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The Rudolf Steiner Archive

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Search results 61 through 70 of 177

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55. Supersensible Knowledge: The Bible and Wisdom 26 Apr 1907, Berlin
Tr. Rita Stebbing

Rudolf Steiner
The difference he sees is just as great between the highly advanced human being, the initiate, and the person who has barely begun to develop his slumbering forces. An initiate is someone who has attained spiritual faculties by developing to ever greater perfection forces that are inherent in every human soul.
With this insight there dawns in the human soul a feeling, an attitude that says: I look up to a godlike ideal of man, the seed of which slumbers within me.
He points to the deepest and most significant aspect of a person's being, to that which lies deeply hidden in every human soul, to the human's “I.” We find that when we come to this fourth member, then the “I” is a name we must bestow an ourselves.
91. Notes from Mathilde Scholl 1904–1906: The World Center, Christ, The I 13 Sep 1906, Landin

Rudolf Steiner
Only some people, a small crowd, could recognize the world life in the Christ Jesus. Thus the world life rested in the world. It resounded incessantly as the Word and instilled its life into the world; it flowed into every human being and gave him his power to feel himself as I, to find a center in himself, to live in his I.
He then pours out this world life in every thought, every wish, every word, in his whole being; he communicates it to other beings. He helps to overcome death; he has become the redeemer, liberator of the world.
Thus we, too, must bring together in our I all the experiences we have in the world, locate them there, and then transform and use them for the more beautiful shaping of our own being in connection with the development of the cosmos.
52. What Do Intellectuals Make of Theosophy? 28 Apr 1904, Berlin

Rudolf Steiner
It seems to be a summit of arrogance if such representatives appear who claim that this ability slumbers in every human being. Develop it and you will see that the objects which once were objects of your faith can become objects of your knowledge, of your wisdom.
Not because it has God solely as the object of its consideration, but because it makes a distinction between the external sensuous human being who sees, hears, smells, tastes with his five senses, and combines the sense-perception with his reason—and the other human being who lives in this bodily human being who slumbers in it and can be woken and uses such spiritual organs, spiritual sensory tools, as the body has the physical sensory tools.
This is something that has always existed with extraordinary human individualities since millennia, even since there are human beings. In the form, however, as single great spirits have owned it, it could not been given to the big mass.
90b. Self-Knowledge and God-Knowledge II: The Apocalypse and Theosophical Cosmology V 27 Feb 1905, Berlin

Rudolf Steiner
Then there will be the human, animal and plant kingdoms; but then he will create alive — which happens today in the organic — but only in the astral.
There is a sense of pleasure in what is being created, he no longer distinguishes himself from what he is doing today with the animal [gap in the transcript] He will not only bring forth life, he will bring forth everything with feeling.
Our next globe - of the fourth round - is the model for the physical globe of the fifth round, and here man appears in his highest state, 'glory'. Then a state of slumber sets in and the sixth round begins. Here the beings live in such a way that the animal kingdom is the lowest realm.
21. The Case for Anthroposophy: Anthropology and Anthroposophy
Tr. Owen Barfield

Rudolf Steiner
When a man perceives the colour yellow, he has an experience that is not simply optical but is also affective and empathetic, an experience of the nature of feeling. It may be more or less pronounced in different human beings, but it is never wholly absent. There is a beautiful chapter in Goethe’s Farbenlehre on the “sensuous-moral effect of colours”, in which he has described with great penetration the emotional by-effects for red, yellow, green and so forth.
It proceeds from observation of a part of the spiritual world to ideas of human being which represent to it the spiritual man as he reveals himself in the human body. Anthropology, too, coming from the opposite direction, proceeds to ideas of human being.
Through what has transpired in the course of those researches, it comes at its notion of the human being living in the sense-world.
90a. Self-Knowledge and God-Knowledge I: The Fifth Root Race: Fire 29 Jun 1904, Berlin

Rudolf Steiner
It is now an important occult law: You withdraw as much vril power from yourself as you destroy vril power. With every being killed, no matter whether it is the most miserable insect, man deprives himself of as much vril power as he kills.
By withdrawing the light vril force, I relate myself to the lower power of fire that slumbers in dense matter. This is an occult process in the fifth root race, that by killing - as with the hunting peoples - it makes itself lower and awakens the power of fire.
But thought on the physical plane must be ascribed to a being, must have a vehicle. The Indian recognizes it as spirit; the Jew does not know the cosmic thought, but only the human thought, and therefore must anthropomorphize his God, Yahweh.
108. Novalis 26 Oct 1908, Berlin
Tr. Hanna von Maltitz

Rudolf Steiner
Basically there was in Sophie von Kühn—that was her name—something like the lives of various beings. She became ill and soon died.
He saw the time when the souls of plants, animals and people were still companions of divine beings, when an interruption in awareness had not yet happened as it did later to human beings in the exchange between night and day—while nothing was influenced by any interruption, as is expressed in the words: birth and death.
It held itself in heavenly spheres and descended when human beings needed to once again be able to rise up to spiritual worlds.
97. The Christian Mystery (2000): The Gospel of John as an Initiation Document I 12 Feb 1906, Cologne
Tr. Anna R. Meuss

Rudolf Steiner
One must enter wholly into this, penetrating so deeply into the world that one realizes: The logos lives in the world. Originally there was the creation of the physical human being. The spiritual human being entered into this physical human being.
But the darknesses did not at first comprehend it. When a human being develops further, there comes to him the content of astral truth vision. He then sees clearly what Christ Jesus was, and what his teaching signified: that the time was ripe in those days to bring forth a reverse Adam.
It is John himself who needed to understand; it was explained to him in the vision that it was a matter of killing off the lower human being, with the higher human being coming alive.
68c. Goethe and the Present: Goethe's “Faust” Exoteric 13 Feb 1910, Frankfurt

Rudolf Steiner
In his innermost being, at first unconsciously, he felt an irrepressible, invincible urge to know, which could not be hindered by anything, and which was connected with the whole of his life at every moment, pouring out, as it were, into the whole of his life, so that there can be no theory, no world of ideas for him at all, without his whole world of feeling and emotion being impregnated with his heart's blood.
It is clear that the earth spirit is a creative, productive force, that life is expressed in the elements of earthly existence, but one thing is missing: there are no passions or desires in it – only birth and death.
Faust feels: I am held down by what I do not see in my outer corporeality, not by the material forces, but by what is supersensible in corporeality. The embodiment of this supersensible in the physical is Mephistopheles; that is the spirit that he grasps for the time being.
70b. Ways to a Knowledge of the Eternal Forces of the Human Soul: The Forgotten Pursuit of Spiritual Science Within the Development of German Thought 02 Mar 1916, Bremen

Rudolf Steiner
Hegel did indeed oppose the idea that the new meaning, the inner meaning, should become something that man could only receive through a special disposition; and that is why he criticized Schelling, who spoke of [intellectual] intuition. In a sense, Hegel was right, because for every human being – you only need to read about it in my book “How to Know Higher Worlds” , for every human being, this new sense is attainable if only he wants to develop it.
And among these lesser spirits is the son of the great Johann Gottlieb Fichte: Immanuel Hermann Fichte. Certainly, there are not many today who still occupy themselves with this Immanuel Hermann Fichte; but Immanuel Hermann Fichte – to mention only that – already stands there and says: the human being whom we observe with our outer senses, the human being who is made of flesh and blood, is bound to the perishable earthly in terms of his material and his powers. But in this human being there is another human being. This other human being – I mentioned him earlier in these lectures.

Results 61 through 70 of 177

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