to consciousness. Here is an example, for spiritual science will only really become part of our spiritual flesh and blood, if I may say so, when we learn to view the outer, everyday reality from the perspective of spiritual science. In England in the 1870s and 1880s, the historian Professor Seeley was active. What he taught was in many ways decisive for what later lived in the minds of many people. Seeley is perhaps England's first historical imperialist, historically as an imperialist, imperialistically as a historian, because he viewed British history as it developed over the centuries from the perspective that it tended toward the establishment of the great British Empire, which today occupies a quarter of the inhabitable earth. In his lectures, which were published in the 1870s and went through many editions—there were years when a new edition appeared every year, he had many students—he set out to compile all the individual facts that made the British Empire what it is today. And he saw in this something like divine providence, that the individual pieces came together in this way on the basis of this or that impulse. He also asks the question: How did it all actually come about? — and says explicitly: There were no people who decided all this, who at some point did something to add another piece to the British Empire with the intention of creating an empire of the grandest style; rather, it all happened instinctively in earlier times. These individual parts came together instinctively, and in Seeley's view, there is a divine spiritual order in this coming together. Now, he said, it is our task to raise what has happened instinctively to the level of consciousness and to round off what has become instinctive into a firmly established empire that has never before existed in the world. And he saw his task as an imperialist historian precisely in consciously penetrating what had been unconsciously brought together. Seeley wants, in a sense, to raise to the present consciousness of the fifth post-Atlantean period what, according to the laws of the fourth post-Atlantean period, contributed to the emergence of the British Empire out of still atavistic forces. But we have pointed out that it is not only intellectual, rational thinking that grasps the instinctive convergence of the parts, but I could tell you that in the last decades of the 19th century there were also certain members of occult movements who, with not only ordinary consciousness but also occult consciousness, set about expanding this British Empire by placing maps before their souls and those of their listeners and students, showing what would come into being when the British Empire radiated its power over the world. In these occult circles, the idea was consciously put forward that the fifth post-Atlantean epoch belongs to English-speaking people. And from this point of view, all divisions were made and all details arranged. Certainly, the “Regius Professor” did not see through this, but others did and consciously made it their impulse. This must be firmly noted.
We will speak more about what has been seen through, but what has not been seen through nevertheless penetrates the human mind and, in a certain way, causes trouble there. And so, in our time, a strange interaction has arisen between what lurks occultly in the background and pulls the strings, and what, knowing nothing of these things, lives at the forefront of the events of the physical plane.
One must know such things in order to be able to make judgments in the right way. I have already mentioned to you recently some strange facts, the matter of the “Almanac of Madame de Thebes” and similar things; you will remember that I mentioned these things. But without taking sides in any way, purely objectively: is it not a peculiar thing that gives food for thought to those who merely think, for those who contemplate spiritual connections but demand more than mere reflection, but rather contemplation and an absorption of the matter into their impulses—is it not peculiar that already in the 1890s an English book appeared, written by three editors of The Times and entitled The War of 1899? The time periods considered in the book were, admittedly, treated somewhat amateurishly. The book was referring to the current war, but the authors wanted to set it a little too early. The book makes a small mistake in that it states that the war will begin with an assassination attempt on the Bulgarian Prince Ferdinand, which will then lead to a European conflagration. And the details of this European conflagration are described with such strange prophecy that the main features of what actually happened are confirmed. It can be said that the greatest error in this book is that the Bulgarian Prince Ferdinand has been confused with Franz Ferdinand of Austria, and that the event did not take place in Sofia but in Sarajevo. But I think it is nevertheless of no small significance that this book was published in 1892 and depicts a coming event in such a remarkable way. If one tries not to form abstract judgments, but to form one's judgment on the basis of what is there, then one alone can develop the ability to see a little into the configuration of things.
Of course, those who could see something of the events that were to happen—as is always the case when one talks about such things—shifted this or that in the details. One does not always see everything clearly. But it should give us pause to think that there were people who had so much reason to concern themselves with these matters that they went so far as to publish their findings. I just want to present all this to you, precisely in the context in which we find ourselves, so that you can sharpen your powers of judgment. One must indeed have the will to look at the facts, to see the facts in their context. In earlier reflections made here, I have said that one can only get along in the fifth post-Atlantean period if one strives, on the one hand, for imagination and, on the other hand, to let the facts speak for themselves. All preconceived judgments will increasingly become mere phrases, will be condemned to become mere phrases. But what can least be judged by mere abstract thinking, without engaging in thinking connected with the facts, are precisely the tragic conflicts of the world, the tragic interplay of impulses that work as I characterized them earlier.
Today, I would say, there is a trick in world history that consists of saying things that are plausible, that seem convincing to many people, but that actually say nothing at all and cannot provide the basis for a valid judgment. Let us take a judgment like this one, which is often expressed: The rulers of the British Empire did not want the war. To support this, the relevant correspondence, telegrams, letters, and so on are cited, along with all kinds of conference proposals and the like. People who judge abstractly, without regard for reality, may well be convinced by this, because the available material can even be used to make the case seem very plausible. But a judgment does not depend merely on whether it is plausible or abstractly correct, but on whether it is true in reality. That the rulers of the British Empire—or rather, certain rulers who mattered—did not want the war can be proven very easily under certain circumstances, and this proof can make a huge impression on the entire peripheral world. In proving this — and I say “proving” — one does not even need to state an immediate untruth; but a real falsehood remains. Why? Precisely because it is true and can be proven to be true, but this truth is not worth a damn, it is completely irrelevant. For one can be convinced that the rulers of the British Empire would even have liked to prevent the conflict, insofar as the British Empire is involved in it. But what they now want to achieve through the war is what they have wanted with all their energy — those who matter. If this could have been achieved without war, they would of course have preferred that, and from the outset it was not entirely out of the question to achieve these goals by means other than war. To do so, it would only have been necessary, before the war broke out, to create some kind of surrogate intergovernmental institution, something where representatives of the various states could sit down together and decide on certain matters. If you had ensured beforehand that you had a majority in such a body, you could of course achieve your goals without war, provided that the minority agreed to them.
So you see: it does not matter whether one ultimately wanted to wage war or prevent it; what matters is what one wanted in the first place. And that one wanted what emerges from the various hints I have made — they can only ever be hints — will be clear to the objective observer. But I always ask you to bear in mind that I am not making a moral judgment, but rather weighing up the concept of tragedy, and that when people fight conflicts with each other, when much blood is shed, this arises from the tragedy of the conflicts. However, if one wants to see this tragedy externally, one must be willing to approach things a little differently than one usually does.
How often do we hear it said: Those judgments, sentiments, and feelings that people such as Treitschke and Bernhardi spread among the German people are partly to blame for this war. Let us take out the grotesque: How often have we heard these names mentioned as the names of completely adventurous fellows, even by people who are honestly convinced that they are doing the right thing. Sometimes Nietzsche is added, sometimes a few others. One can learn a lot by considering what, I would say, underlies such things in the “realm of truth.” But before I go into this from a spiritual point of view, so to speak—one can learn a lot about spirituality by looking at everyday life—I would like to draw your attention to the fact that it is precisely in phenomena such as the German historian Treitschke that the tragedy of human development can become apparent. One must not judge by the outer surface alone.
If I had judged by appearances alone, I would have considered Treitschke a social monster for some time. I only met him once, at a time when he was already completely deaf. People wrote down what they wanted to say to him on little pieces of paper, and he replied. When I was introduced to him, he asked me: Where are you from? I wrote down that I was Austrian. He replied, “Yes, yes—he was a loudmouth, he couldn't hear anything himself—the Austrians are either geniuses or scoundrels, one or the other,” and so on. That's how it always was with Treitschke: if you didn't consider yourself a genius, you were in for it. He was a temperamental man who already had a certain background, but often expressed himself in sharply defined terms. He wrote a “History of the German People” that is often quoted. It could also be quoted differently than it is usually quoted, because if one wanted to compile a collection of crude remarks about Germans abroad, one could copy them from Treitschke. But that will be avoided; instead, people will look for what is less prevalent than the truths that Treitschke tells his own people: they will look for passages where he is believed to have written in a particularly “Prussian-militaristic” style.
I would like to quote a judgment that is not without interest. It comes from a man who was well placed to judge, because he was also a historian and was particularly interested in Treitschke's antipathy towards recent English history and development, which was certainly real. Treitschke did indeed have this antipathy, and it soon became apparent when one got to know him.
This historian, who knew Treitschke well, writes: Treitschke's aversion to modern England was partly historical and partly moral; England's world power offended Treitschke as a human being because of its immorality, its arrogance, and its pretensions. “Not without justice” — I ask you to note this carefully — ”Treitschke describes England's policy in the 18th and 19th centuries as consistently aimed at keeping Prussia down as soon as English politicians discovered the true nature of this state and sensed the great future that fate had in store for it. Was England not Prussia's treacherous but fearful enemy in 1864 and 1866, then in 1870/71 and above all in 1874/75?"
So says this historian, discussing Treitschke's antipathy toward England. The strongest argument he makes in Treitschke's favor is his “conviction that England's world domination is completely out of proportion to England's real power and real value in political, social, intellectual, and moral terms.” He goes on to say: “His abhorrence is a revulsion against humbug... What Germany hates about England is the same thing that Napoleon hated about England—a presumptuous, arrogant, petty bourgeois self-righteousness, which in reality is by no means patriotism or such a high, serious love of country as that of the Germans in 1813 and 1870, but only a narrow-minded, insular self-love. ... That is basically what the song 'Rule Britannia' says.” He continues: ‘But Treitschke is rarely witty, whereas he is often very offensive, albeit unintentionally. He is just as incapable as Heine’ — whom the historian quotes at the beginning along with Treitschke — ‘of seeing anything beautiful in the English character.’
That is also a judgment on Treitschke. And while we are on the subject of this historian, I would like to quote another judgment he made about the much-maligned Bernhardi: “What makes the book,“ he says—and the book he is referring to is precisely the one that is now always cited as a particularly abominable book—”truly epoch-making is that it gives us a definitive attempt by a German officer not only to clarify how Germany could wage war against England with any prospect of success, but also why it must wage such a war.”
All this is written about Treitschke and Bernhardi by the English professor Cramb, who, from his point of view, can be called the Treitschke of England. Anyone who looks into the matter will find extraordinary similarities in the overall tone between Cramb and Treitschke, for Cramb is at the same time wholeheartedly committed to making it clear that the British Empire must rule the world, that everything must be done to bring the British Empire to world domination. And one can say that he speaks of England no differently than Treitschke speaks of Germany—with the differences between the English and the Germans, of course. Here we see how two men, each of whom must say the opposite of the other from his own point of view, can at least appreciate each other. In a certain sense, we had already come so far that we had stripped away what had to be stripped away in order to reach the supra-individual, the historical.
It is therefore an extremely sad setback, a throwback for humanity, when even the most serious documents now contain completely inaccurate judgments. One really does not need to go far, but only, I would say, to have the intuition—which today can only be maintained through some connection with the spiritual sciences—to seek out what is right; then one can already grasp the truths with one's hands. It is simply grotesque, however, when, after centuries of the Russian program to acquire the Dardanelles and Constantinople, and this program is also admitted, it is said at the same time: We are innocent, highly innocent! Once again we have this combination: we are completely innocent—but we want to conquer, even though we are completely innocent—in a historical document of the highest order that has recently been circulated throughout the world, the Tsar's decree. But you see, even in Russia people have not always judged as they do today.
For example, in 1910, Kuropatkin published a book on the “Tasks of the Russian Army.” In this book there is a curious passage which, I would say, should be hammered into the brains of those who speak of Russia's great innocence. It says: “If Russia does not put an end to its interference in a matter that is foreign to it and at the same time of such vital interest to Austria, we can expect the outbreak of war between Russia and Austria in the 20th century because of the Serbian question.” This was said in 1910 by Russian General Kuropatkin, who naturally had in mind what, from Russia's point of view, was bound to lead to war with Austria because of the Serbian conflict.
Now the question arises: Why this distortion of the truth today? — Simply because one cannot readily tell the truth and yet must say something. I already hinted at this yesterday. The things that are said are said precisely to spread a fog around the truth, precisely to distract people's attention from the truth. To do this, one must of course choose arguments that are immediately plausible to people who do not have the will to really get to the bottom of things, arguments that appeal to their sentimentality.
It would be desirable if, above all, more and more people understood the full meaning of even unconscious or subconscious untruths. I have often said that one cannot excuse oneself by saying that someone else said something and one believed it. I will never take the position that many of the people who say this or that today do not also believe it. I do not want to take that position without further ado, but it does not matter. Things have an effect in the world, and those who say something have an obligation to concern themselves with the truth; mere belief is not enough. If someone unconsciously or even subconsciously reverses something in the way I have indicated, even saying that they wanted to prevent the war, then in view of the fact that they wanted to achieve what they hoped to achieve and strove for with all their might by means other than war, this truth is not worth a penny and is something much worse than a falsehood, even though outwardly it appears to be the truth. And this is the enormously heavy karma of humanity in the present, that one does not feel bound to the real, actual truth and truthfulness that lives in the facts, indeed that today its opposite has already become world-ruling and, as it seems, is to become more and more world-ruling. Outward actions are always the consequence of what lives in humanity as thought; they are the consequence of untruthfulness, which perhaps appears precisely under the guise of truth because it can be “proved,” as they say, but only to the superficial. What lives in this way in people's judgments can, in a sense, be cannon fire and blood on another plane. There is already a connection there. But the consequence of this is that we must increasingly respond to reality, that we must acquire a sense that leads us to see in the right places those things that are truly enlightening, that reveal what is essential.