Donate books to help fund our work. Learn more→

The Rudolf Steiner Archive

a project of Steiner Online Library, a public charity

Search results 491 through 500 of 654

˂ 1 ... 48 49 50 51 52 ... 66 ˃
102. The Influence of Spiritual Beings on Man: Lecture III 15 Feb 1908, Berlin
Tr. Unknown

Rudolf Steiner
You will remember that I once showed you how one passes symbolically from the green sap of the plant, chlorophyll, to the blood of man. Plants arose at the period before this passage of Mars had taken place and have preserved their characteristic.
119. Macrocosm and Microcosm: Sleeping and Waking Life in Relation to the Planets 22 Mar 1910, Vienna
Tr. Dorothy S. Osmond, Charles Davy

Rudolf Steiner
All external sense-perceptions work in such a way that they give rise to certain inner states; everyone will realise that the effect of violet is different from that of green. It is the Sentient Body that enables the sense-impressions to be received; it causes men to see yellow, for example; but what we experience and feel inwardly as a result of the impressions made upon us by the red, violet or yellow colour—that is caused by the Sentient Soul.
119. Macrocosm and Microcosm: Mirror-images of the Macrocosm in Man. Rosicrucian Symbols. 28 Mar 1910, Vienna
Tr. Dorothy S. Osmond, Charles Davy

Rudolf Steiner
A pupil who aspires to be led to higher stages of knowledge would be told by his teacher to contemplate, as a beginning, how a plant grows out of the soil, how it forms stem, leaves, flower and fruit. Through the whole structure flows the green sap. Now compare this plant with a human being. Blood flows through the human being and is the outer expression of impulses, appetites and passions; because man is endowed with an Ego he appears to us as a being higher than the plant.
121. The Mission of Folk-Souls: Lecture Two 08 Jun 1910, Oslo
Tr. Unknown

Rudolf Steiner
In truth that which mysteriously confronts us in the part of the earth inhabited by a certain people, is the etheric aura of that particular part of the earth. That which confronts the physical eyes in the green vegetation, in the peculiar configuration of the earth and so on, is fundamentally only maya or external illusion; it is a condensation, as it were, of what is at work in the etheric aura.
190. The Spiritual Background of the Social Question: Lecture III 11 Apr 1919, Dornach
Tr. Unknown

Rudolf Steiner
A man like Fritz Mauthner has a quite correct feeling for this. If one walks over a meadow and sees the green surface there, differentiated in the most varied way, interspersed with white, blue, yellow and reddish varieties of flowers, one has what is the true reality in the sensible world.
233a. The Easter Festival in the Evolution of the Mysteries: Lecture II 20 Apr 1924, Dornach

Rudolf Steiner
The initiate thus learned to look in (red) instead of out (yellow), and in so doing became aware of what had entered him as pre-earthly existence through his eyes, ears, skin, and so forth (green—see diagram). Aware now that he had had such an existence, he was told that now he could begin to acquaint himself with what today we would call natural science.
236. Karmic Relationships II: Perception of Karma 09 May 1924, Dornach
Tr. George Adams, Mabel Cotterell, Charles Davy, Dorothy S. Osmond

Rudolf Steiner
It was in the year 1889—I tell about this in the Story of my Life—that the inner spiritual construction of Goethe's “The Fairy Tale of the Green Snake and the Beautiful Lily” first came before my mind's eye. And it was then, for the first time, that the perception as it were of a greater, wider connection than appears in the Fairy Tale itself presented itself to me.
221. The Invisible Man Within Us 11 Feb 1923, Dornach
Tr. Unknown

Rudolf Steiner
Poisonous substances have the peculiarity that they do not make use of the etheric as do the normal green substances in the plant; instead they turn directly to the astral, so that the astral enters into this substance.
223. Michaelmas and the Soul-Forces of Man: Lecture I 27 Sep 1923, Vienna
Tr. Samuel P. Lockwood, Loni Lockwood

Rudolf Steiner
—but then he turns to what lives in nature—in the salts, in plants, and in the parts of animals that enter his own body; and he observes what it is that sprouts in the innocent green of the plants and what is even still present in a naïve way in the animal body. All this he now perceives when he looks into himself: he sees it arising in him as passions, as bestial lusts, animal instincts; and he perceives what nature becomes in him.
270. Esoteric Instructions: Seventh Lesson 11 Apr 1924, Dornach
Tr. John Riedel

Rudolf Steiner
He beholds himself as threefold. [It was marked in green.]2 Mind—Spirit He beholds himself in his threefold nature, expressed in soul in thinking, in feeling, and in willing.

Results 491 through 500 of 654

˂ 1 ... 48 49 50 51 52 ... 66 ˃