The Social Question as a Question of Consciousness
GA 189
15 March 1919, Dornach
Lecture VII
If you follow present-day developments with full awareness, in all humanity you will find a trend little adapted to direct thinking towards what the purely perceptible facts at work in the world themselves demand. There exists a general aversion to thoughts that do not run in the old grooves. But never before, perhaps, would it have been so apt to ask how it comes about that people are quite unready to entertain thoughts new to them. We experience today a fundamental phenomenon running through the whole evolution of the times. I have often pointed out how this came to expression some years ago. One could quote quite a collection of speeches delivered in the spring and early summer of 1914 by European statesmen, and find much the same in all their utterances—in what, for example, the Secretary of State, Jagow, said when addressing the Reichstag. This was to the effect that by the efforts of the European Cabinets it had been possible to create a satisfactory relation between the great powers, and that peace in Europe had been secured for a long time to come. Again and again you might find this kind of speech, repeated with variations by these self-styled ‘practical’ men. Thus it was at that time. A few weeks later began the world-conflagration now merely entering on a different phase.
What else do we experience today in the aims and actions of men so largely the children of their times? I have recently attended a so-called League of Nations Conference at Berne. There people talked of many things. Fundamentally everything concerning recent previous events was of the same caliber as the speeches of the European statesmen in the spring and summer of 1914. These men talk on the old customary lines of thought as for years they have been accustomed to talk. In truth, during the last four-and-half years they have actually learnt nothing, nothing at all from the lessons speaking to them out of the depths of world-existence. This is a fact to which the Anthroposophist should give his most earnest attention; for this depressing indifference in face of facts is widespread throughout the greater part of the continent of Europe. Despite many variations there repeatedly appears, quite typically, what is produced out of powerful depths, which are, however, ruinous for these times. This appears from the direction of a certain current in world-outlook, which on account of indifference and lack of interest among Europeans has every prospect of making impression upon impression, conquest upon conquest. When I was quite a boy—a long time ago now—in my religious books the following could be read, which was intended to lead boys to knowledge of Jesus Christ: Jesus Christ was either a hypocrite, a lunatic, or what He Himself said—the Son of the living God. Since one dare not accept His being either a hypocrite or a lunatic, there remains only the other possibility, namely, that it is true that He was, as He said, the Son of the living God! What was there in print in my religious books decades ago, I heard again recently in an address given in Berne by a Graz Professor Ude, in connection with the so-called Berne League of Nations Conference. Once again one could hear the words Jesus was either a hypocrite, a lunatic, or as He Himself said the Son of the living God. “And as we dare not call Christ”—this was hurled at the audience—“a lunatic or a hypocrite. He can only have been what He said, the Son of the living God!” With Jesuitical fervour this was cast at the audience, and there were few indeed in the hall who today in face of such things would ask the only really significant question: Has not this been repeated over and over again before the faithful, and in spite of it has not destruction descended upon mankind? Is there no one with heart and sense today in whom the thought can arise of the senselessness in the midst of the great world catastrophe of crying aloud to the multitude things that have shown such strong proof of their fruitlessness: And I heard another talk, by the same professor, on the social question, which from beginning to end gave no hint of what should happen, what must happen. It was solely a kind of condemnation of many immoral practices that, in the present time, are certainly both prevalent and predominant. But here, too, one realised that nothing had been learnt from the sad experiences of these four-and-a-half years.
This is a better example than many because, among the numerous speeches given in Berne these of Professor Ude were by far the best. For behind them was at least a world-outlook, even though one which if preached today must have its dangers. The other speeches had their roots in a lack of power to rise to any kind of world-outlook or understanding of life. We must continually emphasise that men's thoughts today have become dull and summary. They are unable to penetrate into realities. They move among illusions and are entirely superficial. Men cannot see into what it is that these times demand from those who would speak about the necessary organisation of things.
We should remind ourselves again and again, my dear friends, that during the last four centuries we Europeans, with the new blood of America, have produced a thinking only fit to understand what is lifeless. We have brought into being a thinking entirely dominated by mathematical technics. We have become incapable of directing our thought to what is living in nature, and comprehend only what is dead. What official science has to say about the living organism is only valid for the organism when dead, and is actually acquired from the corpse. So accustomed have people become to this thinking that it is also applied to the social organism. This simply means that mankind in general today is incapable of any creative thinking about the living social organism, at least they find it very difficult. But what thoughts do they find easy? They find easy such thoughts as have been drubbed into them for centuries through the method of catechism and as run in the ruts they have made; or those thoughts born of thinking that relates only to what is dead in the living organism. But today it is the living social organism we have to comprehend.
Let us start from a concrete example. Modern socialist thinking is directed against capitalism. Socialism demands the association of all private capital for means of production. There was already much talk about this socialisation in what I believe was called the National Assembly of Weimar. The way in which capitalism is now spoken of absolutely conforms with the dead thinking of recent centuries, which has greatly increased in the world-conception of purely materialistic natural science. What exactly have we in capitalism? We have something that fundamentally has become a terrible oppressor of the great mass of human beings, and we have the fact that there is very little to be said in answer to what is urged, and will continue to be urged from the side of the proletariat against the oppressive nature of capitalism in its relation to the spheres of the spiritual, of the economic, and of rights. But what conclusions are drawn by the socialist thinker from these undeniable facts? The conclusion that capitalism must be done away with! Capitalism is the oppressor, something dreadful, it has proven itself a scourge of modern mankind, so it must be destroyed. What should appear more comprehensible, more fruitful, for the usual agitator than this demand for the abolition of capitalism. But it has resulted in terrible deeds all over Europe. For those who do not confine themselves to these dead thoughts of the last four hundred years, but are able to turn to living thinking needed above all for our Spiritual Science—for those, this talk of the necessity for abolishing capitalism as an oppression and a scourge, is just as logical, based on just such factual as the following: We continually breathe in oxygen end breathe out dead carbonic acid; in us the oxygen is transformed into carbonic acid. Then why should we first inhale it? For it only produces a deadly poison in us, it becomes a deadly poison! There is no doubt that oxygen changes inside us to deadly poison, but for our life's sake we have to breathe it in; the life process in both human and animal bodies is unthinkable without the inhaling, of oxygen. And the social life is just as unthinkable without the continual building up of capital; without the constant building-up of the means of production which, strictly speaking, is nothing more nor less than capital. There is no social organism that would not show the interworking of individual human capacities. Were the demands of the social organism widely understood the worker would say: It is a question of having confidence in the director of the undertaking, for unless he takes the responsibility for it I cannot do my work. When there are directors of undertakings, however, the accumulation of capital necessarily follows. It is impossible to escape the accumulation. If socialistic thinkers, well-meaning up to a point, but mistaken, put the question: How is capitalism to be done away with? this is as significant as to ask: How is the social organism itself to be done away with? How, best is the social organism to be driven to its death?
It is quite clear for anyone who has insight into the matter that capital is accumulated even in the wisest social order, and equally clear that it is idle to ask: How can the amassing of capital be prevented; how can we arrange that no capital is accumulated?—But you see, people today find it too difficult to face up to these things; they prefer to avoid such thoughts. Where thinking is concerned they prefer everything to be easy. But this is not allowed by the times. It is always forgotten that everything living is in a state of becoming, that to comprehend the living time must be taken into account; what is living is one thing at one time and later something different. With a little thought it is not hard to become aware that to understand in its concrete nature anything living, we must take time into account. For the human organism in something alive. Think of your organism about half-past-one; you are all busy people who do not stay long over your meals; coming out after having eaten you have—at least it is to be hoped you have—satisfied your hunger, you are no longer hungry. You can describe your organism, taking it in its concrete condition at half-past-one, as a human organism that is a living being without hunger. But at half-past-twelve on entering the restaurant it was otherwise; then you were all hungry; then you would say: a human organism is something having hunger. The fact is that you are looking at the concrete, the living, at two different points of time, and that, at two different points of time, two entirely contrasting conditions are needed for the well-being of the organism, and something has to be brought about in the the organism that has the effect of causing its opposite to arise. It is the same in what is living in nature as it is in what is socially alive. In a living society capital can never be prevented from arising as a natural symptom of the work of individual human capacities; private property can never be prevented from becoming the means of production. When anyone devotes himself to the direction of some branch of production, and also shares equally in the resulting products with the manual workers working with him, the social organism would never be able to exist unless capital appeared as an attendant phenomenon. For the individual possesses this just as much as he possesses what he needs for his own use, what he produces so that he can exchange it for what he needs.
But we can think just as little whether or not we should eat since we shall certainly become hungry again, as we can think about how the building-up of capital can be permanently prevented. We can think only how this capital is to be transformed at some future date, what must become of it. You cannot wish to prevent the accumulation of capital without undermining the whole social organism in its capacity for life; you can only want what is thus accumulated not to cause harm to the soundness of the social organism.
What is demanded in this way for the soundness of the social organism to be found only in the threefold ordering. For only in the threefold social organism, as in the human natural organism, can the different members work in their various directions. It is in the interest of the individual that a member should be there in the social organism in which individual human capacities come to expression; but it is in the general interest that these individual human capacities should not take on a form that sooner or later would injure the organism. In the course of the economic life capital will always be accumulated. If just left there it will simply pile up to an unlimited extent. Capital piled up through the capacities of human individuals cannot be left in the economic sphere, it must be transferred to the sphere of rights. For the moment man acquires more than he needs of what is produced by him alone or in association with his fellows, the moment capital is accumulated, what he possesses is no more a commodity than is human labour. Possession is a right. Possession is nothing more nor less than an exclusive right, a matter of using or disposing of a thing—be it land, house, or anything of the sort—with utter disregard of others. No other definition of possession is fruitful for understanding the social organism. The moment a man acquires a possession, it must come under the political State and be directed from within the Rights State. But the State may not itself acquire, for then it would itself become economist. It has only to pass over what is acquired to the spiritual organism where the individual capacities of men are dealt with. Now-a-days a process of this kind is carried out only with goods today considered of least value. What I have just been stating holds good for these; it does not hold good for what is of value. When today anything spiritual is produced, a fine poem for instance, an important work by writer or artist, the proceeds from it can be left to his heirs for thirty years after his death, then it passes ever as the free property of all men in common. Thirty years after his death an author's works can be reprinted without any restriction. This originates in the sound idea that man has society to thank for his own individual capacities. Just as a man cannot learn to speak on a desert island but only in the company of others, it is also only from society that he has his individual capacities—on the basis of his karma, certainly, but that has to be developed in society. The fruits of individual activity must return to society. For a time only the individual has command of it because this is better for the social organism. A man himself best knows what he has produced, so to begin with he can be its best administrator. The goods valued least by modern mankind, the spiritual goods, are thus socially estimated in a certain way by taking into account the current concepts.
Some apparently capitalistic members of my recent audience in Berne are supposed to have been very angry—so I was told—when I asked in a lecture why it should not be possible for a capitalist to be obliged by law to assign his capital, a certain number of years after his death, to the free control of a corporation of the spiritual organisation, the spiritual part of the social organism. One can surely think out different ways of establishing a concrete right. But, if it should be expected of people today to return to what was a matter of right in the old Hebraic times, namely, that after a definite time: goods should be apportioned anew, it would be regarded as something unheard of. But what is the consequence of men looking upon it in this way? The consequence is that in the last four-and-a-half years ten million people have been killed, eighteen million crippled, and we have the prospect of more happening in this way. Reflection above all is needed in these matters. It is really not without importance that there should be a desire for the concept of time to be brought to the understanding of the social organism The social organism is thought of as being timeless if it is said that already in a condition of arising something should be done with the incipient capital. But one has to allow capital to come into existence, end even let it for a time be controlled by those who have caused it to arise. We must, however, have the possibility of letting it actually pass over again to men in general through a sound organisation, a sound organism, that is to say, an organism functioning as one that is threefold.
You cannot just ask why a social organism consisting in only one member should not be capable of doing all this. Today people still believe that it is possible, but when they believe it they must reckon badly with the human soul. Only think what it means—for the human soul must be reckoned with—when a near, or even distant, relation of a judge stands before him. As a relation he has his special feelings, but when he has to pronounce judgment it will not be in accordance with his feelings but obviously in accordance with the law. He will give his decision from this other source. Thought out in an all-embracing psychological way this gives you an idea of the necessity for men to judge from three directions, to control from three sources, whatever streams into the social organism. Our times demand that we should go into these things. For ours is the time of the epoch of consciousness, that wishes man to have concrete ideas as guiding impulses for his actions. Many people claim today that we should not keep to the intellect, and to abstract thinking (which is all the thinking they know) but that we should judge out of feeling and, since thinking is only for scientific matters, should hold above all to belief in principles that concern life between man and man.
This is all very doubtful because in our time men are inclined to the most abstract thinking and hold fast to the most straight-forward concepts. And when they have grasped these they cling to them with tremendous tenacity. This abstract thinking has for its organ chiefly the human head, is bound up at least with the physical organ. Formerly, in the time of atavistic clairvoyance, there entered into this thinking from the rest of the human organism a thinking directed to the spiritual. This time is past. Henceforward man must rise consciously to Imagination and grasp the spiritual life consciously. For without this penetration into spiritual life today man's thoughts remain empty.
Now why is this? You know from our recent discussions that what belongs to every human head today is brought over from the rest of the organism of the previous incarnation, excluding the head. I have often dwelt upon this with you. Naturally this does not mean the physical substance but the formative forces of the head,which even in the roundness of its form, resembles the cosmos, these forces after death merge into the cosmos. What remains over for our life as forces between death and a new birth, what in the next life will become the head, is the rest of the body of the previous incarnation. To this is appended the rest of the organism which, fertilised by the father, then comes from the body of the mother. On passing through death we lose what belongs to the head as forces, and transform the forces of the rest of the body into the head of our next incarnation. The great mass of mankind of the present day was in its former incarnation so placed on earth that in the way they thought, in a truly Christian sense, they despised this earthly vale of tears. This scorn is a feeling that is connected not with the head but with the remaining organism. When these human beings re-incarnate today, what appeared in their former incarnation as an exalted Christian feeling, being now reincarnated and developed into the head organism, is transformed into its opposite and becomes a longing for the material, a yearning after material life. Present-day man has reached a turning point in evolution of which we must say that very little from the previous incarnation has come into the head. And just because of this something fresh must enter man, something that as a revelation from the present is manifested anew from the spiritual world. It is no longer possible today simply to hold to the Gospels; it is necessary to listen to what man is now being told about the spiritual. The Catholic Church is sharing in this dead thinking that cannot grip the living organism. Here in Berne the preachers of the Catholic Church too never tire in their professions of faith in the Christ, the Son of the Living God. But of what use is it to believe in the Christ, the Son of the living God, if one grasps Him only with dead thinking, that is, if He becomes a dead ideal in one's own thoughts? Our need today is not to call on the Christ, the Son of the living God, but to call on Christ, the living Son of God, which means to call on the Christ who is living now in the new revelations He is sending to mankind.
Spiritual Science wishes to make what as new revelation is striving directly towards the earth out of the spiritual worlds, into the impulse behind all thoughts. Through this men would receive thoughts capable of diving deep down into reality. These thoughts, it is true, would in many respects be the opposite of those holding sway in men today. Present-day men would like to hold to the most audacious thoughts, as far as possible from reality. And when they have such thoughts they cling to then tenaciously without noticing what the realities are that alter the circumstances with regard to thoughts. I will quote you a striking example of this.
Just as in the Spring and early Summer of 1914 statesmen talked of world peace, so now in Berne the various so-called ‘internationally’ thinking people talk of the coming League of Nations. You know that this idea came from the head of Woodrow Wilson. In his speech of January, 1917, Wilson made public this idea of a League of Nations. He set it up as a model of what men must strive for if he is not again in the future to suffer the terrible catastrophe into which we have today been driven. He described the striving for such a league as an absolute necessity. At the same time he said—and this is important—that the realisation of this League of Nations would depend upon a certain assumption without which there could be no talk of founding a league of the sort. This necessary assumption would be that the war should end without victory on either side for a League of Nations could never be founded in a world where there was definite conquest on the one side, definite defeat on the other.
This is the assumption Wilson made for the setting up of a League of Nations. What has arisen is the exact reverse of this assumption. Nevertheless men will establish the League of Nations in the way that, in January, 1917, Wilson spoke of it as a hypothesis. This means he was very far from reality in his thinking, that he clung to a thinking that offers no possibility of going with these thoughts deeply into reality, comprehending reality, of coming to terms with reality through thought. But that is just what is most needed. for the present time. People do not in the least realise that they dare not hold to their old way of thinking but that it is absolutely essential with thought to look deep into reality.
Now at Berne, as an example of a well-meaning man, we might point to the pacifist, Schücking. There was a discussion about the League of Nations and its organisation. It was curious to listen to the words that the aim would have to be a super-State and a super-Parliament resembling the parliaments of the individual States. For example, Schücking said: The objection will be made that the various States remain individualities and will not submit to the control of a single centralised super-State. The answer to that is what is being done in the national Assembly in Weimar. In that Assembly small local principalities are also individuals, nevertheless there exists a sense of the collective whole.—Here we have, close at hand, an obvious thought for those who love abstractions; for what could be more illuminating than to see that what can be done in miniature with a number of principalities, by joining them into a National Assembly, is now sought to be realised on a large scale with this super-State? But who ever thinks realistically, concretely, whoever makes straight for reality in his thinking, will ask why it was possible in Weimar? It was possible only because a German revolution took place! Otherwise there would have been no talk of doing away with the small States.
Today it is very difficult to make people see that a completely new thinking is necessary, a thinking in sympathy with reality, and that setting things right in present conditions depends upon how much inclination men have for this kind of thinking. A thinking, however, that wishes to know nothing of the spiritual world cannot dive into reality for in all reality there lives the spiritual world. And when we know nothing of the spiritual world we are unable to grasp reality, either today or in the future. Therefore, for the healing of the world today the chief condition is that man should turn to the knowledge of spiritual science. This must form the foundation, this can form the foundation, this can easily form the foundation. Do not keep repeating the superficial chatter that it is difficult to apply Spiritual Science to reality because people are not ready to receive it. Abolish State control over universities, schools, all schools, and. in ten years, in place of the present science which harms and kills the human soul, Spiritual Science, at least in its rudiments, will have arisen! Then what today can grow out of the emancipated third part of the sound social organism, out of the spiritual organisation, will have a different appearance from what is supervised by the State. For this State wishes to develop only its own spirituality, which means that it tolerates only a State theology, or would train its own jurists so that State jurists alone are recognised. Not to speak of medicine! How stupid, how ridiculous it is that medical practice should vary from one State to another, that the same knowledge should not be supposed to heal human beings on both sides of a frontier!
I have often emphasised that to socialistic thinking all spiritual life is mere ideology. What is the deeper reason of this being so for the masses of the proletariat? The reason is that all knowledge is supposed to be controlled by an external political State, and that it is only the shadow of the political State. It is indeed an ideology! If the spiritual life is not to be mere ideology, it must continually out of its own forces, be proving its reality, that means being established on its own foundation. The spiritual life must continually be showing its reality and may not depend upon outward support. Only this kind of independent spiritual life, which sees itself established solely on human ability and has entire control over itself, only a spiritual life of this kind will let its tributaries flow into capitalism with healing effect. For the control of capitalism too is brought about simply by human ability. Make the sources healthy, and spiritual life where it joins with capitalism in guiding economic life, will also be healthy. Thus things hang together and we must become conscious of the connection. The thinking of the present abstractionists must be avoided, the thinking estranged from reality which meets us at every step. It created the conditions that caused our present conditions; but this is not yet understood.
Today men ask how the super-State must be created, and they think of the former State. What was done by that should be done also by the super-State.—But is it not more to the point to ask what the State should leave undone? When the States have landed us in a European catastrophe is it not more apt to ask what it should not do? It should have done with its meddling in spiritual life and its acting as economist; and it should limit itself to the political sphere! It can no longer be asked how a League of Nations should be established, by taking as model what the States have done or should do; it is better and more suitable to the times to ask what the States should give up doing.
People are still little inclined to look deeply into these things. But upon their doing so the destiny of man today will depend.
Siebenter Vortrag
Wenn Sie jetzt aufmerksam die Zeitentwickelung verfolgen, dann werden Sie finden, daß durch die ganze Menschheit im Grunde genommen ein gewisser Zug geht, der wenig geeignet ist, die Gedanken auf das hinzulenken, was die laut vernehmlichen Tatsachen, die sich in der Welt abspielen, selbst verlangen. Es besteht im allgemeinen eine gewisse Abneigung der Menschen gegen Gedanken, die nicht in altgewohnter Weise laufen. Aber vielleicht niemals lag es so nahe als gerade heute, zu fragen: Wie kommt es, daß die Menschen eigentlich so wenig eingehen wollen auf Gedanken, die sie nicht schon gedacht haben? - Sehen Sie, man erlebt ja heute, ich möchte sagen, durch die ganze Zeitentwickelung gehend, ein Grundphänomen. Ich habe schon öfter aufmerksam darauf gemacht, wie sich dieses Grundphänomen vor Jahren ausgesprochen hat. Man könnte eine nette Sammlung anlegen von Reden europäischer Staatsmänner aus dem Frühling und Frühsommer des Jahres 1914, und man würde in den Ausführungen dieser Reden so ziemlich das gleiche finden, was zum Beispiel in einer Rede des deutschen Reichstages von seiten des Staatssekretärs Jagow dazumal gesagt worden ist. Es lautete ungefähr so: Durch die Bemühungen der europäischen Kabinette ist es gelungen, solche befriedigenden Verhältnisse zwischen den Großmächten Europas herzustellen, daß der Friede für lange Zeiten hinaus in Europa gesichert ist. In verschiedenen Variationen konnte man bei diesen Lebenspraktikern — so nennen sich diese Leute — diese Rede immer wieder und wiederum finden. Das war dazumal. Und wenige Wochen nachher begann jener Weltbrand, der jetzt nur in eine Krisis eingetreten ist. Was erleben wir jetzt anderes innerhalb der Absichten, der Maßnahmen, der so recht der heutigen Zeit angehörigen Menschen? Ich habe in den letzten Tagen einiges mitgemacht von der sogenannten Berner «Völkerbunds-Konferenz». Die Leute haben dort auch Verschiedenes geredet. Unter diesem Verschiedenen war im Grunde genommen alles von demselben Kaliber gegenüber dem, was die vorstehenden Ereignisse sind, wie die Reden der europäischen Staatsmänner vom Frühling und Frühsommer des Jahres 1914. Diese Menschen reden in den altgewohnten Gedankengeleisen. Sie reden dasjenige, was sie seit Jahren zu reden gewohnt sind. Sie haben im Grunde genommen wirklich nichts, aber auch gar nichts aufgenommen von den aus den Tiefen des Weltendaseins heraus sprechenden Lehren der letzten viereinhalb Jahre.
Es ist dies eine Tatsache, auf die gerade der Geisteswissenschafter in intensivstem Maße seine Aufmerksamkeit hinlenken sollte; denn über einen großen Teil des europäischen Kontinents geht diese Trostlosigkeit. Trotz der verschiedenen Variationen erscheint es einem doch immer wieder ganz typisch und nur im Extrem ausgedrückt, wenn aus starken, aber für die heutige Zeit verderblichen Untergründen heraus gerade von einer Weltanschauungsströmung geredet wird, die wegen der Gleichgültigkeit, der Interesselosigkeit der europäischen Bevölkerung in der nächsten Zeit große Aussichten haben wird, Eindruck über Eindruck zu machen, Eroberungen über Eroberungen zu machen. Als ich ein ganz kleiner Knabe noch war - es ist jetzt lange her -, da stand in meinen Religionsbüchern sehr dezidiert ausgedrückt das Folgende, um die Knaben zur Erkenntnis hinzuführen, was der Christus Jesus sei. Da stand: Der Christus Jesus war entweder ein Heuchler oder ein Narr — oder er war das, was er selber sagte, der Sohn des lebendigen Gottes. Da man nicht annehmen darf, daß der Christus ein Heuchler gewesen sei, da man auch nicht annehmen darf, daß er ein Narr gewesen sei, so kann nur das eine möglich sein, daß das wahr ist, was er sagte, daß er der Sohn des lebendigen Gottes sei. — Was so Jahrzehnte vor unserer Zeit in meinem damaligen Religionsbuche stand, ich hörte es neulich in einer Rede, die im Anschlusse an die Berner «Völkerbunds-Konferenz» von dem Grazer Universitätsprofessor Ude in Bern gehalten worden ist! Da konnte man wiederum die Worte hören: Der Jesus war entweder ein Heuchler oder ein Narr, oder er war, was er selber sagte, der Sohn des lebendigen Gottes. «Und da Sie nicht wagen werden» - so rief der Mann in die Menge hinein — «den Christus einen Narren oder einen Heuchler zu nennen, so kann er nur das gewesen sein, was er selber von sich sagte, der Sohn des lebendigen Gottes!» Das wurde alles mit jesuitischem Temperament in die Menge hineingeworfen, und es waren wohl wenige Leute dazumal im Saal, welche die heute einzig und allein bedeutungsvolle Frage gegenüber einer solchen Sache aufwarfen: Ist nicht dieses Sprüchlein durch Jahrhunderte wiederholt worden vor den Gläubigen, und ist nicht trotz dieses Sprüchleins das große Verderben über die Menschheit hereingebrochen? Sollte es heute noch ein Herz und einen Sinn geben, die sich nicht Gedanken darüber machten, wie sinnlos es ist, nach der großen Weltkatastrophe und mitten drinnen die Dinge, die so stark ihre Fruchtlosigkeit bewiesen haben, immer wieder und wiederum in die Menge hineinzuschreien. — Und ich hörte eine andere Rede desselben Grazer Universitätsprofessors über die soziale Frage, und diese Rede war vom Anfange bis zum Ende ohne jeden Hinweis darauf, was eigentlich geschehen soll, was geschehen muß, war lediglich eine Art Verurteilung mancher ja gewiß vorhandener Unsitten, die in der Gegenwart herrschen; allein auch da war nichts gelernt durch die traurigen Ereignisse der letzten viereinhalb Jahre!
Es ist dies eigentlich aus dem Grunde ein besseres Beispiel als manche andere, weil unter den Reden, die in Bern gehalten wurden von allen Seiten, die des Grazer Professors Ude weitaus die besten waren; denn sie kamen wenigstens aus einer Weltanschauung heraus, wenn auch aus einer Weltanschauung, die, heute propagiert, gerade gefährlich werden muß. Die anderen entstammten der Ohnmacht, überhaupt sich noch zu irgendeiner Weltanschauung oder Lebensauffassung zu erheben. Immer wieder muß man betonen: die Gedanken der Menschen sind heute stumpf und kurz geworden. Sie sind nicht in der Lage, einzudringen in die Wirklichkeiten. Sie bewegen sich in Illusionen, sie bewegen sich lediglich an der Oberfläche der Dinge. Man kann heute nicht einsehen, was gerade diese Zeit von denjenigen fordert, die ein Wort mitreden wollen bei der so notwendigen Neugestaltung der Dinge.
Meine lieben Freunde, sagen wir uns das immer wieder und wieder: Wir haben durch die letzten vier Jahrhunderte als europäische Menschheit, mit ihrem amerikanischen Nachwuchs, ein Denken heraufgebracht, welches nur geeignet ist, das Leblose, das Tote zu begreifen. Wir haben ein Denken heraufgebracht, welches ganz und gar hingeordnet ist auf das Mathematisch-Technische. Wir sind unfähig geworden, Gedanken zu richten auf dasjenige, was in der Natur lebt. Wir begreifen nur das Tote. Dasjenige, was wir zu sagen wissen in unserer offiziellen Wissenschaft über den Organismus, das gilt bloß für den toten Organismus, das ist bloß an den Leichen gewonnen. Das aber wird heute, wo man sich in dieses Denken eingewöhnt hat, auch auf den sozialen Organismus angewendet. Das heißt aber nichts anderes, als: daß die Menschheit heute in weiten Kreisen unfähig ist, sich überhaupt Gedanken über den lebendigen sozialen Organismus zu machen. Höchstens finden die Menschen heute, daß diese Gedanken schwierig seien. Welche Gedanken finden die Menschen heute leicht? — Diejenigen, die ihnen durch den Katechismus meinetwillen seit Jahrhunderten eingepaukt worden sind, die in ihren ausgefahrenen Geleisen laufen, oder solche, welche die Kinder derjenigen Gedanken sind, die sich nur auf das Tote des lebendigen Organismus beziehen. Aber auf der anderen Seite ist es aber der Gegenwart nötig, den lebendigen sozialen Organismus zu begreifen.
Gehen wir von einer konkreten Sache aus. Das sozialistische Denken der Gegenwart richtet sich in weitem Umfange - ich habe Ihnen das nach allen Seiten hin charakterisiert — gegen den Kapitalismus. Es fordert der Sozialismus die Vergesellschaftung des gesamten Privatkapitals an Produktionsmitteln. Über diese Sozialisierung wurde ja schon in reichlichem Maße in der, man nennt sie, glaube ich, «Nationalversammlung», in Weimar geredet. Die Art und Weise, wie heute über den Kapitalismus geredet wird, stammt so recht aus dem toten Denken der letzten Jahrhunderte, welches groß geworden ist innerhalb der rein naturwissenschaftlich-materialistischen Weltanschauung. Was liegt denn da eigentlich vor? — Es liegt vor, meine lieben Freunde, daß im Grunde genommen der Kapitalismus zu einem furchtbaren Bedrücker der großen Menschenmasse geworden ist; es liegt vor, daß man wenig wird einwenden können gegen all das, was von seiten der proletarischen Menschenbevölkerung gegen das Bedrückende des Kapitalismus in geistiger, in rechtlicher, in wirtschaftlicher Beziehung gesagt worden ist und weiterhin gesagt wird. Aber welche Konsequenz ziehen sozialistisch gestimmte Denker aus dieser ja unleugbaren Tatsache? — Sie ziehen die Konsequenz: Also muß der Kapitalismus abgeschafft werden, er ist ja ein Bedrücker, er ist etwas Furchtbares, er hat sich als eine Geißel der neueren Menschheit erwiesen, er muß abgeschafft werden. Was erscheint begreiflicher, was erscheint fruchtbarer für gewöhnliche Agitationen - die sich jetzt aber in furchtbaren Tatsachen durch Europa ausleben — als diese Forderung nach der Abschaffung des Kapitalismus. Für denjenigen, der sich nicht an das tote Denken der letzten vier Jahrhunderte allein wendet, sondern der in der Lage ist, sich zu wenden an das lebendige Denken, das wir vor allen Dingen für unsere Geisteswissenschaft brauchen, für den ist diese Rede, man müsse den Kapitalismus abschaffen, weil er ein Bedrücker, eine Geißel ist, geradeso logisch, geradeso durch die Tatsachenlogik begründet, wie wenn jemand sagen würde: Wir atmen fortwährend Sauerstoff ein und die tötende Kohlensäure aus, der Sauerstoff verwandelt sich in uns ja doch in Kohlensäure, warum atmen wir ihn denn erst ein? Er wird ja in uns doch zum todbringenden Gift. Zweifellos wird der Sauerstoff in uns zum todbringenden Gift, aber um des Lebens willen müssen wir ihn einatmen, denn der Lebensprozeß des menschlichen und tierischen Leibes ist nicht denkbar ohne die Sauerstoffatmung. Ebensowenig ist ein soziales Leben denkbar ohne die fortwährende Bildung von Kapital, namentlich ohne die fortwährende Bildung heute von produzierten Produktionsmitteln, und das ist ja im Grunde genommen, in Wirklichkeit das Kapital. Es gibt keinen sozialen Organismus, der nicht angewiesen wäre auf die Mitarbeiterschaft der individuellen menschlichen Fähigkeiten. Würde im weitesten Umkreise begriffen, was der soziale Organismus für Forderungen hat, so würde der Arbeiter sagen: Es handelt sich darum, daß ich Vertrauen habe zu dem Leiter der Unternehmungen; denn ohne daß er die Unternehmungen leitet, kann ich ja meine Arbeit nicht leisten, das ist ja ganz selbstverständlich. Aber wenn es Leiter von Unternehmen gibt, so ist die notwendige Folge, daß sich Kapital ansammelt. Es gibt keine Möglichkeit, der Ansammlung von Kapital zu entgehen. Frägt also ein in einer gewissen Weise es gut meinendes, aber falsch orientiertes sozialistisches Denken danach: Wie vernichtet man den Kapitalismus? — so ist diese Frage gleichbedeutend mit der: Wie vernichtet man den sozialen Organismus überhaupt, wie treiben wir in den Tod des sozialen Lebens hinein?
Es ist ganz zweifellos für jeden, der die Dinge durchschauen kann, daß bei der allervernünftigsten sozialen Ordnung sich Kapitalien ansammeln, und es ist ebenso zweifellos, daß man nicht darüber nachdenken kann: wie verhindert man die Ansammlung von Kapitalien, wie verhindert man sie im Keime? Wie macht man es, daß keine Kapitalien sich ansammeln? — Aber sehen Sie, diese Gegenüberstellung, die ist den Menschen heute zu schwer. An solche Gedanken möchten die Menschen heute nicht heran. Sie möchten alles leicht haben gerade mit Bezug auf das Denken. Aber die Zeit gestattet nicht, daß wir es uns gerade mit Bezug auf das Denken heute leicht machen. Was nämlich immer vergessen wird, das ist, daß alles Lebendige im Werden ist, daß zum Begreifen alles Lebendigen die Zeit mitgehört, daß das Lebendige einmal so, einmal so ist. Es ist nicht schwierig bei einiger Bedachtsamkeit sich klarzumachen, daß zum Begreifen des Lebendigen in seiner Konkretheit die Zeit gehört. Denn der menschliche Organismus ist ein Lebendiges. Nehmen Sie den menschlichen Organismus — ich will sagen, Ihren Organismus — in der Zeit um halb zwei Uhr herum; Sie sind ja alle fleißige Leute, die nicht lange in der Kantine bleiben, und wenn Sie aus der Kantine kommen und eben gegessen haben, so sind Sie, wenigstens wäre es wünschenswert normal, dann voll gesättigt, Sie haben keinen Hunger. Ihr Organismus ist ganz gewiß ein konkreter, menschlicher Organismus. Sie definieren ihn, indem Sie ihn in seiner Konkretheit um dreiviertel zwei Uhr am Nachmittag nehmen, wenn Sie eben aus der Kantine kommen: ein menschlicher Organismus ist ein Lebewesen, das keinen Hunger hat. Aber um halb ein Uhr, wenn Sie zur Kantine gehen, ist es anders, da haben Sie alle Hunger. Da könnten Sie wiederum definieren: ein menschlicher Organismus ist das, was Hunger hat. - Was da vorliegt, ist, daß Sie das Konkrete, Lebendige in zwei verschiedenen Zeitpunkten anschauen, und daß das, was in zwei verschiedenen Zeitpunkten notwendig ist für das Gedeihen dieses Organismus, gerade entgegengesetzte Zustände sind, daß im Organismus etwas herbeigeführt werden muß, was so verarbeitet wird, daß sein Gegenteil eintritt. So ist es im natürlichen Lebendigen, so ist es aber auch im sozialen Lebendigen, meine lieben Freunde. Man kann im sozialen Lebendigen niemals verhindern, daß als Begleitereignis, als selbstverständliches Begleitereignis des Arbeitens der individuellen menschlichen Fähigkeiten Kapital entstehe, daß das Eigentum, das private Eigentum an Produktionsmitteln sich herausbilde. Wenn jemand sich einem Produktionszweige leitend widmet, und er auch ganz gerecht die erzeugten Produkte teilt mit dem handwerklich Mitarbeitenden, es würde der soziale Organismus gar nicht bestehen können, wenn nicht als Begleiterscheinung Kapital auftreten würde, Kapital, was der einzelne besitzt, ebenso wie er das besitzt, was er für seinen eigenen Gebrauch benötigt, was er so produziert, daß er es eintauschen will für seinen eigenen Gebrauch.
Aber ebensowenig wie man das Essen verbieten kann — weil man, wenn man gegessen hat, doch wieder hungrig wird -, wie man nachdenken kann, ob man eigentlich nicht essen soll, ebensowenig kann man darüber nachdenken, wie sich überhaupt kein Kapital bilde in irgendeinem Zeitpunkt, sondern man kann nur darüber nachdenken, wie dieses Kapital sich wiederum verwandeln muß in einem anderen Zeitpunkte, was aus ihm werden muß. Sie können nicht, ohne den sozialen Organismus in seiner Lebensfähigkeit zu untergraben, die Kapitalbildung verhindern wollen, Sie können nur wollen, daß das, was sich als Kapital bildet, nichts Schädliches werde innerhalb des gesunden sozialen Organismus.
Dieses, was in solcher Art gefordert werden muß für die Gesundung des sozialen Organismus, ist nur im dreigliedrigen sozialen Organismus möglich. Denn nur im dreigliedrigen sozialen Organismus kann ebenso wie im menschlichen natürlichen Organismus das eine Glied im entgegengesetzten Sinne arbeiten, als das andere Glied. Es liegt im individuellen Interesse, daß ein Glied ist im sozialen Organismus, in dem die individuellen menschlichen Fähigkeiten zum Ausdrucke kommen; aber es liegt in jedermanns Interesse, daß diese individuellen menschlichen Fähigkeiten nicht im Laufe der Zeit zum Schaden des Organismus sich umgestalten. Innerhalb des wirtschaftlichen Kreislaufes wird sich immer Kapital bilden. Lassen Sie es im wirtschaftlichen Kreislauf drinnen, so führt es zu unbegrenzter Besitzanhäufung. Sie können nicht als ein Wirtschaftliches belassen, was durch die individuellen menschlichen Fähigkeiten als Kapital sich ansammelt — Sie müssen es überleiten in die Rechtssphäre. Denn in dem Augenblicke, wo der Mensch für das von ihm allein oder in Gemeinschaft Erzeugte mehr erwirbt, als er verbraucht, in dem Augenblicke also, wo er Kapital ansammelt, in dem Augenblicke ist sein Besitz wahrhaftig ebensowenig eine Ware, wie die menschliche Arbeitskraft eine Ware ist. Besitz ist ein Recht. Denn Besitz ist nichts anderes, als das ausschließliche Recht, eine Sache — sagen wir, Grund und Boden oder ein Haus oder dergleichen -— mit Hinwegweisung aller anderen zu benützen, über irgendeine Sache zu verfügen mit Hinwegweisung aller anderen. Alle anderen Definitionen des Besitzes sind unfruchtbar für das Verstehen des sozialen Organismus. Das heißt, in dem Augenblicke, wo der Mensch Besitz erwirbt, ist der Besitz etwas, was innerhalb des rein politischen Staates, innerhalb des Rechtsstaates zu verwalten ist. Aber der Staat darf das nicht erwerben, sonst würde er selbst Wirtschafter. Er hat es nur überzuleiten in den geistigen Organismus, wo die individuellen Fähigkeiten der Menschen verwaltet werden. Heute wird ein solcher Prozeß nur vollzogen mit den Gütern, die die «schofelsten» für die heutige Zeit sind. Für diese schofelsten Güter gilt das allerdings, was ich jetzt ausgeführt habe. Für die wertvollen Güter gilt es nicht. -— Wenn heute einer etwas geistig produziert — sagen wir, ein sehr bedeutendes Gedicht, ein bedeutendes Werk als Schriftsteller, als Künstler —, so kann er ja für dreißig Jahre nach seinem Tode das Erträgnis seinen Nachkommen vererben. Dann geht die Sache als freies Gut nicht auf seine Nachkommen über, sondern auf die allgemeine Menschheit. Man kann dreißig Jahre nach dem Tode einen Schriftsteller in beliebiger Weise nachdrucken. Das entspringt einem ganz gesunden Gedanken; dem Gedanken, daß der Mensch auch das, was er in seinen individuellen Fähigkeiten hat, der Sozietät verdankt. Geradesowenig wie man auf einer einsamen Insel sprechen lernen kann, wie man sprechen nur im Zusammenhang mit den Menschen lernen kann, so hat man seine individuellen Fähigkeiten auch nur innerhalb der Sozietät — gewiß auf Grundlage desjenigen, was im Karma liegt, aber das muß entwickelt werden durch die Sozietät. Man schuldet es in einer gewissen Weise der Sozietät. Es muß wiederum an die Sozietät zurückfallen und man hat es nur eine Zeitlang zu verwalten, weil es für den sozialen Organismus besser ist, wenn man es verwaltet: Man kennt das, was man hervorgebracht hat, selber am besten, man kann es daher zunächst auch am besten verwalten. Diese schofelsten Güter für die heutige Menschheit, nämlich die geistigen, die werden also in einer gewissen Weise unter Berücksichtigung des Zeitbegriffes sozial taxiert.
Wütend sollen einige kapitalistisch aussehende Zuhörer neulich in Bern geworden sein bei meinem Vortrage — so wurde mir berichtet -, als ich sagte: Warum sollte denn zum Beispiel ein Gesetz unmöglich sein, das den Kapitalbesitzer verpflichtete, so und so viele Jahre nach seinem Tode sein Kapital zur freien Verwaltung einer Korporation, der geistigen Organisation, des geistigen Teiles des sozialen Organismus zuzuweisen? Gewiß, man kann sich verschiedene Arten, ein konkretes Recht festzusetzen, ausdenken. Aber wenn heute die Menschen zurückkommen wollten auf das, was in der alten hebräischen Zeit rechtens war: nach einer bestimmten Zeit die Güterverteilung neu vorzunehmen — so würden die Menschen das heute als etwas Unerhörtes ansehen. Aber was ist die Folge davon, daß die Menschen das für etwas Unerhörtes ansehen? Die Folge davon ist, daß diese Menschheit in den letzten viereinhalb Jahren zehn Millionen Menschen getötet hat, achtzehn Millionen Menschen zu Krüppeln gemacht hat und sich anschickt, weiteres nach dieser Richtung zu tun. — Besonnenheit in solchen Dingen, das ist es denn doch, um was es sich heute vor allen Dingen handelt, meine lieben Freunde. Es ist tatsächlich nichts Unbedeutendes, wenn verlangt wird, daß zum Begreifen des sozialen Organismus der Zeitbegriff herangezogen wird. Man denkt ja den sozialen Organismus ganz zeitlos, wenn man sagt: das oder jenes soll schon im Entstehungszustand, im Status nascens, mit dem Kapital geschehen. Man muß das Kapital entstehen lassen, man muß es auch eine Weile verwaltet sein lassen von denen, welche es haben entstehen lassen; man muß aber wieder die Möglichkeit haben, durch einen gesund, das heißt dreigliedrig funktionierenden sozialen Organismus, es in die wirkliche Allgemeinheit der Menschen übergehen zu lassen.
Sie können nicht sagen: warum sollte denn nicht ein eingliedriger sozialer Organismus das alles auch können. Das glauben nämlich heute noch die Menschen, daß der das auch kann. Es ist aber doch recht schlecht mit der Menschenpsyche gerechnet, wenn man dieses glaubt. Bedenken Sie nur, was es bedeutet - denn man muß mit der menschlichen Seele rechnen -, wenn vor einen Richter ein nah oder ein entfernter Verwandter gestellt wird. Er hat seine besonderen Gefühle als naher oder entfernter Verwandter, aber wenn er zu richten hat, wird er nicht nach diesem Gefühl richten, sondern nach dem Gesetze selbstverständlich. Er wird aus einer anderen Quelle heraus urteilen. Das in umfassender Weise psychologisch durchdacht gibt Ihnen Ausblicke auf die Notwendigkeit, daß die Menschen das, was im sozialen Organismus zusammenfließt, aus drei verschiedenen Richtungen her beurteilen, von drei Quellen her verwalten. Unsere Zeit fordert es nun einmal, daß man sich auf solche Dinge einläßt. Denn unsere Zeit ist die Zeit des Bewußtseinszeitalters. Und dieses Bewußtseinszeitalter will konkrete Ideen für den Menschen als Richtimpulse seines Handelns haben.
Viele Menschen fordern heute, man solle sich nicht an den Verstand und das abstrakte Denken halten, denn sie kennen nur das abstrakte Denken, sondern man solle aus dem Gemüte heraus urteilen, man solle sich vor allen Dingen in den Grundsätzen, welche das Leben von Mensch zu Mensch betreffen, an einen gewissen Glauben halten, denn das Denken sei doch nur für die eigentlichen Dinge der Wissenschaft. - Das ist aus dem Grunde eine bedenkliche Rede, weil gerade in unserer Zeit die Menschen gerade für das allerabstrakteste Denken intensiv veranlagt sind. Die Menschen wollen ja nur die geradlinigsten Begriffe festhalten. Und wenn sie sie einmal festgehalten haben, so kleben sie mit ungeheuerer Zähigkeit an diesen geradlinigen Begriffen. Dieses abstrakte Denken ist vorzugsweise das Denken, das zu seinem Organe nur den menschlichen Kopf hat, das am meisten an das physische Organ, an den menschlichen Kopf gebundene Denken. Früher, zur Zeit des atavistischen Hellsehens kam in dieses Denken von der übrigen menschlichen Organisation ein nach dem Geiste gerichtetes Denken hinein. Diese Zeit des atavistischen Hellsehens ist vorüber. Bewußt müssen sich die Menschen nunmehr zu Imaginationen aufschwingen, bewußt das spirituelle Leben erfassen. Denn ohne auf das spirituelle Leben einzugehen, bleiben heute die Gedanken der Menschen leer. Woher rührt das?
Sie wissen ja aus den Auseinandersetzungen, die wir in der letzten Zeit gepflogen haben, daß das, was heute Kopf ist bei jedem Menschen, eigentlich der übrige Organismus, außer dem Kopfe, aus der früheren Inkarnation ist. Ich habe Ihnen das öfter auseinandergesetzt. Die Formationskräfte des Kopfes, natürlich nicht die physische Substanz, aber die Formationskräfte des menschlichen Hauptes, die ja auch in ihrer Rundung dem Kosmos gleichgebildet sind, gehen hinüber in den Kosmos. Was an Kräften unser Leben durchdauert zwischen Tod und neuer Geburt und in der nächsten Inkarnation zum Kopfe wird — dem sich dann aus dem Leibe der Mutter, befruchter vom Vater, der übrige Organismus angliedert —, das ist der übrige Leib der vorhergehenden Inkarnation. Den Kopf verlieren wir in bezug auf seine Kräfte, indem wir durch den Tod gehen; den übrigen Leib in bezug auf seine Kräfte wandeln wir um zu unserem Haupte, zu unserem Kopf in der nächsten Inkarnation. Die große Masse der heutigen Menschen war in der vorigen Inkarnation so auf die Erde hingestellt, daß sie Verächter waren — wie man es damals meinte, im rechten christlichen Sinne —, Verächter des irdischen Jammertales. Diese Verachtung ist ein Gefühl. Das ist an den übrigen Organismus, nicht an den Kopf gebunden. Aber indem diese Menschen sich heute reinkarnieren, wird dasjenige, was in der vorigen Inkarnation ein scheinbar sehr erhabenes christliches Gefühl war, indem es nunmehr das Organ des Kopfes ausbildet und reinkarniert, in sein Gegenteil umgewandelt, es wird zur Sehnsucht nach der Materie, zur Sehnsucht nach dem materiellen Leben. Die heutigen Menschen sind angelangt an einem Wendepunkt der Entwickelung, von dem man sagen muß: in ihr Haupt ist möglichst wenig hineingekommen aus der früheren Inkarnation. Und gerade deshalb muß etwas Neues in die Menschen hinein, etwas, was jetzige Offenbarung ist, was jetzt aus der geistigen Welt den Menschen neu geoffenbart wird. Heute ist es nicht möglich, sich bloß auf die Evangelien zu berufen. Heute ist es notwendig, auf dasjenige hinzuhören, was heute der Menschheit an Geistigem gesagt wird. Teilnehmen an dem toten Denken, das nicht den lebendigen Organismus begreifen kann, tut zum Beispiel auch die katholische Kirche. Nicht müde wurden gerade die Redner dieser katholischen Kirche jetzt auch wiederum in Bern in dem Bekenntnis zu Christus, dem Sohn des lebendigen Gottes. Aber, meine lieben Freunde, was nützt es, sich zu Christus, dem Sohn des lebendigen Gottes zu bekennen, wenn man diesen Christus nur erfaßt mit einem toten Denken, das heißt, wenn er in den eigenen Gedanken zum toten Ideal wird? Wir haben heute nicht nötig, uns zu berufen auf Christus, den Sohn des lebendigen Gottes, sondern wir haben nötig, uns zu berufen auf Christus, den lebendigen Sohn des Gottes. Das heißt auf den Christus, der jetzt lebendig wirkt, indem er neue Offenbarungen der Menschheit zukommen läßt.
In diesem Sinne will gerade Geisteswissenschaft dasjenige, was jetzt herein will als neue Offenbarung unmittelbar aus den spirituellen Welten, zum Impuls allen Denkens machen. Das aber würde den Menschen Gedanken geben, die in die Wirklichkeit untertauchen können. Diese Gedanken würden allerdings in vieler Beziehung entgegengesetzt sein denjenigen, die heute die Menschen beherrschen. Sehen Sie, meine lieben Freunde, an die kühnsten Gedanken, die der Wirklichkeit möglichst fremd sind, möchten sich die Menschen heute halten. Und haben sie einen solchen Gedanken, dann klammern sie sich wunderbar daran, merken nicht, welche Wirklichkeiten walten und den Gedanken unter Umständen modifizieren. Ich will Ihnen ein eklatantes Beispiel vorführen.
In Bern drüben redeten, wie die Staatsmänner vom Frühling und Frühsommer 1914 von dem Weltfrieden geredet haben, so jetzt die verschiedenen, wie man sagt «international» denkenden Menschen von dem kommenden Völkerbund. Sie wissen, der Gedanke des Völkerbundes ist entstanden aus dem Kopfe Woodrow Wilsons heraus. In jener Rede vom Januar 1917 hat Wilson diesen Gedanken vom Völkerbund geäußert. Er hat ihn hingestellt als das, was erstrebt werden müsse, damit die Menschen in der Zukunft nicht wiederum zu so furchtbaren, grauenvollen Katastrophen kommen wie diejenigen, in die die Menschen der Gegenwart hineingetrieben worden sind. Er hat das Streben nach diesem Völkerbund als etwas absolut Notwendiges bezeichnet. Er hat zu gleicher Zeit gesagt, und das ist das Wichtige: Die Verwirklichung dieses Völkerbundes ist an eine bestimmte Voraussetzung geknüpft; ohne daß diese Voraussetzung erfüllt werde, könne von der Begründung eines solchen Völkerbundes überhaupt nicht gesprochen werden. Die notwendige Voraussetzung zur Begründung eines solchen Völkerbundes ist aber, daß dieser Krieg ausgehe ohne den Sieg der einen Partei über die andere. Denn niemals könne in einer Welt ein Völkerbund verwirklicht werden, wenn auf der einen Seite ein entscheidender Sieg, auf der anderen Seite eine entscheidende Niederlage sei.
Nun, das ist die Voraussetzung, ohne die Wilson nicht vom Völkerbund sprechen wollte. Dasjenige, was sich erfüllt hat, ist das genaue Gegenteil von dem, was Wilson als die Voraussetzung zum Völkerbund bezeichnet hat. Dennoch werden die Menschen den Völkerbund heute so, wie Wilson im Januar 1917 über ihn als eine Hypothese gesprochen hat, begründen. Das heißt eben gerade in seinem Denken der Wirklichkeit ganz fernstehen, sich anklammern an einen Gedanken und gar nicht die Möglichkeit haben, mit diesem Gedanken in die Wirklichkeit unterzutauchen, die Wirklichkeit zu erfassen, einzubeschließen in seine Gedanken diese Wirklichkeit. Das aber ist das Allernotwendigste für die Gegenwart. Den Leuten fällt gar nicht ein, daß sie nicht bei ihren Gedanken stehenbleiben dürfen, sondern daß sie vor allen Dingen heute nötig haben, von diesen Gedanken aus in die Wirklichkeit hineinzuschauen.
Ein Beispiel von einem gutmeinenden Menschen konnte man jetzt wiederum in Bern erleben an dem Pazifisten Schücking. Sehen Sie, die Leute redeten von dem Völkerbund mit all seinen Einrichtungen. Kurioserweise fielen sogar die Worte, daß man, wie die einzelnen Staaten Parlamente haben, so einen Überstaat und Überparlamente anstreben müsse. Schücking sagte zum Beispiel: Ja, da werde eingewendet, daß die verschiedenen Staaten doch Individualitäten seien und sich nicht so einer einheitlichen, zentralistischen, überstaatlichen Leitung fügen werden. Dem widerspreche doch zum Beispiel, was die Nationalversammlung in Weimar tue. Da seien gerade die kleinen Territorialfürstentümer auch Individualitäten, aber es sei doch ein Sinn dafür vorhanden, das Ganze zusammenzufassen. — Es ist ein naheliegender Gedanke, man könnte sagen, ein selbstverständlicher Gedanke für die Abstraktlinge, denn was könnte richtiger sein als das, was man im Kleinen kann mit den vielen kleinen Fürstentümern — sie nämlich zusammenzufassen durch die Nationalversammlung -, nun auch im Großen mit dem Überstaat machen zu können! Wer aber real, konkret denkt, wer gleich mit seinen Gedanken in die Wirklichkeit geht, der sagt: Wodurch ist das möglich geworden in Weimar? Durch die deutsche Revolution! Sonst wäre gar keine Rede gewesen, daß das möglich geworden wäre. Also: laßt erst eine Weltrevolution kommen, dann wird ein Überparlament nach dem Muster der Weimarer Nationalversammlung möglich sein! Das ist der reale Gedanke, der überall an die Wirklichkeiten anknüpft, der sich nicht trennt von der Wirklichkeit, der sich krank fühlen würde, wenn er nicht an die Wirklichkeit anknüpfen würde.
Es ist so schwer, meine lieben Freunde, den Leuten heute klarzumachen, daß eben ein neues Denken notwendig ist, ein ganz neues, wirklichkeitsfreundliches Denken, und daß die Gesundung unserer Zustände von der menschlichen Neigung für dieses wirklichkeitsbefreundete Denken abhängt. Aber in die Wirklichkeit untertauchen kann kein Denken, das nichts wissen will von der geistigen Welt, denn in aller Wirklichkeit lebt eben die geistige Welt. Und wenn man nichts wissen will von der geistigen Welt, dann kann man heute schon am allerwenigsten in die Wirklichkeit untertauchen, und in der Zukunft wird man es erst recht nicht können. Daher ist schon mit eine Hauptfrage für die Gesundung der heutigen Welt die Hinwendung der Menschheit zur geisteswissenschaftlichen Erkenntnis. Das muß natürlich doch die Grundlage bilden — und das könnte die Grundlage bilden, kann leicht die Grundlage bilden. Sagen Sie nicht immer die oberflächlichen, geschwätzigen Worte, es sei schwer, diese Geisteswissenschaft in die Wirklichkeit überzuführen, weil die Menschen Geisteswissenschaft nicht annehmen wollen. Schaffen Sie die staatliche Oberaufsicht über Universitäten, Gymnasien, Volksschulen ab — und in zehn Jahren ist an die Stelle der heutigen, Menschenseelen ertötenden und verderbenden Wissenschaft die Geisteswissenschaft getreten, wenigstens in ihren notwendigen, elementaren Grundlagen! Denn was heute aus dem emanzipierten Drittel des gesunden sozialen Organismus, aus der geistigen Organisation heraus erwachsen kann, das wird anders ausschauen als dasjenige, was überwacht worden ist von jenem Staate, der nur seine Geistlichen ausbilden wollte, das heißt nur eine Staatstheologie duldete, oder der nur seine Juristen ausbilden wollte, daher eben nur seine Staatsjuristen gelten ließ; von der Medizin gar nicht zu reden, wo es blödsinnig und lächerlich ist, daß eine andere Medizin gelten soll drüben und herüben über die Grenzen von Staat zu Staat, daß nicht dasselbe Wissen heilsam sein soll für die Menschen hier und dort und so weiter.
Ich habe Ihnen öfter betont, für das sozialistische Denken ist alles geistige Leben eine Ideologie. Welches ist denn der tiefere Grund, daß alles geistige Leben für das sozialistische Denken der proletarischen Masse heute eine Ideologie ist? — Weil ja alles Wissen getragen werden soll von einem Äußeren, von dem politischen Staate, weil es nur der Schatten des politischen Staates ist! Es ist ja eine Ideologie. Denn soll das geistige Leben nicht Ideologie sein, so muß es aus seinen eigenen Kräften fortwährend seine Wirklichkeit beweisen, das heißt, es muß eben emanzipiert, auf sich selbst gestellt sein. Das geistige Leben hat seine Wirklichkeit fortwährend zu beweisen, darf nicht eine äußere Stütze haben. Nur ein solches geistiges Leben, das keine äußere Stütze hat, das sich lediglich auf die menschlichen Fähigkeiten gestellt sieht, das sich lediglich aus sich selbst verwaltet, wird in gesunder Weise auch seine Zweigströmungen in den Kapitalismus hineinsenden. Denn die Verwaltung durch Kapitalismus ist auch keine andere als die durch menschliche Fähigkeiten. Machen Sie das geistige Leben an seinem Ursprunge gesund, so wird das geistige Leben auch da gesund, wo es in den Kapitalismus einmündet und das Wirtschaftsleben zu leiten hat. So hängen die Dinge zusammen, und mit diesem Zusammenhang muß man sich bekanntmachen. Meiden muß man, meine lieben Freunde, all das Denken der heutigen Abstraktlinge, das wirklichkeitsfremde Denken, das einem auf Schritt und Tritt überall entgegenkommt und das unsere heutigen Zustände hervorgerufen hat, von dem unsere heutigen Zustände die Folge sind. Man sieht es heute nur noch nicht ein.
Heute fragen die Menschen: Wie muß der Überstaat sein? — und sie denken nach, wie der bisherige Staat war; was er getan hat, das soll auch der Überstaat tun. Aber liegt es nicht viel näher, zu fragen, was dieser Staat unterlassen soll? Nachdem die Staaten zur europäischen Katastrophe geführt haben, liegt es viel näher, zu fragen, was sie unterlassen sollen. Unterlassen sollen sie, sich einzumischen in das geistige Leben, unterlassen sollen sie, Wirtschafter zu sein. Beschränken sollen sie sich auf das bloße politische Gebiet. Heute kann man nicht fragen: Wie wird ein Völkerbund begründet? — und sich zum Muster für dieses Begründen nehmen, was die Staaten getan haben oder tun sollen, sondern es ist besser und heute zeitgemäßer zu fragen, was die Staaten unterlassen sollen.
Wenig noch sind die Menschen geneigt, auf diese Dinge wirklich einzugehen. Aber das Schicksal der Menschheit unserer Zeit wird davon abhängen, ob man auf diese Dinge eingeht. Ich habe Ihnen heute, ich möchte sagen, einleitungsweise über diese Dinge gesprochen. Ich werde morgen darüber weitersprechen.
Seventh Lecture
If you now follow the development of time closely, you will find that there is basically a certain tendency throughout humanity that is not very conducive to directing thoughts toward what the loud and clear facts of world events themselves demand. In general, people have a certain aversion to thoughts that do not follow the old familiar patterns. But perhaps never before has it been so obvious as today to ask: How is it that people are so reluctant to accept ideas that they have not already thought of themselves? You see, today, I would say, throughout the entire course of time, we are experiencing a fundamental phenomenon. I have often pointed out how this fundamental phenomenon manifested itself years ago. One could compile a nice collection of speeches by European statesmen from the spring and early summer of 1914, and one would find in the statements of these speeches pretty much the same thing that was said, for example, in a speech by State Secretary Jagow in the German Reichstag at that time. It went something like this: Through the efforts of the European cabinets, it has been possible to establish such satisfactory relations between the great powers of Europe that peace is assured in Europe for a long time to come. In various variations, one could find this speech again and again among these practitioners of life—as these people call themselves. That was then. And a few weeks later, the world conflagration began, which has now only entered a crisis. What else are we experiencing now in the intentions and measures of people who are so very much of this time? In the last few days, I have experienced some of the so-called Bern “League of Nations Conference.” People there also said various things. Among these various things, everything was basically of the same caliber as the preceding events, such as the speeches of European statesmen in the spring and early summer of 1914. These people speak in the old familiar thought patterns. They say what they have been accustomed to saying for years. Basically, they have taken nothing, absolutely nothing, from the lessons of the last four and a half years, which speak from the depths of world existence.
This is a fact to which scholars of the humanities in particular should pay the most intense attention, for this desolation pervades a large part of the European continent. Despite the various variations, it always seems quite typical and only expressed in extreme terms when, from strong but, for the present time, corrupting foundations, there is talk of a worldview that, because of the indifference and lack of interest of the European population, will have great prospects in the near future of making impression after impression, conquest after conquest. When I was a very young boy—a long time ago now—the following was written very clearly in my religion books to help boys understand who Jesus Christ was. It said: Christ Jesus was either a hypocrite or a fool — or he was what he said he was, the Son of the living God. Since we cannot assume that Christ was a hypocrite, nor can we assume that he was a fool, the only possibility is that what he said is true, that he is the Son of the living God. What was written in my religion book decades before our time, I heard recently in a speech given in Bern by Professor Ude of the University of Graz, following the Bern “League of Nations Conference”! There one could hear the words again: Jesus was either a hypocrite or a fool, or he was what he himself said, the Son of the living God. “And since you will not dare,” the man cried out to the crowd, “to call Christ a fool or a hypocrite, he can only have been what he himself said he was, the Son of the living God!” All this was thrown into the crowd with Jesuit temperament, and there were probably few people in the hall at that time who raised the only question that is meaningful today in the face of such a thing: Has not this little saying been repeated for centuries before the faithful, and has not great ruin come upon mankind despite this little saying? Should there still be hearts and minds today that do not reflect on how senseless it is, after the great world catastrophe and in the midst of it, to shout again and again into the crowd the things that have so clearly proven their futility? — And I heard another speech by the same Graz university professor on the social question, and this speech was from beginning to end without any reference to what should actually happen, what must happen; it was merely a kind of condemnation of certain bad habits that certainly exist and prevail at present; but even here, nothing had been learned from the sad events of the last four and a half years!
This is actually a better example than many others because, of all the speeches made in Bern by all sides, those of Professor Ude from Graz were by far the best; for they at least came from a worldview, even if it is a worldview that, propagated today, is bound to become dangerous. The others stemmed from the inability to rise to any worldview or conception of life at all. It must be emphasized again and again: people's thoughts have become dull and short-sighted today. They are incapable of penetrating reality. They move in illusions, they move only on the surface of things. Today, it is impossible to understand what this particular era demands of those who want to have a say in the much-needed reorganization of things.
My dear friends, let us repeat this again and again: over the last four centuries, we as the European people, together with our American offspring, have developed a way of thinking that is only capable of understanding the lifeless, the dead. We have brought forth a way of thinking that is entirely oriented toward the mathematical and technical. We have become incapable of directing our thoughts toward that which lives in nature. We understand only that which is dead. What we know about the organism in our official science applies only to the dead organism; it has been gained solely from corpses. But today, now that we have become accustomed to this way of thinking, it is also applied to the social organism. This means nothing other than that humanity today, in wide circles, is incapable of thinking about the living social organism at all. At most, people today find these thoughts difficult. What thoughts do people find easy today? Those that have been drummed into them for centuries through the catechism, those that run along well-worn tracks, or those that are the children of thoughts that relate only to the dead aspects of the living organism. But on the other hand, it is necessary for the present to understand the living social organism.
Let us start with a concrete example. Contemporary socialist thinking is directed to a large extent—I have characterized this for you in every respect—against capitalism. Socialism demands the socialization of all private capital in the means of production. This socialization has already been discussed at length in what I believe is called the “National Assembly” in Weimar. The way in which capitalism is discussed today stems from the dead thinking of the last centuries, which has become widespread within the purely scientific-materialistic worldview. What is actually at stake here? — What is at stake, my dear friends, is that capitalism has basically become a terrible oppressor of the masses; what is at stake is that there is little to be said against everything that has been said and continues to be said by the proletarian population against the oppression of capitalism in intellectual, legal, and economic terms. But what conclusion do socialist-minded thinkers draw from this undeniable fact? — They draw the conclusion: Capitalism must therefore be abolished; it is an oppressor, it is something terrible, it has proved to be a scourge of modern humanity, it must be abolished. What could be more understandable, what could be more fruitful for ordinary agitation—which is now being lived out in terrible facts throughout Europe—than this demand for the abolition of capitalism? For those who do not turn solely to the dead thinking of the last four centuries, but who are able to turn to the living thinking that we need above all for our spiritual science, for them, this talk of having to abolish capitalism because it is an oppressor, a scourge, is just as logical, just as justified by the logic of facts, as if someone were to say: We constantly breathe in oxygen and breathe out deadly carbon dioxide; oxygen is transformed into carbon dioxide in our bodies, so why do we breathe it in in the first place? It becomes a deadly poison in us. Undoubtedly, oxygen becomes a deadly poison in us, but for the sake of life we must breathe it in, because the life process of the human and animal body is inconceivable without oxygen respiration. Nor is social life conceivable without the continuous formation of capital, namely without the continuous formation of the means of production, which is, in essence, capital. There is no social organism that does not depend on the cooperation of individual human abilities. If the demands of the social organism were understood in the broadest sense, the worker would say: It is a matter of my having confidence in the manager of the enterprise; for without his management I cannot do my work, that is quite obvious. But if there are managers of enterprises, the necessary consequence is that capital accumulates. There is no way to avoid the accumulation of capital. So if a socialist who is well-meaning in a certain way but misguided asks: How can capitalism be destroyed? — this question is equivalent to: How can the social organism be destroyed altogether, how can we drive social life to its death?
It is undoubtedly clear to anyone who can see through things that capital accumulates even under the most reasonable social order, and it is equally clear that one cannot think about how to prevent the accumulation of capital, how to nip it in the bud. How do you prevent capital from accumulating? — But you see, this juxtaposition is too difficult for people today. People today do not want to entertain such thoughts. They want everything to be easy, especially when it comes to thinking. But the times do not allow us to take the easy way out when it comes to thinking. What is always forgotten is that everything that lives is in the process of becoming, that time is part of understanding everything that lives, that what lives is sometimes this way and sometimes that way. With a little thought, it is not difficult to realize that time is necessary for understanding what lives in its concreteness. For the human organism is a living thing. Take the human organism—I mean your organism—at around half past one in the afternoon; you are all hard-working people who do not stay long in the canteen, and when you come out of the canteen and have just eaten, you are, at least ideally, completely satiated and not hungry. Your organism is certainly a concrete, human organism. You define it by taking it in its concreteness at quarter to two in the afternoon, when you have just come out of the canteen: a human organism is a living being that is not hungry. But at half past one, when you go to the canteen, it is different; then you are all hungry. You could then define: a human organism is that which is hungry. What we have here is that you are looking at the concrete, living thing at two different points in time, and that what is necessary for the organism to thrive at two different points in time are precisely opposite states, that something must be brought about in the organism that is processed in such a way that its opposite occurs. This is how it is in natural life, but it is also how it is in social life, my dear friends. In social life, it is impossible to prevent capital from arising as a natural consequence of the work of individual human abilities, or to prevent private ownership of the means of production from developing. If someone devotes himself to managing a branch of production and also shares the products produced quite fairly with his fellow workers, the social organism could not exist at all if capital did not appear as a concomitant phenomenon, capital which the individual possesses just as he possesses what he needs for his own use, what he produces in such a way that he wants to exchange it for his own use.
But just as one cannot forbid eating—because once one has eaten, one becomes hungry again—just as one cannot think about whether one should actually eat, one cannot think about how capital does not form at any point in time, but one can only think about how this capital must be transformed at another point in time, what it must become. You cannot prevent the formation of capital without undermining the viability of the social organism; you can only want that which forms as capital not to become harmful within the healthy social organism.
What must be demanded in this way for the healing of the social organism is only possible in the threefold social organism. For only in the threefold social organism, as in the human natural organism, can one member work in the opposite sense to another member. It is in the individual's interest that there is a member in the social organism in which individual human abilities find expression; but it is in everyone's interest that these individual human abilities do not, in the course of time, transform themselves to the detriment of the organism. Capital will always accumulate within the economic cycle. If you leave it in the economic cycle, it will lead to unlimited accumulation of wealth. You cannot leave what is accumulated as capital through individual human abilities as an economic entity—you must transfer it to the legal sphere. For at the moment when a person acquires more for what he produces alone or in community than he consumes, at the moment when he accumulates capital, at that moment his property is truly no more a commodity than human labor power is a commodity. Possession is a right. For possession is nothing other than the exclusive right to use a thing — let us say, land or a house or the like — to the exclusion of all others, to dispose of a thing to the exclusion of all others. All other definitions of property are useless for understanding the social organism. This means that at the moment when a person acquires property, property is something that must be administered within the purely political state, within the constitutional state. But the state must not acquire it, otherwise it would become an economist itself. It must only transfer it to the spiritual organism, where the individual abilities of human beings are administered. Today, such a process is only carried out with the goods that are the “most worthless” for the present time. However, what I have just explained applies to these most worthless goods. It does not apply to valuable goods. If someone today produces something intellectual—say, a very important poem, an important work as a writer or artist—they can bequeath the proceeds to their descendants for thirty years after their death. Then the property does not pass to his descendants as free property, but to humanity in general. Thirty years after a writer's death, his works can be reprinted in any way. This stems from a very healthy idea: the idea that what a person has in his individual abilities, he also owes to society. Just as one cannot learn to speak on a desert island, just as one can only learn to speak in connection with other people, so too does one acquire one's individual abilities only within society — certainly on the basis of what lies in karma, but this must be developed through society. In a certain sense, we owe this to society. It must in turn be returned to society, and we only have to manage it for a while, because it is better for the social organism if we manage it: we ourselves know best what we have produced, so we are initially best placed to manage it. These most valuable goods for humanity today, namely the spiritual ones, are thus socially valued in a certain way, taking into account the concept of time.
I was told that some capitalist-looking listeners recently became angry in Bern during my lecture when I said: Why should it be impossible, for example, to have a law that obliges capital owners to assign their capital to a corporation, an intellectual organization, the intellectual part of the social organism, for free administration for a certain number of years after their death? Certainly, one can think of various ways of establishing a concrete right. But if people today wanted to return to what was right in ancient Hebrew times, namely, to redistribute property after a certain period of time, people today would consider this something unheard of. But what is the consequence of people considering this unheard of? The consequence is that in the last four and a half years, humanity has killed ten million people, crippled eighteen million, and is preparing to do more of the same. Prudence in such matters is what is most important today, my dear friends. It is indeed no small thing to demand that the concept of time be used to understand the social organism. One thinks of the social organism as completely timeless when one says that this or that should happen to capital already in its state of origin, in its status nascens. Capital must be allowed to come into being, it must also be allowed to be administered for a while by those who brought it into being; but it must again be possible, through a healthy, that is, threefold functioning social organism, to transfer it to the real generality of human beings.
You cannot say: why should a single-member social organism not be able to do all this? People still believe today that it can. But it is a poor calculation of the human psyche to believe this. Just consider what it means – for one must take the human soul into account – when a close or distant relative is brought before a judge. He has his special feelings as a close or distant relative, but when he has to judge, he will not judge according to these feelings, but according to the law, of course. He will judge from a different source. This, when thought through psychologically in a comprehensive manner, gives you an insight into the necessity for people to judge what flows together in the social organism from three different directions, to administer it from three sources. Our time demands that we engage with such things. For our time is the age of consciousness. And this age of consciousness wants concrete ideas for people as guiding impulses for their actions.
Many people today demand that we should not adhere to reason and abstract thinking, because they know only abstract thinking, but that we should judge from the heart, that we should above all adhere to a certain belief in the principles that affect the life of human beings, because thinking is only for the actual things of science. This is a questionable statement because, especially in our time, people are intensely predisposed to the most abstract thinking. People only want to hold on to the most straightforward concepts. And once they have grasped them, they cling to these straightforward concepts with tremendous tenacity. This abstract thinking is primarily thinking that has only the human head as its organ, thinking that is most closely bound to the physical organ, to the human head. In the past, at the time of atavistic clairvoyance, thinking directed toward the spirit entered into this thinking from the rest of the human organism. This time of atavistic clairvoyance is over. People must now consciously raise themselves to imaginations, consciously grasp spiritual life. For without entering into spiritual life, people's thoughts remain empty today. Where does this come from?
You know from the discussions we have had recently that what is now the head in every human being is actually the rest of the organism, except for the head, from a previous incarnation. I have explained this to you many times. The formative forces of the head—not the physical substance, of course, but the formative forces of the human head, which are also modeled after the cosmos in their roundness—pass over into the cosmos. The forces that permeate our life between death and new birth and become the head in the next incarnation — to which the rest of the organism then attaches itself from the mother's body, fertilized by the father — are the rest of the body from the previous incarnation. We lose the head in terms of its forces when we pass through death; we transform the rest of the body in terms of its forces into our head in the next incarnation. The great mass of people today were placed on earth in their previous incarnation in such a way that they were despisers — as was understood at that time, in the true Christian sense — despisers of the earthly valley of sorrow. This contempt is a feeling. It is bound to the rest of the organism, not to the head. But as these people reincarnate today, what was apparently a very noble Christian feeling in their previous incarnation is now transformed into its opposite as it forms the organ of the head and reincarnates. It becomes a longing for matter, a longing for material life. People today have reached a turning point in their development where it must be said that as little as possible from their previous incarnation has entered their heads. And that is precisely why something new must enter into people, something that is the present revelation, something that is now being revealed anew to people from the spiritual world. Today it is not possible to rely solely on the Gospels. Today it is necessary to listen to what is being said to humanity in the spiritual realm. The Catholic Church, for example, also participates in dead thinking that cannot comprehend the living organism. The speakers of this Catholic Church have not grown weary of professing their faith in Christ, the Son of the living God, now in Bern as well. But, my dear friends, what good is it to profess Christ, the Son of the living God, if one understands this Christ only with dead thinking, that is, if he becomes a dead ideal in one's own thoughts? Today we do not need to invoke Christ, the Son of the living God, but we need to invoke Christ, the living Son of God. That is, to Christ who is now working in a living way by sending new revelations to humanity.
In this sense, spiritual science wants to make what is now coming in as a new revelation directly from the spiritual worlds into the impulse of all thinking. But that would give people thoughts that can sink into reality. These thoughts would, however, be in many ways opposed to those that dominate people today. You see, my dear friends, people today want to hold on to the boldest thoughts, those that are as foreign as possible to reality. And when they have such a thought, they cling to it wonderfully, not noticing the realities that prevail and may modify the thought. Let me give you a striking example.
In Bern, just as the statesmen of the spring and early summer of 1914 talked about world peace, so now various people who are said to think “internationally” are talking about the coming League of Nations. You know that the idea of the League of Nations originated in the mind of Woodrow Wilson. In that speech in January 1917, Wilson expressed this idea of the League of Nations. He presented it as something that must be strived for so that people in the future would not again be driven into such terrible, horrific catastrophes as those into which the people of the present have been driven. He described the pursuit of this League of Nations as something absolutely necessary. At the same time, he said, and this is important, that the realization of this League of Nations is linked to a certain prerequisite; without this prerequisite being fulfilled, there can be no question of establishing such a League of Nations. The necessary prerequisite for the establishment of such a League of Nations, however, is that this war must end without the victory of one party over the other. For a League of Nations can never be realized in a world where there is a decisive victory on one side and a decisive defeat on the other.
Now, that is the prerequisite without which Wilson did not want to talk about a League of Nations. What has come to pass is the exact opposite of what Wilson described as the prerequisite for a League of Nations. Nevertheless, people today will establish the League of Nations as Wilson spoke of it in January 1917 as a hypothesis. This means being completely detached from reality in one's thinking, clinging to an idea and not having the ability to immerse oneself in reality with this idea, to grasp reality, to include this reality in one's thoughts. But this is the most necessary thing for the present. It does not occur to people that they must not remain stuck in their thoughts, but that what they need above all today is to look at reality from these thoughts.
An example of a well-meaning person could now be seen again in Bern in the pacifist Schücking. You see, people were talking about the League of Nations with all its institutions. Curiously, the words were even uttered that, just as individual states have parliaments, we must strive for a superstate and superparliaments. Schücking said, for example: Yes, it will be objected that the various states are individual entities and will not submit to such a uniform, centralised, supranational leadership. This is contradicted, for example, by what the National Assembly in Weimar is doing. There, the small territorial principalities are also individual entities, but there is nevertheless a sense of unity. — It is an obvious thought, one might say a self-evident thought for abstract thinkers, because what could be more right than to do on a large scale with the supranational state what can be done on a small scale with the many small principalities, namely, to unite them through the National Assembly! But anyone who thinks realistically and concretely, anyone who immediately applies their thoughts to reality, will say: How did this become possible in Weimar? Through the German Revolution! Otherwise, there would have been no question of it ever becoming possible. So: let a world revolution come first, then a super-parliament modeled on the Weimar National Assembly will be possible! That is the real idea, which is connected to reality everywhere, which cannot be separated from reality, which would feel sick if it were not connected to reality.
It is so difficult, my dear friends, to make people understand today that a new way of thinking is necessary, a completely new way of thinking that is friendly to reality, and that the recovery of our conditions depends on the human inclination toward this reality-friendly way of thinking. But no thinking that wants to know nothing of the spiritual world can immerse itself in reality, for the spiritual world lives in all reality. And if one wants to know nothing of the spiritual world, then one can already today immerse oneself least of all in reality, and in the future one will be even less able to do so. Therefore, one of the main questions for the recovery of today's world is the turning of humanity toward spiritual scientific knowledge. This must of course form the basis — and it could form the basis, it can easily form the basis. Do not always say the superficial, chattering words that it is difficult to translate this spiritual science into reality because people do not want to accept spiritual science. Abolish state supervision of universities, high schools, and elementary schools — and in ten years, spiritual science will have taken the place of today's science, which kills and corrupts human souls, at least in its necessary, elementary foundations! For what can grow today out of the emancipated third of the healthy social organism, out of the spiritual organization, will look different from what has been supervised by a state that only wanted to educate its clergy, that is, only tolerated a state theology, or that only wanted to educate its lawyers, and therefore only allowed its state lawyers to practice; not to mention medicine, where it is absurd and ridiculous that a different medicine should be valid on one side of the border and not on the other, that the same knowledge should not be healing for people here and there, and so on.
I have often emphasized to you that for socialist thinking, all intellectual life is ideology. What is the deeper reason why all intellectual life is ideology for the socialist thinking of the proletarian masses today? — Because all knowledge must be supported by an external entity, by the political state, because it is only the shadow of the political state! It is indeed an ideology. For if spiritual life is not to be ideology, it must continually prove its reality from its own forces, that is, it must be emancipated, self-reliant. Spiritual life must continually prove its reality; it must not have any external support. Only such a spiritual life, which has no external support, which sees itself as relying solely on human abilities, which administers itself solely from within, will also send its branches into capitalism in a healthy way. For administration through capitalism is nothing other than administration through human abilities. If you make spiritual life healthy at its source, spiritual life will also be healthy where it flows into capitalism and has to guide economic life. This is how things are connected, and one must familiarize oneself with this connection. My dear friends, we must avoid all the thinking of today's abstract thinkers, the thinking that is divorced from reality, that meets us at every turn and that has brought about our present conditions, of which our present conditions are the consequence. People just don't see it yet.
Today people ask: What should the superstate be like? — and they think about what the state has been like up to now; what it has done, the superstate should also do. But isn't it much more obvious to ask what this state should refrain from doing? After the states have led to the European catastrophe, it is much more obvious to ask what they should refrain from doing. They should refrain from interfering in intellectual life; they should refrain from being economists. They should limit themselves to the purely political sphere. Today, one cannot ask: How can a league of nations be established? — and take as a model for this establishment what states have done or should do. Instead, it is better and more appropriate today to ask what states should refrain from doing.
People are still not very inclined to really engage with these issues. But the fate of humanity in our time will depend on whether we engage with them. Today, I have spoken to you, I would say, by way of introduction, about these issues. I will continue to speak about them tomorrow.