The Occult Significance of the Bhagavad Gita
GA 146
31 May 1913, Helsingfors
Lecture IV
We have seen that if man would enter into the realm to which, among other things, the woven fabric of our dreams belongs, he must take with him from the ordinary world something we designated as an intensified self-consciousness. There must be a stronger and fuller life in his ego than he needs for his purposes on the physical plane. In our age this excess of self-consciousness is drawn forth from our soul by the experiences we gain through occult exercises such as I have given. Thus the first step consists in strengthening and intensifying one's inner self.
Man instinctively feels that he needs this strengthening, and for this very reason a kind of fear and shyness comes over him if he has not yet attained it. He tends to shrink from the prospect of developing into higher worlds. We must continually bear in mind that in the course of evolution the soul of man has passed through many different stages. Thus, in the period of the Bhagavad Gita it was not yet possible for a human soul to intensify its self-consciousness by such occult exercises as may be practiced today. In that ancient time, however, something else was still present in the self; I mean, primeval clairvoyance. This is also a faculty man does not really need for his ordinary life on the physical plane, if he can be content with what his epoch offers him. But the men of that ancient time still had the remnants of primeval clairvoyance.
So, we can look far back and put ourselves in the place of a person living at the time when the Bhagavad Gita originated. If such a man were to express his experience he would say, “When I look out into the world around me I receive impressions through my senses. These impressions can be combined by the intellect, whose organ the brain is. Apart from that I still have another faculty, a clairvoyant power that enables me to acquire knowledge of other worlds. This power tells me that man belongs to other realms, that my human nature extends far beyond the ordinary physical world.” This very power, by means of which there arises in the soul the instinctive knowledge that it belongs not only to the physical world—this power is actually a stronger kind of self-consciousness. It is as though these last remnants of ancient clairvoyance still had the power to surcharge the soul with selfhood. Today man can again develop in himself such surplus forces if he will go through the right occult exercises.
Now, a certain objection might be made. You know that in anthroposophical lectures we must always forestall objections that the true occultist is well aware of. It might be asked, “Why should it occur to present-day man to want to undertake occult exercises at all? Why isn't he content with what his ordinary intellect offers him?” That, my friends, is a big question because we touch something here that is not only a question but an actual fact for every thoughtful soul in the present cycle of evolution. If man did not reach out to anything more than what his senses and his brain-bound intellect can show him, he would certainly be content with his existence. He would observe the things and events around him, their relationships, and how they come into being and pass away again, but he would ask no questions about this ebb and flow of activity. He would be content with it as an animal may be content with its existence. In fact, if man were really the being that materialistic thinking considers him, he could quite well accept his life as such and ask no questions. This is the life of the animal, being content with all that arises and passes before its senses. Why isn't this the case with man?
Remember that we are speaking of present-day man, for even in ancient Greece the human soul was different in this respect from what it is today. When we today give ourselves with our whole soul to the study of natural science, or when we consider all the events of historical evolution and gain knowledge of the external science of history—with all this something else finds its way almost imperceptibly into our soul, something that has no purpose or sense for physical life. Many comparisons have been made to illustrate this fact. I would like to mention one of them because people often make use of it without considering its deeper significance. A famous medical authority in the last third of the 19th century, wishing to enhance the honor of pure science, once drew attention to a Greek philosopher Pythagoras who was asked, “What do you think of the philosophers who spend their time speculating on the meaning and purpose of life? How does their occupation compare with the activities of ordinary men who pursue some useful calling and play a useful part in community life?” The philosopher replied, “Look at a fair or market; men come to buy and sell and everyone is busy, but there are a few among them who do not want to buy or sell but simply want to stroll about and watch what is going on.” The philosopher implied that the market represented life, people busy in all sorts of ways; but the philosophers are not busy with such affairs, instead they look at what is happening and try to learn all about it.
Somehow a great respect for the philosophers who do not seem to take part in any productive activity has penetrated deeply into the minds of the so-called intellectuals among mankind. The philosophers are honored just because their science is independent, detached, self-sufficient. Yet this comparison ought to give us food for thought, for it is by no means so banal as it might appear at first sight. After all, it is curious that philosophers should be compared to idlers in the market-place of life, useless folk while their fellows labor. One might indeed think of it in this way, but we must realize that judgments are passed that originally are quite correct but become altogether wrong if they linger on for centuries, or as in this case for thousands of years. Therefore we ask again if these people who stroll about in life are really to be judged as idlers. That depends upon the standards by which we value human life. Certainly there are those who regard the philosophers as useless loiterers and think they would do better to carry through some productive work. From their point of view they may be quite right, but when man today observes life through the senses and considers it by means of the brain-bound intellect, something steals into his soul that obviously has no connection with the outer world of the senses. That is the point.
This can be seen clearly in books that try to construct a satisfactory picture of the world and life on a purely materialistic basis. It usually turns out that the big questions do not arise until the end. These books claiming to solve the riddle of the universe actually begin to set forth those riddles only in their concluding pages. In effect, when one begins today to study the external world that is the subject treated in such books, the thought slips in that either man exists for other worlds besides, or else the physical world deceives us and makes fools of us because it is continually putting questions we cannot answer.
An enormous part of our soul life is meaningless if life really ends with death; if man has no part in, no connection with a higher world. Indeed, it is not the longing for something he does not have, but the lack of sense for what he has, that impels man to follow up these questions and ask what it is that comes into the soul that does not belong to this world of the senses. Thus he is driven to cultivate something evidently without foundation in the external world. He is impelled to take up occult exercises. We would not say man has an inward longing for immortality and therefore invents the idea of it, but rather that the external world has implanted something in his soul that would be meaningless, unreal, if the whole of existence were included between birth and death. Man is impelled to ask the very nature, not of something he does not have, but of something he has.
In fact, present-day man is no longer quite in the position of a mere loiterer or on-looker, so he cannot appeal now to the Greek philosopher. In those times the comparison held good, but today it does not. Today we might say that buyers and sellers come and go. When at length they close the market and make up accounts they find something that certainly could neither have been bought nor sold, nor can they find out whence it came. That never happens in an ordinary market, but so it is in the market of life. (Every comparison has its flaw and this one is all the better for it.) As we go on living we are continually finding things that life opens to view, yet no explanation for them is to be found in the world of sense. That is the deeper reason why there are people in the world today who despair of life yet at the same time have vague, unrecognized longings. Something is active in them that does not belong to the physical world but keeps on putting forth questions about other worlds. For this reason we now have to acquire a spiritual culture. Otherwise we shall be overcome by hopelessness and despair.
What today we have to acquire, a man like Arjuna had, simply because he lived in the ancient age of primeval clairvoyance. Yet it also was a period of transition, because he belonged to that time in evolution when only the last remnants and echoes of that clairvoyance remained. If we are to understand the Bhagavad Gita it is important to realize that at the time of its origin men were entering an age in which this old clairvoyance gradually became lost. In this lies the deep undercurrent of that sublime poem; or we may say, the source of the breath poured out through it. For this song resounds with tones of a great turning-point in time, when, from the twilight of the old clairvoyance, a night was to begin in which a new force could be born to mankind. Only in that night could a force be born that the soul of today possesses, but that souls of that time did not yet possess. About Arjuna then we can say that ancient clairvoyance is still present in his soul but it is flickering out. It is no longer a strong, spontaneous force but requires such a harrowing experience as I have described to re-awaken it. What then can Arjuna perceive through this awakening of the ancient power of vision, which at other times was dying away within him? He sees the Spiritual Being who is called Krishna.
Here it is necessary to point out that though man may lift his soul today into that realm where his dreams are woven, this is no longer enough to give him a full understanding of Krishna's being. Even if we develop the forces enabling us to consciously pass into the region of dream-consciousness, we still are not able today to fully discover what Krishna is. Referring again to what was said yesterday, let us call our everyday consciousness the lowest realm. About it lies a realm we are unconscious of in daily life, or rather that reaches us in a kind of phantom picture veiled in our dreams. When we push these aside impressions from another world enter. Into all the experiences man has of his physical environment something now enters that is like a kind of overflow in his soul and belongs really to other worlds, to inner super-sensible worlds. Now he has an experience that cannot be described as a reminiscence of ordinary life, because the world now has a different aspect from anything known on the physical plane. We discover that we are seeing something we do not see in the ordinary world. Though we often imagine that we see light, in reality it is not so. On the physical plane we never see light, only color and different shades of color, darker and lighter colors. We see the effects of light but light itself speeds invisibly through space. We can easily convince ourselves of this fact. When a ray of light strikes through the window we see a kind of streak of light-rays in the room, caused by dust in the air. We see reflections of light from the glittering particles of dust, the light itself remaining invisible.
After lifting his experience to the higher realm we have spoken of, man really does begin to see the light itself. There he is surrounded by flowing light, just as in the physical world he lives in flowing air. Only he does not enter this world with his physical body. He has no need to breathe there. Man enters that world with the part of his being that needs the light as in the physical world his body needs the air. In this region light is the element of life—light-air we might call it—and it is a necessity for existence.
Further, that light is permeated and transfused with something not unlike the cloud-forms shaping and re-shaping in our atmosphere. The clouds are water, but up there what meets us like floating forms is nothing else than the weaving life of sound, the music of the spheres. Still further we shall perceive the flowing of life itself. Thus we may begin to describe the world into which our soul enters, but the terms of our description must remain meaningless for the physical world. Perhaps he who uses words most lacking in meaning for the physical world will best describe that other world that has a far higher reality.
Of course our materialistically-minded friends will find it easy to refute us. Their arguments against what the occultist has to say are plausible enough. The occultist himself knows how easily such objections are made, for the very reason that the higher worlds are best described by words not suitable for things of the physical plane. For example he would speak of light-air, or air-light. On the physical plane there is no such thing, but over there, there is. Indeed, when we penetrate into that realm we also discover what it is to be deprived of this life element, to have insufficient light-air. We feel a pain of suffocation in our soul, comparable to losing our breath for lack of air on the physical plane. There we also find the opposite condition, a fullness of pure, holy light-air when we live in it and when we perceive spiritual beings who manifest themselves in full clearness in this element of airy light and have their life in it. Those are the beings who stand under the guidance of Lucifer. The moment we enter that realm without sufficient preparation, without proper training, Lucifer gains the power to deprive us of the light-air we need. We can say he suffocates our souls.
It is not quite the same effect as suffocation on the physical plane. But like a polar bear transported to the South, we thirst and long for something that can reach us from the spiritual treasure, the spiritual light of the physical plane. That is just what Lucifer desires, for then we do not pay attention to all that comes from the higher hierarchies but thirstily cleave to all that Lucifer has brought onto the physical plane. This is what happens if we have not sufficiently trained ourselves in preparation. Then when we stand before Lucifer he takes away the light-air from us. We crave breath, and long for the spiritual that comes from the physical plane.
Let us suppose that someone goes through a training that brings him far enough to enter the higher worlds, to reach this upper region. But suppose he has not done all that belongs to the training; suppose he has forgotten that with all his exercises he must at the same time be ennobling his moral sense, his moral feelings, that he must tear all earthly ambitions and lust for power from his soul. Indeed a man can reach the higher worlds even though he is vain and ambitious, but then he takes these qualities with him. When a person has not purified his moral feelings Lucifer takes the light-air away from him, so that he perceives nothing of what is really there, and instead he longs for the things on the physical plane. He breathes in, so to say, what he has been able to perceive on the physical plane. So he may imagine that he perceives something only to be seen spiritually in the light-air. He imagines that he sees the different incarnations of various human beings. But it is not so. He does not see them because he lacks the air-light. Instead, like a thirsty being, he sucks up into that realm things of the physical plane below, and describes all manner of things acquired there as though they were processes in the higher region. Actually there is no more harmful way of raising one's soul into the higher worlds than by means of vain and earthly love of power! If one does this, one will never be able to bring down true results of knowledge. What one brings will be a mere reflection, a phantom picture of the speculations and conjectures one may have made in the physical world.
Here we have been describing what may be called the general scenery of that realm. There are also Beings we meet there, whom we may call Elemental Beings. In the physical world we often speak of the forces of nature. In that higher realm these same forces manifest themselves as real beings. There we make a definite discovery. Through the actual facts that meet us we discover that whereas on the physical plane good and evil exist together, in that higher realm there are separate, specific forces of good and evil. Here in the physical world good and evil are combined and interwoven in each human soul. One has more of a tendency to good, another less. In that realm there are evil beings who exist to battle against the work of good beings. On entering that realm, therefore, we already have occasion to make use of the strengthened self-consciousness we mentioned yesterday. We have need of the more acute power of judgment that must come with our enhanced self. Then we may really be in a position to say that here in the higher realm there must needs be beings who have the mission of evil. Such beings have to exist alongside those who have the mission of good.
We often hear it asked, “Why didn't the all-wise God of the universe simply create the good alone? Why isn't it everywhere, always?” Now we gain this conviction, however, that if only the good were present the world would become one-sided, it would not bring forth all the fullness of life that it does yield. The good must have something to oppose it. This, in fact, can already be realized on the physical plane, but in that higher realm we perceive it with far greater force. There we see that only people who are content with a merely sentimental and dreamy outlook can imagine that good beings alone could bring about the purposes of the universe. In the realm of everyday life we might do with sentimentality, but we cannot tolerate it when we enter the stern realities of the super-sensible world. There we know that the good beings alone could not have made the world. They would be too weak to mold this universe. In the totality of evolution those forces must be included which come from the evil beings. There is great wisdom in this fact that evil is mingled in cosmic evolution. Thus, one of the things we have to get rid of when we enter spiritual life is sentimentality. Bravely and unflinchingly we must approach the dangerous truths that dawn upon us when we perceive the battle that is fought in just this realm—the battle between the good and evil beings that can there be revealed to us. All these are experiences we have when we have trained and adapted our souls to entering consciously into this realm.
So far we have only entered the realm of dreams. We human beings live in still another realm, one for which we are so little adapted in ordinary life that we generally have no perceptions whatever in it. It is the realm through which we live in dreamless sleep. Here already an absolute paradox appears, for sleep after all is characterized by the complete cessation of consciousness. In normal human life today man ceases to be conscious when he falls to sleep, and he does not regain consciousness till he wakes up again. In the age of primeval clairvoyance this realm too was something the soul could experience. If we go back into those ancient periods of evolution there was actually a condition of life corresponding to our sleep in which, however, man could perceive in a still higher, still more spiritual world than the world of dreams. This was true even in early post-Atlantean times. There we find conditions that, in regard to the usual human processes, are exactly like the condition of sleep, but are not, because they are permeated by consciousness. When we have reached this height we do not see the physical world, even though we still see the world of light-air, of sound, of cosmic harmony, and of the battle between the good and evil beings. The world we see may be said to be still more fundamentally different from all that exists in the physical world. So it is yet more difficult to describe than the world we find on entering the region of dream consciousness. I would like now to give you an idea of how one's consciousness in this realm works, and of its actual effects.
Anyone who describes that sublime world into which our dreams find their way, and about which I have given the merest hint, will be labeled a fantastic visionary by the bigoted intellectualism of today. If anyone begins to speak of that still higher realm through which man ordinarily sleeps, then people, if they take any notice at all, do not stop at abusing him as a visionary. They altogether lose their heads. We have already had an example of this. When my books were first published in Germany, the critics, who are supposed to represent the intellectual culture of today, attacked them with all sorts of insinuations. In one point, however, their criticism ran absolutely wild; in fact, they became foolish in their fury. I mean the point where I had to call attention to something that could only originate in the spiritual realm we are now considering. This was the question of the two Jesus children mentioned in my book, The Spiritual Guidance of Mankind.
For those of our friends who have not heard of this I may say once more that it appeared as a result of occult research, namely, that at the beginning of our era not only one but two Jesus children were born. One was descended from the so-called Nathan line of the House of David, the other from the Solomon line. These two children grew up side by side. In the body of the Solomon child lived the soul of Zarathustra. In the twelfth year of the child's life this soul passed over into the other Jesus child and lived in that body until its thirtieth year. Here we have a matter of the deepest significance. Zarathustra's soul went on living in the body that until its twelfth year had been occupied by a mysterious soul. And then, only from the thirtieth year onward, there lived in this body the Being Whom we call the Christ, Who remained on earth altogether for three years.
We really cannot take amiss the reaction of the critics to this statement, as it is natural that they should want to have something to say about the matter from their scholarly viewpoint. But what they set out to criticize comes from a realm in which they are always fast asleep! So we cannot expect them to know anything about it. Yet a healthy human understanding is able to grasp this fact. People only will not give themselves a chance to understand. In their haste they change their power of understanding into bitterness and fury.
Such truths as that about the two Jesus children, which are to be found in this higher realm, never have anything to do with sympathy and antipathy. We find such truths; we never experience them in the way we gain experience in the usual manner of knowledge in the physical world, or even in the realm of dream life. In both these areas we are there, so to say. We are present at the origin of our knowing or perception. This is true also of those occultists who are conscious only as far as the realm of dreams. We can say that a person witnesses the birth of his knowledge, of his perceptions, in that realm, but truths like this concerning the two Jesus children can never be found in this way. When truths come to us in that higher realm and enter our consciousness, the moment in which we actually acquired them has long since passed. We experienced them long before we met them with our full consciousness, as we have to do in our time. We have them already in us. So that when we reach these truths—the most important, the most living and essential of all truths—we distinctly have the feeling that when we gained them we were in an earlier time than the present; that we are now drawing out of the depths of our soul what we acquired in an earlier time and are bringing it into our consciousness. Such truths we discover in ourselves, just as in the outer world we come across a flower or any other object. Even as in the outer world we can think about an object that is simply there before us, so can we think about these truths when we have discovered them in ourselves, in our own self.
In the outer world we can only judge an object after we have perceived it. In the same way we find those sublime truths objectively in ourselves, and only then do we study them, in ourselves. We inwardly investigate them as we investigate the external facts of nature. Just as it would have no meaning to ask of a flower whether it is true or false, there would be no sense in asking about these truths that we simply come upon in ourselves, whether they are true or false. Truth and falsehood only come into the picture when it is a question of our power to describe what we find or what arises in our consciousness. Descriptions can be true or false. Truth and falsehood do not concern the facts, they concern the manner in which any thinking being approaches or deals with those facts. Thus, when we do research and get results in this realm we are really looking into a region of the soul we have lived in before but did not look into with our consciousness.
In carrying on our occult exercises we are best able to enter this realm if we pay positive attention to those moments when from the depths of our soul not mere judgments arise, but facts; facts that we know we did not consciously take part in originating. The more we are able to wonder at the things there unveiled, like the objective things of the outer world, the more astonishing it all is for us, the better are we prepared to enter into this realm. So, as a general rule, we do not make a good entrance if we have all sorts of conjectures and constructions in our minds. For example, there is no better way of finding nothing at all about the previous incarnations of some person than to speculate as to who they may have been earlier. Let us say you wanted to investigate the earlier incarnations of Robespierre. The best way of finding out nothing at all about him would be to search about for historical personalities you think might possibly have been his previous incarnations. In that way you never can discover the truth. You must get out of the habit of making conjectures and theories and forming opinions.
He would become a true occultist who would set himself to making as few judgments as possible about the world because then he will most quickly attain the condition in which the facts can meet him. The more a man cultivates silence in his conjectures and opinions, the more will his soul be filled with the actual truths of the spiritual world. Someone, for example, who had grown up with a particular religious bias, with definite feelings and ideas or perhaps views about the Christ—such a person in general would not be the most adapted to discover a truth like the history of the two Jesus children. Just when one feels a little neutral about the Christ event one is well prepared for such a discovery, provided of course he has made all the other necessary preparations. People with a Buddhistic bias will least easily be able to talk sense about Buddha, just as those with a Christian bias will least easily be able to talk sense about Christ. This is always true.
If we would enter into the third realm just described, it is necessary that we go through all the bitterness—for in ordinary life we cannot help feeling it in this way—of becoming, so to say, a twofold person. We are, in fact, twofold beings in ordinary life, even if we make no conscious use of the one-half of our existence, for we are both waking and sleeping beings. Different as these two conditions are, so is that third realm in the higher worlds different from this physical world. That realm has a peculiar existence of its own. There also we are surrounded by a world, but one so altogether new and different that we get to know it best if we extinguish not only the sense impressions of this world of ours but even our feelings and sentiments and all the things that have the power to arouse our passions and enthusiasms. In ordinary life man is so little fitted for conscious experience of that higher world that his consciousness is extinguished every night. He can only attain experience there if he is able to become a twofold man. Those who have the power at will to forget and to blot out all their interests in this physical world, are then able to enter that higher realm. The world between—that is to say, where our dreams are woven—is made of the materials of both worlds, it is penetrated by reflections of the higher worlds of which man is generally not aware, and by reminiscences of ordinary consciousness. That is why no one can perceive the true causes of events in the physical world who is not able to penetrate with understanding into that third realm.
Now if a man of today wishes to discover through his own experience who Krishna is, he can only make that discovery in the third realm. Arjuna's impressions, which in the sublime Gita are described to us through the words of Krishna, have their origin in that world. For this reason I have had to prepare the way today by speaking of man's ascent into the third realm. Only so will you be able to understand the origin of the strange and wondrous truths that Krishna speaks to Arjuna—truths that sound so altogether different from anything that is spoken in ordinary life.
These lectures are to help us gain knowledge of Krishna; that is to say, of the very essence of the Bhagavad Gita. Also, the occult principles of this wonderful Song are to give you something which, if you really make use of it, can enable you to find the way into the higher worlds because the way is open to every man. We have only to realize that the grain of gold with which we must begin is ours once we are aware of how many things there are in which the highest spiritual beings live and work and are interwoven in our everyday life.
Vierter Vortrag
Wir haben gesehen, daß der Mensch, wenn er einrücken will in jene Region, in welcher auch die Träume gewoben werden, mitbringen muß in diese Region aus der gewöhnlichen Welt dasjenige, was man nennen kann ein verstärktes Selbstbewußtsein, ein Mehr in dem Ich, als dieses Ich nötig hat für den physischen Plan, für die physische Welt. In unserer Gegenwart wird dieses Mehr von Selbstbewußtsein, dieser Überschuß aus unserer Seele durch dasjenige herausgebildet, was wir erleben können durch solche Übungen, wie sie erwähnt sind in dem Buche «Wie erlangt man Erkenntnisse der höheren Welten ?». Es findet zunächst also eine solche Verstärkung, Erkraftung des Selbstes statt. Weil der Mensch sozusagen empfindet, daß er das braucht, so überkommt ihn auch etwas wie eine Art Furcht, wie eine Art Angst, eine Art Scheu, hinauf sich zu entwickeln in die höheren Welten, wenn er diese Stärke im inneren Selbst noch nicht erlangt hat.
Nun habe ich oftmals betont, daß die Menschenseele im Verlauf der Evolution die verschiedensten Stadien durchgemacht hat. Was heute durch die genannten Übungen eine solche Menschenseele der Gegenwart erlangen kann an Erhöhung, an Erkraftung des Selbstbewußtseins, das konnte sie auf dieselbe Art nicht eigentlich erreichen in der Zeit, in welche wir zu versetzen haben den erhabenen Sang, die Bhagavad Gita. Dafür war in alten Zeiten im menschlichen Selbst, im menschlichen Bewußtsein etwas anderes vorhanden: Es war noch die erste, uralte Hellsichtigkeit in der Menschenseele vorhanden. Hellsichtigkeit ist auch etwas, was man sozusagen für das gewöhnliche Selbst auf dem physischen Plan nicht eigentlich braucht, wenn man nur mit dem, was eben jeweilig der physische Plan enthält, sich zufrieden geben kann.
Aber jene alten Zeiten, jene alten Menschen der Zeit, in welche wir die erhabene Gita zu versetzen haben, hatten eben noch die Reste uralten Hellsehens. Wir blicken auf der einen Seite zurück bis zu solchen Menschen, die Zeitgenossen waren der Entstehung der Bhagavad Gita. Diese Menschen konnten sich sagen: Wenn ich die physische Umwelt schaue, dann bekomme ich Eindrücke durch meine Sinne, dann können diese Eindrücke der Sinne durch den Verstand, der an das Gehirn gebunden ist, kombiniert werden. Aber ich habe außerdem noch eine andere Kraft, durch die ich hellsehend ein Wissen mir aneignen kann von anderen Welten. Und diese Kräfte bezeugen mir, daf die Menschen auch noch anderen Welten angehören, daß ich als Mensch noch hineinrage in andere Welten, über die gewöhnliche physische Welt hinaus. — Das aber ist eben das verstärkte Selbstbewußtsein, das unmittelbar in der Seele hervorsprießen läßt das Wissen, daß diese Seele nicht allein der physischen Welt angehört. Es ist gleichsam ein Überdruck im Selbst, was da hervorgerufen wird durch jene, wenn auch letzten Reste hellsichtiger Kraft. Und heute wiederum kann der Mensch solche Kräfte eines Überdruckes in sich entwickeln, wenn er entsprechende okkulte Übungen in seiner Seele vollzieht.
Da könnte eingewendet werden — und Sie wissen ja, daß immer an der entsprechenden Stelle in anthroposophischen Vorträgen vorweggenommen werden solche Einwände, die der wahre Okkultist selber recht gut weiß -—, da könnte eingewendet werden: Ja, wie kommt überhaupt der Mensch in unserer Zeit dazu, solche okkulten Übungen machen zu wollen? Warum ist er nicht zufrieden mit dem, was der Verstand bietet, der an das Gehirn gebunden ist? Warum will der Mensch solche okkulten Übungen? — Da berühren wir eine Frage, die nicht nur eine Frage, sondern eine Art Tatsache ist für jede sinnige Seele im gegenwärtigen Menschheitszyklus. Wenn der Mensch wirklich in seiner Seele zu nichts käme als zu dem, was nur die Sinne ihm zeigen, was ihm der Verstand gibt, der an das äußere physische Instrument, das Gehirn, gebunden ist, dann wäre er ganz sicher zufrieden mit seinem Dasein, ohne irgendeine Begierde zu entwickeln nach höheren übersinnlichen Welten. Der Mensch würde in einem solchen Falle sehen, wie sich die Dinge und Ereignisse um ihn herum verhalten und abspielen, er würde sie entstehen und vergehen sehen, nicht aber über Entstehen und Vergehen in sich eine Frage stellen, sondern damit zweifellos zufrieden sein, wie etwa zufrieden sein kann das einzelne Tier mit seinem Dasein. Das kann der Mensch im Grunde genommen ganz gut in der Lage, in welcher heute der materialistisch gesinnte Mensch den Menschen denken möchte. Das Tier ist in der Lage, mit seinem gewöhnlichen Bewußtsein nur aufzunehmen dasjenige, was vor den Sinnen entsteht und vergeht; auch ist das Tier zufrieden mit dem, was vor den Sinnen sich abspielt. So ist es aber nicht bei dem Menschen. Aber warum ist es nicht so beim Menschen?
Ich rede in diesem Zusammenhange immer von dem Menschen der Gegenwart. Denn noch im alten Griechenland war es im Grunde nicht so für die Menschenseele, wie es heute ist. Wenn wir heute wirklich mit voller Seele an die Naturwissenschaft herangehen, Naturwissenschaft uns erwerben, wenn wir an dasjenige herangehen, was im geschichtlichen Werden vor sich geht, uns die äußere Historiologie, Geschichtswissenschaft aneignen, dann kommt mit alle dem, was wir uns da aneignen, zugleich etwas in diese Menschenseele herein, es schleicht sich ganz verstohlen mit alldem etwas in die Menschenseele hinein, wofür eigentlich Zweck und Sinn fehlt im äußeren physischen Leben. Man hat daher mannigfache Vergleiche gebraucht für dasjenige, was sich da einschleicht. Einen solchen möchte ich doch erwähnen, weil er oftmals gemacht wird, ohne daß eigentlich wirklich nachgedacht wird über seine tiefere Bedeutung. Eine sehr berühmte medizinische Autorität hat im letzten Drittel des 19. Jahrhunderts einmal, um sozusagen das Ehrwürdige der selbständigen Wissenschaft bedeutungsvoller an der Akademie der Wissenschaft hervorzuheben, aufmerksam gemacht auf einen griechischen Philosophen, der einmal gefragt worden ist: Wie ist es denn eigentlich mit dem philosophischen Nachdenken über des Lebens Sinn und Zweck? Wie verhält sich dieses Nachdenken zu den anderen Tätigkeiten der Menschen, die sich durch andere Arbeit, durch nützliche Tätigkeit beteiligen am allgemeinen Leben? — Da hat jener Philosoph folgende Antwort gegeben: Man betrachte sich einmal einen Jahrmarkt. Da kommen die Menschen zum Verkauf und Kauf. Diese sind alle beschäftigt. Aber auch einige andere finden sich ein, die wollen nichts verkaufen und auch nichts kaufen, sondern sie wollen betrachten, nur anschauen, wie es da zugeht auf dem Jahrmarkt. - Der Philosoph wollte nämlich sagen: Der Jahrmarkt sei das Leben. Da sind die Menschen beschäftigt in mannigfacher Form. Die Philosophen aber, die nicht beschäftigt sind mit dem, was andere Menschen beschäftigt, lungern herum, gehen herum und schauen sich alles bloß an, um alles kennenzulernen.
Es ist schon einmal in das Fleisch und Blut der sogenannten intellektuellen Menschheit eingedrungen, daß man die Philosophen deshalb, weil sie nicht offensichtlich teilnehmen an der nützlichen Tätigkeit im Leben, gerade wegen ihrer auf sich selbst gestellten, selbständigen Wissenschaft, die sich vollkommen selbst genügt, ganz besonders schätzen will. Aber dieser Vergleich sollte denn doch einigermaßen zum Nachdenken anregen. Vielleicht könnte das banausisch scheinen, aber es ist doch nicht ganz banausisch, wenn man tiefer nachdenkt. Dieser Vergleich könnte nämlich recht gut zum Nachdenken anregen. Es ist denn doch recht bedenklich, daß man die Philosophen vergleicht mit den Herumlungerern auf dem Jahrmarkt des Lebens, die eigentlich zwecklos sind, die da herumgehen zwischen Leuten, die alle einen Zweck haben. Das wäre doch auch ein mögliches Nachdenken. Es werden eben durchaus oftmals Urteile gefällt, welche vielleicht an ihrem Ausgangspunkte ganz zweifellos richtig sind. Wenn sie sich aber durch Jahrhunderte oder, wie dieses, sogar durch Jahrtausende fortschleppen, dann können sie doch recht unrichtig werden. Daher darf die Frage aufgeworfen werden: Sind denn wirklich alle, über die so im allgemeinen ein Urteil gefällt wird, sind die wirklich zunächst die Herumlungerer im Leben?
Es kommt nur darauf an, wonach man das Leben bewertet. Ganz gewiß gibt es Menschen, die die Philosophen wirklich als unnütze Herumlungerer ansehen und glauben, daß es gescheiter wäre, irgendein nützliches Handwerk zu treiben. Von ihrem Standpunkte mögen diese Menschen sogar ganz recht haben. Aber es kommt darauf an, daß, wenn man das Leben mit den Sinnen betrachtet und mit dem Verstande, der an das Gehirn gebunden ist, dann wie verstohlen Dinge in die menschliche Seele hineinschleichen, die ganz offenkundig gar keinen Zusammenhang haben mit der Außenwelt, welche uns sinnlich umgibt. Man kann das sehr gut sehen bei der Lektüre solcher Bücher, die aus rein materialistischer Grundlage heraus eine befriedigende Weltanschauung zimmern wollen, welche die Welträtsel lösen soll. Dann stellt sich gewöhnlich heraus, daß am Ende dieser Bücher überhaupt erst Fragen auftauchen. Diese Bücher werfen im allgemeinen die Welträtsel erst auf an ihrem Ende. Es schleicht sich eben ein Gedanke ein mit der Aufnahme dessen, was diese Bücher behandeln, mit der Aufnahme der Außenwelt, ein Gedanke, mit dem man sich sagen muß: Entweder ist der Mensch noch für andere Welten da als nur für die physische Welt, oder diese physische Welt belügt, prellt einen fortwährend, indem sie uns Rätsel aufgibt, die wir nicht beantworten können. Eine ganze Summe unseres Seelenlebens ist sinnlos, wenn wirklich das Leben mit dem Tode abschließen würde, wenn der Mensch keinen Anteil, keinen Zusammenhang hätte mit der höheren Welt. Und die Sinnlosigkeit dessen, was er hat, nicht die Sehnsucht nach etwas, was er nicht hat, das ist es, was den Menschen dazu treibt, dem nachzugehen, wie es sich damit verhält, daß in die Seele etwas kommt, was gar kein Bürger unserer Sinnenwelt ist. Und das treibt ihn dazu, etwas auszubilden, wie es eben durch okkulte Übungen geschehen kann, etwas, was ganz offenkundig nicht mit der Außenwelt zusammenhängt. Wir würden nicht sagen, der Mensch habe die Sehnsucht nach der Unsterblichkeit in sich, und deshalb bilde er sich den Begriff der Unsterblichkeit, deshalb erfinde er sie, sondern: der Mensch hat so, wie er lebt, etwas von der Außenwelt hereinbekommen in seine Seele, was ganz sinnlos, zwecklos, wesenlos wäre, wenn das Dasein nur zwischen Geburt und Tod eingeschlossen wäre. Der Mensch muß fragen nach Sinn und Zweck, überhaupt nach der ganzen Wesenhaftigkeit von etwas, was er hat, und nicht von etwas, was er nicht hat.
So ist der Mensch der Gegenwart in der Tat nicht mehr ganz in der Lage - und darum kann er sich in der heutigen Zeit nicht auf den griechischen Philosophen berufen -, er ist nicht mehr ganz in der Lage eines bloßen Herumlungerers, eines bloßen Strabanzers, sondern er ist in einer anderen Lage: in der Lage, daß man ihn vergleichen kann mit einer Persönlichkeit, die nur Worte verleiht demjenigen, was eigentlich in allen lebt. Im alten Griechenland paßte tatsächlich der Vergleich des Philosophen. Heute paßt er nicht mehr, heute ist die Sache anders. Wenn wir das Leben wiederum mit einem Jahrmarkt vergleichen, so können wir auch heute sagen: Da kommen Käufer und Verkäufer. Wenn sie nun den Jahrmarkt abschließen und abzählen, ob alles stimmt, dann finden sie — so wunderbar das klingt, aber jeder Vergleich hinkt ja ein wenig, und dieser ist sogar in gewissem Sinne um so besser, je mehr er hinkt -, dann finden sie etwas, was da ist, was aber weder gekauft noch verkauft hat werden können, wovon nicht zu ergründen ist, woher es kommt. So ist es zwar nicht bei einem Jahrmarkt, aber so ist es beim Jahrmarkt des Lebens. Indem wir das Leben durchleben, finden wir fortwährend Dinge, die aus dem Leben heraussprießen, für die es aber keine Erklärung in der Sinnenwelt gibt. Das ist der tiefere Grund, warum es heute in der Welt Menschen gibt, die an dem Dasein verzweifeln können, die unbestimmte Sehnsüchte haben können: weil eben beim Menschen der Gegenwart etwas in der Seele wirkt, was keine Bürgerschaft hat in der physischen Welt, was aber Fragen nach anderen Welten aufwirft.
Das aber, was wir heute in der Seele erwerben müssen, damit Verzweiflung, Hoffnungslosigkeit gegenüber dem Leben nicht aufkomme, gegenüber einer Sache, die sonst sinnlos wäre, das hatte ein Mensch wie Arjuna einfach deshalb, weil seine Seele noch herausragte aus einer Zeit, wo das uralte menschliche, primitive Hellsehen noch da war. Aber Arjuna befindet sich gleichzeitig in einem Übergangszeitpunkt — und das ist das Wesentliche, das Bedeutungsvolle, wenn die Bhagavad Gita verstanden werden soll -, Arjuna befindet sich in jener Zeitentwickelung, wo nur noch Reste, letzte Nachklänge des uralten Hellsehens vorhanden waren. Die Menschen rückten in der Zeit, in der etwa die Bhagavad Gita entstand, in eine Zeit der Evolution, in der dieses alte Hellsehen allmählich verlorenging. Und das ist der ganz tiefe Grundzug der Bhagavad Gita, der Hauch, der über die Bhagavad Gita ausgegossen ist, daß aus ihr die Töne herausklingen, die von jener Zeitenwende kommen, in der das alte Hellsehen der Menschheit in seinem Absterben war, wo dem Abendrot des alten Hellsehens gegenüber jene Nacht beginnen sollte, in der diejenige menschliche Kraft erst geboren werden konnte, welche die alte Menschenseele noch nicht hatte und in unserer Zeit die gewöhnliche Menschenseele hat.
So ist Arjuna eine Seele, von der man sagen kann: Altes Hellsehen ist in letztem Nachklang noch in seiner Seele vorhanden, aber immer so, daß es wie verglimmt in der Seele, nicht mehr so recht da sein will, daß es braucht ein solches erschütterndes Ereignis, wie ich es geschildert habe, um wieder wachgerufen zu werden, wieder hervorgerufen zu werden. Was ist es also, was da in dem Moment, wo Arjuna momentan hellsichtig dem Krishna gegenüberrtritt, was ist es, was da die hellseherische Kraft aus der Seele des Arjuna hervorruft? Es ist das erschütternde Ereignis, das ich erzählt habe. Und jene hellseherische Kraft holt es hervor, die in alten Zeiten dem Menschen allgemein eigentümlich war. Was kann nun Arjuna sehen, schauen dadurch, daß bei ihm hervorgerufen wird die alte hellseherische Kraft, die sonst sich schon dem Uhntergange neigte in seiner Seele? Trocken und rein historisch gesprochen, soll Arjuna der geistigen Wesenheit entgegentreten, welche wir im Sinne der Bhagavad Gita als Krishna anzusprechen haben.
Nun muß, damit völliiges Verständnis ausgebreitet werden kann über dasjenige, was eigentlich in der Seele des Arjuna vorgeht, aufmerksam gemacht werden darauf, daß jenes Erheben der Menschenseele in die Region, aus welcher sonst die Träume gewoben werden, heute eigentlich nicht mehr ganz dazu führt, Krishna oder die Wesenheit des Krishna voll zu verstehen. Wenn wir auch wirklich all die Kräfte ausbilden, die uns bewußt hinüberführen in die Region, die wir im vorigen Vortrag charakterisiert haben als die Region des Traumbewußtseins, können wir doch nicht heute sozusagen die volle Entdeckung machen dessen, was Krishna ist.
Rufen wir uns noch einmal ins Gedächtnis, was ich gestern geschildert habe. Das gewöhnliche alltägliche Bewußtsein wollen wir als diese untere Region bezeichnen. Darüber liegt eine Region, die für die Alltäglichkeit unbewußt bleibt, die nur bewußt wird gleichsam in einem Scheingebilde, als Maya, als Traumbewußtsein. Wenn wir aber in der Art, wie es im vorigen Vortrage dargestellt worden ist, sozusagen die Träume herausschaffen, die Maya zu tilgen versuchen, dann kommen Eindrücke aus einer anderen Welt in diese Region des menschlichen Bewußtseins hinein.
In der Tat mischt sich aber nun für den Menschen in alle diese Erlebnisse, die er hat, alles dasjenige von der physischen Umwelt herein, was eben eigentlich wie ein Überschuß in der Seele anderen, inneren, übersinnlichen Welten angehört, von denen der Mensch nur Kenntnis erhalten kann, wenn er eben dieses Bewußtsein entwickelt. Da macht der Mensch in der Tat die Erfahrung, die nur derjenige als Reminiszenz des täglichen Lebens beschreiben wird, der materialistisch gesinnt ist und als solcher keine Ahnung hat, wie eigentlich die Erfahrungen sind, die der Mensch dann macht. Denn die Welt schaut eben doch etwas anders aus, als sie aussieht, wenn man nur den physischen Plan um sich hat. Man macht die Entdeckung, daß man etwas sieht, was man eigentlich in der gewöhnlichen Welt nie sieht. Wenn man sich auch oftmals denkt, man sehe etwas, die Menschen glauben, sie sehen Licht, in Wahrheit sieht der Mensch ja auf dem physischen Plane nicht Licht, sondern er sieht Farben, Farbennuancen, hellere und dunklere Farben, er sieht nur die Wirkung des Lichtes, aber Licht selber durchschweift unsichtbar den Raum. Wenn der Mensch nur in den Raum, durch den das Licht geht, schaut, so sieht er das Licht nicht. Wir können uns ja leicht davon überzeugen durch das ganz grobklotzige Erlebnis, daß, wenn wir durch ein Fenster Licht lassen, wir eine Art Strahlenbündel im Zimmer sehen. Aber dann muß eben Staub in der Luft sein. Wir sehen den Widerglanz, die Reflexion des Lichtes, aber das Licht sehen wir nicht. Das Licht selbst bleibt unsichtbar. Jetzt aber, nach solchen Erfahrungen, bekommt man das Licht wirklich zu sehen, man nimmt es wirklich wahr. Das kann man aber erst, wenn man eben in die höheren Welten aufrückt. Dann ist man wirklich von flutendem Licht umgeben, wie man in der physischen Welt in flutender Luft ist. Nur kommt man nicht mit seinem physischen Leibe herauf, man braucht da oben nicht zu atmen, aber mit dem Teil seines Wesens kommt man herauf, welcher das Licht so braucht, wie der Leib in der physischen Welt die Luft braucht. Das Lebenselement ist da oben das Licht, man möchte sagen Lichtluft, die dort Bedürfnis des Daseins ist, wie die Luft Bedürfnis des Daseins ist für den Menschen der physischen Welt. Durchdrungen, durchsetzt wird dieses Licht in der Tat von so etwas, wie die Luft in unserem Umkreise durchsetzt ist von Wolkenbildungen. Die sind aber Wasser. Doch dieses Wasser auf dem physischen Plane läßt sich auch mit etwas, was da oben ist, vergleichen. Dasjenige, was uns da entgegenkommt wie schwimmende, schwebende Gebilde im flutenden Licht, wie hier Wolken durch die flutende Luft schweben, das ist webender, lebender Ton, webendes TTongebilde, das ist Sphärenmusik. Und dasjenige, was man weiter wahrnehmen wird, das ist fließendes, webendes Leben selber.
Man kann also schon diese Welt, in die man da eintaucht mit der Seele, beschreiben, aber die Dinge, durch die man beschreiben muß, die müssen eigentlich sinnlos sein für die physische Welt. Daher wird vielleicht derjenige diese Welt, die zwar für die physische Vorstellung sinnlos ist, darum aber doch eine höhere Wirklichkeit hat, am besten beschreiben, der die für den physischen Plan sinnlosesten Worte gebrauchen wird. Nun haben es ja selbstverständlich alle materiellen Philisterseelen leicht, zu widerlegen. Deshalb nehmen sich auch diese Widerlegungen so plausibel aus, welche die materialistisch Gesinnten gegenüber demjenigen machen, was der Okkultist über die höheren Welten zu sagen hat. Er weiß es schon selber, daß diese Widerlegungen sehr leicht zu machen sind, denn man beschreibt ja die höheren Welten am besten, wenn man Worte gebrauchen muß, die gar nicht passen für dasjenige, was der Mensch im Auge hat, wenn man vom physischen Plan redet.
Man möchte zum Beispiel reden von «Lichtluft» oder «Luftlicht». Das gibt es nicht auf dem physischen Plan. Da oben aber gibt es Luftlicht, Lichtluft. Auch lernt man in der Welt, in die man da hineindringt, kennen die Abwesenheit des Lebenselementes, der nötigen Menge von Lichtluft und Luftlicht, dadurch, daß man sich beklommen fühlt, schmerzlich berührt fühlt in der Seele: ein Zustand, der sich vergleichen läßt mit dem Zustand auf dem physischen Plan, wenn man aus Luftmangel keinen Atem findet. Und auch den entgegengesetzten Zustand trifft man dort an, den Zustand wahrer, echter, man möchte sagen heiliger Lichtluft, den Zustand, zu leben in diesem Reinen, Heiligen, und zu schauen geistige Wesenheiten, die sich innerhalb dieser Lichtluft recht gut bemerkbar machen können und da ihr Wesen treiben. Es sind alle diejenigen Wesenheiten, die unter der Führung des Luzifer stehen. In dem Augenblicke, wo wir ohne gehörige Vorbereitung in diese Region hineinkommen, durch nicht gehörige oder auch nicht ordentliche Vorbereitung, bekommt Luzifer die Macht, uns die Lichtluft zu entziehen. Er versetzt uns sozusagen seelisch in Atemnot. Das hat zwar nicht die Wirkung der Atemnot auf dem physischen Plane, sondern eine andere Wirkung, nämlich die, daß wir jetzt, etwa wie ein Eisbär, wenn er nach dem Süden gebracht wird, lechzen nach dem, was uns von dem geistigen Schatz, von dem geistigen Licht des physischen Planes kommen kann. Das ist nämlich gerade das, was Luzifer haben will: daß wir uns nicht befassen mit demjenigen, was von den höheren Hierarchien kommt, sondern dürstend hängen an dem, was er in den physischen Plan gebracht hat, wenn wir durch unsere Vorbereitung uns nicht genügend geschult haben. Stehen wir dann vor Luzifer, dann entzieht er uns das Luftlicht, dann bekommen wir seelische Atemnot, dann lechzen wir nach dem, was geistig aus dem physischen Plane kommt.
Wie nimmt sich das aber im Konkreten aus? Nehmen wir an, irgend jemand macht Vorbereitungen, die ihn geführt haben dazu, in die höheren Welten wirklich hinaufzukommen, das heißt, diese obere Region wirklich zu erreichen. Aber nehmen wir an, er macht nicht die gehörigen Vorbereitungen dazu, vergißt zum Beispiel, daß der Mensch neben allen Übungen zugleich seine moralischen Empfindungen, seine moralischen Gefühle veredeln muß, daß der Mensch irdische, ehrgeizige Machtgefühle aus seiner Seele ausreißen muß — man kann in die höheren Welten hinaufkommen, auch wenn man ein ehrgeiziger, eitler, machtlüstiger Mensch ist, aber dann trägt man irdische Eitelkeit, irdische Machtlust in diese höheren Welten hinauf —, wenn ein Mensch so seine moralischen Empfindungen und Gefühle nicht geläutert hat, dann nimmt ihm oben Luzifer die Lichtluft, das Luftlicht. Dann nimmt man nichts wahr da oben von dem, was in Wirklichkeit oben ist, dann lechzt man nach dem, was unten auf dem physischen Plane ist; man atmet gleichsam dasjenige, was man auf dem physischen Plan hat wahrnehmen können. Man glaubt dann zum Beispiel, man überschaue dasjenige, was nur auf geistige Weise, eben in der Lichtluft, zu überschauen ist, nur dann zu überschauen ist, wenn man Luftlicht atmet. Man glaubt, verschiedene Inkarnationen verschiedener Menschen zu überschauen. Das ist aber nicht wahr, man überschaut sie nicht, weil einem eben Luftlicht fehlt. Man saugt aber wie lechzend, was unten auf dem physischen Plan vorgeht, herauf in diese Region und schildert allerlei Dinge, die man unten auf dem physischen Plan erworben hat, wie Vorgänge in höheren Welten. Es gibt sozusagen kein besseres, oder besser gesagt, kein schlimmeres Mittel, als mit irdischen, eitlen Machtgelüsten in die höheren Welten hinaufzuheben seine Seele. Wenn man das aber tut, so wird man niemals wahre Forschungsergebnisse aus diesen höheren Welten herunterbringen können, sondern was man herunterbringt, wird nur ein Scheinbild dessen sein, was man sich auf dem physischen Plan ausgedacht, ausgesonnen hat und dergleichen.
Da habe ich gleichsam nur die allgemeine Szenerie geschildert. Aber man begegnet auch Wesenheiten, die man elementarische Wesenheiten nennen kann. Während man hier in der physischen Welt von Naturkräften spricht, bekommen da oben diese Kräfte etwas Wesenhaftes. Und man macht vor allem da eine ganz bestimmte Entdeckung, man macht die Entdeckung - jetzt aber durch die Tatsachen, die einem entgegentreten -: ja, hier auf dem physischen Plan gibt es Gutes und Böses, da oben aber gibt es gute und böse Kräfte. Hier in der physischen Welt ist Gutes und Böses in der Menschenseele gemischt, vereint, bei dem einen mehr, bei dem anderen weniger nach der guten Seite hin, da oben aber gibt es Wesenheiten, die als böse Wesenheiten gegen dasjenige kämpfen, was von Wesenheiten, die man gute Wesenheiten nennen muß, hervorgebracht wird. Man kommt da in eine Region hinein, wo man sozusagen das gesteigerte Selbstbewußtsein schon brauchen kann, wo man brauchen kann eine geschärfte Urteilskraft, die eben mit diesem gesteigerten Selbstbewußtsein verbunden sein muß. So daß man zum Beispiel wirklich sich sagen kann: Es müssen da oben auch Wesenheiten sein, die sozusagen die Mission des Bösen haben, neben den Wesenheiten, die die Mission des Guten haben.
Auf dem physischen Plane wird einem immer entgegnet: Warum hat denn die allweise Weltengottheit nicht bloß das Gute geschaffen, warum ist denn nicht immer und überall nur das Gute vorhanden? - Wenn nur das Gute vorhanden wäre, dann würde die Welt davon überzeugt man sich — eine einseitige Richtung nehmen müssen, dann würde die Welt durchaus nicht all die Fülle hervorbringen können, die sie hervorbringt. Das Gute muß eine Widerlage haben. Gewiß, man kann das schon auf dem physischen Plane einsehen. Aber man lernt erkennen: Nur so lange kann man glauben, daß die guten Wesenheiten allein die Welt zu Rande bringen würden, solange man auskommt mit der Sentimentalität, mit der Welt der Phantasie. Mit der Sentimentalität kann man noch in der Region des Alltags auskommen, aber nicht, wenn man in die ernsten Realitäten der übersinnlichen Welt hineinkommt. Da weiß man, daß die guten Wesenheiten die Welt allein nicht machen könnten, daß sie zu schwach wären, um die Welt zu gestalten, daß beigesetzt werden müssen der gesamten Evolution diejenigen Kräfte, die aus den bösen Wesenheiten kommen. Das ist weisheitsvoll, daß das Böse beigemischt ist der Weltenevolution. Daher muß man neben die Dinge, die man sich abgewöhnt, die man bekämpft, auch das Abgewöhnen einer jeglichen Sentimentalität setzen. Man muß erkennen, daß das notwendig ist. Unerschrocken und mutig muß man jenen gefährlichen Wahrheiten entgegengehen können, die man einsieht durch das Wahrnehmen des Kampfes, der sich gerade in dieser Region abspielt, der einem da offenbart werden kann von seiten der guten und bösen Wesenheiten. Das alles sind solche Dinge, die man erlebt, wenn man seine Seele geeignet macht, bewußt in diese Region einzudringen. Aber dann sind wir eigentlich erst in die Traumregion hineingekommen.
Wir leben aber noch in einer weitaus anderen Region als Menschen, in einer Region, für die wir als Seelen im normalen Leben so wenig geeignet sind, daß wir in ihr überhaupt gar nichts wahrnehmen können. Das ist die Region, die wir als Seelen durchleben im traumlosen, tiefen Schlaf, die Region, in die niemals Träume hineinreichen können: die Region des gewöhnlichen Schlafbewußtseins. Hier beginnt schon der absolute Widerspruch, denn der Schlaf ist doch eigentlich dadurch charakterisiert, daß das Bewußtsein eben völlig aufhört. Schlafbewußtsein, ein vollkommenes Paradoxon, ist jener Zustand, in dem wir sind, wenn wir vom Einschlafen bis zum Aufwachen leben. Diesen Zustand wollen wir zunächst das Schlafbewußtsein nennen. Dieses Schlafbewußtsein ist für das normale menschliche Leben ja in der Tat so, daß der Mensch eben aufhört, bewußt zu sein, wenn er in dieses Leben hineingeht, und mit dem Aufwachen erst wieder bewußt wird. Aber in uralten Zeiten des Hellsehens war auch diese Region für die Menschenseele etwas Erlebbares. Da gab es, wenn wir in diese alten Zeiten unserer Erdenentwickelung, sogar noch in nachatlantische Zeiten zurückgehen, durchaus einen Zustand, der für das gewöhnliche Leben dem Schlafe gleich war, in welchem aber wahrnehmbar war eine noch höhere, noch geistigere Welt, als diejenige ist, die in der Traumregion wahrzunehmen ist. Wir können zu solchen Zuständen kommen, die für das gewöhnliche menschliche Leben ganz gleich sind dem Schlafzustande, die aber kein Schlaf sind, weil sie von Bewußtsein durchdrungen sind. Dann sehen wir, wenn wir so hoch hinaufgekommen sind, nicht die physische Welt. Allerdings sehen wir noch die Welt der Lichtluft, die Welt der Töne, die Welt der Weltenharmonie, die Welt des Kampfes der guten und bösen Wesenheiten. Aber diese Welt, die wir da sehen, ist, man möchte sagen, noch verschiedener, noch grundverschiedener von allem, was in der physischen Welt besteht. Es ist eine Welt, welche daher noch schwieriger zu beschreiben ist als diejenige Welt, die man antrifft, wenn man in die Region des Traumbewußtseins kommt.
Ich möchte Ihnen nun eine Art von Vorstellung geben, wie praktisch eigentlich das Bewußtsein in dieser Region arbeitet, wie es wirkt. Wenn man das schildert, worüber ich Andeutungen gemacht habe von einer hohen Welt, in welche Träume hereinragen, da wird man von der gewöhnlichen Philistrosität als Phantast erklärt. Wenn man aber gar beginnt, von den Erfahrungen zu sprechen aus dieser Region heraus, die sonst der Mensch nur durchschläft, dann werden die Menschen schon nicht mehr nur so gehässig, daß sie einem Phantasterei vorwerfen, nein, dann werden sie, wenn sie überhaupt sich irgend einlassen darauf und keine Bösartigkeit haben, schon ganz wild.
Wir haben ein kleines, oder vielmehr ein großes Beispiel auf diesem Gebiete schon erleben können. Während ja zunächst, als in Deutschland meine Bücher erschienen sind, die öffentliche, sich gelehrt nennende Kritik selbstverständlich gehässig und allerlei Dinge vermutend diese Bücher beurteilte, wurde die Kritik auf einem Punkte wirklich ganz wild, schon bis zu dem Grade wild, daß man sagen kann: Eine gewisse Kritik wird, wenn sie gar zu wild wird, eiinfach töricht. Dieser Punkt war ein solcher, wo einmal aufmerksam gemacht werden sollte auf etwas, was wirklich nur aus der erwähnten Region des Geistes kommen kann. Das war die Sache, die ausgesprochen ist in meinem Buche: «Die geistige Führung des Menschen und der Menschheit», die Sache von den zwei Jesusknaben. Für diejenigen der lieben Freunde, die damit nicht bekannt sind, möchte ich wiederholend erwähnen, daß sich ergab als okkultes Forschungsresultat, daß geboren wurde im Beginne unserer Zeitrechnung nicht nur ein Jesusknabe, sondern zwei. Der eine abstammend aus der sogenannten nathanischen Linie des Hauses David, der andere aus der sogenannten salomonischen Linie. Diese beiden Jesusknaben wuchsen miteinander auf. In dem Leibe des salomonischen Knaben lebte die Zarathustraseele, die in dem zwölften Jahre überging — und das ist etwas tief Bedeutsames — in den anderen Jesusknaben, und da bis zum dreißigsten Jahre dieses Leibes lebte. Sie lebte also in dem Leibe, der bis zum zwölften Jahre eingenommen worden war von einer geheimnisvollen Seele, bis zum dreißigsten Jahre dieses Leibes. Von dem dreißigsten Jahre an lebte dann in diesem Leibe diejenige Wesenheit, die wir die Christuswesenheit nennen, solange sie überhaupt auf der Erde lebte: drei Jahre.
Wie gesagt, wild geworden sind diejenigen, die sich überhaupt von der Außenwelt her eingelassen haben auf diese Geschichte der zwei Jesusknaben. Wir können ihnen das ja weiter auch gar nicht übelnehmen, denn die Leute wollen doch natürlich etwas kontrollieren mit der Wissenschaft, die sie haben. Aber das, was sie kritisieren wollen, stammt eben aus einer Region, die sie halt immer verschlafen. Deshalb kann man ihnen ja gar nicht übelnehmen, daß sie davon nichts wissen. Allerdings reicht eigentlich die gesunde Vernunft schon aus, dies zu begreifen. Aber auf solches Begreifen lassen die Leute sich nicht ein, sie wandeln dieses Begreifens Kraft gleich um in Wildheit und Gehässigkeit.
Solche Wahrheiten, wie diese von den zwei Jesusknaben, die eben in dieser höheren Region gefunden werden, entsprechen niemals einer Sympathie oder Antipathie. Solche Wahrheiten findet man in der Tat immer nur in einer solchen Weise, daß man sie eigentlich als Erfahrung nie macht, wenn ich «machen» dasjenige nennen darf, was sozusagen mit der Erkenntnisweise der physischen Welt zu tun hat, ja, eigentlich sogar mit der Erkenntnisweise derjenigen Region, in welcher das Traumleben ist. Da ist man sozusagen bei der Entstehung der Erkenntnis dabei, wie man dabei ist bei dem physischen Bewußtsein. Das gilt auch noch für denjenigen Okkultisten, der nur in diese Traumregion mit seinem Bewußtsein hereinragt. So daß man sagen kann: Wenn die Erkenntnisse dieser Region entstehen, ist man unmittelbar dabei. In einem solchen Dabeisein lassen sich solche Wahrheiten nicht finden, wie diese Wahrheit von den zwei Jesusknaben. Wenn man in der höheren Region solche Wahrheiten bekommt - und zwar so, daß sie in das Bewußtsein hineinkommen -, dann ist der Zeitpunkt, in dem man sie eigentlich erworben hat, längst vorbei, wenn man sie erkennt. Man hat sie früher schon erlebt, bevor man ihnen bewußt entgegentritt — und das soll man ja eben in unserer Zeit —, man hat sie schon in sich. So daß man zu den wichtigsten, wesenhaftesten, bedeutsamsten Wahrheiten so kommt, daß man das deutliche Bewußtsein in sich trägt: Als man sie erworben hat, war man in einem früheren Zeitpunkte als in dem jetzigen, wo man das, was man früher erworben hat, aus den Tiefen der Seele holt und sich bewußt macht. Solche Wahrheiten trifft man in sich an, wie man in der Außenwelt antrifft eine Blume oder irgendein anderes Ding. Wie man in der Außenwelt denken kann über eine Blume oder über einen sonstigen Gegenstand, der eben zunächst einfach da ist, so kann man denken über die Wahrheiten, wenn man sie in sich selbst angetroffen hat, wenn sie in einem selbst einem entgegentreten. Wie man in der Außenwelt erst urteilen kann, nachdem man die Wahrnehmung eines Gegenstandes vollzogen hat, so findet man auch solche Wahrheiten in sich objektiv, und dann erst studiert man sie in sich selbst. Man studiert sie in sich selbst, wie man äußere Tatsachen studiert. Und so wenig es einen Sinn hat zu sagen: Diese Blume, ist sie wahr oder falsch? -, so wenig hat es einen Sinn, über das, was man da eigentlich in sich antrifft, zu fragen, ob es wahr oder falsch sei. Die Wahrheit oder Falschheit bezieht sich nur darauf, ob man fähig ist, das, was man findet, was einem bewußt wird, zu beschreiben. Die Beschreibung kann wahr oder falsch sein. Wahr sein und falsch sein bezieht sich ja nicht auf die Tatsache, sondern darauf, wie irgendein denkendes Wesen sich zu der Tatsache stellt. Auf die Tatsachen sind die Worte «wahr» oder «falsch» gar nicht anwendbar.
Es ist in der Tat das Kommen zu Forschungsergebnissen auf diesem Gebiete ein Hineinschauen in eine Seelenregion, in der man vorher auch gelebt hat, in die man nur nicht mit dem Bewußtsein hineingeschaut hat. Man kann am besten im Fortschreiten okkulter Übungen in diese Region hineinkommen, wenn man geradezu acht gibt auf solche Momente, in denen sich in den Tiefen der Seele nicht bloß Urteile, sondern Tatsachen ergeben, von denen man weiß, daß man nicht mitgewirkt hat mit dem Bewußtsein an ihrem Entstehen. Je mehr man verwundert sein kann über dasjenige, was sich da einem enthüllt wie ein ganz objektiver Gegenstand der Außenwelt, je überraschender das für einen ist, desto mehr ist man vorbereitet, in diese Region hineinzukommen. Daher ist es in der Regel so, daß man mit alldem, was man sich zusammenkonstruiert hat, was man vermutet, nur schlecht in diese Region hineinkommt. Sie haben kein besseres Mittel, nichts zu finden, zum Beispiel über vorherige Inkarnationen dieser oder jener Persönlichkeit, als nachzudenken, was diese in den vorherigen Inkarnationen gewesen sein könnte. Wenn Sie zum Beispiel untersuchen wollten, sagen wir, die früheren Inkarnationen des Robespierre, dann wäre es das beste Mittel, nichts über ihn zu erfahren, wenn Sie historische Persönlichkeiten aufsuchten, von denen Sie vermuten, daß sie vorherige Inkarnationen von Robespierre sein könnten. Das beste Mittel wäre das, um niemals das Richtige zu erfahren. Man muß sich in energischer Weise abgewöhnen, Meinungen, Vermutungen, Hypothesen sich zu machen. Immer mehr und mehr muß derjenige, der ein wirklicher Okkultist werden will, sich daran gewöhnen, möglichst wenig über die Welt zu urteilen. Denn dann kommt er am schnellsten dazu, daß ihm die Tatsachen entgegenkommen. Je mehr der Mensch sich schweigend in seinen Vermutungen, in seiner Meinung verhält, desto mehr erfüllt sich das Innere seiner Seele mit Tatsachen der geistigen Welt.
Man kann zum Beispiel sagen, daß derjenige, der in einem bestimmten religiösen Vorurteile aufgewachsen ist, der ganz bestimmte Gefühle und Empfindungen, vielleicht auch Vermutungen über den Christus hat, nicht sehr geeignet wäre, von vornherein solch eine Wahrheit zu finden wie die Geschichte von den zwei Jesusknaben. Gerade wenn man etwas neutral fühlt gegenüber dem Christus-Ereignis, dann ist dies eine gute Vorbereitung, wenn man nur auf der andern Seite die anderen notwendigen Vorbereitungen macht. Vorurteilsvolle Buddhisten werden am wenigsten etwas Vernünftiges über Buddha zu sagen wissen, ebenso wie vorurteilsvolle Christen am wenigsten über den Christus zu sagen wissen werden. So ist es auf allen Gebieten. Man muß schon einmal gewissermaßen alle für das gewöhnliche Leben so zu nennenden Bitternisse durchmachen, gleichsam ein doppelter Mensch werden, wenn man in diese Region, die jetzt als eine dritte geschildert worden ist, eintreten will. Ein doppelter Mensch ist man ja auch im gewöhnlichen Leben, wenn man auch von der einen Hälfte seines Seins keinen bewußten Gebrauch macht. Man ist auch im gewöhnlichen Leben ja ein wachender und ein schlafender Mensch. Wahrhaftig: so verschieden Wachen und Schlafen ist, so verschieden ist diese Region von der physischen Welt, diese dritte Region in den höheren Welten. Diese Region ist etwas Besonderes für sich. Sie ist auch eine Umwelt, aber eine völlig neue Welt, die wir am besten dann erkennen, wenn wir nicht nur dasjenige auszulöschen vermögen, was die Sinne an Eindrücken der physischen Außenwelt übermitteln, sondern auch alles das, was wir fühlen und empfinden können, wofür wir uns leidenschaftlich erregen können in bezug auf Dinge der Sinnenwelt. Im gewöhnlichen Leben ist der Mensch so wenig geeignet zum Erleben dieser Welt, daß sein Bewußtsein ausgelöscht wird jede Nacht. Dazu gelangt er nur, wenn er imstande ist, wirklich aus sich einen Doppelmenschen zu machen. Und derjenige Mensch, der vergessen kann, der ausschalten kann zunächst alles, was ihn interessiert in dieser physischen Welt, der kann dann in diese andere, höhere Welt eindringen. Die mittlere Welt, die Welt, in der auch die Träume gewoben werden, sie ist gleichsam gemischt aus den beiden anderen Welten. In sie ragen sowohl Elemente der höheren Welt, die der Mensch sonst verschläft, als auch die Elemente des Alltagsbewußtseins.. Deshalb kann auch niemand die wahren Ursachen der physischen Welt erkennen, wenn er nicht in seinem Erkennen einzudringen vermag in diese dritte Region. Wenn aber der Mensch durch eigene Erfahrung heute die Entdeckung machen will, wer zum Beispiel Krishna ist, so kann er das nur in dieser dritten Region. Und jene Eindrücke, die Arjuna bekommen hat, und die uns geschildert werden in dem erhabenen Sang, in der Bhagavad Gita, dadurch, daß sie dem Krishna in den Mund gelegt werden, sie stammen aus dieser Welt. Daher mußte ich heute zunächst vorbereitend sprechen von dem Aufrücken des Menschen in diese dritte Region, damit wir begreiflich finden können, woher eigentlich die wunderbare und doch grotesk klingende Wahrheit stammt, die Krishna dem Arjuna sagt, und die doch sehr unähnlich klingt demjenigen, was gewöhnlich gehört werden kann. Kennenzulernen den Krishna und damit den Nerv der Bhagavad Gita, das soll die eine Seite dieser Vorträge sein. Auf der anderen Seite sollten Sie aber in den okkulten Grundzügen dieses wunderbaren Sanges etwas haben, das Sie, wenn Sie es wirklich gebrauchen, auch wirklich den Weg in die höheren Welten finden lassen kann. Denn der Weg in die höheren Welten ist jedem Menschen offen, wenn er nur verstehen will, wie das Körnchen Gold, das man erst haben muß, in dem Bewußtsein besteht, daß in das alltägliche Leben Dinge hineinspielen, in denen die höchsten geistigen Wesenheiten leben und weben.
Fourth Lecture
We have seen that when a person wants to enter the realm where dreams are woven, they must bring with them from the ordinary world what can be called a heightened self-awareness, a surplus in the ego beyond what is necessary for the physical plane, for the physical world. In our present time, this extra self-awareness, this surplus from our soul, is developed through what we can experience through exercises such as those mentioned in the book “How to Know Higher Worlds.” So, first of all, there is a strengthening, an empowerment of the self. Because human beings feel, so to speak, that they need this, they are overcome by something like a kind of fear, a kind of anxiety, a kind of shyness about developing themselves upward into the higher worlds if they have not yet attained this strength within their inner self.
Now, I have often emphasized that the human soul has gone through various stages in the course of evolution. What the human soul of the present day can attain through the exercises mentioned above in terms of elevation and strengthening of self-consciousness could not actually be achieved in the same way in the time in which we must place the sublime song, the Bhagavad Gita. In ancient times, something else existed in the human self, in human consciousness: the first, ancient clairvoyance was still present in the human soul. Clairvoyance is also something that is not really necessary for the ordinary self on the physical plane, so to speak, if one is content with what the physical plane has to offer.
But those ancient times, those ancient people of the time in which we must place the sublime Gita, still had the remnants of ancient clairvoyance. On the one hand, we look back to such people who were contemporaries of the emergence of the Bhagavad Gita. These people could say to themselves: When I look at the physical environment, I receive impressions through my senses, and these impressions of the senses can be combined by the mind, which is connected to the brain. But I also have another power through which I can acquire knowledge of other worlds through clairvoyance. And these powers testify to me that human beings also belong to other worlds, that as a human being I still extend into other worlds beyond the ordinary physical world. — But this is precisely the heightened self-awareness that immediately springs forth in the soul, the knowledge that this soul does not belong solely to the physical world. It is, as it were, an excess pressure within the self that is brought about by those, albeit final, remnants of clairvoyant power. And today, human beings can again develop such powers of excess pressure within themselves if they perform appropriate occult exercises in their souls.
It could be objected — and you know that in anthroposophical lectures such objections, which the true occultist himself knows very well, are always anticipated at the appropriate point — it could be objected: Yes, how does the human being of our time come to want to do such occult exercises? Why is he not satisfied with what the intellect, which is bound to the brain, offers him? Why does man want such occult exercises? — Here we touch upon a question that is not just a question, but a kind of fact for every sensible soul in the present cycle of humanity. If human beings really came to nothing in their souls except what the senses show them, what the intellect gives them, bound as it is to the external physical instrument, the brain, then they would certainly be satisfied with their existence, without developing any desire for higher, supersensible worlds. In such a case, humans would see how things and events behave and unfold around them, they would see them arise and pass away, but they would not question their arising and passing away, instead being undoubtedly satisfied with them, just as an individual animal can be satisfied with its existence. Humans are basically quite capable of this, at least in the state in which materialistic-minded people today would like to think of humans. With its ordinary consciousness, the animal is only able to perceive what arises and passes away before the senses; the animal is also satisfied with what takes place before the senses. But this is not the case with human beings. But why is this not the case with human beings?
In this context, I am always talking about human beings of the present. For even in ancient Greece, the human soul was not fundamentally as it is today. If we approach natural science today with our whole soul, if we acquire natural science, if we approach what is happening in historical development, if we acquire external historiology, the science of history, then, along with everything we acquire, something enters the human soul, something creeps very stealthily into the human soul, something for which there is actually no purpose or meaning in external physical life. Many comparisons have therefore been made for what creeps in there. I would like to mention one such comparison, because it is often made without really thinking about its deeper meaning. In the last third of the 19th century, a very famous medical authority, in order to emphasize the dignity of independent science at the Academy of Sciences, drew attention to a Greek philosopher who was once asked: What is the point of philosophical reflection on the meaning and purpose of life? How does this reflection relate to the other activities of human beings who participate in general life through other work, through useful activities? The philosopher gave the following answer: Consider a fair. People come to sell and buy. They are all busy. But there are also some who come who do not want to sell or buy anything, but only want to observe, just to see what is going on at the fair. The philosopher meant to say that the fair is life. People are busy in many different ways. But philosophers, who are not busy with what other people are busy with, loiter around, walk around, and just look at everything in order to learn about everything.
It has become second nature to so-called intellectual humanity that philosophers are held in particularly high esteem precisely because they do not obviously participate in the useful activities of life, but because of their self-imposed, independent science, which is completely self-sufficient. But this comparison should give us pause for thought. This may seem banal, but it is not entirely banal when you think about it more deeply. This comparison could indeed give rise to some reflection. It is quite questionable to compare philosophers to loiterers at the fairground of life, who are essentially useless, wandering among people who all have a purpose. That would also be a possible line of thought. Judgments are often made that are undoubtedly correct at the outset. But if they drag on for centuries or, as in this case, even for millennia, they can become quite incorrect. Therefore, the question must be asked: Are all those who are generally judged in this way really just loiterers in life?
It depends entirely on how one evaluates life. There are certainly people who really regard philosophers as useless loafers and believe that it would be wiser to pursue some useful craft. From their point of view, these people may even be quite right. But what matters is that when you look at life with your senses and with your mind, which is bound to the brain, things sneak into the human soul that clearly have no connection with the external world that surrounds us. This can be seen very clearly when reading books that attempt to construct a satisfying worldview from a purely materialistic basis, with the aim of solving the riddles of the world. Then it usually turns out that at the end of these books, questions arise for the first time. These books generally raise the riddles of the world only at the end. As we take in what these books are about, as we take in the outside world, a thought creeps in, a thought that makes us say: Either human beings are here for other worlds than just the physical world, or this physical world is lying to us, constantly deceiving us by presenting us with riddles we cannot answer. A whole sum of our soul life is meaningless if life really ends with death, if man has no share, no connection with the higher world. And the meaninglessness of what he has, not the longing for something he does not have, is what drives man to investigate how it is that something enters the soul that is not at all a citizen of our sensory world. And that drives him to develop something, as can happen through occult exercises, something that is quite obviously not connected with the external world. We would not say that human beings have a longing for immortality within themselves, and that is why they form the concept of immortality, why they invent it, but rather that, in the way they live, human beings have brought something from the external world into their souls that would be completely meaningless, purposeless, and insubstantial if existence were confined to the period between birth and death. Humans must ask about meaning and purpose, indeed about the whole essence of something they have, and not of something they do not have.
Thus, people today are in fact no longer entirely capable—and therefore cannot refer to the Greek philosophers—they are no longer merely loiterers, mere pranksters, but are in a different situation: in a position where he can be compared to a personality who merely lends words to what actually lives in everyone. In ancient Greece, the comparison with the philosopher was indeed appropriate. Today it is no longer appropriate; today things are different. If we compare life again with a fair, we can also say today: there are buyers and sellers. When they close the fair and count up whether everything is correct, they find—as wonderful as it sounds, but every comparison is a little flawed, and in a certain sense, the more flawed it is, the better—they find something that is there but cannot have been bought or sold, something whose origin cannot be fathomed. This is not the case at a fair, but it is the case at the fair of life. As we live through life, we continually find things that spring from life but for which there is no explanation in the world of the senses. This is the deeper reason why there are people in the world today who despair of existence, who have vague longings: because something is at work in the soul of contemporary human beings that has no citizenship in the physical world, but which raises questions about other worlds.
But what we must acquire in our souls today so that despair and hopelessness do not arise toward life, toward something that would otherwise be meaningless, a person like Arjuna simply had because his soul still stood out from a time when ancient human, primitive clairvoyance still existed. But Arjuna is also at a transitional point—and this is the essential, meaningful point if the Bhagavad Gita is to be understood—Arjuna is at a point in time when only remnants, the last echoes of ancient clairvoyance, still existed. At the time when the Bhagavad Gita was written, people were entering a period of evolution in which this ancient clairvoyance was gradually being lost. And that is the very profound characteristic of the Bhagavad Gita, the breath that is poured out over the Bhagavad Gita, that the tones resound from it that come from that turning point in time when the old clairvoyance of humanity was dying, when the evening glow of the old clairvoyance was about to give way to the night in which the human power that the old human soul did not yet have and that the ordinary human soul has in our time could first be born.
Arjuna is thus a soul of whom one can say: Old clairvoyance is still present in his soul in its last echoes, but always in such a way that it seems to be fading away in the soul, no longer really wanting to be there, so that it needs such a shattering event as I have described in order to be awakened again, to be brought forth again. So what is it that, at the moment when Arjuna stands clairvoyantly before Krishna, what is it that evokes the clairvoyant power from Arjuna's soul? It is the shocking event that I have described. And that clairvoyant power brings it forth, which in ancient times was common to all human beings. What can Arjuna now see, perceive, through the evocation of the ancient clairvoyant power that was otherwise already in decline in his soul? In purely historical terms, Arjuna is to face the spiritual being whom we must address as Krishna in the sense of the Bhagavad Gita.
Now, in order to gain a complete understanding of what is actually going on in Arjuna's soul, it must be pointed out that the elevation of the human soul into the region from which dreams are otherwise woven does not actually lead to a full understanding of Krishna or the essence of Krishna today. Even if we really develop all the powers that consciously carry us over into the region we characterized in the previous lecture as the region of dream consciousness, we cannot today, so to speak, make the full discovery of what Krishna is.
Let us recall what I described yesterday. Let us call the ordinary everyday consciousness the lower region. Above it lies a region that remains unconscious to everyday life, which only becomes conscious, as it were, in a phantom image, as Maya, as dream consciousness. But when we, in the manner described in the previous lecture, remove the dreams, so to speak, and try to eliminate Maya, impressions from another world enter this region of human consciousness.
In fact, however, everything from the physical environment that actually belongs as an excess in the soul to other, inner, supersensible worlds, of which man can only gain knowledge if he develops this consciousness, now mixes with all the experiences that man has. In this way, human beings actually have experiences that only those who are materialistic and, as such, have no idea what these experiences are like can describe as reminiscences of everyday life. For the world looks somewhat different than it appears when one is surrounded only by the physical plane. One discovers that one sees something that one never actually sees in the ordinary world. Although one often thinks one sees something, people believe they see light, in reality, on the physical plane, human beings do not see light, but rather colors, shades of color, lighter and darker colors; they see only the effect of light, but light itself passes invisibly through space. When people look only into the space through which light passes, they do not see the light. We can easily convince ourselves of this through the very crude experience that when we let light through a window, we see a kind of bundle of rays in the room. But then there must be dust in the air. We see the reflection of the light, but we do not see the light itself. The light itself remains invisible. But now, after such experiences, one really gets to see the light, one really perceives it. However, one can only do this when one ascends to the higher worlds. Then one is truly surrounded by flooding light, just as one is surrounded by flooding air in the physical world. Only you cannot ascend with your physical body; you do not need to breathe up there, but you ascend with that part of your being which needs light as much as the body needs air in the physical world. The element of life up there is light, one might say light-air, which is necessary for existence there, just as air is necessary for existence for human beings in the physical world. This light is indeed permeated and interspersed with something like the clouds that permeate the air around us. But those are water. However, this water on the physical plane can also be compared to something that is up there. What comes toward us like floating, hovering formations in the flooding light, like clouds floating through the flooding air here, is weaving, living sound, weaving sound formations, which is sphere music. And what one perceives further is flowing, weaving life itself.
So it is possible to describe this world into which one plunges with one's soul, but the things one must use to describe it must actually be meaningless to the physical world. Therefore, perhaps the person who will best describe this world, which is meaningless to the physical imagination but nevertheless has a higher reality, is the one who will use the words that are most meaningless to the physical plane. Now, of course, all materialistic philistine souls find it easy to refute this. That is why the refutations made by materialistic minds against what occultists have to say about the higher worlds seem so plausible. He knows himself that these refutations are very easy to make, because the higher worlds are best described when one has to use words that do not fit at all with what people have in mind when they talk about the physical plane.
One would like to speak, for example, of “light air” or “air light.” These do not exist on the physical plane. But up there, there is air light and light air. In the world into which one enters, one also learns about the absence of the life element, the necessary amount of light-air and air-light, by feeling uneasy, painfully touched in one's soul: a state that can be compared to the state on the physical plane when one cannot breathe due to lack of air. And one also encounters the opposite state there, the state of true, genuine, one might say holy light air, the state of living in this pure, holy state and seeing spiritual beings who can make themselves quite noticeable within this light air and pursue their nature there. These are all those beings who are under the leadership of Lucifer. The moment we enter this region without proper preparation, through improper or inadequate preparation, Lucifer gains the power to deprive us of the light air. He puts us, so to speak, in spiritual distress. This does not have the effect of distress on the physical plane, but a different effect, namely that we now, like a polar bear when it is brought to the south, thirst for what can come to us from the spiritual treasure, from the spiritual light of the physical plane. This is precisely what Lucifer wants: that we do not concern ourselves with what comes from the higher hierarchies, but cling thirstily to what he has brought into the physical plane if we have not trained ourselves sufficiently through our preparation. When we stand before Lucifer, he withdraws the air light from us, we experience spiritual suffocation, and we crave what comes spiritually from the physical plane.
But how does this work in concrete terms? Let us assume that someone makes preparations that have led him to actually ascend to the higher worlds, that is, to actually reach this higher region. But let us assume that he does not make the necessary preparations, forgetting, for example, that in addition to all the exercises, human beings must also refine their moral sensibilities, their moral feelings, that human beings must tear earthly, ambitious feelings of power out of their souls — one can ascend to the higher worlds even if one is an ambitious, vain, power-hungry person, but then one carries earthly vanity and earthly lust for power up into these higher worlds — if a person has not purified his moral sensibilities and feelings in this way, then Lucifer takes away the light air, the air light, from him above. Then one perceives nothing up there of what is really up there, then one craves for what is down below on the physical plane; one breathes, as it were, what one has been able to perceive on the physical plane. One believes, for example, that one can see what can only be seen spiritually, in the light air, and only when one breathes air light. One believes that one can see the different incarnations of different people. But this is not true; one cannot see them because one lacks air light. Instead, one sucks up what is happening down on the physical plane into this region as if thirstily, and describes all kinds of things that one has acquired down on the physical plane as events in higher worlds. There is, so to speak, no better, or rather no worse, means of lifting one's soul up into the higher worlds than with earthly, vain desires for power. But if one does so, one will never be able to bring down true research results from these higher worlds; instead, what one brings down will only be a mere image of what one has imagined or concocted on the physical plane and the like.
I have only described the general scene, so to speak. But one also encounters beings that can be called elemental beings. While here in the physical world we speak of forces of nature, up there these forces take on a more substantial character. And above all, one makes a very specific discovery, one discovers — but now through the facts that confront one — that yes, here on the physical plane there is good and evil, but up there there are good and evil forces. Here in the physical world, good and evil are mixed together in the human soul, united, with some people leaning more toward the good side and others less, but up there there are beings that fight as evil beings against what is brought forth by beings that must be called good beings. One enters a region where one can already use, so to speak, increased self-awareness, where one can use a sharpened power of judgment, which must be connected with this increased self-awareness. So that one can really say, for example: There must also be beings up there who have, so to speak, the mission of evil, alongside the beings who have the mission of good.
On the physical plane, one is always confronted with the question: Why did the all-wise world deity not create only good, why is not only good present everywhere and at all times? If only good were present, then the world would have to take a one-sided direction, and it would not be able to produce all the abundance that it does. Good must have an opposite. Certainly, one can already see this on the physical plane. But one learns to recognize that one can only believe that good beings alone bring the world to completion as long as one gets by with sentimentality, with the world of fantasy. Sentimentality is sufficient in everyday life, but not when one enters the serious realities of the supersensible world. There one knows that good beings alone could not create the world, that they would be too weak to shape it, that the forces coming from evil beings must be added to the whole of evolution. It is wise that evil is mixed into the evolution of the world. Therefore, in addition to the things one must unlearn and fight against, one must also unlearn all sentimentality. One must recognize that this is necessary. One must be able to face fearlessly and courageously those dangerous truths that one perceives through the awareness of the struggle that is taking place in this region, which can be revealed to one by the good and evil beings. These are all things that one experiences when one prepares one's soul to consciously enter this region. But then we have only just entered the dream region.
However, we still live in a very different region as human beings, in a region for which we, as souls in normal life, are so ill-suited that we cannot perceive anything at all in it. This is the region that we, as souls, pass through in dreamless, deep sleep, the region that dreams can never reach: the region of ordinary sleep consciousness. This is where the absolute contradiction begins, because sleep is actually characterized by the complete cessation of consciousness. Sleep consciousness, a complete paradox, is the state we are in when we live from falling asleep to waking up. Let us first call this state sleep consciousness. This sleep consciousness is indeed such for normal human life that human beings cease to be conscious when they enter this life and only become conscious again when they wake up. But in ancient times of clairvoyance, this region was also something that the human soul could experience. If we go back to these ancient times of our Earth's development, even to post-Atlantean times, there was definitely a state that was like sleep for ordinary life, but in which a higher, more spiritual world could be perceived than the one that can be perceived in the dream region. We can attain states that are just like sleep for ordinary human life, but which are not sleep because they are permeated with consciousness. Then, when we have risen so high, we do not see the physical world. However, we still see the world of light air, the world of sounds, the world of world harmony, the world of the struggle between good and evil beings. But this world that we see there is, one might say, even more diverse, even more fundamentally different from everything that exists in the physical world. It is a world that is therefore even more difficult to describe than the world one encounters when one enters the region of dream consciousness.
I would now like to give you a kind of idea of how consciousness actually works in this region, how it operates. If one describes what I have hinted at, a higher world into which dreams intrude, one is dismissed by ordinary philistines as a fantasist. But if you start talking about experiences from this region, which people otherwise only sleep through, then people are no longer just hostile, accusing you of fantasy; no, if they engage with it at all and are not malicious, they become quite wild.
We have already experienced a small, or rather a large, example of this. When my books first appeared in Germany, the public critics who called themselves learned naturally judged them with hostility and all sorts of assumptions, but on one point the criticism became really wild, so wild that one can say: a certain kind of criticism, when it becomes too wild, simply becomes foolish. This was a point where attention should be drawn to something that can really only come from the aforementioned region of the mind. This was the matter expressed in my book, The Spiritual Guidance of Men and Humanity, the matter of the two Jesus boys. For those of my dear friends who are not familiar with this, I would like to repeat that occult research has revealed that at the beginning of our era, not one but two Jesus boys were born. One descended from the so-called Nathanic line of the House of David, the other from the so-called Solomonic line. These two Jesus boys grew up together. The soul of Zarathustra lived in the body of the Solomon boy, which passed over in the twelfth year — and this is something deeply significant — into the other Jesus boy, where it lived until the thirtieth year of this body. It thus lived in the body that had been occupied by a mysterious soul until the twelfth year, until the thirtieth year of this body. From the age of thirty, the entity we call the Christ consciousness lived in this body for as long as it lived on earth: three years.
As I said, those who have allowed themselves to be drawn into this story of the two Jesus boys from the outside world have become wild. We cannot really blame them, because people naturally want to control things with the knowledge they have. But what they want to criticize comes from a region that they have always overlooked. Therefore, we cannot blame them for not knowing anything about it. However, common sense is actually enough to understand this. But people do not allow themselves to understand this; they immediately transform this understanding into wildness and hatred.
Truths such as these about the two Jesus boys, which are found in this higher region, never correspond to sympathy or antipathy. Such truths are in fact always found in such a way that one never actually experiences them, if I may call “experience” that which has to do, so to speak, with the mode of cognition of the physical world, indeed, even with the mode of cognition of that region in which dream life exists. One is, so to speak, present at the emergence of knowledge, just as one is present in physical consciousness. This also applies to the occultist who only enters this dream region with his consciousness. So that one can say: When the insights of this region arise, one is immediately present. In such a state of presence, truths such as this truth about the two Jesus boys cannot be found. When one receives such truths in the higher region—in such a way that they enter one's consciousness—then the moment when one actually acquired them is long past when one recognizes them. One has already experienced them before consciously encountering them—and that is precisely what one should do in our time—one already has them within oneself. So that one comes to the most important, most essential, most significant truths in such a way that one carries the clear consciousness within oneself: when one acquired them, one was at an earlier point in time than the present, where one brings what one acquired earlier out of the depths of the soul and becomes conscious of it. One encounters such truths within oneself in the same way as one encounters a flower or any other thing in the external world. Just as one can think about a flower or any other object in the external world that is simply there, so one can think about truths when one has encountered them within oneself, when they confront one within oneself. Just as one can only judge in the external world after one has completed the perception of an object, so one also finds such truths objectively within oneself, and only then does one study them within oneself. One studies them within oneself as one studies external facts. And just as it makes little sense to say, “Is this flower true or false?”, it makes just as little sense to ask whether what one actually encounters within oneself is true or false. Truth or falsehood only refers to whether one is able to describe what one finds, what one becomes aware of. The description can be true or false. Being true or false does not refer to the fact itself, but to how a thinking being relates to the fact. The words “true” or “false” are not applicable to facts at all.
In fact, arriving at research results in this field is like looking into a region of the soul where one has lived before, but into which one has not looked with one's consciousness. The best way to enter this region is through occult exercises, paying close attention to those moments when, in the depths of the soul, not merely judgments arise, but facts of which one knows that one has not participated in their formation with one's consciousness. The more you can be amazed at what is revealed to you like a completely objective object of the outer world, the more surprising it is for you, the more prepared you are to enter this region. That is why it is usually the case that with everything you have constructed for yourself, with all your assumptions, you can only enter this region with difficulty. You have no better means of finding anything, for example about the previous incarnations of this or that personality, than to think about what they might have been in their previous incarnations. If, for example, you wanted to investigate the previous incarnations of Robespierre, then the best way would be to learn nothing about him by seeking out historical personalities whom you suspect might be previous incarnations of Robespierre. The best way to never find out the truth would be to never learn anything about him. One must energetically break the habit of forming opinions, assumptions, and hypotheses. More and more, anyone who wants to become a true occultist must accustom themselves to judging as little as possible about the world. For then they will most quickly come to a point where the facts come to meet them. The more a person remains silent about their assumptions and opinions, the more the inner soul is filled with facts from the spiritual world.
One can say, for example, that someone who has grown up with certain religious prejudices, who has very definite feelings and sensations, perhaps even assumptions about Christ, would not be very suited to finding such a truth as the story of the two Jesus boys from the outset. If you feel neutral about the Christ event, this is a good preparation, provided you make the other necessary preparations. Prejudiced Buddhists will have the least to say about Buddha, just as prejudiced Christians will have the least to say about Christ. This is true in all areas of life. One must first go through all the bitterness of ordinary life, so to speak, and become a double person, if one wants to enter this region, which has now been described as a third. One is also a double human being in ordinary life, even if one does not make conscious use of one half of one's being. In ordinary life, one is also a waking and a sleeping human being. Truly, as different as waking and sleeping are, so different is this region from the physical world, this third region in the higher worlds. This region is something special in itself. It is also an environment, but a completely new world, which we recognize best when we are able to extinguish not only the impressions that the senses convey from the physical outer world, but also everything that we can feel and sense, everything that can arouse our passions in relation to things in the sensory world. In ordinary life, human beings are so ill-equipped to experience this world that their consciousness is extinguished every night. They can only achieve this if they are able to truly create a double of themselves. And those who are able to forget, who are able to switch off everything that interests them in this physical world, can then enter this other, higher world. The middle world, the world in which dreams are woven, is, as it were, a mixture of the other two worlds. It contains both elements of the higher world, which humans otherwise sleep through, and elements of everyday consciousness. That is why no one can recognize the true causes of the physical world unless they are able to penetrate this third region with their perception. But if people today want to discover for themselves who Krishna is, for example, they can only do so in this third realm. And the impressions that Arjuna received, which are described to us in the sublime song, in the Bhagavad Gita, by being put into Krishna's mouth, come from this world. That is why I had to begin today with a preparatory discussion of man's ascent into this third region, so that we may understand where the wonderful and yet grotesque-sounding truth that Krishna tells Arjuna comes from, which sounds very unlike what is usually heard. Getting to know Krishna and thus the essence of the Bhagavad Gita is to be one aspect of these lectures. On the other hand, however, you should also gain something from the occult outlines of this wonderful song that can help you find your way into the higher worlds when you really need it. For the path to the higher worlds is open to every human being, if only they are willing to understand how the grain of gold that one must first possess exists in the consciousness, that things in which the highest spiritual beings live and weave play a part in everyday life.