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The Rudolf Steiner Archive

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Search results 5971 through 5980 of 6551

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233. World History in the light of Anthroposophy: Evolution of the Soul and of Memory 24 Dec 1923, Dornach
Translated by George Adams, Mary Adams, Dorothy S. Osmond

For it cannot be denied that the present only becomes comprehensible as we try to understand its origin in the past. The present age is however one that is peculiarly prejudiced in its thought about the evolution of man and of mankind.
Thus, in the first place, as we trace back in historical time, we see a soul-life undergoing comparatively little change. Then the picture disappears in a kind of cloud, and before that again we see man in his animal imperfection as a kind of higher ape-being.
You have perhaps to-day a memory-experience that leads you back to experiences in perception of some ten years ago. Now try and understand exactly what that really means. Ten years ago you experienced something. Ten years ago you may have visited a gathering of men and women.
233. World History in the light of Anthroposophy: Mysteries of “Asia” 25 Dec 1923, Dornach
Translated by George Adams, Mary Adams, Dorothy S. Osmond

It was another mankind that could call Asia the last or lowest heaven and understand by that their own land, the Nature that was round about them. They knew where the lowest heaven was.
Now there is a quite definite principle underlying these conquests. As a result of the states of consciousness which I have described to you, man stood in an altogether different relation to his fellow man and also to the world around him.
To-morrow we will consider more in detail the contrast, which I have only been able to indicate at the close of to-day's lecture, and so approach a fuller understanding of the transitions that lead over from Asia to Europe. For these had a deep and powerful influence on the evolution of man, and without understanding them we can really arrive at no understanding of the evolution we are passing through at the present day.
233. World History in the light of Anthroposophy: Asiatic Mysteries of Ephesus, Gilgamesh and Eabani 26 Dec 1923, Dornach
Translated by George Adams, Mary Adams, Dorothy S. Osmond

In the first two introductory lectures we have been at pains to acquire an understanding for the radical change in man's life of thought and feeling that has come about in the course of human evolution, prehistoric as well as historic.
And it was so that in this ancient Mystery centre they knew how to judge and appraise the faculty of knowledge that Gilgamesh possessed. He was met with understanding. A test was imposed upon him, one that in those days was often imposed on pupils of the Mysteries.
These personalities who had first in the Egypto-Chaldean epoch gone through what I may call a widely-extended cosmic life, and had then deepened this cosmic experience within them, thereby in a sense establishing their souls, now lived again in a later incarnation as Aristotle9 and Alexander the Great.10 When one understands the underlying depths in the souls of Aristotle and Alexander the Great, then one can begin to understand, as I explained in Stuttgart, all that was working so problematically in these two personalities, whose lives took their course in the time when Greek culture was falling into decay and Roman rule beginning to have dominion.
233. World History in the light of Anthroposophy: Atlantean Wisdom in the Mysteries of Hibernia, Gilgamesh and Eabani at Ephesus, Logos Mysteries of Artemis at Ephesus 27 Dec 1923, Dornach
Translated by George Adams, Mary Adams, Dorothy S. Osmond

I have told you how the personality who is concealed behind the name of Gilgamesh undertook a journey to the West and went through a kind of Western Post-Atlantean initiation. Let us first form an idea of the nature of such an initiation, that we may the better understand what came later.
I must now repeat some of what I then said before we can come to a clear and full understanding of the subject we are treating. The Mysteries of Hibernia, the Irish Mysteries, were in existence for a long time.
Before he was able to receive the initiation he had to be strictly prepared; the preparation that had to be undergone before entering the Mysteries was always in those times of extraordinary strictness and rigour.
233. World History in the light of Anthroposophy: Mysteries of the East, West, and of Ephesus 28 Dec 1923, Dornach
Translated by George Adams, Mary Adams, Dorothy S. Osmond

The God, so to speak, came in his phantom or shadow-picture, when the human being, through the preparations he had undergone, had been made worthy to receive the God in phantom form. In this way the Mysteries of Greece prepared the road for modern humanity.
It was in very truth this purpose that lay at the root of all he undertook: to found a spiritual Ephesus, reaching out across Asia Minor eastward to India, covering also Egyptian Africa and the East of Europe.
Thus far we can look back with full understanding. But we cannot look back to Greece, neither can we look back to the East. There we must look in Imaginations.
233. World History in the light of Anthroposophy: Mysteries of the Ancient Near East Enter Europe 29 Dec 1923, Dornach
Translated by George Adams, Mary Adams, Dorothy S. Osmond

Of peculiar importance for the understanding of the history of the West in its relation to the East is the period that lies between three or four hundred years before, and three or four hundred years after, the Mystery of Golgotha.
In Greece there was still the confident assurance that insight and understanding proceed from the whole human being. The teacher is the gymnast.7 From out of the whole human being in movement—for the Gods themselves work in the bodily movements of man—something is born that then comes forth and shows itself as human understanding.
From this point of view, we may gain a true understanding of the events of history, for it is often so that seemingly fruitless undertakings are fraught with deep significance for the historical evolution of mankind.
233. World History in the light of Anthroposophy: The Fifteenth Century and the Transition from Mind-Soul to Spiritual-Soul 30 Dec 1923, Dornach
Translated by George Adams, Mary Adams, Dorothy S. Osmond

All this kind of knowledge that traces back the real substance of man's nature to these material abstractions—hydrogen, oxygen and the like—affords no true knowledge of the human being. The mechanism of the watch has to be understood by seeing in it a connected system of forces; and similarly, if we would understand the nature and being of man, we must recognise how the various impulses that are to be found working in all the kingdoms of Nature work in the human being;—for there they work differently than in the other kingdoms of Nature.
The moment the albumen is inwardly split up and destroyed, it comes under the influence of the whole sphere of the Cosmos. Forces work in upon it from every quarter. And then we have the tiny particle of albumen that forms the basis for reproduction.
Such knowledge will be attainable when we are once again in a position to understand the relationship of the human being to the surrounding kingdoms of Nature. Suppose, then, we take our start from the ego-organisation of the human being.
233. World History in the light of Anthroposophy: The Burning of the Ephesian Temple and the Goetheanum 31 Dec 1923, Dornach
Translated by George Adams, Mary Adams, Dorothy S. Osmond

We stand to-day under the sign of a painful memory, and I want to place what we have to take for the theme of our lecture to-day into the sign of that painful memory.
Whoever looked upon this Goetheanum with feeling and understanding could find in it a memory of the Temple of Ephesus. The memory, however, grew to be terribly painful.
We will remain faithful to the spirit in which at a certain moment of our life we first sought the Spiritual Science of the Goetheanum. And let us understand and know how to keep the promise we have made.
233. World History in the light of Anthroposophy: World History in the Light of Anthroposophy 01 Jan 1924, Dornach
Translated by George Adams, Mary Adams, Dorothy S. Osmond

They think, or at least most of them were still thinking only a short time ago, that until the nineteenth century mankind was childish and primitive in respect of understanding and conceptions of the world. Then modern science appeared in its many branches and now—so it is thought—there exists something that must through all eternity be cultivated as the truth.
During waking life souls would have no inkling of the existence of the Guardian of the Threshold and during sleep would be rejected by him in order to avoid mental paralysis; and this would finally result in a race of men being born in the future with no understanding, no possibility of applying ideas in their future earthly life; and all thinking, all ideation would vanish from the Earth.
It is of essential importance that a branch of practical life such as medicine should be taken in the real sense into anthroposophical life. That is what I certainly understood to be Dr. Zeylmans' wish when he said this morning that an individual who becomes a doctor to-day really longs for something that gives impulses from a new corner of the world.
233a. Easter as a Chapter in the Mystery Wisdom of Man: Lecture I 19 Apr 1924, Dornach
Translated by Samuel P. Lockwood

Because Christ was not an Earth-man but a Sun-being in the body of Jesus of Nazareth, it was possible for all the human principles of this Being to undergo on Golgotha what the former initiate experienced only in his soul. Those with intimate knowledge of the old Mystery initiation, whether living at that time or in our own day, have best understood what took place on Golgotha; for what they have known is that for thousands of years the secrets of the spiritual world have been revealed to men through the death and resurrection of their soul.
At the time of the Mystery of Golgotha, a mood of rejoicing, of holy elation, filled the souls of those who understood something of it. What then was a living substance of consciousness gradually became a festival in memory of the historical event on Golgotha—through developments to be described later.
It must infuse into our philosophy a feeling for Easter, a frame of mind appropriate to Easter. This it can do if men will understand that the ancient Mysteries can live on in the true Easter Mystery, provided the body, the soul and the spirit of man—and the destiny of these in the realms of body, soul and spirit—are rightly understood.

Results 5971 through 5980 of 6551

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