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The Bridge between the Ideal and the Real
GA 184

6 September 1918, Dornach

Lecture I

I should like to take some of those subjects we have had here this Summer, which have been brought up in the course of our considerations, and to go more deeply into them. To-day, tomorrow, and the day after, I will therefore bring forward certain historical, and also a few objective facts; and to-day by way of preparation, I Should like to point to a few historical facts, and from these, and especially from the revelation of certain historical personalities, we shall then draw conclusions upon which we can base our deeper considerations.

In all ages those who have been initiated into the Mysteries, have always uttered, and correctly, a certain saying. It is this:—“Unless a person knows how to value aright those two streams of world-conceptions which we have mentioned:—Idealism and Materialism,—he either falls through a trap-door into a kind of 'cellar' as regards his view of the world, or he enters blindly along the other paths which one traverses to reach a World Conception.” Now the trap-door through which one may fall and which may very well escape notice in the “Weltanschaumergaleben,” has been regarded by the Mystery Initiates of all as the Dualism which cannot find the bridge between the Ideal—one can also call it the “spiritually-coloured Ideal”—and the Materialistic, that concerned with matter. And the blind alley into which one may stray along the various paths of philosophy if one does not find the balance between Idealism and Materialism, for those same Mystery Initiates this blind alley was Fatalism.

Our recent epoch clearly inclines on the one side to a dualistic outlook, and on the other to a fatalistic philosophy, although these things are not admitted nor even clearly seen.

Now, I should like to-day, to take a personality out of the life of the twilight of the 4th Post-Atlantean epoch with reference to the life of philosophy, and give a brief sketch of him, and his outlook; and we can then consider other personalities more characteristic of the World-Conceptions of our own, the 5th Post-Atlantean epoch. A very, very characteristic personality in the Western life of thought, St. Augustine, who lived from the year 354 to 430 of our Christian era. We will recall certain thoughts of St. Augustine because, as you will see from the dates I have quoted, he lived in the twilight of the 4th Post-Atlantean epoch which came to an end in the 15th century. We can clearly see the approach of this end, starting from the 3rd-6th Post-Xian centuries. Now St. Augustine had to pass through the impressions of the most diverse World-Views. We have often discussed these things. Above all, St. Augustine passed through Manichaeism and Scepticism. He had taken all those impulses into his soul which one gets if on the one hand, he looks at the world and sees everything Ideal, Beautiful and Good, all that is filled with Wisdom, and then on the other hand, ell that is ugly, bad and untrue. Now we know that Manichaeism only “gets on” (this is coarsely expressed, but it can be expressed in this way)—it only gets on with these two streams in the Ordering of the Cosmos, by postulating an eternal, everlasting polarity, an everlasting dualism, between Darkness and Light, Evil and Good; that which is full of Wisdom, and that which is filled with wickedness.

Manichaeism only `gets' on with Dualism, (in its on way quite correctly), by uniting certain old pre-Christian basic concepts with its acceptance of the polarity in World-phenomena. Above all, it unites certain ideas which can only be understood when one knows that in ancient times the Spiritual world was perceived by humanity in atavistic clairvoyance, and perceived in such a way that men's visions of the Spiritual world were in their very content, similar to the impressions made by the Sense-world of perception. Now, because Manichaeism took into itself such ideas of a physical appearance, (sinnlichen schein) of the supersensible, it thereby gives many people the impression of materialising the spirit, as though it presented the spirit in a material form. That, of course, is a mistake which more recent views of the world have made, (as I have explained lately) a mistake even made by modern Theosophy. St. Augustine actually broke with Manichaeism because in the course of his purified life of thought, he could no longer boar this materialisation of the spirit. That was one of the reasons which made him break with Manichaeism.

St. Augustine then also passed through Scepticism, which is a quite justifiable view of the world, in se far as it points man's attention to the feet that through the mere observation of what a person can gain from this Sense-world and his experiences therein, he can learn nothing concerning the supersensible. And, if one is of [the] opinion that one cannot stand for the supersensible, as such, one begins to doubt the existence of any knowledge of the truth itself. It was doubt of the knowledge of the Truth through which St. Augustine also passed; and thereby obtained the strongest impulses.

Now if one wishes to see what led St. Augustine to place himself in western philosophy, one must point to the apex of his perceptions, from which radiated all the light which rules in him, and which was also the apex of the view of the world which he finally developed. That is the point, my dear friends; and it can be characterised in the following ways:—St, Augustine came to acquire that Certainty, the true Certainty subject to absolutely no deception, which can only be acquired by man with reference to what he experiences in his inner soul. Everything else may be uncertain. Whether the things which appear to our eyes, or are audible to our ears, or which make impressions on our other Sense-organs, are really so constructed as they appear to be to the evidence of the senses, that one cannot know. We cannot even know how this itself appears, when one shuts one's Sense organs to it, That is the way in which persons think of the external perceptible world, who think after the way of St. Augustine. They think this externally perceptible world, as it lies before us, can offer no unconditional certainty, can give no unconditioned truth; that man can gain nothing out of it on which he can stand on a firm substantial point. On the other hand, a man is present in what he experiences in his inner soul; quite regardless as to how he experiences it there, he himself experiences those ideas and feelings in his inner being. He knows himself to be living in his own inner experiences. And so, to such a thinker as St. Augustine, the fact is substantiated by his own inner experiences;—that, with reference to what man experiences in his inner sou1 as truth, he gives himself over to no possibility of deception. One can relieve that everything else the world says is subject to deception, but one cannot possibly doubt that what one experiences in one's inner being, as one's ideas and feelings, is the truth; that is certain. That firm basis for the admittance of an indisputable truth, formed one of the starting-points of the Augustinian philosophy.

Again in a striking way, in the 5th Post-Atlantean epoch, Descartes again took up that point; he lived from 1596 to 1650, thus in the dawn of the 5th Post-Atlantean epoch. His assertion:—“I think, therefore I exist,” which remains true even if we doubt everything else, that he takes as his starting point, and in this perception he simply takes the standpoint of St. Augustine.

Now my dear friends, the fact is that with reference to any world-conception one must always say: A man who lives at a particular point of time in human evolution acquires certain views:—only those who come later can see these. One must say that it is always reserved for those who come afterwards to see things in a more radical, true way, than does the person who has to utter them at a certain period of time in human evolution. One cannot get away from this fact; and it would be well, if especially from our Anthroposophical standpoint, as I have often told you, if it were recognised consciously and thoroughly, that even what is said now, even that we acquire as ever such advanced knowledge about Spiritual things, that must not be grasped as a sum of absolute dogmas. We must be quite clear that those who come after us, in future times, will see greater than we ourselves can. On this rests the true Spiritual evolution of mankind, and everything of a hindering nature in the Spiritual progress of mankind rests finally on the fact that human beings will not admit this. They like to have truths presented to them, not as the truths for one definite epoch of time, but as absolute timeless dogmas,

And so, from our point of view, we can look back on St. Augustine and shall have to say: If one stands on St. Augustine's standpoint, one must sharply look to this.—that he assumes uncertainty as to the truths of all external revelations, and true certainty only in the experience of what we carry in our souls. Now, if one gives oneself to such a perception as that, it presupposes that, as a human being, one has a certain courage. One would not perhaps need to mention so decidedly what I am now going to say, unless we had to admit the fact that it is characteristic of the world-view of our present age that it lacks courage, the lack of courage I refer to here is expressed in two directions. The one is this. When a person boldly admits, as did St. Augustine, that you can only find true certainty as regards what you yourself experience in your inner being, then the other pole of this courage should be there which is not there in our present age. One must also have the courage to admit that thin true Certainty concerning reality is not to be found in external Sense-Revelation. It requires real inner courage in one's thought to deny external Reality in its utterances that true Certainty, which is held by modern Materialism as absolutely secure. And, on the other hand, it requires courage to admit that true certainty only comes when one is truly conscious of what one experiences inwardly. Certainly such things are said, even in our times, and there are those who demand this two-fold courage of their fellow-man, if they are anxious to create a world-conception. But one has to things differently about these things to-day, if one wishes to think exhaustively. And herein the whole historical position of St. Augustine is revealed for modern mankind, because one has to think differently about these matters. To-day one must know something which neither Augustine nor Descartes took into consideration. I have spoken of this where I discuss Descartes, in my book “The Riddles of Man.” To-day we must admit: The belief that one can come to a satisfactory philosophy through a grasp of one's immediate inner being as man, as it offers itself to-day,—the belief that one can reach a firm standpoint in one's inner being,—is refuted every time one goes to sleep. Every time a person to-day passes into the unconsciousness of sleep, from him is snatched that absolute certainty of inner experience of which St. Augustine spoke,—the Reality of that inner experience is snatched from him. Every time you go to sleep until the moment of waking, the reality of real experience forsakes you. And the man of our age to-day, who experiences his inner being in a different way from that of the 4th Post-Atlantean age, even from that of the twilight of the age of St. Augustine, has to admit: “No matter how acute a certainty is experienced in one's inner being, yet for man's life after death, there is no certainty at all; for the simple reason that the reality of his experiences sinks into the realm of the unconscious, every time he goes to sleep, and a modern human being does not even know whether it does not pass into Unreality, and so what man apparently experiences securely in his inner being is not made safe from attack. That my not be theoretically refuted perhaps, but the very fact of sleep contradicts it.

Now if we turn attention to whit has just been said, we recognise how, in reality, St. Augustine with a far greeter justification than Descartes later, (who after all only merely repeated St. Augustine in another age) with what right St. Augustine could arrive at his view. Through the entire 4th Post-Atlantean epoch, and even through the age of St. Augustine, there still lived in human beings something of an echo of the old atavistic clairvoyance. History to-day unfortunately notices those things far too little and really knows little of them; but numerous were those persons throughout the whole 4th Post-Atlantean ago who, from their personal experiences knew that there existed a Spiritual life. Because they beheld it. And in the 4th Post-Atlantean age—it was different in the 3rd or in the 2nd Post-Atlantean epochs—in the 4th age they beheld it chiefly because it played into their life of sleep. So that we may say: In the 4th Post-Atlantean epoch it was not the case for human beings, (as it became later in the 5th epoch), that their sleep transpired completely unconsciously. Those human beings of the 4th Post-Atlantean epoch knew that, from sleeping until waking up, there was a time in which all that they had as ideas, as feelings from waking to sleeping, still continued to work, but in other forms. Their waking life of truth dived down, as it were, into a dim, but conscious life of sleep. In that age one still knew that what was experienced as inner truth, was not only truth but also reality, because one knew those moments of sleeping life in which was revealed, not merely as an abstract life but as a real concrete life in the spirit, what one had experienced in one's inner being. It is not a question to-day of proving whether St. Augustine himself could say, from his own experience, “I know myself that during the time between going to sleep and waking, there arises an experience which is true, even if not real inwardly.” The fact that one could grasp ouch a perception, on which one could stand firm, was still absolutely possible in the age of St. Augustine.

Now, you see, if you take what I have just said with reference to the subjective nature of man, and generalise it over the whole Macrocosm, you come to something else. You come to that condition from which subjective nature in an older epoch, and still in the 4th Post-Atlantean period, has really preceded; that from which it really became possible. Let us speak for a moment of the pre-Christian era. You must bear in mind that the Mystery of Golgotha is the dividing line between those ancient atavistic perceptions and the newer ones, which are only to-day in their beginning. In that pre-Christian age one could still cling to certain living Mystery-Truths. The Mystery Truths, to which I am now referring, are those which pertain especially to the great secret of Birth and Death. That is considered by certain Mystery Initiates as a secret which, they think, may not be referred to among the profane. (I have also spoken of this in recent lectures). They consider that those secrete should not be imparted to the world, because the world is not yet ripe to receive them. In that pre-Christian epoch there was in the Mysteries a certain view concerning the connection between Birth and. Death in the great Cosmic Life into which man with his entire being is inserted. In that pre-Christian age, through those Mysteries, man turned his attention specially to Birth, to all the processes of being born into the world. Anyone who is acquainted with the World-views of ancient times, knows also what emphasis was laid on the process of Birth,—of Arising, Sprouting, Growing;—all those processes, all those ancient views, specially concerned themselves with this. I have often emphasised what a gigantic contrast appeared through the Mystery of Golgotha. I have put it in the following way. Just think how, 600 years before the Mystery of Golgotha, Buddha, who stands ever in the evolution of main as the conclusion of the pre-Christian World-Conception, is led to his conceptions because, amongst other things, he beholds a corpse. “Death is suffering.” It becomes an axiom with the Buddha, that suffering must be overcome, A means must be found to be able to turn away from death. The corpse is that from which Buddha turns, in order to come to something which for him, can though spiritualised, can be filled with Sprouting, Growing life.

If we now turn to 600 years after the Mystery of Golgotha, to another part or the world, and other human beings, we see that the vision of the Corpse of Christ on the Cross is not something which man has to turn away from, but to which he has to turn, which is regarded whole-heartedly as the symbol that can solve the riddles of the Cosmos in so far as they refer to man and his development.

There is a wonderful connection within this 1200 years, six hundred years Before Golgotha, the turning away from a corpse gives an uplift to one's concept of the World; 600 years after Golgotha there is developed a symbol, The Image of the Crucifix, a turning towards death, towards a corpse, in order to create those forces from that Corpse, by which one can reach a concept of the world able to throw light on human evolution. Among the many things which show the mighty transformation which appeared in earthly evolution through the Mystery of Golgotha, there is this Buddha symbol, this turning away from the corpse; and then comes the Christ-symbol, the turning towards the Corpse—the Corpse of that Being Who in regarded as the highest Being ever seen on the Earth.

It was really the case that in a certain connection the old Mysteries put the Mystery of Birth in the very centre of their world-conception. But therewith, my dear friends, (since we are talking of Mystery-knowledge and not merely giving forth trivial views) therewith you have before your souls a deep cosmological secret. Your attention is turned to that with which is connected the life of Birth in the World's evolution.

And one does not come to understand this life of Birth in the Cosmos unless one can go beck to the Riddle of the Old Moon. know indeed that the preview: incarnation of the Earth before it became Earth was Old Moon, and in many of the phenomena connected with our present Moon, that camp-follower, so to speak of the Old Moon.—(you can read this up in my “Outline of Occult Science”)—in various phenomena connected to-day with the present Moon, with this straggler, we simply have the after effects of what occurred in the Moon-Incarnation of the Earth, at the time which preceded our earthly development.

Now there would be no such thing as Birth in all the kingdoms of nature, there would be nothing born on the Earth, were it not that the law of the Old Moon prevailed through this straggler, which is the satellite of our Earth. All birth in the various kingdoms of nature and man, is dependent on the activity of the Moon. With this is also connected the fact that the Initiates of the ancient Hebrews regarded Jehovah as the Moon-God, as a Divine Being who arranged the process of bringing forth; Jehovah was honoured as a Moon-Divinity. It was clearly seen that cosmologically, behind all the processes of birth throughout all the kingdoms, there ruled the laws of the Moon. And so one could, I might say, symbolically utter a deep secret of Cosmology by saying: when the Moonlight falls on the Earth, on what is represented through this light, depends everything connected with all the Sprouting, Growing and `being born' on the Earth. In those pre-Christian ages one did not turn in the highest Mysteries to the life of the Sun, one turned to the reflected sunlight, that is, to the Moon, whenever the secret of Birth was alluded to. And the peculiar “Nuances” which were poured over the depths of those pre-Christian conceptions depended on the fact that the initiates knew the Mysteries or the Moon.

They regarded the Sun Mysteries as something quite veiled, something hardly bearable for a humanity not fully prepared, because they knew that it is a deception, a maya, to believe that through the rays of the Sun falling on the Earth those things which Sprout and Grow are enchanted out of the various kingdoms of nature. That is a deception, a maya. It was known that from the life of the Sun did not depend the process of Birth, but, on the contrary, the decaying, decreasing life, the process of Death. These were the secrets of the Mysteries. The Moon causes things to be born, but the Sun causes them to die. And, however highly for other reasons the Sun-life was honoured in those pre-Christian Mysteries, the Sun-life was honoured as the cause of Death. The fact that beings had to die was not to be ascribed to the Sun, the 2nd incarnation of the Earth, but has to be ascribed to the resent Sun, which appears so magnificently on the horizon.

Well, the decay of life, the opposite of birth, is connected with the Sun-life, but, my dear friends, there was something else, not so important in that pre-Christian age, but very specially important in our post-Christian age: and that is, that all conscious life is connected with Sun-life, and that conscious life through which man has especially to pass in the course of his earthly evolution, that consciousness which shines forth especially in the 5th Post-Atlantean age to which we ourselves belong, that is most intensely connected with the Sun-life. Only we must consider this Sun-life Spiritually, as we have attempted to do in the course of lectures given this Summer. For, if indeed the Sun is the creator of Death, of the decaying life in the Cosmos and also of man, yet the Sun is at the same time the creator of conscious life. The conscious life was not so important in the pre-Christian ages, because it was then replaced by an atavistic clairvoyant life, which still remained as an inheritance of the Moon. For our post-Christian age it has however become important, far more important than life. Consciousness has become more important than life, because only through consciousness can the goal of earthly evolution be reached—which is, that this consciousness should be attained in the corresponding way by the humanity on earth. You must receive this consciousness from the giver, the Sun, from which comes the living into Death and not the life of Birth.

Therefore the Mystery of Golgotha appears as that power in earthly development which has now become the most important thing for this evolution:—the Son of the Sun, the Christ, Who passed through the Body of Jesus of Nazareth,—That is connected with the deepest Cosmic secrets. The ancient Mystery Initiates said to their pupils:

“Try to recognise through your sleep-life how the Moon-forces are playing into it. (We know that even waking-man is partially asleep). Try to recognise the MOON-life in your sleep-life, for it plays into your sleep-life, as the Silvery Moon-shine plays into the darkness of night.”

The Christian Initiates on the contrary said to their disciples: “Try to recognise that in your waking-life consciousness shines; for the Sun-Forces pour into your waking-life, just as from morning till evening the Sun shines outside in the life of the Earth.”

You see, this reversal was fulfilled through the Mystery of Golgotha, and, whereas in pre-Christian ages the most important thing was to recognise the origin of Life, it has now become the most important thing to recognise the origin of Consciousness. Only through learning to unite this cosmological wisdom with what man experiences as true certainty in his soul, which means, only by grasping Spiritual Science with one's Inner Being, does man come to see the Spiritual Reality concealed in that which otherwise lacks this reality it his inner being.

Now with those means possessed by St. Augustine, the means possessed by those who stand on an Augustinian basis, one cannot get very far, because every sleep refutes the real certainty of one's inner experiences. Only when its Reality is added to this inner experience does man come to a really firm stand on the basis of his inner experience.

You see, my dear friends, that which we think to-day, that which we feel to-day in our present life on Earth, has not as yet any reality. This is even recognised to-day, by a few scientifically-thinking men. What we think and feel in our inner soul is unreal at present; and that is just the peculiarity—that which we experience most intimately, that which shines indubitably in us as truth, without doubt that at present has no reality. But this is really the fruitful seed for our next earthly life. That of which St. Augustine was speaking, and for which there is no guarantee of its reality, that we may say, is the seed for the next earthly life. We can say:—it is true that the truth shines in our inner being, but it shines simply as a gleam, (Schein). To-day it in still but a gleam, but in our earthly incarnation that which now is gleam, and as such is simply a germ, will become a fruit which animates our next incarnation, as the seed of the plant this year will animate the visible plant of next year. Only when we conquer time can we find in what we now experience inwardly, a reality. Of course we should not be the human being we are and that we should be, if we experienced our inward truth as though it were a reality like the external world. We should never become free. There could be no question of freedom; we should not even be personalities, we should simply be woven into an ordering of Nature, and whatever occurred in us would occur of necessity. We are only personalities and especially free personalities, because from out of the weaving of natural events there arises as a kind of miracle, the gleam (der Schein) of those things which we experience in our inner soul and which will only become external reality, like that of our environment, in our next earthly incarnation.

It is the deceptive nature of our age to which all fantasy still gives itself, that we do not take into consideration the fact that what springs up inwardly as an unreality is one earthly incarnation, becomes a concrete reality in the next. We shall speak further on this point in the next two lectures.

We see hew from the standpoint we have acquired to-day we can look back at the standpoint of St. Augustine, how we can understand him, and to a certain extent can see in him what he himself could not yet see. Thus St. Augustine stands for us as a specially significant figure in the twilight of the 4th Post-Atlantean age, because with especial sharpness he points to the one stream in world-happiness to the stream of the Ideal; and in this stream he seeks to find a firm point. St. Augustine sought that firm point. To-day we only want to bring forward the historical fact.

There had not yet come to people in his age that tremendous swing of the pendulum which came about with the Mysteries of Birth and of Death; for only out of this Mystery of Death of which we shall Speak further tomorrow, can one find a real substantiation of the absolute certainty of what man experiences inwardly as Truth.

We shall now have to make a great jump. Just as we have characterised what reveals itself in St. Augustine as representative of the twilight of the 4th Post-Atlantean age, so we will take certain personalities characteristic of our 5th Post-Atlantean age, and study them according to a certain direction. Of these I will select two.

One of those persons in whom a certain tendency was developed which is characteristic for the 5th age, is Count Saint-Simon, who lived from 1766 to 1825, Another is a pupil of Saint-Simon, Auguste Comte, who lived from 1798 to 1857. If we have in St. Augustine a personality who, with all the means which stood at his disposal, sought through his knowledge, to substantiate Christianity, so an the other hand in Saint-Simon and also in Auguste Comte, we see personalities who are led completely astral [astray?] as regards Christianity. We can best gain a clear idea of what lived in Auguste Comte, as also in a certain sense in Saint-Simon, if we briefly outline the chief thoughts of Auguste Comte.

Auguste Comte is to a great extent representative of a certain world-view in our age; and it is only due to the fact that people trouble so little as to how certain impulses in philosophy incorporate themselves into the life of man, that Auguste Comte is regarded as a kind of rarity, in historical life. These persons do not know how, perhaps not quite everywhere, but still in countless human beings, Auguste Comte exercises a school-masterly influence in the essential directions of their thinking, and one may say that Auguste Comte is representative of a great portion of the philosophical life of the present.

Auguste Comte says that humanity has developed through Three stages, and has now reached the third stage. If one observes the soul-life of men through these three stages, one finds in the first stage that the ideas of man tended mostly towards Demonology. The first stage of evolution in the Comte sense is the demonological stage. Human beings imagined that behind the sensible phenomena of Nature supersensible Spiritual beings were active and operative; spirits were imagined everywhere in trivial life—demons were threatening everywhere, big demons and little demons. That was the first stage.

Then men passed on, as they developed. a little further, from the standpoint of Demonology to that of Metaphysics. Whereas they first thought demons, elementary beings, were behind all phenomena, they then put abstract ideas in their place.—People became Metaphysical when they no longer it wasted to be believers in demons. Thus the second stage is that of Metaphysics. They united certain concepts with their own life, and thought that through those ideas they could come to the basis of things.

But man has now gone beyond this stage. He has entered on the third stage, in which Auguste Comte quite in the sense of his master Saint-Simon, assumes that man no longer looks on demons, no longer looks to metaphysical concepts when seeking the basis of the World, but simply to that which results as the Sense-Reality of positivistic science. The third stage is therefore the stage of Positivism, of Positivistic Science. The revelations to be obtained simply through external scientific experience should be regarded by man as leading to a world-conception. He should explain himself in the same way as the metaphysical explanation given about the orderings of space, as physics explain the law of Forces, Chemistry the ordering of Substances, or Biology the ordering of Life. Just as everything can thus be explained by the different Sciences, so Comte tried to present a like harmony in his great work on Positive Philosophy. Everything which can be experienced through the various positive Sciences is considered by Comte as the sole thing worthy of men in the third stage. Christianity itself he still considers as the highest development of the last phase of Demonology. Then appeared Metaphysics,—which gave man a number of abstract concepts. But a concrete reality which alone can give an existence worthy of man on Earth, that can be given by Positive Science alone, according to Comte. And so he even tries to found a Church on the basis of positive Science, to bring man into such social structures as can be grasped on a basis of Positive Science. It is very extraordinary to see to what things Auguste Comte really came at last. I will only bring forward a few really characteristic features. He occupied himself a great deal with the founding of a Positivistic Church. Now if you just take the various points, you will at once perceive the spirit of it. This Positivistic Church was to bring out a kind of Calendar. A certain number of the days of the year were to be devoted, for instance, to the memory of such people as Newton or Galileo, or Kepler; the bearers of Positivistic Science. These days were to be devoted to their veneration. Other days should then be devoted to the condemnation of such people as Julian the Apostate or Napoleon. All that was to be regulated. Life itself was to be regulated with a great sweep, according to the basic principles of Positivistic Science.

Now anyone who knows life to-day, knows that no great number of human beings would take such ideals as those of Auguste Comte seriously although that Is simply cowardice, because in truth people do think as Auguste Comte did. If one studies the image the Positivistic Church of Comte gives, one actually gets the impression that the structure of his Church accords absolutely and entirely with that of the Roman Catholic Church. Only the Christ is lacking in the Positivistic Church of Auguste Comte, and that is the extraordinary thing. That in just what we must place before our souls as characteristic.—Auguste Comte seeks a Catholic Church without the Christ. That is what he came to, when he took those three stages into his soul;—Demonology, Metaphysics and Positivism. And one can say he took over all the “clothing” of Christianity, as it came to him out of history. He considered the clothing very good; but the Christ Himself he wished to banish out of his Church. That is the essential point round which everything revolves in Auguste Comte. A Catholic Church without the Christ.

That, my dear friends, is infinitely characteristic of the dawn of the 5th Post-Atlantean age, because as Auguste Comte thought, so a spirit had to think who had absorbed in his soul the element of Romanism, and thought from out of this element of Romanism, while at the same time he thought fully in the sense of the 5th Post-Atlantean epoch, with its so absolutely anti-spiritual character. And to Auguste Comte and his teacher Saint-Simon, are in the highest degree characteristic of the dawning of our 5th Post-Atlantean age. But in this 5th age many things have yet to be decided, and therefore other shadings appear which are still also possible. I just want to throw a few historical lights before you to-day, on which we can then build further.

An extraordinary contrast to Auguste Comte is Schelling, who lived from 1775 to 1854; and he also is to a certain extent characteristic of the dawn of our 5th Post-Atlantean age. Of course I cannot put before you even diagrammatically the world-view of Schelling. We have spoken often of it from this or the other point of view—it is most manifold in itself. I cannot even give you any idea now of its structure, but can only point out various characteristics.

I told you St. Augustine takes his stand in the twilight of the 4th Post-Atlantean age with the purpose, so to observe the one stream, the Ideal, that thereby he could get a firm point on which to stand. We now enter on the 5th Post-Atlantean Age. In its dawn we have such spirits as Saint-Simon and Auguste Comte who, in a purely natural materialistic ordering, seek a firm point in positivistic science. Thus we have two streams—Augustine on the one side, Auguste Comte on the other. Schelling seeks to get behind what can be seen in the world with the ordinary means of the 5th Post-Atlantean age; he seeks first abstractly and philosophically for a bridge between the Ideal and the Real, the Ideal and the Material. He tried with infinite energy to find the bridge. (You can find the essential points of this in my book “Riddles of Man.”) He seeks with infinite energy to bridge over that opposition and he came at first to all kinds of abstract thoughts in the course of this bridge-building. While he first built on the same basis as Johann Gottlieb Fichte, he went a little further, and attempted to grasp something in the world as real Being—something which is both the Ideal and the Real at the same time. Then came a time in Schelling's life in which it appeared impossible to him, with the methods of abstractions brought to him in the course of time out of the 5th Post-Atlantean age, to build a bridge between those two. So he said one day: “Human beings have really only acquired on the basis of their modern learning concepts by which they can grasp the external ordering of Nature. But we have no concepts by means of which we can come behind this external Nature to that sphere where one could build a bridge between the Ideal and External Reality.” It is extremely interesting that one day Schelling made the following admission. He said, it appeared to him as though the learned people of the last centuries had concluded a silent contract tending to wipe out everything of a deeper nature,—all that could lead one to a real true life. Therefore he said: “We meet turn to the unlearned people.” That was the time when Schelling started studying Jacob Boehme, and found in him that Spiritual deepening which then guided him to his final and theosophical period of life, from which proceeded his wonderful books the “Freedom of Man,” “The Gods of Samathrace,” the Kabiri Divinities; followed by his “Philosophy of Mythology” and the “Philosophy of Revolution.”

Now what Schelling most sought, especially in the last period of his life, was to understand the intervention of the Mystery of Golgotha into the history of mankind. That he sought especially; and while so doing it occurred to him that, with the ideas at the disposal of modern learning, one could never really understand the life which flows from the Mystery of Golgotha; which means that one could never come to understand the true life of man. Thereby Schelling formed the conclusion, (and that is the tendency which I want to emphasise especially now:—we will build further on this in the next lecture)—which is in complete contrast to that of his contemporary, Auguste Comte. That is the remarkable thing. We may say that Auguste Comte seeks a Catholicism, or I might better say a Catholic Church, without Christianity; Schelling, with his views, sought a Christianity without a Church. Schelling seeks, as it were, to Christianise the whole of modern life, to permeate it with Christianity; so that everything which human beings can Think and Feel and Will is absolutely saturated by the Christ-Impulse. He does not seek a separate clerical life for Christianity, especially not after the type found in historical evolution, although he studied this life very carefully.

Thus we have those two extremes—Auguste Comte's thought, of a Church without Christ, and Schelling's thought, of a Christ without a Church.

I just wanted to place these historical views before your soul, in order to be able to build further on these things. We have seen one spirit who seeks a firm starting point in Idealism—A spirit, Auguste Comte, who seeks a firm starting point in Realism, and then a personality such as Schelling who seeks to build a bridge between them. Both these tendencies preceded the evolution in which we ourselves are engaged.

We may say the following:—we can now survey those things which have contributed through many centuries to the life of World-Conceptions, and then we can turn our attention to the way in which these ideas have developed in the widest circles of human beings. The study of Auguste Comte gives a very important Aperçu, but Comte himself could not attain this, because he stuck so rigidly to his positivistic prejudices. But something which can give us an important starting point for our considerations for the next days results, when we see in an Aperçu the connection between St. Augustine, Auguste Comte, and Schelling, I will just put this at the conclusion of these considerations, because I should like it to have a place in your souls. We shall then have to speak of that which is connected in a significant way with just this. Now, as this Aperçu results from a consideration of what I have told you, I will simply put aphoristically, without giving the foundations for it in detail, the reason why this, which is not to be found in Auguste Comte, is to be found in others. I have told you that it is important not to consider the life of these World-views individually in the abstract, but one must regard them as incorporated into the entire life of humanity. Only thereby does one reach a standpoint of reality, when one can see the incorporation of these things into the collective life of mankind.

It was clear to Saint-Simon and Auguste Comte that they could only come to their positivism in recent times, that it would have been impossible in an earlier age. Auguste Comte feels it especially strongly; he says approximately “My mode of thought is only possible in our Age.” That is something which is of infinite importance in our modern Movement, and in connected with that Aperçu to which I am referring. if one takes what Auguste Comte considers as a starting point for his threefold division, one can say in his sense, that this threefold division is Theology, Metaphysics, and what he calls Positivistic Science.

It in very characteristic that one can put this question: “Who will most easily be a believer in any one of these directions?” I beg you not to misunderstand what I am saying with reference to this Aperçu not even to grasp it as a one-sided radical dogma to be applied very roughly with absolute certainty to our present age, but to take it as applying to the whole evolution of man, as it must be if one will regard what I now say. One can ask: not “who will be a believer?” but “Who will most easily be a believer in any one of these directions? From a very careful consideration, contradictory to facts as it may seem, this results:—The one who most easily becomes a believer in Theology (please, not a bearer, not a theologian, nor a worker, but simply a believer; I am not speaking of religion but of Theology) is the Soldier. The person who most easily becomes a believer in Metaphysics is the Official, especially the legal Official. And the person who is most easily becomes a believer in Positivistic Science is the Industrial.

It is important if one must judge life, not to remain in the abstract, but to look at it quite unprejudiced, and then such questions have to be put.

I just want this quite treated as an Aperçu which results when one intimately studies Auguste Comte, because he was conscious that he was only completely comprehensible to the Industrials; and only In an Industrial Age could he appear on the scene with his views. That is connected with the fact that the Industrial is most easily a follower of Positivistic Science; the Soldier most easily a believer not merely of Christian but of any Theology; and the Official most easily a believer, a follower of Metaphysics.

Erster Vortrag

Ich möchte gerne einiges von dem, was in den Betrachtungen, die wir in diesem Sommer hier schon angestellt haben, vorgebracht worden ist, vertiefen, und in den nächsten Tagen wollen wir einiges Geschichtliche und auch einiges Sachliche dazufügen. Heute möchte ich vorbereitend Sie auf einige geschichtliche Tatsachen hinweisen, und aus diesen geschichtlichen Tatsachen, vorzugsweise aus der Offenbarung gewisser geschichtlicher Persönlichkeiten, einige Folgerungen, die sich einer gründlicheren Betrachtung ergeben, Ihnen vorführen.

Diejenigen, welche in die Mysterien eingeweiht sind, zu allen Zeiten eingeweiht waren, haben mit Recht immer einen Ausspruch getan. Es ist der, daß auf der einen Seite, wenn man die beiden Strömungen des Weltanschauungslebens, die wir angeführt haben, den Idealismus und den Materialismus, nicht im rechten Maße einzuschätzen weiß, man dann entweder in der Gefahr schwebt, durch eine Falltüre in ein Kellerloch der Weltanschauung zu fallen, oder aber bei den verschiedenen Wegen, die man einschlägt, um eine Weltanschauung zu gewinnen, in eine Sackgasse kommen kann. Das Kellerloch, in das man fallen kann durch eine Falltüre, die man leicht unbemerkt läßt im Weltanschauungsleben, dieses Kellerloch sehen die Mysterieneingeweihten aller Zeiten an als den Dualismus, der nicht die Brücke findet zwischen dem Ideellen, man könnte auch sagen, ideell gefärbten Spirituellen, und dem Materiellen, dem Stofflichen. Und die Sackgasse, in die man sich verirren kann beim Wandeln verschiedener Wege der Weltanschauungen, wenn man nicht zurechtkommt mit dem Ausgleich zwischen Idealismus und Materialismus, diese Sackgasse ist für Mysterieneingeweihte der Fatalismus. Deutlich neigt ja wiederum die neuere Zeit auf der einen Seite zur dualistischen Weltanschauung, auf der andern Seite zur fatalistischen Weltanschauung, wenn auch das eine oder das andere von den neuzeitlichen Weltanschauungen nicht eingestanden oder eigentlich nicht einmal eingesehen wird.

Nun möchte ich zuerst aus dem Leben in der Abenddämmerung des vierten nachatlantischen Zeitraums eine Persönlichkeit - zunächst skizzenhaft charakterisiert - mit Bezug auf das Weltanschauungsleben hinstellen, und dann andere Persönlichkeiten betrachten, die mehr charakteristisch sind für das Weltanschauungsleben unserer Epoche, der fünften nachatlantischen Epoche.

Eine sehr, sehr charakteristische Persönlichkeit innerhalb des abendländischen Weltanschauungslebens ist Augustinus, der gelebt hat von 354 bis 430 der christlichen Zeitrechnung. Wir wollen mit einigen Gedanken des Augustinus gedenken aus dem Grunde, weil, wie Sie ja aus der Jahreszahl sehen, er in der Abenddämmerung lebte des vierten nachatlantischen Zeitraums, der im 15. Jahrhundert seinen Abschluß findet. Man kann schon deutlich bemerken, wie dieser Abschluß herannaht, vom 3., 4., 5., 6. nachchristlichen Jahrhundert angefangen. Nun ist Augustinus durchgegangen durch Eindrücke verschiedenster Weltanschauungen. Über diese Dinge haben wir ja schon gesprochen. Vor allen Dingen ist Augustinus durchgegangen durch den Manichäismus und durch den Skeptizismus. Er hat alle diejenigen Impulse in seine Seele aufgenommen, die man bekommt, wenn man auf der einen Seite in der Welt alles Ideale, Schöne, Gute sieht, alles dasjenige, was von Weisheit erfüllt ist, und dann auch alles dasjenige, was übel ist, was Böses ist. Und wir wissen ja, daß der Manichäismus dadurch zurechtzukommen sucht - es ist das grob ausgedrückt, aber es kann auch so ausgedrückt werden - mit diesen beiden Strömungen in der Weltenordnung, daß er gewissermaßen ewig dauernde Polarität annimmt, einen ewig dauernden Gegensatz des Lichtes, der Finsternis, des Guten, des Bösen, des Weisheitsvollen, des Übels.

Mit diesem Dualismus kommt der Manichäismus nur dadurch zurecht, in seiner Art zurecht, daß er gewisse alte, vorchristliche Grundbegriffe mit dieser seiner Annahme von der Polarität der Weltenerscheinungen verbindet, vor allen Dingen verbindet gewisse Vorstellungen, die sich nur begreifen lassen, wenn man weiß, daß in alten Zeiten von den Menschen im atavistischen Hellsehen die geistige Welt geschaut worden ist, so geschaut worden ist, daß die Schauungen in ihrem Inhalte ähnlich sind den Eindrücken, welche die sinnliche Wahrnehmungswelt macht. Dadurch, daß der Manichäismus solche Vorstellungen, ich möchte sagen, von einem sinnlichen Schein des Übersinnlichen in sich aufgenommen hat, macht er auf viele den Eindruck, als ob er das Geistige vermaterialisierte, als ob er das Geistige in sinnlichen Formen vorstellte. Es ist das ja ein Fehler, den auch noch neuere Weltanschauungen, den zum Beispiel, wie ich Ihnen auseinandergesetzt habe in diesen Tagen, auch die neuere Theosophie vielfach macht. Augustinus ist gerade vom Manichäismus mit dadurch abgekommen, daß er diese Versinnlichung, diese Vermaterialisierung des Spirituellen im Laufe geläuterteren Vorstellungslebens nicht mehr ertragen konnte. Das war einer der Gründe, die ihn abgebracht haben.

Dann ist Augustinus auch durchgegangen durch den Skeptizismus, der insoferne eine berechtigte Weltanschauung ist, als er den Menschen aufmerksam darauf macht, daß man durch die bloße Betrachtung dessen, was man aus der sinnlichen Welt und aus den Erfahrungen und Erlebnissen der sinnlichen Welt gewinnen kann, nichts erfahren kann über das Übersinnliche. Und wenn man dann zugleich der Anschauung ist, daß man das Übersinnliche als solches nicht erhalten kann, dann zweifelt man an der Erkenntnis der Wahrheit überhaupt. Auch durch diesen Zweifel an der Erkenntnis der Wahrheit überhaupt ist Augustinus durchgegangen. Er hat die stärksten Impulse dadurch erhalten.

Nun muß man, wenn man einsehen will, wodurch sich Augustinus eigentlich hineingestellt hat in die abendländische Weltanschauung, auf den Hauptpunkt seiner Anschauung hinweisen, jenen Hauptpunkt, von dem alles Licht ausstrahlt, das in Augustinus waltet, und der eben der Hauptpunkt seiner späteren, seiner letztgebildeten Weltanschauung gewesen ist. Das ist der Punkt, der in dieser Art charakterisiert werden kann: Augustinus kam darauf, daß Gewißheit, wahrhaftige Gewißheit, keiner Täuschung unterworfene Gewißheit eigentlich der Mensch nur erringen kann mit Bezug auf dasjenige, was er im Inneren seiner Seele erlebt. Alles übrige kann ungewiß sein. Ob die Dinge, die unseren Augen erscheinen, die unseren Ohren hörbar werden, die auf unsere andern Sinne einen Eindruck machen, ob diese Dinge wirklich so konstituiert sind, wie das nach der Aussage der Sinne angenommen werden muß, das kann man nicht wissen; man kann nicht einmal wissen, wie diese Welt eigentlich aussieht, wenn man die Sinne vor ihr verschließt. - So denken Persönlichkeiten, die im Sinne des Augustinus über die äußere, erfahrbare Welt denken. Sie denken sich, daß diese äußere erfahrbare Welt, wie sie dem Menschen vorliegt, keine unbedingte Gewißheit und keine wahrhaftige Gewißheit geben könne, daß man aus ihr nichts gewinnen könne, worauf man als auf einem festen Punkte einer Weltanschauung stehen könnte. Dagegen ist man bei dem, was man in seinem Inneren erlebt — ganz gleichgültig, wie man es erlebt -, unmittelbar dabei, man ist es selbst, der die Vorstellungen, die Gefühle im Inneren erlebt; man weiß sich im inneren Erleben drinnenstehend. Und so ergibt sich für einen solchen Denker wie Augustinus die durch das innere Erleben belegbare Tatsache: Mit Bezug auf dasjenige, was der Mensch in seinem Inneren erlebt als Wahrheit, kann er keiner Täuschung sich hingeben. Man kann der Meinung sein, daß alles übrige, was die Welt sagt, der Täuschung unterworfen sei, aber man kann unmöglich daran zweifeln, daß dasjenige wahrhaftig und wirklich von uns im Inneren erlebt wird, was wir eben als unsere Vorstellungen, als unsere Gefühle erleben. — Diese feste Grundlage für das Zugeben einer unbezweifelbaren Wahrheit, sie bildet einen der Ausgangspunkte der Augustinischen Weltanschauung.

Wiederaufgenommen hat diesen Punkt in ganz eklatanter Weise im fünften nachatlantischen Zeitraum Cartesius, der 1596 bis 1650 gelebt hat, also schon in der Morgendämmerung der fünften nachatlantischen Periode. In Cartesius’ bekanntem: Ich denke, also bin ich -, das da bleibt, wenn wir alles übrige bezweifeln, sieht auch Cartesius den Ausgangspunkt, und er ist eigentlich mit dieser Anschauung ganz auf dem Standpunkte des Augustinus.

Nun liegen die Sachen doch so, daß mit Bezug auf das Weltanschauungsleben man immer sagen muß: Wer in irgendeinem Zeitpunkte in der Menschheitsentwickelung drinnensteht, der kommt zu gewissen Anschauungen. Gewisse Perspektiven dieser Anschauungen sieht er dann nicht; diese sehen dann die Späteren. Man möchte sagen: Den Späteren ist es immer aufbewahrt, gründlicher, wahrer irgend etwas zu sehen, als derjenige sehen kann, der gewisse Dinge aussprechen muß in einem gewissen Zeitpunkte der Menschheitsentwickelung. - Und über diese Tatsache kommt man nicht hinweg. Und gut ist es, wenn insbesondere auf unserem anthroposophischen Standpunkte das der Fall ist, was ich öfter schon erwähnt habe, wenn auf unserem anthroposophischen Standpunkte bewußt und gründlich erkannt wird: Auch dasjenige Wissen, das man in der Gegenwart, und sei es auch ein noch so ausgeprägtes, über spirituelle Dinge erwerben kann, es darf nicht aufgefaßt werden wie eine Summe von absoluten Dogmen. Man muß sich klar sein darüber, daß Spätere in kommenden Zeiten auftreten werden, die gerade an dem, was wir heute vorzubringen in der Lage sind, Wahreres sehen werden, als wir selbst sehen können. Darauf beruht eigentlich die geistige Entwickelung der Menschheit. Und alles Hemmnis, alles Hindernis des geistigen Fortschrittes der Menschheit beruht schließlich darauf, daß die Menschen das nicht zugeben wollen, daß sie gern Wahrheiten überliefert haben möchten, die nicht die Wahrheiten eines bestimmten Zeitalters sind, sondern die absolute, zeitlose Dogmen sind.

Wir können heute gerade wiederum von unserem Gesichtspunkte aus auf Augustinus zurückblicken, und wir werden uns sagen müssen: Steht man auf Augustinischem Standpunkte, dann wird man scharf hinzusehen haben darauf, daß er Ungewißheit über die Wahrheit in allen äußeren Offenbarungen annimmt, wahrhaftige Gewißheit in dem Erleben desjenigen, was wir in unserer Seele tragen. — Das setzt voraus, wenn jemand sich einer solchen Anschauung hingibt, daß er als Mensch einen gewissen Mut hat. Man brauchte vielleicht gar nicht das, was ich jetzt sage, so dezidiert zu erwähnen, wie ich es tun muß, wenn nicht gerade in unserer Zeit es charakteristisch wäre für das Weltanschauungsleben, daß eben gerade dieser Mut fehlt. Und dieser Mut, den ich hier meine, er äußert sich nach zwei Richtungen hin. Die eine Richtung ist diese, daß man kühnlich, wie Augustinus, sich gesteht: Wahrhaftige Gewißheit findest du nur mit Bezug auf dasjenige, was du im Inneren erlebst. - Dann muß der andere Pol dieses Mutes da sein, der eben gerade in der Gegenwart nicht da ist; man muß den Mut dann auch haben, sich zu gestehen: In der äußeren sinnlichen Offenbarung ist diese wahrhaftige Gewißheit über die Wirklichkeit nicht enthalten. - Es gehört schon ein innerlicher Denkermut dazu, der äußeren Wirklichkeit, die dem heutigen Materialismus zum Beispiel als absolut sicher gilt, die wahrhaftige Gewißheit in ihren Aussagen abzusprechen. Und es gehört auf der andern Seite ein gewisser Mut dazu, sich zu sagen: Wahrhaftige Gewißheit erfließt nur, wenn man so recht sich dessen bewußt wird, was man im Inneren erlebt.

Gewiß, es ist auch in unserer Zeit solches wiederum gesagt worden, und es gibt in unserer Zeit Menschen, die von ihren Mitmenschen, insofern diese zu einer Weltanschauung kommen wollen, diesen zweifach sich äußernden Mut fordern. Dennoch muß man heute über die Sache anders denken, wenn man erschöpfend denken will, und darin zeigt sich eben die ganze historische Stellung des Augustinus für den heutigen Menschen, daß man über diese Sache etwas anders denken muß. Heute muß man nämlich das wissen, was weder Augustinus noch Cartesius erwogen haben - ich habe es da, wo ich den Cartesius besprochen habe in meinem Buche «Vom Menschenrätsel» ausgeführt -, heute muß man sagen: Der Glaube, daß man zu einem Befriedigenden des Weltanschauungslebens durch das Ergreifen des unmittelbaren Inneren des Menschen, so wie es heute von dem Menschen erlebt wird, kommen könne, dieser Glaube wird von jedem Schlafe widerlegt. Jedesmal, wenn der Mensch der heutigen Zeit in die Bewußtlosigkeit des Schlafes zurücksinkt, wird ihm zwar nicht dasjenige, wovon Augustinus spricht — die absolute wahrhaftige Gewißheit des inneren Erlebens -, aber die Wirklichkeit dieses inneren Erlebens wird ihm entrissen. Jedesmal vom Einschlafen bis zum Aufwachen ist die Wirklichkeit dieses wahrhaftigen Erlebens entflohen. Und der Mensch der heutigen Zeit, der in etwas anderer Art das Innere erlebt, als man es noch erlebt hat im vierten nachatlantischen Zeitraum, selbst in der Abenddämmerung zur Zeit des Augustinus, der muß sich sagen: Möge noch so scharf, noch so offenbar eine Gewißheit im Inneren erlebt werden, für das Leben nach dem Tode gibt das doch keine Gewißheit, aus dem einfachen Grunde, weil wir ja mit jedem Schlafe die Wirklichkeit hinuntersinken sehen in das Unbewußte, der heutige Mensch weiß nicht, ob nicht auch in das Unwirkliche. - Es darf also heute nicht mehr geschlossen werden, was man in seinem Inneren scheinbar absolut sicher erlebt, das könne nicht angefochten werden. Es kann theoretisch nicht angefochten werden, aber die Tatsache des Schlafes selber widerlegt es.

Indem man den Blick auf das eben Gesagte hinwendet, erkennt man aber auch gleich, wie eigentlich Augustinus mit einem viel größeren Rechte als später Cartesius, der die Sache doch mehr oder weniger nur nachgesprochen hat, zu dieser Anschauung hat kommen können. Durch den ganzen vierten nachatlantischen Zeitraum, auch durch das Zeitalter des Augustinus hindurch, lebte in den Menschen noch etwas von Nachklängen des alten, atavistischen Hellsehens. Die Geschichte notifiziert das leider heute viel zu wenig, weiß eigentlich auch nicht viel davon. Aber zahlreich waren die Menschen den ganzen vierten nachatlantischen Zeitraum hindurch, die aus persönlicher Erfahrung wußten: Es gibt ein geistiges Leben - weil sie dieses geistige Leben eben schauten. Aber sie schauten es zumeist in diesem vierten Zeitraume - ungleich wie im dritten oder zweiten Zeitraume — dadurch, daß es in ihr Schlafleben hineinspielte. So daß man sagen kann: Für den vierten nachatlantischen Zeitraum war es bei den Menschen noch nicht so wie jetzt im fünften nachatlantischen Zeitraum, daß der Schlaf völlig bewußtlos verläuft. - Die Leute des vierten nachatlantischen Zeitraums wußten noch: Vom Einschlafen bis zum Aufwachen ist eine Zeit, in der in anderen Formen das wirkt, was sie als Vorstellungen, als Gefühle vom Aufwachen bis zum Einschlafen haben. Es tauchte gewissermaßen das wache Wahrheitsleben unter in das dämmerhaft bewußte Schlafesleben. Und man wußte: Was man als innere Wahrheit erlebt, das hat nicht nur Wahrheit, sondern auch Realität, hat auch Wirklichkeit. Denn man kannte die Augenblicke des Schlafeslebens, in denen sich zeigte, wie vorhanden ist als wirkliches, als reales, nicht bloß als abstraktes Leben dasjenige, was man im Inneren erfährt. Es kommt nicht darauf an, ob jemand heute noch beweisen kann oder nicht, daß Augustinus selbst aus eigener Erfahrung heraus hätte sagen können: Ich weiß, es dauert durch den Zeitraum vom Einschlafen bis zum Aufwachen dasjenige, was man innerlich zwar wahr, aber unwirklich erlebt. - Aber daß man eine solche Anschauung fassen konnte, daß man auf sie sich stellen konnte, das war in der Zeit des Augustinus durchaus möglich.

Nun, wenn Sie dies, was ich jetzt mit Bezug auf das Subjektive des Menschen ausgeführt habe, verallgemeinern auf den ganzen Makrokosmos, so kommen Sie auf etwas anderes; Sie kommen dann auf dasjenige, aus dem dieses Subjektive in älterer Zeit, also noch im vierten nachatlantischen Zeitraum, eigentlich hervorgegangen ist, wodurch es möglich geworden ist. Man hat sich - sprechen wir jetzt von der vorchristlichen Zeit, namentlich das Mysterium von Golgatha ist die Grenze zwischen alten atavistischen Anschauungen und späteren neuen, die auch heute erst im Aufgange sind - in der vorchristlichen Zeit noch an gewisse lebendige Mysterienwahrheiten halten können. Die Mysterienwahrheiten, die ich damit meine, sind diejenigen, die sich beziehen auf das große Geheimnis der Geburt und des Todes. Das Geheimnis der Geburt und des Todes betrachten ja gewisse Mysterieneingeweihte als ein Geheimnis, welches, wie sie meinen, der profanen Welt nicht mitgeteilt werden solle, weil die Welt noch nicht dazu reif sei. Aber innerhalb der Mysterien war auch in der vorchristlichen Zeit eine gewisse Anschauung vorhanden über den Zusammenhang zwischen Geburt und Tod im großen Weltenleben, in das der Mensch ja auch mit seinem ganzen Wesen eingeschaltet ist. In dieser vorchristlichen Zeit hat man durch die Mysterien vorzugsweise den Blick hingewendet auf die Geburt, auf alles Geborenwerdende in der Welt. Wer die Weltanschauungen der alten Zeiten kennt, der weiß auch, daß die Betonung des Geborenwerdens, des Entstehens, des Sprießens und Sprossens diese alten Weltanschauungen ganz vorzugsweise beschäftigte. Und ich habe es ja öfter betont, welcher Gegensatz da eingetreten ist durch das Mysterium von Golgatha. Ich habe es in der folgenden Weise erwähnt: Man denke daran, wie sechshundert Jahre etwa vor dem Mysterium von Golgatha Buddha, der dasteht in der Menschheitsentwickelung wie der Abschluß der vorchristlichen Weltanschauung, zu seinen Anschauungen geführt wird dadurch, daß er unter anderem einen Leichnam sieht. Tod ist Leiden -, und wie ein Axiom gilt es dem Buddha: Das Leiden muß überwunden werden; es muß ein Mittel gefunden werden, sich vom Tode abwenden zu können. - Der Leichnam ist dasjenige, wovon sich Buddha abwendet, um zu dem zu kommen, was, zwar spiritualisiert, aber für ihn doch dasjenige ist, worinnen das sprossende, sprießende Leben erfühlt werden kann.

Und wenn wir sechshundert Jahre nach dem Mysterium von Golgatha an andern Orten bei gewissen Menschen Umschau halten, dann sehen wir, wie der Anblick des Leichnams des Christus am Kreuze nicht dasjenige wird, wovon man sich abwendet, sondern dasjenige, wozu man sich hinwendet, dasjenige, worauf man mit seinem ganzen Herzen blickt als das Symbolum, welches die Weltenrätsel, insoferne sie sich auf den Menschen und sein Werden beziehen, enthüllen soll.

Es ist das ein wunderbarer Zusammenhang innerhalb dieser zwölf Jahrhunderte: Sechshundert Jahre vor dem Mysterium von Golgatha gibt die Abwendung von einem Leichnam dasjenige, was Aufstieg sein soll in der Weltanschauung; sechshundert Jahre nach dem Mysterium von Golgatha ist ausgebildet das Symbolum, das Bildnis des Kruzifixus, die Hinwendung zum Tode, die Hinwendung zum Leichnam, um daraus die Kraft zu schöpfen, zu einer Weltanschauung zu kommen, die auch auf das menschliche Werden Licht wirft. Unter den vielen Dingen, welche den gewaltigen Umschwung, der im Erdenwerden eingetreten ist durch das Mysterium von Golgatha, charakterisieren, ist dieses Buddha-Symbolum: die Abwendung von dem Leichnam, und das Christus-Symbolum: die Hinwendung zu dem Leichnam, der als der Leichnam des höchsten auf der Erde erschienenen Wesens gilt.

Es war eben wirklich so, daß in einer gewissen Beziehung die alten Mysterien das Rätsel der Geburten in den Mittelpunkt der Weltanschauungen gerückt haben. Aber damit haben die Mysterien, da sie ja Mysterienwissen und nicht bloß triviale Anschauungen vermitteln wollten, zu gleicher Zeit ein tiefes kosmologisches Geheimnis vor die Seele hingestellt:Sie haben den Blick auf dasjenige gewendet, was mit dem Leben der Geburten im Weltenlaufe zusammenhängt. Und man kommt nicht darauf, das Leben der Geburten im Weltenlaufe zu verstehen, wenn man nicht zurückgeht auf das alte Mondenrätsel. Wir wissen ja, die Verkörperung der Erde, bevor sie Erde geworden ist, war der alte Mond. Und in verschiedenen Erscheinungen, die mit unserem jetzigen Monde, mit dem Nachzügler des alten Mondes, zusammenhängen — Sie können das in meiner «Geheimwissenschaft im Umriß» nachlesen -, hat man Nachwirkungen dessen zu sehen, was in der alten Mondenzeit, in derjenigen Zeit, die dem Erdenwerden vorangegangen ist, geschehen ist.

Nun gäbe es im Erdenwerden keine Geburten, durch alle Reiche der Natur hindurch gäbe es keine Geburten im Erdenwerden, wenn nicht die Gesetzmäßigkeit des alten Mondes waltete beziehungsweise seines Nachzüglers, welcher der Trabant unserer Erde ist. Alles Geborenwerden durch die Reiche der Natur und des Menschen hindurch hängt mit der Wirksamkeit des Mondes zusammen. Damit hängt auch zusammen, daß die Eingeweihten der alten Hebräer den Jahve als eine Mondgottheit betrachteten, Jahve als den Hervorbringenden, den die Hervorbringungen ordnenden Gott, als eine Mondgottheit ansahen. Dies sah man klar ein, daß kosmologisch allem Geborenwerden durch die Reiche hindurch zugrunde liegen die Mondengesetze. Und so konnte man auch gewissermaßen symbolisch ein tiefes Geheimnis der Kosmologie aussprechen, indem man sagte: Indem das Mondenlicht auf die Erde fällt, rührt von alldem, was durch dieses Mondenlicht dargestellt wird, alles sprießende, sprossende, alles geborenwerdende Leben her. - Man hat sich in den höchsten Mysterien in vorchristlichen Zeiten nicht gewendet an das Sonnenleben, man hat sich gewendet an das vom Monde reflektierte Sonnenleben, indem man von dem Geheimnis der Geburten gesprochen hat. Die eigentümliche Nuance, die über die vorchristlichen Weltanschauungen in ihren Tiefen ausgegossen ist, sie rührt schon einmal davon her, daß man in den alten Mysterien das Mondengeheimnis kannte.

Nur wie etwas ganz Verhülltes, wie etwas, das für die Menschen, die nicht gut vorbereitet sind, wenig erträglich ist, hat man das Sonnengeheimnis betrachtet, weil man wußte, daß es eine ’Täuschung, eine Maja ist, wenn man meint, durch den Strahl der Sonne, der auf die Erde fällt, werden hervorgelockt die sprießenden, sprossenden Wesen der verschiedenen Reiche. Man wußte, von dem Sonnenleben hängt nicht das Geborenwerden ab, sondern umgekehrt, das Versengtwerden, das Abnehmen des Lebens, das Hinsterben des Lebens. Das war das Mysteriengeheimnis, daß der Mond geboren werden läßt die Wesen und die Sonne sie sterben läßt. Wie hoch man also sonst auch aus andern Gründen das Sonnenleben verehrte in den alten vorchristlichen Mysterien, man verehrte das Sonnenleben als den Grund des Todes. Daß die Wesen sterben müssen, das ist nicht zuzuschreiben jener Sonne, die wir kennen aus der «Geheimwissenschaft» als die zweite Verkörperung der Erde, ist aber wohl zuzuschreiben der gegenwärtigen, uns so herrlich am Horizonte erscheinenden Sonne.

Nun ja, der Untergang des Lebens, das Gegenteil der Geburten, hängt mit dem Sonnenleben zusammen. Dafür aber auch etwas anderes, etwas, was noch nicht so wichtig war in der vorchristlichen Zeit, was aber in der nachchristlichen Zeit ganz besonders wichtig geworden ist: Alles bewußte Leben hängt mit dem Sonnenleben zusammen. Und dasjenige bewußte Leben, durch das der Mensch gerade im Verlaufe seines Erdenwerdens geht, jenes Bewußtsein, das insbesondere aufleuchtet im fünften nachatlantischen Zeitraum, dem wir selbst angehören, das hängt ganz intensiv mit dem Sonnenleben zusammen. Wir müssen nur dieses Sonnenleben so geistig betrachten, wie wir das in den verflossenen Vorträgen dieses Sommers schon getan haben. Ist die Sonne zwar der Schöpfer des Todes, des versengenden Lebens im Kosmos und auch für den Menschen, so ist doch die Sonne zu gleicher Zeit die Schöpferin des bewußten Lebens. Dieses bewußte Leben war in den vorchristlichen Zeiten nicht so wichtig, weil es ersetzt war durch das atavistisch-hellseherische Leben, das noch eine Mondenerbschaft war. Für die nachchristliche Zeit ist wichtig geworden, wichtiger als das Leben, das Bewußtsein; denn nur dadurch kann das Ziel des Erdenwerdens erfüllt werden, daß dieses Bewußtsein in entsprechender Weise von den Menschen erlangt wird. Sie müssen es schon entgegennehmen, dieses Bewußtsein, von dem Geber desselben, von dem aber auch das Todesleben, nicht das Leben der Geburten, kommt.

Daher tritt durch das Mysterium von Golgatha in die Erdenentwickelung ein, gewissermaßen als diejenige Macht, welche für diese Erdenentwickelung nun das Wichtigste geworden ist, der Sonnensohn, der Christus, der durch den Leib des Jesus von Nazareth gegangen ist. Das hängt also zusammen mit tiefen kosmischen Geheimnissen. Versuchet zu erkennen - so etwa sagten die alten Mysterieneingeweihten zu ihren Schülern - aus eurem Schlafleben, in das die Mondenkräfte hineinspielen, auch wenn ihr wach seid - wir wissen ja, daß der Mensch auch wachend zum Teil schläft -, das Mondenleben, das in dieses Schlafesleben so hineinspielt, wie in das Dunkel der Nacht der silberne Mondenschein hineinspielt. - Die christlichen Eingeweihten haben dagegen zu ihren Schülern zu sagen: Versuchet zu erkennen, daß aus dem wachen Leben das Bewußtsein herausleuchtet dadurch, daß in dieses wache Leben hineinspielen die Sonnenkräfte, so wie vom Morgen bis zum Abend die Sonne draußen im Erdenleben leuchtet.

Dieser Umschwung hat sich vollzogen durch das Mysterium von Golgatha. Und während in den vorchristlichen Zeiten das Wichtigste war, den Ursprung des Lebens zu erkennen, ist nunmehr das Wichtigste geworden, den Ursprung des Bewußtseins zu erkennen. Nur dadurch, daß man die angedeutete kosmologische Weisheit zu verbinden versteht mit dem, was man als wahrhaftige Gewißheit in seiner Seele erlebt — das heißt, nur dadurch, daß man Geisteswissenschaft durch das Innere erfaßt -, nur dadurch kommt man dazu, innerhalb desjenigen, was sonst in diesem Inneren nicht die Wirklichkeit verbürgt, die geistige Wirklichkeit verbürgt zu erhalten.

Mit den Mitteln, die Augustinus hatte, mit den Mitteln, die dann diejenigen haben, die auf Augustinischen Grundsätzen stehen, kann man nicht weit kommen, weil jeder Schlaf die wahrhaftige Gewißheit des innerlich Erlebten widerlegt. Erst wenn zu diesem innerlich Erlebten hinzu seine Wirklichkeit erlebt wird, dann kommt man zu einem wirklichen, festen Stehen auf dem Boden dieses inneren Erlebens.

Das, was wir heute denken, das, was wir heute fühlen in unserem gegenwärtigen Erdenleben, es hat in diesem gegenwärtigen Erdenleben noch keine Wirklichkeit - das erkennen heute schon einige naturwissenschaftlich denkende Menschen an -, das ist unwirklich gegenüber der Gegenwart. Und das Eigentümliche ist gerade das: Was wir am intimsten erleben, dasjenige, in dem uns geradezu die Wahrheit unbezweifelbar aufleuchtet, ist kein Wirkliches in der Gegenwart, aber es ist dieses der eigentliche tragende Keim unseres nächsten Erdenlebens. Wir dürfen von dem, wovon Augustinus spricht und für das es bei ihm keine Bürgschaft gibt, wir dürfen von diesem sprechen wie von dem Keim für das nächste Erdenleben. Wir dürfen sagen: Es ist gewiß wahr, daß die Wahrheit in unserem Inneren aufleuchtet, aber sie leuchtet auf als Schein. Heute ist sie noch Schein, aber im nächsten Erdenleben wird das, was jetzt Schein ist und als Schein Keim ist, zur Frucht, die gerade das nächste Erdenleben so belebt, wie der Keim der Pflanze in diesem Jahr die sichtbare Pflanze im nächsten Jahr belebt. - Nur dann, wenn man die Zeit überwindet, dann findet man in dem, was innerlich erlebt werden kann, eine Wirklichkeit. Wir würden nimmermehr diejenigen Menschen sein, die wir sein sollen, wenn die innerlich erlebte Wahrheit jetzt gegenwärtig eine solche Wirklichkeit wäre wie die äußere Welt. Wir würden nimmermehr frei werden können. Von Freiheit könnte gar nicht die Rede sein. Wir würden aber auch keine Persönlichkeit sein können; wir würden eingespannt sein in die Naturordnung. Dasjenige, was in uns geschähe, würde notwendig geschehen. Wir sind eine Persönlichkeit, und namentlich eine freie Persönlichkeit nur dadurch, daß auf den Wogen des notwendigen Geschehens sich wie ein Wunder heraushebt der Schein dessen, was wir in unserem Inneren erleben, und was erst in unserem nächsten Erdenleben eine solche äußere Wirklichkeit wird wie diejenige, die wir in unserer Umgebung sehen.

Das ist das Trügerische der Zeit, dem sich alle Phantasie heute noch hingibt: man zieht nicht in Erwägung, daß dasjenige, was als unwirklich innerlich aufleuchtet in einem Erdenleben, Realität wird im nächsten Erdenleben. Nun, gerade über diesen Punkt reden wir dann morgen und übermorgen weiter.

Aber wir sehen, wie wir von dem Gesichtspunkte, den wir heute uns erobern können, den Augustinischen Standpunkt überschauen können, wie wir gewissermaßen das sehen können an Augustinus, was er noch nicht sehen konnte. So steht vielleicht gerade für uns ganz besonders signifikant Augustinus in der Abenddämmerung des vierten nachatlantischen Zeitraums drinnen, indem er mit besonderer Präzision hinweist auf die eine Strömung im Weltengeschehen, auf die ideelle, und in der ideellen Strömung im Weltengeschehen versucht, einen festen Punkt zu finden. Das versuchte Augustinus. Wir wollen heute nur die historische Tatsache einmal hinstellen.

Noch nicht war zu seiner Zeit den Leuten aufgegangen der ungeheure Umschwung, der mit Bezug auf das Mysterium der Geburten und des Todes eingetreten war; denn erst aus diesem Mysterium des Todes kann dann herausquillen die wirkliche Befestigung der absoluten Gewißheit der im Inneren der Menschenseele erlebten Wahrheit.

Wir werden nun einen großen Sprung machen, um eine andere Persönlichkeit so zu charakterisieren, wie wir für die Abenddämmerung des vierten nachatlantischen Zeitraums das charakterisierten, was sich in der Persönlichkeit des Augustinus offenbarte. Wir wollen ebenso charakteristische Persönlichkeiten des fünften nachatlantischen Zeitraums nach einer gewissen Richtung hin schildern. Zwei will ich herauswählen. Eine dieser Persönlichkeiten, von der ausgehend sich nach einer gewissen Richtung hin dasjenige charakterisieren läßt, was im fünften nachatlantischen Zeitraum für die Menschheit herauskommt, ist der Graf Saint-Simon, der gelebt hat von 1760 bis 1825. Eine andere Persönlichkeit ist der Schüler von Saint-Simon, Auguste Comte, der gelebt hat von 1798 bis 1857. Haben wir in Augustinus eine Persönlichkeit, welche mit allen Mitteln, die ihr von seiten ihrer Erkenntnis zur Verfügung stehen, das Christentum zu befestigen versucht, so haben wir auf der andern Seite sowohl in Saint-Simon wie in Auguste Comte Persönlichkeiten, welche an dem Christentum im Grunde vollständig irre geworden sind. Wir werden uns am leichtesten eine Vorstellung machen von dem, was in Auguste Comte, in gewissem Sinne auch in Saint-Simon lebte, wenn wir, wenigstens schematisch, einige der Hauptgedanken von Auguste Comte uns einmal vorführen.

Auguste Comte ist im hohen Grade ein Repräsentant für ein gewisses Weltanschauungsleben in unserer Zeit, und nur der Umstand, daß man sich so wenig kümmert um die Art, wie sich die verschiedenen Weltanschauungsimpulse in das Leben der Menschen einfügen, bewirkt, daß man so jemanden wie Auguste Comte auch so studiert wie eine Rarität des geschichtlichen Lebens. Man weiß eben nicht, daß im Grunde genommen, wenn auch vielleicht nicht überall, zahlreiche Menschen von Auguste Comte etwas schülerhaft beeinflußt sind — darauf kommt es aber nicht an —, und in der wesentlichen Grundrichtung ihres Denkens mit Auguste Comte übereinstimmen. So daß man sagen kann: Auguste Comte ist der Repräsentant für einen großen Teil des Weltanschauungslebens der Gegenwart.

Auguste Comte sagt: Die Menschheit hat sich entwickelt. Sie hat sich entwickelt durch drei Stadien hindurch. Beim dritten Stadium ist sie jetzt angelangt. Wenn man durch diese drei Stadien hindurch das Seelenleben der Menschen beobachtet, so findet man, daß in dem ersten Stadium die Vorstellungen der Menschen vorzugsweise hinneigten zur Dämonologie. Das erste Stadium der Entwickelung also im Auguste Comteschen Sinne wäre das Dämonologische. Die Menschen haben sich vorgestellt, daß hinter den Erscheinungen der Natur, welche sinnenfällig sind, geistige Wesen tätig, wirksam sind, die so vorzustellen sind, wie eben im trivialen Leben Geister vorgestellt werden. Überall werden Dämonen gewittert, große und kleine Dämonen gewittert. Das war das erste Stadium.

Dann sind die Menschen übergegangen, als sie sich schon etwas weiter entwickelt hatten, von dem Standpunkt der Dämonologie zu dem Standpunkt der Metaphysik. Während sie sich zuerst Dämonen, Elementarwesen oder dergleichen vorgestellt haben hinter allen Erscheinungen, stellten sie sich dann in abstrakten Begriffen faßbare Gründe vor. Metaphysisch wurden die Menschen, nachdem sie nicht mehr Dämonengläubige sein wollten. Das zweite Stadium ist also das der Metaphysik: man denkt gewisse Begriffe aus und verbindet diese Begriffe mit seinem eigenen Leben, so daß man meint, durch solche Begriffe könne man an die Urgründe der Dinge herankommen.

Über dieses Stadium ist die Menschheit nun auch hinausgeschritten. Sie ist nun in das dritte Stadium eingetreten, von dem Auguste Comte, ganz auch im Sinne seines Lehrers Saint-Simon, annimmt, daß der Mensch nicht mehr zu Dämonen hinschaut, wenn er sich über die Urgründe der Welt unterrichten will, auch nicht zu metaphysischen Begriffen, sondern lediglich zu dem, was die sinnenfällige Wirklichkeit der positivistischen Wissenschaft gibt. Das dritte Zeitalter ist also das der positivistischen Wissenschaft. Was man durch die äußere wissenschaftliche Erfahrung geoffenbart bekommen kann, das soll der Mensch betrachten als dasjenige, was ihn aufklärt für eine Weltanschauung. Er soll über sich selber sich so aufklären wollen, daß diese Aufklärung in demselben Sinne gehalten ist, wie die mathematische Aufklärung über die Raumordnungen aufklärt, wie die Physik über die Kräfteordnungen, die Chemie über die Stoffordnungen, die Biologie über die Lebensordnungen aufklärt. Alles dasjenige, was so durch die einzelnen Wissenschaften, deren Zusammenklang Auguste Comte in seinem großen Werke über die positive Philosophie ausführlich im einzelnen darzustellen versuchte, alles das, was so durch die einzelnen positiven Wissenschaften erfahren werden kann, betrachtete Auguste Comte als dasjenige, was einzig und allein des Menschen im dritten Stadium würdig ist. Das Christentum selber betrachtet er noch, zwar als die höchste Ausbildung, aber doch nur als die letzte Phase der Dämonologie. Die Metaphysik ist dann aufgetreten; sie gab den Menschen eine Summe von abstrakten Begriffen. Zu etwas wirklich Realem, das den Menschen auch ein menschenwürdiges Dasein auf der Erde hier geben könne, bringt es erst die positive Wissenschaft; so meint Auguste Comte. Daher will auch Auguste Comte eine Kirche begründen auf Grundlage der positivistischen Wissenschaft, die Menschen in solche sozialen Strukturen bringen, die auf Grundlage der positivistischen Wissenschaft gefaßt sind.

Es ist sehr merkwürdig, zu welchen Dingen Auguste Comte - ich will heute nur einige charakteristische Züge hervorheben - eigentlich zuletzt gekommen ist. Er hat sich ja mit der Gründung einer Kirche, der positivistischen Kirche, viel beschäftigt. Und diese positivistische Kirche - wenn Sie einzelne Dinge daraus entnehmen, so werden Sie ja gleich den Geist kennenlernen - sollte auch eine Art Kalender einführen. Eine große Anzahl von Jahrestagen sollte zum Beispiel dem Andenken von solchen Leuten wie Newton oder Galilei gewidmet sein, den Trägern der positivistischen Wissenschaften; diese Tage des Jahres, die diesen Leuten gewidmet sind, sollten verwendet werden zum Verehren dieser Leute. Andere Tage sollten verwendet werden zum Verlästern solcher Leute wie Julian des Abtrünnigen oder Napoleons. Auch das sollte geregelt sein. Aber das Leben sollte überhaupt im weitgehendsten Maße durchaus nach den Grundsätzen der positivistischen Wissenschaft geregelt sein.

Wer das Leben heute kennt, der weiß, daß die Menschen gewiß in keiner großen Anzahl mit solchen Idealen, wie sie Auguste Comte gehabt hat, Ernst machen wollen. Aber das ist ja doch nur aus Feigheit; denn in Wahrheit denken die Menschen schon so, wie Auguste Comte gedacht hat. Wenn man studiert, welches Bild die positivistische Kirche des Auguste Comte gibt, so bekommt man tatsächlich den Eindruck: Die Struktur dieser Kirche stimmt ganz genau mit der Struktur der katholischen Kirche überein, nur fehlt der positivistischen Kirche des Auguste Comte der Christus. Und das ist das Merkwürdige. Das ist dasjenige, was man sich geradezu vor die Seele stellen soll als das Charakteristische: Auguste Comte sucht eine katholische Kirche ohne Christentum. Dazu ist er gekommen, indem er diese drei Stufen: das Dämonologische, das Metaphysische und das Positivistische, in seine Seele aufgenommen hat. Man könnte sagen: Er hat alle Einkleidung des Christentums, wie sie in der Geschichte sich bis zu ihm ergeben hat, als etwas sehr Gutes betrachtet; aber den Christus selbst wollte er aus dieser Kirche beseitigen. Das ist doch im Grunde das Wesentliche, worauf es bei Auguste Comte ankommt: eine katholische Kirche ohne den Christus.

Das ist außerordentlich charakteristisch für die Morgendämmerung der fünften nachatlantischen Zeit. Denn so wie Auguste Comte denkt, so mußte ein Geist denken, der den Romanismus ganz und gar in seiner Seele aufgenommen hatte, aus diesem Romanismus heraus dachte, aber zu gleicher Zeit völlig dachte im Sinne der fünften nachatlantischen Zeit mit ihrem antispirituellen Charakter. So sind Auguste Comte und sein Lehrer Saint-Simon im höchsten Grade charakteristisch für die Morgendämmerung des fünften nachatlantischen Zeitraums. Aber in diesem fünften nachatlantischen Zeitraum wird sich viel entscheiden. Daher treten auch die andern Nuancierungen, die noch möglich sind, auf. Ich will heute, wie gesagt, einige historische Lichtblicke vor Ihnen eröffnen; wir werden dann darauf weiterbauen.

Einen merkwürdigen Gegensatz zu Auguste Comte bildet Schelling, der da lebte von 1775 bis 1854. Auch er ist gewissermaßen charakteristisch für die Morgendämmerung des fünften nachatlantischen Zeitraums. Ich kann Ihnen ja von Schellings mannigfaltig in sich gegliederter Weltanschauung, über die wir von diesem oder jenem Gesichtspunkte schon öfter gesprochen haben, selbstverständlich nicht einmal schematisch heute sprechen; aber auf einiges Charakteristische möchte ich Sie hinweisen.

Gesagt habe ich: Augustinus steht in der Abenddämmerung des vierten nachatlantischen Zeitraums auf dem Punkte, die eine Strömung, die ideelle, so zu betrachten, daß sich ihm aus ihr ein fester Punkt ergeben soll, auf dem er stehen kann. Nun kommen wir in den fünften nachatlantischen Zeitraum herein: In der Morgendämmerung haben wir solche Geister wie Saint-Simon und Auguste Comte, die in der anderen, in der rein natürlichen, materiellen Ordnung den festen Punkt suchen der positivistischen Wissenschaft. Da haben wir die beiden Richtungen: Augustinus auf der einen Seite, Auguste Comte auf der andern Seite stehend. Schelling suchte hinter dem, was man in der Welt sehen kann mit den gewöhnlichen Mitteln des fünften nachatlantischen Zeitraums, zuerst abstrakt-philosophisch, mit ungeheurer Energie nach einer Brücke zwischen dem Idealen und dem Realen, dem Idealen und Materialen - Sie finden die wesentlichen Punkte in meinem Buche «Vom Menschenrätsel» dargestellt -; er suchte mit ungeheurer Energie nach einer Überbrückung dieser Gegensätze. Er kam zuerst nur zu allerlei abstrakten Gedanken in dieser Überbrükkung. Indem er zuerst namentlich auf denselben Grundlagen gebaut hat, auf denen Johann Gottlieb Fichte baute, kam er etwas weiter und versuchte, etwas in der Welt als ein Sein zu erfassen, das ideal und real zu gleicher Zeit ist. Dann kam eine Zeit in Schellings Leben, in der ihm unmöglich schien, mit den Mitteln der Abstraktionen, zu denen es dieser fünfte nachatlantische Zeitraum im Laufe der Zeit gebracht hatte, zu einer solchen Brücke zu kommen. Unmöglich erschien ihm dieses. Er sagte sich eines Tages: Die Menschen haben ja doch eigentlich nur auf dem Boden der neuzeitlichen Gelehrsamkeit solche Begriffe gewonnen, mit denen man die äußere Naturordnung begreifen kann. Aber für das, was hinter dieser äußeren Naturordnung ist, der Sphäre, wo man die Brücke zwischen Idealem und Realem bauen kann, dafür haben wir keine Begriffe. - Und sehr interessant ist es, daß Schelling eines Tages das Geständnis gemacht hat: es käme ihm vor, wie wenn die gelehrten Leute der letzten Jahrhunderte einen stillen Vertrag geschlossen hätten, der dahin ginge, alles Tiefere aus der Weltanschauung auszuschalten, das nach dem wirklichen, wahrhaftigen Leben führen will. Daher müsse man zu den ungelehrten Leuten gehen. Das war auch die Zeit, in der sich Schelling auf Jakob Böhme eingelassen hat, so daß er dann aus Jakob Böhme jene spirituelle Vertiefung fand, die ihn zu seiner letzten, zu seiner theosophischen Periode in seinem Leben führte, aus welcher hervorgegangen ist die schöne Schrift über die Freiheit des Menschen, die schöne Schrift über die Gottheiten von Samothrake, über die Kabirengottheiten; dann die «Philosophie der Mythologie» und die «Philosophie der Offenbarung».

Was Schelling namentlich in dieser letzten Periode seines Lebens ganz besonders gesucht hat, das war, das Eingreifen des Mysteriums von Golgatha in die Menschheitsgeschichte zu begreifen. Das hat er ganz besonders gesucht. Und es ist ihm dabei aufgegangen, daß man mit den Begriffen, die der neueren Gelehrsamkeit zur Verfügung stehen, nicht dazu kommen kann, jenes Leben zu verstehen, in welchem das Mysterium von Golgatha fließt, also auch nicht das wahre Menschenleben zu verstehen. Dadurch kam Schelling - und das ist der Zug, den ich bei ihm jetzt besonders hervorheben möchte, wir werden in den nächsten Tagen weiter auf diesen Dingen bauen - zu einer Anschauung, die nun der seines Zeitgenossen Auguste Comte völlig entgegengesetzt war. Und das ist das Merkwürdige: Wir können sagen, Auguste Comte sucht einen Katholizismus, ich möchte besser sagen eine katholische Kirche, ohne Christentum; Schelling sucht aus seinen Anschauungen heraus ein Christentum ohne Kirche. Ein Christentum ohne Kirche: Schelling sucht gewissermaßen das ganze moderne Leben zu verchristen, zu durchchristen, so daß alles, was der Mensch denken und fühlen und wollen kann, durchpulst wäre von dem Christus-Impuls. Ein abgesondertes kirchliches Leben für das Christentum sucht er nicht, namentlich nicht nach dem Muster, wie es schon war in der historischen Entwickelung, obwohl er dieses Leben sorgfältig betrachtet. So haben wir die zwei Extreme: den Auguste Comteschen Gedanken einer Kirche ohne Christus, den Schellingschen Gedanken des Christus ohne Kirche.

Ich wollte diese historischen Ausblicke vor Ihre Seele hinstellen, um eben auf diesen Dingen aufbauen zu können. Denn wir sehen einen Geist, Augustinus, der den festen Punkt sucht im Idealismus, einen Geist, Auguste Comte, der den festen Punkt sucht im Realismus, eine Persönlichkeit wie Schelling, welche die Brücke schlagen will. Das alles sind Tendenzen, die der Entwickelung vorangehen, in der wir selbst eben stehen.

Nun kann man folgendes sagen: Man kann überblicken dasjenige, was sich da zugetragen hat durch viele Jahrhunderte hindurch, was sich zugetragen hat im Weltanschauungsleben, und man kann dann seinen Blick werfen auf die Art, wie sich die Vorstellungen der Menschen im weitesten Umkreise ausbilden. Da kommt einem gerade durch das Studium von Auguste Comte ein sehr wichtiges Aperçu, aber Auguste Comte konnte dieses Aperçu nicht rein fassen, weil er ja ganz in seinen positivistischen Vorurteilen drinnensteckte. Aber etwas, was für uns ein wichtiger Ausgangspunkt der nächsten Tage werden kann, ergibt sich gerade, wenn man den ganzen Zusammenhang - ich möchte sagen Augustinus, Auguste Comte, Schelling - ins Auge faßt: ein Aperçu, das ich an den Schluß dieser Betrachtungen heute hinstellen will, weil ich möchte, daß es zunächst einmal in Ihre Seelen sich hineinsetzt. Wir werden dann in den nächsten Tagen zu reden haben von dem, was in bedeutsamer Weise mit diesem Aperçu zusammenhängt. Weil nun dieses Aperçu sich gerade ergibt aus einer Betrachtung dessen, was ich vorausgesetzt habe, stelle ich es aphoristisch hin, ohne im einzelnen die Begründung geben zu können, warum man dieses, nicht bei Auguste Comte, aber bei andern stehende Aperçu gerade findet, wenn man sich vom Standpunkte des Späteren, wie ich es heute angedeutet habe, einläßt auf einen in diesem Fall nicht viel Späteren, desjenigen, der im Anfange des 20. Jahrhunderts über jemanden denkt, der am Ende des 18. und in der ersten Hälfte des 19. Jahrhunderts dachte. Aber es ist heute schon wichtig — was ich immer wieder und wiederum betont und auch diesmal scharf charakterisiert habe -, daß man das Weltanschauungsleben nicht nur in abstracto so für sich betrachtet, sondern so, wie es sich eingliedert in das gesamte Leben der Menschheit. Nur dadurch kommt man zu einem Wirklichkeitsstandpunkt, daß man diese Eingliederung in das Gesamtleben der Menschheit ins Auge faßt.

Nun sind sich gerade Saint-Simon und Auguste Comte klar darüber, daß sie zu ihrem Positivismus nur kommen konnten in der modernen Zeit, daß der Positivismus unmöglich gewesen wäre in einer früheren Zeit. Auguste Comte besonders empfindet es stark: Wie ich denke — so sagt er sich ungefähr -, so kann man nur in unserem Zeitalter denken. - Das ist etwas, was als etwas ungeheuer Wichtiges dasteht in der modernen Bewegung, und das hängt zusammen eben mit jenem Aperçu, das ich meine. Wenn man gerade zugrunde legt das, was Auguste Comte als Ausgangspunkt für seine Dreigliederung betrachtet, so kann man auch ganz in seinem Sinne sagen, diese Dreigliederung sei Theologie, Metaphysik und das, was er - ob nun recht oder unrecht, das ist gleichgültig — positivistische Wissenschaft nennt.

Nun ist das Eigentümliche, daß man fragen kann: Wer wird am leichtesten Gläubiger von einer dieser Richtungen? Ich bitte, mich in bezug auf dasjenige, was ich jetzt mit Bezug auf dieses Aperçu sagen werde, ja nicht mißzuverstehen, ja nicht irgendwie dies als einseitig radikales Dogma aufzufassen, und auch nicht es so aufzufassen, als ob es für die Gegenwart grobklotzig beobachtet werden könnte mit apodiktischer Gewißheit; sondern es muß betrachtet werden der ganze Entwickelungsgang der Menschheit, wenn man das ins Auge fassen will, was ich jetzt aussprechen will. Aber man kann dann nicht fragen: Wer wird Gläubiger?, sondern: Wer wird am leichtesten Gläubiger einer dieser Richtungen? — Und da ergibt sich durch eine sorgfältige Beobachtung, so sehr auch die Tatsachen zu widersprechen scheinen: Am leichtesten wird Gläubiger der Theologie - nicht Träger der Theologie, nicht Theologe, sondern Gläubiger - ich spreche nicht von der Religion, sondern von der Theologie -, der Soldat! Am leichtesten wird Gläubiger der Metaphysik der Beamte, insbesondere der juristische, und am leichtesten wird Gläubiger der positivistischen Wissenschaft der Industrielle.

Es ist wichtig, wenn man das Leben beurteilen will, nicht im Abstrakten stehenzubleiben, sondern wirklich unbefangen auf das Leben hinzublicken. Dann aber muß man sich solche Fragen aufwerfen.

Ich möchte das nur eben heute am Schlusse als ein Aperçu behandelt wissen, das sich gerade dann ergibt, wenn man sich auf Auguste Comte intimer einläßt, weil er sich dessen bewußt ist: Nur für Industrielle ist er vollständig verständlich, und nur im industriellen Zeitalter konnte er eigentlich auftreten mit seinen Anschauungen. Das aber hängt damit zusammen, daß der Industrielle am leichtesten Gläubiger der positivistischen Wissenschaft wird, der Soldat am leichtesten Gläubiger nicht etwa bloß der christlichen, sondern jeder Theologie wird, der Beamte am leichtesten der Gläubige wird der Metaphysik.

First lecture

I would like to elaborate on some of the points that have been raised in the reflections we have already made here this summer, and in the next few days we will add some historical and factual information. Today, as a preliminary, I would like to point out some historical facts and, based on these historical facts, preferably from the revelations of certain historical personalities, present to you some conclusions that arise from a more thorough consideration.

Those who are initiated into the mysteries, who have been initiated at all times, have always rightly made a statement. It is that, on the one hand, if one does not know how to assess the two currents of worldview life that we have mentioned, idealism and materialism, in the right measure, one then either runs the risk of falling through a trapdoor into a cellar hole of worldview, or else, in the various paths one takes to gain a worldview, you can end up in a dead end. The basement hole into which you can fall through a trapdoor that is easily overlooked in the life of worldview is seen by the initiates of mystery of all times as the dualism that cannot find a bridge between the ideal, one could also say the idealistically colored spiritual, and the material, the materialistic. And the dead end into which one can stray when wandering along different paths of worldviews, if one cannot find the right balance between idealism and materialism, this dead end is fatalism for initiates of the mysteries. Clearly, modern times tend on the one hand toward a dualistic worldview and on the other toward a fatalistic worldview, even if neither is admitted or even recognized by modern worldviews.

Now I would like to first present a personality from life in the twilight of the fourth post-Atlantean epoch—initially in sketch form—with reference to the life of worldview, and then consider other personalities who are more characteristic of the life of worldview in our epoch, the fifth post-Atlantean epoch.

A very, very characteristic personality within Western worldview life is Augustine, who lived from 354 to 430 AD. We want to commemorate him with a few thoughts because, as you can see from the dates, he lived at the twilight of the fourth post-Atlantean epoch, which came to an end in the 15th century. One can already clearly see how this end is approaching, starting from the 3rd, 4th, 5th, and 6th centuries AD. Augustine was influenced by a wide variety of worldviews. We have already spoken about these things. Above all, Augustine went through Manichaeism and skepticism. He absorbed into his soul all those impulses that one receives when one sees, on the one hand, everything ideal, beautiful, and good in the world, everything that is filled with wisdom, and then also everything that is evil and bad. And we know that Manichaeism tries to come to terms with these two currents in the world order – to put it crudely, but it can be expressed this way – by assuming a kind of eternal polarity, an eternal opposition between light and darkness, good and evil, wisdom and evil.

Manichaeism can only cope with this dualism, in its own way, by combining certain ancient, pre-Christian basic concepts with its assumption of the polarity of world phenomena, above all by combining certain ideas that can only be understood if one knows that in ancient times people with atavistic clairvoyance saw the spiritual world and that these visions were similar in content to the impressions made by the world of sensory perception. By incorporating such ideas, I would say, of a sensory appearance of the supersensible, Manichaeism gives many people the impression that it materializes the spiritual, that it represents the spiritual in sensory forms. This is a mistake that even newer worldviews, such as the newer theosophy, which I have explained to you in recent days, often make. Augustine turned away from Manichaeism precisely because he could no longer tolerate this sensualization, this materialization of the spiritual, in the course of a more purified life of imagination. That was one of the reasons that led him astray.

Augustine then also went through a period of skepticism, which is a legitimate worldview insofar as it draws people's attention to the fact that one cannot learn anything about the supersensible through the mere observation of what can be gained from the sensory world and from the experiences and adventures of the sensory world. And if one is also of the opinion that the supersensible cannot be obtained as such, then one doubts the knowledge of truth in general. Augustine also went through this doubt about the knowledge of truth in general. This gave him the strongest impulses.

Now, if one wants to understand how Augustine actually placed himself in the Western worldview, one must point to the main point of his view, the main point from which all the light that reigns in Augustine radiates, and which was precisely the main point of his later, finally formed worldview. This point can be characterized as follows: Augustine came to the conclusion that certainty, true certainty, certainty that is not subject to deception, can only be attained by human beings in relation to what they experience within their own souls. Everything else can be uncertain. Whether the things that appear to our eyes, that are audible to our ears, that make an impression on our other senses, whether these things are really constituted as they must be assumed to be according to the testimony of the senses, cannot be known; one cannot even know what this world actually looks like when one closes one's senses to it. This is how personalities think about the external, experiential world in the sense of Augustine. They think that this external, experiential world, as it presents itself to human beings, cannot provide any absolute certainty or true certainty, that nothing can be gained from it that could serve as a firm foundation for a worldview. On the other hand, with what one experiences within oneself—no matter how one experiences it—one is immediately present; it is oneself who experiences the ideas and feelings within oneself; one knows that one is inside one's inner experience. And so, for a thinker like Augustine, the fact that can be proven by inner experience is that with regard to what a person experiences within themselves as truth, they cannot succumb to deception. One may believe that everything else the world says is subject to deception, but one cannot possibly doubt that what we experience within ourselves as our ideas and feelings is truly and really experienced by us. This firm foundation for the admission of an indubitable truth forms one of the starting points of Augustine's worldview.

This point was taken up again in a very striking way in the fifth post-Atlantean period by Descartes, who lived from 1596 to 1650, that is, already at the dawn of the fifth post-Atlantean period. In Cartesius' famous statement, “I think, therefore I am,” which remains when we doubt everything else, Cartesius also sees the starting point, and with this view he is actually completely in line with Augustine.

Now, the situation is such that, with regard to the life of worldview, one must always say: Whoever stands at any point in human evolution will arrive at certain views. He will not see certain perspectives of these views; these will be seen by those who come later. One might say: it is always reserved for those who come later to see something more thoroughly, more truly, than those who must express certain things at a certain point in human evolution. And there is no getting around this fact. And it is good that, especially from our anthroposophical point of view, what I have already mentioned several times is the case, that is, that from our anthroposophical point of view it is consciously and thoroughly recognized that Even the knowledge that can be acquired in the present, however profound it may be, about spiritual things must not be regarded as a sum of absolute dogmas. We must be clear that later, in future times, people will appear who will see more truth in what we are able to present today than we ourselves can see. This is actually the basis of the spiritual development of humanity. And every obstacle, every hindrance to the spiritual progress of humanity is ultimately based on the fact that people do not want to admit this, that they would like to have truths handed down to them that are not the truths of a particular age, but are absolute, timeless dogmas.

Today, we can look back at Augustine from our own point of view, and we must say to ourselves: if one stands on Augustine's point of view, then one must look sharply at the fact that he accepts uncertainty about the truth in all external revelations, and true certainty in the experience of what we carry in our souls. This presupposes that anyone who subscribes to such a view must have a certain amount of courage as a human being. Perhaps it would not be necessary to state what I am about to say in such decisive terms if it were not characteristic of the worldview of our time that precisely this courage is lacking. And the courage I am referring to here manifests itself in two ways. One direction is that, like Augustine, one boldly admits: You can only find true certainty in relation to what you experience within yourself. Then there must be the other pole of this courage, which is precisely what is lacking in the present; one must also have the courage to admit that this true certainty about reality is not contained in external sensory revelation. - It takes inner intellectual courage to deny the true certainty of the statements of external reality, which, for example, today's materialism considers absolutely certain. And on the other hand, it takes a certain courage to say to oneself: True certainty flows only when one becomes truly aware of what one experiences within oneself.

Certainly, this has been said again in our time, and there are people in our time who demand this twofold courage from their fellow human beings, insofar as they want to arrive at a worldview. Nevertheless, if one wants to think about the matter exhaustively, one must think differently today, and this is precisely where the whole historical position of Augustine for modern man becomes apparent, namely that one must think about this matter somewhat differently. Today, one must know what neither Augustine nor Descartes considered—I have explained this in my book The Mystery of Man, where I discuss Descartes—today one must say: The belief that one can arrive at a satisfactory worldview by grasping the immediate inner life of human beings as it is experienced today is refuted by every moment of sleep. Every time a person of today sinks back into the unconsciousness of sleep, they are not deprived of what Augustine speaks of — the absolute true certainty of inner experience — but they are deprived of the reality of this inner experience. Every time, from falling asleep to waking up, the reality of this true experience has fled. And modern man, who experiences his inner life in a somewhat different way than people did in the fourth post-Atlantean epoch, even in the twilight of Augustine's time, must say to himself: No matter how sharp, how obvious a certainty may be experienced inwardly, there is no certainty about life after death, for the simple reason that with every sleep we see reality sink down into the unconscious, and modern man does not know whether it sinks into the unreal. So today we can no longer conclude that what we experience within ourselves as seemingly absolutely certain cannot be challenged. It cannot be challenged theoretically, but the fact of sleep itself refutes it.

But when we turn our attention to what has just been said, we immediately recognize how Augustine actually had a much greater right than Cartesius, who more or less just repeated what he had heard, to arrive at this view. Throughout the entire fourth post-Atlantean period, including the age of Augustine, something of the old, atavistic clairvoyance still lived on in people. Unfortunately, history today pays far too little attention to this and does not really know much about it. But throughout the entire fourth post-Atlantean period, there were many people who knew from personal experience that there is a spiritual life — because they actually saw this spiritual life. But they saw it mostly in this fourth period — unlike in the third or second period — because it played into their sleep life. So one can say that in the fourth post-Atlantean period, sleep was not yet completely unconscious for people as it is now in the fifth post-Atlantean period. The people of the fourth post-Atlantean period still knew that the time between falling asleep and waking up is a time when what they have as ideas and feelings from waking up to falling asleep continues to work in other forms. The waking life of truth, so to speak, submerged into the dimly conscious life of sleep. And people knew that what they experienced as inner truth was not only true but also real, had reality. For they knew the moments of sleep in which it became apparent how what they experienced inwardly existed as real, not merely as abstract life. It does not matter whether anyone today can prove that Augustine himself could have said from his own experience: I know that what one experiences inwardly as true but unreal lasts from the moment of falling asleep to the moment of waking up. But that one could grasp such a view, that one could stand on it, was quite possible in Augustine's time.

Now, if you generalize what I have just said about the subjective nature of human beings to the entire macrocosm, you arrive at something else; you arrive at that from which this subjective nature actually emerged in earlier times, that is, in the fourth post-Atlantean period, which made it possible. In pre-Christian times – let us speak now of the pre-Christian era, for the Mystery of Golgotha is the boundary between old atavistic views and later new ones, which are only now emerging – people were still able to hold on to certain living mystery truths. The mystery truths I am referring to are those that relate to the great mystery of birth and death. Certain initiates into the mysteries regard the mystery of birth and death as a secret which, in their opinion, should not be revealed to the profane world because the world is not yet ready for it. But within the mysteries, even in pre-Christian times, there was a certain view of the connection between birth and death in the great world life, in which human beings are also involved with their whole being. In this pre-Christian time, the mysteries directed attention primarily to birth, to everything that comes into being in the world. Anyone familiar with the worldviews of ancient times knows that these ancient worldviews were primarily concerned with the emphasis on being born, on coming into being, on sprouting and sprouting. And I have often emphasized the contrast that arose through the mystery of Golgotha. I mentioned it in the following way: Think of how, about six hundred years before the mystery of Golgotha, Buddha, who stands in human evolution as the conclusion of the pre-Christian worldview, is led to his views by seeing, among other things, a dead body. Death is suffering — and for Buddha it is an axiom that suffering must be overcome; a means must be found to turn away from death. The corpse is that from which Buddha turns away in order to come to that which, although spiritualized, is nevertheless for him that in which the sprouting, budding life can be felt.

And when, six hundred years after the Mystery of Golgotha, we look around us in other places at certain people, we see how the sight of the corpse of Christ on the cross does not become that from which one turns away, but that toward which one turns, that upon which one gazes with one's whole heart as the symbol which is to reveal the riddles of the world, insofar as they relate to human beings and their development.

There is a wonderful connection within these twelve centuries: six hundred years before the mystery of Golgotha, the turning away from a corpse represents what is to be the ascent in the worldview; six hundred years after the Mystery of Golgotha, the symbol is formed, the image of the crucifix, the turning toward death, the turning toward the corpse, in order to draw from it the strength to arrive at a worldview that also sheds light on human becoming. Among the many things that characterize the tremendous upheaval that occurred in the earth's evolution through the mystery of Golgotha is this Buddha symbol: turning away from the corpse, and the Christ symbol: turning toward the corpse, which is regarded as the corpse of the highest being who appeared on earth.

It was indeed the case that, in a certain sense, the ancient mysteries placed the mystery of birth at the center of worldviews. But in doing so, since they wanted to impart mystery knowledge and not merely trivial views, the mysteries at the same time presented a profound cosmological secret to the soul: they turned the gaze to that which is connected with the life of births in the course of the world. And one cannot understand the life of births in the course of the world unless one goes back to the ancient mystery of the moon. We know, of course, that the embodiment of the earth before it became earth was the ancient moon. And in various phenomena connected with our present moon, the remnant of the old moon — you can read about this in my “Outline of Secret Science” — one can see the after-effects of what happened in the old lunar period, in the time that preceded the formation of the earth.

Now, there would be no births in the becoming of the earth, there would be no births throughout all the realms of nature in the becoming of the earth, if it were not for the lawfulness of the old moon, or rather its straggler, which is the satellite of our earth. All birth throughout the realms of nature and humanity is connected with the activity of the moon. This is also connected with the fact that the initiates of the ancient Hebrews regarded Yahweh as a moon deity, Yahweh as the creator, the God who orders creation, as a moon deity. It was clearly understood that cosmologically, all birth throughout the realms is based on the laws of the moon. And so, in a symbolic sense, a profound mystery of cosmology could be expressed by saying: As the moonlight falls on the earth, everything that is represented by this moonlight gives rise to all sprouting, budding, and nascent life. In the highest mysteries of pre-Christian times, people did not turn to the life of the sun, but to the life of the sun reflected by the moon, when they spoke of the mystery of birth. The peculiar nuance that pervades the depths of pre-Christian worldviews stems from the fact that the ancient mysteries knew the secret of the moon.

The secret of the sun was regarded as something completely veiled, something that was difficult to bear for people who were not well prepared, because it was known that it was an illusion, a Maya, to believe that the rays of the sun falling on the earth brought forth the sprouting, budding beings of the various kingdoms. It was known that birth does not depend on the life of the sun, but rather the opposite: scorching, the decline of life, the dying of life. That was the mystery, that the moon gives birth to beings and the sun causes them to die. No matter how highly the life of the sun was revered in the ancient pre-Christian mysteries for other reasons, it was revered as the cause of death. That beings must die is not attributable to the sun we know from “The Secret Science” as the second embodiment of the earth, but rather to the present sun that appears so glorious on the horizon.

Well, the end of life, the opposite of birth, is connected with the life of the sun. But there is also something else, something that was not so important in pre-Christian times, but which has become particularly important in post-Christian times: all conscious life is connected with the life of the sun. And that conscious life through which human beings pass in the course of their earthly existence, that consciousness which shines forth particularly in the fifth post-Atlantean epoch, to which we ourselves belong, is very closely connected with the life of the sun. We need only consider this life of the sun spiritually, as we have already done in the lectures given this summer. Although the sun is the creator of death, of scorching life in the cosmos and also for human beings, it is at the same time the creator of conscious life. This conscious life was not so important in pre-Christian times because it was replaced by atavistic clairvoyant life, which was still a legacy of the moon. For the post-Christian era, consciousness has become more important than life itself, because only through consciousness can the goal of becoming earthly be fulfilled, provided that this consciousness is attained by human beings in the appropriate manner. They must already receive this consciousness from the giver of consciousness, who also gives them death, not the life of birth.

Therefore, through the mystery of Golgotha, the Son of the Sun, Christ, who passed through the body of Jesus of Nazareth, enters into the development of the earth as, in a sense, the power that has now become the most important for this development. This is connected with profound cosmic mysteries. Try to recognize—as the ancient initiates into the mysteries said to their disciples—from your sleep life, in which the lunar forces play a part even when you are awake—for we know that even when awake, human beings are partly asleep—the lunar life that plays into this sleep life just as the silver moonlight plays into the darkness of the night. The Christian initiates, on the other hand, say to their disciples: Try to recognize that consciousness shines out of waking life through the fact that the forces of the sun play into this waking life, just as the sun shines outside in earthly life from morning to evening.

This change took place through the Mystery of Golgotha. And while in pre-Christian times the most important thing was to recognize the origin of life, now the most important thing has become to recognize the origin of consciousness. Only by understanding how to connect the hinted-at cosmological wisdom with what one experiences as true certainty in one's soul — that is, only by grasping spiritual science through the inner being — only then can one arrive at preserving spiritual reality within that which otherwise does not guarantee reality in the inner being.

With the means available to Augustine, with the means available to those who adhere to Augustinian principles, one cannot get very far, because every sleep refutes the true certainty of what is experienced inwardly. Only when the reality of this inner experience is added to it does one arrive at a real, firm footing on the ground of this inner experience.

What we think today, what we feel today in our present earthly life, has no reality in this present earthly life—as some scientifically minded people already recognize today—it is unreal in relation to the present. And the peculiar thing is precisely this: what we experience most intimately, that in which the truth shines upon us in an unquestionable way, is not real in the present, but it is the actual seed of our next earthly life. We may speak of what Augustine speaks of, and for which he offers no guarantee, as the seed for our next earthly life. We may say: it is certainly true that truth shines forth within us, but it shines forth as an illusion. Today it is still an illusion, but in the next earthly life, what is now an illusion and an illusionary seed will become the fruit that animates the next earthly life, just as the seed of a plant animates the visible plant in the next year. Only when one overcomes time does one find reality in what can be experienced inwardly. We would never be the people we are meant to be if the truth experienced inwardly were now as real as the outer world. We would never be able to become free. There would be no question of freedom. But we would also not be able to have a personality; we would be bound by the natural order. What happened within us would happen out of necessity. We are personalities, and specifically free personalities, only because the appearance of what we experience within ourselves emerges like a miracle from the waves of necessary events, and only in our next earthly life does it become an external reality like the one we see in our surroundings.

This is the deception of the times to which all imagination still succumbs today: one does not consider that what shines inwardly as unreal in one earthly life becomes reality in the next earthly life. Well, we will continue talking about this point tomorrow and the day after tomorrow.

But we see how, from the point of view we can gain today, we can look back on Augustine's position and see, as it were, what he could not yet see. Thus, Augustine stands out as particularly significant for us at the twilight of the fourth post-Atlantean epoch, in that he points with special precision to the one current in world events, the ideal current, and attempts to find a fixed point in the ideal current in world events. That is what Augustine attempted. Today, we will simply state the historical fact.

In his time, people had not yet realized the tremendous upheaval that had taken place with regard to the mystery of birth and death; for it is only from this mystery of death that the real confirmation of the absolute certainty of the truth experienced within the human soul can spring forth.

We will now take a great leap forward to characterize another personality in the same way as we characterized what was revealed in the personality of Augustine at the dawn of the fourth post-Atlantean epoch. We will describe equally characteristic personalities of the fifth post-Atlantean epoch in a certain direction. I would like to single out two. One of these personalities, from whom we can characterize in a certain direction what emerges for humanity in the fifth post-Atlantean epoch, is Count Saint-Simon, who lived from 1760 to 1825. Another personality is Saint-Simon's disciple, Auguste Comte, who lived from 1798 to 1857. While in Augustine we have a personality who tries to strengthen Christianity with all the means available to him from his knowledge, on the other hand we have in Saint-Simon and Auguste Comte personalities who have basically become completely disillusioned with Christianity. We can most easily form an idea of what lived in Auguste Comte, and in a certain sense also in Saint-Simon, if we present some of Auguste Comte's main ideas, at least schematically.

Auguste Comte is a highly representative figure of a certain worldview in our time, and it is only because so little attention is paid to the way in which the various worldview impulses are integrated into people's lives that someone like Auguste Comte is studied as a rarity of historical life. People simply do not know that, although perhaps not everywhere, numerous people have been influenced by Auguste Comte in a somewhat schoolboyish way — but that is not important — and that they agree with Auguste Comte in the essential direction of their thinking. So one can say that Auguste Comte is representative of a large part of the worldview of the present day.

Auguste Comte says: Humanity has developed. It has developed through three stages. It has now reached the third stage. If one observes the spiritual life of human beings through these three stages, one finds that in the first stage, people's ideas tended predominantly toward demonology. The first stage of development, in Auguste Comte's sense, would therefore be demonology. People imagined that behind the phenomena of nature, which are perceptible to the senses, there were spiritual beings at work, which could be imagined in the same way as spirits are imagined in trivial life. Demons were sensed everywhere, large and small demons. That was the first stage.

Then, when they had developed a little further, people moved from the standpoint of demonology to that of metaphysics. Whereas at first they imagined demons, elemental beings, or the like behind all phenomena, they then imagined comprehensible reasons in abstract concepts. People became metaphysical after they no longer wanted to believe in demons. The second stage is therefore that of metaphysics: one thinks up certain concepts and connects these concepts with one's own life, so that one believes that through such concepts one can approach the fundamental principles of things.

Humanity has now also moved beyond this stage. It has now entered the third stage, which Auguste Comte, very much in line with his teacher Saint-Simon, assumes that when humans want to learn about the fundamental principles of the world, they no longer look to demons, nor to metaphysical concepts, but only to what is given by the sensory reality of positivist science. The third age is therefore that of positivist science. What can be revealed through external scientific experience should be regarded by man as that which enlightens him for a worldview. He should seek to enlighten himself in such a way that this enlightenment is held in the same sense as mathematical enlightenment enlightens us about spatial orders, physics about the orders of forces, chemistry about the orders of matter, and biology about the orders of life. Auguste Comte regarded everything that can be experienced through the individual sciences, whose harmony he attempted to describe in detail in his great work on positive philosophy, as the only thing worthy of human beings in the third stage. He still regarded Christianity itself as the highest form of education, but only as the final phase of demonology. Metaphysics then appeared, giving people a set of abstract concepts. According to Auguste Comte, only positive science can lead to something truly real that can give people a dignified existence here on earth. Auguste Comte therefore wants to establish a church based on positivist science, which brings people into social structures that are based on positivist science.

It is very strange what Auguste Comte actually came to in the end – I will only highlight a few characteristic features today. He was very preoccupied with founding a church, the positivist church. And this positivist church – if you take individual elements from it, you will immediately understand its spirit – was also supposed to introduce a kind of calendar. A large number of anniversaries were to be dedicated to the memory of people such as Newton and Galileo, the proponents of positivist science; these days of the year dedicated to these people were to be used to venerate them. Other days should be used to slander people such as Julian the Apostate or Napoleon. That too should be regulated. But life in general should be regulated to the greatest possible extent according to the principles of positivist science.

Anyone who knows life today knows that very few people take ideals such as those of Auguste Comte seriously. But that is only out of cowardice; for in truth, people already think as Auguste Comte thought. If one studies the image presented by Auguste Comte's positivist church, one actually gets the impression that the structure of this church corresponds exactly to that of the Catholic Church, except that Christ is missing from Auguste Comte's positivist church. And that is the strange thing. This is what one should keep in mind as the characteristic feature: Auguste Comte seeks a Catholic Church without Christianity. He arrived at this by absorbing these three stages—the demonological, the metaphysical, and the positivist—into his soul. One could say that he regarded all the trappings of Christianity, as they had developed in history up to his time, as something very good; but he wanted to remove Christ himself from this church. That is basically what Auguste Comte was all about: a Catholic Church without Christ.

This is extremely characteristic of the dawn of the fifth post-Atlantean era. For just as Auguste Comte thinks, so must a spirit think that has completely absorbed Romanism into its soul, thinks out of this Romanism, but at the same time thinks completely in the spirit of the fifth post-Atlantean era with its anti-spiritual character. Thus, Auguste Comte and his teacher Saint-Simon are highly characteristic of the dawn of the fifth post-Atlantean epoch. But much will be decided in this fifth post-Atlantean epoch. That is why other nuances that are still possible are also emerging. Today, as I said, I want to shed some historical light on a few things; we will then build on that.

Schelling, who lived from 1775 to 1854, forms a remarkable contrast to Auguste Comte. He too is, in a sense, characteristic of the dawn of the fifth post-Atlantean epoch. Of course, I cannot even give you a schematic overview of Schelling's multifaceted worldview, which we have already discussed frequently from various perspectives; but I would like to point out a few characteristic features.

I have said that Augustine stands at the twilight of the fourth post-Atlantean epoch on the point of viewing a current, the ideal current, in such a way that it will yield him a firm point on which he can stand. Now we are entering the fifth post-Atlantean epoch: at dawn we have spirits such as Saint-Simon and Auguste Comte, who seek the fixed point of positivist science in the other, purely natural, material order. Here we have the two directions: Augustine on one side, Auguste Comte on the other. Schelling sought behind what can be seen in the world with the ordinary means of the fifth post-Atlantean epoch, first abstractly and philosophically, with tremendous energy, for a bridge between the ideal and the real, the ideal and the material—you will find the essential points in my book The Riddle of Man . He sought with tremendous energy to bridge these opposites. At first, he arrived only at all kinds of abstract thoughts in this bridging. By building initially on the same foundations as Johann Gottlieb Fichte, he progressed somewhat further and attempted to grasp something in the world as a being that is both ideal and real at the same time. Then there came a time in Schelling's life when it seemed impossible to him to build such a bridge with the means of abstraction that this fifth post-Atlantean period had brought about over time. This seemed impossible to him. One day he said to himself: “After all, it is only on the basis of modern scholarship that people have acquired concepts with which to comprehend the external order of nature. But for what lies behind this external order of nature, the sphere where the bridge between the ideal and the real can be built, we have no concepts. And it is very interesting that Schelling once confessed that it seemed to him as if the learned people of the last centuries had concluded a silent agreement to eliminate everything deeper from the worldview that leads to real, true life. Therefore, one must go to the uneducated people. This was also the time when Schelling became involved with Jakob Böhme, so that he then found in Jakob Böhme the spiritual deepening that led him to his last, his theosophical period in his life, from which emerged the beautiful writing on the freedom of man, the beautiful writing on the deities of Samothrace, on the Kabir deities; then the “Philosophy of Mythology” and the “Philosophy of Revelation.”

What Schelling sought in particular during this last period of his life was to understand the intervention of the mystery of Golgotha in human history. He sought this very particularly. And in doing so, he realized that with the concepts available to modern scholarship, it is not possible to understand the life in which the mystery of Golgotha flows, and therefore also not to understand true human life. This led Schelling—and this is the trait I would like to emphasize particularly in him now; we will build on these things further in the next few days—to a view that was completely opposed to that of his contemporary Auguste Comte. And that is the strange thing: we can say that Auguste Comte seeks a Catholicism, or rather a Catholic Church, without Christianity; Schelling, on the basis of his views, seeks a Christianity without a church. A Christianity without a church: Schelling seeks, in a sense, to Christianize all of modern life, to permeate it with Christianity, so that everything that man can think, feel, and want would be pulsating with the Christ impulse. He does not seek a separate ecclesiastical life for Christianity, especially not according to the model that already existed in historical development, although he carefully considers this life. Thus we have the two extremes: Auguste Comte's idea of a church without Christ, and Schelling's idea of Christ without a church.

I wanted to present these historical perspectives to you so that we can build on them. For we see a spirit, Augustine, who seeks a fixed point in idealism; a spirit, Auguste Comte, who seeks a fixed point in realism; and a personality like Schelling, who wants to build a bridge between the two. These are all tendencies that precede the development in which we ourselves are currently engaged.

Now we can say the following: We can survey what has happened over many centuries, what has happened in the life of worldviews, and we can then cast our gaze on the way in which people's ideas develop in the widest circles. The study of Auguste Comte provides us with a very important insight here, but Auguste Comte was unable to grasp this insight because he was completely caught up in his positivist prejudices. But something that can become an important starting point for us in the coming days emerges when we consider the whole context—I would say Augustine, Auguste Comte, Schelling—an insight that I would like to place at the end of today's reflections because I would like it to sink into your souls first. In the next few days, we will talk about what is significantly related to this insight. Because this insight arises precisely from a consideration of what I have presupposed, I will present it aphoristically, without being able to give detailed reasons why this insight, which is not found in Auguste Comte but in others, is found precisely if one takes the later standpoint, as I have indicated today, in this case not much later, of someone at the beginning of the 20th century thinking about someone who thought at the end of the 18th and in the first half of the 19th century. But it is already important today—as I have repeatedly emphasized and also sharply characterized this time—that one does not consider the life of worldview only in abstracto, but as it is integrated into the entire life of humanity. Only by considering this integration into the total life of humanity can one arrive at a realistic point of view.

Now Saint-Simon and Auguste Comte are well aware that they could only arrive at their positivism in modern times, that positivism would have been impossible in an earlier era. Auguste Comte feels this particularly strongly: “The way I think,” he says, more or less, “is the only way to think in our age.” This is something that stands out as enormously important in the modern movement, and it is connected precisely with the insight I am referring to. If one takes as a basis what Auguste Comte considers to be the starting point for his threefold division, one can also say, quite in his spirit, that this threefold division is theology, metaphysics, and what he calls—whether rightly or wrongly, that is irrelevant—positivist science.

Now, the peculiar thing is that one can ask: Who is most likely to become a believer in one of these directions? I beg you not to misunderstand what I am about to say in relation to this insight, not to take it as a one-sided radical dogma, nor as if it could be observed with apodictic certainty in the present day; rather, the entire course of human development must be considered if one wants to grasp what I am about to say. But then one cannot ask: Who will become a believer? Instead, one must ask: Who will most easily become a believer in one of these directions? And here, careful observation reveals, however much the facts may seem to contradict it, that the easiest believers in theology—not proponents of theology, not theologians, but believers—I am not speaking of religion, but of theology—are soldiers! The easiest believers in metaphysics are civil servants, especially lawyers, and the easiest believers in positivist science are industrialists.

If you want to judge life, it is important not to remain in the abstract, but to look at life with a truly open mind. But then you have to ask yourself such questions.

I would just like to mention this at the end today as an aperçu that arises precisely when one engages more intimately with Auguste Comte, because he is aware of it: he is completely understandable only to industrialists, and it was only in the industrial age that he could actually appear with his views. But this has to do with the fact that industrialists are the most likely to believe in positivist science, soldiers are the most likely to believe not only in Christianity but in any theology, and civil servants are the most likely to believe in metaphysics.