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The Rudolf Steiner Archive

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Search results 351 through 360 of 1160

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259. The Fateful Year of 1923: Concluding Words Following the Lecture for Members 02 Sep 1923, London

It was the concern for the further construction of the Goetheanum, which was to be a sign here on earth for that which is to come into the world through anthroposophical spiritual science. At the time, the concern I expressed was met with understanding. [On November 19, 1922, see references below.] Since that time, what is written as an unspeakable pain in the history of the anthroposophical movement has come to pass. This pain could not be averted. It was deeply inscribed in the destiny of the anthroposophical movement by the hostile forces that oppose it.
[Rudolf Steiner, who came to the September conference of the Anthroposophical Society in Stuttgart, is taking part in the following session.
Cosmic Workings In Earth and Man: Foreword
Translated by Mabel Cotterell, Dorothy S. Osmond, V. E. Evans

Roman Boos for any of the workmen who were interested, after their daily tasks on the site of the building; later on, courses were continued by other members of the Anthroposophical Society. But then the workmen asked Rudolf Steiner whether he would not himself help them to satisfy their desire for knowledge—also whether it would be possible to devote to this purpose a working hour when they were fresher and better able to assimilate what they heard.
147. Secrets of the Threshold: Welcome 24 Aug 1913, Munich
Translated by Ruth Pusch

All these things bear witness to the selfless dedication that has been growing in a wide circle of friends in our Anthroposophical Society. All those who had to begin their tasks so early, the artist-painters, also Fraulein von Eckhardtstein in charge of the costumes, have been at it since June.
They will forgive me for not naming them all, for they are well known to our friends in the Anthroposophical Society. In view of the long, long list that I would have to read off, they will not be offended if this year again I speak in general about those who have contributed their help.
31. Struggles in the Theosophical Society.32. To Charles Bleck, President of the Theosophical Society in France, March 1, 1913, announcing Schure's resignation from the Society which had offered him honorary membership in 1907.
263. Correspondence with Edith Maryon 1912–1924: Letter from Edith Maryon 03 Jun 1913,

Felkin's, she has been a member of his order for 7 or 8 years and is Professor of Education at Cardiff University (where her husband is a philosophy lecturer). Both are members of the Anthroposophical Society. I am personally friends with her, so I could ask her if she would write a reply, but of course I can't speak for you, nor do I know if you would agree, or perhaps you have a better suggestion.
46. Posthumous Essays and Fragments 1879-1924: Autobiographical Fragment I

In 1902, the approval of his world view by leading members of the Theosophical Society (based in Adyar) prompted Steiner to He then worked in the external connection to this society for the intuitive-spiritual scientific worldview he represented, also in numerous lectures and in the magazine “Lucifer - Gnosis”. His independent direction compared to the Theosophical Society led to the exclusion of Steiner and all his followers from this society in 1913 and to the founding of the independent “Anthroposophical Society” by the latter.
337b. Social Ideas, Social Reality, Social Practice II: Announcement 10 Oct 1920, Dornach

at the end of a meeting of members of the Anthroposophical Society at the first Anthroposophical College Rudolf Steiner: I just want to say a few words at this moment, my dear friends.
Now, from a certain quarter, A lot of work has been put into creating these Anthroposophical College courses here in Dornach, and the success of these college courses will essentially depend on us as Anthroposophists leaning a little on what these college courses have brought and carrying it out into the world in the future – that will take some work.
We must therefore try to present ourselves to the world as a society and to build up such a force that the practitioners will actually come together to present something of practical economic thinking.
World Economy: Editorial Note
Translated by Owen Barfield, T. Gordon-Jones

As the reading of these lectures may stimulate a desire to work further on the lines of Rudolf Steiner's thought, I feel it necessary to add that lectures on this subject are given and a study-group conducted in the English Section of the General Anthroposophical Society, of which notices may be obtained from 54 Bloomsbury Street, W.C. 1. Other works by the author are specified in the advertisements at the end of the book.
143. Birth of the Light — Thoughts on Christmas Eve 24 Dec 1912, Berlin
Translated by Harry Collison

For in this year we ourselves stand before the birth of that which, if we rightly understand it, must lie very close to our hearts: I mean the Birth of our Anthroposophical Society. If we have lived the great ideal which we want to express through the Anthroposophical Society, and if we are accordingly inclined to dedicate our forces to this great ideal of mankind, then we can naturally let our thoughts sweep on from this our spiritual light or means of light to the dawn of the great light of human evolution which is celebrated on this night of love and peace.
And the other pole is that which we can feel in our highest spiritual concerns, if we remain faithful to the impulse which was mentioned at the beginning of this evening's thoughts, the impulse whereby we awaken the will to the spiritual light after which we strive in our now to be founded Anthroposophical Society. For there, too, it is our will that that which is to come into human evolution shall be borne by something which comes into us from spiritual realms as an impulse.
And if in this circle we feel ourselves united in such love as can stream in from a right understanding of the ‘night of initiation,’ then we shall be able to attain that which is to be attained through the Anthroposophical Society—our anthroposophical ideal. We shall attain that which is to be attained in united work, if a ray of that man-to-man love can take hold of us, of which we can learn when we give ourselves in the right way to the Christmas thought.
143. Festivals of the Seasons: Thoughts of Christmas Eve 24 Dec 1912, Berlin
Translated by Harry Collison

For in this year we ourselves stand before the birth of that which, if we rightly understand it, must lie very close to our hearts: I mean the Birth of our Anthroposophical Society. If we have lived the great ideal which we want to express through the Anthroposophical Society, and if we are accordingly inclined to dedicate our forces to this great ideal of mankind, then we can naturally let our thoughts sweep on from this our spiritual light or means of light to the dawn of the great light of human evolution which is celebrated on this night of love and peace.
And the other pole is that which we can feel in our highest spiritual concerns, if we remain faithful to the impulse which was mentioned at the beginning of this evening’s thoughts, the impulse whereby we awaken the will to the spiritual light after which we strive in our now to be founded Anthroposophical Society. For there, too, it is our will that that which is to come into human evolution shall be borne by something which comes into us from spiritual realms as an impulse.
And if in this circle we feel ourselves united in such love as can stream in from a right understanding of the ‘night of initiation,’ then we shall be able to attain that which is to be attained through the Anthroposophical Society—our anthroposophical ideal. We shall attain that which is to be attained in united work, if a ray of that man-to- man love can take hold of us, of which we can learn when we give ourselves in the right way to the Christmas thought.
259. The Fateful Year of 1923: Stuttgart Delegates Meeting (without Steiner) 03 Aug 1923,

Husemann on the Goesch case, the project of the Kennenburg insane asylum (to which Stein remarked that the Anthroposophical Society could not exist without an insane asylum, since, according to a saying of Dr. Steiner, mental illnesses will occur epidemically in the near future, if only due to malnutrition), the problem of Dr.

Results 351 through 360 of 1160

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