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The Rudolf Steiner Archive

a project of Steiner Online Library, a public charity

Search results 321 through 330 of 439

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35. Human Life in the Light of Spiritual Science 16 Oct 1916, Liestal

Rudolf Steiner
The things which are being said today in this connection are a result of the same spirit which produced the already antiquated concept of Kant-Laplace, about which I am going to speak. According to that concept the earth and the whole solar system were fashioned out of a sort of primeval nebula, which contained nothing but forces belonging to a misty form.
This is what Herman Grimm says: “The great fantasy of Laplace and Kant concerning the origin and eventual fate of the earth ball had established itself firmly even at the time when Goethe was a youth.
342. Anthroposophical Foundations for a Renewed Christian Spiritual Activity: First Lecture 12 Jun 1921, Stuttgart

Rudolf Steiner
I would like to express myself as follows: Suppose you are a person in the sense of today's Ritschlianer or something like that, who is thoroughly religious in terms of soul immortality, the existence of God and so on, but at the same time you are weak enough to accept the Kant-Laplace theory, and in fact as it is taught by today's natural science. The mere fact that this Kant-Laplacean theory is in your mind and is an objective contradiction of what you have to represent as the content of your Christian confession, already that impairs the convincing power that you must have as a preacher.
71b. The Human Being as a Spirit and Soul Being: The Revelations of the Unconscious in the Life of the Soul from the Spiritual-scientific Point of View 18 Feb 1918, Munich

Rudolf Steiner
By believing that it is not within this sensory world, one falls back on all sorts of methods to explain this sensory world from something other than the spiritual. We can see how something like the Kant-Laplace theory comes about. I have often mentioned this before and will only refer to it today because it sheds light on our present-day field.
For example, if you calculate from heredity what the human stomach goes through in the course of one, two, seven years, what changes it undergoes in three hundred years, you proceed in the same way as a geologist or astronomer, in the same way as the one who put forward the Kant-Laplace hypothesis. We can calculate in the same way as for the small changes that take place in the constitution of the stomach, what the stomach must have been like 300 years ago; only it had not yet come into existence at that time.
53. Theosophy and Nietzsche 01 Dec 1904, Berlin

Rudolf Steiner
Since some centuries in particular, the European humanity is developing the intellectual force, intelligence. Our great philosophers, up to Kant and Schopenhauer, are completely involved in this development of our principal race. As to them the big problem became the question: what is the significance of the human thought, how can the human being recognise anything?
149. Christ and the Spiritual World: The Search for the Holy Grail: Lecture I 28 Dec 1913, Leipzig
Tr. Charles Davy, Dorothy S. Osmond

Rudolf Steiner
In tracing back the evolution of the world they are too readily inclined to think in terms of the Kant-Laplace theory of a cosmic nebula, of something quite material. And even those who seek for a more spiritual conception of the world—even they, when they look back to the beginning of time, think of this cosmic nebula or something similar.
147. Secrets of the Threshold: Lecture IV 27 Aug 1913, Munich
Tr. Ruth Pusch

Rudolf Steiner
I have continually said: The chapter of Schopenhauer's philosophy that views the world as a mere mental image and does not distinguish between idea and actual perception can be contradicted only by life itself. Kant's argument, too, in regard to the so-called proof of God' s existence, that a hundred imaginary dollars contain just as many pennies as a hundred real dollars, will be demolished by anyone who tries to pay his debts with imaginary and not real dollars.
323. Astronomy as Compared to Other Sciences: Lecture VII 07 Jan 1921, Stuttgart
Tr. Unknown

Rudolf Steiner
This, surely, is a rough and ready definition of Euclidean space. I might also call it ‘Kantian space’, for Kant's arguments are based on this assumption. Now as regards this Euclidean—or, if you will, Kantian—space we have to put the question: Does it correspond to a reality, or is it only a thought-picture, an abstraction?
324. Anthroposophy and Science: Lecture VI 22 Mar 1921, Stuttgart
Tr. Walter Stuber, Mark Gardner

Rudolf Steiner
He never speaks of a Kantian “thing in itself” that must be sought behind the phenomena, something Kant supposed existed there. And so Goethe comes to a true understanding of phenomena—of what might be called the “letters” in the mineral-physical world.
124. Background to the Gospel of St. Mark: Mystery Teachings in St. Mark's Gospel 18 Dec 1910, Hanover
Tr. E. H. Goddard, Dorothy S. Osmond

Rudolf Steiner
He observed the conjunction of Saturn, Jupiter and Moon and through it sought to explain the star by which the Three Wise Men from the East were guided. Abstractions as appalling as the Kant-Laplace theory had not been devised in Kepler's day. The Gospel of St. Mark gives expression to the wonderful harmony between the great Cosmos and what was to come to pass once on our Earth through the deeds of Christ Jesus and the Mystery of Golgotha.
203. The Two Christmas Annunciations 01 Jan 1921, Stuttgart
Tr. Unknown

Rudolf Steiner
What was the special development brought about in the souls of these pupils through the introduction of mathematics into their soul-condition, when this was found especially mature and ready? Kant speaks of mathematics as being “a priori” truth. With “a priori” he means a truth which is present within us before our external, empirical knowledge, before our experience of it existed.

Results 321 through 330 of 439

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