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The Rudolf Steiner Archive

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Search results 301 through 310 of 439

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60. How Does One Attain Knowledge of the Spiritual World? 15 Dec 1910, Berlin

Rudolf Steiner
It is an impossibility not only for feeling and emotion but also for a realisation that truly understands itself. What I mean is the Kant-Laplace theory that explains our solar system as if it were made up only of lifeless, inorganic substances and forces, and as if it had clenched itself out of a giant gas ball.
A long time ago, already in his youth, the great Kant-Laplace fantasy about the origin and the future downfall of the globe, had gained ground. Out of the primeval, cosmic, in itself rotating world-nebula—the children learn this at school already—the central drop of gaseous matter forms itself, which later becomes the Earth and, as a solidifying ball in incomprehensible periods of time, goes through all phases including the episode of mankind’s habitation.
18. The Riddles of Philosophy: The World Conceptions of the Modern Age of Thought Evolution
Tr. Fritz C. A. Koelln

Rudolf Steiner
This world conception rests on the presupposition that the self-conscious soul can produce thoughts in itself that are valid for what lies entirely and completely outside its own realm. This is the riddle with which Kant later feels himself confronted; how is knowledge that is produced in the soul and nevertheless supposed to have validity for world entities lying outside the soul, possible?
In this current live the seeds from which the thought development of the “Age of Kant and Goethe” grew.
69e. The Humanities and the Future of Humanity: Spiritual Science and the Spiritual World Outlook on the Goals of Our Time 07 Dec 1913, Munich

Rudolf Steiner
In an introduction in which he wanted to write about an evolution in philosophy, he said that if you read Kant and so on, you read into concepts, but that could be remedied, because today – and again, it should be noted that nothing should be said against the technical achievements of the present time , these technical achievements have their significance, their justification; but what has been said is characteristic – the philosopher says that if you want to immerse yourself in Spinoza's Ethics, it is difficult to live into the intangible concepts.
Thus, one might hope to see a complete cinematographic adaptation of Spinoza's Ethics, or Kant's “Pure Reason”. As I said, I am not criticizing the arts, although it seems strange when the editor says that in this way ancient metaphysical longings of the human soul can be satisfied by an art that the superficial mind usually regards as something playful.
18. Individualism and Philosophy: Appendix I: Excerpt From the Final Chapter of “The Riddles of Philosophy”

Rudolf Steiner
The direction followed takes its point of departure more or less from Kant's way of picturing things. The natural-scientific mode of thinking has a definitive influence, consciously or unconsciously, upon the way one shapes one's thoughts.
4. The Philosophy of Freedom (1916): Are There Any Limits to Knowledge?
Tr. R. F. Alfred Hoernlé

Rudolf Steiner
It is from a Dualism such as this that there arises the distinction between the object of perception and the thing-in-itself, which Kant introduced into philosophy, and which, to the present day, we have not succeeded in expelling. According to our interpretation, it is due to the nature of our organization that a particular object can be given to us only as a percept.
346. Lectures to Priests The Apocalypse: Lecture III 07 Sep 1924, Dornach
Tr. Unknown

Rudolf Steiner
It's only because people have become as blockheaded as old Kant was, that they speak of a thing in itself which can't be explained. The thing in itself of warmth is astonishment;' and Saturn man is astonishment just as much as he is warmth.
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.

Results 301 through 310 of 439

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