, Between Death and Rebirth Ten Lectures by Rudolf Steiner 

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grown-up person, however, or of a child from a
certain age onwards, when seen from the
viewpoint of sleep, reveals a constant process of
decay, of destruction. Every night during sleep the
forces of destruction are ever and again subjugated
by the forces of growth; what is destroyed by day
is repaired during the night, but the forces of
destruction are always in excess. And the
consequence of this fact is that we die. The forces
that are renewed during the night are never the
equal of those that have been used up during the
waking life of day, so that in the normal life of the
human being a certain surplus of destructive forces
is always present. This surplus accumulates and
the natural death of old age ensues when the
destructive forces eclipse the upbuilding forces.
Thus when we observe the human being from the
viewpoint of sleep we are actually witnessing a
process of destruction  but without sadness. For
the feelings we might have in our waking life
about this process of destruction are absent when
we see it from the viewpoint of sleep, because then
we know that it is the precondition of man's true
spiritual development. No being who did not
destroy his body in some measure would be
capable of thinking or of developing an inner life
of soul. No life of soul as experienced by man
would be possible if the process of growth were
not opposed by processes of destruction. We
therefore regard these processes of destruction in
the human organism as the precondition of man's
life of soul and feel the whole development to be
beneficial. Looked at from the other side of life,
the fact that man's body can gradually be dissolved
is felt to be a blessing. Not only do things look
different when viewed from the other side of life
but all our feelings and ideas are different;
consciousness during sleep has always before it
the spectacle of the body in decline  and rightly
in decline.
Study of the life between death and rebirth,
however, affords a different spectacle. A certain
connection with the preceding life is experienced
for a time after death. All of you are aware that
this is the case during the period of Kamaloka;
even after that period, however, the experience of
connection with the previous life continues for a
time. But then, at a certain point during the life
between death and rebirth, a reversal of all
ordinary vision and perception takes place, a
reversal far more radical than takes place during
sleep-consciousness. During existence on Earth we
look out from our body into the world that is not
our body; from the point of time to which I have
just referred, between death and the new birth, we
direct hardly a gaze to the universe around us but
look with all the great intensity at what may now
be called the human body; we discern all its
secrets. Thus between death and rebirth there
comes a moment when we begin to take special
interest in the human body. It is extremely difficult
to describe these conditions and it can really only
be done with halting words. There comes a time
between death and the new birth when we feel as
if the whole universe were within us and outside
us only the human body. We feel that the stars and
other heavenly worlds are within our being, just as
here on Earth we feel that the stomach, the liver,
the spleen, are within us. Everything that here, in
life on Earth, is outside us becomes in that other
life an inner world, and just as here we look
outwards to the stars, clouds and so forth, in that
other life we gaze at the human body. At which
human body?
To understand this we must be clear that the new
human being who at his next birth is to enter into
existence, has for a long time previously been
preparing his essential characteristics. Preparation
for a return to the Earth begins a long time before
birth or conception. The conditions of central
importance here are quite different from those
accepted by modern statistical biology which
assumes that when a human being comes into
existence through birth he simply inherits certain
traits from his father, mother, grandparents and the
whole line of ancestors. Quite an otherwise
attractive little book about Goethe has recently
been published, in which his characteristic
qualities are traced back to his ancestors.
Outwardly speaking, that is absolutely correct in
the sense I have often indicated, namely, that there
is no contradiction between a scientific fact that is
correctly presented and the facts brought forward
by Spiritual Science. It is just as if someone were
to say: Here is a man; how comes it that he is
alive? It is because he has lungs inside him and
there is air outside. Needless to say, that is quite
correct. But someone else may turn up and say:
This man is alive for an entirely different reason. A
fortnight ago he fell into the water and I jumped in
after him and pulled him out; but for that he would
not be alive today! Both these assertions are
correct. In the same way, natural science is quite
correct when it says that a man bears within
himself characteristics inherited from his
ancestors; but it is equally correct to attribute them
to his karma and other factors. In principle,
therefore, Spiritual Science cannot be intolerant; it
is external natural science alone that can be
intolerant, for example, in rejecting Spiritual
Science. Someone may insist that he has preserved
the characteristics of his own ancestors. But there
is also the fact that from a certain point of time
between death and rebirth a human being himself
begins to develop forces which work down upon
his ancestors. Long before an individual enters
into physical existence there is a mysterious
connection between himself and the whole line of
his ancestors. And the reason why specific
characteristics appear in a line of ancestors is that
perhaps only after hundreds of years a particular
individual is to be born from that ancestral line.
This human being who is to be born, perhaps
centuries later, from a line of ancestors, regulates
their characteristics from the spiritual world. Thus
Goethe  to take this example once again 
manifests the qualities of his ancestors because he
worked continuously in the spiritual world with
the aim of implanting into these ancestors qualities
that were subsequently to be his. And what is true
of Goethe is true of every human being.
From a specific point of time between death and
rebirth, therefore, a human being is already
concerned with the preparation of his later earthly
existence. The physical body which a man has on
Earth does not by any means derive in all details
from the physical lives of his ancestors, nor indeed
from processes that can operate on the Earth. The
physical body we bear is in itself fourfold. It has
evolved through the periods of Saturn, Sun, Moon
and Earth. Its very first foundation was laid during
the Old Saturn period; during the Old Sun period
the etheric body was woven into this foundation;
during the Old Moon period the astral body was
added and then, during the Earth period, the Ego,
the  I . As a result of these processes the physical
body has undergone many changes. Thus we have
within us the transformed Saturn foundation, the
transformed Sun and Moon conditions. Our
physical human body is the product of transformed
physical conditions. The only part of all this that is
visible is what has come from the Earth;
everything else is invisible. Man's physical body is
visible because he takes in the substances of the
Earth, transforms them into his blood and
permeates them with something that is invisible. In
reality we see only the blood and what has been
transformed by the blood, that is to say, a quarter
of the physical human body; the other three-
quarters are invisible. In the first place there is an
invisible framework containing invisible currents
 all this exists in the form of forces. Within these
invisible currents there are also the influences
exercised by one current upon another. All this is [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
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