Donate books to help fund our work. Learn more→

The Rudolf Steiner Archive

a project of Steiner Online Library, a public charity

Search results 191 through 200 of 938

˂ 1 ... 18 19 20 21 22 ... 94 ˃
51. Schiller and Our Times: Schiller's Life and Character 21 Jan 1905, Berlin
Tr. Harry Collison

Rudolf Steiner
In times when men, basing themselves on tradition, still believed they knew something of the relationships of the world, they were not so intent on the personality. Now, when the personality had cut asunder the bonds between itself and the world, men began to ask how that personality was to establish itself firmly in the world.
51. Schiller and Our Times: Schiller's Influence During the 19th Century 04 Mar 1905, Berlin
Tr. Harry Collison

Rudolf Steiner
Hence came that abstracted ideal of beauty, an art so cut off from the life of the times, particularly as the poets grew older. For Schiller's earlier plays, the Räuber, Kabale und Liebe are still connected with his own life.
51. Philosophy, History and Literature: History of the Middle Ages X 29 Dec 1904, Berlin

Rudolf Steiner
Shaken we see the whole life in its foundations. And if one often thinks that the cuts in the historical view are chosen arbitrarily, this cut is really significant. It happened one of those "jerks", as we have been able to trace in the middle of the Middle Ages with the founding of cities, in the beginning with the migration of peoples.
53. Reincarnation and Karma 20 Oct 1904, Berlin

Rudolf Steiner
The human being is a species for himself, not in the physical sense, as far as the human being is on the highest level of animality, for it is the same with the human being as with the animals concerning the generic : if we describe the human being as a species, we describe him in such a way, as we describe the lion species, the tiger species or the cat species. The description of the individual of the human being is substantially different. The individual of the human being is a species for himself.
170. The Riddle of Humanity: Lecture IX 15 Aug 1916, Dornach
Tr. John F. Logan

Rudolf Steiner
For what you describe does not exist in its own right and cannot possible be a tree trunk in the state in which it is now lying there, cut off from it roots and branches and twigs. It is only a part of existence when seen along with its branches, blossoms and roots, and it is nonsense to think of the trunk as existing in its own right.
170. The Sense-Organs and Aesthetic Experience 15 Aug 1916, Dornach
Tr. Unknown

Rudolf Steiner
It is a tree-trunk from which the roots have been cut away, and the boughs and branches lopped off. But it could have come into existence only along with boughs and blossoms and roots, and it is nonsense to think of the mere trunk as a reality.
171. Inner Impulses of Evolution: Lecture II 17 Sep 1916, Dornach
Tr. Gilbert Church, F. Kozlik, Stewart C. Easton

Rudolf Steiner
All the unrest and disturbance that came into the evolution of modern man through the Mongolian invasions, everything connected with them that has gone on working into the fifth post-Atlantean epoch—all this unrest, which was prepared long ago, is nothing more than the great attempt that is being made from Asia to bring about a visionary European culture. It would cut it off from the conditions of its further evolution and lead it altogether away from the earth, just as the East has experienced again and again this feeling of being filled with vision and of wanting to be estranged from the earth.
171. Inner Impulses of Evolution: Lecture III 18 Sep 1916, Dornach
Tr. Gilbert Church, F. Kozlik, Stewart C. Easton

Rudolf Steiner
This special way of being bound to the scaffold forced his stomach outward so that with one cut, which the initiate had been prepared to perform, it could be cut out. This kind of murder engendered definite feelings in the initiate.
But it is even known in ordinary history that many Europeans who set foot on Mexican-American soil were murdered by the decadent priesthood, which, though no longer as evil as in earlier times, still cut out the stomach, as I described. This was the fate of many Europeans who trod the soil of Mexico after the discovery of America, and the fact is even known to history.
171. Inner Impulses of Evolution: Lecture V 24 Sep 1916, Dornach
Tr. Gilbert Church, F. Kozlik, Stewart C. Easton

Rudolf Steiner
The one to be murdered was tied to this and his body bent in such a way that his stomach could be excised with a single cut. This operation, the excision of the stomach, had to be performed with great dexterity. Certain experiences arose from the act of having cut into the living organism with such consummate skill, and under such special conditions.
Many Europeans met their death at the hands of Mexican priest-initiates who bound them to scaffold-like structures and cut out their stomachs with expert skill. This is a matter of historical knowledge, and it was an aftermath of what I have been describing to you.
171. Inner Impulses of Evolution: Lecture VII 01 Oct 1916, Dornach
Tr. Gilbert Church, F. Kozlik, Stewart C. Easton

Rudolf Steiner
Everything of an ecclesiastical nature was preserved, but the Church in England was to be cut off from the Roman Catholic Church simply because the Pope had refused to sanction Henry VIII's divorce.

Results 191 through 200 of 938

˂ 1 ... 18 19 20 21 22 ... 94 ˃