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The Rudolf Steiner Archive

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Search results 91 through 100 of 236

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191. Fundamentals of the Science of Initiation 17 Oct 1919, Dornach
Translator Unknown

61. The Origin of the Animal World in the Light of Spiritual Science 18 Jan 1912, Berlin
Translator Unknown

If we must say that such developments in recent mental life can show us—so to speak—how notable thinkers standing firmly upon the grounds of natural science, not only with regard to their convictions but also their comprehension, do not refer to the earth at all as the glowing liquid lifeless gas ball of the Kant-Laplace, but look upon the earth at its origin as a huge living being, in order to be able to explain that what is living today, this fact can, in some respects, teach us that it is, indeed, not so easy to trace back the living to the lifeless.
On the other hand, however, we must emphasize again and again that no explanation will succeed in making it logically plausible, if only to some extent, that the manifoldness of the living beings could have, in earth evolution, developed out of a mere nebular organization, as assumed by Kant-Laplace's theory; unless we had, so to speak, to take up the expedients of the most recent mental attitude, if we would reconcile the origin of the organic or animal world with this idea.
In a certain regard, Spiritual Science shows us something similar to what Fechner and Preyer have pictured to themselves by mere intellectual conclusions (deductions); namely, that the earth at and since its beginning has been a living being, which contained in itself gas and vapor, not only in a lifeless manner, as the theory of Kant-Laplace assumes. This theory can be explained very easily to the simplest pupil by saying: Look here, by mere rotation something can split off from a drop of a liquid, if we let it rotate, and as a little drop is thrown off it rotates around the big drop—thus in this way we originate a world system on a small scale.
109. From Buddha to Christ II 14 Jun 1909, Vienna

69d. Death and Immortality in the Light of Spiritual Science: Life and Death 28 Nov 1910, Hamburg

127. The Mission of the New Spirit Revelation: The Different Ages of Human Development 05 Jan 1911, Mannheim

147. Secrets of the Threshold: Lecture II 26 Aug 1913, Munich
Translated by Ruth Pusch

35. Collected Essays on Philosophy and Anthroposophy 1904–1923: Spiritual Science and Contemporary Epistemology 01 Jan 1917,

The most diverse formulations of Schopenhauer's sentence: the world is my representation, presented itself at that time in all possible variations. Volkelt, the subtle dissector of Kant, the judicious author of the epistemological book “Erfahrung und Denken” (Experience and Thought), wrote at that time: “The first fundamental proposition that the philosopher must clearly realize is that our knowledge extends to nothing more than our ideas.
In the final section of the second volume of my “Riddles of Philosophy” one finds a “sketchy presentation of an anthroposophy” (written in 1914). In it I attempt to show that a completely organic progression must be conceived, from the basic epistemological views of my writing 'Truth and Knowledge' and my 'Philosophy of Freedom', to the content of 'spiritual science' or 'anthroposophy', as I have further developed them.
He has roughly the same view of the clear ideas of reason as Kant. For him, they stand outside the creative whole of nature and belong only to the human mind. The mystic therefore seeks to attain the highest knowledge by awakening special powers.
178. The Wrong and Right Use of Esoteric Knowledge: Lecture III 25 Nov 1917, Dornach
Translated by Charles Davy

During the last centuries three ideas have gradually emerged in abstract guise. They were incorrectly named by Kant, and correctly by Goethe. Kant called them God, Freedom and Immortality; Goethe called them God, Virtue and Immortality.
Speculation turns on what in man could be immortal. In my first Basle lecture [23rd November, 1917. (Not translated into English.)] I said that the kind of learning which under the name of philosophy occupies itself with such questions as that of immortality is a starveling, under-nourished kind of learning.
181. Anthroposophical Life Gifts: Lecture II 01 Apr 1918, Berlin
Translator Unknown

194. The Mission of the Archangel Michael: The Culture of the Mysteries and the Michael Impulse. 28 Nov 1919, Dornach
Translated by Lisa D. Monges

Results 91 through 100 of 236

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