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The Rudolf Steiner Archive

a project of Steiner Online Library, a public charity

Search results 111 through 120 of 229

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169. Toward Imagination: The Immortality of the I 06 Jun 1916, Berlin
Tr. Sabine H. Seiler

Rudolf Steiner
I have often entertained you with describing how the Kant- Laplace theory is taught to children in school. They are carefully taught that the earth at one time was like a solar nebula and rotated and that the planets eventually split off from it.
19 Long ago, in the time of his [Goethe's] youth, the famous Kant-Laplace fantasy [you see, Grimm calls it a fantasy!] about the origin and future destruction of the earth had taken root.
Wrote on historical philosophy and his own philosophy of ethical activism. Awarded Nobel prize for literature in 1908.Josef Kohler, 1849–1919, German jurist and writer.15.
183. Mysteries of the Sun and of the Threefold Man: Lecture III 26 Aug 1918, Dornach
Tr. Unknown

Rudolf Steiner
184. Three Streams in Human Evolution: Lecture III 06 Oct 1918, Dornach
Tr. Charles Davy

Rudolf Steiner
Scientifically, this opinion is quite in order, but the conclusion which should be drawn from it is the following: Just because it is scientifically in order to believe that birth and death belong to the world of the senses—on that very account it is false; on that account the real origin of man was different. When Kant and Laplace thought out their theory, they built it up from natural science. On the surface there is nothing to be said against it—but things were different for the very reason that the Kant-Laplace theory is correct from the standpoint of natural science.
As I have explained, the error we have been talking about is not an error because we ought to be seeing the devil in the world; but it is an error to identify ourselves with physical nature because in our own world we should be seeing God in us. It is also false to say: I am a quite high being, a tremendously high being, a tremendously lofty soul ... and everything around me is inferior and ugly (see blue in diagram, I).
If you think of the various lecture-courses in which these things have been spoken of, if you think particularly of the content of what I have given as the Fifth Gospel, [ Seven lectures given in Christiania (Oslo) from October 1st to 6th, 1913.] you will discover a whole series of ways by which these things may be understood, but understood supersensibly only.
185. From Symptom to Reality in Modern History: Incidental Reflections on the Occasion of the New Edition of ‘Goethes Weltanschauung’ 01 Nov 1918, Dornach
Tr. A. H. Parker

Rudolf Steiner
You can read the literature of the war-mongers over recent decades and you will find that Kant is quoted again and again. In recent weeks many of these war-mongers have turned pacifist, since peace is now in the offing.
The Stresemann9 of today is the same Stresemann of six weeks ago. And today it is customary to quote Kant as the ideal of the pacifists. This is quite unreal. These people have no understanding of the source from which they claim to have derived their spiritual nourishment.
Professor of Jurisprudence and Political Economy. President U.S.A. 1912–20. Author of the ‘Fourteen Points’ as basis for peace 1918. Idea of a ‘League of Nations’ stemmed from him; also of a world government to prevent future wars.
174a. Central Europe Between East and West: Twelfth Lecture 04 May 1918, Munich

Rudolf Steiner
164. The Value of Thinking for Satisfying our Quest for Knowledge: The Relationship Between Spiritual Science and Natural Science II 27 Sep 1915, Dornach

Rudolf Steiner
184. The Cosmic Prehistoric Ages of Mankind: The Threefoldness of Space and the Unity of Time 20 Sep 1918, Dornach
Tr. Mabel Cotterell

Rudolf Steiner
Three dimensions standing at right angles to one another, or even all that geometry has to say about space,—how frightfully abstract, how prosaic and poverty-stricken, so poverty-stricken that the whole of space—with time as well—has become for Kant subjective shadow, merely a form of conceiving sense-phenomena. This abstraction, space, of which modern man knows little more than that it has length, breadth and height, this abstraction, space, was a very different conception in the far past, of which, however, something still exists today for especially sensitive people—though indeed it is only a trace.
1. 15th September 1918
108. The Answers to Questions About the World and Life Provided by Anthroposophy: Formal Logic II 28 Oct 1908, Berlin

Rudolf Steiner
167. Things in Past and Present in the Spirit of Man: Fragments from the Jewish Haggada 23 May 1916, Berlin
Tr. E. H. Goddard

Rudolf Steiner
175. Building Stones for an Understanding of the Mystery of Golgotha: Lecture IX 01 May 1917, Berlin
Tr. A. H. Parker

Rudolf Steiner
This self-awareness of reason, the consciousness of its boundaries, of the limitations of its own power when bereft of the divine afflatus, began with Kant. He recognized that reason of itself cannot achieve that which by its very nature it is constrained to will; it cannot achieve the goal it has set itself. He called a halt to reason at the very moment where it promised to be fruitful. Kant set boundaries to reason, but his disciples extended these boundaries and each went his own way. Ultimately godless reason had no other choice but to abdicate.
Max Scheler (1874–1928). Professor of Philosophy at Cologne, 1920–21. His writings have a strong theistic flavour and he was a subtle advocate of Catholicism. Note 7.

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