Translations:Benutzer:Arian/Klett-Mini-Test/1713/en

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In the experience of the idea, the head-thought becomes heart-thought; one lives in a thought-picture that keeps growing and is an offer to the will — to grasp it in freedom and let it become deed outwardly. In this will toward deed, the spirit dwelling within the idea awakens as a purposeful moral force. In this is where the task of science is to be sought into the future: that the thinking soul becomes conscious of its spiritual aim. Christian Morgenstern puts it in the words: "whoever does not know the goal cannot have the way."[1] The path toward this goal is an artistic one. The goal lies in the future. One will have to develop a science that gives far-sightedness into the future, that points the spiritual aims out to the human being toward an artistic creating. If he remains true to these aims through all resistances, moral forces are released through which he can meet the development-hindering being-power of evil with open visor, and devote all his striving to the being-powers of the good, to the advancement of humanity. The path toward the goal is the art that forms itself out of a rightly understood — that is, phenomenon-faithful — science. If one confines oneself in science to a thinking in dead abstract concepts, technologies arise that certainly have their present-oriented, yet restricted to the purely physical-sensory

  1. Christian Morgenstern: Werke und Briefe. Stuttgarter Ausgabe, Band II, Lyrik 1906–14, Stuttgart 1992, S. 213 f.