Three Perspectives of Anthroposophy: Cultural Phenomena from the Point of View of Spiritual Science
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Rudolf Steiner
During the last two decades of the nineteenth century the Austrian-born Rudolf Steiner (1861-1925) became a respected and well-published scientific, literary, and philosophical scholar, particularly known for his work on Goethe's scientific writings. After the turn of the century, he began to develop his earlier philosophical principles into an approach to methodical research of psychological and spiritual phenomena. His multi-faceted genius has led to innovative and holistic approaches in medicine, science, education (Waldorf schools), special education, philosophy, religion, economics, agriculture, (Bio-Dynamic method), architecture, drama, the new art of eurythmy, and other fields. In 1924 he founded the General Anthroposophical Society, which today has branches throughout the world.
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Three Perspectives of Anthroposophy - Rudolf Steiner
THREE PERSPECTIVES
OF ANTHROPOSOPHY
CULTURAL PHENOMENA FROM THE
POINT OF VIEW OF SPIRITUAL SCIENCE
THREE PERSPECTIVES
OF ANTHROPOSOPHY
CULTURAL PHENOMENA FROM THE
POINT OF VIEW OF SPIRITUAL SCIENCE
Twelve lectures held in Dornach between
5 May and 23 September 1923
TRANSLATED BY ELIZABETH MARSHALL
INTRODUCTION BY ELIZABETH MARSHALL
RUDOLF STEINER
Rudolf Steiner Press
Hillside House, The Square
Forest Row, RH18 5ES
www.rudolfsteinerpress.com
Published by Rudolf Steiner Press 2021
Originally published in German under the title Drei Perspektiven der Anthroposophie. Kulturphänomene, geisteswissenschaftlich betrachtet (volume 225 in the Rudolf Steiner Gesamtausgabe or Collected Works) by Rudolf Steiner Verlag, Dornach. Based on shorthand notes that were not reviewed or revised by the speaker. This authorized translation is based on the second German edition (1990) that was edited by Hella Wiesberger und Ruth Moering
Published by permission of the Rudolf Steiner Nachlassverwaltung, Dornach
© Rudolf Steiner Nachlassverwaltung, Dornach, Rudolf Steiner Verlag 1990
This translation © Rudolf Steiner Press 2021
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publishers
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
ISBN 978 1 85584 587 9
EISBN 978 1 85584 624 1
Cover by Andrew Morgan
Typeset by Symbiosys Technologies, Vishakapatnam, India
Printed and bound by 4Edge Ltd., Essex
CONTENTS
Introduction, by Elizabeth Marshall
DORNACH, 5 MAY 1923
The nature of the spiritual crisis of the nineteenth century
A transformation in human spiritual life. The successes of natural science in comparison with idealism. Materialism is irrefutable. Spirit is independent of matter. Connections between spirit and matter. Personalities who find ideas behind nature and history. On Swabian Vischer and his development of the idea of beauty, sublimity and grace. Vischer’s humour. Characteristics of his novel, Auch Einer, (One Too). Classification of architectural styles according to Semper and to Vischer. Aphorisms in Vischer and Nietzsche. Matter and ideals in Vischer. Vischer’s description of world events. Vischer’s understanding of humour.
DORNACH, 6 MAY 1923
The mystery of the head and of the lower human being
On the interpretive dominance of scientific knowledge. Friedrich Albert Lange’s History of Materialism. The concept of the atomic world. Interest in the spiritual world and the development of humanity. Facts of natural science from an anthroposophic perspective. Guiding intellectualism to the spiritual. Anthroposophy is not a comforter. Giving impulses in spiritual life. The head and previous incarnations. The mystery of the head and of the lower human being. Rhythmic regions of the human being and the centre of the freedom impulse. Inadequate concepts lead to moral, social and religious systems which are out of touch with real life.
DORNACH, 1 JULY 1923
Cultural phenomena
Civilization and the ‘cultural death of the present age’. Rubner’s speech in October 1910 and the prevalent spiritual culture. Rubner’s proposition ‘thinking is brain sport’. On the malign spirit of science. Albert Schweitzer on cultural decadence. Natural science and faith in ethical ideals. Schweitzer on the loss of the spiritual in culture. How to bring the spiritual back into culture? Anthroposophy on Schweitzer’s cultural criticism.
DORNACH, 6 JULY 1923
A study of the century from 1823 to 1923
Literary characteristics of George Sand and the scientific study of history. Goethe’s Wilhelm Meister compared to Sand’s novel, The Journeyman Joiner. Goethe writes in a cosmopolitan manner, Sand national, political. French artisan associations—‘Loups Devorants’ and ‘Gavots’. Differences between these groups. Devorants and human astrality; Gavots and the human ‘I’. The tendency of artisans towards the spiritual. Emulation of spiritual fellowships in Masonic secret societies. Differences in the colour of blood in various climate zones. Human beings in relation to the spiritual impulses active in various geographic areas. A catechism for wandering carpenters in France. A study of history from the perspective of spiritual science.
DORNACH, 7 JULY 1923
Community building in Central Europe
Different concepts of intellectualism have existed since the fifteenth century. Life and work in the West in contrast to the free spirituality in Central Europe. Individual artisans with a thirst for knowledge of alchemy and astrology. Education in Western and Central Europe. Goethe’s human wisdom in Wilhelm Meister. Female personalities as ‘seers’ at the beginning of the nineteenth century. Contribution of newspapers to the destruction of spiritual life. Effectiveness of astrology on the nerve-sense system. Effectiveness of alchemy on the metabolic system. Balance of both systems in Paracelsus and Faust. Human education in Central and Western Europe. The tolerance of the East seen in the letters of Dostoevsky on Switzerland and Germany. On the necessity, from a national point of view, of becoming a citizen of the earth. History and geography need a spiritual metamorphosis.
DORNACH, 8 JULY 1923
European culture and its relationship to the Latin language
Greek and Roman mysteries
The logic of reason encourages materialism. Eastern Europe and Greek consciousness. Western and Central Europe and Latin education. The Latin sickness of Central Europe. Soul and spirit from a Central European perspective. Mauthner’s critique of language. The Latin language can only be applied to external sensory phenomena. The Latin language and science. Science and faith. On the inner spirituality of the vernacular. Materialism in the vernacular comes from Latin. Economics is heavily influenced by Latin. When we hear Latin, we assume it is science. When we hear the vernacular, we assume it is superstition. Du Bois-Reymond’s ‘ignorabimus’ (‘we will never know’) as a consequence of Latinized thinking. The Eleusinian mysteries and the initiates of Rome. Anthroposophic cognition doesn’t collect ideas but helps us wake up. Difference between novices (telests) and initiates.
DORNACH, 15 JULY 1923
The gnostic foundations of Pre-Christianity. Imagination of Europe
The creator of the world, the demiurge, and the aeons. Jehovah’s creation of human beings. Pleroma as a world of individualistic beings. Achamoth’s striving towards the spiritual. The mystery surrounding Jesus, the human being. Scholastic ideas and concepts of the world. The scholastic practice of thinking has been lost. In the present age cognition is usually received passively. The present practice of thinking in Europe lacks a spiritual perspective. Decadent remnants of clairvoyance in Asia. Magic sorcery of the shamans. Magic and Bolshevism. Metamorphosed satyrs and fauns in the Urals and Volga region. Ahrimanic beings in the world bordering the earthly world. Merging of the luciferic thinking of the West with ahrimanic-asiatic beings. A cosmic union. Seducers and tempters of the physical human being.
THREE PERSPECTIVES OF ANTHROPOSOPHY
DORNACH, 20 JULY 1923
I. The physical perspective
Problems of science in accepting anthroposophical ideas. What the human being experiences after death. Ingesting external matter (food) during earthly life. Regeneration from the cosmos. Predisposition to illness. Ether matter and natural science. Cosmic over earthly activity. Botany from the perspective of spiritual science (Usteri). Psychoanalysis of Karl Rosenkranz from the year 1841. Anthroposophy extends the horizon of science.
DORNACH, 21 JULY 1923
II. The soul perspective
Modern civilization has lost its soul. The age of intellectualism. On the physical body and the intellect. Eduard von Hartmann: ‘the most intelligent person’. Hartmann’s philosophy of the unconscious mind/spirit. Hartmann and the sphere of lovelessness. Reasons for Hartmann’s pessimism. Hartmann refutes his own philosophy. On the etheric body and its concentrated wisdom in relation to the physical body. The etheric body without the physical body. Stimulation of the astral body through the ether body. Three stages of initiation. The genius and the demon of the age. Hamerling’s ‘homunculus’ as a satire on the soullessness of an age.
DORNACH, 22 JULY 1923
III. The spiritual perspective
On changing states of consciousness. Two aspects of thinking. Senses oriented towards the outside. The etheric body or body of formative forces works towards the inside. Realizing the activity of thinking. Moral impulses and free consciousness. The power of memory, the power of dream-creation and the astral body. The power of love leading to devotion to the outer world. Connecting to the dead through memory. Paths of human beings in the spiritual world. Causality leads to a dogmatic science and deadens the vitality of life in human beings. The antagonism of love and eroticism. The interpretation of sexuality in present-day civilization. Anthroposophy leads to the spirit within the soul.
DORNACH, 22 SEPTEMBER 1923
The dream world as a transition between the physical-natural world and the world of ethical considerations
Dream and feelings without a logical context. Will as a combustion process. The transition from dreaming to sleeping and from sleeping to dreaming. The dream as a protest against natural laws. The inner human being doesn’t behave according to natural laws. Science and reality using the example of a potato diet or a grain diet. Staudenmaier’s experiment with mediums. Staudenmaier’s unconscious protesting against natural laws and the appearance of demons. Changes in natural laws such as gravity on the earth and in space. Johann Müller’s understanding of dreaming. The Greek concept of chaos. The dream world as a transition between spiritual and natural laws.
DORNACH, 23 SEPTEMBER 1923
Jakob Boehme, Paracelsus, Swedenborg
Intellectual conceptualizing and dreaming with sensations and feelings. Somnambulants such as Boehme and Swedenborg and the influence of the moon. Great teachers of earth wisdom as present-day moon beings. On reproductive life on earth. The interior of the moon and what is reflected back from it. Earthiness and moon power in the human etheric body. Hostility of somnambulants towards the spirit in pre-earthly existence. Somnambulants and spiritual experience on earth. The ability of Boehme and of Swedenborg to perceive transitional states. Knowledge of the Druids in connection with light and shadow. Atavism in Boehme and Paracelsus. Musical compositions at the end of the nineteenth century compared to the statements of Boehme. Swedenborg’s power of Saturn. Tasks of such people as Swedenborg in the post-earthly world. Supersensible beings who dwell in humans.
Notes
Rudolf Steiner’s Collected Works
Significant Events in the Life of Rudolf Steiner
Index
INTRODUCTION
THIS volume of the Collected Works of Rudolf Steiner consists of 12 lectures given over the summer of 1923 from 5 May to 23 September. It was a portentous year at the very beginning of which stands the tragedy of the fire which burned down the first Goetheanum in Dornach. At the end stands the Christmas Conference and the re-founding of the Anthroposophical Society with the Foundation Stone meditation at its heart. In the intervening year Steiner came to regard the Society and most of its members as incapable of absorbing and realizing anthroposophy—of carrying it out into the world. At the same time the attacks of opponents of anthroposophy were becoming increasingly vicious—for example the Goetheanum fire was later proved to have been arson. The many school initiatives claimed Steiner’s attention in the absence of enough leaders who were sufficiently versed in Waldorf education and able to deal independently with arising difficulties, particularly among the staff. Also, the commercial enterprises such as Der Kommende Tag (The coming day) which supported firms in loose association, that had been established particularly by the younger members, were running into economic and personal difficulties and many turned to him for help. All this took its toll—it was a difficult and sobering year. But Steiner continued his lecture courses, travelled extensively, and spoke at various conferences throughout the year, wrote several articles, received all those seeking his advice or instruction and initiated the founding of the various national societies—in Norway, Austria, Holland, etc.—which would form the new basis of the General Anthroposophical Society. He visited Great Britain in August, giving a pedagogical course at the conference of the Educational Union for the Realization of Spiritual Values in Education in Ilkley, Yorkshire. Then on to Penmaenmawr and the summer school organized by D.N. Dunlop. In both places Steiner visited the Druid stone circles nearby with Marie Steiner. Then on to London for further lectures, eurythmy performances and a visit to the Nursery and Training School in Deptford founded by Margaret MacMillan for poor and orphaned children. In addition to all this he was deeply involved in the spiritual research which informed and enriched all his courses on the most disparate subjects such as medicine, theology, art, education and many others.
It is in this context that we should view these lectures, focusing as they do on the decline of European culture, the development of materialism and the gradual loss of access to spirituality. Thinking becomes a mere ‘brain sport’. Even Albert Schweitzer is at a loss as to how to overcome the cultural decadence of the times. In the earlier part of the nineteenth century there was a natural access to spirituality as seen for example in the craft associations of the Devorants and Loups Garous in France. It is also significant for European culture that Latin, a dead language, became the lingua franca (sic) of science and particularly of the emerging study of economics! Only those educated in Latin had access to knowledge and those who spoke the vernacular were excluded. This led to a divide in Europe as the East was influenced by Greek and the West by Latin culture.
However, in the last half of the nineteenth century European culture had become so decadent that there was a complete lack of spirituality. Steiner says that materialistic science doesn’t even understand matter! This situation forms the background for the development of anthroposophy. As Steiner says here: anthroposophy had no exoteric foundation in European culture on which to build and had to develop without any former groundwork (always excepting the esoteric circles of the Rosicrucians and people like Paracelsus and Jakob Boehme). Importantly however he exhorts anthroposophists not to try through argument to convince natural science of the existence of the spiritual. This cannot be done, materialism is irrefutable. Only if the relevant person is prepared to give up their preconceptions and study anthroposophy is there any point in such discourse. We should remain interested in and tolerant of the world of natural science and indeed of the world at large including those who criticize anthroposophy, but we shouldn’t try to convince anyone of spiritual truths. This is only possible when the person in question is prepared to develop their soul in a manner which will prepare them for spiritual perception and enable them to evolve into a conscious spiritual being.
What impressed me in these lectures is how Steiner repeatedly urges us to bring anthroposophy into everyday life, to see how dreams ‘protest’ against the laws of nature or what a difference there is when we eat and digest a potato for example as compared to a cereal such as rye. And how we can grasp phenomena such as sleepwalking through our understanding of the threefold human being. How our head is the transformed organism of our last life. All eminently down to earth and practical aspects which show us: we can realize spirituality on earth, we can make it real, we can wake up and make anthroposophy real.
And what is truly real? In the last lecture in this volume, he says unequivocally: ‘All phenomena outside beings are just illusory; in the cosmos only beings are truly real.’ This touched me deeply.
Elizabeth Marshall
Berlin, January 2021
THE NATURE OF THE SPIRITUAL CRISIS OF
THE NINETEENTH CENTURY
¹
DORNACH, 5 MAY 1923
TODAY I’d like to examine from another point of view something which has occupied us a great deal recently. I want to look from a historical perspective at the fact that in the last third of the nineteenth century there was in effect a critical transformation in the spiritual life of humanity. This critical change revealed itself through various circumstances. And these circumstances are essentially the basis for what I would call the misery that has taken hold of humanity in the twentieth century; for the foundation of all this misery lies in the spiritual.
But first of all, I’d like to characterize briefly the real essence of the spiritual crisis of the last third of the nineteenth century. In this period there was on the one hand materialism, the materialism of external life, and behind this the materialistic world view. And the idealistic world view had been gradually, and we could almost say shamefacedly, completely abandoned. In the penultimate issue of The Goetheanum² I’ve tried to point out the discrepancy between this materialism, which often didn’t want to be materialistic but nevertheless was, and idealism. There I briefly sketched how, in the last third of the nineteenth century, idealistic minds, who perpetuated the idealism of the first half of the nineteenth century, played a certain role. And how these minds, these thinkers, precisely because they knew spiritual life only in the form of ideas, couldn’t stand their ground in the face of all the arguments being developed on the basis of what natural science was confidently asserting. Natural science, to which there can basically be no objection, was however going beyond its proper purview, as if pure natural science were in a position to make judgements on all the concerns of humanity. At the time in question natural science had its greatest successes, success in relation to cognition, success in relation to external practical, technical life. And all those wishing to repudiate what didn’t conform in their opinion to the findings of natural science, could point to these successes.
So, they stood, so to speak, opposite each other: the successful, who could competently explain natural science, but who really only represented materialism, as they still do today, and on the other side those thinkers whose intention was to protect idealism. But these last only knew spiritual life in ideas. They saw, so to speak, behind material beings of the world only ideas and behind the ideas nothing further, no creative spirit. Ideas were for them the ultimate, the last thing they could arrive at. But these ideas are just abstract. They were abstract in the way they were cultivated by these thinkers in the first half of the nineteenth century, and they stayed abstract when they were developed by idealists in the last third of the nineteenth century. And so, these idealists with their abstract ideas, which were for them the only spirit, couldn’t hold their ground in the face of the concrete findings of natural science and its concomitant world view
This is the external historic aspect. But the internal historic perspective lying behind it is something different. And this is that materialism, if it is consistent and spirited—even though materialism denies spirit it can still have great spirit—cannot be disproved. Materialism is irrefutable. It is useless to believe that materialism is a world view that we can disprove. There is no rationale with which we can prove that materialism is wrong. This is why it is a waste of time trying to refute materialism with theoretical arguments.
Why can’t materialism be disproved? Now you see, it can’t be disproved for the following reasons. Let’s take that piece of matter that in human beings themselves is the basis for intellectual activity: the brain or, to go a bit further, the nervous system. This brain or nervous system is an image of the spirit. Everything that exists in the human spirit can be found in one form or another, in one process or another in the brain or the nervous system. So all that we could invoke as an expression of the spirit of the human being can be found reproduced in its material counterpart, in the brain, in the nervous system.
How could someone who points to this nervous system not say: what you really mean when you speak of the soul or the spirit is all these components of the nervous system? It is as if someone looked at a portrait and said: what is pictured here is all there is of the human being, there is no original. If we couldn’t find the person whose portrait it is, then perhaps we couldn’t prove that there was an original. The portrait alone doesn’t provide us with evidence that there is an original. Similarly, the material image of the spiritual world doesn’t provide us with evidence that spirit exists. We cannot disprove materialism. There is only the possibility of pointing to the will to find the spirit itself. We must find spirit completely independently of matter, but in doing so we then find it working creatively in matter. However, through descriptions of the material, through conclusions reached through the material, we can never find spirit, because matter consists of images of the spirit.
This is the secret of why in a time such as the last third of the nineteenth century, when people had no direct access to spirit, materialism stood unrefuted, irrefutable, and why, for those who couldn’t point to the spirit but only to the abstract, lifeless image of spirit, the ideas in human beings, why these idealistic thinkers couldn’t stand their ground against contemporary materialistic thinkers. The dispute couldn’t be based on evidence and counter-evidence. It took place under the influence of the power—greater or lesser—of the parties involved in the dispute. And in the last third of the nineteenth century the greater power belonged to those people, who could produce as evidence the progress and successes of natural science with its technical achievements, which convinced by their mere existence.
Of course those people, who as idealistic thinkers such as I’ve described in the penultimate issue of The Goetheanum, preserved the traditions of the first half of the nineteenth century; they were the wiser and more brilliant thinkers, they were the ones whose arguments reached more deeply into people’s souls than those of the materialists, but the materialists were more powerful. And the dispute wasn’t settled by the evidence, but was a question of power. We only have to face the facts without any illusions. We must be quite clear that in order to reach the spirit we have to seek the way directly and not try to prove its existence through material phenomena. For whatever is in the spirit is also in matter. So, if someone can’t find the direct path to the spirit, then they can still find in matter all there is to know of the world.
Since in the last third of the nineteenth century even the most noble minds weren’t able to find access to the spirit, but still had spiritual needs and longings, they got into a kind of insecurity about the whole human soul situation. And behind one or other of the really important personalities of the last third of the nineteenth century, their own instability shows up like a backdrop. Even though they were extremely intellectualistic, they were also extremely soulful, so they said to themselves: well, here is the material world, there are the ideas. Ideas are all we can find behind the phenomena of nature and of human beings. But then again, these people feel that ideas are only abstract and lifeless. And so, they slid into uncertainty and instability.
I’d like to demonstrate this through the example of one quite prominent personality, so that you can see in detail how this spiritual development, which ultimately lead to our present era, really was. I’d like to show you the so-called Swabian Vischer³, who is also called V-Vischer, as he writes his name with a V, unlike all the other academic Fischers—Swabian Vischer, the aesthetician.
He was a product of that whole idealism of the first half of the nineteenth century. He couldn’t endorse crude materialism. Everywhere behind material beings and material processes he perceived ideas; basically, he perceived in the moral world order