The Effect of Occult Development Upon the Self and the Sheaths of Man
GA 145
24 March 1913, The Hague
Lecture V
This course of lectures should rightly be considered as an explanation of certain experiences passed through by the student as changes produced in him by his esoteric development, or, shall we say, Theosophy; so that what is described is really to be looked upon as something that can actually be experienced during development. Naturally, only outstanding experiences, typical experiences, as it were, can be explained; but from the description of these characteristic experiences we may gain an idea of many other things we have to notice in the course of development.
In the last lecture we spoke principally of the fact that the student acquires a great sensitivity with respect to what goes on in the external life-ether, or in the ether as a whole. These experiences are connected with many other things, and one which we should particularly notice is the experience we have with respect to our power of judgment. As human beings, we are so placed in the world that in a certain way we judge the things that come before us, we form ideas about things; we consider one thing to be right, another wrong. A person's capacity for judging depends upon what is known as shrewdness, cleverness, discernment. This shrewdness, this cleverness, this discernment, is in course of his development gradually placed in a different light. This was briefly indicated in the last lecture. The student finds more and more that for the actual affairs of the higher, spiritual life, this shrewdness or cleverness is not of the slightest value, although he must bring as much of it as possible at his starting point on the physical plane if he wishes to enter upon the path to the higher worlds. And thus he comes inevitably into a position which may easily seem unendurable to the utilitarian; for while of necessity he needs something at first for his higher development, yet when he has acquired the needful quality it loses its value. To a certain extent the student must do everything possible to develop a sound power of judgment here on the physical plane, one that weighs the facts carefully; but having done so he must quite clearly understand that during his sojourn in the higher worlds this power of judgment has not the same value as it possesses here below on the physical plane. If the student wishes his higher senses to be sound he must proceed from a healthy power of judgment; but for the higher vision healthy judgment must be transformed into healthy vision.
But however highly we may develop, as long as we have to live on the physical plane we are still human beings of this plane, and on this physical plane we have the task of developing our power of judgment in a healthy way. Therefore we must take care to learn betimes not to mix the life in the higher worlds with that of the physical plane. One who wishes to make direct use on the physical plane of what he experiences in the higher worlds will easily become a visionary, an incompetent man. We must accustom ourselves to be able to live clearly in the higher worlds, and then, when we pass out of that condition, to hold again as firmly as possible to what is suitable for the physical plane. We must carefully and conscientiously maintain the twofold attitude demanded by the twofold nature of the spiritual and physical life. We accustom ourselves to the right attitude towards the world in this respect by accustoming ourselves not to bring what belongs to the higher worlds into the everyday course of life; to bring into everyday affairs as little as possible of that which may easily tempt us to say, for instance, when something in a person is unsympathetic to us, that we cannot bear his aura. In ordinary life, when speaking of this or that as unsympathetic, it is better to keep to the ordinary terms; it is better in this respect to remain like one's fellows on the physical plane, and to be as sparing as possible in ordinary life of expressions which only have their true application when used for the higher life. We ought carefully to refrain from mixing into daily life words, ideas, conceptions, belonging to the higher life. This may perhaps seem a sort of pedantic requirement to anyone who, from a certain enthusiasm for the spiritual life, shall we say, finds it necessary to permeate his whole being with it. And yet, that which in an ordinary way in ordinary life may perhaps seem pedantic, is an important principle of training for the higher worlds. Therefore, even if it should seem more natural to describe the ordinary life in words belonging to the higher life, let us translate them into the language most fitted for the physical plane. It must be emphasised again and again that these things are not without consequence, but are full of significance and possess active power. This being admitted, we may also speak without prejudice of the fact that, as regards the life in the higher worlds, the ordinary power of judgment ceases to be of use, and we learn to feel, to a certain extent, that the sort of cleverness we had before is now at an end. And here again the student notices—this is an experience which grows more and more frequent—he notices his dependence upon the etheric life of the world, that is, upon time. How often do we find in our particular age that people, even quite young people, approach everything in the world upon which judgment can be passed, and think that when they have acquired a certain power of judgment they can pronounce opinion about everything in existence, and speculate on everything possible. In esoteric development the belief that one can speculate on all things is torn out of the soul by the roots; for we then notice that our opinions are capable of growth and, above all, that they need to mature.
The student learns to recognise that if he wishes to arrive at an opinion with which he is himself able to agree, he must live for some while with certain ideas which he has acquired, so that his own etheric body can come to an understanding with them. He learns that he must wait before he can arrive at a certain opinion. Only then does he realise the great significance of the words: ‘Let what is in the soul nature.’ He really becomes more and more modest. But this ‘becoming modest’ is a very special matter, because it is not always possible to hold the balance between being obliged to form an opinion and being able to wait for maturity to have an opinion upon a subject, though delusion about these things is possible to a high degree, and because there is really nothing but life itself which can explain these things. A philosopher may dispute with a person who has reached a certain degree of esoteric development concerning some cosmic mystery, or cosmic law; if the philosopher can only form philosophic opinion he will believe himself necessarily in the right concerning the matter, and we can understand that he must have this belief; but the other person will know quite well that the question cannot be decided by the capacity for judgment possessed by the philosopher. For he knows that in former times he also used the conceptions upon which the philosopher bases his opinion, but allowed them to mature within him, which process made it possible for him to have an opinion on the subject; he knows that he has lived with it, thereby making himself ripe enough to form the opinion which he now pronounces at a higher stage of maturity. But an understanding between these two persons is really out of the question, and in many cases cannot be brought about directly; it can only come to pass when in the philosopher there arises a feeling of the necessity of allowing certain things to mature in his soul before he permits himself to give an opinion about them. Opinions, views must be battled for, must be won by effort—this the student recognises more and more. He acquires a profound, intense feeling of this, because he gains the inner feeling of time which is essentially connected with the development of the etheric body. Indeed, he gradually notices a certain opposition arise in his soul between the way he formerly judged and the way he now judges after having attained a certain maturity in this particular matter; and he notices that the opinion he formed in the past and the opinion he now holds confront each other like two powers, and he then notices in himself a certain inner mobility of the temporal within him; he notices that the earlier must be overcome by the later. This is the dawn in the consciousness of a certain feeling for time, which arises from the presence of inner conflicts, coming into existence through a certain opposition between the later and the earlier. It is absolutely necessary to acquire this inner feeling, this inner perception of time, for we must remember that we can only learn to experience the etheric when we acquire an inner idea of time. This develops into our always having the feeling that the earlier originates in ourselves, in our judgment, in our knowledge; but that the later flows into us, as it were, streams towards us, is vouchsafed to us. More and more clearly comes the feeling of what was described in the last lecture, viz., that the cleverness which springs from oneself must be separated from the wisdom which is acquired by surrender to the stream flowing towards one from the future. To feel ourselves being filled by thoughts, in contradistinction to our former experiences of consciously forming the thoughts ourselves—this shows progress. When the student learns more and more to feel that he no longer forms thoughts, but that the thoughts think themselves in him—when he has this feeling it is a sign that his etheric body is gradually developing the necessary inner feeling of time. All that went before will have the attribute of being something formed egotistically; all that is attained by maturing will have the characteristic of burning up and consuming what the student has made for himself. Thus the gradual change in his inner being results in a very remarkable experience; he becomes increasingly conscious that his own thinking, his own thought processes must be suppressed because they are of little value, compared with his devotion to the thoughts which stream to him from the cosmos. The individual life loses, as it were, one of its parts—that is extremely important—it loses the part we usually call personal-thinking, and there only remains personal-feeling and personal-willing. But these too undergo a change at the same time as the thinking. The student no longer produces his thoughts, but they think themselves within his soul. With the feeling that the thoughts have their own inner power through which they think themselves, comes a certain merging of feeling and will. Feeling, we might say, becomes more and more active, and the will becomes more and more allied to feeling. Feeling and will become more closely related to each other than they were before on the physical plane. No impulse of the will can be formed without accompanying development of feeling. Many of the student's deeds produce within him a bitter feeling, others produce an uplifting feeling. As regards his will, he feels at the same time that his own will-impulses must be adjusted in conformity with his feelings. He gradually finds that feelings which are there merely for the sake of enjoyment give rise to a kind of reproach; but feelings which are so perceived that he says: ‘The human soul must furnish the field of work for such feelings, they must be experienced inwardly, otherwise they would not exist in the universe’—such feelings he gradually finds more justifiable than the others. An example shall be given at once, a characteristic example, in order that what is meant may be made quite clear; it is not intended to decry anything, but only to express the essential nature of this difference. Someone may find his pleasure in having good meals. When he experiences this pleasure, something happens within him—this is indisputable. But it does not make much difference in the universe, in the cosmos, when an individual experiences this pleasure in a good meal; it is not of much consequence to the general life of the world. But if someone takes up St. John's Gospel and reads but three lines of it, that is of immense consequence to the whole universe; for if among all the souls on earth none were to read St. John's Gospel, the whole mission of the earth could not be fulfilled; from our taking part in such activities there stream forth spiritually the forces which ever add new life to the earth in place of that which dies within it. We must distinguish a difference in experience between ordinary egotistic feeling and that in which we are but providing the field for experience of a feeling necessary for the existence of the world. Under certain circumstances a man may do very little externally, but when in his developed soul, for no personal pleasure, he is aware that through his feeling the opportunity is given for the existence of a feeling important to the universal existence; then he is doing an enormous amount.
Strange as it may seem, the following may also be said: There was once a Greek philosopher named Plato. He wrote many books. As long as a person only lives with his soul on the physical plane, he reads these books for his own instruction. Such outer instruction has its significance for the physical plane, and it is very good to make use of every means of instruction on the physical plane, for otherwise we remain stupid. The things achieved on the physical plane are there for the purpose of our instruction. But when a soul has developed esoterically, he then takes Plato, shall we say, and reads him again for a different reason; that is, because Plato and his works only have a meaning in the earthly existence if what he has written is also experienced in other souls; and the student then reads not only to instruct himself, but because something is accomplished thereby.
Something must be added to our feeling, enabling us to recognise a difference between egotistic feeling, which leans more towards enjoyment, and selfless feeling, which presents itself to us as an inner spiritual duty. This may extend even into external life and the external conception of life; and here we come to speak on a point which shines, it might be said, out of individual into social experience.
When a person acquainted with the secrets of esotericism observes what goes on in the world—how so many people waste their spare time instead of ennobling their feelings with what comes into the earthly existence from spiritual creations—he might weep over the stupidity which ignores all that in human life flows through human feeling and sentiment. And in this connection it should be noticed that when these experiences begin a certain more delicate egoism appears in human nature. In the following lectures we shall hear how this finer egoism is assumed for the purpose of overcoming itself; but at first it merely appears as a finer egoism, and during our theosophical development we shall find that a sort of higher thirst for enjoyment appears, a thirst for the enjoyment of spiritual things. And, grotesque as it may sound, it is nevertheless true that a man who is undergoing an esoteric development may at a certain stage declare, even though he may not allow this consciousness to grow into pride and vanity, that all that lies before him on the earth in the way of spiritual creations must be enjoyed by him; it is there for his enjoyment—so it belongs to him. And gradually he develops a certain urge towards such spiritual enjoyments. In this respect esotericism will not cause any mischief in the world, for we may be quite sure that when such a desire for the spiritual creations of humanity appears it will not be a drawback.
As a result of this something else appears. Gradually the student feels in a sense the awakening of his own etheric body, by becoming aware that feeling his own thinking is of less value, and by feeling the inflow of thought from the cosmos, interwoven as it is with the Divine. He feels more and more how will and feeling arise from himself; he begins to feel egoism only in his will and feeling, while he perceives the gifts of the wisdom, which he feels streaming through, as connecting him with the whole cosmos.
This experience is connected with another. He begins to feel inner activity of feeling and will, interwoven with inner sympathy and antipathy. A more subtle and delicate feeling tells him that when he himself does this or that it is a disgrace, for he has within him a certain amount of wisdom. Of something else he may feel that it is right to do it, according to his amount of wisdom. An experience of self-control appearing in feeling comes about naturally. We are overcome with feelings of bitterness when we feel a will arising from within, impelling us to do something or other which does not seem to be right, in view of the wisdom in which we have now learned to share. This bitter feeling is most clearly perceived with respect to the things we have said; and it is well for one who is developing theosophically not to pass by inattentively without noticing how the whole of the inner life of feeling may be refined in this respect. While in the case of a person in exoteric life, when he has uttered certain words, when he has said something or other, that is the end of the matter; in the case of a person who has undergone a theosophical development there comes a clear after-feeling regarding what he has said; he feels something like an inner shame when he has expressed what is not right in a moral or intellectual sense; and something like a sort of thankfulness—not satisfaction with himself—when he has been able to express something to which the wisdom he has attained can give assent. And if he feels—and for this, too, he acquires a delicate sensitiveness—that something like an inner self-satisfaction, a self-complaisance with himself arises when he has said something that is right, that is a sign that he still possesses too much vanity, which is no good in his development. He learns to distinguish between the feeling of satisfaction which follows when he has said something with which he can agree, and the self-complaisance which is worthless. He should try not to allow this latter feeling to arise, but only to develop the feeling of shame when he has said anything untrue or non-moral, and when he has succeeded in saying something suitable to the occasion, to develop a feeling of gratitude for the wisdom he now has part in, and to which he does not lay claim as his own, but receives as a gift from the universe.
Little by little the student feels in this way with respect to his own thinking. As has already been said, he must remain a man on the physical plane; and while not attaching too much value to the self-formed thoughts, he must still form them; but this self-thinking itself now alters, so much that he holds it under the self-control we have just described. Regarding a thought, of which he may say: ‘I have thought that and it is in keeping with the Wisdom’—regarding this thought he develops a feeling of gratitude towards the Wisdom. A thought which arises as a wrong, ugly, non-moral thought leads to a certain inner feeling of shame, and the student feels: ‘Can I really still be like this? Is it possible that I have still sufficient egotism to think this, in the face of the Wisdom that has entered into me?’ It is extremely important for him to feel this kind of self-control in his inner being. The peculiarity of this self-control is that it never comes through the critical intellect, but always appears in feeling, in perception. Let us pay great attention to this, my dear friends: A man who is only clever, who only possesses the judgment of the outer life, who is critical, can never arrive at what we are now speaking of; for this must appear as feeling. When he has acquired this feeling—when it arises as if from his own inner being—he identifies himself with this feeling either of shame or thankfulness, and feels that his own self is connected with this feeling. And if I were to make a diagram of what is thus experienced, it is as though one felt wisdom streaming in from above, coming towards one from above, streaming into one's head in front and then filling one from above downwards. On the other hand, a student feels that, as though coming from his own body, there streams towards that wisdom a feeling of shame, so that he identifies himself with this feeling, and addresses the wisdom as something given from outside; and feels within himself a region wherein this feeling, which is now the ego, meets the instreaming wisdom bestowed.

The pupil can inwardly experience the region where these two meet. To feel this meeting, proves a right inner experience of the etheric world; he experiences the thoughts pressing in from the external etheric world—for it is the wisdom streaming towards him from the external etheric world that presses in and is perceived by means of the two feelings—that is the rightly-perceived etheric world. And when he perceives it thus he ascends to the higher Beings which only descend as far as to an etheric body and not to a physical human body. On the other hand, he may experience this etheric world wrongly, in a certain sense. Rightly, the etheric world is experienced between thinking and feeling, in the manner just described. The experience is purely an inner process in the soul. The elementary or etheric world may be experienced wrongly, if it is experienced on the boundary between breathing and our own etheric body. If the student performs breathing exercises too soon, or in an incorrect way, he gradually becomes a witness of his own breathing-process. With the breathing-process of which he is then aware (the act of breathing being usually unnoticed), he may acquire a breathing which perceives itself. And this feeling may be associated with a certain perception of the etheric world. By means of all kinds of breathing-exercises a person may gain the power of observing certain etheric processes which really are in the external world, but which belong to the lowest external psychic processes, and which, if experienced too soon, can never give the right idea of the true spiritual world.
Of course, from a certain point in the esoteric practice a regulated breathing-process may also begin; but this must be properly directed. It then comes about that we perceive the etheric world, as has been described, on the border between thinking and feeling, and what we thus learn to recognise is only strengthened by our also coming to know the grosser etheric processes which take place on the border between the etheric world and our breathing-processes. For the matter is as follows:—There is a world of genuine higher Spirituality, this we attain through the inter-action which takes place—as we have described—between wisdom and feeling, there we come to the deeds accomplished in the etheric world by the beings belonging to the higher hierarchies. But there are a great number of all sorts of good and bad and hostile and horrible and dangerous elementary beings, which, if we become acquainted at the wrong time, obtrude themselves upon us as if they really were a valuable spiritual world, while they are nothing more, in a certain sense, than the lowest dregs of the beings of the Spiritual world. He who wishes to penetrate into the Spiritual world must indeed become acquainted with these beings, but it is not well to become acquainted with them at the beginning. For the peculiarity is this: that if a person becomes acquainted with these beings at first, without traversing the difficult path of his own inner experience, he grows fond of them, has astonishing partiality for them; and it may then occur that a man who thus raises himself into the spiritual world in a wrong way, especially through such physical training as may be called a changing of the breathing-processes, will describe certain things pertaining to this spiritual world, as they appear to him. He describes them in such a way that many people may think them extremely beautiful, while to the occultist who perceives them in the inward experience, they may be horrible and loathsome. Such things are quite possible in the experience of the spiritual world.
We need not here speak of other processes which a person may undertake as a training, and through which he may enter evil worlds, because in Occultism it is the custom not to speak of that which one comes to know as the dross of the spiritual world. It is not necessary that we should enter spiritually into that world; hence it is not the practice to speak of the methods which go still lower than the breathing processes. Even the breathing-process, when it is not done in the right way, really leads to the dross-beings, which we must indeed come to know, but not at first, as they then make us enamoured of them, which ought not to be. We shall only obtain a true, objective standpoint regarding their value when we have penetrated into the spiritual world from the other side.
If the student now begins in this way to feel streaming out of himself, as it were, responsive feelings towards wisdom, the feeling of shame, and the feeling of thankfulness; if these responsive feelings spring up, as it were, from his own organism, then he thereby becomes first acquainted in the most elementary way with something of which he must learn more in the course of his further occult development. In the last lecture we pointed out that in the course of our gradual experience of the etheric we become aware of what is active in the etheric part of our brain, the Amshaspands, referred to in the teaching of Zarathustra. As regards our ideas we may also say: There we learn at first to form an idea of the active archangel beings and what they have to do in us. Through what is here stored up, through what here arises within us as the feeling of thankfulness or shame, which feeling has a personal character because it comes forth from ourselves—through this we gain the first elementary true conception of what are called the Archai or Primal forces; for we experience in the first most elementary way in the manner described what the Primal forces bring about in us. While the student—when he begins to experience in the etheric—first experiences the Archangels in his head in a shadowy way, one might say, in their activities, in their etheric working, he experiences in that with which the wisdom comes in contact in him, and which reacts to it, the Primal forces permeated with something like will, not entirely of its nature, but the Primal forces which have entered into him and work in the human personality. When he learns to feel in this way, he gradually obtains an idea of what the occultist means when he says: On that primeval embodiment of our earth, Ancient Saturn, dwelt the Primal Forces or the Spirits of Personality at their human stage, so to speak. At that time these Primal Forces or Spirits of Personality were human. They have now developed further, and in so doing they have attained the capacity of working from the super-sensible world. And how do they manifest at the present time, in our earth-period, this power which they have acquired through the progress of their evolution as far as the earth? They have attained the capacity of being able to work from the super-sensible upon our own bodily nature, and so to work on our sheath, that they produce forces in our etheric body manifesting in the manner described. They have placed these forces in us, and if we feel to-day we are so organised that we can develop within ourselves the above-mentioned feelings of gratitude and shame as an inner natural process (and this can become our own experience), we must admit: that this can become an inward experience, that our etheric body should pulsate in this way, and respond in this manner to the Wisdom—to this end have the Primal forces poured forces into it. In the same way man himself in future incarnations of our earth will attain to the ability to imprint capacities such as these into a corresponding covering in other beings, who will be below him; he will imprint them into their inner being. What man is to know regarding the higher worlds will gradually be gained by inner experience, by our ascending, by our passing over from physical to etheric experience.
Let us try to make these matters still clearer. On ancient Saturn—as you know—heat was the densest physical condition, as it were, the only physical condition which had been reached by the middle of the Saturn period. And you may read in my book, An Outline Of Occult Science, the Saturn activities in the physical were currents of heat and cold. We may also speak of these currents of heat and cold from the psychic, soul-aspect, and say: Heat flowed in streams, but this heat was the flowing gratitude of the Spirits of Personality; or this flowing heat which moved in a different direction was the flowing feeling of shame of the Spirits of Personality. What we must gradually acquire is the capacity of connecting the physical with the moral activity; for the further we go into the higher worlds the more closely are these two things connected—the physical occurrence, which then ceases to be physical, and the moral, which then flows through the world with the power of the laws of nature.
All that has just been described as something which appears in inner experience through the altered etheric body, brings about something else in the human soul. This human soul gradually begins to feel discomfort in being this individual man at all, this single, personal human being. It is important for us to learn to notice this; and it is well to make a rule of noticing it. The less interest one has developed previously to this stage of esoteric development in what concerns humanity in general, in what is common to humanity, the more disquieting does one find this on pressing forward. A person having developed no interest in mankind in general, and yet wishing to undergo an esoteric development, would feel himself more and more as a burden. For example, a person to whom it is possible to go through the world without sympathy and fellow-feeling with what another may suffer and enjoy, who cannot well enter into the souls of others, nor transpose himself into the souls of other human beings, such a person when he progresses in esoteric development, feels himself to be a kind of burden. If in spite of remaining unmoved by human sorrow and human joy he undergoes a theosophical development, the student drags himself about with him as a heavy weight; and we may be quite sure his theosophical development will merely remain external, an intellectual affair only, that such a person is merely taking up theosophy like learning a cookery-book or some external science, unless he feels that he is a mere weight, if in spite of his development, he cannot develop a heart that truly feels with all human sorrow and all human gladness. Hence it is very good if, during a theosophical, occult development, we extend our human interests; and really nothing is worse during this esoteric progress than not to try to gain an understanding of every kind of human feeling and human sensation and human life. Of course, this does not postulate the principle—this must be emphasised again and again—that we should pass over all the wrong that is done in the world without criticism, for that would be an injustice towards the world; but it postulates something else; whereas before esoteric development we may have felt a certain pleasure in finding fault with some human failing, this pleasure in finding fault with other people entirely ceases in the course of esoteric development. Who does not know in external life people who like to deliver very pertinent criticisms of other people's faults? Not that the pertinence of judgment over human faults has to cease, not that under all circumstances, such an act as was committed, let us say, by Erasmus of Rotterdam when he wrote his book, The Praise of Folly, should be condoned; no, it may be quite justifiable to be stern against the wrongs done in the world; but in the case of one who undergoes an esoteric development every word of blame he utters or sets in motion pains him, and prepares more and more pain for him. And the sorrow at being obliged to find fault is something which can also act as a barometer of the esoteric development. The more we are still able to feel pleasure when we are obliged to find fault or when we find the world ludicrous, the less we are really ready to progress; and we must gradually gain a sort of feeling that there is, developing more and more within us, a life which makes us see these follies and errors in the world with eyes, of which one is critical, and the other filled with tears, one dry and the other wet. This inner dividing into parts, this becoming more independent, as it were, of that which was previously intermingled, also forms part of the change undergone by the human etheric body.
Sechster Vortrag
Es wird sich darum handeln, daß wir diesen Vortragszyklus gerade im richtigen Sinne nehmen, das heißt, ihn betrachten als eine Auseinandersetzung über Erlebnisse, die der Mensch durchmacht als Veränderungen in sich selbst während seiner esoterischen, oder sagen wir, durch Anthroposophie an ihm bewirkten Entwicklung, so daß das, was geschildert wird, durchaus anzusehen ist als etwas, was während der Entwicklung wirklich erlebt werden kann.
Naturgemäß können nur hervorstechende Erlebnisse, sozusagen typische Erlebnisse auseinandergesetzt werden; allein an diesen hauptsächlichsten Erlebnissen wird man ja eine Vorstellung gewinnen können über mancherlei anderes noch, was im Verlaufe der Entwicklung zu beobachten ist. Gestern sprachen wir hauptsächlich davon, daß der Mensch sich eine feinere Empfindlichkeit gegenüber dem aneignet, was im äußeren Lebensäther oder überhaupt im Äther vorgeht. Verknüpft sind diese Erlebnisse mit mancherlei anderen, und ein Erlebnis, auf das ganz besonders zu achten ist, ist das, was wir gegenüber unserer Urteilskraft machen.
Nicht wahr, als Menschen stehen wir ja in der Welt so, daß wir die Dinge, die an uns herantreten, in einer gewissen Weise beurteilen, daß wir uns Vorstellungen über die Dinge machen, daß wir das eine für richtig, das andere für nicht richtig halten. Wie ein Mensch imstande ist, die Dinge zu beurteilen, davon hängt ja das ab, was man in der Regel als Klugheit, als Gescheitheit, als Urteilsfähigkeit bezeichnet. Diese Klugheit, diese Gescheitheit, diese Urteilsfähigkeit wird allmählich im Laufe der Entwicklung etwas, was sich in ein anderes Licht setzt. Ein wenig ist das ja schon gestern angedeutet worden. Man findet immer mehr und mehr, daß für die eigentlichen Angelegenheiten des höheren, des spirituellen Lebens gerade diese Klugheit, diese Gescheitheit nicht von dem allergeringsten Wert ist, obwohl man sie so viel als möglich mitbringen muß von seinem Ausgangspunkt, von dem physischen Plan aus, wenn man den Weg in die höheren Welten antreten will. Und so kommt man schon einmal in die Lage, die den Nützlichkeitsmenschen leicht als unerträglich erscheinen kann: daß man etwas ganz notwendigerweise zunächst braucht für eine höhere Entwicklung und daß dennoch dann, wenn man in dieser höheren Entwicklung drinnen steht, es an Wert verliert. Man muß also gewissermaßen alles daransetzen, um eine gesunde, den Tatsachen gerecht werdende Urteilskraft hier auf dem physischen Plan zunächst zu entwickeln, muß sich aber dann klar sein darüber, daß beim Verweilen in den höheren Welten selbst diese Urteilskraft nicht den gleichen Wert hat wie hier unten auf dem physischen Plan. Wenn man gesunde höhere Sinne haben will, dann muß man von einer gesunden Urteilskraft ausgehen; aber diese gesunde Urteilskraft muß sich eben verwandeln für das höhere Anschauen in gesundes Anschauen.
Nun sind wir aber, wenn wir uns noch so sehr entwickeln, immer solange wir auf dem physischen Plan zu verweilen haben, Menschen dieses physischen Planes, und auf diesem physischen Plane haben wir die Aufgabe, unsere Urteilskraft gesund zu entwickeln. Daher müssen wir sorgfältig darauf achten, daß wir beizeiten lernen, nicht miteinander zu vermischen das Leben in den höheren Welten und das Leben auf dem physischen Plan. Wer unmittelbar anwenden will dasjenige, was er für höhere Welten erlebt, auf den physischen Plan, der wird leicht zum Schwärmer, zum unbrauchbaren Menschen. Wir müssen uns angewöhnen, klar in der höheren Welt leben zu können und dann wiederum, wenn wir heraustreten aus dem Zustande dieses Lebens in den höheren Welten, möglichst uns an das zu halten, was das Richtige ist für den physischen Plan. Und diese Doppelstellung, die durch die Doppelstellung des geistigen und physischen Lebens selber gefordert wird, die müssen wir sorgfältig und gewissenhaft durchführen. Wir gewöhnen uns an eine richtige Lage zur Welt auf diesem Gebiete dadurch, daß wir möglichst uns nicht angewöhnen, in den alltäglichen Umgang hinein dasjenige zu mischen, was der höheren Welt einmal angehört; daß wir in den alltäglichen Umgang hinein möglichst wenig von dem mischen, wozu man so leicht versucht sein kann: etwa zu sagen, wenn einem irgend etwas an einem Menschen unsympathisch ist, man könne seine Aura nicht vertragen. Es ist besser, wenn man bei der gewöhnlichen Redensart bleibt für das gewöhnliche Leben, wenn man sagt: es sei einem dieses oder jenes unsympathisch. Es ist besser, daß man in dieser Beziehung ein Mensch auf dem physischen Plan unter anderen Menschen auf dem physischen Plan bleibt und möglichst mit Ausdrücken, die ja vollständig ihre Richtigkeit in bezug auf das höhere Leben haben, sparsam ist im gewöhnlichen Leben. Sorgfältig sollte man sich davor bewahren, in den täglichen Umgang Worte, Begriffe, Vorstellungen hineinzumischen, die dem höheren Leben gehören. Das könnte vielleicht wie eine Art pedantischer Forderung erscheinen demjenigen, der - nun, sagen wir - aus einer gewissen Begeisterung für das spirituelle Leben findet, daß es notwendig sei, das ganze Sein zu durchdringen mit diesem spirituellen Leben; und dennoch: Was vielleicht in einem gewöhnlichen Fall für das gewöhnliche Leben pedantisch erscheinen möchte, es ist ein wichtiger Erziehungsgrundsatz für die höheren Welten.
Übersetzen wir daher, wenn es uns naturgemäßer scheinen sollte, mit Worten des höheren Lebens das gewöhnliche Leben zu bezeichnen, übersetzen wir das in eine möglichst für den physischen Plan taugliche Sprache! Immer wieder und wiederum muß betont werden, daß diese Dinge nicht gleichgültig, sondern bedeutungsvoll und wirksam sind. Wenn man das voraussetzt, dann kann man auch unbefangen davon reden, wie mit Bezug auf das Leben in den höheren Welten die gewöhnliche Urteilskraft an Wert verliert, wie man gewissermaßen fühlen lernt, daß die Art, wie man vorher gescheit war, jetzt aufhören müsse. Und da merkt man dann wiederum - das ist eine Erfahrung, die man immer mehr und mehr macht - seine Abhängigkeit von dem ätherischen Leben der Welt, nämlich von der Zeit. Wie leicht trifft man es gerade in unserem Zeitalter, daß Menschen - sagen wir - von einer gewissen Jugend sich an alles, alles, was in der Welt beurteilt werden kann, heranmachen und nun glauben: Ja, wenn man sich angeeignet hat eine gewisse Urteilsfähigkeit, dann kann man über alles sein Ja und Nein sagen, dann kann man über alles mögliche philosophieren. — Dieser Glaube, daß man über alles mögliche philosophieren könne, der reißt sich bei einer esoterischen Entwicklung gründlich aus der Seele heraus; denn da merkt man, daß unsere Urteile eigentlich etwas Wesenhaftes haben, das vor allen Dingen der Reifung bedarf. Man lernt erkennen, wie man mit gewissen Vorstellungen, die man in sich aufgenommen hat, einfach eine Zeitlang leben muß, so daß unser eigener Ätherleib sich mit ihnen auseinandersetzen kann, wenn man zu einem Urteil kommen will, mit dem man selber einverstanden sein kann. Man merkt, daß man es abwarten muß, zu einem gewissen Urteil zu kommen. Man merkt erst dann die ganze, volle Bedeutung des Wortes: Ausreifenlassen dasjenige, was Seeleninhalt ist. Und man wird im Grunde genommen immer bescheidener und bescheidener.
Es ist ja allerdings mit diesem Bescheidenerwerden eine so eigenartige Sache, weil man nicht immer die Waage halten kann zwischen dem Urteilenmüssen und dem Wartenkönnen auf die Reife, um über irgendeine Sache ein Urteil zu haben, weil man sich auch gerade über diese Dinge in hohem Maße täuscht und weil es eigentlich nichts Rechtes gibt als das Leben selber, das einen aufklären kann über diese Dinge. Es kann - sagen wir - bei einer Frage über irgendein Weltengeheimnis, über irgendein Weltengesetz ein Philosoph gegenübertreten einem solchen, der esoterisch bis zu einem gewissen Grade entwickelt ist. Wenn der Philosoph nur sein philosophisches Urteil fällen kann, so wird er einmal in sich den Glauben haben, daß er recht haben müsse über irgendeine Sache, und man wird begreifen, daß er diesen Glauben haben muß. Der andere wird ganz gut wissen: mit der Urteilsfähigkeit, die der Philosoph aufbringen kann, kann über die Frage überhaupt nicht entschieden werden. Denn er weiß, daß er die Vorstellungen, die der Philosoph zu einem Urteil zusammenbraut, in vergangenen Zeiten in sich aufgenommen hat, daß er sie ausreifen ließ in sich und daß ihm das erst die Möglichkeit gebracht hat, eine Anschauung zu haben über die Sache; er weiß, daß er gelebt hat mit der Sache und daß er sich dadurch reif gemacht hat zu diesem Urteil, welches er jetzt auf einer höheren Stufe der Reife fällt. Aber eine Verständigung zwischen beiden ist eigentlich ausgeschlossen, kann gar nicht unmittelbar herbeigeführt werden in vielen Fällen; nur dann kann sie herbeigeführt werden, wenn in dem Philosophen ein Gefühl auftaucht von der Notwendigkeit des Ausreifens gewisser Seeleninhalte, bis man sich über sie eine Meinung gestatten darf. Meinungen, Anschauungen - das lernt man immer mehr und mehr erkennen - müssen erkämpft, müssen errungen werden. Dafür eignet man sich eine tiefe, eine intensive Empfindung an, und das rührt davon her, weil man dieses innere Zeitgefühl bekommt, das im wesentlichen mit der Entwicklung des Ätherleibes zusammenhängt.
Ja, man merkt allmählich einen gewissen Gegensatz in der Seele heraufkommen zwischen der Art, wie man früher geurteilt hat, und wie man jetzt, nachdem man sich eine gewisse Reife in der entsprechenden Angelegenheit errungen hat, urteilt; und man merkt, wie das, was man in der Vergangenheit hat urteilen können, und das, was man jetzt urteilt, sich wie zwei Mächte gegenüberstehen, und man merkt dann eine gewisse innere Beweglichkeit des Zeitlichen in sich, man merkt, wie durch das Spätere das Frühere überwunden werden muß. Dies ist das Heraufdämmern eines gewissen Zeitgefühles im Bewußtsein, das auftritt durch das Vorhandensein innerer Kämpfe, die aber nur dadurch auftreten, daß das Spätere mit dem Früheren in einen gewissen Gegensatz kommt. Dieses ist durchaus notwendig sich anzueignen als ein inneres Zeitgefühl, als eine innere Zeitempfindung; denn daran müssen wir festhalten, daß wir das Ätherische nur erfahren lernen, wenn wir uns einen inneren Zeitbegriff aneignen.
Des weiteren wird uns das ein gewisses Erlebnis, daß wir immer das Gefühl haben: das Frühere rührt von uns selber her in unserem Urteil, in unserer Erkenntnis; das Spätere ist wie in uns eingeflossen, ist uns wie entgegengeströmt, ist uns verliehen worden. Immer deutlicher tritt das Gefühl eben hervor von dem, was schon gestern erwähnt worden ist: daß die Gescheitheit, die aus einem selber stammt, abgelöst werden muß von der Weisheit, die wie durch eine Art von Hingabe an einen aus der Zukunft entgegenfließenden Strom erworben wird. Sich erfüllt fühlen von Gedanken, im Gegensatz zu dem, was man früher getan hat, da man gelebt hat in dem Bewußtsein, man mache die Gedanken, das bezeugt den Fortschritt. Indem man immer mehr und mehr fühlen lernt, man macht nicht mehr Gedanken, sondern die Gedanken denken sich in einem, indem man dieses Gefühl hat, hat man ein Zeichen dafür, daß der ätherische Leib allmählich in sich das notwendige innere Zeitgefühl entwickelt. Alles Frühere wird den Beigeschmack des egoistisch Gemachten haben; alles das, was beim Heranreifen erlangt ist, wird den Beigeschmack haben, daß es verbrennt dasjenige, was man selber gemacht hat, daß es aufzehrt dasjenige, was man selber gemacht hat. Und so verwandelt man allmählich sein Inneres in ein ganz merkwürdiges Erleben: Man kommt immer mehr und mehr zu dem Bewußtsein davon, daß das eigene Denken, das eigene Gedankenmachen unterdrückt werden müsse, weil es etwas Minderwertiges ist, und daß das Sichhingeben an die Gedanken, die einem aus dem Kosmos zuströmen, das eigentlich Wertvolle ist.
Das Eigenleben verliert sozusagen einen seiner Teile — das ist außerordentlich wichtig -, es verliert den Teil, den wir vorzugsweise das Selbstdenken nennen, und übrig bleibt nur das Selbstfühlen, Selbstempfinden und Selbstwollen. Aber auch diese erfahren eine Veränderung gleichzeitig mit dem Denken. Man macht nicht mehr seine Gedanken, sondern sie denken sich im Innern der Seele. Mit dem Gefühl, daß die Gedanken Eigenkräfte haben, durch die sie sich denken, kommt ein gewisses Zusammenfließen von Gefühl und Wille. Gefühl - könnte man sagen - wird immer mehr und mehr aktiv, und Wille wird immer mehr und mehr gefühlsmäßig. Gefühl und Wille werden miteinander verwandter, als sie vorher auf dem physischen Plan waren. Man kann da nicht mehr einen Willensimpuls fassen, ohne daß man ein Gefühl damit entwickelt. Manches von dem, was man tut, erzeugt einem ein bitteres Gefühl, anderes erzeugt einem ein erhebendes Gefühl. Gleichzeitig mit seinem Willen fühlt man in sich ein gefühlsmäßiges Richteramt über seine eigenen Willensimpulse. Gefühle, die bloß um des Genusses willen da sind, an denen erlebt sich allmählich, daß sie einem zu einer Art von Vorwurf gereichen; Gefühle aber, welche so empfunden werden, daß man sich sagt, man muß als Menschenseele den Schauplatz für solche Gefühle abgeben, man muß sie innerlich erleben, sonst würden sie im Weltenall nicht da sein, solche Gefühle findet man nach und nach gerechtfertigter als die anderen.
Es sei gleich ein besonderes Beispiel angeführt, und zwar ein radikales Beispiel, damit das, was gemeint ist, recht deutlich hervortreten kann. Irgend jemand - es soll damit nichts profaniert werden, sondern die Sache nur radikal ausgedrückt werden -, irgend jemand könnte so recht seine Freude haben an einer guten Mahlzeit, an einem guten Mahle. Wenn er diese Freude erlebt, so geschieht etwas mit ihm - das ist ganz zweifellos -, aber es verändert sich nicht viel im Welteninhalt, im Kosmos, ob der einzelne diese Freude an einem guten Mahle hat oder nicht; es macht das für das allgemeine Weltenleben nicht viel aus. Wenn aber jemand hernimmt das Johannes-Evangelium und liest darin nur drei Zeilen, so macht das ungeheuer viel für das ganze Weltenall aus; denn wenn zum Beispiel niemand unter den Erdenseelen das Johannes-Evangelium lesen würde, würde die ganze Erdenmission nicht erfüllt werden können: von unserer Teilnahme an solchen Dingen strahlen aus spirituell die Kräfte, welche der Erde immer neues Leben zuführen gegenüber dem, was in ihr abstirbt.
Man muß sich einen Unterschied im Erleben aneignen zwischen demjenigen, was bloß egoistisches Fühlen ist, und dem, wo wir nur den Schauplatz abgeben zu dem Erleben des Gefühls, das da sein muß für das Weltendasein. Es kann unter Umständen ein Mensch äußerlich sehr wenig tun, aber wenn er, nicht um einen persönlichen Genuß zu haben, sondern mit einer entwickelten Seele weiß, daß in seinem Gefühl die Gelegenheit gegeben wird, daß dieses Gefühl, welches für das Weltendasein wichtig ist, überhaupt vorhanden ist, so tut er damit außerordentlich viel. So sonderbar es erscheint, so sei auch noch das Folgende gesagt: Es hat einmal einen griechischen Philosophen gegeben, der Plato hieß. Es rühren von ihm Schriften her. Solange man nur auf dem physischen Plan lebt mit seiner Seele, liest man diese Schriften, um sich aus ihnen zu belehren. Eine solche äußere Belehrung hat ihre Bedeutung für den physischen Plan, und es ist ganz gut, wenn man alles mögliche benutzt, um sich auf dem physischen Plane zu belehren, denn sonst bleibt man eben dumm. Die Dinge, die auf dem physischen Plane geleistet werden, sind dazu da, daß man sich aus ihnen belehrt. Wenn aber die Seele esoterisch sich entwickelt hat, dann nimmt sie - sagen wir - den Plato und liest ihn wiederum aus einem anderen Grunde: nämlich weil der Plato mit seinen Schöpfungen nur dann einen Sinn im Erdendasein gehabt hat, wenn das, was er geschaffen hat, in Seelen auch erlebt wird; und man liest dann nicht nur, um sich zu belehren, sondern man liest, weil dadurch etwas getan wird.
So müssen wir uns etwas aneignen für unser Fühlen, was uns einen Unterschied erkennen läßt zwischen egoistischem Fühlen, das mehr nach der Genußseite hingeht, und unegoistischem Fühlen, welches einem erscheint wie eine spirituelle Verpflichtung. Sogar bis ins äußere Leben und in die äußerliche Lebensanschauung kann sich das hineinerstrecken. Und hier kommen wir auf einen Punkt zu sprechen, welcher - man möchte sagen - aus dem einzelnen Erleben in das soziale Erleben hineinleuchtet. Wenn derjenige, der mit den Geheimnissen der Esoterik bekannt ist, sich das äußere Weltentreiben anschaut: wie so viele Menschen die freie Zeit, die ihnen bleibt, verschwenden, statt ihre Gefühle zu veredeln in Anknüpfung an das, was dem Erdendasein aus den geistigen Schöpfungen kommt, dann möchte der, der eine esoterische Entwicklung durchgemacht hat, weinen über die Stumpfheit im Menschendasein, das vorübergeht an dem, was da ist, damit es durch menschliches Fühlen und menschliches Empfinden ströme. Und es ist auf diesem Gebiete durchaus darauf aufmerksam zu machen, daß da, wo diese Erlebnisse beginnen, schon ein gewisser feinerer Egoismus in der Menschennatur auftreten wird. Wir werden in den nächsten Vorträgen hören, wie dieser feinere Egoismus dazu angetan ist, sich selber zu überwinden; aber es tritt das durchaus zuerst wie ein feinerer Egoismus auf, und man wird während der spirituellen Entwicklung an sich erfahren können, daß eine Art höherer Genußbedürftigkeit auftritt, eine Genußbedürftigkeit gegenüber geistigen Dingen und geistigen Angelegenheiten. Und so grotesk es klingen mag, so ist es doch wahr, derjenige, der eine esoterische Entwicklung durchmacht, er sagt sich von einem bestimmten Punkte an, wenn er auch dieses Bewußtsein nicht bis zum Hochmut und zur Eitelkeit kommen lassen darf, er sagt sich: Dasjenige, was an geistigen Schöpfungen auf der Erde vorliegt, muß von mir genossen werden; es ist da, um von mir genossen zu werden. So gehört es sich. - Und man entwickelt einen gewissen Drang allmählich nach solchen geistigen Genüssen. Die Esoterik wird schon in dieser Beziehung kein Unheil stiften in der Welt; denn man kann sich versichert halten, daß, wenn solche Genußsucht gegenüber den geistigen Schöpfungen der Menschheit auftritt, diese nicht zum Nachteil sein wird.
Im Gefolge davon tritt aber noch etwas anderes auf. Man fühlt also nach und nach seinen eigenen Ätherleib gewissermaßen erwachen dadurch, daß man das eigene Denken wie etwas Minderwertiges fühlt, daß man die Gedanken, die in einen einströmen wie von dem Kosmos, von dem gottdurchwobenen Kosmos einströmen fühlt. Man fühlt immer mehr und mehr, wie Wille und Gefühl aus einem selber aufsteigen; Egoität beginnt man zu fühlen eigentlich nur noch in Wille und Gefühl, während man wie etwas, das einen mit der ganzen Welt verbindet, die Gaben der Weisheit empfindet, von denen man sich durchströmt fühlt. Und dann ist dieses Erlebnis mit einem anderen verbunden: Man beginnt diese innere Wirksamkeit von Gefühl und Willen mit innerer Sympathie und Antipathie durchwirkt zu erleben. Das Gefühl wird immer feiner und feiner dafür: Wenn du dieses oder jenes tust, so ist es eine Schande, da du ein gewisses Quantum von Weisheit doch in dir hast. - Von anderem kann man fühlen: Es ist würdig, es zu tun, da man dieses Quantum von Weisheit fühlt. - Ein im Fühlen auftretendes Erleben der Selbstkontrolle stellt sich naturgemäß ein. Ein bitteres Gefühl überkommt einen, wenn man von sich aufsteigen fühlt einen Willen, der einen drängt, dieses oder jenes zu tun, was doch nicht gerechtfertigt erscheint gegenüber der Weisheit, deren man teilhaftig geworden ist. Dieses bittere Gefühl wird am deutlichsten wahrgenommen gegenüber dem, was man gesprochen hat; und es ist gut bei dem anthroposophisch sich Entwickelnden, nicht mit Unaufmerksamkeit darüber hinwegzugehen, wie sich gerade in dieser Beziehung verfeinern kann das ganze innere Empfindungsleben. Während der Mensch des exoterischen Lebens, wenn er Worte ausgesprochen hat, wenn er dieses oder jenes gesagt hat, es auch abgetan hat, stellt sich bei demjenigen, der eine esoterische Entwicklung durchgemacht hat, ein deutliches Nachgefühl gerade gegenüber dem Gesprochenen ein: etwas wie eine innere Schande, wenn er etwas Unrichtiges in moralischer oder intellektueller Beziehung ausgesprochen hat, etwas wie eine Art von Dankbarkeit - nicht Wohlgefallen mit sich selbst -, wenn es einem gelungen ist, so etwas auszusprechen, wozu die errungene Weisheit «ja» sagen kann. Und fühlt man - man bekommt auch dafür eine feine Empfindung -, daß etwas auftaucht wie innere Selbstbefriedigung, Selbstgefälligkeit, wenn man etwas Richtiges gesagt hat, dann läßt man sich das zum Zeugnis dafür sein, daß man noch zuviel Eitelkeit in sich trägt, die nichts taugt in der Entwicklung des Menschen. Man lernt unterscheiden zwischen dem Gefühl der Befriedigung, wenn man etwas gesagt hat, womit man einverstanden sein kann, und der Selbstgefälligkeit, die nichts taugt. Man versuche dieses Gefühl nicht aufkommen zu lassen, sondern nur die Empfindung zu entwickeln gegenüber der Schande, wenn man Unrichtiges und Unmoralisches gesagt hat, und gegenüber der Dankbarkeit für die Weisheit, die einem zuteil geworden ist und die man nicht als seine eigene beansprucht, sondern als vom Weltenall geschenkt, wenn es einem gelungen ist, etwas ihr Angemessenes zu sagen.
Nach und nach empfindet man auch so gegenüber seinem eigenen Denken. Es ist ja vorhin gesagt worden: Man muß ein Mensch auf dem physischen Plane bleiben; man muß also neben dem, daß man den selbstgemachten Gedanken nicht allzuviel Wert beimißt, diese Gedanken doch machen, aber dieses Selbstdenken verwandelt sich jetzt auch, und zwar so, daß man es unter die eben charakterisierte Selbstkontrolle stellt. Bei einem Gedanken, von dem man sich sagen kann: du hast ihn gemacht und er ist angemessen der Weisheit, - bei diesem Gedanken entwickelt man ein Gefühl der Dankbarkeit gegenüber der Weisheit. Ein Gedanke, der aufsteigt als irrtümlicher, unschöner, unmoralischer Gedanke, der führt zu einem gewissen inneren Schamgefühl, und man bekommt die Empfindung: So kannst du noch sein; das ist noch möglich, daß du so viel Egoität hast, um das zu denken gegenüber dem, was schon als Weisheit in dich eingezogen ist! - Das ist ungeheuer wichtig, eine solche Art von Selbstkontrolle in seinem Inneren zu fühlen. Diese Selbstkontrolle hat noch die Eigentümlichkeit, daß sie einem nie gegeben wird durch den kritischen Verstand, sondern immer auftritt im Fühlen, im Empfinden.
Achten wir wohl darauf, meine lieben Freunde: Derjenige, der nur gescheit ist, der nur Urteilskraft in bezug auf das äußere Leben hat, kritisch ist, der kann zu dem, um was es sich handelt, niemals kommen; denn das muß im Fühlen aufkommen. Wenn es im Gefühl auftaucht, wenn man dieses Gefühl sich errungen hat, so ist es ein Gefühl, das wie aus dem eigenen Innern aufsteigt; man identifiziert sich dann mit diesem Gefühl der Scham oder Dankbarkeit und man empfindet sein Selbst verbunden mit diesem Gefühl. Und wenn ich schematisch aufzeichnen sollte, was man da erlebt, so müßte ich sagen, daß es ist, wie wenn man Weisheit von oben einströmend, von oben also einem entgegenkommend fühlte, von vorne in das Haupt einströmend und dann einen von oben nach unten ausfüllend. Dagegen empfindet man, wie einem aus dem eigenen Leib entgegenströmt etwas von Scham, so daß man sich identifiziert mit diesen Gefühlen, und sich das, was als Weisheit da ist, anspricht als etwas, was von außen gegeben ist; und man empfindet in sich eine Region, wo sich begegnet das, was jetzt das Ich ist, dieses Gefühl, und die einströmende, einem geschenkte Weisheit.
Diese Region, wo die beiden zusammenkommen, die kann man innerlich erleben. Fühlt man dieses Zusammenkommen, so ist dieses das richtige innere Erleben der ätherischen Welt. Man erlebt, wie sich hereindrängen die Gedanken aus der äußeren ätherischen Welt - denn das ist die Weisheit, die aus der äußeren ätherischen Welt einem entgegenströmt, was da hereindrängt und empfunden wird durch die beiden Gefühle. Das ist die richtig empfundene ätherische Welt, - und wenn wir sie so empfinden, steigen wir auf zu den höheren Wesen, die nur bis zu einem Ätherleib herunterkommen und nicht bis zu einem physischen Menschenleib. — Dagegen kann man auch diese ätherische Welt in einer gewissen Weise unrichtig erleben. Richtig wird die ätherische Welt zwischen Denken und Fühlen erlebt, wie eben gezeigt worden ist: das Erlebnis ist also ein rein innerer seelischer Vorgang. Unrichtig kann die elementarische oder ätherische Welt erlebt werden, wenn man sie erlebt an der Grenze zwischen Atmen und unserem eigenen Ätherleib. Wenn man zu früh oder überhaupt unrichtig Atemübungen macht, so wird man allmählich ein Zeuge seines eigenen Atmungsprozesses. Mit dem Atmungsprozeß, den man dann wahrnimmt — während man sonst atmet, ohne es wahrzunehmen -, kann man sich aneignen ein wie sich selber empfindendes Atmen. Und zu diesem Empfinden kann sich gesellen ein gewisses Wahrnehmen der ätherischen Welt. Man kann sich durch alle möglichen Atmungsprozesse ein Erfahren, ein Beobachten ätherischer Prozesse aneignen, die in der Außenwelt real sind, die aber zu den niedersten äußerlichen psychischen Prozessen gehören und die einem niemals, wenn man sie zu früh erlebt, einen richtigen Begriff geben werden von der wahren geistigen Welt.

Gewiß, es kann von einem gewissen Zeitpunkt des esoterischen Übens an auch ein regulierter Atmungsprozeß eintreten; aber er muß in der richtigen Weise geführt werden. Dann kommt das zustande, daß wir die ätherische Welt wahrnehmen, wie es geschildert worden ist, an der Grenze zwischen dem Denken und Fühlen, und daß nur unterstützt wird dasjenige, was wir da kennenlernen, dadurch, daß wir auch die groben ätherischen Vorgänge kennenlernen, die sich an der Grenze der ätherischen Welt und unseres Atmungsvorganges abspielen. Denn die Sache ist so, daß es eine Welt wirklicher höherer Geistigkeit gibt; die erreichen wir durch jenen Prozeß, der beschrieben worden ist, zwischen der Weisheit und dem Fühlen; da dringen wir hinauf bis zu den Taten, welche in der ätherischen Welt die Wesen der höheren Hierarchien verrichten. Aber es gibt eine große Anzahl von allen möglichen guten und schlechten und widrigen und schauerlichen und schädlichen Elementarwesen, die, wenn wir mit ihnen zur Unzeit bekannt werden, sich uns so aufdrängen, als ob sie wirklich eine wertvolle geistige Welt wären, während sie nichts anderes sind als in einer gewissen Weise die letzten Abfallwesen der geistigen Welt. Derjenige, der in die geistige Welt eindringen will, muß ja schon auch mit diesen Wesenheiten bekannt werden; aber es ist nicht gut, zuerst mit ihnen bekanntzuwerden. Denn das Eigentümliche ist dieses, meine lieben Freunde, daß, wenn man mit diesen Wesenheiten zunächst bekannt wird, ohne den schwierigeren Weg des eigenen inneren Erlebens zu gehen, dann bekommt man eine Vorliebe für diese Wesenheiten, eine ungeheure Vorliebe für diese Wesenheiten. Und da kann es sich herausstellen, daß jemand, der auf unrichtige Weise, namentlich durch solche physische Trainierung, die man eine Änderung des Atmungsprozesses nennen kann, sich so hinauflebt in die geistige Welt, daß er gewisse Dinge beschreibt aus diesen geistigen Welten, so wie sie ihm erscheinen. Und er beschreibt sie so, daß manche Menschen sie hinnehmen als etwas außerordentlich Schönes, während sie für denjenigen, der sie im inneren Erleben wahrnimmt, Schauerliches und Ekelhaftes sein können. Diese Dinge sind durchaus möglich im Erleben der geistigen Welt.
Von anderen Vorgängen, die der Mensch als Trainierung an sich vornehmen kann und durch die er in schlimme Welten eintreten kann, braucht hier nicht die Rede zu sein, da es im allgemeinen in dem der Welt zu verkündenden Okkultismus Usus, Sitte ist, daß man von demjenigen, was der Mensch in der geistigen Welt als den Abschaum dieser geistigen Welt kennenlernt, nicht spricht. Es ist nicht notwendig, daß man in diese Welt geistig eintritt; daher ist es nicht Usus, von den Methoden, die unter den Atmungsprozeß noch hinuntergehen, zu sprechen. Schon der Atmungsprozeß, wenn er nicht in der richtigen Weise getrieben wird, führt durchaus in Abfallswesen hinein, die man allerdings kennenlernen soll, aber nicht zuerst, weil sie einem sonst durchaus eine gewisse Verliebtheit in sie abgewinnen, die man eben nicht haben soll. Einen richtigen objektiven Standpunkt gegenüber ihrem Werte wird man erst bekommen, wenn man von der anderen Seite in die geistigen Welten eingedrungen ist.
Wenn man nun beginnt, so aus sich selber gleichsam herausströmend zu fühlen Gegengefühle gegenüber der Weisheit, Schamgefühle, Dankbarkeitsgefühle, wenn einem das gleichsam aus dem eigenen Organismus heraus aufstößt, dann macht man dadurch wiederum die erste elementarste Bekanntschaft mit etwas, das dann weiter kennengelernt werden muß in der fortschreitenden okkulten Entwicklung. Wir haben gestern darauf aufmerksam gemacht, daß bei dem allmählichen Erleben des Ätherischen wir mit dem bekannt werden, was in unserem Hirnätherleib tätig ist als Amshaspands der Zarathustralehre. Für unsere Begriffe können wir auch sagen: Wir lernen da zuerst einen Begriff kennen für die wirkenden Erzengelwesen, für das, was diese Archangeloi in uns zu tun haben. Durch das, was da zurück sich staut, was da aus uns selber heraufdringt in dem Gefühl von Dankbarkeit und Scham, das einen Persönlichkeitscharakter hat, weil es aus uns herauskommt, durch das bekommen wir den ersten elementaren wahren Begriff von dem, was man Archai oder Urkräfte nennt; denn was die Urkräfte in uns wirken, das erleben wir auf diese eben geschilderte Weise in der ersten elementarsten Art. Während man sozusagen in seinem Kopfe, wenn man anfängt ätherisch zu erleben, zuerst die Archangeloi - man möchte sagen - schattenhaft erlebt in ihren Tätigkeiten, in ihren ätherischen Wirkungen, erlebt man in dem, worauf die Weisheit in einem stößt und was einen Rückschlag gibt, die mit etwas Willensartigem, aber nicht ganz Willensartigem durchströmten Urkräfte, die in einen eingezogen sind und die in der menschlichen Persönlichkeit mitwirken. Man bekommt dann allmählich einen Begriff davon - wenn man so fühlen lernt -, was der Okkultist meint, wenn er sagt: Auf der uralten Verkörperung unserer Erde, auf dem alten Saturn, haben gelebt sozusagen auf ihrer Menschenstufe die Urkräfte oder Geister der Persönlichkeit. Damals waren diese Urkräfte oder Geister der Persönlichkeit Menschen. Sie haben sich weiterentwickelt. Indem sie sich weiterentwickelt haben, haben sie die Fähigkeit erlangt, aus dem Übersinnlichen heraus zu wirken. Und wie entfalten sie in unserer heutigen Zeit, in unserer Erdenzeit, diese Macht, die sie sich angeeignet haben, indem ihre Entwicklung fortgeschritten ist bis zur Erde herein?
Sie haben sich die Fähigkeit erworben, aus dem Übersinnlichen an unserer eigenen Leiblichkeit, an unserer Hülle so zu arbeiten, daß sie in unserem Ätherleib Kräfte bewirken, welche so zur Erscheinung kommen, wie beschrieben worden ist. Sie haben diese Kräfte in uns hereingelenkt, und wenn wir heute fühlen: Wir sind so organisiert, daß wir in uns die charakterisierten Gefühle von Dankbarkeit und Scham entwickeln können wie einen inneren naturgemäßen Vorgang - das kann in uns zum Erleben werden -, so müssen wir sagen: Damit dies zum inneren Erlebnis werden kann, damit unser Ätherleib so pulsieren kann, damit er so reagiert auf die Weisheit, dazu haben Kräfte in ihn hineingegossen die Urkräfte, geradeso wie der Mensch selber dazu gelangen wird, einstmals bei den fernen Verkörperungen unserer Erde in andere Wesenheiten, die unter ihm stehen werden, in ihr Inneres hinein solche Fähigkeiten für eine entsprechende Hülle zu prägen. Was man über die höheren Welten wissen soll, wird eben nach und nach durch inneres Erleben erworben, wird erworben dadurch, daß wir aufsteigen, daß wir von dem physischen Erleben ins ätherische Erleben übergehen. Auf dem alten Saturn - das sei zur Verdeutlichung dieser Dinge noch angeführt - war ja, wie Sie wissen, die Wärme sozusagen der dichteste physische Zustand, der einzige physische Zustand, zu dem es zunächst gekommen ist in der mittleren Saturnzeit. Und das, was damals - Sie können das nachlesen in meiner «Geheimwissenschaft» - als Saturnwirkungen im Physischen vorhanden war, das waren Wärme- und Kälteströmungen. Psychisch, seelisch können wir diese Wärme- und Kälteströmungen auch ansprechen dadurch, daß wir sagen: Es strömte Wärme, aber diese war strömende Dankbarkeit der Geister der Persönlichkeit, oder es strömte Kälte, und diese strömende Kälte, die nach einer anderen Richtung strömte, war strömendes Schamgefühl der Geister der Persönlichkeit. Das ist das, was wir uns allmählich aneignen müssen, daß sich uns verbindet das physische Wirken mit dem moralischen Wirken; denn je weiter wir in die höheren Welten hineingehen, desto mehr gesellen sich diese beiden Dinge zusammen, das physische Geschehen, das dann kein physisches Geschehen mehr ist, und das moralische, das dann aber mit der Macht von Naturgesetzen durch die Welt hinströmt.
Alles das, was jetzt charakterisiert worden ist als etwas, was im inneren Erleben auftritt durch den veränderten Ätherleib, das bewirkt noch ein anderes in der menschlichen Seele. Es bewirkt, daß diese menschliche Seele nach und nach anfängt, ein Unbehagen darüber zu empfinden, daß man überhaupt dieser einzelne Mensch ist, dieser einzelne persönliche Mensch ist. Das ist wichtig, daß man auch darauf achten lernt; und es ist gut, wenn man sich zum Grundsatz macht, überhaupt darauf zu achten. Je weniger man sich nämlich vor dieser Stufe der esoterischen Entwicklung angeeignet hat an Interesse für das, was die Menschen im allgemeinen angeht, an Interesse für das allgemein Menschliche, desto störender empfindet man das beim Vorwärtsdringen. Eine Seele, die ohne Interesse geblieben ist für das allgemein Menschliche und die dennoch eine esoterische Entwicklung durchmachen würde, würde sich selber immer mehr und mehr wie eine Last empfinden. Eine Seele zum Beispiel, die es vermag, hinzugeben durch die Welt mitleidlos und ohne Mitfreude an dem, was eine andere Seele erfreuen und erleiden kann, eine solche Seele, die nicht gut untertauchen kann in die Seelen der anderen, die sich nicht recht hineinversetzen kann in die Seelen von anderen Menschen, eine solche Seele empfindet, wenn sie fortschreitet in der esoterischen Entwicklung, sich selber wie eine Art von Last. Wie ein schweres Gewicht schleppt man sich selber mit, wenn man, trotzdem man gleichgültig bleibt gegenüber Menschenleid und Menschenfreude, dennoch eine esoterische Entwicklung durchmacht; und man kann sicher sein, daß die esoterische Entwicklung eine äußerliche, verstandesmäßige bleibt, daß man das Geistige so aufnimmt wie die Lehren eines Kochbuches oder einer äußeren Wissenschaft, sobald man sich nicht als Last empfindet, wenn man trotz seiner Entwicklung nicht ein mitfühlendes Herz entfalten kann mit allem Menschenleid und mit aller Menschenfreude.
Daher ist es so gut, wenn man seine menschlichen Interessen erweitert während seiner okkulten Entwicklung, und nichts ist eigentlich schlimmer, als wenn man nicht versucht, Verständnis sich anzueignen im Fortschritt der esoterischen Entwicklung für jede Art von Menschenfühlen und Menschenempfinden und Menschenleben. Das bedingt natürlich nicht den Grundsatz - das muß immer wieder betont werden -, daß man über alles Unrecht, das etwa in der Welt geschicht, kritiklos hinweggehen müsse; denn das wäre ein Unrecht gegenüber der Welt. Aber etwas anderes bedingt es: Während man vor seiner esoterischen Entwicklung eine gewisse Freude haben kann am Tadel irgendeines Menschenfehlers, hört dieses Freudehaben am Tadeln eines Menschen im Laufe der esoterischen Entwicklung eigentlich ganz auf. Wer kennt nicht im äußeren Leben die Spötter, die so gerne über Fehler anderer eine ganz treffende Kritik abgeben können. Nicht als ob gerade das Treffende des Urteils über Menschenfehler aufhören müßte, nicht als ob man unter allen Umständen verpönte - sagen wir - eine solche Tat, wie sie Erasmus von Rotterdam getan hat mit seinem Buche «Das Lob der Narrheit». Nein, es kann ganz berechtigt bleiben, scharf zu sein gegen die Fehler, die in der Welt geschehen; aber wer eine esoterische Entwicklung durchmacht, bei dem ist es so, daß ihn jeder Tadel, den er aussprechen oder in Wirkung umsetzen muß, schmerzt und immer mehr und mehr Schmerz bereitet. Und das Leid über das Tadelnmüssen, das ist etwas, was auch wie ein Barometer der esoterischen Entwicklung auftreten kann. Je mehr man noch Freude empfinden kann, wenn man tadeln muß oder wenn man lächerlich finden muß die Welt, desto weniger ist man wirklich reif, fortzuschreiten. Und man muß schon allmählich eine Art von Gefühl dafür bekommen, daß sich in einem immer mehr ein Leben entwickelt, welches einen diese Torheiten und Fehler der Welt anschauen läßt mit einem spottenden und mit einem von Tränen erfüllten Auge, mit einem nassen und einem trockenen Auge. Dieses innerliche Gegliedertwerden, dieses Selbständigerwerden sozusagen von dem, was früher vermischt war, das gehört nun auch zu der Veränderung, die der Ätherleib des Menschen erlebt.
Sixth Lecture
It will be important that we take this series of lectures in the right sense, that is, that we regard it as an examination of experiences that human beings go through as changes within themselves during their esoteric, or let us say, anthroposophical development, so that what is described can be regarded as something that can actually be experienced during development.
Naturally, only striking experiences, typical experiences, so to speak, can be discussed; but it is precisely these most important experiences that will enable us to gain an idea of many other things that can be observed in the course of development. Yesterday we spoke mainly about how human beings acquire a finer sensitivity to what is happening in the outer life ether or in the ether in general. These experiences are connected with many others, and one experience that deserves special attention is what we do with our power of judgment.
Isn't it true that as human beings we stand in the world in such a way that we judge the things that come to us in a certain way, that we form ideas about things, that we consider one thing to be right and another to be wrong? How a person is able to judge things depends on what is generally referred to as wisdom, intelligence, or judgment. This wisdom, this intelligence, this judgment gradually becomes something that is seen in a different light in the course of development. This was already hinted at a little yesterday. One finds more and more that for the actual affairs of the higher, spiritual life, this intelligence, this cleverness, is of no value whatsoever, even though one must bring as much of it as possible from one's starting point, from the physical plane, if one wants to embark on the path to the higher worlds. And so one finds oneself in a situation that can easily seem unbearable to the utilitarian: that one needs something quite necessarily at first for higher development, and yet, once one is within that higher development, it loses its value. One must therefore, in a sense, do everything possible to develop a healthy power of judgment here on the physical plane that does justice to the facts, but one must then be clear that when dwelling in the higher worlds, even this power of judgment does not have the same value as it does here below on the physical plane. If one wants to have healthy higher senses, one must start from a healthy power of judgment; but this healthy power of judgment must be transformed into healthy perception for higher perception.
However, no matter how much we develop, as long as we have to remain on the physical plane, we are still human beings of this physical plane, and on this physical plane we have the task of developing our power of judgment in a healthy way. Therefore, we must take great care to learn in good time not to mix life in the higher worlds with life on the physical plane. Anyone who wants to apply what they experience in the higher worlds directly to the physical plane will easily become a dreamer, a useless person. We must accustom ourselves to living clearly in the higher world and then, when we step out of the state of this life in the higher worlds, to adhere as much as possible to what is right for the physical plane. And this dual position, which is required by the dual position of spiritual and physical life itself, must be carried out carefully and conscientiously. We accustom ourselves to a correct attitude toward the world in this realm by not allowing ourselves to mix into our everyday dealings that which belongs to the higher world; by mixing as little as possible into our everyday dealings that which we are so easily tempted to do: for example, saying that if we find something unsympathetic in a person, we cannot tolerate their aura. It is better to stick to ordinary expressions for ordinary life, saying that one finds this or that unsympathetic. In this respect, it is better for a person on the physical plane to remain among other people on the physical plane and to use expressions that are completely correct in relation to higher life sparingly in ordinary life. One should be careful to avoid mixing words, concepts, and ideas that belong to the higher life into everyday conversation. This might seem like a kind of pedantic demand to someone who, let's say, out of a certain enthusiasm for spiritual life, finds it necessary to permeate their entire being with this spiritual life; and yet, what might seem pedantic in an ordinary case for ordinary life is an important educational principle for the higher worlds.
Therefore, if it seems more natural to us to describe ordinary life with words from higher life, let us translate this into a language that is as suitable as possible for the physical plane! It must be emphasized again and again that these things are not insignificant, but meaningful and effective. If one assumes this, then one can also speak impartially about how, in relation to life in the higher worlds, ordinary judgment loses its value, how one learns, as it were, to feel that the way one was previously intelligent must now cease. And then one notices again — this is an experience one has more and more — one's dependence on the etheric life of the world, namely on time. How easy it is, especially in our age, for people—let us say, of a certain youth—to approach everything, everything that can be judged in the world, and now believe: Yes, once one has acquired a certain capacity for judgment, then one can say yes or no about everything, then one can philosophize about everything possible. This belief that one can philosophize about everything is thoroughly torn from the soul in esoteric development, for there one realizes that our judgments actually have something essential about them that needs to mature above all else. One learns to recognize that one must simply live with certain ideas that one has taken in for a while, so that one's own etheric body can grapple with them if one wants to arrive at a judgment with which one can agree. One realizes that one must wait to arrive at a certain judgment. Only then does one realize the full meaning of the phrase: “Allow the contents of the soul to mature.” And one becomes, in essence, more and more modest.
However, this becoming more modest is a very peculiar thing, because one cannot always strike a balance between having to judge and being able to wait for maturity in order to have a judgment about something, because one is also highly mistaken about these things and because there is actually nothing right except life itself, which can enlighten one about these things. Let's say, for example, that a philosopher is confronted with a question about some secret of the universe, about some law of the universe, by someone who is esoteric to a certain degree. If the philosopher can only make his philosophical judgment, he will believe that he must be right about something, and one will understand that he must have this belief. The other person will know very well that the philosopher's capacity for judgment is not sufficient to decide the question at all. For he knows that he has absorbed the ideas that the philosopher has concocted into a judgment in times past, that he has allowed them to mature within himself, and that this alone has enabled him to have a view of the matter; he knows that he has lived with the matter and that this has made him ripe for the judgment he now passes at a higher stage of maturity. But understanding between the two is actually impossible, cannot be brought about directly in many cases; it can only be brought about if the philosopher feels the necessity of allowing certain contents of the soul to mature until one can allow oneself to form an opinion about them. Opinions, views—we learn more and more to recognize this—must be fought for, must be won. To this end, one acquires a deep, intense feeling, and this stems from the fact that one gains an inner sense of time, which is essentially connected with the development of the etheric body.
Yes, one gradually notices a certain contrast arising in the soul between the way one used to judge and the way one judges now, after having attained a certain maturity in the matter; and one notices how what one was able to judge in the past and what one judges now stand opposite each other like two powers, and then you notice a certain inner mobility of the temporal within yourself, you notice how the later must overcome the earlier. This is the dawning of a certain sense of time in consciousness, which arises through the existence of inner struggles, but these only arise because the later comes into a certain opposition with the earlier. It is absolutely necessary to acquire this as an inner sense of time, as an inner perception of time; for we must hold fast to the fact that we can only learn to experience the etheric if we acquire an inner concept of time.
Furthermore, we gain a certain experience that we always have the feeling that what came earlier originates from ourselves in our judgment, in our knowledge; what comes later has flowed into us, has come toward us, has been given to us. The feeling that was mentioned yesterday is becoming increasingly clear: that the cleverness that comes from oneself must be replaced by wisdom, which is acquired as if through a kind of devotion to a stream flowing toward us from the future. Feeling fulfilled by thoughts, in contrast to what one did in the past, when one lived in the consciousness of creating one's thoughts, testifies to progress. As one learns more and more that one does not make thoughts, but that thoughts think themselves in one, one has a sign that the etheric body is gradually developing the necessary inner sense of time. Everything that came before will have the aftertaste of something selfishly done; everything that is gained in the process of maturing will have the aftertaste of burning up what one has done oneself, of consuming what one has done oneself. And so one gradually transforms one's inner life into a very strange experience: one becomes more and more aware that one's own thinking, one's own thought-making, must be suppressed because it is something inferior, and that surrendering oneself to the thoughts that flow in from the cosmos is what is really valuable.
One's own life loses, so to speak, one of its parts — this is extremely important — it loses the part that we prefer to call self-thinking, and all that remains is self-feeling, self-sensation, and self-will. But these too undergo a change at the same time as thinking. One no longer forms one's thoughts, but they think themselves within the soul. With the feeling that thoughts have their own power through which they think themselves, a certain merging of feeling and will occurs. Feeling, one might say, becomes more and more active, and will becomes more and more emotional. Feeling and will become more closely related than they were previously on the physical plane. It is no longer possible to grasp an impulse of the will without developing a feeling with it. Some of what one does produces a bitter feeling, other things produce an uplifting feeling. Simultaneously with one's will, one feels within oneself an emotional judgment of one's own impulses of the will. Feelings that are there merely for the sake of pleasure gradually come to be experienced as a kind of reproach; but feelings that are experienced in such a way that one says to oneself that, as a human soul, one must provide the arena for such feelings, that one must experience them inwardly, otherwise they would not exist in the universe, such feelings are gradually found to be more justified than the others.
Let us take a specific example, a radical example, so that what is meant can be clearly understood. Someone—this is not meant to be profane, but only to express the matter in radical terms—might take real pleasure in a good meal. When he experiences this joy, something happens to him—that is beyond doubt—but it does not change much in the content of the world, in the cosmos, whether the individual has this joy in a good meal or not; it does not matter much for the general life of the world. But if someone picks up the Gospel of John and reads just three lines of it, that makes an enormous difference to the whole universe; for if, for example, no one among the souls on earth were to read the Gospel of John, the whole mission of the earth could not be fulfilled: from our participation in such things, spiritual forces radiate out, which always bring new life to the earth in contrast to what is dying within it.
One must learn to distinguish between what is merely selfish feeling and what is merely the setting for the experience of the feeling that must exist for the existence of the world. Under certain circumstances, a person may do very little outwardly, but if he knows, not for personal enjoyment, but with a developed soul, that the opportunity is given in his feeling for this feeling, which is important for the existence of the world, to be present at all, then he is doing an extraordinary amount. As strange as it may seem, let me also say the following: There was once a Greek philosopher named Plato. He wrote some works. As long as you live only on the physical plane with your soul, you read these works to learn from them. Such external instruction has its significance for the physical plane, and it is quite good to use everything possible to educate oneself on the physical plane, for otherwise one remains ignorant. The things that are accomplished on the physical plane are there to teach us. But when the soul has developed esoterically, it takes, say, Plato and reads him again for a different reason: namely, because Plato's creations only had meaning in earthly existence if what he created was also experienced in souls; and then one reads not only to learn, but because something is accomplished by doing so.
Thus, we must acquire something for our feeling that allows us to recognize the difference between selfish feeling, which tends more toward pleasure, and unselfish feeling, which appears to us as a spiritual obligation. This can even extend into our outer life and our outer view of life. And here we come to a point which, one might say, shines from individual experience into social experience. When someone familiar with the mysteries of esotericism looks at the outer world and sees how many people waste their free time instead of refining their feelings in connection with what comes to earthly existence from spiritual creations, then those who have undergone an esoteric development want to weep over the dullness of human existence, which passes by what is there to flow through human feeling and human perception. And in this area, it is important to point out that where these experiences begin, a certain finer egoism will already appear in human nature. In the next lectures, we will hear how this finer egoism is capable of overcoming itself; but at first it appears as a finer egoism, and during spiritual development one will experience that a kind of higher need for enjoyment arises, a need for enjoyment of spiritual things and spiritual matters. And as grotesque as it may sound, it is nevertheless true that those who undergo esoteric development say to themselves at a certain point, even if they must not allow this consciousness to develop into arrogance and vanity, they say to themselves: What exists on earth in the form of spiritual creations must be enjoyed by me; it is there to be enjoyed by me. That is how it should be. And one gradually develops a certain urge for such spiritual enjoyment. In this respect, esotericism will not cause any harm in the world, for one can be assured that when such a desire for enjoyment arises in relation to the spiritual creations of humanity, it will not be to their detriment.
In the wake of this, however, something else occurs. One gradually feels one's own etheric body awakening, so to speak, by feeling one's own thinking as something inferior, by feeling the thoughts flowing into one as if from the cosmos, from the cosmos woven by God. One feels more and more how will and feeling rise up from within oneself; one begins to feel egoity only in will and feeling, while one feels the gifts of wisdom flowing through one as something that connects one with the whole world. And then this experience is connected with another: One begins to experience this inner effectiveness of feeling and will interwoven with inner sympathy and antipathy. The feeling becomes finer and finer: if you do this or that, it is a shame, because you have a certain amount of wisdom within you. One can feel about other things: it is worthy of being done, because one feels this amount of wisdom. - An experience of self-control naturally arises in the feeling. A bitter feeling comes over you when you feel a will rising within you that urges you to do this or that, which does not seem justified in relation to the wisdom you have become aware of. This bitter feeling is most clearly perceived in relation to what one has said; and it is good for those developing anthroposophically not to overlook how the whole inner life of feeling can be refined in this particular relationship. While people in exoteric life, once they have spoken, once they have said this or that, dismiss it, those who have undergone esoteric development experience a distinct after-feeling precisely in relation to what has been said: something like an inner shame if they have said something wrong in a moral or intellectual sense, something like a kind of gratitude — not self-satisfaction — if they have succeeded in saying something to which the wisdom they have attained can say “yes.” And if one feels—one also gets a subtle sense of this—that something like inner self-satisfaction or complacency arises when one has said something right, then one allows this to be evidence that one still carries too much vanity within oneself, which is of no use in human development. One learns to distinguish between the feeling of satisfaction when one has said something one can agree with and the self-satisfaction that is of no use. Try not to let this feeling arise, but only develop a sense of shame when you have said something wrong or immoral, and a sense of gratitude for the wisdom that has been bestowed upon you, which you do not claim as your own, but as a gift from the universe when you have succeeded in saying something appropriate.
Gradually, one also feels this way about one's own thinking. It has been said before: one must remain a human being on the physical plane; therefore, in addition to not attaching too much value to one's own thoughts, one must still think these thoughts, but this self-thinking is now also transformed, in such a way that it is placed under the self-control just characterized. When you can say of a thought, “You have formed it, and it is appropriate to wisdom,” you develop a feeling of gratitude toward wisdom. A thought that arises as erroneous, unattractive, or immoral leads to a certain inner sense of shame, and you get the feeling: You can still be like that; it is still possible that you have so much egoism that you can think that about what has already entered into you as wisdom! It is immensely important to feel this kind of self-control within oneself. This self-control has the peculiarity that it is never given to us by the critical intellect, but always arises in feeling, in sensation.
Let us pay close attention, my dear friends: those who are only clever, who only have judgment in relation to external life, who are critical, can never arrive at what is important; for that must arise in feeling. When it arises in feeling, when one has attained this feeling, it is a feeling that rises up as if from one's own inner being; one then identifies with this feeling of shame or gratitude and feels one's self connected with this feeling. And if I were to sketch schematically what one experiences there, I would have to say that it is as if one felt wisdom flowing in from above, coming toward one from above, flowing into the head from the front and then filling one from top to bottom. In contrast, you feel something like shame flowing out of your own body, so that you identify with these feelings, and what is there as wisdom appeals to you as something given from outside; and you feel a region within yourself where what is now the I, this feeling, meets the wisdom that is flowing in and being given to you.
This region where the two come together can be experienced inwardly. If one feels this coming together, this is the correct inner experience of the etheric world. One experiences how thoughts from the outer etheric world push their way in—for this is the wisdom that flows toward one from the outer etheric world, which pushes its way in and is felt through the two feelings. This is the correctly perceived etheric world, and when we perceive it in this way, we ascend to the higher beings who only descend as far as the etheric body and not as far as the physical human body. — On the other hand, it is also possible to experience this etheric world in a certain way that is incorrect. The etheric world is experienced correctly between thinking and feeling, as has just been shown: the experience is therefore a purely inner soul process. The elemental or etheric world can be experienced incorrectly if it is experienced at the boundary between breathing and our own etheric body. If one does breathing exercises too early or incorrectly, one gradually becomes a witness to one's own breathing process. Through the breathing process that one then perceives — whereas one otherwise breathes without perceiving it — one can acquire a breathing that feels like oneself. And this feeling can be accompanied by a certain perception of the etheric world. Through all kinds of breathing processes, one can acquire an experience, an observation of etheric processes that are real in the outer world but belong to the lowest external psychic processes and which, if experienced too early, will never give one a correct understanding of the true spiritual world.

Certainly, from a certain point in esoteric practice, a regulated breathing process can also occur, but it must be guided in the right way. Then we will perceive the etheric world as it has been described, at the boundary between thinking and feeling, and what we learn there will be supported by our knowledge of the gross etheric processes that take place at the boundary between the etheric world and our breathing process. For the fact is that there is a world of real higher spirituality; we reach it through the process that has been described, between wisdom and feeling; there we ascend to the deeds that the beings of the higher hierarchies perform in the etheric world. But there are a large number of all kinds of good and evil, adverse and terrifying and harmful elemental beings who, if we become acquainted with them at the wrong time, impose themselves on us as if they were really a valuable spiritual world, whereas they are nothing more than, in a certain sense, the last remnants of the spiritual world. Those who wish to enter the spiritual world must of course become acquainted with these beings; but it is not good to become acquainted with them first. For the peculiar thing is this, my dear friends, that if one first becomes acquainted with these beings without going through the more difficult path of one's own inner experience, one develops a fondness for these beings, an immense fondness for these beings. And then it can happen that someone who has worked their way up into the spiritual world in the wrong way, namely through physical training that can be called a change in the breathing process, describes certain things from these spiritual worlds as they appear to them. And they describe them in such a way that some people accept them as something extraordinarily beautiful, while for those who perceive them in their inner experience, they can be terrifying and disgusting. These things are entirely possible in the experience of the spiritual world.
There is no need to mention here other processes that people can undertake as training and through which they can enter into evil worlds, since it is customary in occultism, which is to be proclaimed to the world, not to speak of what people encounter in the spiritual world as the dregs of that world. It is not necessary to enter this world spiritually; therefore, it is not customary to speak of methods that go even further down than the breathing process. Even the breathing process, if not carried out in the right way, leads to a state of degeneration, which one should certainly learn about, but not at first, because otherwise one will develop a certain infatuation with it, which one should not have. One will only gain a correct, objective viewpoint of its value once one has entered the spiritual worlds from the other side.
When one now begins to feel counterfeelings toward wisdom, feelings of shame, feelings of gratitude, as if flowing out of oneself, when these feelings rise up from one's own organism, then one makes the first elementary acquaintance with something that must then be further explored in the progressive occult development. Yesterday we pointed out that in the gradual experience of the etheric, we become acquainted with what is active in our brain ether body as the Amshaspands of the Zarathustra teaching. In our terms, we can also say that we first learn a concept for the working archangel beings, for what these Archangeloi have to do in us. Through what accumulates there, what rises up from within us in a feeling of gratitude and shame, which has a personal character because it comes from within us, we gain the first elementary true concept of what are called archai or primal forces; for what the primal forces work in us, we experience in the most elementary way just described. While one experiences, so to speak, in one's head, when one begins to experience the etheric, first the Archangeloi — one might say — shadowy in their activities, in their etheric effects, one experiences in that which wisdom encounters in one and which gives a setback, the primal forces that flow through something will-like, but not entirely volitional, which have entered into you and are working in the human personality. You then gradually gain an understanding — if you learn to feel in this way — of what the occultist means when he says: On the ancient embodiment of our Earth, on old Saturn, the elemental forces or spirits of personality lived, so to speak, on their human level. At that time, these primordial forces or spirits of personality were human beings. They have evolved. In evolving, they have acquired the ability to work from the supersensible world. And how do they unfold in our present time, in our earthly time, this power which they have acquired as their evolution has progressed to the earth?
They have acquired the ability to work from the supersensible realm on our own physical bodies, on our outer shell, in such a way that they cause forces to arise in our etheric body, which then manifest as described. They have directed these forces into us, and when we feel today that we are organized in such a way that we can develop within ourselves the feelings of gratitude and shame described above as an inner, natural process—which can become an experience within us—then we must say: In order for this to become an inner experience, in order for our etheric body to pulsate in this way, in order for it to react in this way to wisdom, forces have been poured into it, the primordial forces, just as human beings themselves will one day, in the distant incarnations of our Earth, in other beings that will stand below them, imprint such abilities for a corresponding shell into their inner being. What we need to know about the higher worlds is acquired gradually through inner experience, through our ascent, through our transition from physical experience to etheric experience. On ancient Saturn—let me mention this to clarify these things—heat was, as you know, the densest physical state, the only physical state that initially existed in the middle Saturn period. And what was present at that time—you can read about this in my “Secret Science”—as Saturn's effects in the physical realm were currents of heat and cold. Psychically, soul-wise, we can also address these currents of warmth and cold by saying: warmth flowed, but this was the flowing gratitude of the spirits of the personality, or cold flowed, and this flowing cold, which flowed in a different direction, was the flowing shame of the spirits of the personality. This is what we must gradually learn: that physical activity is connected with moral activity; for the further we go into the higher worlds, the more these two things come together, physical events, which are then no longer physical events, and moral events, which then flow through the world with the power of natural laws.
Everything that has now been characterized as something that occurs in inner experience through the transformed etheric body also has another effect on the human soul. It causes the human soul to gradually begin to feel uneasy about being this individual human being, this individual personal human being. It is important to learn to pay attention to this, and it is good to make it a principle to pay attention to it at all. The less one has acquired an interest in what concerns human beings in general, an interest in what is generally human, before reaching this stage of esoteric development, the more disturbing one finds it when advancing. A soul that has remained uninterested in what is generally human and yet undergoes esoteric development would increasingly feel itself to be a burden. A soul, for example, that is capable of going through the world without compassion and without sharing in the joys and sufferings of another soul, a soul that cannot immerse itself in the souls of others, that cannot really empathize with other people, such a soul feels itself to be a kind of burden as it progresses in esoteric development. Like a heavy weight, one drags oneself along when, despite remaining indifferent to human suffering and human joy, one nevertheless undergoes esoteric development; and one can be sure that esoteric development will remain external and intellectual, that one will absorb the spiritual as one would the teachings of a cookbook or an external science, as soon as one no longer feels oneself to be a burden, if, despite your development, you cannot develop a compassionate heart for all human suffering and all human joy.
That is why it is so good to broaden your human interests during your occult development, and nothing is actually worse than not trying to acquire understanding for every kind of human feeling, human perception, and human life as you progress in your esoteric development. This does not, of course, imply the principle—and this must be emphasized again and again—that one must uncritically overlook all injustice that occurs in the world, for that would be an injustice to the world. But something else is implied: while one may take a certain pleasure in criticizing some human fault before one's esoteric development, this pleasure in criticizing a person actually ceases entirely in the course of esoteric development. Who does not know in outer life the mockers who are so fond of offering very apt criticism of the mistakes of others? Not that the aptness of judgments about human errors must cease, not that one must under all circumstances condemn—let us say—an act such as that committed by Erasmus of Rotterdam with his book “The Praise of Folly.” No, it can remain entirely justified to be harsh toward the mistakes that occur in the world; but for someone undergoing esoteric development, every rebuke they have to utter or put into effect causes them pain and increasingly more pain. And the suffering caused by having to rebuke is something that can also act as a barometer of esoteric development. The more one can still feel joy when one has to reproach or when one has to find the world ridiculous, the less one is really ready to progress. And one must gradually develop a kind of feeling that a life is developing within oneself that allows one to look at the follies and mistakes of the world with a mocking and tear-filled eye, with a wet and a dry eye. This inner structuring, this becoming independent, so to speak, of what was previously mixed, is now also part of the change that the etheric body of the human being experiences.