The Karma of Materialism
GA 176
4 September 1917, Berlin
6. Reflections on the Times
It is especially important in our time that the reality of spiritual life is not confused with the way people interpret this reality. We live in an age when human understanding and human conduct are strongly influenced by materialism. However, it would be wrong to think that because our age is materialistic, spiritual influences are not at hand, that the spirit is not present and active. Strange as it may seem it is possible, particularly in our time, to observe an abundance of effects in human life which are purely spiritual. They are everywhere in evidence and, the way they manifest, one could certainly not say that they are either invisible or inactive. The situation is rather that people, because of their materialistic outlook, are incapable of seeing what is manifestly there. All they see is what is so to speak "on the agenda." When one looks at people's attitude to the spirit, at the way they react when spiritual matters are spoken of, it reminds one of an incident which took place several decades ago in a Central European city. There was an important meeting of an important body of people and the degeneration of moral standards came under discussion. Immoral practices had begun to have adverse influence on certain financial transactions. Naturally a large part of this distinguished body of people wanted financial matters to be discussed purely from the point of view of finance. But a minority—it usually is a minority on such occasions—wanted to discuss the issue of moral corruption. However a minister got up and simply tossed aside such an irrelevant issue by saying: “But gentlemen, morality is not on the agenda.”—It could be said that the attitude of a great many people today in regard to spiritual matters is also one that says: But gentlemen, the spirit is not on the agenda. It is manifestly not on the agenda when things of importance are debated. But perhaps such debates do not always deal with the reality, perhaps the spirit is present, only it is not put on the agenda when human affairs are under discussion.
When one considers these things, and has opportunity to talk more intimately with people, a situation emerges which is very different from what is imagined by those who feel embarrassed by talking about things of a spiritual nature. When one comes to discuss how people got the impulse to do what they are doing one finds again and again that they decided on a project because of some prophetic vision or because of some inner impulse. As I said, if one looks at these things and is able to assess the situation, more often than not things are done because of some spiritual influence, perhaps in the form of a dream or some other kind of vision. Much more than is imagined takes place under the influence of spiritual powers and impulses which flow into the physical world from the spiritual world. People's theoretical rejection of spirituality, based on present-day outlook, does not alter the fact that significant spiritual impulses do penetrate everywhere into our world. However, they do not escape being influenced by the prevailing materialism. There has always been an influx of spiritual impulses throughout mankind's evolution and one ought not to think that this has ceased in our time. But people responded differently when there was more awareness of the existence of a spiritual world than they do in a materialistic age like ours. Let us look at a particular example.
It is extraordinarily difficult to convey to the world certain facts concerning spiritual matters, the reason being that people in general are not sufficiently prepared; they cannot formulate the appropriate concepts for receiving rightly such communications from the spiritual world. Such communications are all too easily distorted into the very opposite. Therefore it often happens, especially at present, that those who are initiated into spiritual matters must remain silent in regard to what is most essential. They must because it cannot be foreseen what might happen if certain things were imparted to someone unripe for the information. Nevertheless certain situations do often arise. On occasions, in accordance with higher laws, discussions take place about spiritual matters. When it is difficult, as it usually is at present, to discuss such things with the living it can often be all the more fruitful to discuss them with those who have died. Seldom perhaps was there a time when conscious interaction between the physical plane and the spiritual world, in which the dead are living, was so vigorous as it can be at present.
Let us assume that a discussion takes place of a kind possible only between someone with knowledge on the physical plane and someone who has died. In this situation something very curious can happen, something that could be termed a "transcendental indiscretion" can take place. The fact is that there are those who listen at keyholes, so to speak, not only on the physical plane, but also among certain beings in the spiritual world. There are spirits of an inferior kind who are forever attempting to obtain knowledge of all kinds of spiritual facts by such means. They listen to what is being said between beings on the physical plane and those in the spiritual world. Their opportunity to listen to such a conversation can arise through someone who, being especially passionate, in the grip of his passion is, as one might say, “beside himself.” This kind of situation often arises through passion, through being drunk—really physically drunk—or through faintness. It gives the lower spirit opportunity to enter into the person with the result that the person either then or later has visions of some kind and can hear things he is not supposed to hear.
It is well known to those able to observe such happenings that countless things, obtained through indiscretion in spiritual communication, appear in distorted form in all kinds of literature, particularly those of a more dubious kind. Nothing is more effective than when some lower elemental spirit (Kobold) takes possession of the writer of a detective novel, especially if drunk and, entering into his human frailties, instills in him a particular sentence or phrase which he then introduces into his story. Later the novel reaches people through all kinds of direct or indirect channels; the particular sentence has an especially strong effect because, given the way people take these things in, it speaks, not to the reader's consciousness, but to his subconscious.
Another method which is very effective is when, in a spiritualistic seance, such a spirit may have the opportunity to insinuate, into what is related through the medium, the spiritual indiscretion he wishes put to effect. This is not to say anything against mediumship as such, only the way it is used. Many things occur in the course of human karma which, in order to come to light, need mediumistic communications. We are not dealing with this aspect today, however. The point I want to make at the moment is to emphasize that there are at the present time spiritual channels between the spiritual world and the physical plane. These channels are very numerous and far more effective than is supposed.—Having said this you will understand better when I now say something which may seem paradoxical but is nevertheless a reality.
The years between 1914 and 1917 will no doubt be written about in the future in the usual way of historians. They will scrutinize documents, found in archives everywhere, in order to establish what caused the terrible World War. On this basis they will attempt to write a plausible account of say the year 1914 in relation to events in Europe. However, one thing is certain: no documentary research, no report drawn up in the way this is usually done will suffice to explain the causes of this monstrous event. The reason is simply that according to their very nature the most significant causes are not inscribed by pen or printer's ink into external documents. Furthermore their very existence is denied because they are not, so to speak, “on the agenda.”
Just in these last days you will have read reports of the legal inquiries going on in Russia. The Russian minister of war Suchomlinoff,20Wladimir Alexandrowitsch Suchomlinoff 1848–1926 Russian General the Chief of the Russian General Staff and other personalities have made important statements which have caused a great deal of indignation. Many feel moral indignation on learning that Suchomlinoff lied to the Czar; or that the Chief of the Russian General Staff, with the mobilization order in his pocket, gave the German Military Attache his solemn promise that this order had not yet been issued. He said this because he intended to pass it on to the proper quarters a few minutes later. Such things are certainly cause for indignation and moralizing but so much lying goes on nowadays that no one should be surprised that really fat ones are told in important places. But these incidents and what people say about them are truly not the real issue. That is something quite different. When one reads the full report carefully one comes across remarkable words which are clear indicators of what really took place. Suchomlinoff himself says that while these events were taking place he, for a time, lost his reason. He says in so many words: “I lost my reason over it.” The continuous vacillation of events caused this state of affairs. He was not alone, quite a few others in key positions were in similar states.
Imagine a person occupying a position such as that of Suchomlinoff: The loss of his power of reasoning gives splendid opportunity for ahrimanic beings to take possession of him and instill into his soul all kinds of suggestions. Ahriman uses such methods to bring his influence to bear, especially when no importance is attached to remaining fully conscious—apart from sleep. When we are fully conscious such spiritual beings have no real access to our soul. But when our spirit; i.e., our consciousness is suppressed then ahrimanic beings have immediate access. Dimmed consciousness is for ahrimanic and luciferic beings the window or door through which they can enter the world and carry out their intention. They attack people when they are in a state of dimmed consciousness and take possession of them. Ahriman and Lucifer do not act in inexplicable terrifying ways but through human beings whose state of consciousness gives them access.
Those who in the future want to write a history of this war must discover where such dimmed states of consciousness occurred, where doors and windows were thrown open for the entry of ahrimanic and luciferic powers. In earlier times such things did not happen to the same extent in events of a similar kind. In order to describe the causes of events during earlier times what professors and historians find in archives will suffice, whereas in the case of present events something will remain unexplained over and above what is found in documents however well researched. This something is the penetration of certain spiritual powers into the human world through states of dimmed consciousness.
I spoke in an earlier lecture about how, in a certain region of the earth, conditions were prepared for decades so that at the right moment the appropriate ahrimanic forces could penetrate and influence mankind. Something of this nature took place in July and August of 1914 when an enormous flood, a veritable whirlpool, of spiritual impulses surged through Europe. That has to be rightly understood and taken into account. One simply does not understand reality if one is not prepared to approach it with concrete concepts derived from spiritual insight. To understand what is real, as opposed to what is unreal, at the present time spiritual science is an absolute necessity. Nothing can effectively be done in the political or any other sphere unless wide-awake consciousness is developed concerning events which must be approached with concepts and ideas gained from spiritual knowledge. Not that everything can be judged in stereotyped fashion according to spiritual science. But spiritual knowledge can stir us to alert participation in present issues, whereas a materialistic view of events allows us to sleep through things of greatest importance. A materialistic outlook prevents us from arriving at proper judgement of what the present asks of us.
A recognition of what here is at stake is what I so much want to be present as an undercurrent in our spiritual-scientific lectures and discussions, so that spiritual knowledge may become a vital force enabling souls to deal appropriately with outer life. It is essential to recognize not only the issues of spiritual science itself but also those of external life as they truly are. One must be able to arrive at judgements based on the symptoms to be seen everywhere.
I recently described the incredible superficiality with which a professor of Berlin University attacked Anthroposophy. I told you of the misrepresentations and slanders delivered by Max Dessoir.21Max Dessoir 1867–1947 Philosopher and Psychologist That such an individual should be a member of a learned body is part and parcel of the complexities of life today. Max Dessoir once wrote a history of psychology and mentions in the preface that he wrote it because the Berlin Academy of Science had offered a prize for a work on the subject. The history of psychology written by Max Dessoir is such a slovenly piece of work, containing fundamental errors that he withdrew it and prohibited further publication. Consequently not many copies are in circulation, though I have a reviewers copy and could say many things about it. For the moment I refer to it in my forth coming booklet concerned with attacks on Anthroposophy.
As I said Max Dessoir wrote a history of psychology and then withdrew it from circulation. But the fact remains that the Berlin Academy of Science did award it the prize. Such things should not be overlooked; they are symptomatic of what takes place nowadays. One must ask: who are the people who award such prizes? They are the very people who educate the younger generation; i.e., they educate those who will become leading figures in society. They also educated the generation which brought about the present situation in the world. It is necessary to see things in their true context and to recognize that all the symptoms reveal the need for that which alone can make our time comprehensible.
This again indicates what I wish so very much could flow as an undercurrent through our movement so that spiritual science would shake souls awake and make them alert observers of what really takes place in their surroundings. The occasion for sleep is in our time considerable and naturally ahrimanic and luciferic powers make use of every opportunity to divert the alert consciousness aroused by spiritual knowledge away from the real issues. The opportunities for dulling man's consciousness are plentiful. Someone who studies exclusively a special subject will certainly become ever more knowledgeable and clever in his particular field; yet the clarity of his consciousness may suffer as a result.—In speaking about these things one is skating on very thin ice.
While it is true that there are many things of which an initiate cannot speak at present because it could have terrible results, it is also true that there are things of which one can and indeed must speak. To give an example, there is a professor at a German university of whom much good could be said and I have no intention to say anything against the man. I want to give an objective characterization. He is a distinguished scholar of theology, has studied widely and his research in the domain of theology has made him very learned. Yet it has not made him awake and alert to what constitutes true reality. As professor of theology his task is to speak about religion, scripture and also about veneration and supersensible powers. This, for a modern professor of theology, is a rather uncomfortable task. Such learned men much prefer to speak about experiencing religion as such, about how it feels merely to approach the spiritual. This professor, as others like him, has a certain fear of the spiritual world, fear of defining or describing it in actual words and concepts. I have often spoken about this fear which is purely ahrimanic in origin. This professor has an inkling that he will meet Ahriman once he penetrates the material world and enters the spiritual world. He would then have to overcome Ahriman.
Here we see someone who as a theologian looks upon the beauty and the greatness of nature as a manifestation of the divine. But this aspect of nature he will not investigate for it is the beings of the Higher Hierarchies who reveal themselves through nature and to speak of them is not “scientific.” Nevertheless he does want to investigate the soul's religious experiences. However, in attempting investigation of this kind, without any wish to enter the spiritual world itself, one very easily succumbs instead to the very soul condition one is apt to experience when confronting Ahriman: the condition of fear. The religious experience of this theologian consists therefore partly of fear, of timidity in face of the unknown. The last thing he wants is to make the unknown into the known. He presumes that timidity and fear of the unknown—which stems from ahrimanic beings—is part and parcel of religious experience.
It is because he wants to describe the soul's religious experience but refuses to enter the realm of the Hierarchies who live behind the sense world that Ahriman darkens his comprehension of the spiritual world. Through the ahrimanic temptation the spiritual world appears as “the great unknown,” as “the irrational” and religious experience is confused with the “mystery of fear.”—Nor is that all, for just as Ahriman is waiting without when one seeks the spiritual world through external nature so does Lucifer wait within. The modern theologian of whom we are speaking also refuses to seek the Hierarchies within. Here again Lucifer makes the realm of the Hierarchies appear as "the great unknown" which the theologian refuses to make into the known. Yet he wants to know the soul's experience, so here he meets the opposite of the mystery of fear, namely the “mystery of fascination.” This is a realm in which we experience attraction, we become fascinated. The theologian now has on the one hand the mystery of fear and on the other the mystery of fascination; for him these two components constitute religious life.
Naturally there are critics today who feel that it is a great step forward when theology has, at last, got away from speaking about spiritual beings; no longer speaks of what is rational but about what is irrational; i.e., the mystery of fear and the mystery of fascination, the two ways to avoid entering the unknown. The book: Über das Heilige (About the Sacred) by professor Otto22Rudolf Otto 1869–1937 of Breslau University is certain to attain fame. This book sets out to derationalize everything to do with religious experience. It sets out to make everything vague, to make all feelings indefinite partly through fear of the unknown and also through fascination for the unknown. This view of religious life is certain to attract attention. People are bound to say that here, at last, the old fashioned idea of speaking about the spiritual world is done away with.
Anyone knowing something of Anthroposophy will recognize that in the case of this scholar there is a condition of dimmed consciousness. Such conditions frequently occur; philologists and researchers often fall into states of dimmed consciousness, especially when their investigations are within a limited field. In such conditions Ahriman and Lucifer have access to them. And why should Ahriman not prevent such a researcher from beholding the spiritual world by deluding him through the mystery of fear? And why should Lucifer not delude him through the mystery of fascination? There is no other remedy than clear awareness of the roles played by Ahriman and Lucifer, otherwise one is merely wallowing in nebulous feelings. Certainly feeling is a powerful element of the soul's life which should not be artificially suppressed by the intellect, but that is something different altogether from allowing a surge of indefinite feeling to obscure every concrete insight into the spiritual world.
One is reminded in this connection of something said by Hegel,24Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel 1770–1831 German Philosopher though it was cynical and purely speculative. Hegel was referring to Schleiermacher's23Friedrich Schleiermacher 1768–1834 Theologian and Philosopher famous definition of religious feeling which, according to him, consisted of utter and complete dependence. This definition is not false but that is not the point. Hegel, who above all wanted to lead man to clear concepts and concrete views and certainly not to feelings of dependence, declared that if utter dependence was a criterion for being religious then a dog would be the best Christian. Similarly if fear is the criterion for religious feelings then one need only suffer an attack of hydrophobia in order to experience intensely the mystery of fear.
What I am bringing up in these lectures must be considered, not so much according to its theoretical content but rather as an indication of the kind of inner attitude which is indispensable if one wants to observe the conditions in the world as they truly are. And it is so very important to do so. No matter where or how one is placed in life one can either observe appropriately or be inappropriately asleep. What surges and pulsates through life comes to expression in small issues as well as in big ones and can be observed everywhere.
We are at the beginning of a time when it will be of particular importance that things I have indicated in these last lectures are kept very much in mind. Many people do arrive at awareness of a universal Godhead or a universal spirituality. Yet, as I demonstrated when I spoke about his article “Reason and Knowledge,” even someone of the stature of Hermann Bahr does not arrive at any real awareness of Christ. He allies himself with the most prominent Christian institution of the day, that of Rome. But despite all he says there is no sign in his “Reason and Knowledge” of any conscious search for the Christ Impulse. Yet the most pressing need in our time is to gain an ever clearer understanding of the Christ impulse.
In the course of the 19th Century there was a great upsurge of natural-scientific thinking and all its attendant results. One of the first results was theoretical materialism accompanied by atheism. It can be said that the materialists of the 19th Century positively revelled in atheism. But such tendencies are apt to reverse and the same kind of thinking which made human beings atheists—due to certain luciferic-ahrimanic impulses at work during the first upsurge of natural science—will make them pious once the first glow has faded. The teachings of Darwin can make people God-fearing as easily as it can make them atheists, it all depends which side of the coin turns up. What no one can become through Darwinism is a Christian; nor is that possible through natural science if one remains within its limits. To become a Christian something quite different is required; namely, an understanding of a certain fundamental attitude of soul. What exactly is meant?
Kant said that the world is our mental picture, for the mental pictures we make of the world are formed according to the way we are organized. I may mention, not for personal but for factual reasons, that this Kantianism is completely refuted in my books Truth and Knowledge and The Philosophy of Freedom. These works set out to show that when we form concepts about the world, and elaborate them mentally, we are not alienating ourselves from reality. We are born into a physical body to enable us to see objects through our eyes and hear them through our ears and so on. What is disclosed to us through our senses is not full reality, it is only half reality. This I also stressed in my book Riddles of Philosophy. It is just because we are organized the way we are that the world, seen through our senses, is in a certain sense what Orientals call Maya. In the activity of forming mental pictures of the world we add, by means of thoughts, that which we suppressed through the body. This is the relation between true reality and knowledge. The task of real knowledge and therefore real science is to turn half reality; i.e., semblance, into the complete reality. The world, as it first appears through our senses, is for us incomplete. This incompleteness is not due to the world but to us, and we, through our mental activity, restore it to full reality. These thoughts I venture to call Pauline thoughts in the realm of epistemology. For it is truly nothing else than carrying into the realm of philosophic epistemology, the Pauline epistemology that man, when he came into the world through the first Adam, beheld an inferior aspect of the world; its true form he would experience only in what he will become through Christ.
The introduction of theological formulae into epistemology is not the point; what matters is the kind of thinking employed. I venture to say that, though my Truth and Knowledge and The Philosophy of Freedom are philosophic works, the Pauline spirit lives in them. A bridge can be built from this philosophy to the Christ Spirit; just as a bridge can be built from natural science to the Father Spirit. By means of natural-scientific thinking the Christ Spirit cannot be attained. Consequently as long as Kantianism prevails in philosophy, representing as it does a viewpoint that belongs to pre-Christian times, philosophy will continue to cloud the issue of Christianity.
So you see that everything that happens, everything that is done in the world must be observed and understood on a deeper level. It is necessary, when assessing literary works today, to keep in view not only their verbal content but also the whole direction of the ideas employed. One must be able to evaluate what is fruitful in such works and what must be superceded. Then one will also find entry into those spheres which alone enables one to stay awake in the true sense. The terrible events taking place in our time must be seen as external symptoms, the real change of direction must start from within.
Let me mention in conclusion that before 1914 I pointed out how confused were the statements made by Woodrow Wilson.25Woodrow Wilson 1856–1924 Professor of Philosophy, President of the U.S.A. 1913–1921 At that time I was completely alone in that view. What I said can be found in a course of lectures I gave at Helsingfors in May and June 1913. At that time Woodrow Wilson had the literary world at his feet. Only certain writings of his had been translated into other languages and much was said about his “great, noble and unbiased” mind. Those who were of that opinion speak differently now; but whether insight or something different brought about the change of view is open to question. What is important now is to recognize that because spiritual science is directly related to true reality it enables one to form appropriate judgements. This is an urgent need in view of the empty abstraction on which most judgements are based at present. An example of the latter is Der Geistgehalt dieses Krieges (The Spiritual Import of this War) by George Simmel. It is an ingenious presentation and a prime example of ideas from which all content has been extracted. To read it is comparable to eating an orange from which all juice has been squeezed out. Yet the book was written by a distinguished philosopher and innovator of modern views. At the Berlin university he had a large following; the fact that he never had a thought worthy of the name did nothing to diminish his fame.
Sechster Vortrag
In einer Zeit wie der unsrigen darf man vor allen Dingen nicht verwechseln die Wirklichkeit des geistigen Lebens und das Verständnis, welches die Menschen diesem geistigen Leben entgegenbringen. Es ist ja zweifellos: Wir leben in einer Zeit, in welcher das menschliche Verständnis und auch das menschliche Gebaren vom Materialismus ergriffen ist. Aber man darf nicht glauben, daß in dieser Zeit des Materialismus die geistigen Einflüsse etwa nicht vorhanden seien, daß gewissermaßen der Geist nicht da sei in seiner Wirksamkeit; das wäre falsch. Man kann sogar, so sonderbar der Ausspruch klingt, in unserer Zeit reichlich geistige Wirkungen, rein geistige Wirkungen im Menschenleben wahrnehmen. Sie treten überall auf, sie sind da. Und sie treten so auf, daß man nicht sagen kann, sie würden dort, wo sie auftreten, nicht gesehen oder sie wären dort nicht wirksam. So ist es nicht. Vielmehr ist es so, daß der brutale Wille der materialistischen Weltanschauungen gerade über dasjenige, was sich zeigt, was da ist, einfach zur Tagesordnung übergeht. Wenn man heute beobachtet, wie sich die Menschen zum Geiste verhalten, wie sie sich verhalten, wenn geistige Wirksamkeiten von irgend jemandem geltend gemacht werden, dann wird man immer an einen merkwürdigen Zwischenfall erinnert, der sich schon vor vielen Jahrzehnten in einer mitteleuropäischen Großstadt ereignet hat. Da war in einer wichtigen Sitzung einer wichtigen Körperschaft davon die Rede, wie auf gewisse Finanzgebarungen moralische Versumpftheit, niedrige moralische Anschauungen einen bösen Einfluß genommen haben. Da war selbstverständlich eine große Partei in dieser erlauchten, erleuchteten Körperschaft, welche Finanzfragen eben nur vom finanztechnischen Standpunkte aus betrachtet wissen wollte. Aber eine andere Minorität — es sind ja meistens Minoritäten — war auch vorhanden, welche die moralische Korruption hervorhob. Und ein Minister erhob sich und schob einfach dieses ganze Einmischen ungehöriger Begriffe hinweg, indem er sagte: Aber meine Herren, die Moral steht doch nicht auf der Tagesordnung! — So etwa, möchte man sagen, verhält sich heute ein großer Teil der Menschen, wenn die Rede auf spirituelle Erscheinungen, auf spirituelle Einflüsse kommt: Aber meine Herren, der Geist steht doch nicht auf der Tagesordnung! — Er steht nämlich nicht auf der Tagesordnung dort, wo verhandelt wird. Aber vielleicht treffen gerade die Verhandlungen nicht immer die Wirklichkeit; vielleicht ist gerade der Geist da, er wird aber nur nicht auf die Tagesordnung dort gesetzt, wo man über die Angelegenheiten der Menschheit redet.
Wer heute nämlich Gelegenheit hat zu prüfen, wer alles so denkt, der trifft alle Augenblicke irgendeine ganz bedeutsame Tatsache etwa dahingehend, daß er mit jemandem besprechen muß, wie dies oder jenes entstanden ist, wie der oder jener dies oder jenes gegründet hat, die eine oder die andere Sache ins Leben gerufen hat. Hat man Gelegenheit, intimer über solche Dinge mit Menschen zu sprechen, die insbesondere da oder dort berufen werden, dann erfährt man meistens etwas anderes, als diejenigen heute erfahren, vor denen man sich schämt, vom Geist zu sprechen. Man erfährt sehr häufig, daß dieses oder jenes nur getan worden ist, das eine oder das andere nur gegründet worden ist, weil der Betreffende diese oder jene Vision hatte, weil ihm dieser oder jener spirituelle Impuls gegeben worden ist. Wie gesagt, wer Gelegenheit hat wahrzunehmen, wie viele Menschen heute unter rein spirituellen Impulsen, sei es auf Visionen oder auch nur auf solche Träume hin, in denen sich ihnen spirituelle Impulse ankündigen können, dieses oder jenes tun, wer Gelegenheit hat in dieser Beziehung, ich möchte sagen, die Wirklichkeit zu beobachten, der weiß, daß heute unendlich viel mehr, als man glaubt, unter dem Einfluß von spirituellen Mächten, von spirituellen Impulsen geschieht, die aus der geistigen Welt hereinfließen in die physische Welt, und daß durchaus das theoretische Ablehnen, das anschauungsgemäße Ablehnen des Spirituellen nichts bedeutet gegenüber der Wichtigkeit spiritueller Tatsachen, die in unsere Welt durchaus lebendig hereinragen, aber allerdings nicht unbeeinflußt von dem herrschenden Materialismus. Solches Hereinragen spiritueller Impulse hat zu jeder Zeit in der Menschheitsentwickelung stattgefunden, und man sollte nur nicht glauben, daß es heute nicht da wäre. Spirituelle Impulse haben immer in die Menschheit hereingewirkt. Aber in unserem materialistischen Zeitalter kommen die Menschen in einer anderen Art solchen spirituellen Impulsen entgegen, als sie in Zeiten ihnen entgegenkommen, in welchen man mehr Bewußtsein von dem Dasein der spirituellen Welt hat. Nehmen wir gleich einen bedeutungsvollen konkreten Fall.
Es ist aus gewissen Gründen außerordentlich schwierig, der Welt gewisse Tatsachen über die geistigen Verhältnisse mitzuteilen. Die Menschen sind nicht vorbereitet genug, sie haben in sich nicht die Begriffe, um in entsprechender Art solche Mitteilungen aus der geistigen Welt entgegenzunehmen, und leicht werden solche Mitteilungen in das Gegenteil verkehrt. So kommt es, daß gerade in der Gegenwart der in die geistige Welt Eingeweihte über die wichtigsten Dinge in vieler Beziehung schweigen muß. Man kann nicht einmal sagen, was geschehen würde, wenn über die wichtigsten Dinge einer völlig unreifen Menschheit gegenüber dieses oder jenes gesagt würde. Aber ein Fall, der sehr häufig vorkommt, ist der folgende: Verhandelt werden muß immer nach gewissen Weltgesetzen über die spirituellen Dinge. Wenn nun mit den Lebenden schlecht zu verhandeln ist, wie in der Gegenwart, so ist sehr häufig die Verhandlung mit den Toten eine um so regere, eine um so intensivere. Und man kann sagen: vielleicht war in wenigen Zeiten das Zusammenwirken, das bewußte Zusammenwirken des physischen Planes mit der geistigen Welt, in welche die Verstorbenen versetzt sind, ein so reges, wie es in der Gegenwart sein kann. Aber nehmen wir an, irgendwo findet eine Verhandlung statt, die nur sein kann zwischen einem Wissenden auf dem physischen Plan und einem Verstorbenen. Dann kann gerade dadurch etwas sehr Merkwürdiges geschehen. Es kann gewissermaßen eine transzendente Indiskretion geschehen. Es können zwei Fälle eintreten. Nicht nur hier auf dem physischen Plane gibt es Horcher, die durch Schlüssellöcher horchen, sondern auch unter den Wesen der geistigen Welt gibt es Horcher, die Geister niederer Art sind, die aber eigentlich immer darauf aus sind, allerlei reelle spirituelle Tatsachen dadurch zu erfahren, daß sie horchen, daß sie namentlich das auffangen, was zwischen Wesen des physischen Planes und der geistigen Welt gesprochen wird. Da kann dann der eine Fall eintreten: Wenn ein Mensch besonders leidenschaftlich ist, von seinen Leidenschaften besonders ergriffen wird, so daß man von ihm sagt: er ist außer sich —, was ja durch Leidenschaft öfter vorkommt, oder wenn er betrunken ist, richtig physisch betrunken ist, oder wenn er in einem Ohnmachts- oder dergleichen Zustande ist, dann können solche Geister die Gelegenheit benutzen und über ihn kommen; und was sie ihm dann einimpfen, das kann ihm in Form einer Vision gleichzeitig oder später auftreten, und er kann dadurch allerlei erlauschen, was er nicht hören sollte.
Wer Sinn und Beobachtungsgabe für so etwas hat, der weiß, daß heute in allen möglichen Büchern unserer Literatur Unzähliges geschrieben wird, Unzähliges vorhanden ist, insbesondere in mancher höchst zweifelhaften Literatur, was auf allerlei verkehrte Art durch Indiskretion aus dem geistigen Verkehr herstammend ist. Es kann nichts Wirksameres geben, als wenn irgendein Kobold den Schreiber eines Detektivromans, wenn er gerade betrunken ist, von sich besessen macht, in seine Menschlichkeit hineingeht, ihm irgendeinen Satz eingibt, so daß er diesen Satz in seinem Detektivroman unterbringt. Dieser Roman gelangt dann durch allerlei Hinter- oder auch Vordertreppen zu den Menschen, und jener Satz kann dann ganz besonders in den Menschenseelen wirken, kann insbesondere dadurch wirksam werden, weil er durch die Art, wie die Menschen solche Dinge aufnehmen, nicht das volle Bewußtsein ansprechend ist, sondern an sich schon etwas zum Unterbewußtsein Sprechendes ist.
Das andere, was geschehen kann, ist, daß in irgendwelchen spiritistischen Sitzungen durch dieses oder jenes Medium das eine oder das andere geschildert wird, und dann mischt sich in das, was durch das Medium zutage tritt, die Kundgebung eines solchen Geistes hinein, der da seine Indiskretion unterbringen will. Wiederum ein Weg, der vielleicht gerade an dem Punkte, wo er eingeschlagen wird, ganz besonders wirksam ist. Es soll damit nicht etwas gesagt werden gegen das Mediumwesen an sich, sondern nur gegen seine Ausartung. Im Verlaufe des Menschheitskarmas treten verschiedene Dinge auf, die durch mediale Kundgebungen dieses oder jenes zutage fördern; das soll heute nicht besprochen werden, dagegen soll die Möglichkeit hervorgehoben werden, wie in der Tat gerade in einer Zeit, wie es die heutige ist, geistige Kanäle von der anderen Welt herübergehen in die physische Welt. Diese Kanäle sind sehr, sehr zahlreich, und sie sind viel mehr wirklich als man denkt. Dies vorausgesetzt, werden Sie begreifen, wenn ich nun etwas sage, was ganz gewiß der Gegenwart gegenüber heute vielfach noch als ein Paradoxon aufgefaßt werden kann, was aber doch tief wahr ist.
Man wird in der Zukunft gewiß über die Ereignisse der Jahre 1914, 1915, 1916, 1917 schreiben. Man wird mancherlei schreiben in dem Sinne, wie Geschichtsschreiber eben schreiben. Man wird über die Ursachen dieses furchtbaren Weltkrieges schreiben, man wird nach allen Seiten die Dokumente durchstöbern, die sich in allen möglichen Archiven finden, und wird versuchen, aus diesen Dokumenten heraus eine plausible Geschichte, vielleicht des Jahres 1914, in bezug auf die europäischen Ereignisse zu schreiben. Das Wichtige, was wir bei einer solchen Sache einsehen müssen, ist dies, daß alle Dokumentenforschung, daß alle Berichterstattung, die nach dem Muster der historischen Forschung bis zur Gegenwart angeregt ist, nicht ausreichen wird, um die Ursachen dieses ungeheuren Weltereignisses klarzulegen. Denn unter den wichtigsten Ursachen werden solche sein, die ihrer Natur nach auf äußeren Dokumenten, die man mit Tinte oder Druckerschwärze fabriziert, eben nicht aufgezeichnet worden sind, sondern die, weil sie eben wiederum heute nicht «an der Tagesordnung» sind, gewissermaßen abgeleugnet werden. In diesen Tagen lasen Sie gewiß die Berichte über jene russische Gerichtsverhandlung, bei welcher der russische Kriegsminister Suchomlinoff, der damalige Generalstabschef und andere Persönlichkeiten bedeutsame Aussagen gemacht haben. Über diese Aussagen sind viele Leute entrüstet; bei diesen Aussagen fällt vielen Leuten ein, daß man ja darob sich stark moralisch entrüsten kann, darüber zum Beispiel, daß Suchomlinoff den Zaren angelogen hat, oder daß der russische Generalstabschef, als er den Mobilisationsbefehl noch in der Tasche hatte, dem deutschen Militärattache das feste Versprechen abgab, daß dieser Befehl noch nicht erlassen sei, weil er ihn erst nach wenigen Minuten an die betreffenden Stellen weitergeben wollte. Gewiß, darüber kann man sich entrüsten, darüber kann allerlei Moralisches deklamiert werden. Aber gelogen wird nun einmal heute so viel, daß es den Weltenkenner eigentlich nicht wundern sollte, daß an einer wichtigen Stelle einmal recht saftig gelogen worden ist. Dies jedoch und was die Leute darüber reden, ist nicht die Hauptsache. Etwas anderes ist die Hauptsache. Wenn man nämlich diesen ganzen Prozeß durchliest, findet man sogar merkwürdige Worte, die handgreiflich auf das hindeuten, worum es sich handelt. Suchomlinoff erzählt geradezu, daß er, als diese Sachen sich abspielten, für eine Zeitlang den Verstand verloren hat. Er sagte geradezu: «Ich hatte darüber den Verstand verloren.» — Das ganze Hin und Her hatte ihn um den Verstand gebracht. Und damals waren nicht wenige Leute in einer solchen Lage.
Stellen Sie sich einen solchen Suchomlinoff vor, der den Verstand verloren hat: da ist so richtig die Möglichkeit, daß ahrimanische geistige Wesenheiten von seiner Seele Besitz ergreifen und ihm alles mögliche eingeben; das ist die Art, wie Ahriman in die Welt hereinwirkt, besonders wenn wir — außer wenn wir schlafen — keinen Wert darauf legen, voll in unserem Bewußtsein zu sein. Sind wir voll in unserem Bewußtsein, so können solche geistigen Wesen keinen richtigen Zugang zu unserer Seele haben. Ist aber die Geistigkeit, das Bewußtsein heruntergetrübt, so haben ahrimanische Wesen sofort den Zugang zu uns. Das sind die Tore, die Fenster, wo die ahrimanischen und luziferischen Wesenheiten in die Welt hereinkommen und ihre Pläne ausführen, indem sie die Menschen im Zustande des herabgedämmerten Bewußtseins überfallen und von sich besessen machen. Denn nicht auf eine unerklärliche, schauderhafte Weise wirken Ahriman und Luzifer, sondern dadurch, daß die Menschen mit ihrem Bewußtseinszustande ihnen entgegenkommen. Wer die Geschichte dieses Krieges in Zukunft wird schreiben wollen, der wird untersuchen müssen, wo überall solche herabgedämpften Bewußtseinszustände vorhanden waren, wo überall Tore und Fenster geöffnet waren für das Hereindringen ahrimanischer und luziferischer Mächte. Das ist bei früheren ähnlichen Ereignissen nicht in demselben Grade der Fall gewesen. Bei früheren ähnlichen Ereignissen wird man mit dem ausreichen, was Professoren und Geschichtsschreiber finden, indem sie die Archive untersuchen und aus dem Gefundenen die Ursachen für die Ereignisse zusammenstellen. Diesmal wird ein Rest bleiben, wenn man noch so genau die äußeren Dokumente zusammenstellen wird. Und dieser dableibende Rest ist das Hereinragen ganz besonderer geistiger Mächte durch die abgedämmerten Bewußtseinszustände in die Menschenwelt.
An anderer Stelle habe ich davon gesprochen, wie auf einem gewissen Gebiete der Erde seit Jahrzehnten die Verhältnisse so zubereitet wurden, daß im richtigen Momente die richtigen ahrimanischen Kräfte in die Menschheit hereinwirkten. Eine ungeheuere Flut von geistigen Impulsen ging im Juli und August 1914 durch Europa, ein Wirbel geistiger Wirkungen. Das ist es, was ganz besonders zu berücksichtigen ist, was verstanden werden soll, richtig verstanden werden soll. Man versteht eben die Wirklichkeit nicht, wenn man nicht in der Lage ist, an diese Wirklichkeit mit denjenigen Begriffen heranzutreten, die aus dem konkreten geistigen Leben genommen sind. Geisteswissenschaft ist zum Verständnis der Wirklichkeit der Gegenwart einmal notwendig. Und auch eine Wirksamkeit in der Gegenwart, sei es auf politischem, sei es auf anderen Gebieten, ist nicht möglich, ohne daß der Mensch über die Ereignisse ein waches Leben entwickelt mit den Vorstellungen, mit den Begriffen, die er aus der Geisteswissenschaft gewinnen kann. Nicht als ob man alles schablonenhaft nach der Geisteswissenschaft beurteilen kann, aber sie ist etwas, was uns dazu anleitet, wach das Gegenwartsleben mitzuerleben, während gerade die materialistische Seelenverfassung uns schlafen läßt über das Allerwichtigste, uns nicht so aufrüttelt, daß wir zu einem Urteil über unsere Zeitgenossenschaft kommen.
Das ist es ja, was ich in die Untertöne, die ich in die geisteswissenschaftlichen Vorträge und Betrachtungen lege, so gerne hineinbringen möchte, damit diese Geisteswissenschaft wirklich lebendiges, regsames Element werde, so daß die Seelen sich so zu dem Außenleben verhalten, wie es der Außenwelt entspricht, und ergriffen werden von dem Konkreten der Welt, nicht nur der Geisteswissenschaft. Man muß richtig aus Symptomen heraus urteilen können.
Ich habe Ihnen neulich erzählen können, mit welcher geradezu phänomenalen Oberflächlichkeit ein Berliner Universitätsprofessor sich über die Anthroposophie hergemacht hat. Ich habe Ihnen erzählt, was an Entstellung oder auch unbewußter Verleumdung sich Max Dessoir geleistet hat. Aber das steht doch im Zusammenhang mit dem ganzen Erscheinungskomplex, daß ein solches Individuum Max Dessoir in einer gelehrten Körperschaft drinnen steht, ja, daß noch etwas ganz anderes möglich war. Dieses Individuum Max Dessoir hat einmal eine Geschichte der Psychologie geschrieben, und wie er in der Vorrede zu diesem Buche gleich bemerkt, hat er besagte Geschichte der Psychologie auf Anregung der Berliner Akademie der Wissenschaften verfaßt, die einen Preis auf die Darstellung der Geschichte der Psychologie ausgeschrieben hatte. Diese Geschichte der Psychologie ist ein so lotteriges, ein innerlich so defektes Werk, daß das betreffende Individuum Max Dessoir es selbst später wieder zurückgezogen und einstampfen lassen hat. Es könnten also nicht so viele Exemplare davon vorhanden sein. Aber ich besitze ein Rezensionsexemplar dieses Buches und werde vielleicht noch manches darüber erzählen können. Vorläufig mußte ich mich damit beschäftigen in meiner demnächst erscheinenden Broschüre in dem Kapitel über die Angriffe gegen die Anthroposophie. Also Max Dessoir schreibt über die Geschichte der Psychologie, und er läßt dann dieses Werk wieder einstampfen. Aber die Tatsache liegt vor, daß die Berliner Akademie der Wissenschaften diese eingestampfte Geschichte der Psychologie preisgekrönt hat! Diese Dinge darf man nicht verschlafen, denn sie sind symptomatisch und sprechen für das, was in unserer gegenwärtigen Welt geschieht.
Was sind solche Individuen für Menschen? Es sind die, welche die Junge Generation heranziehen, welche diejenigen heranziehen, die dann die leitenden Persönlichkeiten der Menschheit werden; es sind die, welche dasjenige Geschlecht heranziehen, das es bis zu dem gegenwärtigen Zustande der Welt gebracht hat! Es ist schon notwendig, die Dinge in ihrem Zusammenhange zu sehen, es ist notwendig, schon zu sehen, wie die Symptome für das sprechen, was einzig und allein zum Verständnis desjenigen führen kann, in dem wir leben. Dies also ist es, was ich so gerne als einen Unterton in dieser Geisteswissenschaft haben möchte, daß es die Seelen ergreife und zu wachenden Beobachtern ihrer Umgebung mache, denn die Gelegenheit zum Schlafen ist heute eine gar große. Selbstverständlich werden die ahrimanischen und luziferischen Kräfte jede Gelegenheit benutzen, um die volle Bewußtheit abzulenken, die den Menschen für die Beobachtung der um ihn liegenden Wirklichkeit aus den geisteswissenschaftlichen Begriffen heute überkommt. Aber das Bewußtsein herunterzudämmern, dafür ist in mancherlei Beziehung Gelegenheit da.
Man kann auch, indem man studiert — und studiert nach einer bestimmten Richtung -, immer klüger, immer gescheiter, immer gelehrter werden; gewiß, das kann man werden. Aber man kann dabei an der Helligkeit seines Bewußtseins Einbuße erleiden. Da kommt man auf dünnes Eis, auf recht dünnes Eis, wenn man die Wirklichkeit bespricht.
Nun kann man zwar, ich möchte sagen, auf gewisse Punkte im Leben der Gegenwart nicht vom Eingeweihten-Standpunkte aus hindeuten, weil etwas Ungeheuerliches daraus erfolgen könnte; aber auf manche Sachen kann man, muß man und soll man hindeuten. Da ist zum Beispiel ein deutscher Universitätsprofessor. Ich will über den Mann gar nichts Schlimmes sagen, sondern alles mögliche Gute, aber ich will ihn sachlich charakterisieren. Dieser Mann ist ein großer Gelehrter, ein bedeutender Gelehrter auf dem Gebiete der 'Theologie. Er hat viel studiert. Doch das Theologiestudium hat ihn zwar gelehrt gemacht, aber nicht wachend, nicht dasjenige sehend, was in der Welt Wirklichkeit ist. Nun hat er als Theologieprofessor die Aufgabe, über Religion und Religionswissenschaft, über das, was in der Religion verehrt wird, über überirdische Mächte zu sprechen. Das ist den 'Theologieprofessoren heute eine recht unbehagliche Sache. Daher reden sie gern mehr über religiöse Zustände, über die Art und Weise, wie die Seele empfindet, wenn sie der geistigen Welt gegenübersteht. Nun liegt bei diesem Professor etwas Besonderes vor. Er hat, wie alle Menschen in der Gegenwart, die seiner Art sind, eine gewisse Furcht vor der geistigen Welt, vor ihrem Enthüllen und ihrem Eingießen in wörtliche Definitionen, in wirkliche Vorstellungen. Diese Angst habe ich Ihnen öfter charakterisiert: sie ist rein ahrimanischen Ursprunges. Der Betreffende fühlt: wenn er auf der einen Seite nach dem Durchdringen der materiellen Welt in die geistige Welt hineinkommt, so begegnet er Ahriman. Er muß Ahriman überwinden, muß ihn beiseiteschaffen. Nun sehen wir, ein solcher Theologe steht nun vor der großen, die Geistigkeit offenbarenden Natur; irgendwie darauf eingehen will er nicht. Was sich da durch die Natur offenbart an Wesenheiten der höheren Hierarchien, das ist ja heute nicht wissenschaftlich; doch den Seelenzustand beim religiösen Erleben will er untersuchen. Aber indem man den Seelenzustand untersuchen will und eigentlich nicht auf die wirkliche geistige Welt eingeht, verfällt man eben sehr leicht jenem Seelenzustande, den man gerade den ahrimanischen Mächten gegenüber haben kann. Ein Teil des religiösen Gefühls ist daher für diesen Theologen die Furcht, die Scheu vor dem Unbekannten. Das Unbekannte möchte er auf keinen Fall zu einem Bekannten machen. Aber die Scheu, die Furcht vor dem Unbekannten, die nun gerade von ahrimanischen Wesen herkommt, registriert er als ein Glied im religiösen Fühlen.
Indem er auf die Hierarchien, die hinter der Sinneswelt leben, nicht eingehen will, sondern nur den Seelenzustand charakterisieren will, verdunkelt nun schon Ahriman sein Verständnis für die geistige Welt. Die soll das große Unbekannte sein, das Irrationale, und das eigentlich Religiöse liegt, wie er sagt, im Mysterium tremendum, im Mysterium des Fürchtens, im Mysterium der Scheu. Aber das ist nicht das einzige. Nach außen paßt Ahriman auf, wenn man die geistige Welt finden will, nach innen paßt Luzifer auf. Der moderne Theologe jedoch, den ich meine, sucht auch nach innen wieder nicht nach den Hierarchien. Da muß die Welt der Hierarchien wieder das große Unbekannte bleiben, das er nur ja nicht zu etwas Bekanntem machen will. Aber die innere Seelenverfassung soll untersucht werden; das muß nun das Entgegengesetzte von dem sein, was das Mysterium der Furcht ist: das ist das Mysterium des Faszinierens. Da werden wir angezogen, fasziniert. Nun hat er auf der einen Seite das Mysterium der Scheu, auf der anderen Seite das Mysterium des Faszinierens; daraus setzt er das religiöse Leben zusammen. Es finden sich nun selbstverständlich heute Kritiker, welche das als den besonderen Fortschritt der Menschheit auf diesem Gebiete empfehlen, daß nun die theologische Betrachtung endlich davon abkomme, von geistigen Wesenheiten zu sprechen, daß sie nicht mehr von dem Rationalen, sondern von dem Irrationalen spreche, von dem Mysterium des Faszinierens und von dem Mysterium der Scheu, von dem zweifachen Sichhinwenden auf ein Unbekanntes. Es wird ja bestimmt das Buch des Breslauer Universitätsprofessors Otto: «Über das Heilige» ein sehr berühmtes Buch in der Gegenwart werden, dieses Buch über das Heilige, welches das ganze religiöse Leben entrationalisieren will, aber nicht nur dies, sondern auch entkonkretisieren und alles bestimmte Fühlen ausmerzen will, auf der einen Seite aus der Scheu vor dem Unbekannten und auf der anderen Seite aus dem Erfülltsein von dem Fasziniertsein durch das Unbekannte. Diese ganze Betrachtung des religiösen Lebens wird besonderes Aufsehen machen. Man wird sagen: Endlich sind wir über die alte Art hinaus, etwas über die geistige Welt aussagen zu wollen.
Wer etwas über Anthroposophie kennt, der muß verstehen, was in einem solchen Falle vorliegt, daß hier ein Dämmerzustand des Bewußtseins bei dem betreffenden Gelehrten vorliegt. Solche Dämmerzustände kennt man. Philologen wie Naturforscher kommen sehr häufig in solche Zustände, wenn sie nur auf einem engbegrenzten Gebiet forschen, und dann haben Ahriman und Luzifer den Zugang zu ihnen. Warum sollte nicht Ahriman einen solchen Forscher davon abhalten, auf die geistige Welt hinzublicken und ihn einlullen in das Gefühl des Mysterium tremendum, des Mysteriums der Furcht? Warum sollte nicht Luzifer ihn einlullen in das Gefühl des Mysterium «fascinosum»? Einzig und allein das Aufgeklärtsein darüber, welche Rollen Ahriman und Luzifer spielen, ist es, was zum Gedeihen führen kann, sonst plätschert man in dem Unbestimmten des Gefühles herum. Das Gefühl ist ganz gewiß ein mächtiges Lebenselement, und der Intellektualismus darf nicht das Gefühlsleben unterdrücken, aber etwas anderes ist es, wenn ein unbestimmtes Plätschern im Gefühlsleben jedes konkrete Ausblicken auf die geistige Welt hinwegdämmern will. Da muß man immer wieder an einen Ausspruch Hegels erinnern, wenn es auch ein theoretisch zynischer Ausspruch von ihm war, auf Schleiermachers berühmte Definition: das Religiöse läge im absoluten Abhängigkeitsgefühl, im Abhängigkeitsgefühl schlechthin. — Eine solche Definition ist ja nicht falsch, aber darum handelt es sich nicht. Hegel, der die Menschenseele auf das Konkrete in der Welt hinlenken wollte und nicht auf das Abhängigkeitsgefühl, meinte: Wenn das Abhängigkeitsgefühl das beste religiöse Gefühl ausmacht, dann ist der Hund der beste Christ. — So meint Hegel. Und wenn das Mysterium der Scheu wirklich Bedingung wäre für ein gewisses inneres Erleben, dann brauchte man nur tollwütig zu werden, brauchte nur wasserscheu zu werden, und würde das intensivste Gefühl für das Mysterium der Scheu entwickeln.
Wenn wir das, was ich durch solche Betrachtungen nicht so sehr an theoretischem Gehalt, sondern an Gesinnungssubstanz vorbringen möchte, berücksichtigen, dann, und nur dann können sich die Elemente ergeben, um in unserer Zeit den Weltenzusammenhang sachgemäß zu beobachten. Und auf solches sachgemäßes Beobachten kommt es ja an. Man kann an jeder Stelle in der Welt, wo man steht, sachgemäß beobachten, oder man kann an jeder Stelle, an der man steht, unsachgemäß schlafen; denn das, was in der großen Welt flutet und pulst, drückt sich auch im kleinsten Kreise aus. Das kann man überall beobachten; da handelt es sich nur darum, daß wir es wirklich beobachten.
So beginnt eine Zeit, in der es wirklich von besonderer Wichtigkeit ist, dasjenige, was ich namentlich in diesen letzten Betrachtungen andeutete, recht genau ins Seelenauge zu fassen. Zu einem Bewußtsein einer allgemeinen Göttlichkeit oder Geistigkeit der Welt kommen heute zahlreiche Menschen; zu einem wirklichen Christus-Bewußtsein kommen selbst Menschen nicht von der Art Hermann Babrs, wie ich es Ihnen mitgeteilt habe, als ich über seinen Aufsatz «Vernunft und Wissenschaft» sprach. Er sucht Anschluß beim allerpositivsten Christentum der Gegenwart: bei Rom. Aber so viel er auch redet: irgendein Bewußtsein, den Christus-Impuls zu suchen, kann man in dieser ganzen Schrift «Vernunft und Wissenschaft» bei Hermann Bahr nicht finden. Gerade dies aber ist die Notwendigkeit in unserer Zeit: immer klarer und klarer gerade über den Christus-Impuls zu werden. Im Laufe des verflossenen Jahrhunderts haben wir den großen Aufschwung der naturwissenschaftlichen Vorstellungsart erlebt mit alle dem, was sie im Gefolge hatte. Dieser erste große Aufschwung der naturwissenschaftlichen Denkungsart hat auch zu einem theoretischen Materialismus geführt, der von einem religiösen Atheismus begleitet war. Der Atheismus hat ja in gewissem Sinne bei den Materialisten des neunzehnten Jahrhunderts wahre Orgien gefeiert. Aber solche Dinge schlagen um, und dieselbe Denkungsweise, welche aus gewissen luziferisch-ahrimanischen Impulsen heraus beim ersten Aufschwung der Naturwissenschaften die Menschen atheistisch werden ließ, wird sie gottgläubig werden lassen, wenn der erste Taumel vorüber ist. Aus dem, was Darwin gelehrt hat, ist es ebensogut möglich, daß man gottgläubig werden kann, wie daß man Atheist werden kann. Es ist wirklich so, daß die Medaille auf die eine Seite und auf die andere Seite gelegt werden kann. Aber christlich kann man nicht aus dem Darwinismus werden, kann es auch nicht aus dem Aufschwung der modernen Naturwissenschaft werden, wenn man nur bei diesem Aufschwung stehenbleibt. Dazu gehört etwas ganz anderes: dazu gehört das Verständnis für eine gewisse Seelenverfassung in den Fundamenten. Welche Fundamente meine ich?
Kant hat gesagt: Die Welt ist unsere Erscheinung, und wenn wir uns Vorstellungen von der Welt machen, so sind sie nach unserer Organisation gebildet. — Mit diesem Kantianismus ist, wie ich, nicht aus persönlicher Albernheit, sondern aus sachlichen Gründen hervorheben darf, am intensivsten erst im Fundament in meiner Schrift «Wahrheit und Wissenschaft» und in meiner «Philosophie der Freiheit» gebrochen. Diese beiden Schriften gehen davon aus, daß wir dann, wenn wir uns Begriffe über die Welt bilden und aus der Seele herausarbeiten, uns nicht von der Wirklichkeit entfernen, sondern daß wir in einen physischen Leib hineingeboren werden, damit wir durch Augen die Welt ansehen, damit wir durch Ohren die Dinge anhören und so weiter. Was uns die Sinne zeigen, ist nicht die ganze, das ist nur die halbe Wirklichkeit. Ich habe das noch einmal in meinem Buche «Die Rätsel der Philosophie» unterstrichen. Gerade dadurch, daß wir in einer bestimmten Weise organisiert sind, ist die Welt nur in einer gewissen Beziehung, wie die Orientalen sagen, Schein, Maja. Und dadurch, daß wir uns Vorstellungen über die Welt bilden, kommt es, daß wir im Gedanken das hinzufügen, was wir unterdrückt haben, indem wir in den Leib hineingegangen sind. So ist das wahre Verhältnis zwischen Wahrheit und Wissenschaft. Wirkliche Wissenschaft ist Ergänzung des Scheines zur vollen Wirklichkeit. Und von dieser Idee ausgehend, daß die Welt in ihrer ersten Gestalt, wie sie den Sinnen vorliegt, durch uns — nicht durch sich - uns unwirklich erscheint, und daß wir diese Gestalt der Welt, die durch uns eine unwirkliche ist, im subjektiven Arbeiten zur Wirklichkeit machen, darf ich diesen Gedanken den paulinischen Gedanken auf dem Gebiete der Erkenntnistheorie nennen.
Denn es ist nichts anderes, als, auf das philosophische Erkenntnisgebiet übertragen, der Gedanke der paulinischen Erkenntnistheorie, daß der Mensch so, wie er in die Welt getreten ist durch den ersten Adam, diese Welt in einer untergeordneten Art vor sich hat, und sie erst durch das, was er durch den Christus wird, in ihrer wahren Gestalt erlebt. Das Christentum kann warten in der Philosophie, in der Erkenntnistheorie. Aber nicht darauf kommt es an, daß man die Erkenntnistheorie damit beginnt, daß man irgendwelche in der Theologie gebräuchliche Formeln an die Spitze setzt, sondern auf die Art des Denkens. Und ich darf sagen: In den Schriften «Wahrheit und Wissenschaft» und «Philosophie der Freiheit», trotzdem sie ganz aus der Philosophie herausgearbeitet sind, lebt paulinischer Geist. Von dieser Philosophie aus ist es möglich, die Brücke hinüber zu finden zu dem Christus-Geist, wie man von der Naturwissenschaft aus die Brücke zum Vater-Geist finden kann. Aber man kann nicht von der naturwissenschaftlichen Denk weise aus zum Christus-Geist kommen. So lange daher der Kantianismus, der durchaus als Philosophie ein vorchristlicher Standpunkt ist, irgendwie herrscht, wird die Philosophie immer mehr das Christentum vernebeln. Da kann nur unrichtiges, verlogenes Christentum in die Philosophie hineinkommen, wenn der Kantianismus als erkenntnistheoretische Grundlage herrscht.
Sie sehen also, die Dinge sind schon tiefer anzufassen, und es wäre notwendig, daß man dasjenige, was heute geistig zutage tritt, nicht bloß dem wörtlichen Inhalte nach, sondern der Art und Weise der Denkenden, der ganzen Richtung nach, ins Auge faßt. Dann würde man verstehen, worin für die Zukunft Fruchtbares ist, und worin das liegt, was überwunden werden muß. Und dann würde man die Fäden nach anderen Gebieten herüber finden, nach Gebieten, die man heute so braucht, wenn man aufwachen will, richtig aufwachen will. Die furchtbaren Zeitereignisse sollten wahrhaftig nur Symptome bleiben. Die große Umkehr sollte von innen kommen.
Wie stand man, lassen Sie mich das noch zum Schlusse sagen, allein da, als man vor 1914 in objektiver Weise die ganze verworrene Denkweise Woodrow Wilsons charakterisierte. Ich habe auf das, was Sie über Wilson finden können, in meinem Helsingforser Zyklus aufmerksam gemacht. Das war in der Zeit, als die übrige Literatenwelt, weil damals gerade von Wilson «Nur Literatur» und anderes übersetzt war, zu den Füßen von Woodrow Wilson gelegen hat, und wie wurde damals die «große, vornehme, unbefangene» Denkweise Wilsons hervorgehoben, vielfach von denen hervorgehoben, die jetzt ganz gewiß anders sprechen. Aber was war dazu notwendig? War Einsicht notwendig, oder etwas ganz anderes als Einsicht, um zu dieser Umkehr zu kommen? Dies aber ist notwendig, daß genauer auf das hingesehen wird, was Geisteswissenschaft bringen soll an Verbindung mit der gesamten Wirklichkeit, an Urteilen über die Wirklichkeit, gegenüber dem, was heute an Unwirklichkeit auf allen Gebieten und an wesenlosen Abstraktionen herrscht. Ich empfehle Ihnen, wenn Sie die Ideen der Zeit so genießen wollen wie jemand, der etwa, um eine Orange zu genießen, dieselbe zuerst zwischen zwei Eisenpfosten zerquetscht, um allen Saft herauszubringen, und nur was übrig bleibt verspeist, dann lesen Sie die ausgepreßten, die ausgequetschten Ideen der Zeit, welche Georg Simmel geschrieben hat über den Geistgehalt dieses Krieges. Da haben Sie ein Musterbeispiel von den in der Gegenwart «geistvollen» Darlegungen, die nichts, aber auch gar nichts enthalten, sondern die nur ausgepreßte, ausgequetschte und inhaltleerste Begriffe sind. Wollen Sie sich ein solches Musterbeispiel einer solchen abstrakten, inhaltleeren Schrift der Gegenwart leisten, so finden Sie es in der Schrift «Der Geistgehalt dieses Krieges» von Georg Simmel. Denn es ist von dem berühmten Philosophen, dem Erneuerer des modernen Denkens, der an der Berliner Universität den größten Zulauf hatte, der auch nie einen wirklichen Gedanken gehabt hat, aber der gerade in unserer Zeit berühmt geworden ist.
Sixth lecture
In times such as ours, it is important not to confuse the reality of spiritual life with the understanding that people have of this spiritual life. There is no doubt that we live in a time in which human understanding and behavior are dominated by materialism. But we must not believe that in this age of materialism spiritual influences do not exist, that the spirit is not active in some sense; that would be wrong. Strange as it may sound, we can perceive abundant spiritual influences, purely spiritual influences in human life in our time. They appear everywhere; they are there. And they appear in such a way that one cannot say that they are not seen where they appear or that they are not effective there. That is not the case. Rather, it is so that the brutal will of materialistic worldviews simply becomes the order of the day, especially with regard to what is apparent, what is there. When one observes today how people behave toward the spirit, how they behave when spiritual influences are asserted by someone, one is always reminded of a strange incident that occurred many decades ago in a large Central European city. During an important meeting of an important body, there was talk of how certain financial practices had been influenced by moral decay and low moral standards. Naturally, there was a large party in this illustrious, enlightened body that wanted to consider financial issues solely from a financial point of view. But there was also another minority—it is usually minorities—which emphasized moral corruption. And a minister rose and simply dismissed all this interference with inappropriate concepts by saying: But gentlemen, morality is not on the agenda! — That, one might say, is how a large part of humanity behaves today when the conversation turns to spiritual phenomena, to spiritual influences: But gentlemen, the spirit is not on the agenda! — It is not on the agenda where negotiations take place. But perhaps negotiations do not always reflect reality; perhaps the spirit is there, but it is simply not put on the agenda where the affairs of humanity are discussed.
For anyone who has the opportunity today to examine who thinks this way will encounter at every moment some very significant fact, such as having to discuss with someone how this or that came about, how someone founded this or that, or brought one thing or another into being. If one has the opportunity to talk more intimately about such things with people who are called to do this or that, then one usually learns something different from what those learn today who are ashamed to speak of the spirit. One very often learns that this or that was only done, that one thing or another was only founded, because the person concerned had this or that vision, because he or she was given this or that spiritual impulse. As I said, anyone who has the opportunity to observe how many people today, under purely spiritual impulses, whether based on visions or even just on dreams in which spiritual impulses may announce themselves, do this or that, anyone who has the opportunity to observe reality in this regard, I would say, knows that today infinitely more than one believes happens under the influence of spiritual forces, by spiritual impulses flowing in from the spiritual world into the physical world, and that the theoretical rejection, the intuitive rejection of the spiritual means nothing in comparison with the importance of spiritual facts that are very much alive in our world, but certainly not uninfluenced by the prevailing materialism. Such an influence of spiritual impulses has taken place at all times in human development, and one should not believe that it is not present today. Spiritual impulses have always worked upon humanity. But in our materialistic age, people respond to such spiritual impulses in a different way than they did in times when they were more aware of the existence of the spiritual world. Let us take a meaningful concrete case.
For certain reasons, it is extremely difficult to communicate certain facts about spiritual conditions to the world. People are not sufficiently prepared; they do not have the concepts within themselves to receive such messages from the spiritual world in an appropriate manner, and such messages are easily turned into their opposite. This is why, especially in the present age, those who are initiated into the spiritual world must remain silent about the most important things in many respects. One cannot even say what would happen if this or that were said about the most important things to a completely immature humanity. But a case that occurs very frequently is the following: Spiritual matters must always be dealt with according to certain world laws. If it is difficult to negotiate with the living, as is the case at present, then very often negotiations with the dead are all the more lively and intense. And one can say that perhaps in a few periods the interaction, the conscious interaction between the physical plane and the spiritual world into which the deceased have been transferred, was as lively as it can be at present. But let us suppose that somewhere a negotiation is taking place that can only be between someone who is knowledgeable on the physical plane and a deceased person. Then something very strange can happen precisely because of this. A kind of transcendent indiscretion can occur. Two cases can arise. Not only here on the physical plane are there eavesdroppers who listen through keyholes, but also among the beings of the spiritual world there are eavesdroppers who are spirits of a lower kind, but who are actually always out to learn all kinds of real spiritual facts by listening, by picking up what is said between beings of the physical plane and the spiritual world. Then one case can occur: if a person is particularly passionate, particularly overcome by his passions, so that one says of him, “He is beside himself” — which often happens because of passion — or if he is drunk, really physically drunk, or if he is in a state of fainting or something similar, then such spirits can take advantage of the opportunity and come over him; and what they then implant in him can appear to him in the form of a vision, either immediately or later, and he can thereby overhear all sorts of things he should not hear.
Anyone who has a sense and an eye for such things knows that today, in all kinds of books in our literature, countless things are written, countless things exist, especially in some highly dubious literature, which originate in all kinds of perverse ways from indiscretion in spiritual communication. There can be nothing more effective than when some goblin, when the writer of a detective novel is drunk, possesses him, enters into his humanity, and puts some sentence into his mouth, so that he includes this sentence in his detective novel. This novel then reaches people through all sorts of back or front doors, and that sentence can then have a very special effect on people's souls, becoming particularly effective because, due to the way people take in such things, it does not appeal to their full consciousness, but is in itself something that speaks to the subconscious.
The other thing that can happen is that in some spiritualist séances, through this or that medium, one thing or another is described, and then the manifestation of such a spirit, who wants to express his indiscretion, mixes in with what comes to light through the medium. Again, this is a path that is perhaps particularly effective at the very point where it is taken. This is not meant to say anything against mediumship itself, but only against its degeneration. In the course of human karma, various things occur which come to light through mediumistic manifestations of this or that; that is not to be discussed today. On the contrary, the possibility should be emphasized that, especially in a time such as ours, spiritual channels pass over from the other world into the physical world. These channels are very, very numerous, and they are much more real than one thinks. Given this, you will understand when I now say something that will certainly be regarded by many today as a paradox, but which is nevertheless deeply true.
In the future, people will certainly write about the events of 1914, 1915, 1916, and 1917. They will write many things in the manner of historians. People will write about the causes of this terrible world war, they will search through all the documents they can find in all the archives, and they will try to write a plausible history, perhaps of the year 1914, based on these documents, with reference to the events in Europe. The important thing we must realize in such a matter is that all documentary research, all reporting inspired by the pattern of historical research up to the present, will not be sufficient to clarify the causes of this monstrous world event. For among the most important causes will be those which, by their very nature, have not been recorded in external documents produced with ink or printing ink, but which, because they are not “on the agenda” today, are, in a sense, denied. In recent days, you have certainly read the reports about the Russian court proceedings in which Russian War Minister Sukhomlinoff, the then Chief of the General Staff, and other prominent figures made significant statements. Many people are outraged by these statements; they remind many people that there is indeed cause for moral outrage, for example, that Sukhomlinoff lied to the Tsar, or that the Russian Chief of the General Staff, when he still had the mobilization order in his pocket, gave the German military attaché a firm promise that this order had not yet been issued because he wanted to pass it on to the relevant authorities after a few minutes. Certainly, one can be outraged about this, and all kinds of moralistic statements can be made. But there is so much lying going on today that it should not really surprise anyone who knows the world that someone in an important position lied quite blatantly on one occasion. However, this and what people say about it is not the main issue. The main issue is something else. If you read through this whole trial, you will even find strange words that clearly indicate what is going on. Suchomlinoff actually says that when these things were happening, he lost his mind for a while. He said outright: “I lost my mind over it.” — All the back and forth had driven him mad. And at that time, quite a few people were in the same situation.
Imagine Suchomlinoff like this, having lost his mind: there is a real possibility that Ahrimanic spiritual beings could take possession of his soul and inspire him to do all sorts of things; this is how Ahriman works in the world, especially when we do not value being fully conscious, except when we are asleep. When we are fully conscious, such spiritual beings cannot gain proper access to our soul. But if our spirituality, our consciousness, is clouded, then Ahrimanic beings immediately have access to us. These are the gates, the windows through which Ahrimanic and Luciferic beings enter the world and carry out their plans by attacking people in a state of clouded consciousness and making them possessed by themselves. For Ahriman and Lucifer do not work in an inexplicable, terrifying way, but through the fact that human beings, with their state of consciousness, come to meet them. Anyone who wants to write the history of this war in the future will have to investigate where such dulled states of consciousness were present, where gates and windows were open for the intrusion of Ahrimanic and Luciferic powers. This has not been the case to the same degree in previous similar events. In previous similar events, it will suffice to examine the archives and compile the causes of the events from what professors and historians find there. This time, however, even if the external documents are compiled with the greatest precision, something will remain. And this residue is the intrusion of very special spiritual forces into the human world through the dimmed states of consciousness.
Elsewhere I have spoken of how, in a certain area of the earth, conditions have been prepared for decades so that at the right moment the right Ahrimanic forces could work upon humanity. An enormous flood of spiritual impulses swept through Europe in July and August 1914, a whirlwind of spiritual influences. This is what must be taken into account, what must be understood, understood correctly. One cannot understand reality if one is not able to approach it with concepts taken from concrete spiritual life. Spiritual science is necessary for understanding the reality of the present. And it is not possible to be effective in the present, whether in politics or in other areas, without developing an alert awareness of events with the ideas and concepts that can be gained from spiritual science. It is not as if everything can be judged stereotypically according to spiritual science, but it is something that guides us to experience contemporary life with alertness, whereas the materialistic state of mind causes us to sleep through what is most important and does not shake us up enough to come to a judgment about our contemporaneity.
That is what I would like to bring into the undertones of my lectures and reflections on spiritual science, so that this spiritual science may become a truly living, active element, so that souls may relate to external life in a way that corresponds to the external world, and be moved by the concrete reality of the world, not just by spiritual science. One must be able to judge correctly from symptoms.
I recently told you about the downright phenomenal superficiality with which a Berlin university professor attacked anthroposophy. I told you about the distortions and even unconscious slander perpetrated by Max Dessoir. But this is connected with the whole complex of phenomena that such an individual as Max Dessoir could be found in a learned body, and indeed that something quite different was possible. This individual, Max Dessoir, once wrote a history of psychology, and as he immediately notes in the preface to this book, he wrote the said history of psychology at the suggestion of the Berlin Academy of Sciences, which had offered a prize for the presentation of the history of psychology. This history of psychology is such a sloppy, internally flawed work that Max Dessoir himself later withdrew it and had it pulped. So there cannot be many copies of it in existence. But I have a review copy of this book and may be able to tell you more about it. For the time being, I had to deal with it in my forthcoming brochure in the chapter on the attacks against anthroposophy. So Max Dessoir writes about the history of psychology, and then he has this work pulped. But the fact remains that the Berlin Academy of Sciences awarded a prize to this pulped history of psychology! These things must not be overlooked, for they are symptomatic and speak for what is happening in our present world.
What kind of people are these individuals? They are the ones who raise the young generation, who raise those who will then become the leading personalities of humanity; they are the ones who raise the generation that has brought the world to its present state! It is necessary to see things in their context; it is necessary to see how the symptoms speak for what alone can lead to an understanding of the world in which we live. This, then, is what I would like to see as an underlying tone in this spiritual science, so that it may seize the souls and make them watchful observers of their surroundings, for the opportunity to sleep is very great today. Of course, the Ahrimanic and Luciferic forces will use every opportunity to distract the full consciousness that comes to people today from spiritual scientific concepts for observing the reality around them. But there are many opportunities to dim consciousness.
One can also, by studying — and studying in a certain direction — become ever wiser, ever more intelligent, ever more learned; certainly, one can become that. But in doing so, one can suffer a loss of clarity in one's consciousness. One treads on thin ice, very thin ice, when one discusses reality.
Now, I would say that one cannot point to certain aspects of contemporary life from the standpoint of an initiate, because something monstrous could result from it; but there are some things that one can, must, and should point out. Take, for example, a German university professor. I do not want to say anything bad about the man, but only good things, but I want to characterize him objectively. This man is a great scholar, an important scholar in the field of theology. He has studied a great deal. But his theological studies have made him learned, but not alert, not seeing what is real in the world. Now, as a professor of theology, his job is to talk about religion and religious studies, about what is worshipped in religion, about supernatural powers. This is quite an uncomfortable thing for theology professors today. That is why they like to talk more about religious states, about the way the soul feels when it encounters the spiritual world. Now, there is something special about this professor. Like all people of his kind in the present day, he has a certain fear of the spiritual world, of its revelation and its pouring into literal definitions, into real ideas. I have often characterized this fear for you: it is purely of Ahrimanic origin. The person concerned feels that when he enters the spiritual world after passing through the material world, he encounters Ahriman. He must overcome Ahriman, must cast him aside. Now we see that such a theologian stands before the great nature that reveals spirituality; somehow he does not want to engage with it. What is revealed through nature in the beings of the higher hierarchies is not scientific today, but he wants to investigate the state of the soul in religious experience. But by wanting to investigate the state of the soul and not actually entering into the real spiritual world, one very easily falls into the state of soul that one can have when confronted with the Ahrimanic forces. Part of religious feeling for this theologian is therefore fear, shyness toward the unknown. He does not want to make the unknown known under any circumstances. But he registers this shyness, this fear of the unknown, which comes precisely from Ahrimanic beings, as a link in religious feeling.
By refusing to engage with the hierarchies that exist behind the sensory world and instead seeking only to characterize the state of the soul, Ahriman already obscures his understanding of the spiritual world. This is supposed to be the great unknown, the irrational, and what is truly religious, he says, lies in the mysterium tremendum, in the mystery of fear, in the mystery of shyness. But that is not all. Ahriman watches over the outer world when one seeks to find the spiritual world, while Lucifer watches over the inner world. The modern theologian I am referring to, however, does not seek the hierarchies within either. There, the world of hierarchies must remain the great unknown, which he does not want to turn into something known. But the inner state of the soul is to be investigated; this must now be the opposite of what the mystery of fear is: it is the mystery of fascination. There we are attracted, fascinated. Now he has, on the one hand, the mystery of timidity and, on the other, the mystery of fascination; from these he composes religious life. Of course, there are critics today who recommend this as a special advance for humanity in this field, that theological reflection is finally moving away from speaking of spiritual beings, that it no longer speaks of the rational but of the irrational, of the mystery of fascination and the mystery of shyness, of the twofold turning toward the unknown. The book by Otto, professor at the University of Breslau, “On the Sacred” will certainly become a very famous book in the present day, this book on the sacred, which seeks to de-rationalize the whole of religious life, but not only that, it also seeks to de-concretize it and eradicate all definite feelings, on the one hand out of shyness towards the unknown and on the other hand out of being filled with fascination by the unknown. This whole view of religious life will cause quite a stir. People will say: At last we have moved beyond the old way of wanting to say something about the spiritual world.”
Anyone who knows anything about anthroposophy must understand what is happening in such a case, that the scholar in question is in a twilight state of consciousness. Such twilight states are well known. Philologists and natural scientists very often find themselves in such states when they research only a narrowly defined field, and then Ahriman and Lucifer have access to them. Why should Ahriman not prevent such a researcher from looking at the spiritual world and lull him into a feeling of mysterium tremendum, the mystery of fear? Why should Lucifer not lull him into a feeling of mysterium fascinans? Only enlightenment about the roles played by Ahriman and Lucifer can lead to prosperity; otherwise, one flounders around in the vagueness of feelings. Feeling is certainly a powerful element of life, and intellectualism must not suppress the life of feeling, but it is something else when an indefinite babbling in the life of feeling wants to obscure every concrete view of the spiritual world. Here we must repeatedly recall a statement by Hegel, even if it was a theoretically cynical one, in response to Schleiermacher's famous definition: that religion lies in an absolute feeling of dependence, in the feeling of dependence par excellence. Such a definition is not wrong, but that is not the point. Hegel, who wanted to direct the human soul toward the concrete in the world and not toward the feeling of dependence, said: If the feeling of dependence is the best religious feeling, then the dog is the best Christian. — That is what Hegel thinks. And if the mystery of shyness were really a prerequisite for a certain inner experience, then one would only need to become rabid, one would only need to become afraid of water, and one would develop the most intense feeling for the mystery of shyness.
If we take into account what I am trying to convey through such considerations, not so much in terms of theoretical content as in terms of the substance of our attitude, then, and only then, can the elements emerge that enable us to observe the world context in our time in an appropriate manner. And such proper observation is what matters. You can observe properly wherever you are in the world, or you can sleep improperly wherever you are; for what floods and pulsates in the great world is also expressed in the smallest circle. You can observe this everywhere; it is only a matter of really observing it.
Thus begins a time in which it is really of particular importance to grasp quite precisely in the soul's eye what I have indicated in these last considerations. Today, numerous people are coming to an awareness of a general divinity or spirituality of the world; even people not of the Hermann Babrs type, as I told you when I spoke about his essay “Reason and Science,” are coming to a real Christ consciousness. He seeks connection with the most positive Christianity of the present day: with Rome. But no matter how much he talks, one cannot find any awareness of seeking the Christ impulse in Hermann Bahr's entire work Reason and Science. But this is precisely what is necessary in our time: to become clearer and clearer about the Christ impulse. Over the course of the past century, we have experienced the great rise of the scientific way of thinking with all that it has brought in its wake. This first great rise of the scientific way of thinking also led to a theoretical materialism accompanied by religious atheism. Atheism celebrated true orgies, in a certain sense, among the materialists of the nineteenth century. But such things change, and the same way of thinking that made people atheistic during the first boom in the natural sciences, arising from certain Luciferic-Ahrimanic impulses, will make them believe in God once the initial frenzy has passed. From what Darwin taught, it is just as possible to become a believer in God as it is to become an atheist. It is really true that the coin can be turned over to either side. But one cannot become a Christian out of Darwinism, nor out of the rise of modern natural science, if one remains stuck at this stage. Something else is needed: an understanding of a certain state of mind at the very foundations. What foundations do I mean?
Kant said: The world is our appearance, and when we form ideas about the world, they are formed according to our organization. — With this Kantianism, I must emphasize, not out of personal silliness, but for objective reasons, the most intense break occurred at the very foundation in my writing “Truth and Science” and in my “Philosophy of Freedom.” These two writings proceed from the assumption that when we form concepts about the world and work them out from the soul, we do not remove ourselves from reality, but that we are born into a physical body so that we can see the world through our eyes, hear things through our ears, and so on. What the senses show us is not the whole reality, but only half of it. I have emphasized this once again in my book The Riddles of Philosophy. Precisely because we are organized in a certain way, the world is only in a certain relationship, as the Orientals say, appearance, Maya. And because we form ideas about the world, we add to them in our thoughts what we have suppressed by entering into the body. Such is the true relationship between truth and science. Real science is the complement of appearance to full reality. And starting from this idea that the world in its first form, as it appears to the senses, seems unreal to us—not through itself—and that we make this form of the world, which is unreal through us, into reality in our subjective work, I may call this thought the Pauline thought in the field of epistemology.
For, transferred to the philosophical realm of knowledge, the idea of Paul's theory of knowledge is nothing other than that man, as he entered the world through the first Adam, has this world before him in a subordinate way, and only through what he becomes through Christ does he experience it in its true form. Christianity can wait in philosophy, in epistemology. But what matters is not that one begins epistemology by placing some formula commonly used in theology at the forefront, but rather the way of thinking. And I may say that in the writings Truth and Science and The Philosophy of Freedom, even though they are entirely developed from philosophy, the Pauline spirit lives on. From this philosophy it is possible to find the bridge to the Christ spirit, just as one can find the bridge to the Father spirit from natural science. But one cannot arrive at the Christ spirit from scientific thinking. Therefore, as long as Kantianism, which is thoroughly a pre-Christian point of view as a philosophy, prevails in any way, philosophy will increasingly obscure Christianity. Only an incorrect, mendacious Christianity can enter into philosophy if Kantianism prevails as its epistemological foundation.
So you see, things need to be approached more deeply, and it would be necessary to consider what is coming to light spiritually today not merely in terms of its literal content, but in terms of the way of thinking, the whole direction. Then one would understand what is fruitful for the future and what needs to be overcome. And then one would find the threads leading to other areas, to areas that are so necessary today if one wants to wake up, to wake up properly. The terrible events of our time should truly remain only symptoms. The great reversal must come from within.
Let me conclude by saying how things stood when, before 1914, one objectively characterized the whole confused way of thinking of Woodrow Wilson. I have drawn attention to what you can find about Wilson in my Helsinki cycle. That was at a time when the rest of the literary world, because Wilson's Nur Literatur (Only Literature) and other works had just been translated, was lying at Woodrow Wilson's feet, and how was Wilson's “great, noble, unbiased” way of thinking emphasized at that time, often by those who now certainly speak quite differently. But what was necessary for this? Was insight necessary, or something quite different from insight, to bring about this reversal? What is necessary, however, is to look more closely at what the humanities should contribute to our understanding of reality as a whole, to our judgments about reality, in contrast to the unreality that prevails today in all areas and in insubstantial abstractions. If you want to enjoy the ideas of the time like someone who, in order to enjoy an orange, first crushes it between two iron posts to extract all the juice and then eats only what is left, then read the squeezed, juiced-out ideas of the time that Georg Simmel wrote about the spiritual content of this war. There you have a prime example of the “spiritual” statements of the present day, which contain nothing, absolutely nothing, but are only squeezed, squeezed-out and empty concepts. If you want to treat yourself to such a prime example of such an abstract, empty writing of the present day, you will find it in the writing “The Spiritual Content of This War” by Georg Simmel. For it was written by the famous philosopher, the innovator of modern thought, who was most popular at the University of Berlin, who never had a real thought, but who has become famous precisely in our time.