The Mission of the Archangel Michael
Lecture VI: The Ancient Yoga Culture and the New Yoga Will.
"...What man has in common with nature remains outside his consciousness.
It falls away from consciousness. In Indian Yoga an attempt is made to
bring it into consciousness again. Therefore Indian Yoga culture is an
atavistic returning to previous evolutionary stages of mankind,
because an attempt is made again to bring into consciousness the
process of breathing, which in the third age was felt in a natural way
as that in which one existed outside and inside simultaneously. The
fourth age begins in the eighth pre-Christian century. At that time
the late-Indian Yoga exercises were developed which tried to call
back, atavistically, that which mankind had possessed at earlier
times, quite particularly in the Indian culture, but which had been
lost.
Thus, this consciousness of the breathing process was lost. And if one
asks: Why did Indian Yoga culture try to call it back, what did it
believe it would gain thereby? one has to answer: What was intended to
be gained thereby was a real understanding of the outer world. For
through the fact that the breathing process was understood in the
third cultural age, something was understood within man that at the
same time was something external.
This must again be attained; on another path, however. We live still
under the after-effects of the culture in which a twofold element is
present in the human soul mood, for the fourth period ends only around
the year 1413, really only about the middle of the fifteenth century.
We have, through our head organization, an incomplete nature
conception, that which we call the external world; and we have through
our inner organization, through the organization of the rest of man,
an incomplete knowledge of ourselves..."
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