The Perfect Workshop for the Articulation of the Thought
The Secret Craft on the Level of Creating Music
The Process of Mental Shaping
The Mechanics of Sensory Perception
Analysis and Synthesis of the Thought
The Mechanics of Gaining Knowledge
The Daily Experence of the Creative Process
The Smithy of Thoughts
Our inner organ of speech is not only the natural organ for the articulation of speech but also our natural organ, our perfect tool, for the articulation of any thought. It is indeed our smithy of thoughts, and has all the attributes of a real smithy to shape our thoughts in their diversity and to present them to our senses which incessantly survey our mind.
On a subtle level of our inner activity the same level which we defined as the level on which music is created our inner breath is pumped into the material of our mind with the help of the warmth of our feeling; this heats the surface of our mind and raises its flexibility as it happens with metal in the forge of a smithy.
Once the mind, through the skilled hand of our intellect in coordination with the formative force of our feeling and the formative force of our understanding has reached the desired shape, it is cooled by the understanding aspect of our intellect and hardens: the thought gains its fixed form.
Now
the thought is finished and contains all the attributes necessary for our
sensory perception.
Our sense of sight surveys the thought and extracts its outer shape
the visual aspect;
our sense of taste tastes the thought and feeds on it, and our sense of smell
sniffs at the thought from all sides.
But our understanding, too, examines the thought with respect to its analytically comprehensible values, and our feeling traces the common basis of the attributes of the thought.
If
this seems unlikely, one must recall what happens during dreaming: during
the dream one thinks; the thoughts are formed from within the mind by the
inner organ of speech.
Simultaneously, the dreamer the dreamer's self-experi-ences, and it
is again the self of the dreamer, who hears in the dream, and this hearing
comes about through his sense of hearing because in a dream the sense of hearing
surveys the dreamed thought. So, the dreamer does not hear outside, but inside.
And in the same dream the sense of sight surveys the same dreamed thought
just as the sense of hearing does, and it communicates what it sees to the
self of the dreamer.
And no one will doubt that this "seeing" takes place only inside since during
dreaming the eyes are closed.
In the same way also the other friends of perception are active: the sense of touch, the sense of smell, and the sense of taste. Together, they all amuse themselves on the fairground of our dreaming state of consciousness.
And the great organizer, the self of the dreamer, sends its custodians of order: the aspects of the intellect through which it distinguishes between the sensory perceptions: between past and future, between now and just before, between high and low, between blue and green, between sweet and salty, between stinging smoke and the mild fragrance of lilac, between soft cushions and hard rock, between the sound of drums and the chirping of the cricket on a blade of grass beside the large bridge across which a train is rumbling.