In
the last lecture I spoke of how the forces of karma take shape,
and today I want to lay the foundations for acquiring an
understanding of karma through studying examples of individual
destinies. Such destinies can only be illustrations, but if we
take our start from particular examples we shall begin to
perceive how karma works in human life. It works, of course, in
as many different ways as there are human beings on the earth,
for the configuration of karma is entirely individual. And so
whenever we turn our attention to a particular case, it must be
regarded merely as an example.
Today
I shall bring forward examples I have myself investigated and
where the course of karma has become clear to me. It is of course
a hazardous undertaking to speak of individual karmic
connections, no matter how remote the examples may be, for in
referring to karma it has become customary to use expressions of
everyday language such as: “This is caused by so-and-so;
this or that blow of destiny must be due to such and such a
cause, how the man came to deserve it” ... and so forth.
But karma is by no means as simple as that, and a great deal of
utterly trivial talk goes on, particularly on this subject!
Today
we will consider certain examples of the working of karma, remote
though they may be from our immediate life. We will embark upon
the hazardous undertaking of speaking about the karma of
individuals — as far as my investigations make this
possible. I am therefore giving you examples which are to be
taken as such.
I
want to speak, first, of a well-known aestheticist and
philosopher, Friedrich Theodor Vischer. I have often
alluded to him in lectures, but today I will bring into relief
certain characteristic features of his life and personality which
can provide the basis for a study of his karma.
Friedrich
Theodor Vischer received his education at the time when German
idealistic philosophy — particularly Hegelian thought —
was in its heyday. Friedrich Theodor Vischer, a young man
pursuing his studies among people whose minds were steeped in the
Hegelian mode of thinking, adopted it himself. The absorption in
transcendental thoughts that is characteristic of Hegel strongly
appealed to Vischer. It was clear to him that, as Hegel asserts,
thought is the Divine Essence of the universe, and that when we,
as human beings, think, when we live in thoughts, we are living
in the Divine Substance.
Friedrich
Theodor Vischer was steeped in Hegelian philosophy. But he was a
person who displayed in a very marked way the traits and
characteristics of the folk from which he sprang. He had all the
traits of a typical Swabian: he was obstinate, dogmatic,
disputatious, exceedingly independent; his manner was abrupt,
off-hand. He also had very striking personal peculiarities. To
take his outward appearance first, he had beautiful blue eyes and
a reddish-brown beard, which in spite of its scrubbiness he wore
with a certain aesthetic enthusiasm! I say “aesthetic
enthusiasm” because in his writings he minces no words
about men who wear no beards, calling them “beardless
monkey-faces”! As you see, his language is anything but
restrained; all his remarks come out with the abrupt, off-handed
assurance of a typical Swabian.
He
was a man of medium height, not stout, in fact rather slight in
build, but he walked the streets holding his arms as if he were
forcing a way for himself with his elbows — which is an
exact picture of what he did in a spiritual sense! So much for
his outward appearance.
He
had a passionately independent nature and would say just what he
pleased, without any restraint whatever. It happened one day that
he had been slandered by “friends” in the Stuttgart
Council — such things are not unusual among friends! —
and he was severely reprimanded by the Council. It chanced that
on the very same day a little son was born to him — the
Robert Vischer who also made a name for himself as an
aestheticist — and the father announced the event in the
lecture-hall with the words: “Gentlemen, today I have been
given a big Wischer (rebuke/wigging) and a little
Vischer!”
It
was characteristic of him to speak very radically about things as
he found them. For example, he wrote an amusing article entitled:
“On the Foot Pest in Trains.” It enraged him to see
people sitting in a railway carriage with their feet up on the
opposite seat. He simply could not endure it and his article on
the subject is really enchanting.
What
he wrote in his book on fashions, [Mode und Zynismus.
Stuttgart, 1878.] about the ill-breeding and lack of adequate
clothing at dances and other entertainments, had better not be
mentioned here. To put it briefly, he was a very original and
forceful personality!
A
friend of mine once paid him a visit, knocking politely at the
door. I do not know whether it is a custom in Swabia, but Vischer
did not say “Come in,” or what is usually said on
such occasions. He yelled out “Glei” [Gleich]—
meaning that he would be ready immediately.
While
still comparatively young, Vischer embarked on a weighty task,
namely that of writing a work on aesthetics according to the
principles of Hegelian philosophy. These five volumes are a truly
remarkable achievement. You will find in them the strict division
into paragraphs which was habitual with Hegel, and the
characteristic definitions. If I were to read a passage to you,
you would all yawn, for it is written in the anything but popular
style of Hegel, all in abrupt definitions, such as: The Beautiful
is the appearance of the Idea in material form. The Sublime is
the appearance of the Idea in material form, but the Idea
predominates over the material form. The Comic is the appearance
of the Idea in material form, but the material form predominates
over the Idea ... and so on and so forth. These statements are
certainly not without interest, but the book goes a great deal
further. As well as the abrupt definitions, you have what is
called the “small print,” and most people when they
are reading the book leave out the large print and read only the
small — which as a matter of fact contains some of the very
cleverest writing on aesthetics that is anywhere to be found.
There
is no pedantry, no Hegelian dialectic here; it is Vischer, the
true Swabian, with all his meticulousness and at the same time
his fine and delicate feeling for the beautiful, the great and
the sublime. Here, too, you find Nature and her processes
described in a way that defies comparison, with an exemplary
freedom of style. Vischer worked at the book for many years,
bringing it to its end with unfaltering consistency.
At
the time when this work appeared,. Hegelianism was still in vogue
and appreciation was widespread. Needless to say, there were
opponents, too, but on the whole the book was widely admired. In
course of time, however, a vigorous opponent appeared on the
scenes, a ruthless critic who pulled the book to pieces until not
a shred of good was left; everything was criticised in a really
masterly style. And this critic was none other than Friedrich
Theodor Vischer himself in his later years! There is an
extraordinary charm about this critique of himself in his
Kritische Gangen (Paths of Criticism).
As
aestheticist, philosopher and man of letters, Vischer published a
wealth of material in Kritische Gangen, and subsequently
in the fine collection of essays entitled Altes und Neues
(Old and New). While still a student he wrote lyrics in an ironic
vein. In spite of the great admiration I have always had for
Vischer, I could never help being of opinion that the productions
of his student days were not even student-like, but sheer
philistinism. And this trait came out in him again in his
seventies, when he wrote a collection of poems under the
pseudonym “Schartenmayer.” Here there is
philistinism par excellence!
He
was an out-and-out philistine in regard to Goethe's Faust.
Part One ... well, he admitted there was something good in it,
but as for Part Two — he considered it a product of
senility, so many fragments patched together. He maintained that
it ought to have been quite different, and not only did he write
his Faust, der Tragödie dritter Teil [Part Three of the
Tagedy], in which he satirises Goethe's Part Two, but he
actually drew up a plan of just how Goethe ought to have written
Faust. That is philistinism and no mistake! It is almost
on a par with what du Bois-Reymond, the eminent scientist, said
in his lecture “Goethe, nothing but Goethe.” He said:
“Faust is a failure. It would have been all right if
Faust had not engaged in such tomfoolery as the invocation of
spirits or the calling up of the Earth-Spirit, but had simply and
straightforwardly invented an electrical machine or an air pump
and restored to Gretchen her good name ... ” And there is
exactly the same kind of philistinism in what Vischer says about
Faust.
Perhaps
it would not be put like this in Wurttemburg, but in my homeland
in Austria we should say that he gave Goethe's Faust a
good “Swabian thrashing”! Such expressions differ
slightly in meaning, of course, according to the districts where
they are used.
It
is these traits that are significant in Vischer. They really make
up his personality. One might also, of course, give details of
his life, but I do not propose to do that. My aim has been to
give you a picture of his personality and with this as a
foundation we can proceed to a study of his karma. Today I wanted
simply to give you the material for this study.
A
second personality of whose karma I want to speak, is Franz
Schubert, the composer. As I said, it is a daring venture to
give particular examples in this way, but it is right that they
should be given and today I shall lay the foundations.
Here
too, I shall select the features that will be needed when we come
to speak of Schubert's karma. Practically all his life he was
poor. Some time after his death, however, many persons claiming
to have been not only his acquaintances but his “friends”
were to be found in Vienna! A whole crowd of people, according to
themselves, had wanted to lend him money, spoke of him
affectionately as “little Franz” and the like. But
during his lifetime it had been a very different story!
Schubert
had, however, found one real friend. This friend, Baron von
Spaun, was an extraordinarily noble-minded man. He had cared for
Schubert with great tenderness from the latter's earliest youth,
when they were schoolfellows, and he continued to do so in later
years. In regard to karma it seems to me particularly significant
— as we shall find when we come to consider the working of
karma — that von Spaun was in a profession quite alien to
his character. He was a highly cultured man, a lover of art in
every form, and a close friend not only of Schubert but also of
Moritz von Schwind. He was deeply sensitive to everything in the
way of art. Many strange things happen in Austria — as you
know, Grillparzer was a clerk in the fiscal service — and
Spaun too, who had not the slightest taste for it, spent his
whole life in Treasury offices. He was an official engaged in
administering finance, dealing with numbers all the time. When he
reached a certain age he was appointed Director of Lotteries! He
had charge of lotteries in Austria — a task that was most
distasteful to him. But now just think what it is that a Director
of Lotteries has to control. He has, so to speak, to deal at a
high level with the passions, the hopes, the blighted
expectations, the disappointments, the dreams and superstitions
of countless human beings. Just think of what has to be taken
into account by a Director of Lotteries — a Chief Director
at that. True, you may go into his office and come out again
without noticing anything very striking. But the reality is there
nevertheless, and those who take the world and its affairs in
earnest must certainly reckon with such things.
This
man who had no part whatever in the superstitions, the
disappointments, the longings, the hopes with which he had to
deal — this man was the intimate friend of Schubert, deeply
and intensely concerned for his material as well as his spiritual
well-being. One can often be astounded, outwardly speaking, at
what is possible in the world! There is a biography of Schubert
in which it is said that he looked rather like a negro. There is not a grain of truth in it. He actually had a pleasing, attractive face. What is true, however, is that
he was poor. More often than not, even his supper, which he was
in the habit of taking in Spaun's company, was paid for with
infinite tact by the latter. Schubert had not enough money even
to hire a piano for his own use. In outward demeanour —
Spaun gives a very faithful picture here — Schubert was
grave and reserved, almost phlegmatic. But an inner, volcanic
fire could at times burst from him in a most surprising way.
A
very interesting fact is that the most beautiful motifs in
Schubert's music were generally written down in the early
morning; as soon as he had wakened from sleep he would sit down
and commit his most beautiful motifs to paper. At such times
Spaun was often with him, for as is customary among the
intellectuals of Vienna, both Schubert and Spaun liked a good
drink of an evening, and the hour was apt to get so late that
Schubert, who lived some distance away, could not be allowed to
go home but would spend the night on some makeshift bed at his
friend's house. On such occasions Spaun was often an actual
witness of how Schubert, on rising in the morning, would write
down his beautiful motifs, as though they came straight out of
sleep.
The
rather calm and peaceful exterior did not betray the presence of
the volcanic fire lying hidden in the depths of the soul. But it
was there, and it is precisely this aspect of Schubert's
personality that I must describe to you as a basis for the study
of his karma.
Let
me tell you what happened on one occasion. Schubert had been to
the Opera. He heard Gluck's Iphigenia and was enraptured
by it. He expressed his enthusiasm to his friend Spaun during and
after the performance in impassioned words, but at the same time
with restraint. His emotions were delicate and tender, not
violent. (I am selecting the particular traits we shall need for
our study.) The moment Schubert heard Gluck's Iphigenia,
he recognised it as a masterpiece of musical art. He was
enchanted with the singer Milder; and Vogl's singing so
enraptured him that he said his one wish was to be introduced to
him in order that he might pay homage at his feet. When the
performance was over, Schubert and Spaun went to the so-called
Bargerstubli in Vienna. I think they were accompanied by a
third person whose name I have not in mind at the moment. They
sat there quietly, although every now and again they spoke
enthusiastically about their experience at the Opera. Sitting
with others at a neighbouring table was a University professor
well known in this circle. As he listened to the expressions of
enthusiasm his face began to flush and became redder and redder.
Then he began to mutter to himself, and when the muttering had
gone on for a time without being commented on by the others, he
fell into a rage and shouted across the table: “Iphigenia!
— it isn't real music at all; it's trash. As for Milder,
she hasn't an idea of how to sing, let alone bring off runs or
trills! And Vogl — why he lumbers about the stage like an
elephant!”
And
now Schubert was simply not to be restrained! At any minute there
was danger of a serious hand-to-hand scuffle. Schubert, who at
other times was calm and composed, let loose his volcanic nature
in full force and it was as much as the others could do to quiet
him.
It
is important for the life we are studying that here we have a man
whose closest friend is a Treasury official, actually a Director
of Lotteries, and that the two are led together by karma.
Schubert's poverty is important in connection with his karma,
because in these circumstances there was little opportunity for
his anger to be roused in this way. Poverty restricted his social
intercourse, and it was by no means often that he could have such
a neighbour at table, or give vent to his volcanic nature.
If
we can picture what was really happening on that occasion, and if
we remember the characteristics of the people from whom Schubert
sprang, we can ask ourselves the following question. (Negative
supposition is of course meaningless in the long run, but it does
sometimes help to make things clear.) We can ask ourselves: If
the conditions had been different (of course they couldn't have
been, only, as I say, the question can make for clarification) —
if the conditions had been different, if Schubert had had no
opportunity of giving expression to the musical talent within
him, if he had not found a devoted friend in Spaun, might he not
have become a mere brawler in some lower station in life? What
expressed itself like a volcano that evening in the Bargerstubli,
was it not a fundamental trait in Schubert's character? Human
life defies explanation until we can answer the question: How
does the metamorphosis come about whereby in a certain life a man
does not, so to say, live out his pugnacity but becomes an
exquisite musician, the pugnacity being transformed into subtle
and delicate musical phantasy?
It
sounds paradoxical and grotesque, but for all that it is a
question which, if we consider life in its wider range, must
needs be asked, for it is only when we study such things that the
deeper problems of karma really come into view.
The
third personality of whom I want to speak is Eugen Dühring,
a man much hated, but also — by a small circle —
greatly loved. My investigations into karma have led me to occupy
myself with this individual, too, and as before I will give you,
first of all, the biographical material.
Eugen
Dühring was a man of extraordinary gifts. In his youth he
studied a whole number of subjects, particularly from the aspect
of mathematics, including branches of knowledge such as political
economy, philosophy, mechanics, physics and so on.
He
gained his doctorate with an interesting treatise, and then in a
book, long since out of print, followed up the same theme with
great clarity and forcefulness. I will tell you a little about
it. The subject is almost as difficult as the Theory of
Relativity, but, after all, people have been talking about the
Theory of Relativity for a long time now and, without
understanding a single word, have considered, and still do
consider it, quite wonderful. Difficult as the subject is, I want
to tell you, in a way that will perhaps be comprehensible,
something about the thoughts contained in this earliest work of
Dühring.
The
theme is as follows. — People generally picture to
themselves: Out there is space, and it is infinite. Space is
filled with matter. Matter is composed of minute particles,
infinite in number. An infinite number of tiny particles have
conglomerated into a ball in universal space, have in some way
crystallised together, and the like. Then there is time, infinite
time. The world has never had a beginning; neither can one say
that it will have an end.
These
vague, indefinite concepts of infinity were repellent to the
young Dühring and he spoke with great perspicacity when he
said that all this talk about infinity is devoid of real meaning,
that even if one has to speak of myriads and myriads of
world-atoms, or world-molecules, there must nevertheless be a
definite, calculable number. However vast universal space is
conceived to be, its magnitude must be capable of computation; so
too, the stretch of universal time. Dühring expounded this
theme with great clarity.
There
is something psychological behind this. Dühring's one aim
was clarity of thought, and there is no clear thinking at all in
these notions of infinity. He went on to apply his argument in
other domains, for example to the so-called “negative
quantities.” Positive quantities (e.g. when something is
possessed) are distinguished from negative quantities by writing
a minus sign before the latter. Thus here you have 0 (zero), in
one direction plus 1, and in the other direction minus 1, and so
on.
Dühring
maintains that all this talk about minus quantities is absolute
nonsense. What does a “negative quantity,” a “minus
number” mean? He says: If I have 5 and take away 1, then I
have 4; if I have 5 and take away 2, then I have 3; if I have 5
and take away 4, then I have 1; and if I have 5 and take away 5,
then I have 0. The advocates of negative quantities say: If I
have 5 and take away 6, then I have minus 1; if I have 5 and take
away 7, then I have minus 2.
Dühring
maintains that there is no clarity of thinking here. What does
“minus 1” mean? It means: I am supposed to take 6
from 5; but then I have I too little. What does “minus 2”
mean? I am supposed to take 7 from 5; but then I have 2 too
little. What does “minus 3” mean? I am supposed to
take 8 from 5; but then I have 3 too little. There is no
difference between the negative numbers, as numbers, and
the positive numbers. The negative numbers mean only that when I
have to subtract, I have too little by a particular amount. And
Dühring went on to apply the same principle to mathematical
concepts of many kinds.
I
know how deeply I was impressed by this as a young man, for
Dühring brought real clarity of thought to bear upon these
things.
He
displayed the same astute discernment in the fields of national
economy and the history of philosophy, and became a lecturer at
the University of Berlin. His audiences were very large and he
lectured on a variety of subjects: national economy, philosophy,
mathematics.
It
so happened that a prize was offered by the Academy of Science at
Göttingen for the best book on the history of mechanics. It
is usual in such competitions for the essays to be sent in
anonymously. The competitor chooses a motto, his name is
contained inside a closed envelope with the motto written
outside, so that the adjudicators are unaware of the author's
identity.
The
Göttingen Academy of Science awarded the prize to Eugen
Dühring's History of Mechanics and wrote him a most
appreciative letter. Therefore Dühring was not only
recognised by his own circle of listeners as an excellent
lecturer, but now gained the recognition of a most eminently
learned body.
Along
with all the talents which will be evident to you from what I
have been saying, this same Dühring had a really malicious
tongue — one cannot call it anything else. There was
something of the malicious critic about him in regard to
everything in the world. As time went on he exercised less and
less restraint in this respect; and when such an eminently
learned body as the Göttingen Academy of Science awarded him
the prize, it acted like a sting upon him. It was quite in the
natural course of things, but nevertheless it stung. And then we
see two qualities beginning to be combined in him: an intensely
strong sense of justice — which he undoubtedly possessed —
and on the other hand an extraordinary propensity for abuse.
Just
at the time when he was stung into abuse and sarcasm, Dühring
had the misfortune to lose his sight. In spite of total
blindness, however, he continued to lecture in Berlin. He went on
with his work as an author, and was always able, up to a point,
of course, to look after his affairs himself. About this time a
truly tragic destiny in the academic world during the 19th
century came to his knowledge — the destiny of Julius
Robert Mayer, who was actually the discoverer of the
heat-equivalent in mechanics and who, as can be stated with all
certainty, had been shut up in an asylum through no fault of his
own, put into a strait-jacket and treated shamefully by his
family, his colleagues and his “friends.” It was at
this time that Dühring wrote his book, Julius Robert
Mayer, the Galileo of the 19th Century. And it was in
truth a kind of Galileo-destiny that befell Julius Robert Mayer.
Dühring
wrote with an extraordinarily good knowledge of the facts and
with a really penetrating sense of justice, but he lashed out as
with a rail in regard to the injuries that had been inflicted.
His tongue simply ran away with him — as, for example, when
he heard and read about the erection of the well-known statue of
Mayer at Heilbronn, and of the unveiling ceremony. “This
puppet standing in the market square at Heilbronn is a final
insult offered to the Galileo of the 19th century. The great man
sits there with his legs crossed. But to portray him truly, in
the frame of mind in which he would most probably be, he would
have to be looking at the orator and at all the good friends
below who erected this memorial, not sitting with his legs
crossed but beating his breast in horror.”
Having
suffered much at the hands of newspapers, Dühring also
became a violent anti-Semite. Here too he was ruthlessly
consistent. For example, he wrote the pamphlet entitled Die
Ueberschätzung Lessings und dessen Anwaltschaft für die
Juden, in which murderous abuse is hurled at Lessing. It is
this trait in Dühring that is responsible for his particular
way of expounding literature.
If
you want one day to give yourselves the treat of reading
something about German literature that you will find nowhere
else, that is totally different from other treatises on the
subject, then take Dühring's two volumes entitled
Literaturgrössen (Great Men of Letters). There you
will find his strictly mathematical way of thinking and his
astute perspicacity, applied to literature. In order, presumably,
to make it plain how his way of thinking differs from that of
others, he sees fit to rechristen the great figures of the German
spiritual life. He speaks, in one chapter, of “Kothe”
and “Schillerer,” meaning Goethe and Schiller.
Duhring writes “Kothe” and “Schillerer”
and adheres to this throughout. The nomenclature he invents is
often grotesque. “Intellectuaille” (connected with
“canaille”) is how he always refers to people we call
intellectualistic. The “Intellectuaille” — the
Intellectuals. He uses similar expressions all the time. But let
me assure you of this: a great deal in Dühring's writings is
extraordinarily interesting.
I
once had the following experience. When I was still on friendly
terms with Frau Elizabeth Forster-Nietzsche and was working on
unpublished writings of Nietzsche, there came into my hands the
material dealing with the “Eternal Recurrence”, now
long since printed. [Thus Spake Zarathustra, Part III.]
Nietzsche's manuscripts are not very easy reading, but I came
across a passage where I said to myself: This “Eternal
Recurrence” has some definite source. And so I went over
from the Archives, where Nietzsche's note-books were kept, to the
Library, and looked up Dühring's Wirklichkeitsphilosophie
(Philosophy of Reality), where, as I thought, I was quickly able
to find this idea of “Eternal Recurrence”. I took the
book from the shelves of the Library and found the passage —
I knew it and found it at once — where Dühring argues
that it is impossible for anyone with genuine knowledge of the
material facts of the world to speak of a return of things, a
return of constellations which once were there.
Dühring
tried to disprove any such possibility. At the side of the
passage in question was a word frequently written by Nietzsche in
the margin of a book when he was using it to formulate a
counter-idea. It was the word: “Ass”!
The
familiar epithet was written in the margin of this particular
page. In point of fact we can find in Dühring's writings a
great deal that passed over, ingeniously, into Nietzsche's ideas.
In saying this I hold nothing against Nietzsche. I am simply
stating the facts as they are.
In
respect of karma, the most striking thing about Dühring is
that he was really able to think only mathematically. In
philosophy, in political economy, in mathematics itself, he
thinks mathematically, with mathematical precision and clarity.
In natural science, too, he thinks with clarity but, again, in
terms of mathematics. He is not a materialist, he is a
mechanistic thinker. He conceives the world as mechanism. And
moreover he had the courage to carry sincere convictions to their
ultimate conclusions. For truth to tell, anyone who thinks as he
did cannot write about Goethe and Schiller in any other way —
leaving aside the abuse and taking only the essential substance
of what is said.
So
much for the fundamental trend of Dühring's thought. Add to
this the blindness while he was still young, and the fact that he
suffered no little personal injustice. He lost his post as
lecturer at the University of Berlin. Well ... there were
reasons! For example, in the second edition of his History of
Mechanics he cast all restraint aside. The first edition had
been quite tame in its treatment of the great figures in the
field of mechanics, so tame that someone said he had written in a
way which he thought would make it possible for a learned body to
award him a prize. But in the second edition he no longer held
himself in check; he let himself go and fairly filled in the
gaps! Someone remarked — and Dühring often repeated it
— that the Göttingen Academy had awarded a prize to
the claws without recognising the lion behind the claws! But when
the second edition appeared the lion had certainly come into the
open!
In
this second edition there were in truth some astounding passages,
for example in connection with Julius Robert Mayer and his
Galileo-destiny in the 19th century. On one occasion when Dühring
was in a towering rage about this, he called a man he considered
to be a plagiarist of Mayer — namely Hermann Hehnholtz —
so much “academic scaffolding,” “wooden
scaffolding.” Later on he enlarged upon this theme. He
edited a periodical Der Personalist, where everything had
a strongly personal colouring. Here, for example, Dühring
enlarges upon the reference to Helmholtz. He no longer speaks
about wooden scaffolding, but when the postmortem examination had
revealed the presence of water in Helmholtz's brain, Dühring
said that the empty-headedness had been quite obvious while the
man was still alive and that there was no need to wait for
confirmation until after his death! Refinement was certainly not
one of Dühring's qualities. One cannot exactly say that he
raged like a washerwoman. His way of abusing was not commonplace;
neither was there real genius in it. It was something quite
unique.
And
now take all these factors together: the blindness, the
mechanistic bent of mind, the persecution he certainly suffered —
for the dismissal from the University was not altogether free
from injustice, and indeed countless injustices were done to him
during his life ... All these things are connections of destiny
which become really interesting only when we study them in the
light of karma.
I
have now given you a picture of these three personalities:
Friedrich Theodor Vischer, the composer Schubert, and Eugen
Dühring. Having outlined the biographical material today, I
will speak tomorrow of the karmic connections.
Continued
in the next issue of SCR
Thanks
to the Rudolf Steiner Archive
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