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The Rudolf Steiner Archive

a project of Steiner Online Library, a public charity

Search results 781 through 790 of 938

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68c. Goethe and the Present: The Secret Secrets in Goethe's “Faust” 23 Sep 1909, Basel

Rudolf Steiner
Our finger does not do that. It would say to itself: the moment I am cut off, I am no longer a finger. If it wanted to succumb to the same delusion as a human being, it would disintegrate. It would disintegrate if it could walk around on our body – cut off. A human being can walk around on the earth, which is why he succumbs to the delusion of being a separate being.
68c. Goethe and the Present: From Paracelsus to Goethe 19 Nov 1911, Munich

Rudolf Steiner
The forces of the whole of nature are concentrated in man, but cannot easily lead him to cut himself off from the external forces and beings of nature. This is because, said Paracelsus, man has within him a living architect, an “archaeus”, who literally tears him away from the whole of nature and gives him his own unique configuration.
69e. The Humanities and the Future of Humanity: The Tasks of Spiritual Research for the Future 25 Sep 1912, Basel

Rudolf Steiner
I have often used the image of what happens when you take a certain substance, an oily substance that forms drops, cut a sheet of paper in half and push it through the large droplet as an equatorial plane, then stick a needle into the sheet of paper, start turning it, and then see how small droplets actually separate.
69e. The Humanities and the Future of Humanity: Errors of Spiritual Research 03 Jan 1913, Cologne

Rudolf Steiner
Then you become completely empty? You feel how you gradually cut yourself out of yourself. What then comes is that terrible moment in life when you see yourself disappearing, when you turn your gaze to the formation of your opinion.
It should not be denied that a mother dog can give a biography of her dogs, a mother cat a biography of her cats. But that is not the point. A teacher can also ask children to present the biography of their pens.
69e. The Humanities and the Future of Humanity: Spiritual Science and the Spiritual Goals of Our Time 01 Dec 1913, Basel

Rudolf Steiner
But the other says: I know he also lives for another reason. I found him hanged eight days ago; because I cut him down, he is alive today. Everyone is right. The natural scientist is fully justified in saying that when certain qualities appear in life, we have inherited them from our parents, our ancestors and so on.
69e. The Humanities and the Future of Humanity: Theosophy as a Lifelong Pursuit 04 Jan 1914, Leipzig

Rudolf Steiner
If philosophy is to become a regulator of our view of life, pointing out that on the one hand there is the world of necessity, and on the other the world of moral commandments, which, however, lives in us as if cut off from the world - how is it rooted in the world? As long as we remain with the passive concept of truth, we will never be able to bridge this gap, because there is a relationship between necessary truth and its legitimacy and moral truth and its legitimacy that cannot be seen in the external world, that cannot be passively grasped.
69c. A New Experience of Christ: Christ in the 20th Century 16 Nov 1912, Hamburg

Rudolf Steiner
This is illustrated by taking a drop of oil floating on water. Then you cut a small piece of paper, stick it on a pin, bring it into the drop of oil and then turn it. As smaller droplets then separate out, you can show the student the formation of a miniature planetary system.
For the development of Goethe, for example, it is easy to indicate when one has to make a cut in the nineties, when something completely new entered into the soul of Goethe. There are many souls that know that they not only progress little by little, but that the soul has tremendous moments of reversal and development, where they feel as if a world is flowing into them, where they take in something completely new.
108. The Answers to Questions About the World and Life Provided by Anthroposophy: The Place of Anthroposophy in Philosophy 14 Mar 1908, Berlin

Rudolf Steiner
Even Schopenhauer, who in his “World as Will and Representation” really goes beyond Kant, but also others to a much greater extent, have only understood this Kantianism to mean that the “thing in itself” is completely inaccessible to human knowledge, whereas everything that occurs in man - from the first sensory impression to the processing of impressions as knowledge - is merely an effect on the subject. You see that man is then basically cut off from everything objective, only wrapped up in his subjectivity. “Our world is not a world of things, only a world of ideas,” says Schopenhauer.
108. The Answers to Questions About the World and Life Provided by Anthroposophy: Life between Two Reincarnations 02 Dec 1908, Breslau

Rudolf Steiner
The physical body was only the instrument with which this desire could be satisfied. If you have a knife to cut with, that is the instrument, and you do not lose the ability to cut when you put the knife away.
108. The Answers to Questions About the World and Life Provided by Anthroposophy: Questions on the Law of Karma 21 Nov 1909, St. Gallen

Rudolf Steiner
One must not believe that the law of karma is as cut as a civil code; it can only be understood through extensive studies. Let us consider a great misfortune that causes deep pain.

Results 781 through 790 of 938

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