Aspects of Human Evolution
GA 176
26 June 1917, Berlin
Lecture IV
In order to relate to our anthroposophical movement certain current thoughts and opinions concerned with some special phenomena, I would like today to add to our considerations some incidental material.
I will begin by speaking about experiments that are being made at the moment; they have a certain interest for us. During our discussions I have often mentioned the natural scientist Moritz Benedikt; his main interests are anthropology and criminology, though his scientific investigations cover a great variety of subjects.1 Moritz Benedikt, 1835-1920, criminologist and anthropologist. Lately he has been intensely occupied with scientific investigations into dowsing, or water divining. The war has caused great interest in this subject. Dowsing consists mainly of the use of a fork-shaped rod, made of certain kinds of wood such as hazel. The rod is held in a special way by the prongs, and when it moves that indicates that there is either something metallic or water in the ground beneath.
Moritz Benedikt is certainly no dreamer, in fact very much the opposite; he is also someone who would emphatically reject anything to do with anthroposophy. Yet he has been completely absorbed in research into dowsing. His interest has been aroused partly because of war operations taking place in certain regions. His aim to set dowsing on a rational footing has led to experiments with certain types of people whom he calls “darkness-adapted.” I will explain in a moment why he attempts' to establish that each human being is asymmetric, a twofold being in the sense that not only does the right side differ from the left, but the two sides are polar opposites. Forces in the left side relate to forces in the right as positive magnetism relates to negative, or positive electricity to negative.
Moritz Benedikt has discovered that when a person holds the divining rod by both prongs the forces in the left side of the body unite with those in the right side. Or, as he expresses it, the forces, by flowing together, form a common stream of emanation. When a person particularly strong in such forces walks over ground beneath which there is water, a change takes place in the forces of both sides of his body. This change is caused by emanations streaming upwards from the water below into the person. It is interesting that Moritz Benedikt, himself a doctor, discovers that particularly susceptible persons can become so strongly influenced that they become ill by simply walking over ground under which there is water or a metal ore. Thus Benedikt found that if certain individuals walked over ground containing particular substances which they either ignored or knew nothing of, they could suffer illnesses such as melancholia, hypochondria or hysteria, illnesses of which doctors no longer know much more than their names. However, when the same individuals held the divining rod, they did not become ill. The rod causes the two streams of forces in the body to unite, and as it dips it diverts the force that would otherwise cause illness in some part of the body. So it is a case of streams of forces being diverted from the body through the rod.
The divining rod is a branch which has been carved into a fork, the way branches fork on a tree, and it is held by the two prongs. But how did Professor Benedikt arrive at his conclusions? He did it with the help of certain individuals whom he calls “darkness-adapted.” He calls them this because when they observe other people in the dark, they see colors. Experiments have established that the colors thus seen on a person's left side are different from those on his right side. Benedikt had the help of two such persons in his experiments. It becomes clear that these colors seen in a dark room, so dark that there is no possibility of ordinary physical sight, are what Benedikt calls emanations. We would call them deep physical aura. In this way it was possible for Professor Benedikt, with the help of “darkness-adapted” persons to prove, not only that human beings are asymmetric; i.e., show different colors on the two sides of their body, but also that the whole color picture changes when the divining rod is held. The experiment can be carried out in a laboratory; all that is needed is a bowl with water or a piece of metal. Thus in a room that is made dark one can prove what causes the effect produced by the rod.
It is interesting to look at some of the passages in Professor Benedikt's latest publication. He says:
There exist, if only in a relatively small number, human beings who are darkness-adapted! A relatively large number of this minority see many objects in darkness as luminous, but without color. A few see objects not only as luminous but colored. Already Reichenbach declared that every human being drags about a huge covering of luminous substance (emanation). Such phenomena, both colored and colorless, have since been strictly tested by me. A great many doctors and other educated people have been observed in my darkroom by two persons who are typically “darkness-adapted,” engineer Josef Pora and civil servant Hedwig Kaindl. According to the result of these tests, there can be no justified reason to doubt the correctness of what is seen and described. The gentlemen who were tested could convince themselves that the two “darkness-adapted” persons saw these unexpected phenomena on the parts of the body whose specific color emanation they described. ... The people who are “darkness-adapted” and see colors will observe on a person's right side blue at the crown of the head down over the forehead and the rest of that half of the body; on the left side red is seen, or by some, for example by engineer Pora, an orange yellow. From the back the same division and the same colors are seen ... I will mention here that an enclosed electrical battery in the darkroom glowed red at the anode and blue at the cathode terminals, thus in colors analogous to those seen on the left and right side of the body. The emanations from the two polar halves of the body were united into a single stream through the rod and combined with the emanation from the substance below the rod; its deflection signified this union.2 Moritz Benedikt, Ruten- und Pendellehre, Vienna and Leipzig, 1917.
All this is very interesting. I must emphasize, so that there can be no misunderstanding, that what we are here concerned with has nothing to do with what I describe in my book Theosophy as the aura.3 Rudolf Steiner, Theosophy: An Introduction to the Supersensible Knowledge of the World and the Destination of Man (Anthroposophic Press, Spring Valley, NY, 1985). What I describe reveals man's higher soul and spirit. What Professor Benedikt discovers in his darkroom is something that exists below the threshold, that is, not above but below the threshold of man's ordinary consciousness. These emanations or radiations are not perceptible to ordinary physical sight. What is interesting for us is the fact that a modern natural scientist finds it acceptable not only to speak about but to investigate scientifically a subconscious aura. It is also interesting that Benedikt himself finds it necessary to indicate that an aptitude for using the divining rod is not an indication of a higher kind of human capability. On the contrary it is seen to be a talent connected with man's lower organization and denied to those who are intellectually developed. It is shown that the ability of certain people to make the rod dip especially strongly is connected with lower soul impulses of a kind not perceptible to the ordinary senses, at least not in the normal way. That is why Professor Benedikt always needs “darkness-adapted” persons for his experiments.
Naturally this phenomenon comes up against opposition, but this is only to be expected; such things always create opposition. Professor Benedikt himself says on page twelve of his booklet:
The simple man instinctively recognizes dowsing as a fact; the academically educated person recognizes the generally held opinion. Thus for the former it is simply traditional knowledge and becomes irrefutable fact the moment he sees and feels the rod dip. The “intellectual” puts blinkers on and refuses to see what does not happen to fit into any compartment of his knowledge.
However, it all depends on what level someone wears his blinkers. Professor Benedikt takes his off when he investigates the aura connected with dowsing, but he puts them on when it comes to those higher realms investigated by anthroposophy. But other things of interest, based on his experiments, are published by Professor Benedikt. He says, for example:
We want to emphasize the significance these experiments have for the theory of color. The Newtonian theory that color effects originate exclusively from light which is reflected or transmitted through the prism is universally accepted without reservation by the guild of physicists, but it was challenged by Goethe. He maintained that the color impressions we receive from naturally colored objects and also from fabrics treated with natural color are due partly to the colored objects themselves. The proofs he offered were not sufficiently convincing to be generally accepted. ... With the help of the pendulum the theory of emanation dramatically confirms and clarifies one of Goethe's views; in this connection it must be stressed that reflected light produces emanations similarly colored.
Thus you see that Benedikt, now that he has embarked on research into this border realm,, comes as far as Goethe's theory of color. When one has been occupied, as I have, for more than three decades with justifying and defending Goethe's theory of color, then one is able to evaluate the extent to which there is a connection between the theory of emanation and Goethe's theory of color, and also whether there is a connection between the boneheaded materialistic theories that dominate modern physics and the rejection of Goethe's theory of color. However, what is interesting is that when someone ventures even slightly into the theory of color, he gets a little further in the direction of the anthroposophical view.
It is significant that when experiments are made with things like dowsing it is found that the simple man instinctively recognizes the phenomenon for a fact, whereas the scholar or academically trained person recognizes only the general opinion. It is significant because no age has been so dominated by opinions as ours, although it is always stressed that common sense should prevail. This is stressed especially in politics. But the fact is that healthy human common sense must today be striven for; it is simply not there. That is the great secret of our time. It must be striven for so that man can regain the connection with the spiritual world which in ancient times he had through atavistic clairvoyance. What he lost can be attained only along the path anthroposophy indicates.
I have mentioned that Professor Benedikt is a somewhat vain person which makes his books rather disagreeable to read, though it does not apply in this particular case. The frontispiece in his book is a photograph of himself, sitting in his darkroom making experiments with the pendulum. In his attempt to discover the interplay of forces between man and world, he arrives at physical auras. That is significant because even such physical experiments in this realm show that the accepted concept of space must be altered, must acquire a new foundation. Through such experiments it is shown, for example, that water is not just contained within the earth. Different emanations flow together when the water diviner walks over ground below which there is water; the rod dips because emanations rise from below and unite with emanations from the human being. In other words, water is not only under the ground; an element rises upwards from it. You may remember my pointing out the great significance of Schelling's famous—or perhaps not famous—saying: “An object exists not only where it is present; rather, it exists wherever its effect is manifest.”4 Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph von Schelling, 1775–1854, see Von der Weltseele, 1798: “It is very true that a body only acts where it is; but it is equally true that it only is where it acts.” To comprehend such things is important. In my book Riddles of Philosophy you will find more about the significance of such concepts.5 Rudolf Steiner, Riddles of Philosophy (Anthroposophic Press, Spring Valley, NY, 1973). They enable one to see things as they truly are, rather than to cling to preconceived notions and opinions.
Though it is naturally not generally acknowledged, individual instances do factually prove that the anthroposophical way of looking at things can guide modern man's thinking in the right direction. When an issue is approached without prejudice, thinking is led towards anthroposophy. The war has drawn attention to dowsing; it has become important to discover just what there is beneath the ground in certain regions especially in regard to water. To find water becomes essential for those who must stay behind in those regions when other sources have become exhausted. Thus investigation into dowsing reveals—especially when account is taken of the lower aspect of man's nature—that he encompasses infinitely more than either modern philosophy or biology have ever dreamed of.
It is a strange fact that although individual instances demonstrate that anthroposophy points in the right direction, it continues to be treated in the peculiar ways I have indicated in recent lectures. Those who have been connected with our movement for a longer period will understand why I am obliged today to speak about a literary phenomenon which can be said to be typical of the ways in which the spiritual stream that is anthroposophy is currently treated.
A book has just been published by a professor at Berlin University, Max Dessoir, a hefty book entitled Behind the Soul.6 Max Dessoir, 1867–1947, philosopher and psychologist. Vom Jenseits der Seele, Stuttgart, 1917. Further references to this book will be indicated in the text. It contains a chapter which, in the typical way I have mentioned, deals extensively with anthroposophy. When I picked up the book, my first thought was that it was going to be very interesting to see how those concerned with modern philosophy would discuss anthroposophy, and especially so as the author is a professor at a university; in fact, I looked forward to reading the book. I expected opposition of course, that cannot be otherwise for reasons I have mentioned. It is not surprising that modern philosophy is still opposed to anthroposophy; that does no harm provided the opposition is not defamatory or malicious. After all it is precisely through dialogue, through exchange of thoughts that something very positive can come about. However, as I studied this seemingly substantial book, I had to say that it was not in the least interesting. Everything he deals with, not only in the lengthy chapter on anthroposophy but elsewhere, shows that the author has not the slightest understanding of what anthroposophy is or the direction in which it points. It is quite extraordinary; he attempts to tell the reader about anthroposophy and does not come up with a single correct statement. His misinterpretations are typical of those usually made.
One's first reaction is to wonder how someone who must claim a degree of intelligence comes to present such a caricature. He must after all have investigated the subject since no decent person, you will agree, writes about something without first looking into it. On closer reading one comes to realize that he simply has no understanding of the subjects he writes about. Everything is unbelievably distorted—in fact, so distorted that anyone who takes such matters seriously is faced with an enigma. One cannot help asking how a person who must generally be regarded as clever (at least up to a point, or he would not be a professor at a university) comes to bungle an issue to such a degree.
However, when one has some experience of philology—and it is not in vain that I have worked with philologists for over six years at the Goethe-Schiller Archives in Weimar—then it is usually possible to put one's finger on the problem. I will start with a concrete example and clear up a particularly gross misunderstanding. Anyone who reads about post-Atlantean history in my books, for example in Occult Science, will know that I divide post-Atlantean time into seven consecutive epochs of which the fifth is the one we live in.7 Rudolf Steiner, Occult Science: An Outline (Rudolf Steiner Press, London, 1984). Further references to this book will be indicated in the text. How often have I mentioned that we live in the fifth epoch of post-Atlantean times, the first epoch being the ancient Indian, the second the ancient Persian and so on. This you all know. Max Dessoir, having discovered these time divisions, writes:
By ancient India is not meant present India, for in general all geological, astronomical and historical designations are to be understood symbolically. The Indian civilization was followed by the ancient Persian which was led by Zarathustra who lived much earlier than the historical personality of that name. Other epochs followed and we live in the sixth (p. 258).
Here you have one of those gross absurdities that occur when people report what I have said. But you will agree that the problem becomes worse when it is brought about by a professor whom one expects to be exact and correct in what he reports. What he writes here is certainly nonsense. If you turn to my Occult Science, you will realize how this inaccuracy came to be written. There it is said that the fifth cultural epoch was gradually prepared within the fourth, and that the fourth, fifth and sixth centuries of the fourth epoch were especially important in this preparation. The passage reads:
In the fourth, fifth and sixth centuries A.D. a new civilization-epoch was preparing in Europe. The actual beginning of it was in the fifteenth century, and we are still living in it now. Intended as it was by slow degrees to replace the fourth, the Graeco-Latin, this is the fifth post-Atlantean epoch. (pp. 218-219)
This passage Professor Dessoir reads with such care that by the fifth line he has forgotten what it is about—or perhaps filed it incorrectly in his card index—and as he looks again he reads the first line: “In the fourth, fifth and sixth centuries” the fifth epoch was being prepared; as he looks once more—as a professor he is very careful—his eye falls on the first line instead of the fifth, and he writes: “We live in the sixth epoch.”
Such is this man's method when he sets out to explain the anthroposophical movement. It shows an unbelievable superficiality which remains undetected because one simply takes for granted that professors are responsible people. Those who read this passage without checking will accept it without question. It is not so terribly important that he says sixth instead of fifth, but it is an instance that provides us with the solution to the problem—an exact philological solution—which shows the man's irresponsibility.
Let us look further in order to find the measure by which to evaluate this publication. Dessoir writes the following:
If contemporary man is to attain a higher consciousness, he must begin by immersing himself, with all his powers, in a mental picture. Best suited for this purpose is a symbolic picture such as a black cross (symbol of the lower desires and passions which have been destroyed) whose intersection is surrounded by seven red roses (symbol of desires and passions which have been purified) ... (p. 255)
Anyone who reads this passage in Max Dessoir must ask if this anthroposophy is quite mad. How is that to arise which is symbolized as purified desires and passions if the black cross symbolizes that desires and passions have been destroyed? If all desires and passions are destroyed then what is there left to transform? So again what he has written is nonsensical. But you see, the passage is supposed to be a quotation. So let us turn to Occult Science. There we read:
Then, having entered right into the experience of the thoughts and feelings, we can re-cast them in the following symbolic picture. Imagine you see before you a black cross. Let this black cross be for you a symbol for the baser elements that have been cast out of man's impulses and passions. (p. 231)
Professor Max Dessoir audaciously alters this passage to “... symbol of lower desires and passions which have been destroyed,” whereas it says: “baser elements that have been cast out of man's impulses and passions.” This shows how carelessly he reads and how inexactly he quotes. In dealing with super-sensible knowledge it is all-important to be as conscientious as possible especially when quoting, yet the learned professor appears to go out of his way to be as slovenly and inaccurate as possible.
Faced, as one is, with a complete caricature of anthroposophy one comes to realize that this man is incapable of giving a proper rendition of it, not for lack of intelligence but for lack of ordinary scientific conscientiousness. One comes to the conclusion that his main characteristic is superficiality. Let us look at another passage where he speaks about how clairvoyance can be attained:
The goal of all philosophy is attained by the soul through such inner work. One must be careful to distinguish body-free consciousness from dreamlike clairvoyance or hypnotic influences. When our soul forces have been strengthened the I can experience itself above consciousness. It is in fact possible already in the perception of color and sound to exclude the body's mediation. (p. 255)
Nowhere do I say that one can exclude the body's mediation when perceiving color and sound, but that does not prevent Professor Max Dessoir from writing that I do. It can hardly be expected that such a man should understand anything; even when he tries, he manages to misunderstand. For example, you will not find anywhere in my writings the expression “cell body.”*Zellenkörper: The usual translation is “protoplasm.” Protoplasm is often defined in biology as the living substance of a cell, or the cell material when considered apart from the cell membrane. “Cell body” is here used to clarify the confusion of terms in German. That is a term that has no meaning in connection with what is said in Occult Science or indeed with anthroposophy in general. Nevertheless, Professor Dessoir says: “When through the submersion the spirit becomes free from the cell body it is still not free of all corporeality.” This is because: “The functions of the astral body are varied. It contains the patterns according to which the ether body gives the cell body its form.” (p. 256)
Nowhere do I speak of “cell body” but rather of physical body. By using such a term, everything I say concerning the physical body becomes meaningless. Thus you see that Dessoir has no understanding of the subject whatever. The following is a typical example:
The recuperation one experiences after sleep can be simpler and more straightforwardly explained without resorting to an astral body. Also, unlike Steiner, we do not need to “explain” the falling asleep of a limb as a separation of the ether body from the physical body. (p. 256)
He puts the word “explain” in quotation marks. But let us turn to <Occult Science where we find:
When, for example, a man subjects an arm or leg to an unusual pressure, a portion of the ether body may become separated from the physical. We say then that the limb has “gone to sleep.” The peculiar sensation it gives is in fact due to the severance of the ether body. (Here too, of course, materialistic thinking can deny the invisible within the visible, maintaining that the effect is merely due to the physical or physiological disturbances induced by the excessive pressure.) (p. 72)
You can see that it is not in the least denied that the physical pressure has an effect and causes the “falling asleep” of the limb. What is said is that the peculiar sensation that accompanies the experience is due to the separation of the ether body.
One wonders if such people are able to read at all. Are they capable of taking in a serious book on a spiritual subject in which every detail has been carefully considered? It is not without significance that people of this kind, capable of treating a serious contemporary work in this manner, fill the professorial chairs at universities. I had hoped to present to you today an example of how one might refute objections of an earnest nature, raised against anthroposophical issues. Instead I am obliged to show you that what we are up against are superficial people who falsify everything. Refuting serious objections would have given me great pleasure.
Dessoir finds, as one might expect, the passages in Occult Science dealing with the Saturn evolution particularly—how shall I put it—“lip-smacking.” It is only natural that he is especially offended by a passage which he presents as follows:
Various kinds of spirits move in Saturn's environment, those of form (Exusiai), of personality (Archai), of fire (Archangeloi) and of love (Seraphim). Through the Angeloi processes of nutrition and excretion develop on Saturn, and through the Cherubim, at a later stage, a dull dreamlike consciousness. The clairvoyant can experience these conditions even today, for they are actually always present to a super-sensible perception which is akin to smell. (p. 258)
So the clairvoyant is supposed to be able to experience by means of super-sensible perception akin to smell! In other words “clairsmellers” smell Saturn,conditions! Now that is something to smack one's lips over, and Dessoir cannot resist saying: “That the ‘odor of sanctity’ and the ‘stench of the devil’ is not brought to bear on this amazes me.” (p. 252)
One wonders if it would be at all possible to have a proper discussion with such a man should the occasion arise. But let us turn to Occult Science where this passage comes from; there it reads: “Inwardly (within Saturn) the dull human will manifests itself to the faculty of super-sensible perception by effects which could be compared to smell.” (p. 125) Thus this passage speaks of effects which can be compared with smell. Dessoir finds it necessary to alter it to: “The clairvoyant experiences these conditions even today through a super-sensible perception which is akin to smell.” (p. 258) In other words he turns a clear statement into nonsense, and then proceeds to criticize his own nonsense. Nor is it said by me that processes of nutrition and excretion begin on Saturn through the Angeloi. What I do say is that by the time the Angeloi appeared, processes of nutrition and excretion took place on Saturn. What is indicated is simultaneity; the Angeloi appear, and processes of nutrition and excretion begin. That these come about through the Angeloi is Dessoir's version.
Later he says: “The Christ or Sun-man taught seven great teachers.” I have not been able to find to what that sentence is supposed to refer. In Occult Science it is clearly stated that the Sun humanity experienced the Christ as the higher “I” (p. 191) which is obviously something quite different than saying “the Christ or Sun-man.” Dessoir presents things at times with great cunning. One gets the impression that his superficiality is deliberate, and he comes close to being slanderous. For example, he remembers that I speak about forces at work in the formation of the brain during early childhood. You will find descriptions of this in certain lectures with which Dessoir is slightly acquainted; these lectures are published under the title The Spiritual Guidance of Man.8 Rudolf Steiner, The Spiritual Guidance of Man (Anthroposophic Press, Spring Valley, NY, 1976), p. 22. I describe that if one later remembers how all the wonderful wisdom which later arises in the brain could have been produced by one's own cleverness, then one comes to see how wisdom works from the unconscious in man during the first three years of childhood. The ingenious Max Dessoir, professor at Berlin University, quotes that as follows:
Particularly a person who has learned wisdom himself—this Rudolf Steiner confesses—will say: When I was a child I worked on myself with forces that entered me from the spiritual world, and what I am now able to give of the best within me must also stem from higher worlds. I cannot regard it as belonging to my ordinary consciousness. (p. 260)
Thus Dessoir gives the reader the impression that I maintain that everything I say is of my own making. Let us turn to The Spiritual Guidance of Man. There we read:
The idea thus gained of the guidance of humanity may be extended in many directions. Let us suppose that a man finds disciples—a few people who follow him. Such a one will soon become aware, through genuine self-knowledge, that the very fact of his finding disciples gives him the feeling that what he has to say does not originate with himself. The case is rather this—that spiritual powers in higher worlds wish to communicate with the disciples, and find in the teacher the fitting instrument for their manifestation.
The thought will suggest itself to such a man: when I was a child I worked on myself by the aid of forces proceeding from the spiritual world, and what I am now able to give, of my best, must also proceed from higher worlds; I may not look upon it as belonging to my ordinary consciousness. (p. 22)
That is the passage quoted by Dessoir. My continuation reads as follows:
Such a man may in fact say: something demonic, something like a “daimon”—using the word in the sense of a good spiritual power—is working out of a spiritual world through me on my disciples. Socrates felt something of this kind. (p. 22)
Thus the whole passage refers to Socrates. Max Dessoir, in bad taste—not to use stronger words—not only distorts completely what is said, but adds the following:
Because a certain individual possesses superior knowledge it is assumed that he is connected through tubes or wires to a spiritual world, thought of in materialistic terms. The objective spirit of which Hegel speaks is transformed into clusters of demons while a muddled religious thinking conjures up all kinds of phantoms. (p. 260)
Dessoir should read the chapter on Hegel in my Riddles of Philosophy, then he would have to recognize that what I say about daimons**Daimon (Greek) = “Deity” refers to Socrates, who used the term.9 Steiner, Riddles of Philosophy, ibid. In the Riddles of Philosophy I emphasize that it could never be used with reference to Hegel. I shall show why in this particular case Professor Dessoir is especially tactless. What he says amounts to slander even if it originates in superficiality mixed with all kinds of antagonistic feelings.
It is truly amazing that such distorted ideas can take hold of the brain of a modern professor. For example, I describe imaginative knowledge, which is experienced pictorially, as the first stage of super-sensible knowledge; just as one gains knowledge of physical things through abstract, shadow-like concepts, so one gains knowledge of facts belonging to higher worlds through imaginative knowledge. What Professor Dessoir makes of this is not very clear. When he reads that knowledge is gained by means of symbols, he thinks that the facts themselves are symbols. That is why he says earlier that: “Ancient India is not the present India, for generally all geological, astronomical and historical designations are to be understood symbolically.” (p. 258)
No one would think it possible for a sensible person to gain the impression from the description in Occult Science that ancient India is to be understood symbolically even though the concept does not coincide with that of modern India. Because he reads that imaginative knowledge, the first stage of higher knowledge, is symbolic he thinks that ancient India, the object of that knowledge, is itself only a symbol. This belief leads him to write, “Steiner has worked out a primordial past of earth evolution which for some reason he calls the Lemurian epoch and places it in a country that was situated between Australia and India. (Thus a concrete place, not a symbol).” (p. 261)
Thus you see that Dessoir presumes that the land of Lemuria is only meant allegorically and blames me as he finds it particularly offensive that I speak of it as real. So here he is not only superficial but stupid, though he regards himself especially clever when he ends by saying:
There are in these descriptions strange contradictions though also apparent logic. There is contradiction in saying that real facts and their mutual connections have evolved out of something merely visualized and symbolic. (p. 263)
So according to Dessoir, when knowledge is pictorial, it can depict only pictures, and he finds it contradictory that it depicts reality. Imagine if a painter found it contradictory that his painting depicted reality and confused the one with the other. In this case his superficiality amounts to stupidity.
This is an example of how the modern world presents anthroposophy. This fat book, written by a university professor, will naturally be widely read and discussed. People will read the chapter on anthroposophy and will of course not realize that what they are reading is a caricature. The announcement appearing in all the periodicals will most likely make them think that the matter has been justly dealt with. Such book announcements are usually composed by people close to the author. This particular one states that
... the book deals with cabbalistic methodology, manifest not just in the actual cabbala, but also in Freudian psychoanalysis, in the unproductive cleverness of certain exponents on Faust, and also in theoretical speculations concerning Shakespeare and Bacon. All these secondary sciences are analyzed, their shallowness revealed. The false doctrines of Guido von List and of Rudolf Steiner are investigated just as thoroughly and relentlessly, thus throwing light on the obscure and questionable theories of faith healers and Theosophists.
So there you have an example of modern scholarship. That is the way officialdom deals with a subject that seeks to serve truth. At times the superficiality of approach by the likes of Max Dessoir reaches hitherto unscaled heights. In his publication you will find this note: “Compare Rudolf Steiner's Occult Science, fifth edition, Leipzig 1913. I have in addition consulted a long list of his other publications.” (p. 254)
I have shown—and my philological training stood me in good stead—that Max Dessoir knows none of my writings except Occult Science, The Spiritual Guidance of Man and “The Occult Significance of Blood.” He has never read Riddles of Philosophy, to mention just one book. The long list of publications, apart from Occult Science, that he mentions consists of the two I have named. He continues: “Steiner's first production, The Philosophy of Freedom (Berlin 1894) is merely a prelude to the actual doctrine” (p. 254). First production! My first book was published in 1883, some eleven years before this so-called first production. That is the kind of thing one is up against.
I shall, of course, write a brochure about this chapter, and also about the rest of Dessoir's book. That must be done because it is a question of putting on record for once the glaring superficiality of a so-called learned publication by demonstrating it. One must formally show that the man is incapable of observing even rudimentary standards of propriety. Nor is it a simple matter of refuting sentence by sentence what is said; before that all the distortions must be demonstrated. Dessoir actually sets the pattern for his whole approach to the subject in his opening remarks. I am aware that of course no one will find anything wrong with those remarks. He says: “Dr. Rudolf Steiner is an altogether strange personality. He comes from Hungary where he was born on the 27th of February 1861, and has arrived in Weimar via Vienna.” (p. 254)
Well, the only time I have spent in Hungary was the first eighteen months of my life. I do not actually “come” from Hungary but from Lower Austria and I descend from an old German family. My father was an official on the Southern Austrian railway, operating between Wiener-Neustadt and Gross-Kanizsa which at that time was part of Cisleithania. He was employed at a station on the Hungarian line, at Kraljevec where I happened to be born and where I lived for eighteen months. In Kürschner10Kürschner is the name of the German publishing house that has been publishing an annually updated encyclopedia of literature, philosophy, and literary history with writers' names, dates of birth, etc. since 1873. This encyclopedia is generally known by the name of its publisher as “Kürschner.” it naturally reads: “born in Hungary,” and that is Dessoir's source of information. I know that people who are always ready to excuse lack of conscientiousness will say: Well, how could the man know otherwise when it is printed in Kürschner. However, a German professor of philosophy should not have such an easygoing attitude. It is true that Kürschner gives the place of birth, but it is well known that someone can be born in one place but originate from quite another. Nowadays that often happens as people are becoming more and more intermingled.
I mentioned that Max Dessoir is acquainted with the lecture “The Occult Significance of Blood.” His quotations from it are quite ingenious. If you look at that lecture, you will find that I proceed with the greatest caution when I explain how things were in earlier times. One of the things I explain is how the blood used to affect man's memory to a much greater extent. I emphasize that these things are difficult to describe; often one can make only approximate comparisons. Needless to say Max Dessoir completely ignores these introductory remarks. If you look up the passages to which he refers in “The Occult Significance of Blood,” you will see with what care and caution everything is described. But Max Dessoir deliberately quotes so as to give the maximum adverse impression. He first remarks: “The astral body is supposed to come to expression partly in the sympathetic nervous system, partly in the spinal cord and brain.” (p. 261) He then quotes this sentence: “The blood absorbs the pictures coming from the external world and made inward through the brain.” He then remarks further: “This colossal disdain for everything factual is combined with the equally unprovable and incomprehensible assertion that prehistoric man remembered, in the pictures received by his blood, not only his own but his ancestors' experiences.” (p. 261)
It is inexcusable to hoax the reader by abbreviating what has been explained with great care in such a way that it is rendered meaningless. This hoax is particularly damaging as it presents things in a defamatory way. Yet what is the good professor quoting? Simply the fact that what is inherited from his forebears through the blood man experienced under earlier and different conditions as memory. This Max Dessoir finds particularly objectionable; yet I would like to draw your attention to one of Dessoir's own assertions which is most interesting. He explains how it comes about that very ancient views still persist, views such as those held by superstitious country folk, by faith healers, or by Guido von List and anthroposophists. This he attempts to explain by saying:
Already from such examples can the conclusion be drawn that primitive thought forms continue to live in occult research. Admittedly this theory of a residue does not in itself provide a conclusive refutation of occultism. The truths grasped in the youth of a people could have become lost from our cultural field, but this is refuted by the facts drawn on for support. And a memory of primitive man's thoughts and views would explain why modern man has difficulty in freeing himself from them. After all, our blood has run through our veins for many centuries. Its pulsebeat is not always regular; it often becomes arhythmical as it once was. (p. 11)
In other words, when Dessoir finds in anthroposophy that our ancestors' blood runs in our veins and constitutes a kind of memory, then that is a matter for ridicule, but when he himself finds the idea useful, then it is acceptable! This is typical of Max Dessoir, Professor at Berlin University.
Those acquainted with my writings on Goethe will know of a strange book which I have always emphatically rejected, Sphinx locuta est by F.A. Louvier.11Ferdinand August Louvier, Sphinx Locuta est. Goethe's “Faust” und die Resultate einer rationellen Methode der Forschung. 2 volumes, Berlin, 1884, p. 122. It is a dreadful book which sets out to explain Goethe's Faust by means of cabbalism. Dessoir speaks first about cabbalism itself; what he says about it would lead us too far as he does not understand it at all. In dealing with modern cabbalism he brings up Louvier's Sphinx locuta est which contains juicy bits for him to get his teeth into. This is what he has to say:
Spiritual forces appear in various places as allegoric figures. The earth spirit—truly the most obscure figure—is the spirit of the whole Faust plane (for earth represents “plane” or “glade”). Gretchen represents naivety, the black poodle negative proof and so on. With this in mind let us look at the scene: ‘At the Gates.’ When Faust symbolizes speculating reason, he resides in the head. Thus the brain represents the city and the dark cavern of the gate represents a mouth from which come audible utterances of the spirits escaping into the open. These are represented by various strollers, but not heard at this point; they are described in detail in the second part as the harbinger's wand. The poem as such is represented by soldiers. The castle (seat of thought) and maidens (feelings) must yield to the poem (soldiers). The trumpets (tones) in the poem are sounded to indicate both joy and destruction ... The middle class girl (Agathe) represents folksong, and the beloved, one of the soldiers, unites with the folksong (Agathe); thus words and song form a pair ... At the side of the folk-song (Agathe) appears a ‘Student’ representing the ballad called curly head, and with them a second student representing the refrain ... Apart from the figures already mentioned there also appear the following audible utterings coming from the gate (mouth): request, command, distortion, chatter, consent, quarrel, question, politics, promise and apology. (p. 222)
Thus Louvier, who sees the whole Kantian philosophy represented in Goethe's Faust, provides Dessoir with plenty to make fun of. Dessoir goes on to ridicule Edwin Bormann and his Shakespeare-Bacon theory,12Edwin Bormann, 1851–1912, Der historische Beweis der Bacon-Shakespeare Theorie, 1897. demonstrating what nonsense they have produced by means of cabbalism. He then cites, in very bad taste, three poems by Stefan George.13Stefan George, 1868–1933, German poet.14Steiner quotes Dessoir's comparison of these poems in order to criticize Dessoir's-method. The complete text, deleted in the text, is included here:
Then he goes on to Stefan George. Here he has the tasteful style of characterizing Stefan George by quoting three of his poems. It is not necessary to go into all of that. It would take an hour to demonstrate Max Dessoir's distortions to you completely; but we will go into one of them, where he compares three poems. It is not necessary to be a fan of these poems, but I want to show you the system Max Dessoir uses. So, please, don't take it as if I were a proponent of Werfel's poems—that is not the point here.
Entrückter, leichter Himmel fiber dem Ort!
Du weißt von der Seebader goldenen Fetzen.
Du weißt von Prinzen
Und herbstlichem Halali.
Ihr Knabenbaume
Zuckt von den Schultern
Das letzte Netz,
Das braune.
Den Schatten werfet auf mich,
Hier sitze ich
Und lese den iibermiitigen
Namen im Stein.
Nun bist du bei meiner Großmutter, Kind,
O unterirdisches Fest,
Das niemand denken will!
As I said, one could hold something against this poem; but Dessoir has the tasteful touch, and compares it with the following poem. This, which I will now read, is the first of the poems:
Der blasse Adelknabe spricht:
Du Dunkelheit, aus der ich stamme?
Ich glaube an alles noch nie Gesagte,
Ich bin auf der Welt zu allein and doch nicht allein genug.
Du siehst, ich will viel!
Wir bauen an dir mit zitternden Handen.
That is the first poem; then comes Werfel's poem, then comes the third. That I will also read now:
Vielleicht, da ich durch schwere Berge gehe—
Du Berg, der blieb, da die Gebirge kamen,
Mach mich zum Wachter deiner Weiten,
Denn, Herr, die großen Stadte sind:
Da leben Menschen, weiß erbliihte, blasse,
O Herr, gib jedem semen eignen Tod!
Herr, wir sind armer denn die armen Tiere,
Mach' Einen Herrlich, Herr, mach' Einen groß
Das letzte Zeichen laß an uns geschehen
The middle poem, that I read to you first, is really Werfel's; but to interpret it Dessoir tastefully takes a volume of Rilke's poems, and does not quote them as written but includes only their first lines as they stand in the table of contents! He makes poems by putting their first lines together, and compares them with Werfel's poem. That is the tasteful way in which he tries to characterize modern verse. He wants to say: Werfel's poem also arises, if one takes the first lines of Rilke's Stundenbuch (Prayer-Book) and writes them consecutively to construct a poem. That is how he does it.
Franz Werfel, 1890–1945, Austrian poet.
Rainer Maria Rilke, 1875–1926, German poet. After that he brings up race-mysticism as expounded by Guido von List.15Guido von List, 1848–1919, Carnuntum, historischer Roman aus dem vierten Jahrhundert nach Christus, 2 volumes, Berlin, 1889. I knew Guido von List when he was still a reasonable person and had written his novel Carnuntum. But our only connection was when he sent me an essay in the early 1880s when I was still publishing Lucifer Gnosis.16Luzifer-Gnosis: a periodical edited by Rudolf Steiner from 1903–1908. Essays which he wrote for the journal may be found in Luzifer-Gnosis, GA 34, Dornach, and in Knowledge of the Higher Worlds and its Attainment (Anthroposophic Press, Spring Valley, NY, 1985). I returned the essay, as it was amateurish and quite unsuitable.
Dessoir goes on to speak about Christian Science. You know how much connection I have had with that! My relation to Christian Science can be summed up in the few words I usually said, when asked about it, after public lectures. Dessoir uses similar words as his own, but you know it is what I have always answered to questions about Christian Science, It is utterly materialistic; furthermore, this so-called Christian Science has no right to call itself Christian. Dessoir says:
For it is clear that the whole teaching is irreconcilable with the spirit of Christianity; a teacher that wants to eradicate all suffering cannot take the Gospels as precedent. Christianity proclaims with awesome solemnity the truth that sin and pain necessarily belong to human nature. These are not illusions of imperfect human reasoning, but facts. Hence the need for God's mercy and the sacrificial death of Jesus. Christian Science is not Christian. (243)
He goes on to describe the theosophical movement as neo-Buddhistic. Well, I could write a book about spiritualism and, based on Dessoir's own descriptions of how he has attended all kinds of spiritualistic meetings, devote a chapter to Max Dessoir, linking him with spiritualism. That would be as justifiable as the way he here links anthroposophy with theosophy, especially in the following tasteless passage:
The occult researcher of this “universal brotherhood” opposes violently the modern or pseudo-theosophists, by whom are meant the anthroposophists rallying round their master Rudolf Steiner. However, their opposition shall not prevent us from looking into this movement as well. (p. 240)
Another thing that must be pointed out is Dessoir's unscrupulous mixing things together so that they become related to issues with which they have nothing to do, as is done throughout a book. For example, you find the following:
There is always a danger that such societies could wield a certain influence especially in our uncertain times. One consolation is that race-mystics, faith healers and theosophists mutually despise and fight one another. (p. 240)
I ask you, my dear friends, have I ever fought anyone unless I was first attacked? What is said here is an example of the untruthfulness that permeates the book. You can test for yourself whether any of those mentioned have been attacked by me. Race-mysticism I have never opposed because I consider it too silly to be worth the effort. I have never said anything about faith healing except what is conveyed by the two passages just mentioned.
Dessoir is certainly a special case. I cannot today go into all the things he maintains to have experienced in various spiritualist sessions. These experiences have enabled Dessoir to write a book which is simply an elaboration of all kinds of sensations. The question is how a person comes to write a book that is really quite mad. Going through the remaining chapters one comes to the sad conclusion that the man, who is supposed to be a specialist writing about his special subject, knows nothing about it. How can a professor of philosophy such as Max Dessoir come to write a passage like the following:
A musically cultivated person will succeed at every moment, during an opera, to grasp as a unity: the text, the music—which itself is highly complex—and the acting, despite the fact that these three components may be quite independent of one another (p. 35).
Someone with any knowledge of what Aristotle, for example, says about the collaboration between the senses in the normal human being could not deliver such verbiage. So it amounts to this, that a university professor, supposedly a specialist in his field, has not read let alone studied even the simpler aspects of his subject. It is truly astounding.
Here among ourselves we can for once discuss these things freely. I shall of course be completely objective in my official refutation. I shall point objectively to the facts and refrain from using the sharp words I have employed today. It must be put to the test whether there are still people who at least become indignant when their attention is forcibly drawn to such a “cultural” publication.
Dessoir brings up another peculiar matter. He speaks about consciousness; there exists, he says, a “borderline,” even a “surface area” of consciousness. To illustrate it he comes up with the following:
Let us resort again to an easily understandable picture: from the centre of the circle [he means the circle of consciousness] “... a complex of ideas slide to the periphery and become engulfed, yet remain partially definite and coherent. To give an example: when I lecture on familiar subjects there can come into that region incidental thoughts and ideas, so that one's attention is drawn to other things. Nevertheless I continue speaking without conscious participation, as it were, in what I am saying. It has happened that I have become surprised by a sudden quiet in the hall, and have to make clear to myself that it is because I have stopped speaking! Thus habitual opinions and trains of thought can be continued “unconsciously” especially when they, as it were, move along not very vividly, while the speech connected with them, likewise continues without difficulty along well practiced paths (p. 34).
Well, I might have known! I am quite sure that not even in this circle have I ever continued speaking without being conscious of doing so, and participating in what I was saying. Dessoir's statement really amounts to an extraordinary self-revelation. One wonders to whom else this condition applies, but that I shall not pursue. He obviously considers it applies to everybody. As he at times gives lectures without participating in what he is saying, one can perhaps assume that he also continues to write page after page without participating in what he is writing—that would indeed explain a few things. But in fact the whole book appears to have been written in a state of semi-consciousness. Perhaps the professor wrote it in a kind of trance and that is the explanation for the insidious superficiality.
When one is committed to establishing a spiritual movement in the modern world, one certainly meets with things that are neither easy to bear nor to deal with. I found it necessary today to draw your attention to two of the ways in which anthroposophy is received. On the one hand I wanted to give a brief description of how someone who takes only a few steps in the right direction moves toward anthroposophy. On the other hand I wanted to show-how anthroposophy is dealt with by those who are officially appointed to represent scientific and philosophical viewpoints and are consequently taken seriously. Well, anthroposophy will struggle through on its own. But let us be clear that in a man like Max Dessoir we are dealing with someone who, apart from being utterly superficial, is also rather ridiculous.
After this digression I hope next time we can proceed and enter more deeply into our present considerations.
Vierter Vortrag
Ich werde heute episodisch unserer fortlaufenden Betrachtung einiges einzufügen haben, hervorgerufen zum Teil durch Zeiterscheinungen und auch durch das Verhältnis unserer anthroposophischen Bewegung zu den Gedanken und Beurteilungsweisen der Zeit.
Zunächst möchte ich über eine Zeitbestrebung sprechen, die von einem gewissen Gesichtspunkte aus für uns ganz interessant sein kann. Ich habe Ihnen öfter gesagt im Verlaufe unserer anthroposophischen Betrachtungen den Namen des Naturforschers — und speziell ist er Kriminalanthropologe - Moritz Benedikt; allein er dehnte das Gebiet seiner naturwissenschaftlichen Betrachtungen auf die verschiedensten Erscheinungen aus. In:der letzten Zeit hat er sich namentlich beschäftigt, intensiv und eingehend beschäftigt mit wissenschaftlichen Versuchen über die sogenannte Rutengängerei. Die Rutengängerei hat ja auch durch die Verhältnisse dieses Krieges eine gewisse Bedeutung gewonnen. Sie wissen, die Rutengängerei beruht im wesentlichen darauf, daß mit einer bestimmt geformten, gabelförmigen Rute aus einem bestimmten Baummaterial, Haselnußstaude zum Beispiel, die in einer bestimmten Weise entweder mit Untergriff oder Obergriff gehalten wird mit ihren beiden Gabelungen, durch das Ausschlagen der Rute gefunden werden kann dasjenige, was sich im Boden befindet, teilweise an Metallschätzen, teilweise aber auch, was sich im Boden befindet namentlich an Quellen, an Wasser und dergleichen. - Nun, Moritz Benedikt, der durchaus kein Phantast ist, weit entfernt ist, Phantast zu sein, der im Gegenteil zu denjenigen gehört, die alles das, was wir Anthroposophie nennen, scharf abweisen würde, er ist ganz und gar in der letzten Zeit mit seinen Forschungen, zum Teil mitveränlaßt durch die kriegerischen Operationen in bestimmten Gegenden, auf dieseRutengängerei ausgegangen. Dabei hat er versucht, der Sache gewissermaßen eine rationelle Grundlage zu geben. Er hat mit Personen, die er «dunkelangepaßte» nennt, experimentiert. Ich werde gleich nachher sagen, warum er festzustellen versucht, daß eigentlich jeder Mensch ein asymmertrisches, ein zweigliedriges Wesen ist, daß also der Mensch links von seiner Symmetrielinie ein anderes Wesen ist als rechts von seiner Symmetrielinie. Diese Verschiedenheit von links und rechts ist eben nicht nur eine Verschiedenheit, sondern sie ist sogar eine Polarität. In gewisser Beziehung sind Kräfte vorhanden in der linken und rechten Körperhälfte, welche so entgegengesetzt wirken, wie positiver und negativer Magnetismus und positive und negative Elektrizität, ähnlich wie positive und negative sich zueinander verhaltende Kräfteimpulse.
Nun fand Moritz Benedikt, daß, wenn der Mensch eine Rute in die Hand nimmt, die beiden Gabeln in die Hand nimmt, dann das Kräftemassiv der linken Seite und das Kräftemassiv der rechten Seite sich vereinigen, wie er sagt: einen gemeinsamen Emanationsstrom bilden, also ineinander übergehen. Wenn nun, sagen wir, ein Mensch, der im besonderen stark durchsetzt ist von solchen Kräften, die dabei eben in Betracht kommen, über eine Bodenfläche geht, unter der im Innern ein Wasser ist, so verändern sich seine Kräfte links und rechts. Das heißt, das Wasser, das seinerseits eine Ausströmung nach oben hat, strömt in die Kräfte des Menschen ein, und dadurch verändert sich sein Kräftemassiv. Interessant ist, daß Moritz Benedikt, der selber Arzt ist, gefunden hat, daß besonders empfängliche Personen einfach, wenn sie über eine Stelle gehen, unter der eine Quelle ist, oder namentlich eine Stelle, unter der eine bestimmte Metallader oder dergleichen ist, bis zum Krankwerden beeinflußt werden können. So daß einfach manche Zustände, von denen Benedikt, der selber Arzt ist, findet, daß die Ärzte nicht viel mehr wissen als den Namen davon, daß gewisse Zustände, wie Melancholie, Hypochondrie, Hysterie, die zusammengeworfen werden, bei gewissen Persönlichkeiten dadurch hervorgerufen werden können, daß eine solche Person über eine Fläche geht, unter der eine entsprechende Quelle ist, aber sie beachtet das nicht, sie weiß das vielleicht nicht. Wenn sie sich aber der Rute bedient, so wird sie nicht krank. Dadurch, daß die Rute die beiden Kraftströme miteinander vereinigt und ausschlägt, wird die Kraft, die sonst zur Erkrankung irgendeines Körperteiles hätte führen können, abgeleitet. So daß man es also im wesentlichen zu tun hat mit einer Ableitung von Strömungen im Organismus durch die in den Händen befindliche Rute. Die Rute ist also ein Zweig, der einen Stock hat und dann sich gabelt, wie sich Äste gabeln; das wird so geschnitten, und an den beiden Gabelstangen hält man ihn.
Nun, auf welche Weise stellt denn der Professor Benedikt das alles fest? Das ist jetzt die Frage. Er stellt es fest mit Hilfe gewisser Personen, die er «dunkel-angepaßt» nennt. Was macht er da? Er hat sich namentlich zweier solcher «dunkel-angepaßter» Personen bedient, die imstande sind, wenn sie in der Dunkelkammer, also im verfinsterten Zimmer sitzen, diejenigen Personen, bei denen die Rute ausschlägt, zu beobachten. «Dunkel-angepaßt» nennt er seine Mitgehilfen, seine Experimentatoren; er nennt sie deshalb so, weil sie, wenn sie im Finstern Menschen beobachten, Farben sehen und dergleichen. Und dieses ImFinstern-Farben-Sehen führt dazu, unterscheiden zu können, daß die Farben, die am Menschen zu sehen sind, links verschieden sind von den Farben, welche rechts zu sehen sind. Da sich nun klärlich ergibt, daß diese Farben, die da in der Dunkelkammer, wo man den gewöhnlichen physischen Anblick nicht hat - so weit wird die Kammer verdunkelt -, die äußere Erscheinung für das ist, was Benedikt Emanation nennt, was wir die tiefste physische Aura nennen würden, so kann Professor Benedikt mit Hilfe solcher Personen, die er «dunkel-angepaßte» nennt, einfach prüfen, wie der Mensch asymmetrisch ist, links andere Farben zeigt als rechts, wie sich das ganze Farbenbild verändert, wenn der Mensch nun die Rute in die Hand nimmt und im Laboratorium ausgesetzt wird. Man braucht nicht irgendeine Quelle zu haben, sondern man kann ein kleines Wasserbassin oder ein Stück Metall haben; das geht geradesogut. Man kann in der Dunkelkammer nachweisen, worauf die Wirkung der Rute beruht. Es ist interessant, einige Stellen der neuesten Publikation von Professor Benedikt sich einmal anzusehen. Er sagt:
«Es gibt, wenn auch eine relativ geringe Anzahl von Menschen, die «dunkel-angepaßt sind. Ein relativ größerer 'Teil dieser Minorität sieht in der Dunkelheit sehr viele Objekte leuchtend, ohne Farben, und nur relativ sehr wenige sehen die Objekte auch gefärbt, Reichenbach hat schon den Ausspruch getan, daß jeder Mensch eine große Hülle leuchtender Substanz (Emanationen) mit sich herumschleppt.
Die farblosen und farbigen Leuchterscheinungen sind seitdem auch von mir vielfach durch kritische Beobachtung erprobt. Eine größere Zahl Gelehrter und Ärzte wurden in meiner Dunkelkammer von meinen zwei klassischen «Dunkel-angepaßten», Herrn Ingenieur Josef Póra und der Beamtin Fräulein Hedwig Kaindl, untersucht, und es konnte den von denselben Untersuchten kein gerechter Zweifel an der Richtigkeit der Beobachtung und Schilderung zurückbleiben. Die Herren haben sich überzeugt, daß die genannten Dunkel-angepaßten die unerwartet Anwesenden sahen, alle Teile des Körpers bezeichneten und ihre Emanationsfarbe bestimmten.
Farbenwahrnehmende Dunkel-angepaßte sehen nur an der Vorderseite die Stirne und den Scheitel blau, die übrige Hälfte ebenfalls blau und die linke rot oder mancher, wie zum Beispiel Herr Ingenieur Pöra, orangegelb. Rückwärts finder dieselbe Teilung und dieselbe Färbung statt.»
«Ich will hier anführen, daß eine geschlossene elektrische Batterie in der Dunkelkammer an der Anode rot, an der Kathode blau leuchtet — also analog der linken und rechten Körperhälfte. Die zwei polaren Körperhälften werden durch die Rute zu einem Emanationsstrom geschlossen. Der Körperrutenstrom tritt in Beziehung zu den emanierenden Substanzen, und der Ausschlag der Rute ist der Ausdruck dieser Beziehung.»
Es ist sehr interessant. Wir haben es hier, das möchte ich ausdrücklich betonen, damit das nicht mißverstanden wird, was ich sage, nicht mit demjenigen zu tun, was in meiner « Theosophie» als Aura beschrieben wird. Bei dieser Aura haben wir es zu tun mit den Offenbarungsweisen des höheren Seelischen und Geistigen, während es der Professor Benedikt in seiner Dunkelkammer zu tun hat mit durchaus unterschwelligen, also unter der Schwelle des Bewußtseins befindlichen, aber für das gewöhnliche sinnliche Anschauen nicht wahrnehmbaren Emanationen, Ausstrahlungen. Interessant muß uns nur sein, daß es dem Naturforscher heute erlaubt ist, durchaus in ganz exakter Weise von einer unterschwelligen Aura zu sprechen und Untersuchungen zu. machen und so weiter. Es ist interessant, daß Benedikt selber angeben muß, daß die Rutenfähigkeit übrigens keine hochstehende menschliche Qualität ist; sie ist mit sonst niederer Organisation möglich, während sie bei intellektuell Fortgeschrittenen versagt. Das weist eben darauf hin auf der einen Seite, daß die Rutenfähigkeit, das heißt die besonders starke Ausschlagfähigkeit der Rute, bei bestimmten Personen mit unterseelischen Impulsen zu tun hat. Aber immerhin, die unterseelischen Impulse sind auch durchaus solche, die nicht mit den gewöhnlichen Sinnen oder wenigstens auf gewöhnliche sinnliche Weise wahrnehmbar sind. Denn Professor Benedikt braucht immerhin, ich möchte sagen, als Versuchsinstrumente «dunkel-angepaßte» Personen.
Natürlich findet die Sache heute noch einige Gegnerschaft; das macht aber nichts, denn alle diese Dinge finden Gegnerschaften, und Professor Benedikt sagt selber, gleich auf Seite zwölf seines Büchelchens:
«Der schlichte Mann erkennt instinktmäßig die Souveränität der Tatsachen an; der akademisch Verbildete die Souveränität der Meinungen. Der Bauer kennt die Tatsache von Kindheit an durch Tradition, und sie wird für ihn zum unumstößlichen Ereignisse, sobald er den ersten Rutenausschlag gesehen und gefühlt hat. Der «Intellektuelle legt Scheuklappen gegen die Wahrheit an, wenn er Tatsachen nicht in die Kammer seiner Weisheit einreihen kann.»
Es kommt ja in der Regel darauf an, bei welcher Grenze der Betreffende seine Scheuklappen anlegt. Nicht wahr, Professor Benedikt legt sie da ab, wo es sich darum handelt, diejenige Aura zu studieren, welche die Rutenfähigkeit nach sich zieht; allein er legt die Scheuklappen sogleich wieder an, wenn es sich um höhere anthroposophische Gebiete handelt. Aber das tut nichts. Wir brauchen nicht Gleiches mit Gleichem zu bezahlen, sondern wir müssen von einer solchen Sache immerhin Kenntnis nehmen.
Interessant ist zum Beispiel auch dieses, was Professor Benedikt mit Hilfe dieser seiner Experimente herausgebracht hat:
«Wir wollen hier gleich die große Bedeutung dieser Versuche für die Farbenlehre hervorheben. Die Newton’sche Lehre, daß die FarbenEffekte ausschließlich von dem reflektierten, respektive durchgehenden prismatischen Farbenlicht herrühren, die auch von den zünftigen Physikern allgemein ohne Reserve akzeptiert ist, wurde von Goethe bestritten. Dieser behauptet, daß von natürlich gefärbten Objekten und mit natürlichen Farben behandelten Stoffen ein Teil des Farbeneindruckes sozusagen autonom von diesen gefärbten Objekten herrühre. Die Beweise Goethes hatten keinen äußeren Erfolg und waren halb und halb indirekte.
Ungemein drastisch gibt hier die Emanationslehre mit Hilfe des Pendels eine die Ansicht Goethes bestätigende Aufklärung, wobei betont werden muß, daß das reflektierte Licht die gleichgefärbte Emanation mit sich fortreißt.»
Sie sehen daraus, daß auf halbem Wege auch Benedikt, da er nun einmal auf diesen Grenzgebieten Versuche macht, sogar zur Goetheschen Farbenlehre kommen muß. Wenn man sich selbst, wie ich, seit mehr als drei Jahrzehnten mit der Verteidigung der Goetheschen Farbenlehre befaßt, so kann man ermessen, ob ein Zusammenhang besteht zwischen der Emanationslehre und der Goetheschen Farbenlehre, und ob auf der anderen Seite ein Zusammenhang besteht zwischen all der stumpfsinnigen, materialistischen Theoretisierung, die die heutige Physik beherrscht, und wiederum der Ablehnung der Goetheschen Farbenlehre. Interessant ist: Sogleich, wenn einer nur ein wenig die Farbenlehre durchdringt, kommt er ein Stückchen weiter, aber der Weg geht immer in der Richtung, in welcher die anthroposophische Betrachtungsweise gehen muß.
In unserer Zeit ist es sehr wichtig, daß sich ein Mann, der sich nun experimentell mit diesen Dingen befaßt, gestehen muß: Der schlichte Mann erkennt instinktmäßig die Souveränität der Tatsachen an. Der Gelehrte oder akademisch Verbildete, wie Benedikt sagt, erkennt nur die Souveränität der Meinungen an. Das ist sehr wichtig. Denn keine Zeit ist noch so sehr unter dem Einfluß der Meinungen gestanden als diese unsere Zeit, obwohl unsere Zeit immer wieder betont: Auf den gesunden Menschenverstand kommt es an! — Insbesondere in der Politik wird das immer betont. Aber dieser gesunde Menschenverstand, der muß heute erst unter Mühe erworben werden, der ist heute nämlich nicht da — das ist das große Geheimnis —, der muß erst wiederum erworben werden dadurch, daß man dasjenige, was frühere Zeiten atavistisch noch hatten, den Zusammenhang mit der geistigen Welt, was heute nicht atavistisch da ist, nun erst auf den Wegen, welche die Anthroposophie angibt, gewinnt. Das ist sehr wichtig. Man könnte sagen: So sitzt nun Benedikt, der ja ein bißchen eitel ist — nicht wahr, ich habe das ja schon früher erwähnt, daß daher seine Bücher nicht angenehm zu lesen sind, aber das gilt nicht für dieses Buch -, er sitzt in seiner Dunkelkammer und macht Pendelversuche. Er hat sich sogar so photographieren lassen; das Bild ist am Anfang des Buches. Er beschreibt eigentlich die physischen Auren, um dahinterzukommen, was da eigentlich für Wechselkräfte spielen zwischen dem Menschen und der übrigen Welt. Natürlich hat das eine außerordentlich große Bedeutung. Es hat deshalb eine große Bedeutung, weil dadurch schon durch physische Forschung der Raumbegriff, ich möchte sagen, auf eine neue Basis gestellt wird. Wasser, wo ist es? Nun, da drinnen in der Erde, nicht wahr. Nun geht der Rutengänger darüber, die Rute schlägt aus. Eine Emanation geht nach oben, die sich mit der menschlichen Emanation vereinigt. Ausströmungen kommen ineinander. Das Wasser ist also nicht nur da unten, sondern es hat etwas in sich, was bis nach oben geht. Erinnern Sie sich, welchen großen Wert ich einmal darauf gelegt habe, als ich den berühmten — oder nicht berühmten -, den bedeutenden Schellingschen Ausspruch zitierte: «Ein Ding wirkt nicht nur da, wo es ist, sondern es ist, wo es wirkt.» Auf die Auffassung solcher Dinge kommt es an. Sie können das in meinem Buche über die «Rätsel der Philosophie» nachlesen, welche Bedeutung einer solchen Anschauung, einem solchen Begriff, einer solchen Vorstellung zukommt, wenn man auf Wirklichkeit sehen will, und nicht auf vorgefaßte und an Worten klebende Meinungen.
So, möchte ich sagen, kann man bis in die Einzelheiten hinein zeigen, wie gewissermaßen das Anthroposophische am Steuer sitzt und richtig die gegenwärtige Zeit-Denkweise lenkt. Man kann es im einzelnen tatsächlich nachweisen, nur daß natürlich die einzelnen Menschen nicht nachkommen. Aber wo sie versuchen, einmal nur eine Einzelheit vorurteilslos anzugreifen, da geht es in dieser Richtung. Der Krieg hat diese Untersuchungen über Rutengängerei besonders dadurch an die Oberfläche gebracht, weil man in gewissen Territorien zu wissen brauchte, was da unten eigentlich ist, namentlich wenn es sich um Wasser handelte, das man dann da verwenden muß für diejenigen, die in den Gegenden sich aufzuhalten haben, wenn man Quellen auszunützen hat. Sie sehen daraus, daß tatsächlich im Menschen, schon rein wenn man auf die allerniedrigsten Dinge sieht, viel mehr vorhanden ist, als die heutige Philosophie oder Biologie sich irgendwie träumen läßt.
Es ist nun sehr merkwürdig, und es ist schon notwendig - diejenigen, die sich länger für unsere Sache interessieren, begreifen, daß es notwendig ist —, daß, trotzdem im einzelnen nachgewiesen werden kann, wie Anthroposophie in der richtigen Weise steuert, diese Anthroposophie in einer Weise behandelt wird, wie ich es ja schon in den letzten hier angestellten Betrachtungen angeführt habe. Aber ich muß heute über eine literarische Erscheinung sprechen, die zu den charakteristischsten, ich möchte sagen, der Gegenwart in bezug auf die anthroposophische Geistesströmung gehört, charakteristisch aus den Gründen, die Sie aus den Besprechungen selber ersehen werden.
Ein Buch, «Vom Jenseits der Seele», ein dickes Buch, ist erschienen von dem Berliner Universitätsprofessor Max Dessoir. In diesem Buche findet sich ein ausführliches Kapitel über Anthroposophie. Dieses ausführliche Kapitel über Anthroposophie, das ist nun im höchsten Grade charakteristisch. Man könnte den Gedanken haben, den ich gehabt habe, als ich das Buch zuerst in die Hand genommen, es ist ja eben erschienen, ich dachte mir: Es ist einmal interessant zu hören, wie die offizielle Philosophie, die sich zur Universitätsphilosophie rechnende Philosophie — und die ja auch als solche gerechnet wird, weil der Betreffende ja hier Professor an der Universität ist —, sich über Anthroposophie ausspricht. Und ich dachte, das würde interessant sein. Gewiß, Gegnerschaften müssen sich ja heute ergeben aus den verschiedensten Gründen heraus, die ich schon angeführt habe. Daß die heutige Philosophie noch gegnerisch zur Anthroposophie ist, das ist nicht weiter verwunderlich, und es schadet auch nichts, wenn die Gegnerschaft nicht verleumderisch, nicht gehässig ist. Gerade durch die dialektische Wechselrede könnte ja etwas außerordentlich Günstiges bewirkt werden. Aber, sehen Sie, als ich das ziemlich dicke Buch nun studierte, konnte ich mir sagen: die Sache ist gar nicht interessant. Das Buch ist ganz und gar nicht interessant, und zwar aus dem einfachen Grunde, weil dieses gar nicht ganz kurze Kapitel über Anthroposophie in dem dicken Buche und verschiedenes andere, das Dessoir noch vorbringt, in der charakteristischesten Weise zeigt, daß er auch nicht das allergeringste Verständnis für die anthroposophische Geistesrichtung hat, indem er gewissermaßen keinen einzigen Satz zustande bringt — er versucht darzustellen, was Anthroposophie will -, der nun wirklich richtig wäre. Das ist sehr merkwürdig. Aber die Unrichtigkeiten sind außerordentlich charakteristisch.
Wenn man so oberflächlich die Sache liest, so sagt man sich: Wie kommt denn ein Mensch, der doch eigentlich Anspruch macht auf Gescheitheit, dazu, solche Karikaturen von einer Sache zu entwerfen, nachdem er sich damit beschäftigt - denn wenn man ein anständiger Mensch ist, darf man ja nicht über eine Sache schreiben, wenn man sich nicht damit beschäftigt hat, nicht wahr? Nun, liest man aber das, was er darstellt, so hat man den Eindruck: ja, der Mann versteht gar nichts von der Sache, er stellt alles in der unglaublichsten Weise verkehrt dar! So verkehrt, daß diese Verkehrtheit eigentlich für denjenigen, der solche Sachen ernst nimmt, zum Problem werden kann. Man fragt sich: Wie kommt ein Mensch, der ja schon dadurch, daß er Universitätsprofessor ist, im allgemeinen Anspruch darauf hat, für einen gescheiten Menschen gehalten zu werden — wenigstens relativ —, wie kommt er dazu, in solcher Weise überall danebenzuhauen? Das wird wirklich zunächst zum Problem.
Nun, wenn man einige philologische Erfahrung hat — und ich habe ja nicht umsonst sechseinhalb Jahre im Weimarer Goethe-SchillerArchiv mit Philologen zusammen gearbeitet —, so gelingt es einem manchmal ganz exakt, genau solche Probleme zu lösen. Und ich will gleich ausgehen, damit wir nicht von einem Unbestimmten sprechen, von der Lösung eines ganz besonders knüppeldicken Mißverständnisses. Sie wissen ja alle, daß jemand, der meine Bücher gelesen hat, wenn er überhaupt im Verlauf dieser Bücher darauf gekommen ist, in der «Geheimwissenschaft» steht ja das, die Geschichte der nachatlantischen Zeit ins Auge zu fassen, daß er dann keinen Augenblick daran zweifeln kann: ich teile die nachatlantische Zeit in sieben aufeinanderfolgende Zeiträume ein und rechne die Zeit, in der wir jetzt leben, als fünften nachatlantischen Zeitraum, als die fünfte Periode im nachatlantischen Zeitraum. Wie oft sage ich: Wir stehen in der fünften Periode des nachatlantischen Zeitraumes. Die erste ist die urindische, die zweite die urpersische und so weiter. Sie kennen ja das. Max Dessoir, der schreibt — nachdem er darauf gekommen ist, daß es etwas gibt wie eine solche Zeiteinteilung:
«Alt-Indien ist nicht das jetzige Indien, wie denn überhaupt alle geographischen, astronomischen, historischen Bezeichnungen sinnbildlich zu verstehen sind. Auf die indische Kultur folgte die urpersische, geführt von Zarathustra, der aber viel früher lebte als die in der Geschichte diesen Namen tragende Persönlichkeit. Andere Zeitabschnitte schlossen sich an. Wir stehen in der sechsten Periode.» [S. 258 f.]
Hier haben Sie solch einen knüppeldicken Unsinn, wo irgend jemand referiert über dasjenige, was ich gesagt habe. Das wird für einen zum Problem, nicht wahr, denn, sehen Sie, ein Professor ist genau. Ein Professor ist genau, aber er schreibt Unsinn in diesem Falle. Das wird zum Problem. Schlagen Sie auf Seite 294 in meiner «Geheimwissenschaft» nach. Da finden Sie die Lösung dieses Problems. Da wird nämlich gesagt, daß sich allmählich im vierten das fünfte Kulturzeitalter vorbereitete, und daß besonders wichtig sind das vierte, fünfte und sechste Jahrhundert dieses vierten Zeitraumes zur Vorbereitung des fünften. Da heißt es:
«Im vierten, fünften und sechsten Jahrhundert nach Christus bereitete sich in Europa ein Kulturzeitalter vor, das mit dem fünfzehnten Jahrhundert begann und in welchem die Gegenwart noch lebt. Es sollte das vierte, das griechisch-lateinische allmählich ablösen. Es ist das fünfte nachatlantische Kulturzeitalter.»
Das hat der Mann gelesen. Aber er liest so genau, daß er bei der fünften Zeile schon vergessen hat, um was es sich handelt — oder er hat es sich nicht genau in seinen Zettelkatalog eingeschrieben —, und wie er wieder nachgeschaut hat, hat er auf die erste Zeile gesehen, «im vierten, fünften und sechsten Jahrhundert», da ist die fünfte nachatlantische Periode angebrochen; und weil er da hinaufschaute, er ist als Professor genau, er schaut noch einmal nach, aber er sieht auf die erste Zeile statt auf die sechste, er sieht: im vierten, fünften und sechsten Jahrhundert, und schreibt hin: Wir sind in der sechsten Periode, während in den Zeilen danach steht: «Es ist das fünfte nachatlantische Kulturzeitalter.»
Das ist die Methode des Mannes, der sich nun vermißt, über eine solche Erscheinung, wie die anthroposophische Bewegung ist, zu schreiben. Man kann sagen: Es ist eine unglaubliche Oberflächlichkeit, die nur damit gedeckt ist, daß es ja gilt: Professoren sind genau. Also wenn jemand das liest, ohne sich in meinen Büchern umzusehen, so gilt das als bedenklich. Es ist nicht besonders wichtig, ob es die fünfte oder sechste Periode ist, aber das Problem löst sich da, das uns sagt: Dieser Mann ist ein gewissenloser Oberflächling! Das ist mit philologischer Genauigkeit an dieser Stelle gelöst.
Nun sehen wir uns weiter um, um zunächst den Maßstab zu gewinnen, mit dem man diese Ausführungen zu messen hat. Da schreibt Dessoir auf Seite 255 folgenden Satz:
«Die Schulung zur höheren Bewußtseinsverfassung beginnt — wenigstens für den Menschen der Gegenwart — damit, daß man mit aller Kraft sich in eine Vorstellung als in einen rein seelischen Tatbestand versenkt. Am besten eignet sich eine sinnbildliche Vorstellung, etwa die eines schwarzen Kreuzes (Symbol für vernichtete niedere Triebe und Leidenschaften), dessen Schneidestelle von sieben roten Rosen umgeben ist (Symbol für geläuterte Triebe und Leidenschaften).»
Nun frage ich mich, wenn ich das lese bei Max Dessoir: Ist denn diese Anthroposophie ganz verrückt? Was soll denn als Symbol für geläuterte Triebe und Leidenschaften noch bleiben, wenn das schwarze Kreuz das Symbol für «vernichtete» Triebe und Leidenschaften ist? Wenn die Triebe und Leidenschaften, die niedrig sind, zunächst alle vernichtet werden, was soll denn in der Verwandlung noch auftreten? Also da steht ein Unsinn! Aber es ist ein Zitat, sehen Sie. Nun schlagen wir auf Seite 311 lieber nach! Da heißt es:
«Nachdem man sich in solchen Gedanken und Gefühlen ergangen hat, verwandle man sich dieselben in folgende sinnbildliche Vorstellung. Man stelle sich ein schwarzes Kreuz vor. Dieses sei Sinnbild für das vernichtete Niedere der Triebe und Leidenschaften .. .»
Das verwandelt der Professor Max Dessoir kühn in ein «Symbol für vernichtete niedere Triebe und Leidenschaften», während hier steht: «das vernichtete Niedere der Triebe und Leidenschaften». So genau liest der Mensch, und so genau zitiert der Mensch; während es in der Geisteswissenschaft gerade darauf ankommt, daß man sich gewissenhaft die Mühe gibt, genau zu stilisieren — Max Seiling nennt das schlechte deutsche Sprache. Während es in der Geisteswissenschaft darauf ankommt, genau zu zitieren, findet der exakte Herr Professor es notwendig, die Sache in der schlampigsten Weise, ich finde kein anderes Wort, zu veroberflächlichen.
Nun frage ich mich: Solch ein Mann stellt also Anthroposophie dar; er stellt sie so dar, daß alles, alles als Karikatur erscheint. Man kommt darauf: er ist nicht imstande, das wiederzugeben. Aber da fehlt es nun nicht an Verstand, sondern es fehlt überhaupt an der ganz gewöhnlichen wissenschaftlichen Gewissenhaftigkeit. Gewissenlosigkeit waltet! Nehmen wir eine andere Stelle, wo er davon spricht, wie der Mensch zur Hellsichtigkeit kommen kann:
«Durch solche Innenarbeit erreicht die Seele das, was von aller Philosophie erstrebt wird. Freilich muß das leibfreie Bewußtsein vor der Verwechselung mit traumhaftem Hellsehen und hypnotischen Vorgängen behütet werden. Wenn unsere Seelenkräfte gesteigert sind, kann das Ich sich oberhalb des Bewußtseins erleben, gleichsam in einer Verdichtung und Verselbständigung des Geistigen, ja, es kann schon bei der Wahrnehmung von Farben und Tönen die Vermittelung des Leibes aus dem Erlebnis ausschließen.» [S. 255.]
Das steht nirgends, daß der Mensch schon bei der gewöhnlichen Farben- und Tonwahrnehmung den Leib ausschließen kann. Aber Professor Max Dessoir schreibt es hin. Von einem solchen Menschen kann man nun nicht hoffen, daß er irgend etwas verstehen kann, denn er hat ja das gar nicht einmal, was er verstehen will; er hat ja etwas ganz anderes! Suchen Sie zum Beispiel bei mir den Ausdruck Zellenkörper! In dem Zusammenhange der «Geheimwissenschaft» und so weiter hat der Ausdruck Zellenkörper keine Bedeutung. Ja, aber was tut Professor Dessoir? Er sagt:
«Wenn die Versenkung den Geist vom Zellenleib befreit, so löst sie ihn doch nicht von jeder Art Körperlichkeit.» [S. 256.]
Denn: «... Die Leistungen des Astralleibes sind mannigfach. Er enthält die Vorbilder, nach denen der Ätherleib dem Zellenkörper seine Gestalt gibt.» [S. 256 £.]
Nichts steht bei mir von Zellenkörper, sondern vom physischen Leib. Sobald man Zellenkörper sagt, hat das alles keinen Sinn, was bei mir vom physischen Leib gesagt wird. Also Sie sehen, er versteht gar nichts. Ein niedliches Beispiel ist noch das Folgende:
«Es braucht wohl nicht erst nachgewiesen zu werden, daß die Erholung nach dem Schlafe sich anders, und zwar einfacher und zutreffender als mit Hilfe des Astralleibes erklären läßt. Ebensowenig werden wir mit Steiner das «Einschlafen> eines Beines durch Abtrennung des Ätherleibes vom physischen Leibe «erklären» wollen.» [S. 257.]
Erklären setzt er in Anführungszeichen. Nehmen Sie sich die Stelle auf Seite 96:
«Wenn der Mensch zum Beispiel eines seiner Glieder belastet, so kann ein Teil des Ätherleibes aus dem physischen sich abtrennen. Von einem Gliede, bei dem dies der Fall ist, sagt man, es sei eingeschlafen. Und das eigentümliche Gefühl, das man dann empfindet, rührt von dem Abtrennen des Ätherleibes her.»
Weiter heißt es: «Natürlich kann eine materialistische Vorstellungsart auch hier wieder das Unsichtbare in dem Sichtbaren leugnen und sagen: Das alles rühre nur von der durch den Druck bewirkten physischen Störung her.»
Also das wird nicht abgestritten, daß der Druck eine physische Störung bewirkt hat; das wird durchaus zugegeben, und daraus das Einschlafen erklärt. Aber etwas anderes als das Einschlafen ist das, was ich hier sage: Das eigentümliche Gefühl, das man dann empfindet, rührt von dem Abtrennen des Ätherleibes her.
Also das Gefühl, das man beim Einschlafen eines Gliedes hat, rührt vom Abtrennen des Ätherleibes her.
«Ebensowenig werden wir mit Steiner das «Einschlafen» eines Beines durch Abtrennung des Ätherleibes vom physischen Leibe «erklären» wollen.» [S. 257.]
Das Abtrennen habe ich nicht erklären wollen, sondern das eigentümliche Gefühl, das auftritt. Man fragt sich: können solche Menschen überhaupt noch lesen? Sind sie imstande, ein ernsthaft geistiges Buch zu lesen, das auf alle seine Objekte acht gibt? Aber mit solchen Leuten werden die Lehrkanzeln der Universitäten besetzt! — das ist ein Nachsatz, der doch eine gewisse Bedeutung hat -, mit Leuten, die imstande sind, in dieser Weise mit Zeiterscheinungen umzugehen. Ich habe eigentlich gedacht, Ihnen heute eine Auseinandersetzung geben zu können über die Art, wie man ernsthafte Einwände zurückweist, und ich bin gezwungen, Ihnen zu zeigen, daß man es mit einem Oberflächling zu tun hat, der in dieser Weise alles fälscht. Ich hätte mich gefreut auf eine andersartige Widerlegung!
Natürlich ganz besonders findet sich Dessoir nun, wie soll man sagen, zum selbstbefriedigten Fingerablecken bereit da, wo über die Saturnverhältnisse gesprochen wird. Da findet er natürlich ganz besonders anstößig dasjenige, was er in der folgenden Weise darstellt:
«Im Umkreis des Saturn bewegten sich Geister verschiedener Art, so die der Form (Exusiai), der Persönlichkeit (Archai), des Feuers (Archangeloi), der Liebe (Seraphim). Später entwickelten sich durch die Angeloi Nahrungs- und Ausscheidungsprozesse auf dem Saturn, durch die Cherubim dumpfe, traumhafte Bewußtseinszustände; von diesen . Zuständen erfährt der Hellsichtige noch heute durch eine dem Riechen ähnliche übersinnliche Wahrnehmung, denn die Zustände sind eigentlich immer da.» [S. 258.]
Also der Hellsichtige erfährt durch eine dem Riechen ähnliche übersinnliche Wahrnehmung! Das ist natürlich so, daß man sich selbstgefällig die Finger ablecken kann, nicht wahr — der Hellriechende riecht die Saturnzustände! Dessoir kann sich sogar nicht enthalten, da zu sagen:
«Mich wundert, daß hiermit der «Geruch der Heiligkeit» und der
Man würde nun diskutieren mit einem solchen Manne, wenn er einen in die Lage versetzte. Aber schlagen Sie wiederum auf, Seite 168 [der «Geheimwissenschaft»], woher er diese Stelle hat:
«Nach innen (im Saturn) gibt sich dieser dumpfe Menschenwille dem hellseherischen Wahrnehmungsvermögen durch Wirkungen kund, welche sich mit den «Gerüchen> vergleichen lassen.»
Das ist da gesagt. Also durch Wirkungen, welche sich mit dem Geruch vergleichen lassen. Herr Dessoir findet sich genötigt zu sagen: «Von diesen Zuständen erfährt der Hellsichtige noch heute durch eine dem Riechen ähnliche übersinnliche Wahrnehmung.» [S. 258.]
Das heißt, er übersetzt das, was klar dargestellt ist, in ein Blech und kritisiert dann sein eigenes Blech. Ebensowenig wie bei mir jemals gesagt ist, daß durch die Angeloi Nahrungs- und Ausscheidungsprozesse auf dem Saturn entstehen; sondern gesagt ist an jener Stelle: In der Zeit, in welcher die Angeloi erscheinen, geschehen auf dem Saturn Nahrungs- und Ausscheidungsprozesse. Da ist Gleichzeitigkeit angegeben. Angeloi treten auf, und die Nahrungs- und Ausscheidungsprozesse entstehen. Das durch die Angeloi macht Dessoir selber dazu.
Sie sehen, was soll man überhaupt anfangen mit einem Menschen, der in dieser Weise sich über eine solche Erscheinung hermacht.
«Der Christus oder Sonnenmensch erzog sieben große Lehrer.» [S.258.]
Ich habe bis jetzt nicht einmal einen Anhaltspunkt gefunden, um diese Bezeichnung zu rechtfertigen: der Christus oder Sonnenmensch, denn auf Seite 242 ist ausdrücklich gesagt, daß die Sonnenmenschen den Christus als das höhere Ich empfinden — was natürlich etwas ganz anderes ist, als wenn man sagt: der Christus oder Sonnenmensch.
Nun, sehen Sie, diese Dinge werden aber auch zuweilen zur Raffiniertheit. Da geht dann die Oberflächlichkeit hart an die Grenze dessen, was dem Leser einen Eindruck machen muß, der, wenn er beabsichtigt war, ein verleumderischer genannt werden müßte. So erinnert Dessoir an die Stelle, wo ich davon spreche, daß im kindlichen Lebensalter Kräfte an der Zubereitung des Gehirns arbeiten; Sie brauchen sich nur zu erinnern an meine Schrift «Die geistige Führung des Menschen und der Menschheit», die der Professor Dessoir sich angeschaut hat. Ich habe dargestellt: Wenn man sich später erinnert, wie man das alles hätte durch eigene Klugheit machen können, was am Gehirn später als Wunderbares erscheint, so kommt man darauf, wie aus dem Unbewußten heraus die Weisheit gleich in den ersten drei Kindheitsjahren an dem Menschen arbeitet. So zitiert Herr Dessoir — pardon, Professor an der Berliner Universität Max Dessoir:
«Besonders ein Mensch, der selber Weisheit lehrt - das bekennt Herr Rudolf Steiner —, wird sich sagen: Als ich Kind war, habe ich an mir durch Kräfte gearbeitet, die aus der geistigen Welt hereinwirkten, und das, was ich jetzt als mein Bestes geben kann, muß auch aus höheren Welten hereinwirken; ich darf es nicht als meinem gewöhnlichen Bewußtsein angehörig betrachten.» [S. 260.]
Also Max Dessoir macht seine Leser glauben, daß ich behauptet hätte von mir selber das alles, was hier gesagt ist. Schlagen wir auf «Die geistige Führung des Menschen und der Menschheit», wo er das her hat. Seite 30, da steht:
«Der so gewonnene Begriff der Menschenführerschaft kann nun in mancher Hinsicht erweitert werden. Man nehme an, ein Mensch habe Schüler gefunden, einige Leute, die sich zu ihm bekennen. Ein solcher wird durch echte Selbsterkenntnis leicht gewahr werden, daß ihm gerade die Tatsache, daß er Bekenner gefunden hat, das Gefühl gibt: was er zu sagen habe, rühre nicht von ihm her. Es sei vielmehr so, daß sich geistige Kräfte aus höheren Welten den Bekennern mitteilen wollen, und diese finden in dem Lehrer das geeignete Werkzeug, um sich zu offenbaren.
Einem solchen Menschen wird der Gedanke nahetreten», und jetzt kommt die Stelle, die Dessoir zitiert:
«Als ich Kind war, habe ich an mir durch Kräfte gearbeitet, die aus der geistigen Welt hereinwirkten, und das, was ich jetzt als mein Bestes geben kann, muß auch aus höheren Welten hereinwirken: ich darf es nicht als meinem gewöhnlichen Bewußtsein angehörig betrachten.» [S. 260.]
Bis hierher zitiert Dessoir. Und nun heißt es bei mir weiter:
«Ja, ein solcher Mensch darf sagen: etwas Dämonisches, etwas wie ein Dämon — aber das Wort «Dämon» im Sinne einer guten geistigen Macht genommen - wirkt aus einer geistigen Welt durch mich auf die Bekenner. - So etwas empfand Sokrates.» [S. 30.]
Also die ganze Stelle bezieht sich auf Sokrates. Max Dessoir hat die Geschmacklosigkeit — möchte ich bloß sagen, um kein stärkeres Wort hier zu gebrauchen -, diese Stelle in dieser Weise zu verdrehen und dann noch dazu zu sagen:
«Die Tatsache also, daß der einzelne ein Träger überindividueller Wahrheiten ist, vergrößert sich hier zu der Vorstellung, daß eine dinglich gedachte Geisteswelt gleichsam durch Röhren oder Drähte mit dem Individuum verbunden sei; Hegels objektiver Geist verwandelt sich in eine Gruppe von Dämonen und alle Schattengestalten eines ungeläuterten religiösen Denkens treten wieder auf.» [S. 260.]
Nun soll man das Kapitel, das ich in meinen «Rätseln der Philosophie» über Hegel geschrieben habe, lesen, und dann sich klarmachen: daß ich hier davon spreche, von Dämonen, das bezieht sich auf Sokrates, der selber das Wort «Dämonion» gebraucht hat. Von Hegel sagte ich selber in den «Rätseln der Philosophie» ausdrücklich in sehr deutlicher Weise, daß man das nicht brauchen kann. Aber ich werde Ihnen nachher zeigen, warum in diesem besonderen Fall der Professor Dessoir, sagen wir, so geschmackvoll sein kann. Solche Oberflächlichkeit, die steigert sich tatsächlich zu dem, was eine richtige Verleumdung ist, wenn auch nur eine oberflächlichkeitsgeborene. Aber esmischen sich ja da andere Gefühle hinein.
Geht man auf das Begriffliche ein, da muß ich sagen: man staunt überhaupt darüber, wie es in dem Hirnkasten eines solchen Gegenwartsprofessors aussieht. Ich stelle dar, daß man als eineerste Stufe der übersinnlichen Erkenntnis die imaginative Erkenntnis hat, die bildhaft wirkt. Also, wie man die sinnliche Erkenntnis durch Begriffe gewinnt, die schattenhaft, abstrakt wirken, so gewinnt man die Tatsachen der höheren Welt durch imaginative Erkenntnis. Daraus macht nun Professor Dessoir etwas — ja, man weiß nicht recht was, denn weil er also liest, daß durch Sinnbilder erkannt wird, so sagt er: Die Tatsachen sind Sinnbilder. Deshalb hat er vorher gesagt:
«Alt-Indien ist nicht das jetzige Indien, wie denn überhaupt alle geographischen, astronomischen, historischen Bezeichnungen sinnbildlich zu verstehen sind.» [S. 258.]
Nun soll man überhaupt denken, daß ein vernünftiger Mensch aus der Darstellung der «Geheimwissenschaft» den Eindruck bekommen kann — wenn auch der heutige Begriff Indiens sich nicht deckt mit dem des alten Indiens -, ich meinte, das alte Indien sei bloß symbolisch zu verstehen. Weil er gelesen hat, daß die erste Stufe der Erkenntnis, die imaginative Erkenntnis, eine sinnbildliche ist, glaubt er, das alte Indien, also der Gegenstand, sei ein bloßes Sinnbild. Daß er das nun glaubt, das bringt ihn wiederum dazu, auf Seite 261 das Folgende zu schreiben:
«Dieser Mensch hat sich herausgebildet in einer urfernen Vergangenheit, die Steiner das lemurische Zeitalter der Erde nennt -— warum wohl? -, und in einem Lande, das damals zwischen Australien und Indien lag (was also eine richtige Ortsbestimmung und kein Symbol ist).»
Also sehen Sie, Dessoir bildet sich ein, ich meinte, das lemurische Land wäre ein Symbol, und nun tadelt er, daß ich die Sache so darstelle, daß es kein Symbol ist; er findet das scharf tadelnswert. Also hier wird die Oberflächlichkeit schon dumm. Da findet er sich besonders geistreich, wenn er zum Schlusse sagt:
«An diesen Erwägungen befremden Widersprüche und eine gewisse logische Genügsamkeit. Es ist widerspruchsvoll, daß aus ‹erschauten› und nur ‹symbolisch› gemeinten Sachverhalten die Tatbestände der Wirklichkeit sich entwickelt haben sollen.» [S. 263.]
Weil die Erkenntnis durch Bilder wirkt, so sollen die Tatbestände auch bildlich sein; und das findet er einen Widerspruch. Also denken Sie, wenn einer sagt, ein Bild, das ein Maler malt, das ist eben ein Bild, aber er verwechselt nun selber das Bild mit der Wirklichkeit, und findet das widerspruchsvoll, daß dieses Bild eine Wirklichkeit darstellen soll — oder so irgend etwas. Also, Sie kommen dazu, diese Oberflächlichkeit an einer solchen Stelle geradezu dumm zu finden.
Nun, sehen Sie, so wird Anthroposophie heute der Welt dargestellt. Denken Sie sich, dieses dicke Buch, das also von einem Universitätsprofessor geschrieben ist, wird selbstverständlich überall besprochen; die Leute lesen dieses Kapitel selbstverständlich mit besonderer Inbrunst. Kümmern sich nicht darum, daß der Mann eine Karikatur der Anthroposophie dargestellt hat, sondern werden finden, daß sie vielleicht der Sache Recht zu geben haben, die der Mann in der Ankündigung jetzt durch alle Zeitschriften schickt — solche Buchhändlerannoncen, die rühren ja gewöhnlich von Leuten her, die dem Autor nicht so ganz ferne stehen. —- Da in der Buchhändlerannonce heißt es:
«... Dann geht das Buch über zu dem kabbalistischen Denkverfahren, das sich nicht nur in der eigentlichen Kabbala, sondern auch in der Freud’schen Psycho-Analyse und in den unfruchtbaren Spitzfindigkeiten gewisser Faust-Erklärer sowie in der Shakespeare-BaconLehre bekundet: alle diese Nebenformen der Wissenschaft werden zergliedert und in ihrer Hohlheit aufgedeckt. Ebenso gründlich, aber auch ebenso unerbittlich werden die Irrlehren eines Guido von List und eines Rudolf Steiner kritisiert; es wird Licht hineingetragen in die dunklen, anspruchsvollen Theorien der Gesundbeter und der Theosophen.»
Also, nun sehen Sie, das ist heute Gelehrtenusus; das ist heute die Manier, wie man von offizieller Seite die Dinge behandelt, die sich in den Dienst der Wahrheit stellen wollen. Aber die Oberflächlichkeit des Herrn Max Dessoir, die geht manchmal wirklich in hohe Regionen. Er macht zum Beispiel auf Seite 254 die Anmerkung:
«Vgl. Rudolf Steiner, die «Geheimwissenschaft im Umriß», fünfte Auflage, Leipzig 1913. Daneben habe ich noch eine lange Reihe anderer Schriften benutzt.»
Ich habe nachgewiesen — meine philologische Beschäftigung gestattet mir so etwas nämlich -—, daß Max Dessoir nichts kennt als die «Geheimwissenschaft», die «Geistige Führung des Menschen und der Menschheit» und «Blut ist ein ganz besonderer Saft». Das ist alles, was er kennt. Das kann ich aus seinem Aufsatz nachweisen. «Die Rätsel der Philosophie» hat er zum Beispiel nicht gelesen — um nur dieses Buch zu nennen. Das nennt er allerdings eine lange Reihe anderer Schriften. Die «Geheimwissenschaft» und die lange Reihe, das ist dieses: «Die geistige Führung» und «Blut ist ein ganz besonderer Saft». Dann fährt er fort:
«In Steiners Erstling, der «Philosophie der Freiheit> (Berlin 1894), finden sich nur Ansätze zur eigentlichen Lehre.» [S. 254, Anm.]
Erstling! Mein erstes Buch ist 1883 erschienen. Dieser Erstling ist also elf Jahre nach meinem wirklichen Erstling erschienen. Das erlebt man heute! So erlebt man die Dinge!
Nun, ich werde selbstverständlich eine Broschüre schreiben über dieses Kapitel im Zusammenhang mit diesem ganzen Buch. Denn das ist notwendig. Hier handelt es sich wirklich darum, einmal eine sogenannte Kulturerscheinung festzunageln und nicht bloß Satz für Satz zu widerlegen, sondern vor allen Dingen die ganze brüchige Oberflächlichkeit zu zeigen, wirklich mit gelehrtem Apparat dem Mann zu zeigen, daß er nicht einmal die allereinfachsten Regeln des wirklichen Anstands einzuhalten vermag. Es darf nicht auf diese Sache geantwortet werden, indem man einfach Satz für Satz nimmt, sondern indem man zeigt, was der Mann erst aus der Sache macht. Die ganze Sache ist nämlich, ich möchte sagen, nach dem Muster geschrieben, wie die ersten Zeilen. Ich weiß selbstverständlich, daß das die Menschen nicht anstößig finden werden; er beginnt:
«Ein immerhin merkwürdiger Mensch, der Dr. Rudolf Steiner. Er stammt aus Ungarn, geboren am 27. Februar 1861, und ist über Wien nach Weimar gekommen.» [S. 254.]
Nun, ich habe im ganzen in Ungarn die ersten eineinhalb Jahre meines Lebens verbracht. Ich stamme nicht aus Ungarn, sondern ich stamme wirklich aus Niederösterreich, und zwar in ältester Abstammung aus Niederösterreich, aus einer urdeutschen Familie. Ich bin nur in Ungarn geboren, weil mein Vater Beamter war an der österreichischen Südbahn, die von Wiener-Neustadt nach Groß-Kanizsa ging, die damals noch zu Cisleithanien gerechnet wurde, und er dort stationiert war an einer Station der ungarischen Linie, Kraljevec, wo ich zufällig geboren worden bin, und bis zu eineinhalb Jahren lebte. Aber im «Kürschner» steht selbstverständlich: «geboren in Ungarn». Das ist die Quelle des Herrn Max Dessoir. Ich weiß, daß natürlich diejenigen Menschen, die immer denjenigen Recht geben, die Gewissenlosigkeiten begehen, sagen werden: Nun, woher soll denn der Mann das andere wissen, wenn es im Kürschner steht. Kürschner gibt nämlich den Geburtsort an; aber man weiß eben sonst, daß der Mensch auch woanders herstammen kann, als wo er zufällig geboren ist — was in der Gegenwart ja sehr häufig der Fall ist, nicht wahr, wo die Menschen durcheinandergewürfelt werden -, nur ein deutscher Philosophieprofessor richtet sich nicht nach den allergewöhnlichsten Erwägungen. Die anderen Dinge sind der Sache würdig.
Aber die Dinge werden manchmal höchst niedlich. Sehen Sie, er kennt auch noch, wie ich schon sagte: «Blut ist ein ganz besonderer Saft.» Da werden Sie finden, daß ich einmal wirklich mit großer Vorsicht dargestellt habe, wie es in früheren Zeiten war, wie das Blut gewissermaßen eine tiefere Gedächtniswirkung hatte und dergleichen. Ich habe allerdings nicht versäumt, ausdrücklich zu sagen, daß es schwierig ist, diese Dinge darzustellen, und daß man deshalb vielfach vergleichsweise reden muß. Selbstverständlich läßt Max Dessoir diese Einleitung weg und zitiert dasjenige, was, wenn Sie es nachlesen in «Blut ist ein ganz besonderer Saft», sehen werden, mit welcher Vorsicht und mit welchen Übergängen das alles dargestellt ist. Max Dessoir zitiert aber, weil er dadurch besonders auf die Leser wirken zu können glaubt, so:
«Der Astralleib soll «seinen Ausdruck finden > teils im sympathischen Nervensystem, teilsim Rückenmark und Gehirn.» [S. 261.]
Nun zitiert er die Sache bei mir:
«Das Blut nimmt die durch das Gehirn verinnerlichten Bilder der Außenwelt auf.»
«Eine solch ungeheuerliche Mißachtung aller Tatsachen verbindet sich mit der ebenso unbeweisbaren wie unverständlichen Behauptung, der vorgeschichtliche Mensch habe in den «Bildern, die sein Blut empfing> auch die Erlebnisse seiner Vorfahren erinnert.» [S. 261.]
Man darf einfach nicht etwas, was mit aller Vorsicht dargestellt ist, in einen Satz so zusammenziehen, daß es keinen Sinn hat, und man bindet dadurch dem Leser Bären auf. Aber die Bären sind in diesem Falle ganz besonders schlimme, weil sie wie verleumderisch die Sache darstellen. Aber was zitiert denn da der gute Dessoir? Nichts anderes, als daß der Mensch das, was er von seinen Vorfahren überliefert bekommen hat, in den früheren, anderen Verhältnissen des Blutes wie ein Gedächtnis erlebte. Das findet Max Dessoir besonders schlimm. Nun möchte ich aber eine eigene Meinung des Dessoir aufschlagen; das ist nämlich höchst interessant. Da erklärt er, wie es kommt, daß heute noch uralte Anschauungen leben, solche Anschauungen, wie sie die abergläubischen Leute auf dem Lande und wie sie die Gesundbeter haben, oder wie sie Guido von List hat und die Anthroposophen. Woher das kommt, sucht er zu erklären. Da sagt er:
«Schon aus solchen Beispielen kann geschlossen werden, daß ir der Geheimforschung uralte Vorstellungsformen weiterleben. Eine bündige Widerlegung des Okkultismus ist mit dieser Resttheorie freilich noch nicht gegeben, da ja die Wahrheit in der Jugend der Völker erfaßt und unserem Kulturkreis verloren gegangen sein könnte. Aber die Tatsachen, die zur Stütze herangezogen werden, versagen, und die Erinnerung an jene urmenschlichen Völkergedanken soll erklären, weshalb wir Menschen der Gegenwart trotzdem so schwer davon loskommen. Das Blut vieler Jahrtausende rinnt in unseren Adern. Sein Pulsschlag ist nicht immer regelmäßig, sondern wird manchmalarrhythmisch, wie er einst gewesen war.» [S. 11f.]
So Max Dessoir. Also, wenn in der Anthroposophie in einer sehr erklärlichen Weise vorkommt, daß gesagt wird: «Das Blut der Vorfahren rinnt in uns und stellt eine Art Gedächtnis dar» — da wird es lächerlich gemacht; wo er es selber braucht, da führt er es selber an. Das ist Max Dessoir, Universitätsprofessor der Philosophie in Berlin.
Nun, ein besonders kurioses Buch, das ich immer weit von mir gewiesen habe, von dem jeder wissen kann, der meine Goethe-Schriften kennt, daß ich es weit von mir gewiesen habe, ist das Buch von F. A. Louvier: «Sphinx locuta est», wo auf kabbalistische Weise Goethes «Faust» erklärt wird. Es ist ein schreckliches Buch. Aber Dessoir nimmt vorerst die Kabbalistik. Was er über Kabbalistik sagt, das würde zu weit führen, denn davon versteht er wirklich nichts; aber er führt dann die moderne Kabbalistik an und darunter auch den Louvier: «Sphinx locuta est», wo so schöne Dinge drinnenstehen. Nicht wahr, da kann er sich nun wieder einmal die Finger ablecken:
«Aus vielen Stellen soll hervorgehen, daß die Geisteskräfte als allegorische handelnde Personen auftreten. Der Erdgeist — in Wahrheit freilich eine der dunkelsten Gestalten des Werks — ist der Geist des Faustplans (denn «Erde steht für «Ebene oder «Plan») und als solcher die Abstraktion; Gretchen ist die Naivität; der schwarze Pudel ist der — negative Beweis und so weiter. Betrachten wir daraufhin die Szene «vor dem Tor; (Sphinx locuta est S. 122ff.). Wenn Faust den spekulierenden Verstand symbolisiert, so ist seine Wohnstätte der Kopf. Demnach bedeutet die Stadt das Gehirn, das hohle, finstere Tor den Mund, und die Spaziergänger aller Art sind die hörbaren Äußerungen des Geistes, die von da hinausziehen ins Freie. Die Sprache selbst erscheint hier nicht, weil sie im zweiten Teil als «Heroldsstab» ausführlich geschildert wird. Wohl aber treten die Gedichte und zwar als die Soldaten auf: Burgen (Sitz der Gedanken) und Mädchen (Gefühle) müssen sich dem Gedicht ergeben; die Trompeten (die Klänge) der Gedichte werben wie für die Freude so zum Verderben.... Das Bürgermädchen (Agathe) stellt das Volkslied vor, und der Geliebte, der sich mit dem Volksliede verbinden soll, d.h. einer der Soldaten, ist ein Gedicht; denn Text und Lied bilden eben ein Paar... Neben dem Volkslied (Agathe) erscheint ferner ein «Schüler, d.h. das Studentenlied, der Krauskopf genannt, und bei diesem ein zweiter Schüler - der Refrain des Liedes... Außer den besprochenen Figuren erscheinen noch die folgenden hörbaren Außerungen, die aus dem Tor (dem Munde) hervorgehen. Es sind: die Bitte, die Wortverdrehung, das Schwatzen, die Einwilligung, der Zank, der Befehl, die Frage, die Kannegießerei, das Ja, das Versprechen und die Abbitte.» [S. 222 f.]
So kann er sich gut lustig machen über den Louvier, der ja die ganze kantische Philosophie im «Faust» dargestellt findet. Dann geht er über zu dem honorificabili von Edwin Bormann und den ShakespeareBacon-Menschen; stellt dar, wie das alles unsinnig ist, was die Shakespeare-Bacon-Menschen in kabbalistischer Weise gemacht haben; geht dann über zu Stefan George, wo er die geschmackvolle Art hat, drei Gedichte zu zitieren, um Stefan George zu charakterisieren. Auf das alles wollen wir nicht eingehen, das würde eine Stunde in Anspruch nehmen, um Ihnen die ganze Vertracktheit des Max Dessoir darzulegen; aber auf das eine wollen wir doch eingehen, wo er drei Gedichte nebeneinanderstellt. Das eine Gedicht, das zweite, das er bringt, das will ich zuerst vorlesen. Man braucht nicht mit solchen Dichtungen einverstanden zu sein, aber ich will Ihnen die Praktik des Max Dessoir darlegen. Also bitte, nehmen Sie es nicht so, als ob ich mit diesem Gedicht, das von Werfel ist, einverstanden wäre, aber darauf kommt es nicht an:
Entrückter, leichter Himmel über dem Ort!
Du weißt von der Seebäder goldenen Fetzen.
Du weißt von Prinzen
Und herbstlichem Halali.
Ihr Knabenbäume
Zuckt von den Schultern
Das letzte Netz,
Das braune.
Den Schatten werfet auf mich,
Hier sitze ich
Und lese den übermütigen
Namen im Stein.
Nun bist du bei meiner Großmutter, Kind,
O unterirdisches Fest,
Das niemand denken will! [S. 234.)
Wie gesagt, man kann gegen dieses Gedicht manches haben, aber Dessoir hat die geschmackvolle Art und stellt es mit dem folgenden Gedicht zusammen. Das ist also das erste, das ich jetzt anführen will:
Der blasse Adelknabe spricht:
Du Dunkelheit, aus der ich stamme —
Ich glaube an alles noch nie Gesagte,
Ich bin auf der Welt zu allein und doch nicht allein genug.
Du siehst, ich will viel!
Wir bauen an dir mit zitternden Händen. [S. 234.]
Das ist also das eine Gedicht; dann kommt das Werfelsche Gedicht, und dann kommt das dritte; das will ich auch jetzt lesen:
Vielleicht, daß ich durch schwere Berge gehe
Du Berg, der blieb, da die Gebirge kamen,
Mach mich zum Wächter deiner Weiten,
Denn, Herr, die großen Städte sind:
Da leben Menschen, weiß erblühte, blasse,
O Herr, gib jedem seinen eignen Tod!
Herr, wir sind ärmer denn die armen Tiere,
Mach’ Einen herrlich, Herr, mach’ Einen groß
Das letzte Zeichen laß an uns geschehen. [S. 235.]
Das mittlere Gedicht, das ich zuerst gelesen habe, ist wirklich von Werfel; aber um dieses zu charakterisieren, begeht Dessoir das Geschmackvolle, daß er einen Band Rilkescher Gedichte nimmt, und nun nicht diese Rilke-Gedichte abschreibt, sondern immer die Versanfänge, wie sie in dem Inhaltsverzeichnis angegeben sind. Also er macht Gedichte, indem er die Versanfänge zusammenstellt; und die vergleicht er dann mit dem Werfelschen Gedicht. Das ist die geschmackvolle Art, wie er moderne Lyrik zu charakterisieren versucht. Er will sagen: Das Werfelsche Gedicht kommt auch heraus, wenn man die Versanfänge im Rilkeschen «Stundenbuch» hintereinander aufschreibt, da macht er ein Gedicht daraus. So macht er es.
Dann bringt er die Rassenmystik von Guido von List. Ich habe zu Guido von List keine andere Beziehung, als daß ich einstmals von ihm, den ich gekannt habe, als er noch ein vernünftiger Mensch war und seinen Roman «Carnuntum» geschrieben hatte, in dem Anfang der achtziger Jahre, eine Abhandlung bekommen habe, in der Zeit, als ich noch «Luzifer-Gnosis» herausgab; da habe ich sie zurückgeschickt als dilettantisch und unbrauchbar. Das ist die einzige Beziehung, die ich zu Guido von List gehabt habe.
Dann bespricht Dessoir die Christian Science. Sie wissen, wieviel Beziehung ich zur Christian Science habe. Die einzige Beziehung, die ich zur Christian Science habe, die kann ich Ihnen ungefähr vorlesen. Wenn ich gefragt worden bin nach öffentlichen Vorträgen über diese Christian Science, habe ich immer als erstes gesagt, daß es wirklich Materie gibt. Aber ich habe gesagt, daß sich diese christliche Wissenschaft nicht christlich nennen darf, und zwar aus folgenden Gründen:
«Hier wird deutlich, daß die ganze Lehre mit dem Geist des Christentums unvereinbar ist. Eine Lehre, die das Leiden aus der Welt wegvernünfteln will, darf sich nicht auf das Evangelium berufen. Denn das Christentum hat mit furchtbarem Ernst die Wahrheit verkündet, daß Sünde und Schmerz notwendig zur Natur des Menschen gehören; sie sind keine Wahngebilde des unvollkommenen menschlichen Denkens, sondern Tatsachen, denen das Erbarmen Gottes und der Opfertod Jesu gilt. Die «christliche Wissenschaft» darf sich nicht christlich nennen.» [S. 243.]
Das habe ich immer gesagt, nur hier sagt es Dessoir; ich habe Ihnen jetzt eine Stelle von Dessoir vorgelesen; aber Sie wissen, daß ich gerade die Christian Science so charakterisiert habe, wenn nach öffentlichen Vorträgen darüber gefragt wurde.
Dann charakterisiert er die theosophische Bewegung als NeuBuddhismus. Aber nach der Art, wie der Professor Dessoir in diesem Buche immer erzählt, daß er allen möglichen Spiritistensitzungen beigewohnt hat, könnte ich ja auch ein Buch schreiben über Spiritismus und ein Kapitel Max Dessoir widmen, unmittelbar an Max Dessoir anreihen. Denn mit derselben Gerechtigkeit könnte das geschehen, wie er hier die Anthroposophie an die 'Theosophie anreiht, insbesondere wenn er den geschmack vollen Satz anführt:
«Diese, der «Universalen Bruderschaft» angehörenden Geheimforscher bekämpfen aufs heftigste die <«Mode- oder Pseudo-Theosophen», worunter sie die um ihren Meister Rudolf Steiner gescharten Anthroposophen verstehen. Wir wollen uns aber dadurch nicht abhalten lassen, auch diese Richtung zu betrachten.» [S. 253.]
Auch durch die ganze Art und Weise, wie das zwischen lauter Dinge hineingestellt wird, in die es nicht hineingehört, auch darin zeigt sich die Gewissenlosigkeit; das muß ausdrücklich gesagt werden.
Aber man kann aufschlagen wo man will, überall findet man das gleiche. Sehen Sie, Seite 240:
«Es liegt eine Gefahr darin, daß solche Genossenschaften Einfluß üben können und zumal in unserer ausgerutschten Zeit. Immerhin gewährt es einen Trost, daß sie sich gegenseitig mißachten und bekämpfen: die Rassenmystiker, die Gesundbeter, die Theosophen.»
Nun, meine lieben Freunde, frage ich Sie einmal, ob ich irgend jemanden bekämpft habe, bei dem es nicht notwendig war, deswegen, weil er mich bekämpfte? Das ist die Unehrlichkeit, mit der immer vorgegangen wird. Sehen Sie nach, ob irgendwie jemand von mir bekämpft worden ist von all den Leuten, die hier angeführt werden. Rassenmystik habe ich nicht bekämpft, weil ich sie für etwas trottelig halte und es nicht der Mühe wert finde, sie zu bekämpfen. Über die Gesundbeter habe ich nur die zwei Sätze gesagt, die ich Ihnen eben angeführt habe.
Ja, mit Dessoir hat es ja eine besondere Bewandtnis. Er erzählt nun alle die Dinge, die er bei verschiedenen spiritistischen Sitzungen erfahren hat. Nun, auf das kann ich heute nicht eingehen, denn bei der ganzen Sache kommt nichts heraus als höchstens das, daß Dessoir in die Lage gekommen ist, ein Buch darüber zu schreiben, denn es ist ja nichts anderes, als ein Gehen auf allerlei Sensationen und dergleichen. Aber ich frage mich: Wie kommt denn nun ein Mensch dazu, solch ein Buch zu schreiben, das eigentlich verrückt ist? Denn wirklich, geht man die anderen Kapitel durch, dann kommt man zu einem höchst traurigen Ergebnis. Der Mann schreibt über lauter Dinge, ohne fachmännisch überhaupt irgend etwas zu kennen, was der Fachmann überall kennen muß in seinem Fach. Ich möchte wissen, ob ein Philosoph wie Max Dessoir solch einen Satz heute hinschreiben darf:
«Einem geistig und musikalisch durchgebildeten Menschen gelingt es, während einer Opernvorstellung in jedem Augenblick den Text, die Musik, die ihrerseits wieder äußerst zusammengesetzt ist, und die mimische Leistung gleichzeitig aufzufassen, obwohl diese drei Bestandteile sehr unabhängig voneinander sein können.» [S. 35.]
Ja, wer bloß Aristoteles studiert hat, das Zusammenwirken der Sinneswirkungen in dem einheitlichen Menschen, der kann solches Satzgestrüppe sich nicht leisten! Also man kommt heute darauf, sich zu sagen, daß solch ein Mensch Universitätsprofessor ist für ein Fach und nicht die einfachsten Dinge seines Faches gelesen, studiert haben kann. Es ist wirklich unerhört.
Ich werde ganz objektiv die Sache widerlegen — selbstverständlich, hier mußten wir uns untereinander einmal über die Sache aussprechen -, aber ich werde objektiv, ohne die scharfen Worte zu brauchen, die ich heute hier gebraucht habe, auf die Tatsache hinweisen, um zu sehen, ob es heute noch Menschen gibt, die, nachdem man ihre Nase auf die Tatsachen hinstößt, wenigstens entrüstet sein können über eine solche Kulturerscheinung. Das möchte ich gerade einmal ausprüfen. Man fragt sich: wie ist es möglich? Allerdings, da kommt man auf Seite 34 auf eine solche merkwürdige Sache. Da redet er über eine solche Sache wie das Bewußtsein, wie es einen «Rand des Bewußtseins», na, und eine «Oberfläche» des Bewußtseins gibt; solch ein Mensch will ja ein Bild haben, nicht wahr, er sagt:
«Um wiederum ein leicht verständliches Bild zu gebrauchen: aus dem Mittelpunkt des Kreises» — er meint den Kreis des Bewußtseins «gleitet ein Komplex an die Peripherie, versinkt dort aber nicht ins Nebelhafte, sondern bewahrt teilweise seine Bestimmtheit und seinen Zusammenhang. Ein Beispiel: Beim Vortragen sehr geläufiger Gedankengänge geraten mir gelegentlich Begriffe und Worte in jene Region, und die Aufmerksamkeit beschäftigt sich mit anderen Dingen. Trotzdem spreche ich weiter, gewissermaßen ohne Anteil des Bewußtseins. Dabei ist es vorgekommen, daß ich von einer plötzlich eingetretenen Stille im Saal überrascht wurde, und mir erst klar gemacht werden mußte, daß sie die Folge meines eigenen Verstummens war! Gewohnte Vorstellungsverknüpfungen und Urteile können also auch «unterbewußt» vollzogen werden, zumal solche, die sich im Unanschaulichen bewegen; die mit ihnen verbundenen Sprachbewegungen laufen gleichfalls ohne Schwierigkeiten in den eingeübten Bahnen.» [S. 34.]
Na, ich möchte wissen, ich glaube nicht, daß es mir jemals vorgekommen ist, selbst in diesem Kreise hier, daß ich so fortgeredet habe und nicht dabei war, bei der Sache. Es ist eigentlich ein sonderbares Selbstzeugnis, und man frägt sich dann, auf wen sich diese Stelle bezieht. Ich will das aber nun auch nicht unterstellen, aber es ist nicht ausdrücklich gesagt, daß es sich auf jemand anders bezöge; es scheint sich also auf ihn selbst zu beziehen, daß er zuweilen Vorträge hält, ohne bei der Sache dabei zu sein. Dann könnte man ja auch denken, daß er auch seitenweise weiterschriebe, ohne bei der Sache dabei zu sein. Dann könnte man sich freilich manches erklären. Nun aber ist das ganze Buch so, daß er es eigentlich bei heruntergedämmertem Bewußtsein geschrieben haben muß; — und das ist wieder zuviel auf einmal, daß man annehmen könnte, daß dieser Professor Max Dessoir in einer Art von Trance das Buch geschrieben und daß die Trance in einer bis zur Perfidie gehenden Oberflächlichkeit gewirkt hätte.
Aber solche sonderbaren Erfahrungen macht man schon. Und wenn man heute darauf angewiesen ist, mit einer geistigen Bewegung sich in die Gegenwart hineinzustellen, dann gibt es wahrhaftig Dinge, die nicht so ganz leicht sind, auch nicht leicht zu nehmen sind. Daher ist es schon notwendig, daß ich Sie heute einmal mit diesen beiden Dingen ein wenig beschäftigt habe. Auf der einen Seite wollte ich Ihnen kurz schildern, wie ein Mensch, der versucht, nur ein paar Schritte zu machen auf dem angedeuteten Wege, sich ganz im Sinne der Anthroposophie bewegt, und wie, wenn diese Anthroposophie selber auftritt, sie von denjenigen, die heute angestellt sind, offiziell, amtlich, philosophische Wissenschaft zu tradieren und deshalb ernst genommen werden, wie sie von solchen Leuten behandelt wird. Nun, sie wird sich als Sache schon durchringen; aber es mußte einmal doch uns ganz klar werden, daß wir es bei einem Manne wie Max Dessoir mit einer oberflächlichen und im Grunde genommen lächerlichen Persönlichkeit zu tun haben.
Ich hoffe, daß wir das nächste Mal wiederum tiefer in unsere Betrachtungen hineingehen können, zu denen das ja nur eine Episode werden sollte.
Fourth Lecture
Today I will have to insert a few episodic remarks into our ongoing consideration, prompted in part by current events and also by the relationship of our anthroposophical movement to the thoughts and judgments of the time.
First, I would like to talk about a contemporary endeavor that may be of great interest to us from a certain point of view. I have often mentioned the name of the natural scientist—and specifically, criminal anthropologist—Moritz Benedikt in the course of our anthroposophical reflections. He extended the field of his scientific observations to the most diverse phenomena. Recently, he has been intensively and thoroughly engaged in scientific experiments on so-called dowsing. Dowsing has gained a certain significance due to the circumstances of this war. As you know, dowsing is essentially based on the use of a specially shaped, fork-shaped rod made of a specific type of wood, such as hazel, which is held in a certain way, either with the fingers underneath or on top, with its two prongs, can be used to find things in the ground, partly metal treasures, but also things such as springs, water, and the like. Now, Moritz Benedikt, who is by no means a fantasist, far from being a fantasist, but on the contrary belongs to those who would sharply reject everything we call anthroposophy, has recently been completely absorbed in his research into this divining rod, partly prompted by the war operations in certain areas. In doing so, he has attempted to give the matter a rational basis, so to speak. He has experimented with people whom he calls “darkly adapted.” I will explain shortly why he attempts to establish that every human being is actually an asymmetrical, two-part being, that is, that the human being to the left of his line of symmetry is a different being than the human being to the right of his line of symmetry. This difference between left and right is not just a difference, but even a polarity. In a certain sense, there are forces present in the left and right halves of the body that act in opposition to each other, like positive and negative magnetism and positive and negative electricity, similar to positive and negative forces acting on each other.
Moritz Benedikt found that when a person takes a rod in their hand, holding both prongs, the force mass on the left side and the force mass on the right side unite, forming, as he says, a common emanation current, i.e., they merge into one another. If, for example, a person who is particularly strongly influenced by such forces walks over a surface of ground beneath which there is water, his forces on the left and right sides change. This means that the water, which itself has an upward flow, flows into the person's forces, thereby changing his force field. It is interesting that Moritz Benedikt, who is a physician himself, found that particularly receptive individuals can simply be influenced to the point of becoming ill when they walk over a spot where there is a spring, or especially a spot where there is a certain metal vein or the like. Thus, some conditions, which Benedikt, who is himself a physician, finds that doctors know little more than the name of, such as melancholy, hypochondria, and hysteria, which are lumped together, can be caused in certain personalities by such a person walking over an area where there is a corresponding source, but they do not notice it, perhaps because they do not know it. But if they use the rod, they do not become ill. The rod combines the two currents of energy and deflects them, thereby diverting the energy that would otherwise have led to the illness of some part of the body. So, essentially, what we are dealing with is a diversion of currents in the organism by means of the rod held in the hands. The rod is therefore a branch that has a stick and then forks like branches; it is cut in this way and held by the two forked sticks.
Now, how does Professor Benedikt determine all this? That is the question. He determines it with the help of certain people whom he calls “darkly adapted.” What does he do? He has enlisted the help of two such “darkly adapted” individuals who are able to observe, while sitting in a darkened room, those individuals who cause the rod to move. He calls his assistants, his experimenters, “darkly adapted”; he calls them that because when they observe people in the dark, they see colors and the like. And this seeing colors in the dark leads to being able to distinguish that the colors seen on the left side of a person are different from the colors seen on the right side. Since it is now clear that these colors, which appear in the darkroom, where one does not have normal physical vision—the room is darkened to such an extent—are the external manifestation of what Benedikt calls emanation, what we would call the deepest physical aura, Professor Benedikt can, with the help of such people, whom he calls “dark-adapted,” , simply test how asymmetrical humans are, how they show different colors on the left than on the right, how the entire color picture changes when the person takes the rod in their hand and is exposed to it in the laboratory. You don't need to have any kind of source; you can just have a small basin of water or a piece of metal; that works just as well. One can prove in a darkroom what the effect of the rod is based on. It is interesting to take a look at some passages from Professor Benedikt's latest publication. He says:
"There are, albeit a relatively small number of people, who are ‘dark-adapted’. A relatively large proportion of this minority sees many objects glowing in the dark, without colors, and only a relatively few see the objects as colored. Reichenbach has already said that every human being carries around a large envelope of luminous substance (emanations).
Since then, I have also tested the colorless and colored luminous phenomena many times through critical observation. A large number of scholars and doctors were examined in my darkroom by my two classic “dark-adapted” subjects, engineer Josef Póra and civil servant Hedwig Kaindl, and none of those examined could entertain any reasonable doubt as to the accuracy of the observations and descriptions. The gentlemen were convinced that the aforementioned dark-adapted subjects saw the unexpected visitors, described all parts of their bodies, and determined their emanation colors.
Color-perceiving dark-adapted individuals see only the forehead and the crown of the head as blue, the remaining half also blue, and the left side red or, in some cases, such as that of engineer Pöra, orange-yellow. The same division and coloring occur when viewed from behind."
"I would like to point out here that a closed electric battery in a darkroom glows red at the anode and blue at the cathode — analogous to the left and right halves of the body. The two polar halves of the body are connected by the rod to form a stream of emanations. The body rod current enters into a relationship with the emanating substances, and the deflection of the rod is the expression of this relationship."
It is very interesting. I would like to emphasize that what I am saying here has nothing to do with what is described as the aura in my ”Theosophy.” With this aura, we are dealing with the manifestations of the higher soul and spirit, while Professor Benedikt, in his darkroom, is dealing with emanations and radiations that are entirely subliminal, i.e., below the threshold of consciousness and imperceptible to ordinary sensory perception. It is interesting to note that natural scientists today are allowed to speak quite precisely about a subliminal aura and to conduct investigations and so on. It is interesting that Benedict himself has to admit that the ability to dowsing is not a highly developed human quality; it is possible in organisms with a lower level of organization, while it fails in intellectually advanced individuals. This indicates, on the one hand, that the ability to dowsing, that is, the particularly strong ability of the rod to deflect, has to do with sub-soul impulses in certain individuals. But after all, the sub-soul impulses are also such that they cannot be perceived with the ordinary senses, or at least not in the ordinary sensory way. For Professor Benedikt needs, I would say, “darkly adapted” persons as experimental instruments.
Of course, the matter still encounters some opposition today, but that does not matter, because all these things encounter opposition, and Professor Benedikt himself says, right on page twelve of his little book:
"The simple man instinctively recognizes the sovereignty of facts; the academically educated recognizes the sovereignty of opinions. The farmer knows the fact from childhood through tradition, and it becomes an irrefutable event for him as soon as he has seen and felt the first movement of the rod. The “intellectual puts blinders on against the truth when he cannot classify facts in the chamber of his wisdom.”
As a rule, it depends on where the person concerned puts on his blinders. Isn't that right, Professor Benedikt? He takes them off when it comes to studying the aura that accompanies dowsing, but he puts them back on again as soon as he enters higher anthroposophical realms. But that doesn't matter. We don't have to repay like with like, but we must at least take note of such things.
What Professor Benedikt has discovered with the help of his experiments is also interesting, for example:
"We would like to emphasize here the great significance of these experiments for color theory. Newton's theory that color effects originate exclusively from reflected or transmitted prismatic colored light, which is also generally accepted without reservation by professional physicists, was disputed by Goethe. He claimed that part of the color impression of naturally colored objects and substances treated with natural colors originates, so to speak, autonomously from these colored objects. Goethe's proofs had no external success and were half and half indirect.
The emanation theory, with the help of the pendulum, provides an extremely drastic explanation that confirms Goethe's view, whereby it must be emphasized that the reflected light carries away the emanation of the same color with it.
You can see from this that Benedikt, who is conducting experiments in these border areas, must also arrive at Goethe's theory of colors. If, like me, you have been involved in defending Goethe's theory of colors for more than three decades, you can judge whether there is a connection between the theory of emanation and Goethe's theory of colors, and whether, on the other hand, there is a connection between all the dull, materialistic theorizing that dominates physics today and, in turn, the rejection of Goethe's theory of colors. It is interesting to note that as soon as one penetrates even a little into the theory of colors, one comes a little further, but the path always leads in the direction in which the anthroposophical view must go.
In our time, it is very important that a man who is now experimentally engaged with these things must admit to himself: The simple man instinctively recognizes the sovereignty of facts. The scholar or academically educated person, as Benedict says, recognizes only the sovereignty of opinions. This is very important. For no age has been so much under the influence of opinions as our own, even though our age repeatedly emphasizes that common sense is what counts! This is emphasized especially in politics. But this common sense has to be acquired with effort today, because it is not there today — that is the great secret — it has to be acquired by regaining what earlier times still had atavistically, the connection with the spiritual world, which is not there today in an atavistic form, but only through the paths indicated by anthroposophy. This is very important. One could say: So now Benedict, who is a little vain — I have mentioned this before, which is why his books are not pleasant to read, but that does not apply to this book — sits in his darkroom and conducts pendulum experiments. He even had himself photographed doing this; the picture is at the beginning of the book. He actually describes the physical auras in order to find out what kind of forces are actually at work between human beings and the rest of the world. Of course, this is of extraordinary importance. It is of great significance because, through physical research, the concept of space is, I would say, placed on a new footing. Water, where is it? Well, there in the earth, isn't it? Now the dowser walks over it and the rod swings. An emanation rises upward and unites with the human emanation. Emanations come together. So water is not only down there, but it has something in it that goes upward. Remember how much importance I once attached to this when I quoted Schelling's famous — or not so famous — but significant saying: “A thing does not only act where it is, but it is where it acts.” It is the understanding of such things that matters. You can read in my book on the “Riddles of Philosophy” what significance such a view, such a concept, such an idea has if one wants to see reality and not preconceived opinions that cling to words.
So, I would say, one can show in detail how, in a sense, anthroposophy is at the helm and correctly guides the current way of thinking. One can actually prove it in detail, except that individual people do not follow suit, of course. But where they try to tackle even a single detail without prejudice, they are moving in this direction. The war brought these investigations into dowsing to the surface, particularly because in certain territories it was necessary to know what was actually down there, especially when it came to water that had to be used for those who had to stay in the area, when springs had to be exploited. You can see from this that there is actually much more in human beings, even when looking at the lowest things, than today's philosophy or biology can somehow dream of.
It is very strange, and it is necessary — those who have been interested in our cause for a long time understand that it is necessary — that, even though it can be proven in detail how anthroposophy works in the right way, this anthroposophy is treated in a way that I have already mentioned in the last considerations made here. But today I must speak about a literary phenomenon that belongs to the most characteristic, I would say, of the present day in relation to the anthroposophical spiritual current, characteristic for reasons that you will see from the reviews themselves.
A book, Vom Jenseits der Seele (From Beyond the Soul), a thick book, has been published by the Berlin university professor Max Dessoir. This book contains a detailed chapter on anthroposophy. This detailed chapter on anthroposophy is highly characteristic. One might have the thought that I had when I first picked up the book, which had just been published. I thought to myself: It is interesting to hear how official philosophy, philosophy that counts itself as university philosophy — and is indeed regarded as such, because the author is a university professor — expresses itself about anthroposophy. And I thought that would be interesting. Certainly, opposition must arise today for a variety of reasons, which I have already mentioned. That today's philosophy is still opposed to anthroposophy is not surprising, and it does no harm if the opposition is not slanderous or hateful. It is precisely through dialectical exchange that something extremely beneficial could be achieved. But, you see, when I studied this rather thick book, I said to myself: this is not interesting at all. The book is not interesting at all, for the simple reason that this rather long chapter on anthroposophy in the thick book and various other things which Dessoir also presents, show in the most characteristic way that he does not have the slightest understanding of the anthroposophical spiritual direction, in that he does not manage to produce a single sentence — he tries to describe what anthroposophy wants — that is really correct. That is very strange. But the inaccuracies are extremely characteristic.
When one reads the matter so superficially, one says to oneself: How can a person who actually claims to be intelligent come up with such caricatures of a subject after having studied it — for if one is a decent person, one must not write about a subject without having studied it, must one? But when you read what he writes, you get the impression that he doesn't understand the subject at all and is presenting everything in the most unbelievable way! So wrong that this wrongness can actually become a problem for those who take such things seriously. One wonders: how can a person who, by virtue of being a university professor, generally has a claim to be considered intelligent—at least relatively—how can he come to be so wrong in every respect? That really becomes a problem at first.
Well, if you have some philological experience—and I didn't spend six and a half years working with philologists at the Goethe-Schiller Archive in Weimar for nothing—you can sometimes solve such problems quite precisely. And I want to get straight to the point so that we are not talking about something vague, about the solution to a particularly thick misunderstanding. You all know that anyone who has read my books, if they have come across it at all in the course of reading them, will find in The Secret Science that the history of the post-Atlantean period must be considered, and that they cannot doubt this for a moment: I divide the post-Atlantean period into seven successive periods and consider the time in which we now live to be the fifth post-Atlantean period, the fifth period in the post-Atlantean era. How often do I say: We are in the fifth period of the post-Atlantean era. The first is the ancient Indian, the second the ancient Persian, and so on. You know that. Max Dessoir, who writes—after coming to the conclusion that there is such a thing as a division of time:
"Ancient India is not the India of today, just as all geographical, astronomical, and historical designations are to be understood symbolically. Indian culture was followed by the ancient Persian culture, led by Zarathustra, who lived much earlier than the historical figure bearing that name. Other periods followed. We are now in the sixth period.” [p. 258 f.]
Here you have such utter nonsense, where someone is referring to what I have said. That becomes a problem, doesn't it, because, you see, a professor is precise. A professor is precise, but in this case he is writing nonsense. That becomes a problem. Look up page 294 in my “Secret Science.” There you will find the solution to this problem. It says there that the fifth cultural epoch gradually prepared itself in the fourth, and that the fourth, fifth, and sixth centuries of this fourth period are particularly important for the preparation of the fifth. It says:
“In the fourth, fifth, and sixth centuries AD, a cultural epoch was preparing in Europe, which began with the fifteenth century and in which the present still lives. It was to gradually replace the fourth, the Greek-Latin epoch. It is the fifth post-Atlantean cultural epoch.”
That is what the man read. But he reads so carefully that by the fifth line he has already forgotten what it is about — or he did not write it down accurately in his card index — and when he looked again, he saw the first line, “in the fourth, fifth, and sixth centuries,” when the fifth post-Atlantic period began; and because he looked up there, being a professor and precise, he looks again, but he looks at the first line instead of the sixth, he sees: in the fourth, fifth, and sixth centuries, and writes down: We are in the sixth period, while the lines after that say: “It is the fifth post-Atlantean cultural epoch.”
This is the method of a man who now finds himself at a loss to write about a phenomenon such as the anthroposophical movement. One could say that it is an incredible superficiality that is only covered up by the fact that professors are supposed to be precise. So if someone reads this without looking in my books, it is considered questionable. It is not particularly important whether it is the fifth or sixth period, but the problem is solved, which tells us: This man is an unscrupulous superficial person! This is solved with philological precision at this point.
Now let us look further to first establish the standard by which these statements are to be measured. On page 255, Dessoir writes the following sentence:
"The training for a higher state of consciousness begins — at least for people of the present day — with immersing oneself with all one's strength in an idea as a purely spiritual fact. The best way to do this is with a symbolic image, such as a black cross (symbolizing destroyed base instincts and passions) surrounded by seven red roses (symbolizing purified instincts and passions)."
Now, when I read this in Max Dessoir, I ask myself: Is this anthroposophy completely crazy? What else can remain as a symbol of purified instincts and passions if the black cross is the symbol of “destroyed” instincts and passions? If the instincts and passions that are base are first destroyed, what is left to be transformed? This is nonsense! But it is a quote, you see. Let us look it up on page 311! It says:
"After indulging in such thoughts and feelings, transform them into the following symbolic image. Imagine a black cross. This is a symbol of the destroyed lower instincts and passions...”
Professor Max Dessoir boldly transforms this into a “symbol of destroyed base instincts and passions,” whereas here it says: “the destroyed base instincts and passions.” This is how precisely people read, and this is how precisely people quote; whereas in spiritual science it is precisely important to take the trouble to stylize accurately — Max Seiling calls this poor German. While it is important in the humanities to quote accurately, the precise professor finds it necessary to trivialize the matter in the most sloppy way, I can find no other word for it.
Now I ask myself: So such a man represents anthroposophy; he represents it in such a way that everything, everything appears as a caricature. One comes to the conclusion that he is incapable of reproducing it. But it is not a lack of intelligence, it is a complete lack of ordinary scientific conscientiousness. Unscrupulousness reigns! Let us take another passage where he talks about how human beings can attain clairvoyance:
"Through such inner work, the soul achieves what all philosophy strives for. Of course, the body-free consciousness must be protected from confusion with dreamlike clairvoyance and hypnotic processes. When our soul forces are heightened, the ego can experience itself above consciousness, as it were in a condensation and independence of the spiritual; indeed, even in the perception of colors and tones, it can exclude the mediation of the body from experience.” [p. 255]
Nowhere does it say that humans can exclude the body even in the ordinary perception of colors and sounds. But Professor Max Dessoir writes it down. One cannot hope that such a person can understand anything, for he does not even have what he wants to understand; he has something completely different! Look up the expression “cell body” in my book, for example! In the context of “The Secret Science” and so on, the expression “cell body” has no meaning. Yes, but what does Professor Dessoir do? He says:
“When contemplation frees the spirit from the cell body, it does not detach it from all physicality.” [p. 256]
For: “... The achievements of the astral body are manifold. It contains the models according to which the etheric body gives the cell body its form.” [p. 256 f.]
I say nothing about the cellular body, but about the physical body. As soon as one says cellular body, everything I say about the physical body makes no sense. So you see, he understands nothing. The following is another cute example:
“It hardly needs to be proven that rest after sleep can be explained in a different way, namely more simply and more accurately than with the help of the astral body. Nor will we, like Steiner, want to ‘explain’ the ‘falling asleep’ of a leg by separating the etheric body from the physical body.” [p. 257]
He puts “explain” in quotation marks. Take a look at page 96:
"When a person strains one of their limbs, for example, part of the etheric body can separate from the physical body. A limb in which this occurs is said to have fallen asleep. And the peculiar sensation one then experiences stems from the separation of the etheric body."
It goes on to say: ‘Of course, a materialistic way of thinking can again deny the invisible in the visible and say: All this is merely the result of physical disturbance caused by pressure.’
So it is not denied that pressure has caused a physical disturbance; that is readily admitted, and it explains falling asleep. But what I am saying here is something different from falling asleep: the peculiar feeling one then experiences comes from the separation of the etheric body.
So the feeling one has when a limb falls asleep comes from the separation of the etheric body.
“Nor do we wish to ‘explain’ with Steiner the ‘falling asleep’ of a leg by the separation of the etheric body from the physical body.” [p. 257]
I did not want to explain the separation, but rather the peculiar feeling that arises. One wonders: can such people still read at all? Are they capable of reading a serious intellectual book that pays attention to all its objects? But the university lecture halls are filled with such people! — this is an afterthought that has a certain significance — with people who are capable of dealing with contemporary phenomena in this way. I actually thought I would be able to give you a discussion today about the way in which serious objections are rejected, and I am forced to show you that we are dealing with a superficial person who falsifies everything in this way. I would have liked to see a different kind of refutation!
Of course, Dessoir is now particularly ready, how shall we say, to engage in self-satisfied finger-licking when it comes to Saturnian conditions. He finds particularly offensive what he describes in the following way:
"In the vicinity of Saturn, spirits of various kinds moved about, such as those of form (Exusiai), personality (Archai), fire (Archangeloi), and love (Seraphim). Later, through the Angeloi, processes of nutrition and excretion developed on Saturn, and through the Cherubim, dull, dreamlike states of consciousness; from these . states are still experienced today by clairvoyants through a supernatural perception similar to smell, for these states are actually always there.” [p. 258]
So clairvoyants experience this through a supernatural perception similar to smell! Of course, this is so obvious that one can smugly lick one's fingers, can't one? The clairvoyant smells the states of Saturn! Dessoir cannot even refrain from saying:
“I am surprised that the ‘smell of sanctity’ and the ‘diabolical stench’ are not mentioned in connection with this.” [p. 258]
One would discuss this with such a man if he put one in the position to do so. But turn again to page 168 [of The Secret Science], where he got this passage:
“Inwardly (in Saturn), this dull human will reveals itself to clairvoyant perception through effects that can be compared to ‘smells.’”
That is what it says. So, through effects that can be compared to smells. Mr. Dessoir feels compelled to say: “The clairvoyant still experiences these states today through a supernatural perception similar to smell.” [p. 258.]
That is, he translates what is clearly stated into gibberish and then criticizes his own gibberish. Nowhere do I ever say that the Angeloi cause processes of nutrition and excretion on Saturn; rather, I say at that point: During the time when the Angeloi appear, processes of nutrition and excretion take place on Saturn. Simultaneity is indicated. The Angeloi appear, and the processes of nutrition and excretion arise. Dessoir himself adds the “through the Angeloi.”
You see, what can one do with a person who attacks a phenomenon in this way?
“The Christ or Sun Man educated seven great teachers.” [p. 258]
So far, I have not found a single clue to justify this designation: the Christ or Sun Man, because on page 242 it is expressly stated that the Sun Men perceive the Christ as the higher self — which is, of course, something completely different from saying: the Christ or Sun Man.
Well, you see, these things sometimes become too sophisticated. Superficiality then pushes the limits of what is necessary to make an impression on the reader, which, if intentional, would have to be called slanderous. Dessoir recalls the passage where I speak of forces working on the preparation of the brain during childhood; you need only remember my book The Spiritual Guidance of the Individual and Humanity, which Professor Dessoir has read. I have shown that when one later remembers how one could have done all this through one's own intelligence, what later appears as something wonderful in the brain, one realizes how wisdom works on the human being from the unconscious during the first three years of childhood. Mr. Dessoir — pardon me, Professor Max Dessoir of the University of Berlin — quotes as follows:
"Especially a person who teaches wisdom himself — as Rudolf Steiner admits — will say to himself: When I was a child, I worked on myself through forces that came from the spiritual world, and what I can now give as my best must also come from higher worlds; I must not regard it as belonging to my ordinary consciousness.” [p. 260]
So Max Dessoir makes his readers believe that I claimed all of this about myself. Let's look at “The Spiritual Leadership of Man and Humanity” to see where he got this from. On page 30, it says:
"The concept of human leadership thus gained can now be expanded in many respects. Suppose a person has found disciples, a few people who profess their allegiance to him. Through genuine self-knowledge, such a person will easily realize that it is precisely the fact that he has found followers that gives him the feeling that what he has to say does not come from him. Rather, it is spiritual forces from higher worlds that want to communicate with his followers, and they find in the teacher the suitable instrument for revealing themselves.”
“Such a person will be struck by the thought,” and now comes the passage that Dessoir quotes:
“When I was a child, I worked on myself through forces that came from the spiritual world, and what I can now give as my best must also come from higher worlds: I must not regard it as belonging to my ordinary consciousness.” [p. 260]
This is where Dessoir ends his quotation. And now I continue:
“Yes, such a person may say: something demonic, something like a demon—but the word ‘demon’ taken in the sense of a good spiritual power—works through me from a spiritual world upon those who profess their faith. This is what Socrates felt.” [p. 30]
So the whole passage refers to Socrates. Max Dessoir has the bad taste — I would just like to say, so as not to use a stronger word here — to twist this passage in this way and then add:
"The fact that the individual is a bearer of supra-individual truths is magnified here into the idea that a spirit world conceived as a thing is connected to the individual through tubes or wires, as it were; Hegel's objective spirit is transformed into a group of demons, and all the shadow figures of unpurified religious thinking reappear.” [p. 260]
Now read the chapter I wrote about Hegel in my “Riddles of Philosophy” and then realize that when I speak here of demons, I am referring to Socrates, who himself used the word “daemonion.” I myself said explicitly and very clearly in “Riddles of Philosophy” that one cannot use this in relation to Hegel. But I will show you later why, in this particular case, Professor Dessoir can be so tasteful, so to speak. Such superficiality actually escalates into what is a real slander, even if only one born of superficiality. But other feelings are mixed in here.
If we go into the conceptual, I must say that one is generally amazed at what goes on in the brain of such a contemporary professor. I argue that the first stage of supersensible knowledge is imaginative knowledge, which has a pictorial effect. So, just as one gains sensory knowledge through concepts that appear shadowy and abstract, one gains knowledge of the facts of the higher world through imaginative knowledge. Professor Dessoir now makes something out of this — yes, one does not really know what, because when he reads that knowledge is gained through symbols, he says: Facts are symbols. That is why he said earlier:
“Ancient India is not the India of today, just as all geographical, astronomical, and historical designations are to be understood symbolically.” [p. 258]
Now one should think that a reasonable person, from the presentation of the “Secret Science,” could get the impression—even if today's concept of India does not correspond to that of ancient India—that I meant that ancient India was to be understood merely symbolically. Because he has read that the first stage of knowledge, imaginative knowledge, is symbolic, he believes that ancient India, i.e., the object, is merely a symbol. The fact that he believes this leads him to write the following on page 261:
“This human being developed in a distant past, which Steiner calls the Lemurian epoch of the earth — why, I wonder? — and in a land that lay between Australia and India at that time (which is therefore a correct geographical location and not a symbol).”
So you see, Dessoir imagines that I meant the Lemurian land to be a symbol, and now he reproaches me for presenting the matter in such a way that it is not a symbol; he finds this highly reprehensible. Here, superficiality becomes downright stupid. He finds himself particularly witty when he concludes by saying:
“These considerations are puzzling because of their contradictions and a certain logical frugality. It is contradictory that the facts of reality should have developed from ‘envisioned’ and only ‘symbolically’ meant circumstances.” [p. 263]
Because knowledge works through images, the facts should also be pictorial; and he finds this contradictory. So you think that when someone says that a picture painted by a painter is just a picture, he is confusing the picture with reality and finds it contradictory that this picture should represent reality — or something like that. So you come to find this superficiality downright stupid in such a place.
Well, you see, this is how anthroposophy is presented to the world today. Just imagine, this thick book, written by a university professor, is of course being discussed everywhere; people are of course reading this chapter with particular fervor. They don't care that the man has presented a caricature of anthroposophy, but they will find that they perhaps have to agree with what the man is now sending out in all the magazines — such book advertisements usually come from people who are not entirely unrelated to the author. —- The book advertisement says:
”... The book then moves on to the Kabbalistic mode of thinking, which is evident not only in the actual Kabbalah, but also in Freudian psychoanalysis and in the fruitless sophistry of certain Faust interpreters, as well as in the Shakespeare-Bacon doctrine: all these secondary forms of science are dissected and exposed in their hollowness. The heresies of Guido von List and Rudolf Steiner are criticized just as thoroughly, but also just as relentlessly; light is shed on the dark, pretentious theories of faith healers and theosophists.”
So, you see, this is scholarly usage today; this is how things are treated today by officialdom that wants to serve the truth. But Mr. Max Dessoir's superficiality sometimes really reaches great heights. For example, on page 254, he makes the following comment:
“See Rudolf Steiner, The Secret Science in Outline, fifth edition, Leipzig 1913. I have also used a long series of other writings.”
I have proven — my philological studies allow me to do so — that Max Dessoir knows nothing other than The Secret Science, The Spiritual Guidance of Humanity, and Blood Is a Very Special Juice. That is all he knows. I can prove this from his essay. For example, he has not read “The Riddles of Philosophy” — to name just one book. However, he refers to this as a long series of other writings. The “Secret Science” and the long series are as follows: “The Spiritual Leadership” and “Blood is a Very Special Juice.” He then continues:
“In Steiner's first work, The Philosophy of Freedom (Berlin, 1894), there are only hints of his actual teaching.” [p. 254, note]
First work! My first book was published in 1883. So this first work was published eleven years after my actual first work. That's how things are today! That's how things are experienced!
Well, I will of course write a brochure about this chapter in connection with this entire book. Because that is necessary. The point here is really to pin down a so-called cultural phenomenon and not merely refute it sentence by sentence, but above all to reveal its entire fragile superficiality, to show the man, with scholarly apparatus, that he is incapable of observing even the simplest rules of real decency. This matter cannot be answered by simply taking it sentence by sentence, but by showing what the man makes of it. The whole thing is written, I would say, according to the pattern of the first lines. I know, of course, that people will not find this offensive; he begins:
“Dr. Rudolf Steiner is a curious man, to say the least. He comes from Hungary, was born on February 27, 1861, and came to Weimar via Vienna.” [p. 254]
Well, I spent the first year and a half of my life in Hungary. I am not from Hungary, but I am actually from Lower Austria, from an ancient Lower Austrian family, from a family of original Germans. I was only born in Hungary because my father was a civil servant on the Austrian Southern Railway, which ran from Wiener Neustadt to Groß-Kanizsa, which at that time was still part of Cisleithania, and he was stationed there at a station on the Hungarian line, Kraljevec, where I happened to be born and lived until I was one and a half years old. But of course, the Kürschner directory says: “born in Hungary.” That is Mr. Max Dessoir's source. I know that people who always side with those who commit acts of conscience will say: Well, how is the man supposed to know otherwise if it says so in the Kürschner directory? Kürschner gives the place of birth, but we know that a person can come from somewhere other than where they happened to be born—which is very often the case nowadays, isn't it, when people are mixed up—only a German philosophy professor doesn't go by the most common considerations. The other things are worthy of the matter.
But things sometimes become extremely cute. You see, he also knows, as I already said, that “blood is a very special fluid.” There you will find that I once described with great caution how it was in earlier times, how blood had, so to speak, a deeper memory effect and the like. I did not fail to point out, however, that it is difficult to describe these things and that one must therefore often speak in comparative terms. Of course, Max Dessoir omits this introduction and quotes what you will see, if you read “Blood is a very special juice,” with what caution and with what transitions all this is presented. However, Max Dessoir quotes the following because he believes it will have a particular impact on readers:
“The astral body is said to find its expression partly in the sympathetic nervous system and partly in the spinal cord and brain.” [p. 261.]
He then quotes me as follows:
“The blood absorbs the images of the outside world internalized by the brain.”
“Such a monstrous disregard for all facts is combined with the equally unprovable and incomprehensible assertion that prehistoric man also remembered the experiences of his ancestors in the ‘images received by his blood.’” [p. 261]
One simply cannot take something that has been presented with the utmost caution and condense it into a sentence that makes no sense, thereby pulling the wool over the reader's eyes. But in this case, the wool is particularly bad because it misrepresents the matter in a defamatory manner. But what is the good Dessoir quoting here? Nothing other than that man experienced what he had inherited from his ancestors in the earlier, different circumstances of blood as a kind of memory. Max Dessoir finds this particularly bad. Now, however, I would like to offer Dessoir's own opinion, which is extremely interesting. He explains how it is that ancient beliefs still live on today, beliefs such as those held by superstitious people in the countryside, by faith healers, by Guido von List, and by anthroposophists. He attempts to explain where this comes from. He says:
“From such examples alone, it can be concluded that ancient forms of thought continue to live on in secret research. Of course, this residual theory does not yet provide a concise refutation of occultism, since the truth may have been grasped in the youth of the peoples and lost to our culture. But the facts used to support it fail, and the memory of those primordial human ideas is supposed to explain why we humans of the present day still find it so difficult to break free from them. The blood of many millennia flows in our veins. Its pulse is not always regular, but sometimes becomes arrhythmic, as it once was.” [p. 11f.]
So says Max Dessoir. So when anthroposophy states in a very explainable way that “the blood of our ancestors flows in us and represents a kind of memory,” it is ridiculed; but when he needs it himself, he quotes it himself. That is Max Dessoir, university professor of philosophy in Berlin.
Now, a particularly curious book that I have always rejected, which anyone familiar with my writings on Goethe knows that I have rejected, is the book by F. A. Louvier: “Sphinx locuta est,” in which Goethe's “Faust” is explained in a Kabbalistic manner. It is a terrible book. But Dessoir takes up Kabbalistic thought for the time being. What he says about Kabbalistic thought would take us too far afield, because he really understands nothing about it; but he then cites modern Kabbalistic thought, including Louvier's Sphinx locuta est, which contains such beautiful things. Isn't that right? Now he can once again lick his fingers:
"It should be clear from many passages that the spiritual forces appear as allegorical characters. The earth spirit—in truth, of course, one of the darkest figures in the work—is the spirit of Faust's plan (for ‘earth’ stands for ‘plane’ or ‘plan’) and as such is abstraction; Gretchen is naivety; the black poodle is the negative proof, and so on. Let us then consider the scene “before the gate” (Sphinx locuta est, p. 122ff.). If Faust symbolizes speculative reason, then his dwelling place is the head. Accordingly, the city represents the brain, the hollow, dark gate represents the mouth, and the passers-by of all kinds are the audible utterances of the spirit that emerge from there into the open. Language itself does not appear here because it is described in detail in the second part as the “herald's staff.” However, the poems do appear, namely as the soldiers: castles (the seat of thoughts) and girls (feelings) must surrender to the poem; the trumpets (the sounds) of the poems woo them as if for joy, but in fact for their ruin.... The bourgeois girl (Agathe) introduces the folk song, and the lover who is to be united with the folk song, i.e., one of the soldiers, is a poem; for text and song form a pair... Next to the folk song (Agathe) appears a “schoolboy, i.e., the student song, called Krauskopf, and with him a second schoolboy—the refrain of the song... In addition to the characters discussed, the following audible utterances emerge from the gate (the mouth). They are: the request, the twisting of words, the chatter, the consent, the quarrel, the command, the question, the mockery, the yes, the promise, and the apology.” [p. 222 f.]
In this way, he can easily mock Louvier, who finds the entire Kantian philosophy represented in “Faust.” He then moves on to Edwin Bormann's honorificabili and the Shakespeare-Bacon people; he shows how nonsensical everything the Shakespeare-Bacon people have done in a Kabbalistic way is; he then moves on to Stefan George, where he has the tasteful idea of quoting three poems to characterize Stefan George. We will not go into all of this, as it would take an hour to explain to you the whole complexity of Max Dessoir; but we will go into the one point where he juxtaposes three poems. The first poem, the second one he quotes, I would like to read aloud first. One does not have to agree with such poetry, but I want to explain Max Dessoir's practice to you. So please do not take it as if I agree with this poem, which is by Werfel, but that is not the point:
Enraptured, light sky above the village!
You know of the golden scraps of the seaside resorts.
You know of princes
And autumnal hunting parties.
You boys' trees
Shake from your shoulders
The last net,
The brown one.
Cast your shadows upon me,
Here I sit
And read the presumptuous
Name in the stone.
Now you are with my grandmother, child,
O subterranean feast,
That no one wants to think about! [p. 234.)
As I said, one can have many objections to this poem, but Dessoir has good taste and combines it with the following poem. So this is the first one I want to quote now:
The pale noble boy says:
You darkness from whence I came —
I believe in everything that has never been said,
I am too alone in the world and yet not alone enough.
You see, I want a lot!
We build on you with trembling hands. [p. 234.]
So that is one poem; then comes Werfel's poem, and then the third; I would like to read that now:
Perhaps I will pass through heavy mountains
You mountain that remained when the mountains came,
Make me the guardian of your vastness,
For, Lord, the great cities are:
There live people, white-blossomed, pale,
O Lord, give each his own death!
Lord, we are poorer than the poor animals,
Make one glorious, Lord, make one great
Let the last sign befall us. [p. 235]
The middle poem, which I read first, is indeed by Werfel; but in order to characterize it, Dessoir commits the tasteful act of taking a volume of Rilke's poems and, instead of copying these Rilke poems, copying only the beginnings of the verses as they appear in the table of contents. So he composes poems by compiling the beginnings of verses, which he then compares with Werfel's poem. That is the tasteful way in which he attempts to characterize modern poetry. He wants to say: Werfel's poem also emerges if one writes down the beginnings of the verses in Rilke's “Stundenbuch” one after the other; that is how he makes a poem out of it. That is how he does it.
Then he brings in the racial mysticism of Guido von List. I have no connection to Guido von List other than that I once knew him when he was still a reasonable man and had written his novel Carnuntum in the early 1980s. At that time, I was still publishing Luzifer-Gnosis, and I sent him a treatise, which I returned as amateurish and useless. That is the only relationship I have had with Guido von List.
Then Dessoir discusses Christian Science. You know how much I have to do with Christian Science. The only connection I have with Christian Science, I can read to you. When I have been asked to give public lectures on Christian Science, I have always said first of all that matter really exists. But I have said that this Christian Science cannot call itself Christian, for the following reasons:
"Here it becomes clear that the entire doctrine is incompatible with the spirit of Christianity. A doctrine that seeks to rationalize suffering out of the world cannot claim to be based on the Gospel. For Christianity has proclaimed with terrible seriousness that sin and pain are necessary parts of human nature; they are not figments of imperfect human thinking, but facts to which the mercy of God and the sacrificial death of Jesus apply. “Christian Science” cannot call itself Christian.” [p. 243]
I have always said this, only here Dessoir says it; I have now read you a passage from Dessoir; but you know that I have characterized Christian Science in precisely this way when asked about it after public lectures.
He then characterizes the theosophical movement as New Buddhism. But given the way Professor Dessoir always recounts in this book that he has attended all kinds of spiritualist séances, I could also write a book about spiritualism and devote a chapter to Max Dessoir, immediately following Max Dessoir. For this could be done with the same justice as he adds anthroposophy to theosophy here, especially when he quotes the tasteful sentence:
“These secret researchers, who belong to the ‘Universal Brotherhood,’ vehemently combat the ‘fashionable or pseudo-theosophists,’ by which they mean the anthroposophists gathered around their master Rudolf Steiner. However, we do not want to allow ourselves to be deterred from also considering this direction.” [p. 253.]
The whole way in which this is inserted between things where it does not belong also reveals a lack of conscience; this must be said explicitly.
But you can open the book anywhere and find the same thing. Look at page 240:
“There is a danger that such cooperatives can exert influence, especially in our troubled times. At least it is comforting that they disregard and fight each other: the racial mystics, the health charlatans, the theosophists.”
Now, my dear friends, let me ask you whether I have ever fought anyone who did not need to be fought because they fought me? That is the dishonesty with which people always proceed. See if you can find anyone among all the people listed here who has been attacked by me. I have not attacked racial mysticism because I consider it silly and not worth the effort. I have only said the two sentences I just quoted to you about the faith healers.
Yes, there is a special circumstance with Dessoir. He now recounts all the things he experienced at various spiritualist séances. Well, I cannot go into that today, because the whole thing amounts to nothing more than Dessoir finding himself in a position to write a book about it, because it is nothing more than a pursuit of all kinds of sensations and the like. But I ask myself: How does a person come to write such a book, which is actually crazy? Because really, if you go through the other chapters, you come to a very sad conclusion. The man writes about all sorts of things without having any expert knowledge whatsoever of what an expert in his field must know. I would like to know whether a philosopher like Max Dessoir is allowed to write such a sentence today:
“A person who is intellectually and musically well-educated is able to comprehend the text, the music, which is itself extremely complex, and the acting at the same time during an opera performance, even though these three components can be very independent of each other.” [p. 35]
Yes, anyone who has studied Aristotle, the interaction of the senses in the unified human being, cannot afford such a tangle of sentences! So today one comes to the conclusion that such a person is a university professor of a subject and cannot have read or studied even the simplest things in his field. It is truly unheard of.
I will refute the matter quite objectively—of course, we had to discuss the matter among ourselves first—but I will point out the facts objectively, without using the harsh words I have used here today, to see whether there are still people today who, when their noses are rubbed in the facts, can at least be indignant about such a cultural phenomenon. I would just like to test that. One wonders: how is this possible? Indeed, on page 34, one comes across such a strange thing. He talks about such a thing as consciousness, how there is a “periphery of consciousness,” and a “surface” of consciousness; such a person wants to have an image, doesn't he? He says:
“To use an easily understandable image: from the center of the circle” — he means the circle of consciousness — ”a complex glides to the periphery, but does not sink into fogginess there, instead retaining some of its definiteness and context. An example: When I am expressing very familiar trains of thought, concepts and words occasionally stray into that region, and my attention is occupied with other things. Nevertheless, I continue to speak, as it were, without any conscious participation. It has happened that I have been surprised by a sudden silence in the room, and it took me a moment to realize that it was the result of my own silence! Familiar associations and judgments can therefore also be made “subconsciously,” especially those that are abstract in nature; the associated speech movements also run smoothly along the well-trodden paths.” [p. 34]
Well, I would like to know, I don't think it has ever happened to me, even in this circle here, that I have talked on and on and not been present at the matter. It is actually a strange self-testimony, and one wonders to whom this passage refers. I don't want to insinuate anything, but it is not explicitly stated that it refers to anyone else; it therefore seems to refer to himself, that he sometimes gives lectures without being present at the event. One could then also think that he wrote pages and pages without being present at the event. That would explain a lot. But the whole book is such that he must actually have written it with his consciousness clouded; — and that is again too much at once to assume that this Professor Max Dessoir wrote the book in a kind of trance and that the trance had the effect of a superficiality verging on perfidy.
But one does have such strange experiences. And when one is dependent today on a spiritual movement to place oneself in the present, then there are truly things that are not so easy, nor are they easy to take lightly. That is why it is necessary that I have occupied you a little with these two things today. On the one hand, I wanted to briefly describe how a person who tries to take just a few steps on the path indicated moves entirely in the spirit of anthroposophy, and how, when this anthroposophy itself appears, it is treated by those who are officially and academically employed to pass on philosophical science and are therefore taken seriously. Well, it will come to pass, but it had to become clear to us that in a man like Max Dessoir we are dealing with a superficial and, in essence, ridiculous personality.
I hope that next time we will be able to go deeper into our reflections, of which this was only meant to be an episode.