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Cosmic and Human Metamorphoses
GA 175

6 March 1917, Berlin

V. The Human soul and the Universe II

I have told you of the three meetings which the soul must go through in its life between birth and death, and which even while still in that life, bring it into touch with the Spiritual worlds. Today let us return to this subject, which on the last occasion was touched on in a preparatory way, as an episode, so to speak. We shall now go into it more minutely.

We noted that man in the middle of the intermediary state between sleeping and waking, has, as a rule, his meeting with the world which is related to our spirit self. (I say as a rule, because I am alluding to the normal sleep, at night.) He then meets with the world in which we place the beings of that Hierarchy which we designate as that of the Angels. Thus every time we pass through sleep, we pass in a sense, through that world in which these beings dwell; through the world which is nearest to our own physical world, reckoning upwards. Through this meeting we refresh and strengthen our whole spiritual being. Because this is so, because in the state of sleep man is in relation with the spiritual world, no merely materialistic explanation of sleep, such as is put forward by external science, can ever be satisfactory. Much of what goes on in man can be explained by the changes that take place in the body between waking up and going to sleep; we may try to explain sleep itself by means of these same changes; yet any such explanation must always prove unsatisfactory, for the reason that in sleep the afore-mentioned meeting takes place, and man enters into relation with the spiritual world; that makes the whole difference. Thus it is just when we consider the state of sleep that we can see that man, unless he consciously seeks a relation to the spiritual world, only arrives at half-true concepts and ideas, which indeed, because they change into life-falsify it, and at last actually bring about great catastrophe. These half-true concepts are indeed in some respects even worse than those which are quite false ones, for those who form the partly-true concepts and ideas rely upon them; they are able to prove them, for, being partly true they can be proved. An attempt to disprove them would bring no further illumination, for these ideas are, after all, partly true! Such concepts really falsify life even more than do the entirely wrong ones, which we can immediately recognise as false. One of these half -true concepts which external science today is to some extent giving up, though it is in a great measure still believed, is the idea I have often alluded to before, that we sleep because we are tired. We may say that this concept is only half-true, and is the result of a half-true observation. People think that the day's life tires out the body and because we are tired we must sleep! I have often, in former lectures, called attention to the fact that this concept does not explain how it is that people of independent means, who do no work at all, often fall asleep when the most stirring things relating to the outer world, are being discussed. It cannot be proved that these persons are tired out and therefore in -need of sleep. It is absolutely incorrect. If we believe that we are compelled to sleep by fatigue, we are only half-observing. We only notice that this is so when we compare the observations made on the one side, with what can be observed on the other, when we come in contact with the other half of the truth. You will presently see what I mean.

Sleeping and waking in individual human life follow each other in rhythmic succession, yet man is a free being, and can consequently interfere with this rhythm (this he does more by reason of circumstance than from what may be called freewill; but the circumstances are the bases of free life). Another rhythm which we have often placed in the same order as sleeping and waking, is that of the seasons of the year; the alternation of summer and winter (leaving the intermediate seasons out of account), but the ordinary consciousness does not connect them aright. It will occur to no one to say that because the earth is hard at work during the summer, unfolding the forces leading to the growth of plants and to much else besides, that thereby it grows tired and needs the rest of winter. Everyone would consider such an idea absurd and would say that the setting in of winter has nothing whatever to do with the summer-work of the earth, but is caused by the changed position of the sun in relation to the Earth. In this case everything is supposed to be brought about from without; in sleeping and waking it all comes from fatigue, from within. Now the one is just as incorrect as the other, or rather the one is only partly true and so is the other—for the rhythm of sleeping and waking is just the same kind of rhythm as that of winter and summer. There is just as little truth in saying that we only sleep because we are tired, as in saying that winter comes because the earth has exhausted herself in summer. Both these statements rest on the independent working of a rhythm, brought about by certain circumstances. The rhythm between sleeping and waking comes about because the human soul has need of the continually recurring meeting with the spiritual world. If we were to say we want to sleep and consequently feel tired, if we were to say that we enter the state in which we have need of one part of the rhythm, that of sleep, and consequently feel tired, we should be speaking more correctly than when we say that because we are tired, we must sleep. This whole question will become still clearer to us, if we simply ask: ‘What then does the soul do when it sleeps?’ The non-spiritual science of today has not the requisite understanding and cannot reply properly to such a question. You see, while we are awake, we enjoy the external world and the enjoyment of this lasts our whole life through. We do not merely enjoy the outer world when we convey good food to our palate, which is the sense in which we generally speak of ‘enjoyment’ because it is here directly applicable, but the whole time we are awake we enjoy the outer world; all life is enjoyment. Although there is much that is unpleasant in the world, much that is apparently no enjoyment, this is only an illusion, of which we shall speak in the subsequent lectures in other connections. In our waking state we enjoy the external world; in sleep we enjoy ourselves. Just as when we with our souls are in the body and through the latter enjoy the external world, so when we with our souls are outside our body, for in the life between birth and death we are still connected with the body: even when outside it—we then enjoy our body. The condition of sleep, of normal sleep, consists essentially in our having a deeper experience of our body, so that we enjoy it. We enjoy our body from outside. The right interpretation of dreams, of the ordinary chaotic dreams, is that they are the reflection of the enjoyment of his body which a man has in dreamless sleep.

You see this explanation of sleep is approximately that of the need of sleep felt by the man of independent means, of which I have already spoken. We cannot easily believe that he is really tired; but we can very readily believe that he may be so fond of his body that he would rather enjoy that than what often comes to him from the external world. He really loves it so much and is so fond of enjoying it, that he may even prefer that to listening to a lecture, let us say, which he is perhaps ashamed not to attend. Or perhaps a better example would be to say he would rather enjoy his body than listen to a difficult piece of classical music which sends him to sleep at once, if he is compelled to listen to it—sleep is self-enjoyment.

Now, as in sleep, in normal sleep, we have the meeting with the spiritual world, our sleep does not therefore consist merely of self-enjoyment, it is also self-understanding, to a certain degree self-understanding, a sizing-up of oneself. In this respect our spiritual training is really needed, so that people may learn to realise that in normal sleep they actually plunge down into the spirit and emerge from it when they wake up; it is necessary that they should learn to feel reverence for this meeting with the spirit.

Now, in order that we may not fail to understand completely, I will return once more to the so-called enigma of fatigue; for the commonplace consciousness may very likely lay hold of this point. It may say: Well, but we do really feel tired, and when we are tired we feel sleepy. This is a point which demands that a really clear distinction should be made. Certainly we do get tired with the day's work and while we sleep we are able to get over our fatigue. This part of the question is true: we are able to drive away fatigue by going to sleep. Yet sleep is not a result of the fatigue, but consists in the enjoyment we feel in ourselves. In this self-enjoyment, man acquires the forces through which he is able to drive away fatigue, but it does not follow that all sleep can do so; for while it is true that all sleep is enjoyment of self, yet it is not true that all sleep drives away fatigue. For a man who sleeps unnecessarily, who goes to sleep at every opportunity without any need for it, may just as well bring about a sleep in which there is no fatigue to be driven away, in which there is nothing but the enjoyment of self. In this kind of sleep, a man will certainly strive the whole time to drive away fatigue, because he is accustomed to do so while asleep; but if there is no fatigue, as in the case of the well-to-do man who falls asleep at a concert, he will simply keep on sweeping out his body, as he would do if the fatigue were there. If there is no fatigue, he goes on sweeping out unnecessarily, with the consequence that he sets up all kinds of bad conditions in his body. That is why these well-to-do men who sleep so much are the most troubled with all those fine things known as neurasthenia, and the like.

Through connection with spiritual knowledge, one may conceive a condition in which a man will be conscious of the following: ‘I am living in a state of rhythm, in which I am alternately in the physical world and in the spiritual world. In the physical world I meet with the external physical nature; in the spiritual world I meet with the beings who inhabit that world.’

We shall be able fully to understand this matter if we enter somewhat more deeply into the whole nature of man, from a particular point of view. You know that it is customary to consider the external science known as biology as a unity, necessarily divided into the head, breast, and lower part with the members attached thereto. In the olden times when man still possessed an atavistic knowledge, he connected other ideas with this division of the human being. The great Greek philosopher, Plato, attributes wisdom to the head, courage to the breast; and the lower emotions of human nature to the lower part of the body. What pertains to the breast-part of man can be ennobled when wisdom is added to courage, becoming a wise courage, a wise activity; and that which is considered the lower part of man, which belongs to the lower parts of his body, if it be rayed through with wisdom, that Plato calls ‘clothed with the sun.’ Thus we see how the soul is divided and attributed to the different parts of the body. Today, we, who have Spiritual Science, which to Plato was not attainable in like manner, speak of these things in much fuller detail. In speaking of the four-fold division of man, we begin at the top by speaking of his ‘I,’ his ego. All that a man can call his own in the soul and spirit sense in his physical life between birth and death, works through the instrument of the physical body; and we can ask concerning each of the four principles of man: with which part of his body is each physically connected A real and sufficiently penetrating spiritual observation shows us that what we call the ego of man—strange as it may seem, for the truth is often very different from what the superficial consciousness supposes—strange as it may seem, the ego of man is between birth and death, physically connected with what we call the lower part of the body. For the ego, as I have often said, is really a baby as compared to the other parts of man's nature; the germ of the physical body was already laid down in the Old Saturn epoch, the germ of the etheric body during the Old Sun, and that of the astral body during the Old Moon; but the ego was only laid down in our own earth-period; it is the youngest member of man's being. It will only attain the stage at which our physical body now stands, in the far-distant era of Vulcan. The ego is attached to the lowest bodily part of man, and this part is really always asleep. It is not so organised that it can bring to consciousness what takes place within it; what takes place there is, even in the normal waking periods, ceaselessly asleep. We are just as little conscious of our ego as such, in its reality, in its true being, as we are of the processes of our digestion. The ego of which we are conscious is but a reflex conception, the image of which is reflected into our head. We never really see or realise our ego, whether in sleep, when in normal conditions we are quite without consciousness, or in our waking state; for the ego is then also asleep. The true ego does not itself enter our consciousness, nothing but t a the concept of the ego is reflected therein. On the other hand, between sleeping and waking, the ego really comes to itself; only a man in normal deep sleep knows nothing of it, being himself still unconscious in this his deep sleep during the earth-period. Thus the ego is in reality connected with the lowest bodily part of man; during the day, in the waking time, it is connected therewith from within; and during sleep from without.

If we now pass on to the second principle in man's nature, to what we call the astral body, we find that as regards the instrument through which it works, it is, from a certain point of view, connected with the breast-part of man. Of all that goes on in this astral body working through the breast-part, we can, in reality, only dream. As earth-man we can only know something of the ego when we are asleep, consciously we know nothing. Of all that the astral body works in us, we can only dream. This is really why we dream constantly of our feelings, of the sentiments that live within us. They actually live a sort of dream-life within us. The ego of man is actually outside the region which we human beings, with our ordinary sense-consciousness, can grasp; for it is continuously asleep. The astral body is also in a certain respect outside that region too, for it can only dream. With respect to both these we are, in reality, whether asleep or awake, within the spiritual world; we are really and truly within that world.

What we know as the Etheric body, is, however, as far as the body is concerned, connected with the head. Through the peculiar Organisation of the head, the etheric body is able to be constantly awake when in the human body, when connected with the physical head. We may therefore say: The ego is connected with the lowest parts of our body; and the astral body with our breast-part. The heart—as to the workings of which we have no full consciousness, nothing but a dream-consciousness—beats and pulsates under the influence of the astral body. When the head thinks, it does so under the influence of the etheric body. We can then further differentiate our physical body, for in its entirety, it is connected with the whole external world.

We now see a remarkable connection: the ego is connected with the lowest parts of the body, the astral body with the heart; the etheric body with the head, the physical body with the whole outer world, with the environment. The whole physical body is really during the waking condition in constant connection with the outer environment. Just as we, with our whole body are in relation to the outer environment, so is our etheric body to our head, the astral body to the heart and so on. This will show you how really mysterious are the connections in which man lives in the world. In reality things are generally just the opposite to what the superficial consciousness may lightly suppose.

The lowest parts of man's nature are at present the least perfected forms of his being; hence these parts of the body, as such, correspond to what we have called the baby—our ego. Innumerable secrets of human-life lie concealed in what I am here referring to, secrets without number. If you go thoroughly into this subject you will understand above all, that the whole man is formed out of spirit, but at different stages. The head of man is formed out of spirit, but is more fully moulded, it belongs to a later stage of formation than the breast, of which indeed one might say, that it is just as much a metamorphosis of the head, as, in the sense of Goethe's theory of the metamorphoses of plants, the leaf is a metamorphosis of the flower. If we consider the rhythm between sleeping and waking from this point of view, we may say that the ego actually dwells during the waking time in all the activities in the human body, in all the lowest activities, which finally culminate in the formation of the blood. The ego is present in all these activities during the waking hours. These activities are those which are in a sense at the lowest stage of spirituality; for of course, everything connected with the body is spiritual. Now it must be carefully noted that while during the waking hours the ego stands at the lowest stage of spirituality, during the hours of sleep it stands with respect to man, at the highest stage. For consider the following: When we look at the head which we as human beings have today, that head is, as regards its outer form, the strongest manifestation of the spirit. It is the most representative of the spirit, its greatest manifestation; here the spirit has entered most deeply into matter. For that very reason there is here less left behind in the spirit itself. So much work has been spent by man on his head, to make its outer form a manifestation of the spiritual, that but little is left behind in the spirit. Whereas the lower members of the human bodily nature as regards their outer formation are the least spiritualised, have least been worked upon in a spiritual sense, there is on that account more of—what pertains to them left behind in the spiritual. The head, as head, least corresponds to the spiritual, for the reason that it has more spirit within it; the lower part of the body corresponds the most, because it has the least spirit within it. But in this greater portion of spirit which does not dwell within the bodily nature, the ego dwells during the hours of sleep.

Just reflect on this wonderful equalising process: while, as regards his body, man possesses a lower nature into which the ego immerses itself during the waking hours, this lower nature is only lower because the spirit has worked less upon it., because it kept back more of the spirit in the spiritual region. Yet in what it thus kept back, dwells the ego during sleep. During sleep, the ego is even now already present in that which man will only develop at a later epoch, which he will only then be able to develop and unfold. This at the present day is merely indicated and but little developed as yet in the bodily nature of man. Hence when the ego becomes conscious of the conditions in which it finds itself during sleep, when it really becomes conscious of this, it will be able to say to itself: ‘During sleep I am within that which is my holiest human predisposition; and when I come forth from sleep, I pass over from this holiest part of me, into that which gives but a faint indication of it.'

Through Spiritual Science such things as these must find their way into our feelings and inner sentiments, and live in them. Life itself will then become spiritualised by a magical breath of holiness. We shall then have a definite and positive idea of what is called the Grace of the Spirit, of the Holy Ghost. For we shall connect the realisation of this collective existence which runs its course in the rhythm between sleeping and waking, with the idea: ‘I am allowed to take part in the spiritual world, I am allowed to dwell in it.’ When we have once realised and felt this idea, this conception: ‘I am allowed to be within the spiritual world; grace is given me whereby I am permeated with the spiritual world, which is inaccessible to my ordinary earth-consciousness,’—when we have thoroughly filled ourselves with that thought, we shall have also learnt to look up to the Spirit which reveals itself just as clearly, I might say, between the lines of life, as the outer world of nature reveals itself to our external eyes and ears. But the age of materialism has led man far from the consciousness of being rayed into and permeated in his whole collective existence by the Grace of the Spirit. It is of immense importance that this consciousness should be re-acquired: for the depths of our souls are more affected than we suppose by the general materialism prevalent in this age of ours. Yet the human soul is now as a rule too weak to be able to realise in itself those conceptions which could lift it out of and above materialism. One such conception is that of the holiness of sleep, which if once understood, we should then ascribe all those thoughts and conceptions in our waking life which do not connect us with matter, to that inward working of the spirit which follows upon sleep. We should not then look upon our waking state, which unites us with matter, as the only important thing to man, which would be like considering the winter as the important time for the earth; we should contemplate the whole. As regards the earth we contemplate it as a whole when we take the winter in connection with the summer; and as regards man, we contemplate him as a whole when we take the day, i.e., man in relation to matter—in connection with sleep, i.e., his relation to the spirit.

Now a superficial observation might lead one to say: ‘As man in his waking state is bound up with matter, he can know nothing of the spirit; yet he does know something of the spirit, even while awake.’ Now, man has a memory; and this memory does not only work in his consciousness, it also works subconsciously. If we had no memory, sleep could not help us at all. I want you to fix this fact very firmly in your minds, for it is very important. No matter how much we slept, if we had no memory it would not help us. For if we had no memory we should of necessity be led to believe that there was naught else but material existence. It is only because we preserve in our subconscious memory what we experience during sleep—although we may know nothing of it in our outer consciousness—only because we have a subconscious recollection of what we then go through, that we are not entirely given over to a materialistic mode of thinking. If man does not think merely materialistic thoughts, if he has any sort of spiritual ideas during the day, he owes it to the fact that his memory acts. For man, as he now is, as earth-man,—only comes into touch with the spirit during sleep.

The point is that if, on the other hand, we were now able to develop as strong a consciousness of what happens to us during sleep as, under certain circumstances, men of bye-gone times could do, we should never think of doubting the existence of the spirit. We should then be able to remember not only subconsciously, but in full consciousness, what we encounter during our sleep. If a man were to experience in full consciousness what he passes through in sleep, it would be just as absurd for him to deny the existence of spirit as it would be for a waking man to deny the fact that there were tables and chairs. The crucial point now is that mankind should once more become capable of properly appreciating the meeting with the spirit in sleep. This can only be done by making the pictures of the days experiences sufficiently vivid; it can only be done by entering deeply into Spiritual Science. In this study we occupy ourselves strongly with ideas drawn from the spiritual world. We compel our head—the etheric body of our head—to picture things which are in nowise connected with outer matter, but only have reality in the world of the spirit. This requires more application than it does to picture the things which are real in the world of matter. Indeed that is the true reason why many people do not go in for Spiritual Science. They find all kinds of reasons against it. They say it is not logical. If they were driven to prove in what it is illogical, they would be embarrassed: for it could never be proved that Spiritual Science is illogical. The real reason they turn away from Spiritual Science comes from something very different! In a scientific refutation it is perhaps allowable not to be quite polite, and we may, therefore, say that the non-recognition of Spiritual Science comes solely from laziness of soul. However industrious certain learned people may be as regards all the concepts relating to outer matter, yet when it comes to the force necessary for understanding the things of the spirit, they are idle and lazy; and it is because they will not arouse in themselves this necessary force, that they refuse to recognise Spiritual Science. For it requires more effort for thinking the ideas of Spiritual Science, than it does for thinking the ordinary thoughts connected with the things of sense. The latter really come of themselves; but the ideas not connected with material things, must be thought; one must wrestle with them and make a big effort. It is this shrinking from the necessary effort which is at the bottom of the non-acceptance of Spiritual Science; and this is what we have to realise. When however, the effort really is made to accept such concepts and ideas as are not connected with the material, and to think them out, such activity is aroused in the soul that it is gradually able to develop the consciousness of what goes on between falling asleep and waking, to realise that a meeting with the Spirit takes place then. It will certainly be necessary to unlearn certain ideas. Just think how little some of the leaders of spiritual life are capable of developing such ideas. What I am about to relate is of less frequent occurrence now, but those who are the present leaders were in many cases, in the days of their youth, so deeply immersed in the life of their day, that they drank themselves into the state called in German ‘Bettschwere.’ They drank so much that the necessary gravitation was established. Well, in such cases a man's ideas as well as his feelings as to what goes on in sleep, are certainly not adapted to elucidate the whole significance of sleep. A man may be extremely learned as regards everything connected with matter, but he is naturally not then able to gain an insight into what happens to him between his falling asleep and awaking.

When people make the necessary effort to think out to their conclusion ideas not connected with material things, they will be able to develop understanding of what I have called the first meeting, the meeting with the Spirit during sleep. Unless the world is to fall into a state of decadence, this understanding must before very long illuminate life, and fill it with sunshine. For if men do not take up these ideas, on what are their concepts to be based? They will only be able to form them by observing external conditions, by studying the external world. Ideas formed in this way alone, leave the inner part of the human being, his soul-part, in a state of inertia; that part of man which must under other circumstances be strongly exercised in spiritual concepts and ideas is left inert, unused: it dies. What is the result of this? The result is that man becomes blind, spiritually blind in his whole relation to the world. If he develops no ideas or concepts except such as he forms under the influence of outer impressions, he becomes spiritually blind; and spiritual blindness does indeed prevail to a great extent, in this materialistic age. In science this is only injurious up to a point, but in practical life this blindness to the real world is extremely harmful. You see, the further we descend into matter, the more things correct themselves in this materialistic age. For if a man builds a bridge, he is forced by circumstances to learn the proper rules of construction, otherwise when the first wagon crosses it, that bridge will collapse. It is easier to apply wrong conceptions in trying to cure anyone, for it can never be proved what a man dies of, or what makes him well. It does not at all follow that the ideas put into practice are necessarily the right ones. If one wishes to work in the realm of the spiritual, it is a much more serious matter; and it is, therefore, particularly serious that things are in a bad way in what are generally known as the practical sciences, Political or National Economy and the like. In this materialistic age people have become accustomed to be guided by the impressions and ideas formed in the outer world and to apply these to their doctrines of national or political economy, and in this way their ideas have become blind. Almost all that has hitherto been developed along these lines is but a blind idea. It must, therefore, follow as a natural consequence, that people with these blind notions are led along in leading strings by events, they yield themselves blindly to the course of events. If in this state they then intervene in them, well, what can we expect?

One possibility formed as a result of not taking up Spiritual Science is these blind ideas. Another possibility is that instead of being stimulated to form ideas by outer circumstances people may let themselves be stimulated from within; that is to say, that nothing but what lives in the emotions and passions is, in a sense, allowed to arise in the soul. In this way a man certainly does not acquire blind ideas, but rather what we might call intoxicated ideas. People of the present day who are acknowledged materialists constantly swing backwards and forwards between blind ideas and intoxicated ideas. Blind ideas, in which they allow themselves to be blindfolded to what is going on, so that when they intervene they do so in the clumsiest way possible! Intoxicated ideas, in which they only give way to their emotions and passions, and confront the world in such a way that they do not really understand things, but either love or hate everything; and judge everything according to their love or hatred, their sympathy or antipathy. For it is only when, on the one hand, a man makes efforts in his soul to acquire spiritual ideas, and on the other develops his feelings for the great concerns of the world, that he can attain to clear-sighted ideas and conceptions. When we lift ourselves up to the thoughts given us in Spiritual Science of the great connections concerning which the materialistic view of the world merely laughs: of the ages of Saturn, Sun and Moon and of our connection with the Universe, when we fructify our moral feelings with the great goals of humanity, we can then rise above all the emotions displayed in sympathy or antipathy for anything in the world around us. And these emotions can be overcome in no other way.

It is undoubtedly necessary, that through Spiritual Science, a great deal that lives in our age, should be purified. For man, after all, does not allow himself to be entirely cut off from the spiritual world. He does not really allow himself to be cut off at all, he only allows himself to be apparently cut off. I have already called your attention to the way this is apparently done. When man, on the one hand swears only by the material and the impressions of the external world, the forces which are intended for the spirit still remain within him, but he then directs them to a false region and gives himself up to all kinds of illusions. That is why it is chiefly the most practical and materialistic people who are subject to the strongest illusions and give way to them. We see people going through life denying the existence of spirit and laughing heartily if they are told of anyone having had spiritual experiences. ‘He sees ghosts!’ they exclaim. Having said that, they consider they have broken the back of the matter. They themselves certainly do not see ghosts, in their sense of the word. But they only believe they see no ghosts; in reality they are incessantly seeing ghosts, they see them the whole time. One can put a man who is thus rooted in his materialistic view of the world to the test, and it will be evident that as regards what the next day may bring forth, he gives way to the worst illusions. This giving way to illusions, is nothing but a substitute for the spiritual, which he denies. If he denies the spiritual, he must then necessarily fall into illusion. As has been said, it is not easy to prove the illusions, existing in the many different departments of life, but they are everywhere prevalent, really everywhere. People are really fond of giving way to illusion. For instance, the following is a very frequent experience. Some one may say: ‘If I invest my money in this or that undertaking, it may be used for the brewing of beer. I refuse to use my money in that way, I will take no part in that.’ So he takes his money to the bank. The bank, without his knowledge, invests the money in a brewery. It makes no difference at all to the objective fact, but he is under the illusion that his money is not used for such base purposes as beer!

Of course, it may be objected that this is far-fetched, but it is not, it is really a thing that rules all life. People do not take the trouble today to become really acquainted with life, to be able to see through it. This, however, is of great significance. It is immensely important that we should learn to know what we ourselves are in the midst of. This is not easy today, because life has become complicated; nevertheless, what I have drawn attention to, is true. For, you know, under certain circumstances one might easily conceive an absurd situation. I will give you an example. There was once an incendiary, (this is a true story,) who ran out of a house which he had set on fire, having so arranged things that he allowed himself time to do so. He was caught and brought before the magistrates. On being questioned, he answered that he considered he had done a good piece of work, that he was not the one to be blamed, but the workmen, who had left a lighted candle in the house when they left it in the evening. If the candle had burnt out at night, it would have set the house on fire. He, therefore, set it on fire himself, before it was quite dark. In either case the house would have been on fire; he only set it on fire so that the fire might be speedily extinguished: for if a house is on fire in the daytime it may be saved, but at night it is a more complicated matter, and the whole house would then have been burnt to the ground. He was then asked why he did not put the candle out; to which he replied ‘I am a teacher of humanity; if I had blown out the candle, the workers, who were the ones to blame in the matter, would have gone on being careless, whereas now they can see for themselves what happens when they forget to blow out their lights.’

We may laugh at such an example as this, for we do not observe that we are continually doing the like. People are constantly acting in the same way as the man who did not put out the lighted candle, but set fire to the house. Only we do not notice this when we are disturbed by our emotions and passions, which cause an intoxication of ideas, and when the whole thing relates to the spiritual world. If we accustom the soul to that elasticity and flexibility, which is necessary for the forming of spiritual ideas, we shall so mould our thought that it will really find its way into life and be properly adapted to it. If we do not do this, our thought will never be fit to deal with life; it will not even be affected by it, except on the surface. That is why-to turn now to the deeper side of the question—the materialistic age really leads one away from an connection with the spiritual world. Just as we undermine our bodily health if we do not get our proper sleep, so do we undermine our soul-life if we do not spend our waking-time in the right way. If we only give way to outer impressions and live without being conscious of our connection with the spiritual world, we are not awake in the right way. Just as a man may by reason of certain conditions sleep restlessly, turning and twisting about, and thus undermine his physical health, so does a man undermine his spiritual health if he only yields to the external impressions of the world, if he is only subject to physical matter. This will prevent his experiencing in the right way that first meeting with the spiritual world, of which I have spoken. In this way he loses all possibility of rightly connecting himself with the spiritual world, during his physical existence. The connection with that world in which we spend our time when not in incarnation, into which we ourselves pass when we go through the Gates of Death, is thereby cut off.

Man must once again learn to understand that we are not here merely to build in the physical universe during our physical existence; he must learn to understand that we, during the whole of our existences are bound up with the whole world. Those who have already passed through the Gates of Death want to work with us on the physical world. This co-operation of theirs appears to be only a physical working with us, but everything physical is only an outer expression of the spirit. The age of materialism has estranged man from the world of the dead; Spiritual Science must re-establish the friendship between them. The time must once more come, when we shall cease to make the work of the dead for the spiritualisation of the physical world impossible, by estranging ourselves from them. For the dead cannot take part with hands in the events of the physical, they cannot accomplish physical work in that direct way. It would be foolish to believe that. The dead can work in a spiritual way. But to do so they need to have instruments placed at their disposal; they require the spiritual matter that lives here in the physical world. We are not merely human beings, we are also instruments, instruments for the spirits who have passed through the Gates of Death. As long as we are incarnated in physical bodies we use the pen or the hammer or the axe; when we are no longer incarnated in physical bodies the instruments we use are the human souls themselves. This rests upon the peculiar way in which the dead perceive, which I will just touch upon once more—I referred to this subject once before here.

Suppose you have before you a small vessel containing salt; you can see that. The salt looks like a white substance, like white powder. The fact that you see the salt as a white powder depends on your eyes. Your spirit cannot see the salt as a white powder; but if you put a little salt on your tongue and taste the peculiar salt taste, it is possible then for the spirit to become aware of it. Every spirit is able to perceive the taste of the salt in you. Everything that takes place in man through the external world, can be perceived by every spirit, including the human souls which have passed through the Gates of Death. Just as within us the world of sense extends to our tasting, smelling, seeing and hearing, so does the world of the dead reach down into what we hear, see and taste, etc. The experiences we have in the physical world are shared in by the dead, for these experiences do not only belong to our world but to theirs. They belong to their world when we spiritualise what we experience in the outer world with spiritual ideas. Unless we do this, if we merely experience the laws of matter, that to the dead is something which they cannot comprehend, it remains dark. To the dead a soul devoid of spirit seems dark. For this reason the dead have become estranged from our earth-life during the age of materialism. This estrangement must be got rid of. An inner common life of the so-called dead with the so-called living must take place; but that can only be when people develop in their souls those forces which are really spiritual, that is, when they develop such ideas, concepts, and images as deal with spiritual matters. When a man in his thinking makes an effort to reach the spirit, he will gradually reach it in reality. It signifies that a bridge is thrown across between the physical and the spiritual world. That alone can lead men across from the age of materialism to that age in which they will face the realities, neither blindfolded nor intoxicated, but with vision and poise. Having learnt to see through the spirit, they will attain vision and poise, and through the feelings and sentiments aroused in them by the great concerns of the world, they will attain the right balance between sympathy and antipathy, with respect to what our immediate surroundings demand of us.

We shall continue the considerations of these subjects in our next lecture, and go still more deeply from this aspect, into the ideas to be gained from the spiritual world.

Fünfter Vortrag

Ich habe Ihnen gesprochen von den drei Begegnungen, denen die Menschenseele unterworfen ist im Verlaufe ihres Lebens zwischen Geburt und Tod, und die sie schon im Verlaufe dieses Lebens zwischen Geburt und Tod in Verbindung bringen mit den geistigen Welten. Auf diesen Gegenstand, den wir das letzte Mal episodisch vorbereitend gewissermaßen von außen berührt haben, werden wir heute noch einmal zurückkommen, wir werden ihn überhaupt genauer betrachten.

Wir haben bemerkt, daß der Mensch in jener Zeit, in der er den Wechselzuständen von Schlafen und Wachen unterliegt, eine Begegnung hat, in der Regel in der Mitte seines Schlafzustandes. In der Regel sage ich deshalb, weil das der Schlafzustand sein soll, der der normale Nachtzustand ist. Also der Mensch hat in der Regel zwischen Schlafen und Aufwachen seine Begegnung mit derjenigen Welt, der unser Geistselbst verwandt ist, mit derjenigen Welt, in die wir versetzen die Wesenheiten aus jener Klasse der Hierarchien, die wir als die Angeloi bezeichnen. Wir kommen da also gewissermaßen jedesmal, wenn wir durch den Schlaf gehen, durch jene Welt durch, in welcher sich diese Wesen aufhalten; durch jene Welt, die die nächste - nach oben - ist zu unserer physischen Welt, und erfrischen, erstärken gewissermaßen unser ganzes geistiges Wesen durch diese Begegnung. Weil das so ist, weil man es also im Schlafzustand zu tun hat mit einem Verhältnis des Menschen mit der geistigen Welt, wird auch niemals eine bloß materialistische Erklärung des Schlafzustandes, wie sie von der äußeren Wissenschaft versucht wird, irgendwie befriedigen können. Man kann vieles, das im Menschen vorgeht, erklären aus den Veränderungen, die der Leib durchmacht vom Aufwachen bis zum Einschlafen, und man kann dann aus diesen Veränderungen den Schlaf erklären wollen, aber es wird immer etwas Unbefriedigendes dabei bleiben, weil es sich im Schlafe eben um die angedeutete Begegnung, also um eine Beziehung des Menschen zur geistigen Welt handelt. Gerade wenn wir also den Schlafzustand betrachten, können wir sehen, wie der Mensch, wenn er keine Beziehung sucht in seinem Bewußtsein zur geistigen Welt, dann zu halbwahren Begriffen kommt, zu jenen halbwahren Begriffen, welche - da Begriffe, Vorstellungen sich ins Leben umsetzen — das Leben verfälschen und auch die großen Katastrophen des Lebens eigentlich in Wahrheit zuletzt doch herbeiführen.

Halbwahre Begriffe! Sie sind aus dem Grunde in gewisser Beziehung sogar schlimmer als die ganz falschen Begriffe, weil die Menschen, welche sich halbwahre Begriffe, halbwahre Vorstellungen bilden, auf diesen halbwahren Vorstellungen bestehen, denn sie können sie ja beweisen; da sie halb wahr sind, lassen sie sich beweisen. Es wird ihnen auch eine Widerlegung nicht einleuchten, da die Begriffe eben halb wahr sind. Solche Begriffe verfälschen wirklich das Leben noch mehr als die ganz falschen, denen man ihre Falschheit ja eben sofort ansieht, anerkennt. Eine solche halbwahre Vorstellung ist diejenige, die heute zum Teil von der äußeren Wissenschaft verlassen ist, aber zum Teil, zum großen Teil sogar von dieser äußeren Wissenschaft noch immer vertreten wird. Es ist die Vorstellung, auf die ich schon öfter aufmerksam gemacht habe: daß wir schlafen, weil wir ermüdet sind. Es ist, wir können wirklich sagen, eine halbwahre Vorstellung, und sie wird gestützt durch eben auch eine halbwahre Beobachtung, auf die sich die Menschen berufen: daß das Leben des Tages den Körper ermüdet, und daß man daher, weil man ermüdet ist, schlafen müsse. Nun, ich habe schon darauf aufmerksam gemacht in früheren Vorträgen, daß sich durch diese Erklärung des Schlafes niemals erklären ließe, warum Rentiers, die gar nicht gearbeitet haben, oftmals bei den anregendsten Dingen, die von der Außenwelt kommen, sofort einschlafen, wenn sie dieses oder jenes hören. Daß sie ermüdet sind, wird man ganz gewiß nicht nachweisen können; und daß sie durchaus schlafen müssen, weil sie nun so abgerackert sind, das ist eben nur eine falsche, also eine halbwahre Beobachtung. Wir Menschen beobachten eben da, wenn wir glauben, daß wir durch die Ermüdung zum Schlafen gezwungen werden, nur halb. Und man sieht, worin die Halbheit besteht, erst dann, wenn man dasjenige, was von der einen Seite beobachtet wird, vergleicht mit dem, was von der anderen Seite beobachtet werden kann, wo man der anderen Halbheit begegnet. Sie werden gleich sehen, was ich damit meine.

Schlafen und Wachen ist im einzelnen menschlichen Leben etwas, was rhythmisch abwechselt. Nur ist der Mensch ein Wesen, das auf Freiheit gestellt ist, und das daher auch mit Bezug auf den Rhythmus von Schlafen und Wachen eingreifen kann — hier mehr durch die Verhältnisse als durch dasjenige, was man Freiheit nennt, aber diese Verhältnisse sind eben die Grundlage der Freiheit -, eingreifen kann bei dem Gang der Ereignisse, und manchmal bei dem Rhythmus des Schlafens und Wachens nur allzu gerne eingreift. Ein anderer Rhythmus, den wir oft zusammengestellt haben mit Schlafen und Wachen, wenn er auch im gewöhnlichen Bewußtsein falsch zusammengestellt wird, ist der, welcher im Jahreslauf eintritt: der Wechsel von Sommer und Winter, wenn wir die Zwischenjahreszeiten unberücksichtigt lassen. Niemand wird es dabei einfallen zu sagen: Nun, während des Sommers strengt sich die Erde an und entfaltet diejenigen Kräfte, welche dazu führen, daß die Pflanzen wachsen, Kräfte, welche zu manchem anderen noch führen; da ermüdet sie, und es muß daher eine Winterruhe eintreten. — Ein jeder wird eine solche Vorstellung als absurd abweisen und wird sagen: "Daß der Winter eintritt, hat gar nichts zu tun mit der sommerlichen Anstrengung der Erde, sondern er tritt halt deshalb ein, weil die Sonne in ein anderes Raumesverhältnis zu dem Fleck Erde kommt, auf dem gerade der Winter eintritt. - Da wird man alles von Äußerem ableiten, beim Schlafen und Wachen alles von der Ermüdung, vom Inneren. Nun ist das eine genau ebenso falsch wie das andere, oder man könnte auch sagen, es ist das eine gerade so halb wahr wie das andere. Denn der Rhythmus von Schlafen und Wachen ist gerade ein solcher Rhythmus wie derjenige zwischen Winter und Sommer. Es ist ebensowenig wahr, daß wir nur deshalb schlafen, weil wir ermüdet sind, wie es wahr ist, daß der Winter eintritt, weil die Erde sich während des Sommers abgerackert hat, sondern beides beruht auf selbständigem Wirken eben eines Rhythmus, der hervorgebracht wird durch gewisse Verhältnisse. Der Rhythmus zwischen Schlafen und Wachen wird eben dadurch hervorgebracht, daß die Menschenseele es nötig hat, die Begegnung mit der geistigen Welt immer wieder und wiederum herbeizuführen, daß sie immer wiederum ihre Begegnung mit der geistigen Welt braucht. Und wenn wir sagen würden, wir wollen schlafen, und deshalb fühlen wir Ermüdung, oder wenn wir sagen würden: wir treten in das Stadium ein, wo wir nach dem einen Teil des Rhythmus, nach dem Schlafzustand verlangen, und deshalb fühlen wir Ermüdung, dann würden wir etwas Richtigeres sagen als: weil wir ermüdet sind, müssen wir schlafen.

Die Sache wird uns noch klarer werden, wenn wir einfach fragen: Ja, was tut denn die Seele eigentlich, wenn sie schläft? Für die Beantwortung einer solchen Frage hat die heutige geistlose Wissenschaft kein rechtes Verständnis, auch keine rechte Möglichkeit. Sehen Sie, im Wachen, da genießen wir -— denn Genuß ist beim ganzen Leben immer vorhanden -, da genießen wir die äußere Welt. Wir genießen ja nicht bloß die äußere Welt, wenn wir eine gute Speise durch unseren Gaumen fühlen, wo wir das Wort «genießen», weil die Sache eben radikal wirkt, anwenden, sondern wir genießen während des ganzen Wachzustandes die äußere Welt, und alles Leben ist zu gleicher Zeit Genuß. Wenn es viel Unlust in der Welt gibt und das scheinbar kein Genuß ist, so ist das nur eine Täuschung, von der wir im späteren Zusammenhang in nächsten Vorträgen einmal sprechen werden. Im Wachen genießen wir die äußere Welt, im Schlafen genießen wir uns selbst. Geradeso wie wir, wenn wir mit unserer Seele im Leibe sind, durch den Leib die äuBere Welt genießen, so genießen wir, wenn wir mit unserer Seele außer dem Leibe sind, unseren eigenen Leib; denn während des Lebens zwischen Geburt und Tod sind wir mit dem Leibe doch zusammenhängend, auch außerhalb des Leibes. Darin besteht im wesentlichen der Schlafzustand, der gewöhnliche normale Schlafzustand, daß wir uns in unseren Leib vertiefen, daß wir unseren Leib genießen. Von außen genießen wir unseren Leib. Und die Träume, die gewöhnlichen chaotischen Träume wird derjenige richtig deuten, der sich sagt, sie sind Widerspiegelung desjenigen Leibesgenusses, den der Mensch hat, wenn er im traumlosen Schlaf ist.

Diese Erklärung des Schlafes kommt schon näher dem Schlafbedürfnis, von dem ich gesprochen habe beim Rentier. Denn daß er ermüdet ist, das werden wir ihm nicht so leicht glauben; daß er aber seinen Leib so gerne hat, daß er ihn lieber genießen will als das, was ihm oftmals aus der äußeren Welt entgegenkommt, das werden wir gerade beim Rentier leicht glauben können. Er hat sich ja in der Regel so unendlich gern und genießt sich so gern, er genießt vielleicht sich viel lieber als, um nicht zu sagen einen Vortrag, den er schandenhalber anhört, sondern vielleicht zu sagen, irgendein schwierigeres, besseres Musikstück, bei dem er sofort einschläft, wenn er es sich anhören soll. Schlaf ist Selbstgenuß. Dadurch nun, daß wir im Schlafe, im normalen Schlafe, die Begegnung mit der geistigen Welt haben, dadurch wird dieser Schlaf nicht bloßer Selbstgenuß sein, sondern auch Selbstverständnis sein; bis zu einem gewissen Grade Selbstverständnis, Selbstauffassung. In dieser Beziehung ist tatsächlich unserer geistigen Bildung notwendig, daß die Menschen begreifen lernen, daß sie wirklich im normalen Schlaf untertauchen in den Geist und im Aufwachen wiederum auftauchen aus dem Geiste, daß sie lernen Ehrfurcht zu haben vor dieser Begegnung mit dem Geiste.

Nun, damit wir nicht unvollständig sind, möchte ich noch einmal auf das sogenannte Ermüdungsrätsel zurückkommen. Denn hier wird ja das triviale Bewußtsein am allerleichtesten einhaken können. Es wird sagen: Nun ja, wir erfahren aber doch, daß wir ermüdet sind, und mit der Ermüdung tritt das Schlafbedürfnis ein. — Hier ist ein Punkt, wo man wirklich genau unterscheiden muß. Wir ermüden tatsächlich bei des Tages Arbeit, und während wir schlafen, sind wir in der Lage, die Ermüdung fortzuschaffen. Also dieser Teil der Sache ist wahr: Wir sind in der Lage, durch den Schlaf die Ermüdung wegzuschaffen. Aber der Schlaf besteht nicht darin, daß er etwa eine Wirkung der Ermüdung ist, sondern er besteht darin, daß man sich selbst genießt. Und in diesem Selbstgenusse erwirbt sich der Mensch die Kräfte, durch die er die eingetretene Ermüdung fortschafft. Also soweit ist die Sache wahr, daß der Schlaf Ermüdung wegschaffen kann. Daraus folgt aber nicht, daß jeder Schlaf Ermüdung wegschafft; wahr ist, daß jeder Schlaf ein Selbstgenuß ist, wahr ist aber nicht, daß jeder Schlaf Ermüdung wegschafft. Denn derjenige, der unnötig schläft, der bei jeder Gelegenheit einschläft und unnötig schläft, der kann auch eben wirklich ein Schlafen vollbringen, in dem keine Ermüdung weggeschafft wird, in dem bloß Selbstgenuß vorliegt. Durch einen solchen Schlaf wird man zwar — weil man gewöhnt ist vom normalen Leben her, durch den Schlaf die Ermüdung wegzuschaffen -, durch einen solchen Schlaf wird man zwar sich fortwährend anstrengen, auch Ermüdung wegzuschaffen. Wenn sie aber nicht da ist, die Ermüdung, wie das beim Rentier der Fall ist, wenn er im Konzert einschläft, wird er bloß an seinem Leibe herumwirtschaften, so wie man sonst herumwirtschaftet, wenn man Ermüdung fortschaffen will. Aber da die Ermüdung nicht da ist, wird er unnötig herumwirtschaften, und die Folge wird sein, daß er allerlei Folgezustände in seinem Leibe ausbrütet. Daher solche schlafenden Rentiers gerade am ärgsten geplagt sind von allerlei Dingen, die man als Neurasthenie, oder wie sie sonst heißen, die schönen Dinge, zusammenfaßt.

Es ist eben doch durch den Zusammenhang mit der geistigen Wissenschaft beim Menschen ein Zustand denkbar, in dem er sich bewußt ist: Du lebst in einem Rhythmus, der dich in Abwechslung dazu bringt, in der physischen Welt zu sein und in der geistigen Welt zu sein. In der physischen Welt hast du deine Begegnung mit der äußeren physischen Natur; in der geistigen Welt hast du deine Begegnung mit den Wesen eben, die in der geistigen Welt leben.

Nun werden wir vollständig die Sache verstehen, wenn wir etwas tiefer auf die ganze Wesenheit des Menschen von einem gewissen Gesichtspunkte eingehen. Sehen Sie, für die äußere Wissenschaft, die man die Biologie nennt, ist der Mensch gewöhnlich als Einheit betrachtet, und man teilt ihn notdürftig in Kopf, Brustteil und Unterleibsteil mit daran befindlichen Gliedern. In jenen alten Zeiten, in denen man noch ein atavistisches Wissen hatte, verband man schon mehr Vorstellungen mit dieser Teilung, mit dieser Gliederung des Menschen. Der große Plato, der griechische Philosoph, er weist dem Kopfe, dem Haupte die Weisheit zu, dem Brustteil das Mutartige im Menschen, dem Unterleibsteil weist er zu dasjenige, was niederste Regungen der menschlichen Natur sind. Und veredelt kann dasjenige, was dem Brustteil zugewiesen ist, werden, wenn Weisheit sich vereinigt mit dem Mutartigen, das an den Brustteil geknüpft ist, zum weisheitsvollen Mut, zur weisheitsvollen Aktivität. Und dasjenige, was als die niedere Gliedrigkeit des Menschen zu betrachten ist, was an dem Unterleib haftet - wenn es durchsonnt wird von der Weisheit, so nennt es Plato die Besonnenheit. Also da sehen wir schon, wie die Seele gegliedert und bezogen wird auf die verschiedenen Leibesteile. Heute, wo wir die Geisteswissenschaft haben, die für Plato noch nicht in derselben Weise zugänglich war, können wir über diese Dinge ja viel genauer sprechen.

Indem wir von dem gesamten Menschen sprechen, sprechen wir zunächst, wenn wir von oben beginnen in der Viergliedrigkeit des Menschen, von seinem Ich. Alles dasjenige, was der Mensch seelisch-geistig sein eigen nennt, wirkt in seinem physischen Dasein zwischen Geburt und Tod durch die Werkzeuge des physischen Leibes. Wir können uns bei jedem Gliede des Menschen fragen: Durch welche Partien der physischen Leiblichkeit wirkt das betreffende Glied? Und da zeigt sich uns bei einer durchgreifenden geistigen Beobachtung, daß dasjenige was wir das Ich des Menschen nennen, tatsächlich, so wie der Mensch ist zwischen Geburt und Tod, gebunden ist — so grotesk es klingt, aber die Wahrheiten sind gewöhnlich verschieden von dem, was das Trivialbewußtsein sich vorstellt -, leiblich gebunden ist an dasjenige, was wir Unterleib nennen. Denn dieses Ich ist ja, wie ich oftmals gesagt habe, gegenüber der menschlichen Natur das Baby. Der physische Leib hat seine Anlage schon bekommen in der alten Saturnzeit, der Ätherleib in der alten Sonnenzeit, der Astralleib in der alten Mondenzeit, das Ich erst während der Erdenzeit. Es ist das jüngste unter den Gliedern der menschlichen Wesenheit. Es wird erst zur künftigen Vulkanzeit auf der Stufe stehen, auf der der physische Leib jetzt während der Erdenzeit steht. Das Ich ist gebunden an die niedrigste Leiblichkeit des Menschen, und diese niedrigste Leiblichkeit, die schläft eigentlich fortwährend. Sie ist nicht so organisiert, daß sie dasjenige, was in ihr verläuft, ins Bewußtsein heraufträgt. Was in der niederen Leiblichkeit des Menschen geschieht, das ist auch im gewöhnlichen Wachzustand dem Schlafe unterworfen. Unser Ich, das kommt uns als solches in seiner Wahrheit, in seiner wirklichen Wesenheit ebensowenig zum Bewußtsein, wie uns die Vorgänge unserer Verdauung zum Bewußtsein kommen. Was uns als Ich zum Bewußtsein kommt, ist die Reflexvorstellung, die Spiegelvorstellung, die in unser Haupt hinaufgeworfen wird. Wir sehen oder nehmen unser Ich eigentlich niemals wahr, weder im Schlafe, wo wir überhaupt bewußtlos sind im normalen Zustand, noch im Wachen, denn das Ich schläft auch während des Wachens. Das wirkliche Ich kommt nicht ins Bewußtsein herein, sondern nur der Begriff, die Vorstellung vom Ich, die wird heraufgespiegelt. Dagegen in der Zeit vom Einschlafen bis zum Aufwachen, da kommt wirklich dieses Ich zu sich selber, nur wird der Mensch im normalen tiefen Schlafe nichts davon wissen, weil er eben noch unbewußt ist während des Erdenzustandes in diesem tiefen Schlafe. Dieses Ich ist also im Grunde genommen an die niederste Leiblichkeit des Menschen gebunden, und zwar während des Tages, während des Tagwachens von innen, während des Schlafes von außen.

Gehen wir nun zu dem zweiten Gliede der menschlichen Natur, zu demjenigen, was wir als den Astralleib bezeichnen, dann finden wir diesen Astralleib in bezug auf die Werkzeuge, durch die er wirkt, von einem gewissen Gesichtspunkte aus gebunden an den Brustteil des Menschen. Und im Grunde genommen können wir von dem, was in diesem Astralleib vorgeht und durch den Brustteil wirkt, eigentlich nur träumen. Vom Ich können wir nur, so wie wir sind als Erdenmenschen, schlafend etwas wahrnehmen, das heißt eben bewußt nichts wahrnehmen. Von dem, was der Astralleib in uns wirkt, können wir träumen. Daher träumen wir im Grunde genommen fortwährend über unsere Gefühle, über dasjenige, was als Empfindungen in uns lebt. Die führen in der Tat ein traumhaftes Dasein in uns. So steht das Ich des Menschen außerhalb des Gebietes, das wir Menschen mit unserem gewöhnlichen sinnlichen Bewußtsein umfassen, denn das Ich schläft forwährend. Der Astralleib steht auch noch in einer gewissen Beziehung außerhalb dessen, was wir mit unserem sinnlichen Bewußtsein umfassen, denn er kann nur träumen. Mit beiden stehen wir also im Grunde genommen fortwährend, ob wir wachen oder schlafen, in der geistigen Welt drinnen, wirklich in der geistigen Welt drinnen.

Dasjenige aber, was wir den Ätherleib nennen, das ist mit Bezug auf seine Leiblichkeit gebunden an das Haupt, an den Kopf. Und das ist dasjenige, was zunächst durch die eigenrümliche Organisation des Kopfes in uns fortwährend wachen kann, beziehungsweise fortwährend wachen kann, wenn es im Leibe ist, also wenn es mit der Leiblichkeit des Kopfes verbunden ist. So daß wir sagen können: Das Ich ist mit den niedersten Gliedern unseres Leibes verbunden, der Astralleib mit unserem Brustteil. Das Herz, von dessen Vorgängen wir nicht ein volles Bewußtsein, sondern fortwährend nur ein Traumbewußtsein haben, das schlägt, pulst unter dem Einfluß unseres Astralleibes. Wenn der Kopf denkt, so denkt er unter dem Einfluß des Ätherleibes. Und dann können wir noch den ganzen physischen Leib unterscheiden, die Zusammenfassung von allem; der hat nun seine Verbindung mit der gesamten Außenwelt.

Jetzt sehen Sie einen merkwürdigen Zusammenhang: Das Ich ist an die niederen Glieder des Leibes gebunden, der Astralleib an den Herzteil, der Ätherleib an den Kopfteil, der physische Leib an die ganze Außenwelt, an die Umgebung. Dieser ganze physische Leib steht auch wirklich fortwährend im wachen Zustande mit der äußeren Umgebung im Verhältnis. Geradeso, wie wir mit dem ganzen Leibe mit der äußeren Umgebung im Verhältnis stehen, so steht unser Ätherleib mit unserem Haupt, der Astralleib mit dem Herzen und so weiter in Verbindung. Daraus aber werden Sie erkennen, wie, ich möchte sagen, wirklich geheimnisvoll die Zusammenhänge sind, in denen der Mensch in der Welt lebt. In Wirklichkeit verhalten sich die Dinge geradezu umgekehrt gegenüber dem, was wir im Trivialbewußtsein leicht glauben können. Es sind eben die niedersten Glieder der menschlichen Natur heute beim Menschen noch unvollkommene Ausbildungen seines Wesens; daher entsprechen sie auch als Leibesglieder eben dem, was wir das Baby genannt haben: dem Ich.

In dem, was ich damit gesagt habe, sind unzählige Geheimnisse des menschlichen Lebens verborgen, unzählige Geheimnisse. Vor allen Dingen werden Sie, wenn Sie in diese ganze Sache eingehen, verstehen, wie aus dem Geiste heraus der ganze Mensch gebildet ist, nur, möchte ich sagen, auf verschiedenen Stufen. Das Haupt des Menschen ist aus dem Geist heraus gebildet, allein es ist mehr ausgeprägt, es hat eine spätere Bildungsstufe als die Brust, von der wir ja sagen können, sie sei ebenso eine Metamorphose für das Haupt, wie das Blatt im Sinne der Goetheschen Metamorphosenlehre eine Metamorphose für die Blüte ist. Und wenn wir von diesem Gesichtspunkte aus den Rhythmus zwischen Schlafen und Wachen betrachten, dann werden wir sagen: Das Ich weilt während des Wachens in der Tat bei all den Tätigkeiten im menschlichen Leibe, die die niedersten Tätigkeiten sind, die zuletzt gipfeln in der Blutbereitung. Bei diesen Tätigkeiten weilt das Ich während des Wachens. Das sind diejenigen Tätigkeiten des Leibes, die gewissermaßen auf der untersten Stufe der Geistigkeit stehen, denn alles Leibliche ist ja auch geistig: aber das, wovon wir jetzt reden, steht auf der untersten Stufe der Geistigkeit. Dadurch aber, daß das Ich während des Wachens auf der untersten Stufe der Geistigkeit steht, steht es während des Schlafes — beachten Sie das wohl! - mit Bezug auf den Menschen in der höchsten Stufe der Geistigkeit. Denn bedenken Sie folgendes: Wenn wir das Haupt ansehen, so wie wir es als Menschen auf uns tragen, so ist es in bezug auf seine äußere Bildung am meisten den Geist offenbarend. Das Haupt ist am meisten Abbild des Geistes, am meisten Offenbarung des Geistes; der Geist ist am weitesten in die Materie eingegangen. Dadurch aber hat er am wenigsten zurückgelassen im Geiste selber. Indem der Mensch am Haupte so viel Arbeit darauf verwendet hat, die äußere Leiblichkeit vergeistigt zu offenbaren, ist wenig zurückgeblieben im Geiste. Indem in den niederen Gliedern der menschlichen Leiblichkeit dasjenige, was nach außen sich gebildet hat, am wenigsten vergeistigt ist, am wenigsten geistig ausgearbeitet ist, ist in bezug auf diese niederen Glieder am meisten im Geistigen zurückgeblieben. Dem Kopf als Kopf entspricht am wenigsten Geistiges, weil er am meisten Geist in sich hat; dem Unterleib entspricht am meisten Geist, weil er am wenigsten in sich hat. Aber in diesem meisten Geist, der nicht in der Leiblichkeit lebt, da lebt das Ich während des Schlafens drinnen.

Denken Sie diesen wunderbaren Ausgleich: Während also der Mensch eine niedere Natur hat in bezug auf seine Leiblichkeit, und das Ich in diese niedere Natur untertaucht mit dem Aufwachen, ist diese niedere Natur nur deshalb niedere Natur, weil der Geist am wenigsten gearbeitet hat, weil der Geist so viel zurückbehalten hat im geistigen Gebiet. Aber in dem, was er zurückbehalten hat, da ist das Ich während des Schlafes drinnen. So also ist das Ich während des Schlafes mit demjenigen heute schon zusammen, was der Mensch erst in späterer Zeit ausbilden wird, was der Mensch erst in der Zukunft zur EntwickeJung, zur Entfaltung bringen wird, was heute noch wenig, ich möchte sagen nur erst angedeutet ist, noch wenig ausgebildet ist in des Menschen Leiblichkeit. Wird daher das Ich bewußt des Zustandes, in dem es sich während des Schlafes befindet, wird es sich dieses Zustandes in Wahrheit bewußt, dann kann es sich sagen: Ich bin während des Schlafes in demjenigen, was meine heiligste menschliche Anlage ist. Und indem ich aus dem Schlafe heraustrete, indem ich aufwache, gehe ich aus der Welt meiner heiligsten Anlagen in dasjenige über, was heute nur eine schwache Andeutung dieser heiligsten Anlage ist.

Ja, solche Dinge müssen durch die Geisteswissenschaft sich in unser Gefühl, in unsere Empfindungen einleben. Dann wird uns das Leben selber durchgeistigt werden von einem Zauberhauch der Heiligkeit. Und dann werden wir einen bestimmten, einen positiven Begriff verbinden mit demjenigen, was die Gnade des Geistes, des Heiligen Geistes genannt wird. Dann werden wir mit diesem Gesamtdasein des Menschen, das verläuft in dem Rhythmus zwischen Schlafen und Wachen, die Vorstellung verbinden: Du darfst teilnehmen an der geistigen Welt, du darfst darinnen sein. - Und haben wir einmal so recht gefühlt diesen Begriff, diese Vorstellung: Du darfst darinnen sein in der geistigen Welt, du wirst begnadet, indem du durchsetzt wirst mit der geistigen Welt, die dir durch dein gewöhnliches Erdenbewußtsein nicht zugänglich ist - haben wir das einmal so recht durchdrungen, dann haben wir auch gelernt, aufzublicken zu dem Geiste, der sich uns, ich möchte sagen, zwischen den Zeilen des Lebens offenbart, und der sich uns da ebenso offenbart, wie durch die äußeren Augen, die äußeren Ohren sich uns die äußere Natur offenbart. Aber das materialistische Zeitalter hat den Menschen in seinem Bewußtsein entfernt, von der Gnade des Geistes in seinem Gesamtdasein überstrahlt und durchdrungen zu sein. Daß das wiederum zurückerobert werde, das ist von so ungeheurer Wichtigkeit. Denn mehr als man denkt, fühlt das Tiefere unserer Seele in unserem Zeitalter den allgemeinen Materialismus unseres Zeitalters, nur ist die Menschenseele in diesem Zeitalter in der Regel viel zu schwach, um diejenigen Vorstellungen in sich zur Empfindung zu bringen, welche über den Materialismus hinausführen. Aber dies wäre eine solche Vorstellung, die von der Heiligkeit des Schlafes. Denn haben wir sie einmal verstanden, diese Heiligkeit des Schlafes, dann schreiben wir auch all dasjenige, was uns im wachen Leben an Gedanken, an Vorstellungen, die uns nicht an die Materie binden, zufällt, der Einwirkung des Geistes, die während des Schlafes erfolgt, zu. Wir sehen dann gewissermaßen nicht nur in unserem Wachzustand, der uns mit der Materie verbindet, dasjenige, was für uns Menschen wichtig ist — was geradeso wäre, als wenn wir nur die Winterszeit als für die Erde wichtig betrachteten —, sondern wir sehen die Ganzheit. Für die Erde sehen wir die Ganzheit, wenn wir den Winter im Zusammenhang mit dem Sommer betrachten; für den Menschen sehen wir die Ganzheit, wenn wir den Tag, das heißt die Verbindung mit der Materie, in Zusammenhang betrachten mit dem Schlafe, das heißt der Verbindung mit dem Geiste.

Nun kann man bei oberflächlicher Betrachtung sagen: Also ist der Mensch, während er wacht, mit der Materie verbunden, kann also nichts wissen von dem Geiste; aber er weiß doch etwas von dem Geiste, während er wacht! - Nun, der Mensch hat ein Gedächtnis, und dieses Gedächtnis wirkt nicht nur im Bewußtsein, sondern auch im Unterbewußtsein. Hätten wir kein Gedächtnis, dann würde uns aller Schlaf nichts helfen. Und das ist etwas sehr Wichtiges, das bitte ich Sie, sich recht zu Gemüte zu führen - dann würde uns aller Schlaf nichts helfen. Denn dann wären wir ohne Gedächtnis unweigerlich zu jenem Glaubensbekenntnis geführt, das da sagt: Es gibt nichts anderes als das stoffliche Dasein. Nur weil wir im Unterbewußten das Gedächtnis an dasjenige bewahren, wenn wir auch nichts davon wissen im Oberbewußtsein, was wir während des Schlafes durchmachen, dadurch denken wir überhaupt nicht bloß materialistisch. Wenn der Mensch nicht bloß materialistisch denkt, wenn er überhaupt geistige Vorstellungen hat während des Tages, so rührt das davon her, daß sein Gedächtnis wirkt. Denn so, wie der Mensch jetzt als Erdenmensch ist, kommt er mit dem Geiste nur während des Schlafes zusammen.

Nun handelt es sich darum, daß, wenn wir auf der anderen Seite ein so starkes Bewußtsein entwickeln könnten von dem, was mit uns während des Schlafes vorgeht, wie es für gewisse Zustände die Menschen der Vorzeit entwickeln konnten, wie es die Menschen in alten Zeiten entwickeln konnten, so würden wir gar nicht darauf kommen, den Geist zu bezweifeln, sondern dann würden wir uns nicht nur unterbewußt, sondern auch bewußt dessen erinnern, dem wir im Schlafe begegnet sind. Wenn der Mensch das bewußt durchmachte, was er im Schlafe durchmacht, dann würde es ebenso absurd sein, den Geist zu leugnen, wie es absurd wäre für den Wachenden, Tische und Stühle zu leugnen. Nun handelt es sich darum, daß die Menschheit wiederum dazu komme, die Begegnung mit dem Geiste im Schlafe wirklich richtig einzuschätzen. Das kann sie nur dadurch, daß sie die Tagesvorstellungen stark genug macht dazu; und das geschieht durch Vertiefung in die Geisteswissenschaft. In der Geisteswissenschaft beschäftigen wir uns mit Vorstellungen, die aus der geistigen Welt herausgeholt sind. Wir strengen unseren Kopf, das heißt den Ätherleib in unserem Kopfe an, sich Dinge vorzustellen, die nicht mit der äußeren Stofflichkeit zu tun haben, die in der Welt des Geistigen nur Wirklichkeit haben. Dazu ist eine stärkere Anstrengung notwendig als dazu, sich Dinge vorzustellen, die in der stofflichen Welt ihre Wirklichkeit haben. Und das ist ja der wahre Grund, warum die Leute nicht eingehen auf die Geisteswissenschaft. Sie erfinden allerlei Ausflüchte gegen die Geisteswissenschaft. Sie sagen, sie sei nicht logisch. Wenn sie angehalten würden, das Unlogische zu beweisen, so würden sie straucheln; denn das Unlogische der Geisteswissenschaft läßt sich nicht beweisen. Aber die Abweisung der Geisteswissenschaft, die Nichtanerkennung der Geisteswissenschaft, die beruht auf etwas ganz anderem, die beruht nämlich — ich weiß nicht, ob man, wenn es sich bloß um wissenschaftliche Auseinandersetzungen handelt, auch unhöflich sein darf — bloß auf seelischer Faulheit. Und wenn gewisse Gelehrte auch noch so fleißig mit Bezug auf alle die Vorstellungen sind, die sich auf die äußere Stofflichkeit beziehen, mit Bezug auf jene Kraft, die man anwenden muß, um den Geist zu fassen, sind sie eben faul, träge. Und darauf, daß sie nicht die Kraft aufbringen wollen, den Geist zu fassen, beruht es, daß sie die Geisteswissenschaft nicht anerkennen. Denn es gehört eben einfach mehr Kraft dazu, die geisteswissenschaftlichen Vorstellungen zu denken, als die gewöhnlichen, an den Stoff gebundenen Vorstellungen zu denken. Die gewöhnlichen, an den Stoff gebundenen Vorstellungen, die denken sich eigentlich von selber; die nicht an den Stoff gebundenen Vorstellungen, die muß man denken, da muß man sich aufraffen, da muß man sich anstrengen. Und auf dieser Scheu vor der Anstrengung beruht die Abneigung gegenüber der Geisteswissenschaft. Das ist etwas, was man ins Auge fassen muß. Indem man aber also sich anstrengt, solche nicht an den Stoff gebundenen Vorstellungen aufzunehmen, sie durchzudenken, versetzt man die Seele in eine solche Regsamkeit, daß sie allmählich schon dazu kommen wird, wirklich das Bewußtsein zu entwickeln für das, was da vorgeht zwischen dem Einschlafen und Aufwachen: daß da eine Begegnung mit dem Geiste stattfindet. Allerdings, ein gewisses Umlernen in bezug auf bestimmte Vorstellungen ist nötig. Denken Sie doch, wie wenig gerade manche Führer des geistigen Lebens heute dazu geeignet sind, solche Vorstellungen zu entwickeln. Denken Sie — jetzt hat das ja schon ein bißchen aufgehört, aber diejenigen, die heute Führer geworden sind, waren zum größten Teil während ihrer Lehrzeit, man nennt das Studentenzeit, so verbunden mit dem Leben, daß sie gelernt haben, wie man das nennt, Bettschwere sich anzutrinken: es wird so viel getrunken, daß die nötige Bettschwere da ist. Ja, da wird eine Vorstellung und damit eine Empfindung, eine Summe von Gefühlen über das Untertauchen in den Schlaf entwickelt, die allerdings nicht geeignet sind, sich die ganze Bedeutung des Schlafes klarzumachen. Da kann man dann ein großer Gelehrter sein mit Bezug auf all dasjenige, was an den Stoff gebunden ist, aber Einblick gewinnen in das, was eigentlich mit dem Menschen vorgeht zwischen Einschlafen und Aufwachen, das kann man ja natürlich dann nicht.

Indem die Menschen sich also anstrengen werden, Vorstellungen, die nicht an die Materie gebunden sind, durchzudenken, werden sie Verständnis sich entwickeln für dasjenige, was ich die erste Begegnung, die Begegnung mit dem Geiste während des Schlafens, genannt habe. Dieses Verständnis aber muß in einer nicht allzu fernen Zukunft, wenn die Welt nicht in die Dekadenz kommen soll, das Leben durchleuchten, das Leben durchsonnen. Denn, kommen die Menschen nicht zu diesen Vorstellungen, ja, wodurch können sie sich dann nur Vorstellungen verschaffen? Dann können sie sich nur Vorstellungen verschaffen durch die Beobachtung der äußeren Verhältnisse, durch die Beobachtung der äußeren Welt. Solche Vorstellungen, die bloß durch die Beobachtung der äußeren Welt gewonnen werden, die lassen aber das Innere des menschlichen Wesens, das seelische Wesen träge sein. Das, was sich sonst anstrengen muß in geistigen Vorstellungen, das bleibt träge, bleibt unbenutzt, das verkommt. Was ist die Folge davon? Die Folge davon ist, daß der Mensch in seinem ganzen Verhältnis zur Welt blind wird, geistig blind wird. Dadurch, daß man nur Vorstellungen, Begriffe unter dem Einfluß der äußeren Verhältnisse sich entwickelt, unter dem Einfluß der äußeren Eindrücke, dadurch wird man geistig blind. Und geistige Blindheit, das ist dasjenige, was vorzugsweise das materialistische Zeitalter auszeichnet. In der Wissenschaft ist es nur gradweise schädlich, im praktischen Leben ist es aber von eminentem Schaden, dieses Blindsein mit Bezug auf die wirkliche Welt. Sehen Sie, je weiter wir ins Materielle heruntersteigen, desto mehr korrigieren sich im materialistischen Zeitalter die Dinge. Wenn man eine Brücke baut, da wird man durch die Verhältnisse gezwungen, richtige Vorstellungen zu gewinnen, richtig zu bauen, sonst wird bei dem ersten Wagen, der darüber fährt, die Brücke einstürzen. Wenn man einen Menschen kurieren will, lassen sich schon eher falsche Vorstellungen anwenden, denn es läßt sich nie nachweisen, wodurch ein Mensch gestorben ist oder gesund geworden ist. Da ist es durchaus nicht etwa notwendig, daß immer richtige Vorstellungen mitgespielt haben. Im Geistigen, wenn man wirken soll im Geistigen, da steht aber die Sache noch viel schlimmer. Und daher steht es ganz besonders schlimm in dem, was man gewöhnlich die praktischen Wissenschaften nennt, die Nationalökonomie oder dergleichen. Im materialistischen Zeitalter haben sich die Menschen auch gewöhnt, mit Bezug auf die Volkswirtschaftslehre sich nach den Eindrücken, den Vorstellungen, die aus der Außenwelt gebildet sind, zu richten; daher sind die Begriffe blind geworden. Alles was an Nationalökonomie entwickelt wird, das sind zum großen Teil geistig blinde Begriffe. Daher, und das muß als notwendige Folge eintreten, werden die Menschen mit ihren blinden Begriffen nur am Gängelband der Ereignisse hingezogen, sie überlassen sich den Ereignissen. Und wenn sie eingreifen in die Ereignisse, dann wird es auch danach!

Das ist die eine Art, wie man, ohne daß man Geisteswissenschaft aufnimmt, zu Begriffen kommt, nämlich zu blinden Begriffen. Die andere Art, wie man zu Begriffen kommen kann, die ist diese, daß man nun, statt von außen, jetzt von innen sich zu Begriffen anregen läßt, das heißt nur dasjenige, was in den Emotionen, in den Leidenschaften lebt, gewissermaßen heraufsteigen läßt in die Seele. Dadurch bekommt man allerdings nicht blinde Begriffe, aber dasjenige, was man Rauschbegriffe, Rauschvorstellungen nennen kann. Und fortwährend pendeln die Menschen der Gegenwart, die sich zum Materialismus bekennen, zwischen blinden Begriffen und Rauschbegriffen hin und her. Blinde Begriffe, indem sie eigentlich von allem, was geschieht, sich gängeln lassen, und wenn sie eingreifen, das in der möglichst ungeschicktesten Weise tun! Rauschbegriffe, indem sie sich nur ihren Affekten, ihren Leidenschaften überlassen und sich der Welt so gegenüberstellen, daß sie eigentlich die Dinge nicht begreifen, sondern entweder alles lieben oder alles hassen, alles nur nach Liebe oder Haß, nach Sympathie und Antipathie beurteilen. Das ist insbesondere im materialistischen Zeitalter so. Denn nur dadurch, daß der Mensch auf der einen Seite seine Seele anstrengt, um zu geistigen Begriffen zu kommen, und auf der anderen Seite seine Gefühle entwickelt an den großen Angelegenheiten der Welt, dadurch kommt er zu klarsehenden Begriffen und Vorstellungen. Wenn wir uns erheben zu dem, was uns die Geisteswissenschaft sagt von den großen Zusammenhängen, über die heute die materialistische Weltanschauung lacht, über Saturnzeit, Sonnenzeit, Mondenzeit, über unseren Zusammenhang mit dem Weltenall, wenn man seine moralischen Empfindungen an diesen großen Menschheitszielen befruchtet, dann kommt man über die bloßen Affekte, die in Sympathie und Antipathie sich über alles ergehen, was uns in der Welt umgibt, hinaus; aber auch nur dadurch.

Allerdings, notwendig ist, daß durch Geisteswissenschaft vieles geläutert wird, was in unserer Zeit lebt. Denn so ganz läßt sich der Mensch ja doch nicht von der geistigen Welt abschließen. Er läßt sich überhaupt nicht abschließen, er läßt sich nur scheinbar abschließen. Und wie er sich scheinbar abschließen läßt, darauf habe ich ja auch schon aufmerksam gemacht. Wenn der Mensch auf der einen Seite nur auf den Stoff schwört und auf die Eindrücke von der Außenwelt, so bleiben die Kräfte doch in ihm, die nach dem Geiste gerichtet sind, nur daß er dann den Geist auf einem falschen Gebiet anwendet, sich allerlei Illusionen hingibt. Daher sind im Grunde genommen die allerpraktischsten, materialistischsten Leute die stärksten Illusionäre, die Menschen, die sich den stärksten Illusionen hingeben. Da sehen wir manche Leute durch das Leben gehen, indem sie allen Geist ableugnen und furchtbar lachen, wenn einer davon spricht, daß jemand Geistiges wahrnimmt. «Ach, der sieht Gespenster!» sagen sie, und damit haben sie schon den Stab gebrochen, wenn sie von jemand sagen können: «Ach, der sieht Gespenster!» Sie sehen allerdings, wie sie meinen, keine Gespenster. Aber sie meinen nur, daß sie keine Gespenster sehen, denn sie sehen fortwährend Gespenster, richtig fortwährend Gespenster. Man kann einen Menschen, der nun wirklich so recht fußt auf seiner derb materialistischen Weltanschauung, prüfen und kann sehen, wie er sich über das, was der morgige Tag eventuell bringen kann, den allerärgsten Illusionen hingibt. Dieses Sich-Illusionen-Hingeben, das ist nur ein Ersatz dafür, daß er alles Geistige ableugnet. Er muß in Illusionen kommen, wenn er alles Geistige ableugnet; er muß notwendig in Illusionen kommen. Nur lassen sich, wie gesagt, die Illusionen auf den verschiedenen Gebieten des Lebens nicht leicht nachweisen, aber vorhanden sind sie überall, richtig überall. Aber die Menschen sind so geneigt, sich Ilusionen hinzugeben. Man kann es zum Beispiel alle Augenblicke einmal erleben, daß jemand sagt: Soll ich mein Geld in diese oder jene Unternehmung hineinstecken? Da wird ja Bier gebraut. Zu so was verwende ich mein Geld nicht; ich werde mich daran nicht beteiligen. —- Er trägt es auf die Bank. Die Bank steckt, selbstverständlich ohne daß er es weiß, das Geld in die Bierbrauerei hinein. Es macht keinen Unterschied, es macht durchaus keinen Unterschied in der Objektivität; aber er ist in der Illusion, daß er zu so niederen Dingen sein Geld nicht hergibt.

Nun kann man sagen: das, was ich da sage, ist etwas Hergeholtes. Es ist nichts Hergeholtes, es ist etwas, was das ganze Leben beherrscht. Die Menschen gehen heute nicht darauf aus, das Leben wirklich kennenzulernen, es zu durchschauen. Das hat aber eine große Bedeutung. Denn es ist ungeheuer wichtig, daß man dasjenige kennenlernt, in dem man wirklich drinnensteckt. Es ist heute nicht leicht, weil das Leben kompliziert geworden ist; aber wahr ist es doch, worauf ich aufmerksam gemacht habe. Denn sehen Sie, unter gewissen Umständen fällt einem eine Absurdität leicht auf. Ich will Sie auf etwas hinweisen durch ein Beispiel. Einmal wurde ein Brandstifter — ich erzähle einen wirklichen Fall — abgefaßt, der aus einem Hause herauslief, das er soeben in Brand gesteckt hatte. Er hatte es so eingerichtet, daß er noch gerade herauslaufen konnte. Er wurde abgefaßt und zur Verantwortung gezogen. Und da sagte er: Ja, er habe ein sehr gutes Werk getan, denn er habe gar nicht die Schuld, daß das Haus in Brand geraten sei, sondern die Arbeiter, die eben weggegangen seien von dem Haus, die hätten in der Dämmerung ein brennendes Licht stehenlassen. Wenn das in der Nacht heruntergebrannt wäre, so wäre das Haus dadurch während der Nacht in Brand gekommen. So habe er aber noch während des Tages das Haus angezündet. Das Haus wäre auf jeden Fall in Brand gekommen; und er habe das nur getan, um die Möglichkeit herbeizuführen denn wenn das Haus am Tage in Brand komme, so sei es doch möglich -, den Brand rasch zu löschen; in der Nacht sei das kompliziert, da würde das ganze Haus verbrennen, bei Tage könne man das Feuer schnell löschen. — Da hat man ihn gefragt: Ja, warum haben Sie denn das Licht nicht ausgelöscht? — Da sagte er: Ja, ich bin ein Pädagoge für die Menschheit. Hätte ich das Licht ausgelöscht, so wären die Arbeiter, die beteiligt waren, unvorsichtig geblieben, so aber sehen sie, was daraus wird, wenn sie vergessen, das Licht auszulöschen.

Man lacht über ein solches Beispiel, weil man nur nicht beobachtet, wann man fortwährend solche Dinge macht. Solche Dinge, wie die, die der Mensch gemacht hat, der das Licht nicht ausgelöscht hat, sondern das Haus angezündet hat, solche Dinge macht man fortwährend. Man merkt es nur dann nicht, wenn sich die ganze Sache auf die geistige Welt bezieht und einen die Affekte, die Leidenschaften trüben und einem Rauschvorstellungen vorführen. Wenn man die Seele zu jener Elastizität, zu jener Biegsamkeit gewöhnt, die notwendig ist, um geistige Vorstellungen zu hegen, dann wird man auch das Denken so ausbilden, daß es sich wirklich durch das Dasein hindurchfindet, sich anpaßt dem Dasein. Wenn man das vermeidet, wird das Denken nie dem Dasein angepaßt sein, sondern das Denken wird gewissermaßen von dem Dasein gar nicht berührt, nur von seiner Oberfläche berührt sein. Daher kommt es, daß das materialistische Zeitalter — um jetzt die Sache zu vertiefen — die Menschen wirklich hinwegführt von allem Zusammenhang mit der geistigen Welt. Geradeso wie man das Leibesleben untergräbt, wenn man nicht in der richtigen Weise schläft, so untergräbt man das Seelenleben, wenn man nicht in der richtigen Weise wacht. Und man wacht nicht in der richtigen Weise, wenn man sich nur den äußeren Eindrücken hingibt, wenn man ohne ein Bewußtsein des Zusammenhanges mit der geistigen Welt lebt. Geradeso wie derjenige, der sich im Schlafe durch gewisse Verhältnisse herumwirft, seine physische Gesundheit untergräbt, so untergräbt derjenige seine geistige Gesundheit, welcher sich im Wachen nur den äußeren Eindrücken der Welt hingibt, nur dem physischen Stoff hingibt. Dadurch wird aber verhindert, daß der Mensch in der richtigen Weise jene Begegnung, jene erste Begegnung, von der ich gesprochen habe, mit der geistigen Welt habe. Dadurch aber verliert der Mensch die Möglichkeit, mit der geistigen Welt überhaupt zusammenzuhängen, in der richtigen Weise zusammenzuhängen während des physischen Daseins. Und dadurch wird durchschnitten der Zusammenhang mit derjenigen Welt, in welcher wir die andere Zeit sind, wenn wir nicht im physischen Leibe verkörpert sind, der Zusammenhang mit derjenigen Welt, in die wir selber eingehen, wenn wir durch die Pforte des Todes gehen.

Und ein Verständnis muß wiederum erworben werden von den Menschen, daß wir nicht bloß da sind, um am physischen Weltenall zu bauen während unseres physischen Daseins, sondern ein Verständnis muß erworben werden, daß wir während unseres gesamten Daseins mit der gesamten Welt verbunden sind. Diejenigen, die durch die Pforte des Todes gegangen sind, wollen mitwirken an der physischen Welt. Dieses Mitwirken ist nur scheinbar ein physisches Mitwirken, denn alles Physische ist nur ein äußerer Ausdruck des Geistes. Das materialistische Zeitalter hat die Menschen der Welt der Toten entfremdet; die geistige Wissenschaft muß die Menschen der Welt der Toten wiederum befreunden. Eine Zeit muß wiederum kommen, wo wir es den Toten nicht dadurch unmöglich machen, ihre Arbeit auch hier für die Vergeistigung der physischen Welt zu tun, daß wir uns ihnen entfremden. Denn der Tote kann nicht mit Händen angreifen die Dinge hier in der physischen Welt und physische Arbeit unmittelbar verrichten. Das wäre ein unsinniger Glaube. Der Tote kann auf geistige Weise wirken. Dazu braucht er aber die Werkzeuge, die ihm dazu zur Verfügung stehen; dazu braucht er das Geistige, das hier in der physischen Welt lebt. Wir sind nicht nur Menschen, sondern wir sind auch zu gleicher Zeit Werkzeuge, die Werkzeuge für die Geister, die durch die Pforte des Todes gegangen sind. Wir bedienen uns, solange wir im physischen Leibe verkörpert sind, der Feder oder des Hammers oder der Axt; sind wir nicht mehr im physischen Leibe verkörpert, dann sind unsere Werkzeuge die menschlichen Seelen selber. Und das beruht ja auf der eigentümlichen Wahrnehmungsart der Toten, die ich hier noch einmal erwähnen will. Ich habe es hier schon früher einmal erwähnt. Sehen Sie, nehmen Sie an, Sie haben vor sich — na, irgend etwas, ein Gefäßchen mit Salz; das sehen Sie. Sie sehen das Salz als weiße Körner, als weißes Pulver. Daß Sie das Salz als weißes Pulver sehen, das hängt von Ihrem Auge ab. Der Geist kann nicht das Salz als weißes Pulver sehen; wenn Sie aber das Salz auf die Zunge bringen und es schmecken, den eigentümlichen Salzgeschmack haben, dann beginnt für den Geist die Möglichkeit der Wahrnehmung. Ihren Geschmack des Salzes kann jeder Geist wahrnehmen. All dasjenige, was durch die Außenwelt im Menschen vorgeht, das kann jeder Geist, auch die Menschenseele, die durch die Pforte des Todes gegangen ist, wahrnehmen. Wie die Natur zu uns heraufreicht bis dahin, wo wir sie schmecken und riechen und sehen und hören, so reicht die Welt der Toten herunter bis in unser Gehörtes, Geschautes, Geschmecktes und so weiter. Was wir in der physischen Welt erleben, das erleben die Toten mit; es handelt sich aber darum, daß es nicht nur unserer Welt, sondern auch ihrer Welt angehört. Es gehört dann ihrer Welt an, wenn wir das, was wir von der Außenwelt empfangen, durchgeistigen eben mit geistigen Vorstellungen. Sonst wird dasjenige, was wir nur erleben als Wirkung des Stoffes, für den Toten etwas sein, was ihm wie unverständlich ist, wie dunkel ist. Eine Seele, die geistentfremdet ist, die ist für den Toten eine dunkle Seele. Dadurch ist während der materialistischen Zeit eine Entfremdung der Toten eingetreten gegenüber unserem Erdenleben. Diese Entfremdung muß wiederum hinweggeschafft werden. Ein inniges Zusammenleben der sogenannten Toten mit den sogenannten Lebendigen muß stattfinden. Das wird aber nur sein können, wenn die Menschen diejenigen Kräfte in der Seele entwickeln, die aktive, geistige sind, das heißt diejenigen Vorstellungen, Begriffe, Ideen entwickeln, die vom Geistigen handeln. Dadurch, daß der Mensch sich anstrengt, zum Geiste zu kommen im Gedanken, wird er auch allmählich zum Geiste in der Wirklichkeit kommen. Das heißt: Es wird eine Brücke geschlagen werden zwischen der physischen und der geistigen Welt. Das aber kann allein aus dem Zeitalter des Materialismus in jene Zeitalter hinüberführen, in denen die Menschen wiederum weder blind noch berauscht der Wirklichkeit gegenüberstehen werden, sondern sehend und gelassen. Sehend und gelassen dadurch, daß sie durch den Geist sehend geworden sind, und dadurch, daß sie durch jene Empfindungen und Gefühle, welche die großen Angelegenheiten der Welt betreffen, zum rechten Gleichmaß zwischen Sympathie und Antipathie kommen auch mit Bezug auf all dasjenige, was die nächste Umgebung von uns will.

An diese Dinge wollen wir dann das nächste Mal anknüpfen und die Vorstellungen, die wir über die geistige Welt gewinnen können, gerade von diesem Gesichtspunkte aus noch mehr vertiefen.

Fifth Lecture

I have spoken to you about the three encounters that the human soul undergoes in the course of its life between birth and death, and which it already connects with the spiritual worlds in the course of this life between birth and death. Today we will return to this subject, which we touched on briefly last time, and examine it in more detail.

We have noted that during the period when human beings are subject to the alternating states of sleep and wakefulness, they have an encounter, usually in the middle of their sleep state. I say “usually” because this is supposed to be the normal nighttime state of sleep. So, between sleeping and waking, humans usually encounter the world that is related to our spiritual self, the world into which we place the beings from that class of hierarchies that we call the Angeloi. So, in a sense, every time we go through sleep, we pass through the world in which these beings dwell, through the world that is the next one up from our physical world, and we refresh and strengthen our entire spiritual being through this encounter. Because this is so, because in the state of sleep we are dealing with a relationship between human beings and the spiritual world, a purely materialistic explanation of the state of sleep, as attempted by external science, will never be able to satisfy us in any way. Much of what goes on in human beings can be explained by the changes that the body undergoes from waking to falling asleep, and one can then try to explain sleep from these changes, but there will always be something unsatisfactory about it, because sleep is precisely about the encounter I have mentioned, that is, about a relationship between human beings and the spiritual world. So when we look at the state of sleep, we can see how human beings, when they do not seek a relationship with the spiritual world in their consciousness, arrive at half-true concepts, those half-true concepts which — since concepts and ideas are translated into life — distort life and ultimately bring about the great catastrophes of life.

Half-true concepts! In a certain sense, they are even worse than completely false concepts, because people who form half-true concepts and half-true ideas insist on these half-true ideas, since they can prove them; because they are half true, they can be proven. They will not be convinced by any refutation, because the concepts are only half true. Such concepts distort life even more than completely false ones, whose falsity is immediately apparent and recognized. One such half-true idea is the one that has been partly abandoned by external science today, but is still partly, and to a large extent, represented by this external science. It is the idea to which I have often drawn attention: that we sleep because we are tired. It is, we can truly say, a half-true idea, and it is supported by a half-true observation to which people refer: that the life of the day tires the body, and that therefore, because we are tired, we must sleep. Now, I have already pointed out in earlier lectures that this explanation of sleep can never explain why people who have not worked at all often fall asleep immediately when they hear this or that, even when they are exposed to the most stimulating things coming from the outside world. It certainly cannot be proven that they are tired, and that they absolutely must sleep because they are so exhausted is merely a false, i.e., a half-true observation. When we believe that fatigue compels us to sleep, we are only observing half of the picture. And one only sees what this incompleteness consists of when one compares what is observed on one side with what can be observed on the other side, where one encounters the other half. You will soon see what I mean.

Sleeping and waking are things that alternate rhythmically in the individual human life. But human beings are creatures that value freedom and can therefore also intervene in the rhythm of sleeping and waking—here more through circumstances than through what we call freedom, but these circumstances are precisely the basis of freedom—can intervene in the course of events, and sometimes all too gladly intervene in the rhythm of sleeping and waking. Another rhythm that we have often associated with sleeping and waking, even though it is incorrectly associated with them in ordinary consciousness, is that which occurs in the course of the year: the alternation of summer and winter, if we disregard the intermediate seasons. No one would think of saying: Well, during the summer the earth exerts itself and unfolds those forces that cause plants to grow, forces that lead to many other things; then it tires, and therefore a winter rest must follow. Everyone will reject such an idea as absurd and say, “The fact that winter comes has nothing to do with the earth's summer exertion, but comes simply because the sun moves into a different spatial relationship to the spot on earth where winter is just beginning. Everything will be derived from external causes, and in the case of sleeping and waking, everything will be derived from fatigue, from internal causes. Now, one is just as false as the other, or one could also say that one is just as half true as the other. For the rhythm of sleeping and waking is precisely the same rhythm as that between winter and summer. It is just as untrue that we sleep only because we are tired as it is true that winter comes because the earth has worked hard during the summer; rather, both are based on the independent action of a rhythm that is brought about by certain conditions. The rhythm between sleeping and waking is brought about precisely by the fact that the human soul needs to bring about the encounter with the spiritual world again and again, that it always needs its encounter with the spiritual world. And if we were to say that we want to sleep and that is why we feel tired, or if we were to say that we are entering the stage where we long for one part of the rhythm, for the state of sleep, and that is why we feel tired, then we would be saying something more correct than: because we are tired, we must sleep.

The matter will become even clearer to us if we simply ask: Yes, what does the soul actually do when it sleeps? Today's spiritless science has no real understanding of the answer to such a question, nor does it have any real possibility of finding one. You see, when we are awake, we enjoy — for enjoyment is always present in all of life — we enjoy the external world. We do not merely enjoy the external world when we taste good food with our palate, where we use the word “enjoy” because the thing has a radical effect, but we enjoy the external world throughout the entire waking state, and all life is enjoyment at the same time. If there is a lot of unpleasantness in the world and this does not seem to be enjoyment, this is only an illusion, which we will discuss later in subsequent lectures. When we are awake, we enjoy the external world; when we sleep, we enjoy ourselves. Just as when we are in our bodies with our souls, we enjoy the external world through our bodies, so when we are outside our bodies with our souls, we enjoy our own bodies; for during the life between birth and death, we are still connected with our bodies, even outside the body. This is essentially what the state of sleep is, the ordinary normal state of sleep, that we immerse ourselves in our body, that we enjoy our body. We enjoy our body from the outside. And dreams, ordinary chaotic dreams, will be correctly interpreted by those who say that they are a reflection of the bodily enjoyment that humans have when they are in dreamless sleep.

This explanation of sleep comes closer to the need for sleep that I mentioned in relation to reindeer. For we will not easily believe that they are tired; but we can easily believe that they love their bodies so much that they would rather enjoy them than what often comes to them from the outside world. As a rule, it loves itself so much and enjoys itself so much that it perhaps enjoys itself much more than, not to say a lecture that it listens to out of a sense of duty, but perhaps a more difficult, better piece of music, which makes it fall asleep immediately when it has to listen to it. Sleep is self-enjoyment. Now, because we encounter the spiritual world in sleep, in normal sleep, this sleep is not mere self-enjoyment, but also self-understanding; to a certain extent, self-understanding, self-perception. In this respect, it is indeed necessary for our spiritual education that people learn to understand that in normal sleep they really submerge themselves in the spirit and, when they wake up, emerge again from the spirit, that they learn to have reverence for this encounter with the spirit.

Now, in order not to be incomplete, I would like to return once more to the so-called mystery of fatigue. For this is where trivial consciousness can most easily hook in. It will say: Well, yes, but we do experience that we are tired, and with fatigue comes the need for sleep. — Here is a point where one really must distinguish carefully. We do indeed become tired during the day's work, and while we sleep, we are able to remove the fatigue. So this part of the matter is true: we are able to remove fatigue through sleep. But sleep does not consist in being an effect of fatigue; rather, it consists in enjoying oneself. And in this enjoyment of oneself, man acquires the strength to remove the fatigue that has set in. So far, it is true that sleep can remove fatigue. But it does not follow that all sleep removes fatigue; it is true that all sleep is self-enjoyment, but it is not true that all sleep removes fatigue. For those who sleep unnecessarily, who fall asleep at every opportunity and sleep unnecessarily, can also truly achieve a sleep in which no fatigue is removed, in which there is only self-enjoyment. Through such sleep, one will indeed—because one is accustomed from normal life to remove fatigue through sleep—through such sleep, one will indeed continually strive to remove fatigue. But if there is no fatigue, as is the case with the reindeer when it falls asleep at the concert, it will merely fidget around, as one usually does when one wants to get rid of fatigue. But since there is no fatigue, it will fidget unnecessarily, and the result will be that it will incubate all kinds of consequences in its body. That is why such sleeping reindeer are most plagued by all kinds of things that are summarized as neurasthenia, or whatever else they are called, the beautiful things.

It is conceivable, precisely because of the connection with spiritual science in human beings, that a state exists in which one is conscious: You live in a rhythm that causes you to alternate between being in the physical world and being in the spiritual world. In the physical world, you encounter external physical nature; in the spiritual world, you encounter the beings that live in the spiritual world.

Now we will understand the matter completely if we go a little deeper into the whole essence of the human being from a certain point of view. You see, for the outer science called biology, the human being is usually regarded as a unity, and is divided roughly into the head, the chest, and the abdomen with the limbs attached to them. In those ancient times, when people still had atavistic knowledge, they associated more ideas with this division, with this structure of the human being. The great Plato, the Greek philosopher, attributed wisdom to the head, courage to the chest, and the lowest impulses of human nature to the lower abdomen. And that which is assigned to the chest can be ennobled when wisdom unites with the courageous, which is linked to the chest, to become wise courage, wise activity. And that which is to be regarded as the lower limb of man, that which is attached to the lower abdomen—when it is permeated by wisdom, Plato calls it prudence. So here we already see how the soul is structured and related to the different parts of the body. Today, with the spiritual science that was not yet accessible to Plato in the same way, we can speak about these things much more precisely.

When we speak of the whole human being, we begin at the top with the fourfold nature of the human being, with the I. Everything that the human being calls his own in the soul and spirit works in his physical existence between birth and death through the instruments of the physical body. We can ask ourselves about each member of the human being: Through which parts of the physical body does the member in question work? And then, through thorough spiritual observation, we see that what we call the human ego is actually bound — as grotesque as it may sound, but truths are usually different from what trivial consciousness imagines — physically bound to what we call the lower abdomen. For this ego is, as I have often said, the baby in relation to human nature. The physical body received its constitution in the ancient Saturn era, the etheric body in the ancient Sun era, the astral body in the ancient Moon era, and the ego only during the Earth era. It is the youngest of the members of the human being. It will only reach the stage that the physical body has now reached during the Earth age in the future Vulcan age. The I is bound to the lowest physicality of the human being, and this lowest physicality is actually asleep all the time. It is not organized in such a way that it carries what is going on within it up into consciousness. What happens in the lower physical body of the human being is also subject to sleep in the ordinary waking state. Our ego, as such, in its truth, in its real essence, comes to our consciousness just as little as the processes of our digestion come to our consciousness. What comes to our consciousness as the I is the reflex idea, the mirror image that is thrown up into our head. We never actually perceive our I, neither in sleep, where we are completely unconscious in the normal state, nor in waking life, because the I also sleeps during waking life. The real I does not enter consciousness, but only the concept, the idea of the I, which is reflected back. In contrast, in the time between falling asleep and waking up, this I really comes to itself, but the person is unaware of this in normal deep sleep because they are still unconscious during the earthly state in this deep sleep. This I is therefore basically bound to the lowest physicality of the human being, during the day, during waking life from within, and during sleep from without.

Let us now turn to the second member of human nature, to what we call the astral body. From a certain point of view, we find this astral body bound to the chest of the human being in relation to the instruments through which it works. And basically, we can only dream about what goes on in this astral body and works through the chest. As we are as earthly human beings, we can only perceive something from the I when we are asleep, that is, we perceive nothing consciously. We can dream about what the astral body is doing inside us. That's why we're basically dreaming all the time about our feelings, about what's going on inside us as sensations. They really do have a dreamlike existence inside us. So, the human “I” is outside the area that we humans can grasp with our normal senses, because the “I” is always asleep. The astral body also stands in a certain relationship outside of what we encompass with our sensory consciousness, for it can only dream. With both of these, we are therefore basically constantly in the spiritual world, whether we are awake or asleep, truly in the spiritual world.

But what we call the etheric body is bound to the head in terms of its physicality. And this is what can remain awake within us through the unique organization of the head, or rather, what can remain awake when it is in the body, that is, when it is connected to the physicality of the head. So we can say that the I is connected to the lowest members of our body, and the astral body to our chest. The heart, whose processes we are not fully conscious of, but only have a dream-consciousness of, beats and pulses under the influence of our astral body. When the head thinks, it thinks under the influence of the etheric body. And then we can distinguish the whole physical body, the sum of everything; it is connected to the entire external world.

Now you see a remarkable connection: the ego is bound to the lower limbs of the body, the astral body to the heart, the etheric body to the head, and the physical body to the entire external world, to the environment. This entire physical body is also in a constant waking state of relationship with the external environment. Just as we are in relationship with the external environment with our entire body, so our etheric body is connected with our head, the astral body with the heart, and so on. From this you will recognize how, I would say, truly mysterious are the connections in which human beings live in the world. In reality, things are exactly the opposite of what we might easily believe in our trivial consciousness. It is precisely the lowest members of human nature that are still imperfect formations of his being; therefore, as members of the body, they correspond to what we have called the baby: the I.

In what I have said, countless mysteries of human life are hidden, countless mysteries. Above all, if you go into this whole matter, you will understand how the whole human being is formed out of the spirit, only, I would say, at different stages. The human head is formed out of the spirit, but it is more pronounced, it has a later stage of formation than the chest, which we can say is just as much a metamorphosis for the head as the leaf is a metamorphosis for the flower in Goethe's theory of metamorphosis. And if we consider the rhythm between sleeping and waking from this point of view, we will say: during waking, the I indeed dwells in all the activities of the human body, which are the lowest activities, culminating in the preparation of blood. The I dwells in these activities during waking. These are the activities of the body that are, so to speak, at the lowest level of spirituality, for everything physical is also spiritual: but what we are now talking about is at the lowest level of spirituality. But because the ego is at the lowest level of spirituality during waking life, it is, during sleep — note this well! — at the highest level of spirituality in relation to the human being. For consider the following: when we look at the head as we carry it on our bodies as human beings, its external form reveals the spirit most clearly. The head is the most complete image of the spirit, the most complete revelation of the spirit; the spirit has entered most deeply into matter. But as a result, it has left the least behind in the spirit itself. Because human beings have put so much work into the head in order to reveal the outer physicality in a spiritualized form, little has remained in the spirit. Since in the lower members of the human body that which has been formed outwardly is least spiritualized, least spiritually developed, the most has been left behind in the spiritual in relation to these lower members. The head as head corresponds least to the spiritual because it has the most spirit in itself; the lower abdomen corresponds most to the spirit because it has the least in itself. But in this most spiritual part, which does not live in the physical body, the I lives during sleep.

Consider this wonderful balance: while the human being has a lower nature in relation to his physicality, and the I submerges into this lower nature upon awakening, this lower nature is only lower because the spirit has worked the least, because the spirit has retained so much in the spiritual realm. But in what it has retained, the I is present during sleep. Thus, during sleep, the I is already united with what the human being will develop later, what the human being will bring to development and unfolding in the future, what is still little, I would say only hinted at, still little developed in the human physical body. If, therefore, the I becomes conscious of the state in which it finds itself during sleep, if it becomes truly conscious of this state, then it can say to itself: During sleep I am in that which is my most sacred human constitution. And as I step out of sleep, as I wake up, I pass from the world of my most sacred constitution into that which today is only a faint hint of this most sacred constitution.

Yes, such things must become part of our feelings, our sensations, through spiritual science. Then life itself will become spiritualized by a magical breath of holiness. And then we will associate a definite, positive concept with what is called the grace of the spirit, of the Holy Spirit. Then we will associate with this whole existence of the human being, which proceeds in the rhythm between sleeping and waking, the idea: You are allowed to participate in the spiritual world, you are allowed to be there. And once we have truly felt this concept, this idea: You are allowed to be in the spiritual world, you are blessed by being permeated with the spiritual world, which is not accessible to you through your ordinary earthly consciousness—once we have truly understood this, then we will also have learned to look up to the spirit that reveals itself to us, I would say, between the lines of life, and who reveals himself to us just as external nature reveals itself to us through our external eyes and ears. But the materialistic age has removed from human consciousness the awareness of being illuminated and permeated by the grace of the spirit in its entire existence. That this be regained is of such immense importance. For more than one thinks, the depths of our soul feel the general materialism of our age, only that the human soul in this age is generally far too weak to bring to consciousness those ideas which lead beyond materialism. But this would be such an idea, the idea of the sanctity of sleep. For once we have understood this sanctity of sleep, we attribute to the influence of the spirit during sleep all those thoughts and ideas that occur to us in waking life and do not bind us to matter. We then see, as it were, not only in our waking state, which connects us to matter, that which is important for us as human beings — which would be just as if we considered only the winter season to be important for the earth — but we see the whole. We see the whole for the earth when we consider winter in connection with summer; we see the whole for human beings when we consider the day, that is, the connection with matter, in connection with sleep, that is, the connection with the spirit.

Now, at first glance, one might say: So while humans are awake, they are connected to matter and therefore cannot know anything about the spirit; but they do know something about the spirit while they are awake! Well, humans have a memory, and this memory works not only in the conscious mind but also in the subconscious. If we had no memory, then all sleep would be of no use to us. And that is something very important, which I ask you to take to heart—then all sleep would be of no use to us. For then, without memory, we would inevitably be led to the creed that says: There is nothing but material existence. It is only because we preserve the memory of what we go through during sleep in our subconscious, even though we are not aware of it in our conscious mind, that we do not think in a purely materialistic way. If human beings do not think in a purely materialistic way, if they have spiritual ideas during the day, this is because their memory is at work. For as human beings now are on earth, they come into contact with the spirit only during sleep.

Now, the point is that if, on the other hand, we could develop such a strong consciousness of what happens to us during sleep as people in former times were able to develop for certain states, as people in ancient times were able to develop, we would not even think of doubting the spirit, but would remember not only subconsciously but also consciously what we encountered in sleep. If human beings consciously experienced what they experience in sleep, it would be just as absurd to deny the spirit as it would be for a waking person to deny the existence of tables and chairs. Now it is a matter of humanity coming to truly appreciate the encounter with the spirit in sleep. It can only do this by making its daytime ideas strong enough to do so, and this happens through immersion in spiritual science. In spiritual science, we deal with ideas that are taken from the spiritual world. We strain our minds, that is, the etheric body in our heads, to imagine things that have nothing to do with external materiality, that are only real in the spiritual world. This requires a greater effort than imagining things that are real in the material world. And that is the real reason why people do not respond to spiritual science. They invent all kinds of excuses against spiritual science. They say it is not logical. If they were asked to prove what is illogical about it, they would stumble, because the illogicality of spiritual science cannot be proven. But the rejection of spiritual science, the failure to recognize spiritual science, is based on something else entirely, namely — I don't know whether one can be rude when it comes to scientific disputes — on spiritual laziness. And even if certain scholars are very diligent with regard to all the ideas that relate to external materiality, with regard to the power that must be applied in order to grasp the spirit, they are still lazy, sluggish. And it is because they do not want to summon the power to grasp the spirit that they do not acknowledge spiritual science. For it simply takes more strength to think spiritual scientific ideas than to think ordinary ideas bound to matter. The ordinary ideas bound to matter actually think themselves; the ideas not bound to matter must be thought, one must summon oneself, one must make an effort. And this aversion to effort is the basis of the aversion to spiritual science. This is something that must be taken into account. But by making an effort to take in such ideas that are not bound to material things, by thinking them through, one puts the soul into such a state of activity that it will gradually develop a real awareness of what happens between falling asleep and waking up: that an encounter with the spirit takes place. Admittedly, a certain amount of relearning is necessary with regard to certain ideas. Just think how little some of today's leaders of intellectual life are suited to developing such ideas. Consider that, although this has now ceased to some extent, most of those who have become leaders today were so connected with life during their formative years, known as their student days, that they learned what is called drinking themselves to sleep: they drink so much that they are ready for bed. Yes, an idea and with it a sensation, a sum of feelings about sinking into sleep, is developed, which, however, are not suitable for understanding the full meaning of sleep. One can then be a great scholar with regard to everything that is connected with the subject matter, but one cannot, of course, gain insight into what actually happens to human beings between falling asleep and waking up.

So, by making an effort to think through ideas that are not bound to matter, people will develop an understanding of what I have called the first encounter, the encounter with the spirit during sleep. But this understanding must, in the not too distant future, if the world is not to fall into decadence, illuminate life, shine through life. For if people do not arrive at these ideas, how can they form any ideas at all? They can only form ideas by observing external circumstances, by observing the external world. But such ideas, which are gained merely by observing the external world, leave the inner life of the human being, the soul life, dormant. What would otherwise have to exert itself in spiritual ideas remains sluggish, unused, and degenerates. What is the consequence of this? The consequence is that human beings become blind in their entire relationship to the world, spiritually blind. By developing ideas and concepts solely under the influence of external circumstances, under the influence of external impressions, one becomes spiritually blind. And mental blindness is what characterizes the materialistic age in particular. In science, this blindness with regard to the real world is only harmful to a certain degree, but in practical life it is eminently harmful. You see, the further we descend into the material, the more things correct themselves in the materialistic age. When you build a bridge, circumstances force you to form correct ideas and build correctly, otherwise the bridge will collapse when the first car drives over it. When you want to cure a person, it is easier to apply false ideas, because it can never be proven what caused a person to die or become healthy. It is therefore not at all necessary that correct ideas have always played a part. In the spiritual realm, however, where one is supposed to work in the spiritual realm, the situation is even worse. And that is why it is particularly bad in what are commonly called the practical sciences, such as economics and the like. In the materialistic age, people have also become accustomed to basing their views on economics on impressions and ideas formed from the external world; as a result, their concepts have become blind. Everything that is developed in economics is, for the most part, spiritually blind concepts. Therefore, and this must be a necessary consequence, people with their blind concepts are only led by the events, they abandon themselves to events. And when they intervene in events, then it happens accordingly!

That is one way of arriving at concepts without taking spiritual science into account, namely blind concepts. The other way of arriving at concepts is this: instead of being inspired by external sources, one allows oneself to be inspired from within, that is, one allows only that which lives in the emotions, in the passions, to rise up into the soul, so to speak. This does not result in blind concepts, but in what might be called intoxicating concepts, intoxicating ideas. And the people of the present day who profess materialism constantly oscillate between blind concepts and intoxicating concepts. Blind concepts, in that they allow themselves to be dictated by everything that happens, and when they intervene, they do so in the most clumsy way possible! Intoxicating concepts, in that they surrender themselves to their emotions, their passions, and confront the world in such a way that they do not actually understand things, but either love everything or hate everything, judging everything only according to love or hate, sympathy or antipathy. This is especially true in the materialistic age. For it is only by striving with his soul to arrive at spiritual concepts on the one hand, and developing his feelings for the great issues of the world on the other, that man arrives at clear concepts and ideas. When we rise to what spiritual science tells us about the great connections that the materialistic worldview today laughs at, about Saturn time, the Sun age, the Moon age, our connection with the universe, when we fertilize our moral sensibilities with these great goals of humanity, then we rise above the mere emotions that pour out in sympathy and antipathy toward everything that surrounds us in the world; but only in this way.

However, it is necessary that spiritual science purify much of what lives in our time. For human beings cannot be completely cut off from the spiritual world. They cannot be cut off at all; they can only appear to be cut off. And I have already pointed out how they appear to be cut off. If, on the one hand, people swear only by matter and by impressions from the external world, the forces within them that are directed toward the spirit remain, but they then apply the spirit in the wrong area and indulge in all kinds of illusions. That is why, basically, the most practical, materialistic people are the strongest illusionists, the people who indulge in the strongest illusions. We see some people going through life denying all spirit and laughing terribly when someone talks about perceiving something spiritual. “Oh, he sees ghosts!” they say, and with that they have already broken the stick when they can say of someone, “Oh, he sees ghosts!” They do not see ghosts, as they believe, but they only think they do not see them. But they only think they don't see ghosts, because they see ghosts all the time, really all the time. You can test a person who is really firmly grounded in his crude materialistic worldview and see how he indulges in the worst illusions about what tomorrow might bring. This indulging in illusions is only a substitute for his denial of everything spiritual. He must fall into illusions if he denies everything spiritual; he must necessarily fall into illusions. As I said, however, illusions are not easy to detect in the various areas of life, but they are everywhere, absolutely everywhere. But people are so inclined to indulge in illusions. For example, one can experience every moment that someone says: Should I invest my money in this or that venture? Beer is brewed there. I'm not going to use my money for that; I'm not going to get involved in it. — He takes it to the bank. The bank, without him knowing, of course, puts the money into the brewery. It makes no difference, it makes absolutely no difference in terms of objectivity; but he is under the illusion that he is not giving his money to such base things.

Now you might say: what I'm saying is far-fetched. It's not far-fetched, it's something that dominates our whole life. People today are not interested in really getting to know life, in seeing through it. But that is very important. For it is immensely important to get to know what you are really involved in. It is not easy today because life has become complicated; but what I have pointed out is nevertheless true. You see, under certain circumstances, it is easy to notice absurdities. Let me give you an example. Once, an arsonist—I am telling you a true story—was caught running out of a house he had just set on fire. He had arranged it so that he could run out just in time. He was caught and held responsible. And he said: Yes, he had done a very good deed, because it was not his fault that the house had caught fire, but the fault of the workers who had just left the house and left a burning light on in the twilight. If it had burned down during the night, the house would have caught fire during the night. But he had set fire to the house during the day. The house would have caught fire anyway, and he had only done it to make it possible to extinguish the fire quickly, because if the house caught fire during the day, it would be possible to do so, but at night it would be complicated and the whole house would burn down, whereas during the day the fire could be extinguished quickly. “Then they asked him, 'Why didn't you extinguish the light? He replied, “Yes, I am an educator of humanity. If I had extinguished the light, the workers who were involved would have remained careless, but now they see what happens when they forget to extinguish the light.”

People laugh at such an example because they do not observe when they constantly do such things. Things like those done by the man who did not extinguish the light but set the house on fire are done all the time. One only fails to notice them when the whole thing relates to the spiritual world and one's emotions and passions cloud one's vision and present one with intoxicating ideas. If you accustom your soul to the elasticity, the flexibility that is necessary to entertain spiritual ideas, then you will also train your thinking in such a way that it really finds its way through existence, adapts itself to existence. If you avoid this, your thinking will never be adapted to existence, but will remain untouched by existence, or only touched on the surface. This is why the materialistic age—to go deeper into the matter—really leads people away from all connection with the spiritual world. Just as one undermines one's physical life by not sleeping properly, so one undermines one's soul life by not waking properly. And one does not wake properly if one merely indulges in external impressions, if one lives without an awareness of the connection with the spiritual world. Just as someone who tosses and turns in their sleep due to certain circumstances undermines their physical health, so too does someone who, while awake, indulges only in external impressions of the world, only in physical matter, undermine their spiritual health. This prevents people from having the right encounter, the first encounter I spoke of, with the spiritual world. As a result, human beings lose the possibility of being connected with the spiritual world at all, of being connected in the right way during their physical existence. And this severs the connection with the world in which we are the other time, when we are not embodied in the physical body, the connection with the world into which we ourselves enter when we pass through the gate of death.

And people must again acquire an understanding that we are not merely here to build the physical universe during our physical existence, but an understanding must be acquired that we are connected with the entire world during our entire existence. Those who have passed through the gate of death want to participate in the physical world. This participation is only apparently physical, for everything physical is only an outer expression of the spirit. The materialistic age has alienated people from the world of the dead; spiritual science must restore their friendship with the world of the dead. A time must come again when we do not make it impossible for the dead to do their work here for the spiritualization of the physical world by alienating ourselves from them. For the dead cannot touch things here in the physical world with their hands and perform physical work directly. That would be a nonsensical belief. The dead can work in a spiritual way. To do this, however, they need the tools that are available to them; they need the spiritual that lives here in the physical world. We are not only human beings, but at the same time we are tools, tools for the spirits who have passed through the gate of death. As long as we are embodied in the physical body, we use the pen or the hammer or the axe; when we are no longer embodied in the physical body, our tools are the human souls themselves. And this is based on the peculiar mode of perception of the dead, which I would like to mention again here. I have mentioned it here before. Suppose you have something in front of you — a small vessel with salt; you see it. You see the salt as white grains, as white powder. The fact that you see the salt as white powder depends on your eyes. The spirit cannot see the salt as white powder; but when you put the salt on your tongue and taste it, and have the peculiar taste of salt, then the possibility of perception begins for the spirit. Every spirit can perceive your taste of salt. Everything that happens to a person through the external world can be perceived by every spirit, including the human soul that has passed through the gate of death. Just as nature reaches up to us to the point where we can taste, smell, see, and hear it, so the world of the dead reaches down to what we hear, see, taste, and so on. What we experience in the physical world, the dead experience with us; but the point is that it belongs not only to our world, but also to theirs. It belongs to their world when we spiritualize what we receive from the outside world with spiritual ideas. Otherwise, what we experience only as the effect of matter will be something incomprehensible and dark to the dead. A soul that is alienated from the spirit is a dark soul for the dead. As a result, during the materialistic age, an alienation of the dead from our earthly life has occurred. This alienation must in turn be removed. An intimate coexistence of the so-called dead with the so-called living must take place. But this will only be possible if people develop those forces in their souls that are active and spiritual, that is, those concepts, ideas, and notions that deal with the spiritual. By striving to attain the spirit in their thoughts, people will gradually attain the spirit in reality. This means that a bridge will be built between the physical and spiritual worlds. But this alone can lead us out of the age of materialism into an age in which people will no longer be blind or intoxicated by reality, but will see it clearly and calmly. They will be seeing and calm because they will have become seeing through the spirit, and because, through those feelings and emotions that concern the great matters of the world, they will have attained the right balance between sympathy and antipathy, even in relation to everything that our immediate surroundings demand of us.

We will take up these things again next time and deepen the ideas we can gain about the spiritual world from this point of view.