First Scientific Lecture-Course
FOREWORD
Rudolf Steiner, in all that he created and gave to the world, took
his start from real needs, never from theoretical programmes.
Time and again, what he gave took its inception from the spiritual
questions and interests of individuals or groups among his friends and
pupils. Yet as the faculty to apprehend the spiritual aspect of the
World first had to be rekindled and awakened in our time a slow
and gradual process it must have signified a very great
sacrifice and a severe hindrance for this universal spirit to bring
the spiritual truths from infinite horizons into the narrower range of
outlook of his contemporaries. This sacrifice he did not shun. Even
into the anxiously constraining walls of earth 20th-century scientific
thinking he brought the light of spiritual knowledge, and we who have
received this cannot find adequate words in which to thank him. Our
truest thanks must be the will to widen out our own horizon, thus
making easier the teacher's task.
The Anthroposophical Movement within this 20th century is seeking
to bring about a return from materialism to a spiritual understanding
of the World. It is a good thing for mankind that in this Movement
some individualities have also chosen the very hardest task, namely to
lead again to spiritual sources that realm of human knowledge which
has plunged most deeply into agnostic materialism Natural
Science. Future generations will surely be very grateful to the
scientists teachers of the Waldorf School at Stuttgart above
all who had the inner courage to put their questions to the
great spiritual teacher.
We take this opportunity to thank those who have hitherto
administered this spiritual treasure who first revised and
duplicated the notes of the lectures, thereby preserving them for
posterity. We refer especially to the Waldorf School teachers E. A. K.
Stockmeyer, Alexander Strakosch, and above all Dr. Eugen Kolisko and
Dr. Walter Johannes Stein. My thanks are also due to Ehrenfried
Pfeiffer of Dornach for his assistance in preparing the present
edition.*
[ *NOTE BY TRANSLATOR: The English version (1948)
has been based on this edition, and on a number of corrections and
improvements, issued a few years ago by Paul Eugen Schiller of
Dornach. ]
It will be well for us to refer at this point to the following
passages from Rudolf Steiner's Autobiography:
The anthroposophical period of my life-work began at a time
when many people were feeling dissatisfied with the ways of knowledge
of the immediate past. They looked for ways to get beyond that realm
of existence to which the scientific era was restricted inasmuch as
nothing was held valid as secure knowledge unless it could
be grasped in mechanistic forms of thought. The strivings of many of
our contemporaries towards some form of spiritual knowledge touched me
deeply. There were biologists for instance such as Oskar Hertwig.
Having begun his career as a disciple of Haeckel, he afterwards took
leave of Darwinism, for he now felt that the driving forces recognized
by the Darwinian school were inadequate to explain the facts of
organic evolution. The longing of our time for knowledge seemed to me
to find expression in such men as these. And yet it seemed to me this
longing was oppressed by a heavy load a burden due to the
belief that only those things which we can investigate by means of the
outer senses and then express in terms of measure, number and weight,
constitute genuine knowledge. Men did not venture to unfold that inner
activity of thought by means of which reality is experienced more
intimately than by the physical senses. The most they did was to
declare that with the kind of scientific explanation hitherto applied
also to higher forms of reality those of organic life for
example no fundamental progress was possible. If a more
positive contribution was looked for, if they were now to say
what it is that works in the realm of life they could bring
forward only the vaguest notions.
Those who were striving to transcend the mechanical
explanation of the World generally lacked the courage to admit that if
we want to overcome the mechanistic system we must also overcome the
habits of thought which have led to it. The time was calling, yet
called in vain, for a clear recognition of this kind. The orientation
of our faculties of knowledge towards the outer senses enables us to
penetrate what is mechanical in Nature. This mental tendency has
become habitual throughout the second half of the 19th century. If the
mechanical aspect of the world no longer satisfied us now, we ought
not to expect to reach into higher regions in the identical frame of
mind. The outer senses develop and awaken in the human being, so to
speak, of their own accord; but on this basis we can only gain insight
into the mechanical domain. If we desire to know more than this, we
must by dint of our own efforts give to our deeper, latent faculties
of knowledge the same development which Nature gives the powers of the
senses. The faculties with which we apprehend what is mechanical are
awake of their own accord; those that apply to higher realms of
reality first need to be awakened.
The time required, so it seemed to me, that in our striving
after knowledge we should arrive at this clear recognition of our
state, and I was happy when I saw any beginnings or indications that
seemed to tend in this direction. . . .
There now exists a twofold outcome of the anthroposophical
period of my life-work. There are my published books upon the one
hand, while on the other hand there are a larger number of
lecture-courses, printed at first for private circulation and
available, to begin with, only to members of the Anthroposophical
Society. These printed versions of my lectures are reports, more or
less accurately made, which I was quite unable to correct for want of
time. It would have pleased me best to let the spoken word remain as
spoken word; but members wanted the lectures made available in printed
form; so it was done. . . .
To gain a picture of my own inner work, my unceasing effort
to present the spiritual science of Anthroposophia to the prevailing
consciousness of our time, one must have recourse to my published
writings. In these I tried to come to terms with the modern striving
after knowledge in its many aspects. Here I set forth, what in the
realm of spiritual perception grew for me ever more fully and clearly
into the edifice of Anthroposophia, admittedly imperfect
as it still is in many ways. Herein I saw my essential task, in the
fulfilment of which I only had to bear in mind what is required when
communications from the spiritual world are imparted to the prevailing
culture of our time. Yet side by side with this requirement I had to
do full justice to another one, namely to meet the inner needs and
spiritual longings that became manifest among the members of the
Society.
To this end the many lecture-courses were given in the
Society; and this involved another circumstance. The lectures were
attended by members only. Acquainted as they were already with the
initial teachings of Anthroposophia, one could speak to them as to
more advanced students. Thus the whole tenor of these member's
lectures came to be different from what was possible in written books
intended for the world at large. In these more intimate circles I
might speak of many things in a form which I should certainly have had
to change had I intended it for publication from the outset.
Competent judgment on the content of these privately printed
lectures will of course only be possible for those who are acquainted
with the premisses of thought, taken for granted in those who heard
them. For the great majority of these reprints, this implies at the
very least some knowledge of the anthroposophical science of Man and
of the essence of the great Universe as described in Anthroposophia;
also a knowledge of anthroposophical History, for this too
is an essential part of the communications from the spiritual
world.
Whoever reads the lectures here reproduced should bear the
foregoing words in mind. If those who work with this lecture-course
approach it with the will to awaken in themselves the faculties
of knowledge for higher forms of reality, the time will surely
come when the dead mechanistic picture of the world which the last
century produced will be transcended transcended above all by
the most up-to-day, the most gifted and conscientious of our
scientists, who will then see through the inherent impossibility and
untruth of this world-picture. Then will the far more living and
spiritual form of Science which Rudolf Steiner had in mind reveal its
truth and beauty, also its ethical inspiring power. The Section calls
to all its fellow-workers: Help the Goetheanum bring about the
beginning of this new epoch even within the present century. For
generations due to come at the end of the 20th century, let there be
in existence a Science of Nature permeated with the living Spirit,
permeated with the Christ-Impulse!
For the Natural Science Section at the
Goetheanum Guenther Wachsmuth. Dornach, January 1925.
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