Federica wrote: ↑Wed Nov 19, 2025 7:58 pm Yes, Ashvin, I do notice it. I have notice that in 2023 for the first time. In this lecture, for example, Steiner applies the principle of concentration to the natural world. He proposes an exercise of concentration. He says: "First of all, looking away from the earth, if we direct our gaze into the ranges of cosmic space, we are met by the blue sky. Suppose we do this on a day in which no cloud, not even the faintest silver-white cloudlet breaks the azure space of heaven. We look upwards into this blue heaven spread out above us — whether we recognize it in the physical sense as something real or not, does not signify; the point is the impression that this wide stretch of the blue heavens makes upon us. Suppose that we can yield ourselves up to this blue of the sky, and that we do this with intensity and for a long, long time; that we can so do it that we forget all else that we know in life and all that is around us in life. Suppose that we are able for one moment to forget all the external impressions, all our memories, all the cares and troubles of life, and can yield ourselves completely to the single impression of the blue heavens. What I am now saying to you, can be experienced by every human soul if only it will fulfil these necessary conditions; what I am telling you can be a common human experience." Etcetera.
Now the exercise Steiner indicates to develop practical thinking: "Let us suppose that somebody tries the following experiment. He begins today by observing, as accurately as possible, something in the outer world that is accessible to him—for instance, the weather. He watches the configuration of the clouds in the evening, the conditions at sunset, etc., and retains in his mind an exact picture of what he has thus observed. He tries to keep the picture before him in all its details for some time and endeavors to preserve as much of it as possible until the next day. At some time the next day he again makes a study of the weather conditions and again endeavors to gain an exact picture of them. If in this manner he has pictured to himself exactly the sequential order of the weather conditions, he will become distinctly aware that his thinking gradually becomes richer and more intense. For what makes thought impractical is the tendency to ignore details when observing a sequence of events in the world and to retain but a vague, general impression of them. What is of value, what is essential and fructifies thinking, is just this ability to form exact pictures, especially of successive events, so that one can say, “Yesterday it was like that; today it is like this.” Thus, one calls up as graphically as possible an inner image of the two juxtaposed scenes that lie apart in the outer world."
Do you spot any differences in the way engagement with the outer world is proposed in these two exercises?
What's important to first note is that your question can only be answered through the introspective method itself. The particular phrases by Steiner to describe two exercises do not by themselves reveal the commonalities or differences between them. To expect that (not saying you do!) would be like a kind of phrenology, expecting to figure out the points of intersection between the inner lives of two different human beings by studying the quantitative properties of their skulls. Instead, the way to investigate the exercises is to actively participate in them (at least imaginatively recreating the experience) and doing some basic observation of our inner process along the way. Then we can discern the points of intersection and/or deviation between how our inner process feels. We should be clear that this inner investigation is independent of what Steiner says or doesn't say - his descriptions stimulate our inner process, sending it off in the 'right direction', but they should never determine the observations and ideas it reaches. Once we freely reach some basic intuitions, however, we may return to his descriptions and find a new dimension of meaning in them, since we are more attuned to the shared intuitive process from which they condensed.
Now we can focus on the weather exercise for practical thinking, since that is what you are indicating is quite distinct from meditative work with the outer world. We should first point out the whole context of this lecture is to differentiate spiritually practical thinking from what is normally considered "practical thinking" by educated people who imagine they pay close attention to events unfolding around them. So it is clear that the former is something to be gradually attained through inner effort, not the default state of ordinary consciousness. We can notice the very ability to practice such exercises in a sustained way is the fruit of prayerful meditative work, and work on purifying the naturally polluted soul atmosphere by cultivating virtuous dispositions. This is the soul environment in which all such exercises unfold and the latter won't take us very deep into the archetypal inner process if our enthusiasm for doing the work and our ability to remain concentrated, patient, disciplined, etc. is continually thwarted by its smog.
Steiner then points out various examples of how modern "practical thinking" unfolds:
"It can be imagined that this world outside and around us may be regarded in the same way as a watch. The comparison between the human organism and a watch is often used, but those who make it frequently forget the most important point. They forget the watchmaker. The fact must be kept clearly in mind that the wheels have not united and fitted themselves together of their own accord and thus made the watch “go,” but that first there was the watchmaker who put the different parts of the watch together. The watchmaker must never be forgotten. Through thoughts the watch has come into existence. Th thoughts have flowed, as it were, into the watch, into the thing."
Such examples stimulate me to introspectively examine why real-time 'watchmaking' stubbornly remains in the blind spot for so many of us in this way. Why is the most important point so frequently forgotten? Is Steiner suggesting that, once we have read this example and formed the corresponding 'belief' that a watchmaker is necessary for the watch, we have overcome the default mode of practical thinking, attaining inner assurance that our thoughts about phenomena are living extensions of the Thoughts living in the outer world? In our experience, this dynamic simply doesn't ring true. If thinking was lifted from the blind spot and made practical in this strictly conceptual way, then there would be no materialistic thinkers left in the world. Anyone can perceive the logic in this analogy and apply it to the natural domain. Clearly, there is something more needed to approach metaphors like these and let their deeper significance insinuate itself into our thinking organism, such that it becomes second nature to keep real-time watchmaking out of the blind spot when contemplating the World Content.
He then proceeds to illustrate how this elusive spiritual mode of practical thinking can be cultivated through a sustained inner practice:
"This is again a rule based upon confidence that there is an inner necessity in things and events, that in the facts themselves there slumbers something that moves things. What is thus working within these things from one day to another are thought forces, and we gradually become conscious of them when meditating on things. By such exercises these thought forces are called up into our consciousness and if what has been thus foreseen is fulfilled, we are in tune with them. We have then established an inner relation with the real thought activity of the matter itself. So we train ourselves to think, not arbitrarily, but according to the inner necessity and the inner nature of the things themselves.
....
To practice these principles is the important point. Time must be taken to observe things as though we were inside the things themselves with our thinking. We should submerge ourselves in the things and enter into their inner thought activity. If this is done, we gradually become aware of the fact that we are growing together with things. We no longer feel that they are outside us and we are here inside our shell thinking about them. Instead we come to feel as if our own thinking occurred within the things themselves. When a man has succeeded to a high degree in doing this, many things will become clear to him."
Things are quite clear in the above, again, on the condition that we have introspectively and meditatively participated in the inner process described. Then we immediately see how it overlaps with what we are aiming toward in all our meditative sessions. Cleric has helpfully described this aim in many ways throughout the posts and essays. It is about developing temporal intuition (Taylor series) for the lawful metamorphoses of our inner states, developing a refined intuitive feeling for the organic inner connections of these states, which otherwise unfolds entirely 'beneath the noise floor' and which we are then forced to link together with intellectual gestures according to 'arbitrary' aspects of our soul constitution (naturally conditioned preferences, desires, etc.).
Cleric: "We reach the higher stage of consciousness not by simply turning away from the sequential thoughts but by trying to feel intimately responsible for them. That’s why we concentrate on a single thought as if to stabilize our dreamy steering activity and be able to better reflect how it manifests and how it is resisted by the most varied forces. In our ordinary intellectual state we accept the meaning of the conceptual sequences as thoughts and ideas about reality but never try to intimately experience the way this fragmentary flow comes to be. In the Imaginative state we don’t think about reality but follow reality within our inner phenomenal flow. Then, like the seismograph, we begin to recognize certain invisible soul forces that modulate the flow".
It is the same principle in the weather exercise as it is in imaginative meditation. As Steiner expressed, it is about renouncing our arbitrary commentary on the experiential states and flowing together with those states with organic inner movements. When we selflessly exert our thinking to hold exact pictures of phenomenal states side by side, without intellectual commentary on 'what they mean', through a sustained practice, our imaginative process begins to flow (dance) together with the lawful and organic connections of the World thought process. The cloud formations and so on that we precisely observe help anchor our concentration within this inner process, training its latent (habitually forgotten) capacity to synchronize with the 'inner necessity' of things. Holding the pictures side by side is also a way of resonating with the imaginative state where 'time becomes space'. By freely moving together with that inner necessity, we attain flashes of insight into how our ordinary flow of experience takes shape and is modulated over the depth process. This is the inner reason why our thinking gradually becomes 'practical', able to resist arbitrary commentaries and objectively evaluate the course of events.
We should appreciate how elegant and harmonious all these varied exercises become when we can view their descriptions through the lens of the meditative principle, which cannot remain theoretical but is fleshed out for us through sustained introspective practice. This deepening practice is needed to even consciously orient toward what the exercises mean, how they relate to the depth axis and how they are significant for our inner development. Of course, at first we may launch into such exercises without much understanding of their inner functions, almost mechanically carrying them out as described, but eventually that will become a hindrance to realizing their value. Eventually, we should develop a deepened sense of how this 'exercise scene' fits into our contextual life narrative of spiritual development, and that deepening sense comes through patiently and introspectively observing what unfolds within us when engaging them.