We
shall now go forward from the thoughts which were intended to
prepare for the explanations of human destiny or karma. From the
abstract element of thought we shall go forward to real life.
Step by step, we shall bring before our souls the several domains
of life into which man is placed, in order to derive from the
constituents of life the foundations for a characterisation of
karma, of human destiny.
Man,
after all, belongs to the whole universe, and in a far wider
sense than we are wont to think. He is a member of the universe,
and without it he is really nothing. I have often used the
comparison with a member of the human body, say a finger. It is a
finger as long as it is on the human body; the moment it is cut
off from the body, it is no longer a finger. Outwardly,
physically, it is still the same; and yet, it is no longer a
finger when it is cut off from the human body.
Likewise,
man is no longer man if he is lifted out of the universal
world-existence. For to this world-existence he belongs, and
without it he can neither be looked upon nor understood as man at
all.
Now
as we saw again in yesterday's lecture, the world-environment of
man is naturally divided into distinct regions. There to begin
with, is the lifeless region of the world which in common
parlance we call the mineral. We only become like this mineral or
lifeless region of the world when we have laid aside our body;
when – as regards this body – we have passed through
the gate of death. With our true being, we never really become
like this lifeless world. Only the bodily form which we have laid
aside becomes like it.
Thus,
on the one hand, we see that which man leaves behind him in the
lifeless kingdom — the physical corpse. And on the other
hand, we see the far-spread lifeless universe of Nature,
crystalline and non-crystalline. We human beings, as long as we
are living on the earth, are quite unlike this mineral world.
This too, I have often pointed out. We in our human form are at
once destroyed when we are relinquished as corpse to the mineral
world. In the mineral world we are dissolved away, that is to
say, what holds our form together has nothing in common with the
mineral. Even from this fact it is evident that man, as he lives
in the physical world, can receive practically no influences from
the mineral as such.
By
far the widest influences which he does actually receive from the
mineral nature come to him via the senses. We see the mineral, we
hear it, we perceive its warmth; in short, we perceive it through
the senses. Our other relations to the mineral are very slight.
You need but think how little of the actual mineral nature comes
into relation to us in our earthly life. The salt with which we
salt our food is mineral; so are a few other things which we take
in with our food. But by far the greater part of the food the
human being absorbs comes from the plant and the animal kingdoms.
Moreover, what he absorbs from the mineral kingdom bears a
remarkable relation to what he receives of mineral nature through
his senses, purely as psychological impressions, namely as
sense-perception. In this connection you should again observe an
important point which I have often mentioned here. The human
brain weighs on the average 1,500 grammes. That is a pretty fair
weight. If it pressed with its full weight on the vessels that
are underneath it, they would be utterly crushed. It does not
press so heavily, for it is subject to a certain law. I described
it again a short while ago. When we put a body in a liquid, it
loses some of its weight. You can investigate it if you have a
balance. Imagine this vessel of water removed, to begin with. You
weigh the body which is suspended here; it has a certain weight.
Then put the vessel of water beneath it, so that the body hanging
from the beam is steeped in water. Immediately the equilibrium is
upset. The beam of the balance goes down on the other side, for
the body has become lighter. And if you now investigate how much,
it will prove to have become as much lighter as is represented by
the weight of the liquid it displaces. That is to say, if the
liquid be water, the body — immersed in the water —
will become lighter by the amount of weight of the body of water
it displaces. It is the well-known principle of Archimedes, who,
as I told you, found it when in his bath. He sat in his bath, and
found his leg grow lighter or heavier, according as he laid it in
the water or lifted it out. Then he exclaimed: “Eureka!”
(I have found it).
It
is a thing of great importance but important things, too, are
sometimes forgotten. For if the art of engineering had not
forgotten this principle of Archimedes, probably one of the worst
elemental catastrophes of recent times would not have happened as
it did, in Italy. Such things arise even in the outer life, owing
to the lack of clarity and synthesis in the prevailing science.
Be
that as it may, the body loses in weight by the weight of the
liquid it displaces. Now the brain is immersed entirely in the
cerebro-spinal fluid. It swims in the cerebral fluid. —
Here and there, you can already find it recognised in science
that man, inasmuch as he is solid, is like a kind of fish. Yes,
he is really a fish; for he consists, as to 90 per cent, of a
body of water, and in this the solid parts are swimming, like the
fish in water. — So, too, the brain is swimming in the
cerebro-spinal water; and it thereby becomes so much lighter that
it only weighs 20 grammes. The brain only weighs 20 grammes —
only with 20 grammes does it press on the surface beneath it.
Think what this means; then you will realise how strongly,
inasmuch as our brain is floating in the cerebro-spinal fluid, we
human beings have the tendency to become free of the earth —
and that in an organ of such importance. We think with an organ
that is not subject to earthly gravity; we think in direct
opposition to earthly gravity. The organ of our thought is first
relieved of earthly weight.
Bear
in mind the wide range and immense importance of the impressions
you receive through your senses, which you confront with your own
free will. Think, by comparison, of the minute influences you
receive from salt, and other such substances taken as food or
condiment. Then you will come to the conclusion that what comes
from the mineral kingdom and has a direct influence on man is
also as 20 to 1,500 grammes ... so great is the predominance of
what we receive as mere sense-impressions, where we are
independent of the stimuli — for our sense-impressions do
not take hold of us and rend us. Moreover, those things in us
which are still subject to earthly gravity like the mineral
condiments or constituents of our food, are generally such as to
preserve us inwardly. Salt has in itself a preserving, a
sustaining, a refreshing power.
Man,
therefore, is on a large scale independent of the surrounding
mineral world. He takes into himself from the mineral world only
that which has no immediate influence upon his being. He moves in
the mineral world freely and independently.
Indeed,
my dear friends, if it were not for this freedom and independence
in the mineral world, what we call human freedom would not be
there at all. The mineral world, we may truly say, exists as the
necessary counterpart to human freedom. If there were no mineral
world, neither should we be free beings. The moment we rise into
the plant-world, we are no longer independent of it. It only
seems to us as though we looked out over the world of plants just
as we do over the crystals, over the far-spread mineral realm. In
reality it is not so. There is the plant-world spread out before
us. We human beings are born into the world as breathing, living
beings, endowed with a specific metabolism. All this is far more
dependent on our environment than the eyes and ears and other
organs which convey our sense-impressions. The far and wide
expanse of the plant-world lives by virtue of the ether, which
pours in on to the earth from all sides. Man, too, is subject to
this ether. When we are born and we begin to grow as little
children, when forces of growth make themselves felt in us, these
are etheric forces. The very forces which enable the plants to
grow are living in us as etheric forces. We carry the ether-body
within us. The physical body contains our eyes and our ears ...
As I explained just now, this physical body has nothing in common
with the remainder of the physical world. This is proved by the
very fact that, as the corpse, it falls to pieces in the physical
world. But it is quite different with our etheric-body. By virtue
of the etheric-body we are very much related to the world of
plants.
Now
you must think of this. That which develops in us as we grow, is,
after all, connected very deeply with our destiny. Only to choose
grotesque and radical examples, we may have grown in such a way
as to be short and thick-set, or tall and lanky, as the case may
be; or so as to receive this or that shape of nose. In short, the
way we grow is not without its influence on our external form.
And this is certainly connected, in however loose a way, with our
destiny. But our way of growth is expressed not only in these
crude externals. If our instruments and methods of investigation
were only delicate enough, we should discover that every person
has a different composition of the liver, of the spleen, or of
the brain. “Liver” is not simply “liver”;
it differs — though in its finer aspects, needless to say —
in every human being. And this is connected with the same forces
which cause plants to grow. As we look out over the
plant-bedecked earth, we should be conscious: That which pours in
from the wide ether-spaces, causing the plants to grow, works in
us human beings too, bringing about the original and native
predisposition of each one of us, and this has very much indeed
to do with our destiny. For it belongs very deeply to his fate,
whether a person receives out of the ether-world this or that
constitution of liver, lung or brain. Man sees, however, only the
outer aspect of it all. When we look out over the mineral world
we see, more or less, what is contained in it. That is why people
are scientifically so fond of the mineral world (if, nowadays,
one can speak of scientific fondness at all). They like it,
because it contains in itself everything they want to find. For
the sustaining forces of the plant-world, this is no longer so.
You can perceive at once, as I have told you, the moment you rise
to Imaginative Cognition, that the minerals are self-contained
within the mineral kingdom; such is the nature of the mineral.
That which sustains the plant-world does not appear externally at
all to everyday consciousness. To find it we must penetrate into
the universe more deeply.
What
is it then that is working in the plant-kingdom? What is it that
is working so that the forces pour in from the wide ether-spaces,
causing the plants to spring and sprout from the earth, and in us
too, bringing about our growth — the finer composition of
our body? What is it that is working? Here, my dear friends, we
come to the Beings of the Third Hierarchy, so-called — the
Angeloi, Archangeloi and Archai. They are invisible to us, but
without them there would not be that ebb and flow of the etheric
forces, causing the plants to grow, and working also in
ourselves, inasmuch as we too carry in us the same forces which
bring about plant-growth. Not to remain obtuse in knowledge, when
we approach the plant-world and its forces we can no longer
adhere to the merely outward and visible.
And
we must also be aware that in the body-free condition between
death and a new birth, we develop our relations to these Beings —
Angeloi, Archangeloi, Archai. And according to the kind of
relations we develop, so does our internal karma take shape: what
I might call our nature-karma, that of our karma which depends
upon the way our ether-body compounds the living fluids in us,
making us grow short or tall, and so forth ...
However,
the Beings of the Third Hierarchy have only a certain degree of
power. It is not owing to their power alone that plants can grow.
In this respect, the Third Hierarchy — Angeloi, Archangeloi
and Archai — are in the service of higher Beings.
Nevertheless, that which we live through before we come down from
the spiritual world into our physical body — that which
determines the finer constitution of our body — is brought
about by our conscious meeting with these Beings of the Third
Hierarchy, we having prepared ourselves for this during our
former life on earth. With the direction, with the guidance we
receive from them to form our ether-body from the wide
ether-spaces, all this is achieved shortly before we descend from
super-physical into physical existence.
Thus
we must first observe that which enters into our destiny or karma
out of our own internal constitution. Perhaps we may describe
this portion of karma by the terms “well-being” or
“comfort” and “discomfort, ” “content”
and “discontent” in life. For our well-being or
contentedness or our discontent in life are connected with this
inner quality which is ours by virtue of our ether-body. Now
there is a second element living in our karma. It depends upon
the fact that not only the plant-kingdom but the animal kingdom
also, peoples the earth. Think what different kinds of animals
there are in the different regions of the earth. The animal
atmosphere, so to speak, is different in the one region and the
other.
But
you will certainly admit that man also lives in this atmosphere
in which the animals are living. It may seem grotesque nowadays,
but that is only because the people of today are unaccustomed to
observe such things. For instance, there are districts where the
elephant is at home. These are simply the districts where the
universe so works down on to the earth that elephant life can
arise. Do you suppose, my dear friends — if this be a
portion of the earth which the elephant inhabits, where the
elephant-creating forces are working in from the cosmos —
do you suppose that these forces are absent if a human being
happens to be there? They are still there, needless to say, and
so it is with all animal nature. Just as the plant-forming forces
from the far ether-spaces are there, wherever we are living (for
not wood walls, nor brick, nor even concrete will keep them from
us; we here are living in the forces that form the plant-world of
the Jura Alps) so, too, if he happens to be in a region where the
earth-nature is such that the elephant can live, the human being
also lives under the elephant-creating forces.
I
can very well imagine many a quality of animals, both large and
small, living in the souls of men! There are the animals
inhabiting the earth, and as you have now learnt, man lives in
the self-same atmosphere. And all this really works upon him. Of
course, it affects him differently from how it affects the
animals, for man has other qualities than they; man has
additional members of his being. It affects him differently; if
it did not, man in the elephantine sphere would also grow into an
elephant, which he does not do. Moreover, man constantly raises
himself out of these things that work upon him. Nevertheless, he
lives in this atmosphere.
All
that exists in the human astral body is dependent upon the
atmosphere in which he lives. And as we said just now that his
well-being, his contentment or discontent, depends on the
plant-nature of the earth, so may we say at this point: The
sympathies and antipathies which we unfold as human beings in our
earthly life, and bring with us from the pre-earthly, depend upon
the forces constituting, so to speak, the animal atmosphere.
The
elephant has a trunk, and thick, pillar-like legs; the stag has
antlers and so forth. Here we behold the animal-creating,
animal-forming forces. In man, these forces only show themselves
in their effect upon his astral body, and it is in their effect
upon the astral body that they beget the sympathies and
antipathies which every human individual brings with him from the
spiritual world.
Observe
them, my dear friends, these sympathies and antipathies. Observe
to what a large extent they guide us throughout life.
Undoubtedly, and with good justification in a certain respect, we
are brought up and trained so as to grow out of our strong
sympathies and antipathies. Yet in the first place they are
there. One man has sympathy for this, another man for that; one
man for sculpture, another for in music: one prefers fair people,
another has sympathy for dark people. These are the strong,
radical sympathies; but our whole life is pervaded by sympathies
and antipathies. In reality they depend for their existence on
that which engenders all the variety of animal formations.
Thus
you may ask, what do we human beings carry within us, in our own
inner being, corresponding to the animal forms that are outside
us? They are a hundred- and a thousand-fold — these forms.
So are the forms of our sympathies and antipathies, only that the
greater part remains in our unconscious — or
sub-consciousness.
This
is another world — a third world. First is the world where
we feel no essential dependence — that is the mineral.
Second is the world in which Angeloi, Archangeloi and Archai
live. That is the world which brings forth the springing,
sprouting world of plants, and which endows us with our inner
quality whereby we bring well-being or discomfort with us into
life, so that we feel, by virtue of our nature, happy or
miserable, as the case may be.
Out
of this world is taken that which determines our destiny by
virtue of our inner constitution — our individual etheric
humanity. Now we come to a third element deeply conditioning our
destiny, namely our sympathies and antipathies. And, after all,
it is through these sympathies and antipathies that many other
things are brought into our life, belonging to our destiny in a
far wider sense than the sympathies and antipathies themselves.
One person is carried into far distances by his sympathies and
antipathies. He lives in this or that part of the world because
his sympathies have taken him there, and in that distant land,
the detailed events of his destiny will now unfold.
Yes,
these sympathies and antipathies are deeply involved in all our
human destiny. They have their life in the world in which not now
the Third but the Second Hierarchy are living: the Exusiai,
Dynamis and Kyriotetes. In the animal kingdom lives the earthly
image of the sublime, majestic formations of this Hierarchy. And
what these Beings implant in us, when we commune with them
between death and a new birth, lives in the innate sympathies and
antipathies which we bring with us from the spiritual world into
the physical.
When
you see through these things, such ordinary concepts as that of
“heredity” appear really very childish. Before I can
carry in me any inherited characteristic of my father or mother,
I must first have unfolded the sympathies or antipathies for this
characteristic of father or mother. It does not depend on my
having inherited the characteristic by a mere lifeless causality
of Nature. It all depends whether I had sympathy for these
characteristics.
As
to why I had sympathy for them — that is a question we
shall deal with in the coming lectures. But to speak of heredity
in the way they generally do in modern science is childish,
although science thinks itself so clever.
They
even speak today of the inheritance of specifically spiritual and
psychological characteristics. Genius is supposed to be inherited
from ancestors, and when a man of genius appears in the world,
they try to gather up among his forebears the several portions
which, they suppose, should produce this genius as a resultant.
Well, that is a strange method of proof. A sensible method would
be to show that once a man of genius is there, his genius is then
transmitted by inheritance. But if they looked for the proof of
that, they would come upon very strange things ... Goethe, too,
had a son; and so had other men of genius.
Nevertheless,
as I said, that would be the way to prove it. But when a genius
is there, to look for certain of his qualities among his
forebears is just as though you were to prove that when I fall in
the water and am pulled out again, then I am wet. It does not
prove that I have much to do, in my essential nature, with the
water that is dripping from me.
Naturally,
having been born into this stream of inheritance through my
sympathy for its characteristics, I have them about me, as
“inherited characteristics.” Just as I have the water
about me, when I fall in and am pulled out again. People's ideas
in this respect are grotesquely childish. For the sympathies and
antipathies already emerge in man's pre-earthly life. They give
him his innermost stamp. With them he enters into his earthly
life; with them he builds his destiny from the pre-earthly.
Now
we can readily imagine: In a former life on earth we were with
another human being. Manifold things resulted from our life
together, and found their continuation in the life between death
and a new birth ... There, under the influence of the forces of
the Hierarchies, in the living Thoughts and cosmic Impulses,
there is fashioned and created what shall pass over from the
experiences of our former lives on earth into the next life, to
be lived out further. We need the sympathies and antipathies so
as to unfold the impulses through which we find one another in
life. Formed in the life between death and a new birth, under the
influence of Exusiai, Dynamis, Kyriotetes our sympathies and
antipathies enable us to find in life the human beings with whom
we must now continue living, according to our former lives on
earth. All this takes shape out of the inner structure of our
human being. Naturally, manifold errors occur in our acquiring
these sympathies and antipathies. Such aberrations, however, are
balanced out again in the course of destiny through many lives on
earth.
Here,
then, we have a second constituent of destiny or karma —
the sympathies and antipathies. So we may say:
The
first constituent of karma: well-being or inner comfort mid
discomfort. The second: sympathies and antipathies. And,
as we come to the sympathies and antipathies in human destiny, we
have ascended into the sphere in which lie the forces for the
forming of the animal kingdom.
Now,
we rise into the human kingdom as such. For we live not only with
the plant-world; we live not only with the animal; we live, above
all, with other human beings in the world. This is the most
important of all for our destiny. That is quite another “living
together” than the common life with plants and animals. It
is a living-together through which is fashioned what is of main
importance in our destiny.
The
impulses which bring about the peopling of the earth with human
beings, work on humanity alone. So there arises the question,
what impulses are these which work only upon humanity? Here we
can let purely external observation tell its tale. It is a course
which we have often followed.
Truly,
our life is guided — from the other side of it, so to speak
— with a far greater wisdom than is ours in guiding it from
this side. Often in later life we meet a human being who becomes
of extreme importance in our life. When we think back: How did we
live until the moment when we met him? Then our entire life seems
like the very pathway to the meeting. It is as though we had
tended every step, that we might find him at the right moment —
or that we might find him at all, at a certain moment.
We
need only ponder the following: Think, my dear friends, what it
signifies for fully conscious human reflection. Think what it
means to find another human being in a given year of life,
thenceforth to experience, work or achieve — whatever it
may be — in common with him [or her]. Think what it means,
think what emerges as the impulse that led up to it, when we
reflect on this quite consciously. When we begin to think: How
did it happen that we met him? It will probably occur to us that
we first had to experience an event with which many other people
were connected, for otherwise the opportunity would not have
arisen for us to meet him in this life. And, that this event
might happen, we had to undergo still another event ... and so
on. We find ourselves in the midst of the most complex chain of
circumstances, all of which had to occur, into all of which we
had to enter, so as to reach this or that decisive experience.
And now we may perhaps reflect: If the task had been set us —
I will not say at the age of one, but let us say at the age of
fourteen — to solve the riddle consciously: to bring about
in our fiftieth year a decisive meeting with another human being;
if we imagine that we had to solve it consciously, like a
mathematical problem — think what it would involve!
Consciously,
we human beings are so appallingly stupid, whereas what happens
with us in the world is so infinitely wise, when we take into
account such things as these. When we begin to think along these
lines, we become aware of the immense intricacy and deep
significance in the workings of our destiny or karma. And this
all goes on in the domain of the human kingdom. All that thus
happens to us is deep in the unconscious life. Until the moment
when a decisive event approaches us, it lies in the unconscious.
All this takes place as though it were subject to Laws of Nature.
Yet where are the Laws of Nature that have power to bring about
such things? For the things that take place in this domain will
often contradict all natural law — or all that we elaborate
after the pattern of outer natural laws. This, too, I have often
mentioned. The external features of human life may even be cast
into the framework of mathematical laws.
Take,
for example, the life-insurance system. Life-insurance can only
prosper inasmuch as one can calculate the probable length of life
of any human being, aged, let us say, 19 or 25. If you wish to
insure your life, the policy will be made out according to the
figure of your probable length of life. As a human being of 19,
you will probably live so or so long; this figure can be
determined. But now imagine that the allotted time has run its
course. You will not feel obliged to die. At the end of their
probable length of life, two people may long ago have died. But,
on the other hand, they may be long “dead” —
according to the insurance estimate — when they find one
another in life in the decisive way I just described. These
things transcend what one can calculate for human life from outer
facts of Nature and yet they happen with inner necessity like
natural facts. We cannot but admit: With the same necessity with
which any event of Nature takes place — be it an
earthquake, or eruption, or any natural event, whether great or
small — with the same necessity two human beings meet in
life according to the paths of life which they have taken.
Thus
we here see established within the physical, another kingdom; and
in this kingdom we are living. We live not only in comfort and
discomfort, in sympathies and antipathies, but in this
realm also — in our events and experiences. We are
completely cast into this realm of the events and experiences
which determine our life by destiny.
Archai,
Archangeloi, Angeloi.
|
1.
Well-being (comfort discomfort).
|
Kyriotetes,
Dynamis, Exusiai.
|
2.
Sympathies, Antipathies
|
Seraphim,
Cherubim, Thrones.
|
3.
Events, Experiences.
|
In
this realm the Beings of the First Hierarchy — Seraphim,
Cherubim, Thrones — are working. To direct all that is
working here — every human step, every impulse of soul —
to guide it all in the world so that the destinies of men grow
out of it, a greater power is needed than works in the
plant-kingdom, a greater power than belongs to the Hierarchy of
Angeloi, Archangeloi, Archai, or to the Hierarchy of Exusiai,
Kyriotetes, Dynamis. It needs a power such as belongs to the
First Hierarchy, to the most sublime of Beings: Seraphim,
Cherubim and Thrones.
What
is lived out in this sphere lives in our true “I”, in
our Ego-organisation, and it lives over from an earlier
earth-life.
Now
consider for a moment: you are living in an earth-life. In this
earth-life you effect this or that; perhaps you do it out of
instinct or passion or a strong impulse, or perhaps it is thought
out — either stupidly or cleverly. In any case what you
bring to pass is done in accordance with some impulse or other.
But now all you do in this way in an earth-life leads to this or
that result; it works for the happiness or the harm of some other
human being. Then comes the life between death and a new birth.
In this life between death and a new birth you have a strong
consciousness of the fact: I have done harm to another person,
and I am less perfect than I should be had I not done him harm. I
must compensate for it. The impulse, the urge arises in you to
compensate for the harm you have done. Or again, if you have done
something to another that is for his good, that helps him on,
then you look upon what you have done and you say to yourself:
That must serve to build the foundation for the general good, it
must lead to further consequences in the world. All this you can
inwardly develop. And it can give you a sense of well-being or of
discomfort according as you form the inner nature of your body in
the life between death and a new birth. It can lead you to
sympathies and antipathies, inasmuch as you build and shape your
astral body correspondingly, with the aid of the Exusiai, the
Dynamis and the Kyriotetes.
All
this, however, will not yet give you the power to transmute what
in a former life was merely a human fact, into a deed of the
cosmos. You helped another human being or you harmed him. This
must entail his meeting you in a next life on earth, and in the
meeting with him you will have to find the impulse to balance-out
the deed.
What,
to begin with, has only moral significance, must be transformed
into an outer fact — an outer event in the world. To do so,
those Beings are needed who transmute or metamorphose moral deeds
into world-deeds, cosmic deeds. They are the Beings of the First
Hierarchy: Seraphim, Cherubim, Thrones. It is they who transmute
what goes out from us in one earthly life into our experiences of
the next lives on earth. They work in the “events and
experiences” in human life.
Here
then we have the three fundamental elements of our karma. Our
inner constitution, our own internal human nature is subject to
the Third Hierarchy. Our sympathies and antipathies (which, as we
saw, already became in some sense our environment) are a concern
of the Second Hierarchy. And that which we encounter as our
actual external life is a concern of the First, the most sublime
of the hierarchies above humanity.
Thus
we perceive man's connection with the world and the whole way he
stands in it. We come to the great question, how do the many
detailed events of his destiny evolve out of these three?
He
is born to such and such parents, in such and such a home, at a
certain spot on the earth, into this or that nation, into a given
nexus of facts. But all that takes place inasmuch as he is born
of such parents, handed over to his educators, born into a
certain nation and at a certain spot on earth — all this
which enters so fatefully into his life, no matter what we say of
human freedom — is in some way dependent on these three
elements of which human destiny is composed.
All
detailed questions will be revealed to us in their true answers,
if we begin with the right foundations. Why does man get smallpox
in his twenty-fifth year, passing through perhaps extreme danger
of his life? How does some other illness or event strike down
into his life? Or some essential help through this or that older
person, through this or that nation, this or that series of outer
events — how does it come into his life? In every case we
must go back to these, the three constituents of human destiny,
whereby he is placed into the totality of the cosmic Hierarchies.
It is only in the realm of the mineral world that man moves
freely. There is the realm of his freedom.
Only
when he becomes aware of this, does he learn to put the question
of freedom in the true way. Read my Philosophy
of Freedom
, and see how much importance I attach to the point
that one should not ask about the freedom of the Will. The Will
lies deep, deep down in the unconscious, and it is nonsense to
ask about the freedom of the Will. It is only of the freedom of
Thoughts that we can speak. I drew the line very clearly in my
Philosophy of Freedom.
Man must become free in his thoughts, and the free thoughts must
give the impulse to the will — then he is free. Now with
his thoughts he lives in the mineral world. In all the rest of
his being, with which he lives in the plant, in the animal, and
in the purely human kingdom, man is subject to destiny.
Therefore, of freedom we may truly say: Out of the realms that
are ruled by the Hierarchies, the human being comes into that
realm which, in a sense, is free from them — into the
mineral kingdom, there to become free in his turn. This mineral
kingdom
— it is precisely the kingdom to which man only becomes
similar as to his corpse, when he has laid the corpse aside and
passed through the gate of death. Man in his earthly life is
independent of that kingdom which can only work to his
destruction. No wonder he is free in it, since it has no other
part nor lot in him than to destroy him the very moment it gets
him. He simply does not belong to this kingdom. Man must first
die; then only — as a corpse — can he be, even in
outer phenomenal Nature, in the kingdom in which he is free.
Man
becomes older and older, and if no accidents occur (these, too,
we shall learn to know in their karmic aspects), if he dies as an
old man, eventually as a corpse he becomes like the mineral
kingdom. As he grows older, so does he gradually come into the
sphere of the lifeless. At length he gives up his corpse —
it is separated off from him. It is no longer man —
needless to say, the corpse is no longer man. Let us look at the
mineral kingdom: it is no longer God. Just as the corpse is no
longer man, so is the mineral kingdom no longer God. What is it
then? The Godhead is in the plant, in the animal, in the human
kingdom; for we have found it there in the three Hierarchies. But
in the mineral kingdom the Godhead is not, any more than the
human corpse is man. The mineral kingdom is the corpse of the
Divine. However, as we proceed we shall encounter the strange
fact — which I shall only hint at now — that whereas
man grows older to become a corpse, the Gods grow younger ... For
they are on the other path, the path which we go through after
our death. Therefore the mineral is the youngest of the kingdoms.
Yet it is the one which is separated off by the Gods, and for
this very reason, man can live in it as in the realm of his
freedom.
Such
are the real connections. Man learns to feel himself ever more at
home in the world when he thus learns to place his sensations,
his thoughts, his feelings and impulses of will into the right
relation to the world. Moreover, only in this way can he perceive
how he is placed by destiny in the world and in relation to other
men.
Lecture 3>>>
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