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The Rudolf Steiner Archive

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Search results 1 through 10 of 225

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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
58. Metamorphoses of the Soul: Paths of Experience I: The Mission of Spiritual Science 14 Oct 1909, Berlin
Tr. Charles Davy, Christoph von Arnim

Rudolf Steiner
70b. Ways to a Knowledge of the Eternal Forces of the Human Soul: The World View Of German Idealism. A Consideration Regarding Our Fateful Times 28 Nov 1915, Munich

Rudolf Steiner
108. The Answers to Questions About the World and Life Provided by Anthroposophy: On Philosophy 20 Mar 1908, Munich

Rudolf Steiner
For a description of Wolff's philosophy, see the lecture of March 14, 1908 in this volume.] At first, Kant also followed in Wolff's footsteps. Hume disturbed him. Hume developed skepticism.
All experience is governed by our form of knowledge. Thus Kant linked Hume with Wolff. Now man is ensnared in this philosophical web. Fichte, Schelling and Hegel are exceptions.
I also have the right to kill everything. Kant uses very convoluted terms. Kant says: I have destroyed knowledge to make room for faith. He has limited knowledge and established a practical faith because everything is spun out of the subjective.
63. Voltaire from the Viewpoint of Spiritual Science 26 Feb 1914, Berlin

Rudolf Steiner
272. Faust, the Aspiring Human: A Spiritual-Scientific Explanation of Goethe's “Faust”: Wisdom – Beauty – Goodness Michael – Gabriel – Raphael 19 Aug 1916, Dornach

Rudolf Steiner
188. A Turning-Point in Modern History 24 Jan 1919, Dornach
Tr. Unknown

Rudolf Steiner
72. Moral, Social and Religious Life from the Standpoint of Anthroposophy 11 Dec 1918, Bern

Rudolf Steiner
Since one could realise that the worst hawks and the most radical pacifists quoted Kant. There are those who have changed during the last weeks just from furious hawks into radical pacifists—such persons do exist—, quoted Kant once and quote Kant now in the nicest way according to their respective opinion.
By his way of writing, one considers Kant as an author who is somewhat hard to understand. However, because some people bring themselves to understand him and consider themselves as very clever, they find, because Kant said something clever that they can just still understand that Kant is a particularly great man. Well, concerning the moral life Kant put up a principle that one quotes very often, indeed, it is sometimes only called, while one says, Kant put up the “categorical imperative” concerning the moral life.
164. The Value of Thinking for Satisfying our Quest for Knowledge: The Relationship Between Spiritual Science and Natural Science I 26 Sep 1915, Dornach

Rudolf Steiner
Kant. Taken out of context, there is certainly not much to be gleaned from this saying of Kant's. However, the author of this paper wants to refer to Kant in the opinion that Kant wanted to say with this saying that the world view that external science creates need not be seen as the only possible one. Here, perhaps, the author of this paper has not quite accurately captured Kant's opinion, because Kant basically means something different in the context of his saying. Kant means: When man reflects, metaphysically reflects, he can think of various real worlds, and then the question is, why of these various conceivable possible worlds, the one in which we live exists for us, while for the author of the booklet the question is: Is it possible to have other world views besides the materialistic one?
35. Philosophy and Anthroposophy 17 Aug 1908, Stuttgart

Rudolf Steiner
In the first place, man would have achieved an inwardly sound theory of knowledge; secondly (and this is of great importance), the great philosophers who lived and worked after Kant would not have been so completely misunderstood in accepted philosophical circles. Kant was succeeded by Fichte, Schelling, and Hegel; what are they to the man of today?
This was never their intention.3 But Kant's principles of thought were the dominating influence and prevented the greatest philosopher in the world being understood.
An unbiased review of the state of affairs leaves us no alternative but to conclude that Kant could only conceive the “thing-in-itself” as matter, however grotesque this may seem at first sight.

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