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The Rudolf Steiner Archive

a project of Steiner Online Library, a public charity

Search results 281 through 290 of 433

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54. Jacob Boehme 03 May 1906, Berlin

Rudolf Steiner
There are hardly bigger contrasts than Jacob Boehme and Immanuel Kant. Whatever the education of the 19th century produced is far away from the spirit of this strange man.
300c. Faculty Meetings with Rudolf Steiner II: Fifty-Ninth Meeting 18 Sep 1923, Stuttgart
Tr. Ruth Pusch, Gertrude Teutsch

Rudolf Steiner
I gave him a strong reminder that he needs to take an interest in his school subjects. He has read Plato, Kant, and Intuitive Thinking as a Spiritual Path: A Philosophy of Freedom. He pretty much has his mind made up.
21. The Riddles of the Soul: The Physical and Spiritual Dependencies of Man's Being
Tr. William Lindemann

Rudolf Steiner
About feeling, however, Ziehen says: Almost without exception, earlier psychology regarded the emotions as the manifestations of a particular independent soul capacity. Kant placed the feeling of pleasure and pain, as a particular soul faculty, between the capacity for knowledge and the capacity for desire, and emphasized explicitly that any further tracing of these three soul capacities back to a common ground was not possible.
140. Life Between Death and Rebirth: Further Facts About Life Between Death and Rebirth 05 Apr 1913, Breslau
Tr. René M. Querido

Rudolf Steiner
Such spiritual knowledge throws significant light on everything that a man is and on his relationship to the world. Kant uttered the saying, “There are two things that fill my mind with an ever new and increasing sense of wonder and devotion: The starry heavens above me and the moral law within me.”
276. The Arts and Their Mission: Lecture VI 09 Jun 1923, Dornach
Tr. Lisa D. Monges, Virginia Moore

Rudolf Steiner
For to understand color is to understand a component part of the world. Kant once said: Give me matter, and out of it I shall create a world. Well, you could have given him matter endlessly without his ever being able to make a world out of it.
293. The Study of Man: Lecture V 26 Aug 1919, Stuttgart
Tr. Daphne Harwood, Helen Fox

Rudolf Steiner
First of all it says dogmatically: we look out upon the world that is round about us, and within us there lives only the mirrored image of this world. And so it comes to all its other deductions. Kant himself is not clear as to what is in the environment which man perceives. For reality is not within the environment, nor is it in phenomena: only gradually, through our own winning of it, does reality come in sight, and the first sight of reality is the last thing we get.
93a. Foundations of Esotericism: Lecture XXXI 05 Nov 1905, Berlin
Tr. Vera Compton-Burnett, Judith Compton-Burnett

Rudolf Steiner
With Tolstoi everything is fructified through the West European culture, but in a way different from that of others before him. With powerful simplicity he utters what no Kant and no Spencer could have expressed. What there appears over-ripe appears in him as something still unfulfilled.
109. Rosicrucian Esotericism: Evolutionary Stages of our Earth before the Lemurian Epoch 09 Jun 1909, Budapest
Tr. Helen Fox

Rudolf Steiner
As far as is possible in terms of philosophical thinking, the Kant-Laplace theory is an entirely intelligible exposition of this first form of our earth. It speaks of a kind of archetypal nebula in which everything was dissolved and out of which the whole solar system came forth.
201. Man: Hieroglyph of the Universe: Lecture XII 08 May 1920, Dornach
Tr. George Adams, Mary Adams

Rudolf Steiner
Spiritual Science must endeavour to bring natural scientific study and Christology into harmony; for where has Christology any place if the Kant-Laplace theory holds sway and we look back to a primeval mist out of which everything has been formed?
191. Cosmogony, Freedom, Altruism: A Different Way of Thinking is Needed to Rescue European Civilization 11 Oct 1919, Dornach
Tr. Unknown

Rudolf Steiner
And then, as the climax of all that was cold and dreary, came the Konigsberg-Kant-school with its Critique of Pure Reason alongside its Critique of Applied Reason—Ethics alongside Science,—making a most terrible gulf between what in man's nature must be felt and lived as a single whole.

Results 281 through 290 of 433

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