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The Rudolf Steiner Archive

a project of Steiner Online Library, a public charity

Search results 271 through 280 of 701

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2. A Theory of Knowledge: Examination of the Content of Experience
Translated by Olin D. Wannamaker

Rudolf Steiner
These illustrations, we believe, insure us against the objection that the realm of our experience already reveals endless distinctions among its objects before thinking appears on the field: that a red surface, for instance, is different from a green surface even without any activity of thought. That is true. But any one who would bring this argument to bear against us has entirely misconstrued our assertion.
2. The Science of Knowing: An Indication as to the Content of Experience
Translated by William Lindemann

Rudolf Steiner
At the same time, we believe that in this we are safe from the objection that our world of experience in fact shows endless differences in its objects even before thinking approaches it. After all, a red surface differs from a green one even if we do not exercise any thinking. This is correct. If someone wanted to refute us by this, however, he would have misunderstood our argument totally.
111. Introduction to the Basics of Theosophy: Theosophy, Goethe and Hegel 06 Mar 1908, Amsterdam

Rudolf Steiner
That Goethe has recognized the spiritual in man is shown not only by a poem from the 1780s, “The Mysteries,” in which he speaks about the Rosicrucian symbol: the black cross with the red roses; he gives his creed even more beautifully in the “Fairytale of the Green Snake and the Beautiful Lily” and in his Faust poem. The speaker refers to Goethe's comment to Eckermann, in which he says that his Faust can be viewed from two perspectives: firstly, it is something for people in the theater, but then there is also something in it for the initiate who sees the spiritual life behind the sensual life of man.
277b. The Development of Eurythmy 1918–1920: Eurythmy Address 24 Mar 1919, Dornach

Rudolf Steiner
More than one might think lies in Goethe's view that the colored petal of a flower is only a transformation of the green leaf of the plant, that even the stamens, the pistil of the plant, which are not at all similar in appearance to the leaves, are transformed petals.
265. The History of the Esoteric School 1904–1914, Volume Two: The Four Elemental Beings N/A

Rudolf Steiner
In the future, one will begin to feel a connection between the spoken word and colors. One will feel green when talking about unimportant things; yellow will arise when speaking selfishly; red will be there when fighting egoism.
6. Goethe's World View: Epilogue to the New Edition of 1918
Translated by William Lindemann

Rudolf Steiner
(One will find in my book, Goethe's Faust and the Fairy Tale of the Green Snake, something of what there is to say about Goethe from the particularly spiritual scientific point of view.)
181. The Earth As Being with Life, Soul, and Spirit: The Earth As Seen by the Dead 01 Apr 1918, Berlin
Translator Unknown

Rudolf Steiner
We acquire a picture of the earth when we imagine a sphere floating in cosmic space, gleaming on one side in shades of blue and violet, on the other side burning, sparkling red and yellow; and between a belt of green. Conceptions which have the character of pictures gradually carry us over into the spiritual world.
277b. The Development of Eurythmy 1918–1920: Eurythmy Address 14 Sep 1919, Berlin

Rudolf Steiner
For Goethe, every single plant leaf – whether a green plant leaf or a colored flower petal – is basically a whole plant, only more simply formed than the whole plant, and again the whole plant is for him only an intricate leaf.
54. Esoteric Development: Inner Development 07 Dec 1905, Berlin
Translated by Gertrude Teutsch, Olin D. Wannamaker, Diane Tatum, Alice Wuslin

Rudolf Steiner
This intermingling can be compared with mixing a yellow with a blue liquid in a glass. The result is a green liquid in which blue and yellow can no longer be distinguished. So also is the lower nature in man mingled with the higher, and the two cannot be distinguished. Just as you might extract the blue liquid from the green by a chemical process, so that only the yellow remains and the unified green is separated into a complete duality, so the lower and higher natures separate in occult development.
54. Inner Development 07 Dec 1905, Berlin

Rudolf Steiner
You can compare this mixture with a mixture of a yellow liquid and a blue one in a glass, resulting in a green liquid in which we can no longer distinguish yellow and blue. The lower nature is mixed with the higher one in the human being that way and both are not to be distinguished. As you can extract the blue liquid from the green liquid by chemical means, so that only the yellow fluid remains, and the uniform green is separated into a duality, in blue and yellow, you separate the lower nature from the higher one by means of the esoteric development.

Results 271 through 280 of 701

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