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The Rudolf Steiner Archive

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Search results 21 through 30 of 171

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155. Christ and the Human Soul: Lecture IV 16 Jul 1914, Norrköping
Tr. Charles Davy

Rudolf Steiner
But we can experience the incoming of the Christ, and so we can receive, by proxy as it were, that which would otherwise come to us from the Music of the Spheres and the Cosmic Life. Pythagoras, an Initiate of the ancient Mysteries, spoke of the Music of the Spheres. He had gone through the process whereby the soul passes out of the body, and he could then be carried away into the spiritual worlds.
Since the Mystery of Golgotha we cannot speak of the Music of the Spheres as did Pythagoras, but we can speak of it in another way. An Initiate might even today speak as Pythagoras did; but the ordinary inhabitant of the Earth in his physical body can speak of the Music of the Spheres and of the Cosmic Life only when he experiences in his soul, “Not I, but Christ in me”, for the Christ within him has lived in the Music of the Spheres and in the Cosmic Life.
95. At the Gates of Spiritual Science: The Three Worlds 23 Aug 1906, Stuttgart
Tr. Charles Davy, E. H. Goddard

Rudolf Steiner
The world of Devachan is a world of sounds the sounds which Pythagoras12 called the music of the spheres. The heavenly bodies as they pursue their courses can be heard resounding.
12. Pythagoras, Greek philosopher, sixth century B.C.13. Johann Wolfgang Goethe, 1749–1832.
96. Original Impulses fo the Science of the Spirit: Education Based on Spiritual Insight 14 May 1906, Berlin
Tr. Anna R. Meuss

Rudolf Steiner
This is very evident in some of the sayings of Pythagoras. Instead of reciting: ‘In your undertakings, you should not concern yourself with things which you can see right away are bound to fail,’ he said pithily: 'Don't smite the fire with your sword!'
And so instead of saying: 'You're not yet mature enough to get involved in public affairs,' Pythagoras simply said: 'Refrain from beans!' This addresses the creative powers of imagination and not the powers of the intellect.Fld GA The more you use images the greater the influence on the child.
266-II. From the Contents of Esoteric Classes II: 1910–1912: Esoteric Lesson 01 Sep 1912, Munich
Tr. Unknown

Rudolf Steiner
Great initiates can't bring these forces down from the highest worlds—only Christ can do this because he went through the Mystery of Golgotha. But Buddha, Pythagoras, Zarathustra and other great initiates gather round the Christ and let themselves be influenced by his forces, regardless of whether or not they're incarnated.
69e. The Humanities and the Future of Humanity: Zarathustra, His Teaching and His Mission 31 Jan 1911, Cologne

Rudolf Steiner
Zoroaster saw in the outer light what is inner wisdom, as does spiritual science today. Pythagoras learned from the Persians the correct attitude towards the spiritual and the moral world. This is quite different from the way it is in Egypt or in the Dionysian mysteries.
34. Essays on Anthroposoph from Lucifer and Lucifer-Gnosis 1903-1908: Initiation and Mysteries

Rudolf Steiner
In it, he presents the great teachers of wisdom: Rama, Krishna, Hermes, Moses, Orpheus, Pythagoras, Plato and Jesus in the manner of an intuitive researcher, a noble thinker and a personality inspired by deep religious feeling.
Schuré describes the sequence of initiation as it was practiced in the school of Pythagoras (582-507 BC). This description is inspired by a genius for art and mystical depth. — With reference to this description, we will speak of these stages here.
This enables him to describe the great initiates: Rama, Krishna, Hermes, Moses, Orpheus, Pythagoras, Plato and Jesus. Gradually, the powers were radiated into humanity through these leaders, depending on the maturity that the human race had attained in the course of time.
60. How Does One Attain Knowledge of the Spiritual World? 15 Dec 1910, Berlin

Rudolf Steiner
If we have let this affect our soul, then we will learn to understand what basically no external science understands, that the ancient Pythagoreans, under the influence of their great teacher Pythagoras, spoke of the universe being made up of numbers because they focussed on the inner laws of numbers.
You will not even be able to teach him the theorem of Pythagoras. Thus it is already bound to the basic principle that the human soul must be appropriately prepared if one wants to prove something to it. And just as one must be prepared to understand the theorem of Pythagoras—even though it is possible for everyone to understand it—one must be prepared through a certain soul exercise if one wants to experience or realise this or that in the spiritual world.
8. Christianity As Mystical Fact (1947): The Greek Sages Before Plato in the Light of Mystery Wisdom
Tr. Henry B. Monges

Rudolf Steiner
[ 13 ] A different conception of the universe from that of Heraclitus grew up, on the basis of the Mysteries, in the community founded by Pythagoras in the 6th century B.C. in Southern Italy. The Pythagoreans saw the basis of things in the numbers and geometrical figures into whose laws they made research by means of mathematics.
The personality only serves as the organ through which the order of pervading cosmic space may express itself. There is something in the spirit of Pythagoras in what one of the Church Fathers, Gregory of Nyssa, said: It is said that human nature is something small and limited, and that God is infinite.
8. Christianity As Mystical Fact (1961): Greek Sages Before Plato In the Light of Mystery Wisdom
Tr. E. A. Frommer, Gabrielle Hess, Peter Kändler

Rudolf Steiner
[ 13 ] Another form of world-conception, different from that of Heraclitus, grew from the same foundation in the essence of the Mysteries, within a community founded by Pythagoras in lower Italy in the sixth century before Christ. The Pythagoreans saw the foundation of things in numbers and figures, whose laws they investigated mathematically.
The personality merely provides the organ through which what is interwoven with the cosmos can be expressed. Something of the spirit of Pythagoras is contained in the saying of the Church Father, Gregory of Nyssa: “It is said that human nature by itself is something small and limited, but the Godhead is infinite, and how has the infinite been embraced by something so tiny?
340. World Economy: Lecture VI 29 Jul 1922, Dornach
Tr. Owen Barfield, T. Gordon-Jones

Rudolf Steiner
I do believe, for the domain of economics, this formula is no less exhaustive than, say, the Theorem of Pythagoras is for all right-angled triangles. But the point is—just as we have to introduce into the Theorem of Pythagoras the varying proportions of the sides, so shall we have to introduce many, very many more variables into this formula.

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