Rudolf
Steiner
The
Opposition to Spiritual Revelations
Lecture
Three, Dornach, 12 June 1923
In
wishing to describe the development of groupings which have a
certain connection with the Anthroposophical Society, I
yesterday had to make reference to the impact of H.P.
Blavatsky, because Blavatsky's works at the end of the
nineteenth century prompted the coming together of those whom
I described as homeless souls.
Blavatsky's
works have very little to do with anthroposophy. I do not,
however, want simply to describe the history of the
anthroposophical movement, but also to characterize those of
its aspects which relate to the Society. And that requires
the kind of background which I have given you.
Now it is of
course quite easy — if we want to be critical —
to dismiss everything that can be said about Blavatsky by
pointing to the questionable nature of some of the episodes
in her life.
I could give
you any number of examples. I could tell you how, within the
Society which took its cue from Blavatsky and her spiritual
life, the view gained ground that certain insights about the
spiritual world became known because physical letters came
from a source which did not lie within the physical world.
Such documents were called the Mahatma Letters. [ Note
1 ]
It then became a rather sensational affair, when evidence of
all kinds of sleight of hand with sliding doors was produced.
And there are other such examples.
But let us for
the moment take another view, namely to ignore in the first
instance everything which took place outwardly, and simply
examine her writings. Then you will come to the conclusion
that Blavatsky's works consist to a large degree of
dilettantish, muddled stuff, but that despite this they
contain material which, if it is examined in the right way,
can be understood as reproducing far-reaching insights into
the spiritual world or from the spiritual world —
however they were acquired. That simply cannot be denied, in
spite of all the objections which are raised.
This, I
believe, leads to an issue of extraordinary importance and
significance in the spiritual history of civilization. Why is
it that at the end of the nineteenth century revelations from
a spiritual world became accessible which merit detailed
attention, even from the objective standpoint of spiritual
science, if only as the basis for further investigation;
revelations which say more about the fundamental forces of
the world than anything which has been discovered about its
secrets through modern philosophy or other currents of
thought? That does seem a significant question.
It contrasts
with another cultural-historical phenomenon which must not be
forgotten, namely that people's ability to discriminate,
their surety of judgement, has suffered greatly and regressed
in our time.
It is easy to
be deceived about this by the enormous progress which has
been made. But it is precisely because individual human
beings participate in the spiritual life as discerning
individuals that we get some idea of the capacity which our
age possesses to deal with phenomena which require the
application of judgement.
Many examples
could be quoted. Let me ask those, for example, who concern
themselves with, say, electrical engineering, about the
significance of Ohm's Law. The answer will be, of course,
that Ohm's Law constitutes one of the basic rules for the
development of the whole field of electrical engineering.
When Ohm [ Note
2 ]
completed the initial work which was to prove fundamental for
the later formulation of Ohm's Law his work was rejected as
useless by an important university's philosophical faculty.
If this faculty had had its way, there would be no electrical
engineering today.
Take another
example: the important role which the telephone plays in
modern civilization. When Reis, [ Note
3 ]
who was not part of the official scientific establishment,
initially wrote down the idea of the telephone and submitted
his manuscript to one of the most famous journals of the
time, the Poggendorffschen
Annalen,
his work was rejected as unusable. That is the power of
judgement in our time! One simply has to face up to these
things in a fully objective manner.
Or there are
occasional fine examples which characterize the judicial
competence of the trendsetters among those who are
responsible for administering, say, our cultural life. And
the general public moving along the broad highway is
completely spellbound by what is deemed acceptable by these
standards today. No country is better or worse than any
other.
Take the case
of Adalbert Stifter, [ Note
4 ]
a significant writer. He wanted to become a grammar school
teacher. Unfortunately he was thought to be totally
unsuitable, not talented enough for such a post.
Coincidentally a certain Baroness Mink, who had nothing to do
with judging the ability of grammar school teachers, heard
about Adalbert Stifter as a writer, acquainted herself with
the material he had produced so far — which he himself
did not think was particularly good — and prevailed
upon him to have it published. That caused a great stir. The
authorities suddenly took the view that there was no one
better equipped to become the schools inspector for the whole
country. And thus a person who a short while before had been
thought too incompetent to become a teacher was suddenly
appointed to supervise the work of every other teacher!
It would be an
exceedingly interesting exercise to examine these things in
all areas of our intellectual life, finishing with someone
like, for instance, Julius Robert Mayer. [ Note
5 ]
As you know, I have called into question the application
under certain circumstances of the law of conservation of
energy, which attaches to his name. But contemporary physics
defends this law unconditionally as one of its pillars. When
he went to Tübingen University, he was told one fine day
to leave, because of his performance. The university can
certainly take no credit for the discoveries he made, because
it wanted to fire him before he sat for the exams which
enabled him to become a doctor.
If all this
material were seen in context, it would reveal an exceedingly
important element in contemporary cultural history; an
element through which it would be possible to demonstrate the
weakness of this age of materialistic progress in recognizing
the significance of spiritual events.
Such things
have to be taken into account when taking full stock of the
hostile forces opposing the intervention of spiritual
movements. It is necessary to be aware of the general level
of judgement which is applied in our time, an age which is
excessively arrogant, precisely about its non-existent
capacity to reach the right conclusions.
It was, after
all, a very characteristic event that many of the things
traditionally preserved by secret societies, which were at
pains to prevent them reaching the public, should suddenly be
published by a woman, Blavatsky, in a book called Isis
Unveiled. Of course people were shocked when they
realized that this book contained a great deal of the
material which they had always kept under lock and key. And
these societies, I might add, were considerably more
concerned about their locks and keys than is our present
Anthroposophical Society.
It was
certainly not the intention of the Anthroposophical Society
to secrete away everything contained in the lecture cycles.
At a certain point I was requested to make the material,
which I otherwise discuss verbally, accessible to a larger
circle. And since there was no time to revise the lectures
they were printed as manuscripts in a form in which they
would otherwise not have been published — not because I
did not want to publish the material, but because I did not
want to publish it in this form and, furthermore, because
there was concern that it should be read by people who don't
have the necessary preparation in order to prevent
misunderstanding. Even so, it is now possible to acquire
every lecture cycle, even for the purpose of attacking us.
The societies
which kept specific knowledge under lock and key and made
people swear oaths that they would not reveal any of it, made
a better job of protecting these things. They knew that
something special must have occurred when a book suddenly
appeared which revealed something of significance in the
sense that we have discussed. As for the insignificant
material — well, you need only go to one of the
side-streets in Paris and you can buy the writings of the
secret societies by the lorry load. As a rule these
publications are worthless.
But Isis
Unveiled was not worthless. Its content was substantive
enough to identify the knowledge which it presented as
something original, through which was revealed the ancient
wisdom which had been carefully guarded until that moment.
As I said,
those who reacted with shock imagined that someone must have
betrayed them. I have discussed this repeatedly from a
variety of angles in previous lectures. [ Note
6 ]
But I now want rather to characterize the judgement of the
world, because that is particularly relevant to the history
of the movement. After all, it was not difficult to
understand that someone who had come into the possession of
traditional knowledge might have suggested it to Blavatsky
for whatever reason, and it need not have been a particularly
laudable one. It would not be far from the truth to state
that the betrayal occurred in one or a number of secret
societies and that Blavatsky was chosen to publish the
material.
There was a
good reason to make use of her, however. And here we come to
a chapter in tracing our cultural history which is really
rather peculiar. At the time there was very little talk of a
subject which today is on everyone's lips: psychoanalysis.
But Blavatsky enabled the people of sound judgement who came
into contact with this peculiar development to experience
something in a living way which made what has been written so
far by the various leading authorities in the psychoanalytic
field appear amateurish in the extreme. For what is it that
psychoanalysis wishes to demonstrate?
Where
psychoanalysis is correct in a certain sense is in its
demonstration that there is something in the depths of human
nature which, in whatever form it exists there, can be raised
into consciousness; that there is something present in the
body which, when it is raised to consciousness, appears as
something spiritual. It is, of course, an extremely primitive
action for a psychoanalyst to raise what remains of past
experience from the depths of the human psyche in this way;
past experience which has not been assimilated intensively
enough to satisfy the emotional needs of a person, so that it
sinks to the bottom, as it were, and settles there as
sediment, creating an unstable rather than a stable
equilibrium. But once brought into consciousness it is
possible to come to terms with such experiences, thus
liberating the human being from their unhealthy presence.
Karl Jung
[ Note
7 ]
is particularly interesting. It occurred to him that
somewhere in the depths — of course there is some
difficulty in defining where — there are all the
experiences with which the human being has failed to come to
terms since birth; that embedded in the individual psyche
there are all kinds of ancestral and cultural experiences
stretching far back. And today some poor soul goes to his
therapist who psychoanalyses him and discovers something so
deep-seated in the psyche that it did not originate in his
present life, but came through his father, grandfather,
great-grandfather and so on, until we arrive at the ancient
Greeks who experienced the Oedipus problem. It passed down
through the blood and today, when these Oedipal feelings make
their presence felt in the human psyche, they can be
psychoanalysed away. Furthermore, people believe that they
have discovered some very interesting connections through
their ability to psychoanalyse away what lies in the far
distant past of one's civilization.
The only
problem is that these are thoroughly unscientific research
methods. You need only have a basic knowledge of
anthroposophy to know that all kinds of things can be
extracted from the depths of the human psyche. First there is
our life before birth, the things which the human being has
experienced before he descended into the physical world, and
then there are those things which he has experienced in
earlier lives on earth. That takes you from a dilettantish
approach to reality! But one also learns to recognize how the
human psyche contains in condensed form, as it were, the
secrets of the cosmos. Indeed, that was the view of past
ages. That is why the human being was described as a
microcosm.
What we
encounter as psychoanalysis today really is dilettantish in
the extreme. On the one hand it is psychologically amateurish
because it does not recognize that at certain levels physical
and spiritual life become one. It considers the superficial
life of the soul in abstract terms, and does not advance to
the level where this soul life weaves creatively in the blood
and in the breathing — in other words, where it is
united with our so-called material functions. But the
physical life is also amateurishly conceived, because it is
observed purely in its outer physical aspects and there is no
understanding that the spiritual is present everywhere in
physical life, and above all in the human organism. When
these two amateurish views are brought together in such a way
that the one is supposed to illuminate the other, as in
psychoanalysis, then we are simply left with dilettantism.
Well, the
manifestation of this kind of amateurism may be seen with
Blavatsky from a psychological perspective. A stimulus may
have come from somewhere, through some betrayal. This
stimulus had the same effect as if a wise and invisible
psychiatrist had triggered within her a great amount of
knowledge which originated in her own personality rather than
from ancient writings.
Up to the
fifteenth century or thereabouts it was not an infrequent
occurrence for visions of cosmic secrets to be triggered
within human beings by some particularly characteristic
physical happening. Later this became seen as an extremely
mystical event. The tale told about Jakob Boehme, [ Note
8 ]
who had a magnificent vision as he looked at a pewter bowl,
is admired because people do not know that up to the
fifteenth century it was very common for an apparently minor
stimulus to provoke in human beings tremendous visions of
cosmic secrets.
But it became
increasingly rare, due to the increasing dominance of the
intellect. Intellectualism is connected with a specific
development of the brain. The brain calcifies, as it were,
and becomes hardened. This cannot, of course, be demonstrated
anatomically and physiologically, but it can be shown
spiritually. This hardened brain simply does not permit the
inner vision of human beings to rise to the surface of
consciousness.
And now I have
to say something extremely paradoxical, which is nevertheless
true. A greater hardening of the brain took place in men,
ignoring exceptions which, of course, exist both in men and
women — which is not to say that this is a particular
reason for female brains to celebrate, for at the end of the
nineteenth century they became hard enough too. But it was
nevertheless men who were ahead in terms of a more pronounced
intellectualism and hardening of the brain. And that is
connected with their inability to form judgements.
This was
exactly the same time at which the secrecy surrounding the
knowledge of ancient times was still very pronounced. It
became obvious that this knowledge had little effect on men.
They learnt it by rote as they rose through the degrees. They
were not really affected by it and kept it under lock and
key. But if someone wished to make this ancient wisdom flower
once more, there was a special experiment he could try, and
that was to make a small dose of this knowledge, which he
need not even necessarily have understood himself, available
to a woman whose brain might have been prepared in a special
way — for Blavatsky's brain was something quite
different from the brains of other nineteenth-century women.
Thus, material which was otherwise dried-up old knowledge was
able to ignite, in a manner of speaking, in these female
brains through the contrast with what was otherwise available
as culture; was able to stimulate Blavatsky in the same way
that the psychiatrist stimulates the human psyche. By this
means she was able to find within herself what had been
forgotten altogether by that section of mankind which did not
belong to the secret societies, and had been kept carefully
under lock and key and not understood by those who did
belong. In this way what I might describe as a cultural
escape valve was created which allowed this knowledge to
emerge.
But at the same
time there was no basis on which it could have been dealt
with in a sensible manner. For Madame Blavatsky was certainly
no logician. While she was able to use her personality to
reveal cosmic secrets, she was not capable of presenting
these things in a form which could be justified before the
modern scientific mind.
Now just ask
yourselves how, given the paucity of judgement with which
spiritual phenomena were received, was there any chance of
correctly assessing their re-emergence only twenty years
later in a very basic and dilettantish form in
psychoanalysis? How was proper account to be taken of
something which had the potential to become an overwhelming
experience, but to which psychoanalysis can only aspire once
it has been cleansed and clarified and stands on a firm
basis; when it is no longer founded on the blood which has
flowed down the generations, but encompasses a true
understanding of cosmic relationships? How was such
experience, which presents a magnificent uncaricatured
counter-image to today's impaired psychoanalytical research,
to be assimilated adequately within a wider context in an age
in which the ability to form true judgements was such as I
have described? In this respect there were some interesting
experiences to be had.
Let me
illustrate this with an example of how difficult it is in our
modern age to make oneself understood if one wants to appeal
to wider, more generous powers of judgement; you will see
from the remainder of the lectures how necessary it is that I
deal with these apparently purely personal matters.
There was a
period at the turn of the century in Berlin during which a
number of Giordano Bruno societies were being established,
including a Giordano Bruno League. Its membership included
some really excellent people who had a thorough interest in
everything contemporary which merited the concentration of
one's ideas, feelings and will. And in the abstract way in
which these things happen in our age, the Giordano Bruno
League also referred to the spirit. A well-known figure
[ Note
9 ]
who belonged to this League titled his inaugural lecture “No
Matter without Spirit”. But all this lacked real
perspective, because the spirit and the ideas which were
being pursued there were fundamentally so abstract that they
could not
approach the reality of the world. What annoyed me
particularly was that these people introduced the concept of
monism at every available opportunity. This was always
followed with the remark that the modern
age had escaped from the dualism of the Middle Ages. I was
annoyed by the waffle about monism and the amateurish
rejection of dualism. I was annoyed by the vague, pantheistic
reference to the spirit: spirit which is present, well,
simply everywhere. The word became devoid of content. I found
all that pretty hard to take. Actually I came into conflict
with the speaker immediately after that first lecture on “No
Matter without Spirit”, which did not go down well at
all. But then all that monistic carrying on became more and
more upsetting, so I decided to tackle these people in the
hope that I could at least inject some life into their powers
of discernment. And since a whole series of lectures had
already been devoted to tirades against the obscurantism of
the Middle Ages, to the terrible dualism of scholasticism, I
decided to do something to shake up their powers of
judgement. I am currently accused of having been a rabid
disciple of Haeckel at that time.
I gave a
lecture on Thomas Aquinas [ Note
10 ]
and said, in brief, that there was no justification to refer
to the Middle Ages as obscurantist, specifically in respect
of the dualism of Thomism and scholasticism. As monism was
being used as a catchword, I
wanted to prove that Thomas of Aquinas was a real monist. But
what at present is conceived as merely materialistic monism
should not alone be called monism, but whoever sees the
world-principle in a unity, in a monon, must be called a
monist. Therefore I said: certainly Thomas of Aquinas did
that, for he surely saw the monon in the unified divinity
which underlies everything present in the world as creation.
One
had to be clear that Thomas Aquinas had intended on the one
hand to investigate the world through physical research and
intellectual knowledge but, on the other hand, that he wanted
to supplement this intellectual knowledge with the truths of
revelation. But he had done that precisely to gain access to
the unifying principle of the world. He had simply used two
approaches. The worst thing for the present age would be if
it could not develop sufficiently broad concepts to embrace
some sort of historical perspective.
In short, I
wanted to inject some fluidity into their dried-out brains.
But it was in vain and had a quite extraordinary effect. To
begin with, it had not the slightest meaning to the members
of the Giordano Bruno League. They were all Lutheran
protestants. It is appalling, they said; we make every
attempt to deal Catholicism a mortal blow, and now a member
of this self-same Giordano Bruno League comes along to defend
it! They had not the slightest idea what to make of it. And
yet they were among the most enlightened people of their
time. But it is through this kind of thing that one learns
about powers of discrimination; specifically, the willingness
to take a broadly based view of something which, above all,
did not rely on theoretical formulations, but aimed to make
real progress on the path to the spirit, to gain real access
to the spiritual world.
Because whether
or not we gain access to the spiritual world does not depend
on whether we have this or that theory about the spirit or
matter, but whether we are in a position to achieve a real
experience of the spiritual world. Spiritualists believe very
firmly that all their actions are grounded in the spirit, but
their theories are completely devoid of it. They most
certainly do not lead human beings to the spirit. One can be
a materialist, no less, and possess a great deal of spirit.
It, too, is real spirit, even if it has lost its way. Of
course this lost spirit need not be presented as something
very valuable. But having got lost, deluding itself that it
considers matter to be the only reality, it is still filled
with more spirit than the kind of unimaginative absence of
anything spiritual at all which seeks the spirit by material
means because it cannot find any trace of spirit within
itself.
When you look
back, therefore, at the beginnings, you have to understand
the great difficulty with which the revelations of the
spiritual world entered the physical world in the last third
of the nineteenth century. Those beginnings have to be
properly understood if the whole meaning and the
circumstances governing the existence of the movement are to
make sense. You need to understand, above all, how serious
was the intention in certain circles not to allow anything
which would truly lead to the spirit to enter the public
domain. There can be no doubt that the appearance of
Blavatsky was likely to jolt very many people who were not to
be taken lightly. And that is indeed what happened. Those
people who still preserved some powers of discrimination
reached the conclusion that here there was something which
had its source within itself. One need only apply some
healthy common sense and it spoke for itself. But there were
nevertheless many people whose interests would not be served
by allowing this kind of stimulus to flow into the world.
But it had
arrived in the form of Blavatsky who, in a sense, handled her
own inner revelation in a naive and helpless manner. That is
already evident in the style of her writings and was
influenced by much that was happening around her. Indeed, do
not believe that there was any difficulty —
particularly with H.P. Blavatsky — for those who wanted
to ensure that the world should not accept anything of a
spiritual nature, to attach themselves to her entourage. In a
sense she was gullible because of her naive and helpless
attitude to her own inner revelations. Take the affair with
the sliding doors through which the Mahatma Letters were
apparently inserted, when in fact they had been written and
pushed in by someone outside. The person who pushed them in
deceived Blavatsky and the world. Then, of course, it was
very easy to tell the world that she was a fraud. But do you
not understand that Blavatsky herself could have been
deceived? For she was prone to an extraordinary gullibility
precisely because of the special lack of hardness, as I would
describe it, of her brain.
The problem is
an exceedingly complicated one and demands, like everything
of a true spiritual nature which enters the world in our
time, a quality of discernment, a healthy common sense. It is
not exactly evidence of healthy common sense to judge
Adalbert Stifter incapable of becoming a teacher and
subsequently, when the nod came — in this case it was
again due to a woman, and probably one with a less sclerotic
brain than all those officials — to find him suitable
to inspect all those he had not been allowed to join.
A healthy
common sense is required to understand what is right. But
there are some peculiar views about this healthy common
sense. Last year I said that what anthroposophy had to say
from the spiritual world could be tested by healthy common
sense. One of my critics came to the conclusion that it was a
wild-goose chase to talk about healthy common sense, because
everyone with a scientific education knew that reason which
was healthy understood next to nothing, and anybody who
claimed to understand anything was not healthy. That is the
stage we have reached in our receptivity to things spiritual.
These examples
show you how contemporary attitudes have affected the whole
movement. For it is almost inevitable — particularly
given someone as difficult to understand as Blavatsky —
that such an atmosphere should lead to a variation of the one
message: any clever person today, anyone with healthy common
sense, will say ignorabimus; [ Note
11 ]
anyone who does not say ignorabimus must be either mad or a
swindler.
If we really
want to understand our times in order to gain some insight
into the conditions governing the existence of the
anthroposophical movement, then this must not be seen purely
as the malicious intent of a few individuals. It has to be
seen as something which in all countries, in contemporary
mankind, belongs to the flavour of our times. Then, however,
we will be able to imbue the strong and courageous stand we
should adopt with something which, if one looks at our age
from an anthroposophical point of view, should not be omitted
— despite the decisive, spiritually decisive, rejection
of our opponents' position — compassion. It is
necessary to have compassion in spite of everything, because
the clarity of judgement in our times has been obscured.
Continued in the next issue of SCR
Thanks to The Rudolf Steiner Archive
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