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The Rudolf Steiner Archive

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Search results 301 through 310 of 433

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303. Soul Economy: Body, Soul and Spirit in Waldorf Education: Education Based on Knowledge of the Human Being I 24 Dec 1921, Dornach
Tr. Roland Everett

Rudolf Steiner
One is forced to imagine the primeval nebulae of the Kant-Laplace theory, or, since views have changed since their time, something similar. But this notion of primeval nebulae makes sense only when we apply to it the laws of aeromechanics.
318. Pastoral Medicine: Lecture VII 14 Sep 1924, Dornach
Tr. Gladys Hahn

Rudolf Steiner
Preyer, the famous Jena physiologist,8 has done just that. He found the ordinary Kant-Laplace theory too stupid, so he went back to certain dynamic fire processes from which evolution was supposed to have originated.
291. Colour: The Connection of the Natural with the Moral-Psychical. Living in Light and Weight 10 Dec 1920, Dornach
Tr. Harry Collison

Rudolf Steiner
There are people who believe everything the purely natural scientific view has to say, who subscribe to the Kant-Laplace theory of primeval mist, and everything in favour of a final cindery, slaggy condition of our evolution; and at the same time they acknowledge some religious view of things—that good works somehow find their reward, and evildoers are punished, and so on.
110. The Spiritual Hierarchies (1928): Lecture VIII 17 Apr 1909, Düsseldorf
Tr. Harry Collison

Rudolf Steiner
You have here no mechanical process taken from the dreary Kant-Laplace theory about the world's creation, but you have the living origins of those formations springing from the spiritual interaction of the Hierarchies, as we see them to-day in the heavenly bodies, in Saturn, Jupiter and Mars.
201. Man: Hieroglyph of the Universe: Lecture I 09 Apr 1920, Dornach
Tr. George Adams, Mary Adams

Rudolf Steiner
I have mentioned before how the impossibility of building a bridge between the two, between the world of Necessity and the world of Morals, led Kant to write two critiques, the Critique of Pure Reason in which he applies himself to investigating the nature of simple Necessity, and the Critique of Applied Reason in which he inquires into what belongs to Moral Cosmogony.
201. Man: Hieroglyph of the Universe: Lecture XIV 14 May 1920, Dornach
Tr. George Adams, Mary Adams

Rudolf Steiner
Let us reflect however, how in all that is considered in natural science, this secondary effect is wholly omitted. The men of the nineteenth century, and even Kant in the eighteenth, formed their view of the origin of the Universe simply out of the principles which Julius Robert Mayer so sharply defined, when he separated out what belongs to nature alone from all that was for him merely secondary effect.
254. The Occult Movement in the Nineteenth Century: Lecture I 10 Oct 1915, Dornach
Tr. Dorothy S. Osmond

Rudolf Steiner
But that too was necessary, in order that the purely materialistic talents of men might develop unhindered by occult faculties. A materialistic philosopher such as Kant, a materialistic philosopher from the standpoint of the Idealists of the nineteenth century—you can easily read about this in my book Riddles of Philosophy—could not have appeared if the occult faculties had not drawn into the background.
233a. Rosicrucianism and Modern Initiation: Research into the Life of the Spirit During the Middle Ages 04 Jan 1924, Dornach
Tr. Mary Adams

Rudolf Steiner
There you have the first Act of the drama. The second Act begins with Kant! One has there the hanger and the clothes hanging on it, and one begins to philosophise in true Kantian fashion as to what the “thing-in-itself” of these clothes may be.
233a. Rosicrucianism and Modern Initiation: The Time of Transition 06 Jan 1924, Dornach
Tr. Mary Adams

Rudolf Steiner
The idea shows itself in a significant manner, it is still, shall we say, human in character. Later, in Kant, in du Bois-Reymond, you will find expressed in them: “Man cannot cross the boundaries of knowledge.”
219. Man and the World of Stars: Rhythms of Earthly and Spiritual Life. Love, Memory, the Moral Life 15 Dec 1922, Dornach
Tr. Dorothy S. Osmond

Rudolf Steiner
Assume for a moment that the cosmic nebula of Kant and Laplace, with its mechanical forces and mechanical laws, did actually constitute the beginning of Earth-existence; assume that from these whirling nebulae, through the working of neutral laws of Nature, the kingdoms of earthly existence had come into being, and finally Man.

Results 301 through 310 of 433

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