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The Rudolf Steiner Archive

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350. Rhythms in the Cosmos and in the Human Being: Druidic Wisdom — Mithraism — Catholic Worship — Freemasonry — The Christian Community 10 Sep 1923, Dornach
Translated by Steiner Online Library

You can say: The more the cults are practiced, the less one understands of the things. — And so the understanding of the cults that are most practiced in the present has actually been lost everywhere.
And so it grows, and you feel as if you were standing under a tree. That is why the Orientals depict Buddha under the bodhi tree. He still knew this cerebellum as an organ of perception.
That is what I wanted to answer your question. I believe that from this you can understand how a cult was just as necessary as a knife that was needed for survival, and how the uselessness of the cult later led to it being eradicated and then continued without being understood.
348. Nine Lectures on Bees: Lecture I 03 Feb 1923, Dornach
Translated by Marna Pease, Carl Alexander Meir

But influences coming from the whole surrounding universe do, none the less, work with immense power in the bee-hive. Indeed, one can only arrive at a right understanding of what the life of the bees truly is, when one takes into account that the whole environment of the earth has a very great influence upon the life of the colony. This life within the hive rests upon the fact that the bees, to a much greater extent than the ants and wasps, work so completely together, so arranging their whole activity that everything is in harmony. If one would understand how this comes about, one must say: In the life of the bee everything that in other creatures expresses itself as sexual life is, in the case of the bees, suppressed, very remarkably suppressed; it is very much driven into the background.
The individual bees renounce love in manifold ways, and thus develop love throughout the whole hive. One only begins to understand the life of the bees when one knows that the bee lives in an atmosphere completely pervaded by love.
351. Nine Lectures on Bees: Lecture II 26 Nov 1923, Dornach
Translated by Marna Pease, Carl Alexander Meir

These worker-bees feel themselves united with the Queen, not because they were under the same Sun, but because they remained within the Sun-development; this is why they feel themselves so united with the Queen.
Honey contains the forces that give man's body firmness. These things should be understood. So one can say that much more attention should be given to the keeping of bees than is usual.
This is a law of great importance, and one we can well understand. Observing things in this way, one is able to say—in the whole inter-relationship of the bee-colony—of this organism—Nature reveals something very wonderful to us.
351. Nine Lectures on Bees: Lecture III 28 Nov 1923, Dornach
Translated by Marna Pease, Carl Alexander Meir

One must see to it that the Queen can make her nuptial flight under the influence of the Sun. You see, gentlemen, once more, what a great part is played by the chemical element.
In the animal kingdom precision and sureness cannot be ascribed to the eyes, but to chemical activity; under the influence of ultra-violet rays this activity is strongest of all. If you wished to be especially gracious to a police dog you would do well if, for instance, you went with him and constantly held a dark lantern in front of him so that you kept him always in the ultra-violet rays.
Now I said just now that we can well understand why you take for example, camomile tea, because you thereby spare the bee something which it has otherwise to do in its own body.
351. Nine Lectures on Bees: Lecture IV 01 Dec 1923, Dornach
Translated by Marna Pease, Carl Alexander Meir

One need not wonder at this, but one must bring the facts before one as they appear; then one begins to understand that things really are so, and can bring them to bear in practical life. QUESTION: According to an old peasant rule it is held that if it rains on the third of May, the Day of the Finding of the Holy Cross, the honey is washed out of all the flowers and trees, and there will be no good honey harvest that year.
It signifies that on the third of May the Sun has a powerful influence on all that is earthly. Whatever happens on the earth is under the influence of the Sun when the weather is fine. What then does is mean when it rains on May the third—that is in the beginning of May?
A matter such as this only becomes comprehensible when we know that everything that happens on this earth is, as I have repeatedly told you, under the influence of the Cosmos, of all that is outside and beyond the earth. Rain means that the influences of the Sun are chased away.
351. Nine Lectures on Bees: Lecture V 05 Dec 1923, Dornach
Translated by Marna Pease, Carl Alexander Meir

The American bee-keepers take exactly this view. 2. I myself, cannot understand that within the next eighty to a hundred years the whole stock of bees will die out. I really cannot understand what Dr.
In a healthy social order a healthy price for honey would naturally be found; this is undoubted. But because we do not live under healthy social conditions at the present day, all our problems are placed in an unhealthy position.
One cannot even say that it is as yet very noticeable, but the milk has not got the same force as milk produced under normal conditions; one cannot immediately prove the great harm that is being done. Perhaps I might tell you the following.
351. Nine Lectures on Bees: Lecture VI 10 Dec 1923, Dornach
Translated by Marna Pease, Carl Alexander Meir

I am myself quite convinced that these methods will prove successful when one is able to enter once again into these questions with a true understanding of nature. You see, it is not possible to go back to the old methods of bee-keeping. Just as little as there is any need to be reactionary in the realms of politics, or of life, is there any necessity to be a reactionary in any other domain.
I have just said that it is a most wonderful thing that the bee should be able to gather substances from the storehouse of nature and then transform them into this honey which is of so great value to human life. You will best understand on what the origin of honey actually rests if I describe to you the sane process in the quite different form in which it appears in those relatives of the bees, if I may call them so, the wasps.
Today one can still see that it is by means of an animal activity, namely that of the wasps, that honey is first prepared in the realms of nature. So now, you can also understand how closely related to this is the fact that the bees place their honey in the cells of the honey-comb.
351. Nine Lectures on Bees: Lecture VII 12 Dec 1923, Dornach
Translated by Marna Pease, Carl Alexander Meir

The farther the Sun moves, the more the bee comes under the influences of the earth. The worker-bee is indeed largely a creature of the Sun, but already somewhat of an earthly creature.
For example, someone has gout or rheumatism; the first question must be—is his heart sound? that is, does it function well under the influence of the blood-circulation? If this is the case, he can be cured with bee or wasp poison.
The best thing in regard to honey is reciprocal control by the bee-keepers, because they best understand the whole question. With regard to the drones, I should like to say this. One may certainly suspect that the Queen is not properly fertilised; too many drones come out.
351. Nine Lectures on Bees: Lecture VIII 15 Dec 1923, Dornach
Translated by Marna Pease, Carl Alexander Meir

Taking our starting point from this fact, we can really learn a very great deal about the whole household of Nature, for the more one learns to understand these small creatures and their ways, the more one realises how wisely regulated their work is, and all they are able to accomplish in the realm of Nature.
The inhabitant of Mars who had never seen living men, and saw only the dead, would first have to be guided to living men; then he would be able to say—“Yes, now I understand why the dead have these forms; before I did not understand this, because I did not know the living form that preceded the dead one.”
351. Nine Lectures on Bees: Lecture IX 22 Dec 1923, Dornach
Translated by Marna Pease, Carl Alexander Meir

Suppose you take a retort, such as are used in chemical laboratories. You make a flame under it, and put into the retort some oxalic acid—it is like salty, crumbly ashes. You then add the same quantity of glycerine, mix the two together, and heat it.
The little creatures hovering over the plants see to it that the oxalic acid is changed into formic acid, that it is metamorphosed. One only fully understands these things when one asks: How is it then with the oxalic acid? Oxalic acid is essential for all that has life.
In Nature the process is unbroken, winter-summer, winter-summer; ever the oxalic acid is undergoing transformation into formic acid. If one watches beside a dying man one really has the feeling that in dying, he first tries whether his body is still able to develop formic acid.

Results 6361 through 6370 of 6552

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