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Rudolf Steiner

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In a previously-unavailable series of talks to the general public, Rudolf Steiner builds systematically, lecture by lecture, on the fundamentals of spiritual science – from the nature of spiritual knowledge and its relationship to conventional science, the path of personal development and the task of metaphysical research, to specific questions on the mystery of death, the meaning of fairy-tales, the significance of morality and the roles of individual figures in human evolution, such as Leonardo da Vinci, Raphael and Jacob Boehme. At the time of these presentations, Steiner had already worked in Berlin for many years, and thus, '…could reckon with a regularly returning audience to whom what mattered was to enter ever more deeply into the areas of knowledge that were newly opening up to them' (Marie Steiner). As a consequence – and through 'a series of inter-connecting lectures whose themes are entwined with one another' – he was able to communicate a coherent and challenging spiritual perception of reality, based on his personal research. Presented here with notes, an index and an introduction by Simon Blaxland-de Lange, the 14 lectures include: 'How is Spiritual Science Refuted?'; 'On What Foundation is Spiritual Science Based'; 'The Tasks of Spiritual Research for both Present and Future'; 'Errors of Spiritual Research'; 'RESULTS OF SPIRITUAL RESEARCH for Vital Questions and the Riddle of Death'; The World-Conception of a Cultural Researcher of the Present, Herman Grimm' and 'The Legacy of the Nineteenth Century'.

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RESULTS OF SPIRITUAL RESEARCH

Fourteen public lectures given in the Architektenhaus, Berlin, between 31 October 1912 and 10 April 1913

TRANSLATED AND INTRODUCED BY SIMON BLAXLAND-DE LANGE

RUDOLF STEINER

RUDOLF STEINER PRESS

CW 62

Rudolf Steiner Press Hillside House, The Square Forest Row, RH18 5ES

www.rudolfsteinerpress.com

Published by Rudolf Steiner Press 2022

Originally published in German under the title Ergebnisse der Geistesforschung (volume 62 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 (1988), edited by Ernst Weidmann and Johann Waeger

Published by permission of the Rudolf Steiner Nachlassverwaltung, Dornach

© Rudolf Steiner Nachlassverwaltung, Dornach, Rudolf Steiner Verlag 1988

This translation © Rudolf Steiner Press 2022

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 599 2 eISBN 978 1 85584 633 3

Cover by Morgan Creative Typeset by Symbiosys Technologies, Vishakapatnam, India Printed and bound by 4Edge Ltd., Essex

CONTENTS

Publisher’s Note

Introduction, by Simon Blaxland-de Lange

LECTURE 1

BERLIN, 31 OCTOBER 1912

How is Spiritual Science Refuted?

Spiritual science must be mindful of understanding and tolerating the objections of its opponents. Regarding the knowledgeability of the spiritual world. The four members of man’s being. The life of sleep. Life and death. Repeated earthly lives. Objective natural-scientific research and spiritual science. Spiritual science, a refined capacity for having illusions and hallucinations? Is belief in the ‘life-force’ and in the etheric body a form of scientific dilettantism? Astral or organic reasons for waking and sleeping? Independence of spiritual life. Repeated earthly lives, different individualities and heredity. Spiritual science and charlatanism. Repeated earthly lives, the law of karma and egotism. An objection of Friedrich Schlegel. The religious life. The danger of arrogance and ‘self-deification’ through spiritual science. An objection of Jacob Frohschammer against the pre-existence of the soul. An example: Eduard von Hartmann and the criticism in connection with his Philosophy of the Unconscious. Geoffroy de Saint-Hilaire regarding man’s weakness.

Pages 1-26

LECTURE 2

BERLIN, 7 NOVEMBER 1912

On What Foundation is Spiritual Science Based?

A threefold opposition to spiritual research: science, religious confessions, ordinary waking consciousness. Concerning the nature of proof in natural science and spiritual science. Etheric body and ‘life-force’. The supposed ‘engendering of living substance’ in the laboratory. Waking and sleeping. The process of breathing and oxygen. Just as the chemist conceives of water as the duality of hydrogen and oxygen, so does the spirit-researcher regard man as consisting of a physical body, etheric body, astral body and ego. The strengthening of the soul-forces through meditation and concentration as a prerequisite for supersensible knowledge and perceptions. Regarding the objection that it is impossible truly to distinguish between illusory hallucinations and real supersensible experiences. Comparison of experiences relating to spiritual research with mathematical truths. Facts cannot be proved but only experienced. The objection that one acquires one’s characteristics not from former lives but solely from the physical line of inheritance: the example of the Bach family of musicians. Regarding the objection that spiritual research promotes egotism in moral acts. Schopenhauer on the preaching of morality. Regarding the religious objection that spiritual science places the spark of the divine in the human breast. Fichte’s answer to the battle against spiritual research. Lines from the Mystery Play The Soul’s Probation.

Pages 27-54

LECTURE 3

BERLIN, 14 NOVEMBER 1912

The Tasks of Spiritual Research for both Present and Future

Spiritual science and natural science. Kepler. The abundance of natural-scientific achievements renders the human soul incapable of perceiving the world of spirit. Herman Grimm about Goethe. Modern philosophers always come close to the world of spirit but cannot embrace it. Wilhelm Wundt. Darwin. The historian Lord Acton. The error of natural science in denying the spirit. Moritz Carrière’s intellectual outlook and the simple man Carl Zeuner. No world-conception is valid today if it is in contradiction with natural science. The contradictory views of the naturalists Mivart and Wallace regarding the soul-spiritual aspect of man’s being. The task of spiritual science. Lessing. Herman Grimm at the threshold of spiritual science. The urge of the time towards spiritual knowledge. Walther Rathenau’s A Critical View of the Age. The abstract reference to ‘spirit’ and ‘soul’. The prejudices against the discoveries of Galileo and Francesco Redi. The prejudices against the discoveries of spiritual science. Giordano Bruno.

Pages 55-78

LECTURE 4

BERLIN, 21 NOVEMBER 1912

The Paths of Supersensible Knowledge

Waking and sleeping. During sleep the soul-spiritual core of one’s being is outside the physical body. A person attains to spiritual knowledge if through his will he consciously and in a waking state withdraws from the physical body to the soul-spiritual core of his being. The four stages of human knowledge: outward sensory and intellectual knowledge and the three stages of supersensible knowledge—Imagination, Inspiration and Intuition. Meditation as a means of rising to Imagination. Rich pictures rise up from the depths of the soul. Differentiation from illusions and hallucinations. Imaginations as a reflection of one’s own being. A person must be the master of his own imaginations and be able to forget and again remember them. Spiritual beings can be perceived already in Imagination. The ascent to Inspiration and the perception of creative beings in nature. Intuition and the perception of previous incarnations. The results of spiritual research in everyday life. Publication of the methods of spiritual research. A person’s worth is determined by his intellectual and moral qualities, not through his spiritual research. The spirit-researcher is no special authority. Belief in authority and blind discipleship are the worst aspect of any spiritual-scientific research. Perception and understanding of the spiritual world. Only like can understand like.

Pages 79-102

LECTURE 5

BERLIN, 5 DECEMBER 1912

Results of Spiritual Research for Vital Questions and the Riddle of Death

Franz Brentano’s Psychology. Thomas Henry Huxley’s Lessons in Elementary Physiology. The question of destiny as regards people born into various states of being or classes. Just as the scientist Francesco Redi has shown that something living can only arise from the living, so spiritual science shows that the soul and spirit can only arise from the soul and spirit. Heredity in reproduction. Repeated earthly lives in natural science and spiritual science. The evolution of the life of the soul. In the reproduction of the species, all development takes place outwardly (evolution); in the life of the individual all development is inwardly oriented (involution). Goethe: In old age we become mystics. The birth of the ‘higher man’, the ‘second ego’. Tiredness and sleep. The building up of bodily forces that have been used up during sleep. A human being is what he has made out of himself, his concentrated destiny. Death and rebirth in different circumstances. Is genius the result of the qualities inherited from one’s ancestors? The changing and eternal nature of life.

Pages 103-127

LECTURE 6

BERLIN, 12 DECEMBER 1912

Natural Science and Spiritual Research

Natural-scientific discoveries at the end of the nineteenth century. The results of research in biology, zoology and anatomy. The difficulty of distinguishing between scientific facts and speculative theories. The strictness of natural-scientific thinking. The need to research in accordance with the model of natural science also in teachings of the soul: Franz Brentano’s Psychology. Brentano’s shortcomings on the path to the spiritual world. Sinnett’s Esoteric Buddhism cannot be justified in terms of strict natural-scientific standards of truthfulness. Blavatsky’s Secret Doctrine is also interspersed with natural-scientific dilettantism. Indian wisdom and yoga. Aristotle’s teaching of the soul. The loss of the perception of the spiritual world with the arising of natural science.. Du Bois-Reymond’s Concerning the Limits of a Knowledge of Nature. The sleeping and waking human being. Spiritual science can only be recognized as justified when it is familiar with present-day natural-scientific research.

Pages 128-152

LECTURE 7

BERLIN, 9 JANUARY 1913

Jacob Boehme

The originality and spiritual greatness of Boehme. Boehme’s ‘dream experience’ as a shepherd boy. His experience as a shoemaker’s apprentice. His withdrawal from the physical body into another world for seven days. His book Dawn in the Ascendant. Boehme is prohibited to write. Boehme’s other books. What lives in Jacob Boehme’s soul can be compared with the first stage of supersensible knowledge, Imagination. The submergence and reappearance of Jacob Boehme’s imaginations. The problem of evil in Boehme. The world as the counterpart of the Godhead. Jacob Boehme seeks not only the primal ground but the groundlessness of evil. Good fulfils its function in the world in that it is juxtaposed to evil. Concerning Lucifer. Boehme’s formulation of the problem of evil: ‘No yes without a no’. Boehme as a solver of the riddles of runes and a ‘Philosophicus teutonicus’. Writings opposing Jacob Boehme.

Pages 153-174

LECTURE 8

BERLIN, 16 JANUARY 1913

The World-Conception of a Cultural Researcher of the Present, Herman Grimm, and Spiritual Research

Herman Grimm as a mediating link between the time of Goethe and modern cultural life and as a spiritual representative of Goethe. His lectures on Goethe. Herman Grimm as an observer of history: Whoever has faith in outer historical documents receives a falsified picture of human evolution. Grimm, in contrast, looked at the continuous stream of the creations of the popular imagination in literature and art. Grimm’s book on Homer. Herman Grimm regarding the Christ impulse in human evolution. Grimm’s Fragments. His book Raphael in relation to his other works. Grimm’s prior studies for his books are not historical but soul studies. The collection of novellas, the novel Insuperable Powers. Herman Grimm at the threshold of spiritual science.

Pages 175-200

LECTURE 9

BERLIN, 30 JANUARY 1913

Raphael’s Mission in the Light of the Science of the Spirit

The education of the human race through such outstanding figures as Raphael. The advancement of humanity towards inwardness. The balance between the soul-spiritual and outward bodily aspects in the culture of Ancient Greece, the inwardly focused soul in Christianity (Augustine), the creations of Raphael as a watershed in human evolution. Raphael’s development in stages of four years. Birth in Urbino, apprenticeship in Perugia, the Florence of Savonarola. The popes. Raphael in Rome seemingly as the servant of a Christianity that had become pagan, but in his works Christian ideas appear in a new form. The Sistine Madonna. The Madonna della Sedia. Inner Christian fire in Raphael and in Savonarola. Raphael’s Christianity and the culture of Ancient Greece. The School of Athens. The Parnassus. The Disputa. Raphael’s creations in the course of human evolution.

Pages 201-225

LECTURE 10

BERLIN, 6 FEBRUARY 1913

Fairy-tale Literature in the Light of Spiritual Research

The sources of fairy-tale literature lie much deeper in the human soul than the sources of other works of art. The difference between fairy tales and tragedy. The battle of the soul in going to sleep and waking up is enacted at such depths of the human soul. The constant unconscious dreaming of the soul. The former clairvoyant consciousness. The arising of fairytale images. The tale of the child and the toad. ‘Rumpelstilstkin’. Rudolf Steiner’s Occult Science and fairy tales from Wilhelm Wundt’s Elements of Folk Psychology. The German fairy tales of the Brothers Grimm. Giants in fairy tales. The tale ‘A Hundred with one Stroke’. Fairy tales are wonderful nourishment for the soul of the child and are a good Angel for a person’s journey through life.

Pages 226-247

LECTURE 11

BERLIN, 13 FEBRUARY 1913

Leonardo’s Spiritual Greatness at the Turning-Point leading to the Modern Age

The Last Supper in Milan. Leonardo’s path of life. His drawing talent. His studies of facial characteristics for the most diverse soul-experiences.. Leonardo at the court of Ludovico il Moro in Milan. His technical inventions and plans. The equestrian statue of Francesco Sforza. Leonardo’s many years of struggle to complete the Last Supper. His Treatise on Painting. The particular relationships of light and shade in the countenance of Christ and of Judas in the Last Supper. The mystery of the personality of Leonardo. The twofold significance of the development of natural science. The art of the Renaissance and the art of Greece. The statue of Marcus Aurelius in Rome. The loss of the feeling of connectedness with the spirit in the age of Leonardo. Leonardo as a tragic figure at the turning-point to a new age. His soul in supersensible existence.

Pages 248-267

LECTURE 12

BERLIN, 6 MARCH 1913

Errors of Spiritual Research

Healthy organs of perception and a full development and clarity of consciousness as a precondition for right observation. A sound faculty of judgement and a moral mood of the soul as a point of departure for spiritual-scientific schooling. The visions of the spirit-researcher are initially only the illusory mental pictures of his own being. Hence the spirit-researcher must also have the capacity to extinguish the spiritual phenomena that he is able to evoke. This is only possible by mastering the obstinacy of self-love. The spirit-pupil should not be frightened of fear. The ‘Guardian of the Threshold’. The fear of the spiritual world as the reason for materialism, which can lead to phenomenalism and spiritism. In the spiritual world error arises through what is dead being taken as something living. Maurice Maeterlinck’s book Death is phenomenalism and spectre-research rather than spiritual research. The other extreme of the possibilities for error is ecstasy. The so-called mystical ‘God within’ is often nothing other than an ego branded with God’s name. Truthfulness as the outward sign of the true spirit-researcher. The communications of the spirit-researcher can also be understood by a person’s faculty of thinking. The path of spiritual research between phenomenalism and ecstasy.

Pages 268-291

LECTURE 13

BERLIN, 3 APRIL 1913

Morality in the Light of Spiritual Research

Arthur Schopenhauer’s idea of morality. The difference in the moral reasoning in the example of a moral deed of Lord Byron’s. The three stages of initiation (Imagination, Inspiration, Intuition) and the moral mood of soul. In order to be able to recognize the pictures of Imagination as reflections of his own being, the spirit-researcher needs a sense for facts and the practice of truthfulness. In order to be able to recognize the spiritual voices of Inspiration as the echo of his own being, the spirit-researcher needs moral courage, fortitude. In order to arrive in Intuition at true knowledge of higher beings, the spirit-researcher needs free open interest. Thus spiritual schooling is intimately connected with the enhancement of moral power. Schopenhauer’s moral demand for compassion, sympathy. The moral experience of the spirit-researcher in the encounter with the Guardian of the Threshold. Moral qualities in their causes and effects in the course of repeated earthly lives. Even if it is as yet very hidden, there is something in man that professes goodness.

Pages 292-312

LECTURE 14

BERLIN, 10 APRIL 1913

The Legacy of the Nineteenth Century

Spiritual science endeavours to be for the soul a knowledge of its spiritual origin. The brilliant period of philosophical striving: Fichte, Schelling, Hegel, Schopenhauer. Kant’s treatise What is Enlightenment? The fading of philosophical striving and the rise of natural science around the middle of the nineteenth century. Goethe, Herman Grimm, Emerson. The significance of natural-scientific thinking for the human soul. The human soul in former cultural epochs: in the Egypto-Chaldaean age the soul feels at one with the world, in the Graeco-Roman age the soul feels at one with its own bodily nature, in the present cultural epoch the soul has thrust itself out of the objective world-picture. Kepler and Giordano Bruno regarding the Earth as an organism. The three members of the human soul and their development in the cultural epochs. The struggle of the consciousness soul in the nineteenth century in Feuerbach, Nietzsche, Du Bois-Reymond. The preparation of the age of the Spirit-self already in our age of the consciousness soul. Otto Liebman’s idea of the cosmos as a giant brain. The natural-scientific world-picture of the nineteenth century is the best educational means for what the human soul is to become: a being that is striving towards the Spirit-self from the consciousness soul.

Pages 313-343

Notes

Rudolf Steiner’s Collected Works

Significant Events in the Life of Rudolf Steiner

Index

PUBLISHER’S NOTE

THE lectures in this volume belong to the part of Rudolf Steiner’s work as a lecturer where he was addressing the general public. ‘Berlin was the starting-point for this public lecturing activity. What in other towns and cities was considered in individual lectures could here be expressed in a series of inter-connecting lectures whose themes were entwined with one another. Because of this they acquired the character of a carefully grounded methodical introduction to spiritual science and could reckon with a regularly returning audience to whom what mattered was to enter ever more deeply into the areas of knowledge that were newly opening up to them, whereas to those approaching for the first time the foundations for understanding what was being presented were reiterated in ever renewed ways.’ (Marie Steiner)

INTRODUCTION

THE lectures presented here were given in the broader context of an annual series of public lecture-cycles that Rudolf Steiner gave during every winter term in the Arkitektenhaus (the House of the Architects) in Berlin between 1903 and 1918. These are published in the Collected Works as a distinct and continuous series (GA 52–67). As indicated in the (German) Publisher’s Note, the endeavour to share the fruits of his spiritual-scientific research with the general public therefore remained of consistent importance for Rudolf Steiner over these years. However, with the exception of two of these cycles, these public lectures have in the majority of cases not been translated; and those that have mostly exist in the form of single lectures, thus making it difficult to discern the context within which they were given.

The period during which the lectures in the present volume were given is notable for the fact that it coincided with a series of events from October 1912 onwards leading to the separation of the ‘German Section’ from the Theosophical Society and the founding of an independent Anthroposophical Society, initially informally on 28 December 1912 in Berlin and, more formally, at the foundation meeting in the same city on 2–3 February 1913. Significantly, Rudolf Steiner gave a remarkable lecture in the course of this latter event entitled ‘The Being Anthroposophia’ (3 February 1913), indicating that ‘what we receive through anthroposophy is our very own being. This once floated towards us in the form of a celestial goddess with whom we were able to enter into relationship. This divine being lived on as Sophia and Philosophia and now we can once again bring her out of ourselves and place her before us as the fruit of true anthroposophical self-knowledge.’

Rudolf Steiner’s underlying intention throughout this cycle of lectures is to work consistently at the frontier between natural science and spiritual science. The tone throughout is one of dialogue, rational and open-minded discussion and conversation. Where, he begins, might a specialist in natural science want to take issue with certain things asserted by spiritual science? And where, on the other hand, are there issues which natural science is unable to illuminate (such as the mysteries of sleep and death) and which require the wider perspective that spiritual science is able to bring to bear? How, in other words, can there be a real, genuine collaboration between a natural science that is, at least to a certain extent, free from dogmatism and a spiritual science that does not fall prey to dilettantism or narrow-minded prejudice? This open-minded debate is throughout illustrated by examining passages from the work of scientists, philosophers and historians, some of these being contemporary writers, while others are chosen to exemplify a frequently expressed theme, namely, that just as there was a need at the time of the Scientific Revolution to have the imaginative boldness to break through the spatial barrier of the seemingly fixed blue firmament, so is there now an urgent need to achieve something similar with respect to the temporal ‘barriers’ of birth and death. These themes are deepened and extended in lectures devoted to carefully chosen historical figures, Jacob Boehme, the painters Raphael and Leonardo da Vinci, and the art and literary historian Herman Grimm; and a lecture on ‘Fairy-Tale Literature in the Light of Spiritual Research’ develops some indications sprinkled through these lectures about historical figures into a quest of illumination about humanity’s deeper past. Nor was Rudolf Steiner’s public audience denied lectures on the path leading to higher knowledge itself, with one lecture being devoted to ‘The Paths of Supersensible Knowledge’, while a pair of lectures later on in the cycle focussed on ‘Errors of Spiritual Research’ and ‘Morality in the Light of Spiritual Research’, thus touching upon much of the substance contained in the book Knowledge of the Higher Worlds.

The concluding, fourteenth lecture begins with a summary of the intention of these lectures:

This winter’s lecture cycle has sought to characterize from a variety of points of view the spiritual stream that has as its aim that of leading the human soul through a process of self-exploration to that knowledge which it must yearn for in connection with the most important riddles of life and existence. The attempt has been made to show that a study of present or future-oriented spiritual and intellectual streams makes it clearly apparent that the spiritual science referred to is the right instrument to guide the human soul in the context of the present and the immediate future time. For this reason it has been a kind of undertone of these winter lectures consistently to emphasize the achievements and results of the intellectual life and aspirations of the nineteenth century; for if one considers the way that the intellectual life and aspirations of the nineteenth century have taken hold of humanity and have brought about the great triumph of material existence, it can truly be said that it would necessarily seem to be a hopeless undertaking if this spiritual science under discussion here were to reject or set itself in opposition to the justified requirements of natural science or, indeed, the intellectual and spiritual achievements of the nineteenth century.

And towards the end of this same lecture, we find these sentiments confirmed in the following words:

If one believes that there must necessarily be a break between what natural science is and has made possible and spiritual science, one would be mistaken about this spiritual science. If, however, one sees how natural science had to become entirely what it has indeed become so that the human soul finds the path to the spiritual in the new way that it must find it, one will recognize it as that which must necessarily be placed within evolution as something that has within it the seeds for that period that will follow ours in the same way that our present period follows on from the previous one. Then the apparent conflicts between the natural-scientific and the spiritual-scientific world-pictures will be reconciled.

Finally, there is a further theme that Rudolf Steiner introduces into these lectures. In one of the most beautiful, heartfelt lectures that he ever gave, that on Jacob Boehme on 9 January 1913, he brought an understanding, as mediated by this extraordinary individual who lived in the early part of the modern era, of the mystery of evil which can be grasped by anyone whatever his particular preconceptions may be.

Simon Blaxland-de Lange February 2022

LECTURE 1

BERLIN, 31 OCTOBER 1912

HOW IS SPIRITUAL SCIENCE REFUTED?

AS in previous winters, it has been made possible for me to give a number of lectures about spiritual science here at this place in the course of the winter season. It will be apparent from the programme that the initial purpose of these lectures is to encompass what spiritual science has to say from its standpoint about the question of life; that the transition will then be made to shedding light on some important cultural phenomena and issues and on outstanding figures such as Raphael and Leonardo da Vinci; and that finally something will be said regarding the relationship of spiritual science to a number of matters concerning the intellectual life of our present times. These lectures will be inaugurated today in a quite distinctive way. The intention is to present at the outset not what can be said by way of consolidating and strengthening this spiritual research but, on the contrary, what possible objections of a more significant nature can be brought to bear against it.

It lies in the nature of things that, because of circumstances peculiar to our present times and because of several other factors, this spiritual research attracts much hostility. But nothing would be more inappropriate to this spiritual research than if it were to succumb to fanaticism and, so to speak, only wanted to see what can be adduced on its behalf from the standpoint of its representatives. Fanaticism must—and we shall see the reasons why this is said—lie far removed from this spiritual research. Therefore it must, more than is perhaps necessary in any other case, give thought to understanding the objections of its opponents and, indeed, it must tolerate them up to a certain point, and it must come to understand that a whole number of thoroughly worthy present-day seekers after truth are not able to ally themselves with it. It has been my custom—those who have attended previous lectures will know this, and this custom will be continued in subsequent ones—at the same time to consider possible objections to any statements that I may make. I shall today anticipate some of the more significant and weighty objections; for objections against what can be said from the standpoint of spiritual research indeed emerge not merely from opponents, but in any conscientiously undertaken spiritual research a person who has engaged in such an endeavour himself feels that at every step he is presented with these possible objections. Moreover, because the truths of spiritual research must be attained and struggled for within the soul, there is a sense in which one has also developed a counterweight to such objections as may have occurred to one; and there are distinct advantages in being clear in advance about anything that may be open to objection.

I do not consider it to be my task to enter here into those objections or alleged criticisms that can, so to speak, be found on the street or are the product of sheer fantasy but, rather, to take account of the objections which anyone in our time who is sincerely seeking truth can himself make out of the spiritual foundations of our present age and even to a certain extent must make. I shall also not concern myself with much that is often referred to today as spiritual research or theosophy; for it has to be admitted from the outset that what appears today as ‘theosophy’ is not really something to celebrate. However, what has been and will be presented here shall indeed be taken into account in the objections that I shall consider today. But if we are wanting to involve ourselves in such objections, much of what has been said in the course of the previous cycles and will come to expression in the coming lectures will need to be drawn upon at least in outline. We shall therefore briefly call to mind what is meant here by spiritual research as regards its content and its sources.

To begin with, spiritual science can in general be characterized by saying that it is based upon the standpoint that it must reach beyond everything that a person may perceive through his senses, and is able to discover by means of a science that is founded primarily upon the senses and on a reasoning power that draws its conclusions from the senses, to the spiritual causes of what can be apprehended by the senses and investigated by the intellect, so that everywhere behind these sense-perceptible phenomena it does not only acknowledge but endeavours to prove the existence of a spiritual world in which there reside the causes of everything that the senses can perceive and the intellect can study.

This spiritual science can be distinguished from many other spiritual disciplines of both past and present through the fact that it does not merely seek to assert in a general, hypothetical way that there is a spiritual world beyond the senses and the ordinary faculties of understanding but proceeds on the basis that man is capable of developing his cognitive powers and soul-forces in such a way that they can gain insight into a spiritual world, which they could not achieve without this development. Hence not only the possibility of a spiritual world but the knowledgeability of such a world is the distinctive quality of this spiritual research or anthroposophy, if that is what we wish to call it. That with the particular nature of the soul-forces and cognitive powers that people ordinarily possess—if we may put it thus—it would not be possible to penetrate into the spiritual world is something that can be acknowledged from the start. But to claim that these cognitive powers cannot be developed in such a way that once they had been raised to this higher standpoint they would be just as capable of perceiving the spiritual world as eyes are in perceiving the world of the senses, is disputed by spiritual science. With this we have already arrived at the sources of this spiritual research.

These sources become available to the soul when through inner work, through inner development—and I have often spoken here about the methods of this inner development—it raises itself to a higher vantage-point as regards its perception. Then in apposition to the sense-world that surrounds us, spiritual science makes manifest another, spiritual world from whence the true causes of all sensory phenomena originate.

By investigating the spiritual world we come to regard man as a far more complicated being than he is for ordinary sensory or narrowly intellectual perception. We come to see man as a four-membered being. That which one calls the physical body is regarded by spiritual research only as part of the whole of man’s being. The ordinary life of the senses can observe this physical body, the reasoning faculties can understand it. This sensory body is the object of ordinary science. For a large part of our modern experience, the physical body is the totality of man’s being. For spiritual-scientific research it is only one part out of four members of this human nature.

In addition to this physical body, spiritual research distinguishes the so-called etheric body or life-body, which is incorporated in the physical body. But it does not speak of this etheric body or life-body as though it were accessible only to the intellect but in such a way that the developed soul-forces are capable of beholding it, just as a developed eye can perceive the colours blue or red, whereas a colourblind eye is unable to perceive these colours. And it then speaks of the necessary conclusion that occurs, namely that the physical body naturally disintegrates with death through the forces that are specific to it, because the forces that belong to the physical body bring about its decomposition, its disintegration and are only held together because during the time of life between birth and death the etheric body or life-body, which fights continuously against the disintegration of the physical body, is incorporated in it. Only when the separation from the etheric body occurs with the moment of death does the physical body proceed in accordance with its own forces, which then—because they work in their particular fashion—bring about its decomposition. Man has his physical body in common with the whole mineral, lifeless world. He has his etheric body in association with all living things, with the whole of the plant world.

However, spiritual science does not stop there. It recognizes a third member of human nature which is as independent as the physical body. We do not need to stumble over particular terms; they will be explained and have already been partially explained. It is the astral body that is distinguished as the third member. This is the real bearer of passions, desires, impulses, emotions, hence of everything that we call our soul-body, which unfolds its activity in our inner being. And in spiritual research we again distinguish from this astral body the actual bearer of the ego. Whereas man has the astral body in common with everything that can develop emotions and passions and an inner life of ideas, as exists for example in the animal world, he has the fourth member of his being—the bearer of the ego as the crown of his personal nature—in his own right. For spiritual research man’s being consists initially of the physical body, the etheric body, the astral body and the bearer of the ego.

It further transpires for anyone who is able to gain insight into the spiritual world that a large part of the life’s circumstances to which we are subjected is distinguished from ordinary life, namely the time that we spend asleep. Sleep is distinguished for the spirit-researcher from waking life in that when someone is asleep the bearer of his ego and his astral body are separated from his etheric body and physical body. The two latter members remain in bed as a plant-like form, while the bearer of the ego together with the astral body, its emotions, impulses, capacities for forming ideas and so forth withdraw from the physical and etheric bodies during sleep and then develop a life of their own in a self-subsisting spiritual world. For a normal person today, however, ordinary life is impossible when the ego and astral body are thus in a withdrawn state during sleep, because they have no organs with which to perceive their surroundings, they do not have eyes and ears as does the physical body. Thus it is impossible that the astral body and ego perceive the world in which they find themselves.

The higher development of the soul consists precisely in that the astral body and ego become capable of developing organs in order to perceive their environment, and that a state can thereby arise for the spirit-researcher in which he perceives the spiritual world. Thus in addition to the waking state and the state of sleep he also has a waking state of sleep—if we may refer to it in this way—which is that condition whereby the spirit-researcher can perceive the spiritual world to which man owes his true origin. Thus spiritual science tries to explain from spiritual facts the transition that a person makes every twenty-four hours between waking and sleeping.

A further aspect for spiritual science is that it approaches the great riddle of death and life, that is in other words the question that so stirs the human heart: the question of man’s immortality. Spiritual science comes to the realization that man’s true spiritual being is not merely a result of his physical organization but an independent entity and essence belonging to a spiritual world which builds up the physical body, which exists before birth, indeed before conception, and from the first moment that a human individual enters into existence as a germinal cell works as an up-building force upon his organism. This is, in other words, the soul-spiritual essence, the truly active and up-building force that brings to a person an organizing principle for his entire life, that bears only the fruits of his life’s experiences through the gate of death and makes with death the transition to a spiritual world in order then to have further experiences, and which then organizes a new physical body for a further life in order to undergo a new life and to repeat the cycle.

Spiritual science speaks, in other words, of repeated earth-lives, it speaks of repeated earthly lives in such a way that we look back from our present embodiment within sensory existence to other incarnations in the past, but also look into the future to subsequent incarnations of our essential being. Thus we divide the entirety of human life into a life between birth and death and another life, which for the senses and the ordinary reasoning powers takes its course purely spiritually between death and the next birth. But spiritual science conceives of this not in an eternally recurring way but such that it recognizes these repeated earthly lives to be only intermediate states, whereas the entirety of human life goes back to a primordial spiritual source which preceded all life, the whole of planetary existence; so that earthly lives had their beginning in a condition where man emerged from a purely spiritual existence, and that once the necessary conditions have been fulfilled he will enter again into purely spiritual states which will include the fruits of everything that he has undergone through a succession of earthly lives.

This is to be sure only an outline which will be filled out in the coming lectures with distinctive colours but which is able to show the kind of results that spiritual-scientific research can obtain. If we place this whole tableau before our minds, we must indeed say that such a picture will, to a large number of those who reckon to be able to think today, not merely be incomprehensible and incapable of proof but even something that can call forth irony, scorn and derision. Already when there is any reference to spiritual science, anyone who wants to relate everything that is of importance to him today to the sure foundation of science must say to himself: What is the significance to such research of not only all the various achievements of science but also its methods, of what significance to spiritual science are the seriousness, the worthiness, the exactitude and also the great efforts that science has made in recent centuries and decades in order to arrive at an objective certainty? Spiritual research does not of course want to work against science (this has frequently been emphasized) but to be fully in harmony with it. It must therefore be conscious of the objections that science has against it, not only with respect to its content but also bearing in mind especially the seriousness and achievements of science in recent centuries.

It would be true to say that, according to spiritual science, these sources of spiritual research lie in a certain development of the soul, in that the soul engages in certain inner processes of ideation, feeling and will which one may call meditation, so that it has as a result inner experiences that are naturally limited purely to one’s own soul and that no one can verify other than the person who experiences them, and then something of this unverifiable nature is presented as a scientific statement regarding the spiritual worlds. What, science can say, then remains of what is the most wonderful achievement of this science, that through all the research of recent centuries only that which can be verified everywhere and at any time by every human being objectively has validity? Outward experiments, outward observations have the distinctive quality that anyone can directly relate to them. This is not so with what is sought and struggled for in one’s inner being. If one looks at people who have an inner experience of such things, does not the whole uncertain nature of the contradictory things they say in all their great variety show how little the experiences that a mystically intensified consciousness is able to bestow accord with one another? Surely we must harmonize the research that various individuals are undertaking in the clinic, in the laboratory or somewhere similar! The response will be that this could not be done any differently; so that what someone experiences subjectively shows itself to be unscientific through the fact that it cannot be verified by another person, since this other person cannot look into the soul of the spirit-researcher concerned.

Do not these experiences of the soul have, one might say, a total similarity with everything that is very evidently experienced in the soul as a result of illness, over-exertion and ecstasy? If the spirit-researcher protests that he has absolutely no intention of allowing any arbitrary vision that appears before his soul to count as the result of his research and that he proceeds in accordance with specific methods, someone can nevertheless still object, and this objection appears thoroughly justified: Yes, is it not so that whenever people experience visions, hallucinations and so forth and have the kind of soul-state that makes this possible, they develop a much greater belief in their fixed ideas, in their hallucinations and visions, than in what their senses persuade them to think? If one looks at a dreamer who is rigid and unbending in his beliefs, one will have cause to be concerned about what the spirit-researcher wants to draw forth from the depths of his soul as something that is not an illusion, that has objective existence in the spiritual world. Someone might say that it is possible for it to have objective existence in the spiritual world, but against the validity of such a soul-experiment it must be said that the dreamer has just as much confidence in his illusory ideas as the spirit-researcher in the results of his research, which he owes to what comes forth from the depths of his soul.

Only someone who has not followed the development of the objective research of what may be said to be the soundly based science of the last few centuries and decades can pass over such an objection with a smile. It is weightier than one ordinarily thinks for those who approach their spiritual-scientific results from a one-sided direction. It must be said, for example with regard to what is said in my book Knowledge of the Higher Worlds, where particular instructions are given for the individual soul, that when the soul is completely involved with such an experience it has no means of keeping itself in check. All this testifies to the fact that one must take very seriously such an objection, which to a superficial spirit-researcher may even appear trivial. There is so much that can be said about the nature of what could be described as erroneous ideas which could also be used against spiritual science, in that people say: Everything that you present as methods for developing the soul may be nothing other than a refined capacity for having illusions and hallucinations.

Then spiritual science appears particularly out of place with respect to serious, verifiable science when it refers to specific, isolated results. A conscientious seeker after truth of the present who is familiar with developments of recent years might say: Do you not know anything about everything that happened before? You speak of an etheric body or life-body that is supposed to have an existence independent from the physical body. Do you know nothing about what used to be called a life-force1 that lurked in people’s minds until the nineteenth century, and that the belief in this life-force has finally been disposed of through devoted scientific efforts? And are you ignorant of the following fact: It used to be said in earlier centuries that a chemical process occurred in lifeless nature between separate chemical substances. But when, so it was claimed, this same connection between substances enters the human organism the so-called life-force takes hold of it; then the process that takes place among the individual substances would not be what we learn in chemistry and physics but these various substances work upon one another under the influence of the life-force. It was a great step forward that this life-force has been swept overboard, that people sought to say that this life-force is of no help whatsoever, and that one’s endeavour must be that what one can investigate in the lifeless world must be pursued further in the living organism, that one would need merely to take into account the more complex way in which substances interact there rather than resort to the dubious expedient of the life-force.

The life-force was indeed disposed of as such a ‘dubious expedient of science’, in that it was shown how the efficacy of certain substances that would formerly be conceived of only under the influence of the life-force is also brought about in the laboratory. And because that is not yet the end of the matter, science had to set itself the high ideal of considering also that combination of substances as exists in the cell of the plant, and had to avoid resorting to the dubious expedient of a life-force when it came to investigating how substances and forces are active in the organism.

So long as people were not in a position to give rise to combinations of substances in the laboratory, it was justified to say that they came about only if the individual substances were influenced by the life-force. But since it has become possible—especially through Liebig2 and Wöhler3, after which there has no longer been a belief in the life-force—to think of certain substances without the life-force, it must since then be said that also the more complicated constructions and interactions in the human organism do not any longer require the help of a special life-force. Thus in the course of the nineteenth century science embraced the high ideal that most researchers adhered to—even if there were also ‘neo-vitalists’—the ideal that became a reality: to recognize such connections between substances as they interact in the living organism and without calling upon the help of a nebulous, mystical life-force which, as all serious scientific research of the nineteenth century has always maintained, serves absolutely no purpose, because it contributes nothing whatsoever to the objective knowledge of nature.

Anyone who acknowledges these facts and above all takes into account the seriousness and intrinsic worthiness that underlie these developments in science may well protest: Is it really so that a number of people have appeared as so-called spirit-researchers who are again reviving the old life-force in the form of their etheric body or life-body? Is it not a sign of scientific dilettantism? They—these people who know nothing of the ideal of science—may ‘have their beliefs’; but the scientific researcher himself cannot be taken in by what can well appear to be a mere revival of the idea of the life-force. Thus spiritual science, one can say, works in a dilettantish way by failing to take account of everything that belongs to the most beautiful ideals of modern science, and it merely makes use of the circumstance that science has not yet managed to manufacture in the laboratory certain substances that are to be found in the living organism in order to be able to maintain that a special etheric body or life-body is necessary for the engendering of life. One might add that as science develops further it will eradicate this etheric body or life-body from man’s being. So long as science has not yet succeeded in the course of its triumphant progress in showing that there is no such thing as an etheric body and that the combination of the substances of the living organism can also be engendered in a test tube, the theosophists or spiritual researchers can make a song and dance about the etheric body, which is nothing but a resuscitation of the old life-force! This is the sort of reproach that might be levelled against dilettantism when it arises.

If, now, spiritual science says regarding sleep-life that the emotions, impulses and desires that people have and are associated with what is specifically designated as the astral body, and that when a person is overcome by sleep it leaves the physical and etheric bodies and leads an independent existence, the criticism can be made that it is very easy to speak of an inner soul-life if one simplifies everything by referring to this inner soul-life without all the difficulties and riddles of which science is aware by saying: This is the astral body, and all that takes place internally has a connection with it.

Again, one can address the advances that science has made and say: What are the great advances that have been made especially in recent decades in order to explain purely scientifically a phenomenon such as sleep-life or dream-life? It would take a long time if I were to present to you all the efforts of science—which are to be thoroughly regarded with seriousness and respect—to explain sleep-life and the life of dreams. It would take a particularly long time because in recent times a considerable amount of research has come to light which could well be discussed.

It will suffice to consider one aspect, which can show how difficult it becomes for a serious truth-seeker at the present time to profess allegiance to what can initially appear as a mere assertion: the ego and the astral body of man withdraw from the physical body and etheric body when one goes to sleep.

If we gather together a number of different hypotheses and conjectures about sleep-life and arrive at an overall explanation of it, we arrive at something of this kind: It is said that in order to give a thorough explanation all that is needed is to look without prejudice at the phenomena of the human and animal organism. It becomes apparent that waking life consists in that the phenomena of the surrounding world make an impression upon the sense-organs, that they stimulate the brain. They exert such stimuli throughout the day. How do they work upon man’s brain and nervous system? They do so in such a way that they destroy the substance of which the nervous system consists. What is going on the whole day, according to modern natural science, is that the outward colours, sounds and so on are penetrating our soul, that is, the life of our brain. By this means dissimilation processes are brought about, that is to say, processes of destruction. Certain products are deposited.

So long as these processes are taking place, man is not in a position to bring about the opposite process, that of the rebuilding of his organism. Thus every time after we wake up, our inner life of soul is to a certain extent destroyed, so that by the time we have become tired we have arrived at the point where we have destroyed our organism and it can no longer develop an inner soul-life; it comes to a halt. One needs only to acknowledge the wearing out of the organic substance, that the organic substance is for a certain time no longer capable of maintaining these inner processes. Outward stimuli no longer have any effect, and the consequence is that the inner organism now begins to develop its nutritional processes, the opposite of the dissimilation (or catabolic) processes, the processes of assimilation, that it now restores the destroyed organic substance and thereby causes nocturnal sleep. Once the organic substance is restored, the inner soul-life is also restored; and so waking life can cause fresh stimuli to arise until again tiredness ensues. Thus one is dealing with what we may call a self-regulation—or self-renewal4—of the organism.

It may be added that a conscientious seeker after truth who is familiar with the results of modern science will be bound to say: If waking life and sleep life in their rhythmic alternation can be well explained by the self-regulation or self-renewal of the organism, it is not only superfluous but directly harmful if you restrict the progress of such a human science by saying that it is not a matter of self-regulation or self-renewal but, because man has an existence that is independent from it, something goes forth from the organism. Since it can be explained solely through the organism that the alternation between sleep and waking comes about, it is unnecessary and harmful to accept that consciousness is anything special and withdraws from the organism in order during the night to engage in life of a particular kind. It will also be pointed out that spiritual science is characterized by extreme dilettantism, in which only such people believe who do not themselves know the path of science to explain the organism purely on its own terms.

When the independence of intellectual life is spoken of, when it is said—and it seems a plausible thing to say—that intellectual life is independent, that through our senses we know of the human organism as a physical entity and can investigate it through scientific methods as we would any other physical process, whereas there is still such a thing as intellectual or mental life, this is something that has often been emphasized—for example, by Du Bois-Reymond5 and also by others who would not readily profess materialism. One can, for instance, consider a conception of the brain: if one were to think of the human brain as so expanded—Leibniz has remarked on this6—that one could walk through it, one would only see material processes within it. Intellectual life does, however, have something distinctive about it, and this testifies to the fact that one is dealing here with an intellectual life that is separate from the processes of physical life. Whether this is justified can, however, be shown from what Benedikt7 says: The fact of consciousness is in actual fact of no other order than that of the working of the force of gravity in connection with matter. For we see, for example, the physical matter of a cosmic body. According to physical science, physical matter exerts a gravitational pull, and then there is something that is attracted, for example by the Sun. People formerly spoke of a supersensible aspect to such influences between the Sun and the Earth or Moon. But this is merely equivalent to there being a piece of soft iron and an electrical or magnetic force outside it. And if we envisage the brain and its interplay of ideas, passions, emotions and so forth, this is similar to the fact that gravity and other forces exert their influence around the material Earth. Why, then, should there be an influence of a different nature if processes are influencing the brain that manifest themselves as does the force of gravity around the material Earth? The Earth in its connection with gravity and with whatever else invisibly influences it is no different from what influences the brain in the form of emotions, ideas and other processes. How does one have a right, it might well be asked, to speak of an independence of mental life if one does not allow oneself to speak of the force of gravity being exercised also when there is no body for it to attract? And one can say furthermore: Just as one has no right to speak of a cosmic body exerting a gravitational force in a situation where there is a free cosmic space, so one is not entitled to speak of a distinctive soul-quality that is not bound through a brain to material existence.

It should be clear to every serious seeker after truth that one should not be allowed to disregard such things through an unscientific fanaticism.

If weighty objections can be raised against the spiritual-scientific understanding of sleep and waking life, and against the independence of consciousness in general, how can someone who takes the scientific methods of the present seriously find a way of agreeing with what is said by spiritual science about repeated earthly lives, about the existence of a core of human nature that transcends death, that has experiences in the time between death and a new birth and then reappears in a new forthcoming physical earthly life! Here an objection is made not only by those who are reliant on scientific facts but also by those who want themselves to be in many respects spiritual scientists: by psychologists, by the present-day investigators of the soul. The question is raised: What is the necessary sign that the human essence continues in existence? The soul-researcher of the present can find this quite simply in that human consciousness has a memory of the states that it underwent during life. Continuation, continuity of consciousness is what psychologists currently take into consideration. They cannot become involved in what does not figure in the consciousness of the human personality, and they will always have to refer to the fact that a person does indeed have a memory of particular circumstances in his life between birth and death but can find no comparable evidence of the continuing existence of the human essence that may have issued from previous earthly lives.

Many serious-minded present-day seekers after truth will also have understandable objections with respect to many other things that have been said in the course of these series of lectures. Thus they may say: You can indeed adduce that certain things in human life seemingly cannot be explained from the events of a single life, that it is reasonable to suppose that a person brings certain dispositions such as talents with him through birth and that one can accept that the soul may have existed before entering physical life. But all this remains only a daring hypothesis. For modern research of the soul, everything of this kind continues to be unsatisfactory in so far as this research pursues a path that seemingly aims quite conscientiously towards an ideal.

One can characterize what is going on here in the following way: Anyone who considers human life without prejudice—with all the passions that engulf it, its shades of feeling, its inclination towards ideas of whatever kind—will, if he has at least a certain relationship to the standpoint of spiritual science, say: We have as a result of our education achieved many things; but not everything can be explained by this, for we bring through the portal of birth something that derives from previous stages of earthly existence. However, the serious-minded scientist may counter: Have we not made a beginning by investigating the early part of childhood, that part of early childhood of which we later have no recollection?

A modern naturalist or philosopher will then perhaps say: The spirit-researcher is wanting to suggest that a gifted genius, for example Feuerbach8, brought certain powers with him from his previous life and was thereby enabled to work artistically. But the following discovery has now been made: such an artist paints with a quite distinctive mood of colour, prefers a particular facial expression and has other features that lead in a particular direction. If one looks further, one finds that in his early childhood he saw, for example, a bust in his room and that the particular way that the light always fell on it impressed itself on the soul of the child. This emerges again later, and it comes to be seen—so it is said—that such impressions are deeply influential and significant. It is possible to explain a great deal in this way. Spiritual science wants to lead everything back to past earthly lives, whereas through careful observation and investigation of early childhood one can perhaps explain everything.