Donate books to help fund our work. Learn more→

The Rudolf Steiner Archive

a project of Steiner Online Library, a public charity

Search results 3411 through 3420 of 6548

˂ 1 ... 340 341 342 343 344 ... 655 ˃
34. Essays on Anthroposophy from Lucifer and Lucifer-Gnosis 1903-1908: Materialism Overcome in Science 01 May 1904,

The representatives of this latter world-view are only advanced posts, which already see which is the course of development of spiritual life. That they still find so little understanding stems solely from the fact that our contemporaries are hypnotized by the thought habits of the age that has just passed, and therefore cannot yet reconcile the old thoughts with the new facts.
There he finds nothing but abstract ideas, rather empty concepts, formed under the influence of a self-overestimating and also overturning “science”. He finds nothing for mind and heart.
34. Essays on Anthroposophy from Lucifer and Lucifer-Gnosis 1903-1908: On Modern Scientific Beliefs 01 Sep 1904,

A point had been reached when everything in this materialistic structure seemed to be in tune. And under a certain compulsion, which the ideas of the time exerted on them, people thought as a believing materialist writes.
(In a comprehensive way, Raoul Francé, a naturalist, has shown in recent times the inadequacy of scientific results for a higher world view. This is an undertaking to which we would like to return another time. And now the facts steadily increased that showed the impossibility of the undertaking to base an psychology on the study of material phenomena.
It is evident that the materialistic conception of the world must undermine its own foundations. It is not yet able to build new ones. Only a true understanding of mysticism, theosophy, gnosis will make this possible.
34. Essays on Anthroposophy from Lucifer and Lucifer-Gnosis 1903-1908: English Prime Minister Balfour 01 Nov 1904,

An alliance will be formed that will benefit the searching and hoping human spirit. In the future, people will increasingly understand what theosophists actually want. They will be recognized as not opposing research but as working in harmony with it.
34. Essays on Anthroposophy from Lucifer and Lucifer-Gnosis 1903-1908: Essays by Camillo Schneider 01 Jun 1904,

How fantastic this remarkable attempt to understand the world in its spiritual character is! This concept of a vague, general psyche, of a coupling, etc., is related to the explanations of the true mystic, as the following description would be related to the scientific description of a plant by a strict botanist: “The plant consists of firm plant parts and juices.”
What clarity would come to all these attempts to understand something if the ideas of genuine mysticism about the different aspects of the human being were applied!
34. Essays on Anthroposophy from Lucifer and Lucifer-Gnosis 1903-1908: The Buddhist 02 Jun 1904,

For example, in a sharp and appropriate way, an article by Bhikkhu Ananda Maitriya characterizes the concept of “Nibbana,” whereby the Buddhist understanding of this term is clearly elaborated. In general, the magazine places a great deal of emphasis on clearly presenting the Buddhist point of view, which does not start from the “higher self” (Atma), but rather looks at this self from the perspective of the non-self. Such precise characterizations alone can promote an understanding of a worldview. Von Seidenstücker's articles are mentioned: “God and Gods, or is Buddhism atheistic?”
Insofar as the magazine serves to educate about the Buddhist worldview, it must be considered a highly commendable undertaking. However, insofar as it pursues a missionary purpose in German-speaking countries, it should be noted that propagandistically disseminating the worldview of one people within another contradicts the higher laws of intellectual life.
34. Essays on Anthroposophy from Lucifer and Lucifer-Gnosis 1903-1908: Further Development of the Christian Religion 01 Jul 1904,

In almost all the essays, it can be seen that the authors are rooted in the present-day cultural-historical way of looking at things, which tends towards materialistic ideas. It is understandable that it is not stated everywhere that such a standard is applied. The authors are also hardly aware of the “temporal and human” in their judgment.
The latter then shows itself in the character of another time, but it itself still contributes to the understanding of its wearer. In this way, theosophy does justice to the modern scientific way of thinking in that it naturally replaces the garment of a bygone age with one of the present.
Eucken's on “Science and Religion,” in which an attempt is made to understand the independence of intellectual life and to break it down into three stages: 1. the spirit that seeks to understand nature is placed as something peculiar above placed above nature itself, 2. the spiritual life in the history of mere succession of human-personal effects is regarded as something special, and 3. the creative power of the individual personality is understood as an emanation of his divine power.
34. From the Contents of Esoteric Classes III: 1913–1914: The Development of Christianity 01 Aug 1905,

He believes that in doing so he is making Christianity accessible to historical explanation. “For to understand an historical phenomenon is to understand it in terms of its causal connection with the conditions of human life at a particular place and time.
It is indeed comprehensible that someone should say: This I understand, therefore I hold it to be real; another I do not understand, therefore it is unreal to me. But this is no different from someone who understands nothing of the power of electricity and considers the telephone impossible.
Because all the preconditions are lacking to understand such an attempt. The theosophist understands Pfleiderer; but Pfleiderer will not want to understand the theosophist.
34. From the Contents of Esoteric Classes III: 1913–1914: The Sensory Life of Plants 01 Jan 1906,

For all those who have any sense at all for the “mysterious” sources of life, such a presentation can be a good preparation for understanding the points of view of occultism and theosophy. And when the narrator of these facts solves his task in such a subtle and at the same time generally understandable way, this must be particularly welcomed.
It can only compensate for this descent into the depths by constantly growing the underground stem, but it is precisely this that ensures its firm footing. Living beings know how to turn everything to their advantage.
Essays that will appear in this journal in the future will shed light on the research that underlies the writing of Francés from the point of view of occultism. But the occultist can only repeat: delve into such works as those of the spirited France: you will find in them the best, the surest preparation for occult training.
34. From the Contents of Esoteric Classes III: 1913–1914: Posthumous Papers of Paul Asmus 31 Jan 1904,

If we can see the development of this intellectual life in its true light since 1870, it is only too understandable that Paul Asmus, who died so young, could find only a few readers. This period was devoted to the development of knowledge directed towards the sensual and factual.
And from here, Paul Asmus then found access to an understanding of religions, these manifold attempts by humanity to grasp the active spiritual forces of the universe from the depths of the human soul.
Those who cannot attain this stage either remain entangled in the fetters of a dim mysticism that only enables them to see the facts of the astral plane without understanding, or they have to content themselves with mere belief in the theosophical dogmas.
34. From the Contents of Esoteric Classes III: 1913–1914: Paul Asmus's Worldview 28 Feb 1904,

The fact that Paul Asmus sought the secrets of existence at the ethereal height of pure thought is the defining characteristic of his research. What underlies things as their essence is revealed in the thinking human being. This fundamental view of German philosophical idealism is also Paul Asmus's.
And my soul is only the arena in which things express themselves about themselves. To understand this, however, man must have thought as an element of life, something that is as much a reality for him as the things that he encounters and can grasp with his hands are a reality for the undeveloped man. He who can grasp nothing in his ideas but shadowy after-images of what the senses tell him does not understand what thinking is. For in order to penetrate to the essence of things, thinking must be filled with a content that no external sense can provide, but that flows from the spirit itself.

Results 3411 through 3420 of 6548

˂ 1 ... 340 341 342 343 344 ... 655 ˃