76 Intuitive Thinking as a Spiritual Path
that we can know anything of them, must also deny the
existence, or at least the knowledge, of their own person-
ality. Critical idealism thus arrives at the statement, “All
reality is transformed into a wonderful dream—without
there being a life that is dreamed about or a spirit that is
doing the dreaming—a dream that coheres in a dream of
itself.”^1
For those who believe they know immediate life is a
dream, it does not matter whether they suspect that noth-
ing exists behind it, or whether they refer their mental pic-
tures to real things. For them, life itself loses all scientific
interest. Science is an absurdity to those who believe that
the accessible universe is exhausted in dreams, while to
those who believe themselves equipped to reason from
mental pictures to things, it consists in the investigation
of “things-in-themselves.” We may call the first view ab-
soluteillusionism;transcendental realism is the name
given the second view by its most consistent exponent,
Eduard von Hartmann.^2
- Cf. Fichte,Die Bestimmung des Menschen (The Vocation of
Man), 1800. Johann Gottlieb Fichte (1762–1814) German philoso-
pher between Kant and Hegel. Rudolf Steiner based his doctoral dis-
sertation, published as Truth and Science [Knowledge] (1892), on
Fichte’s theory of knowledge. See also The Riddles of Philosophy
andThe Riddle of Man; also lecture of December 16, 1915, “The
Spirit of Fichte in our Midst.”
[6]
- Knowledge, in this worldview, is calledtranscendentalbecause it
includes the conviction that nothing can be said directly about things
in themselves, but that one must draw indirect inferences from the
subjective, which is known, to the unknown, which lies beyond the
subjective (the transcendent).