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The Rudolf Steiner Archive

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Search results 71 through 80 of 229

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63. Spiritual Science as and Essential in Life 23 Apr 1914, Berlin

Rudolf Steiner
Those persons who still build up such materialistic atomistic world edifice who are still, so to speak, at its origin are still active with theirsouls. Haeckel (Ernst H., 1834-1919, German naturalist) himself, Ostwald (Wilhelm O., 1854-1932, chemist, philosopher), his next pupils and others, they are still involved actively; they can still develop inner forces, and one could still compare that what they work with their science internally with that what spiritual science attains appealing to the inner soul forces.
Suppose that a quite clever human being says, a spiritual researcher comes here and talks about all kinds of wrong stuff that Kant disproved for a long time, because Kant proved that the faculty of the human being is not sufficient to penetrate into the spiritual world. If this spiritual researcher had studied Kant, he would soon be quiet about that. It is not quite wrong what the clever man says. It can be quite right.
181. A Sound Outlook for Today and a Genuine Hope for the Future: The Being and Evolution of Man 23 Jul 1918, Berlin
Tr. Unknown

Rudolf Steiner
If we thus divide the unity in human nature, criticising it from two sides, we become followers of Kant. What I am now saying goes into the very depths of present-day human thought. Man of this age is little fitted to comprehend himself as a complete being in the word.
The attempts made by Cartesianism in the seventeenth century, and by the philosnphy of Kant and Hegel in the nineteenth, exhort us to prudence. A school of ideas which would replace Aristotelianism would have to arise, just as that did, From fulness of knowledge and contemporary consciousness.”
But the author of the review concludes his considerations thus: “I myself reject this Spiritual Science and abide by Kant; but after all, the sermons contain so much that is good, and Theosophy is for the moment agitating theology in so significant a way, (cf. for example, Rittlemeyer's writings in the Christliche Welt), that I believe I do many theologians and laity a service by drawing attention emphatically to these addresses.”
177. The Fall of the Spirits of Darkness: The Battle between Michael and ‘The Dragon’ 14 Oct 1917, Dornach
Tr. Anna R. Meuss

Rudolf Steiner
Scientists use these as a basis for their views as to what the earth looked like thousands and millions of years ago, arriving, for instance, at the nebular hypothesis of Kant and Laplace.3 They also develop ideas as to the future evolution of the earth, and from the physical point of view these are quite correct.
It is thirty-four years from 1845 to 1879, and if we move on thirty-four years after 1879 we come to the mirroring event: You get 1913, the year preceding 1914. You see, the developments which started in the physical world in 1913 are the mirror-image of the prime reasons for the spiritual battle.
3. Immanuel Kant (1724–1804), German philosopher, wrote an essay on Newtonian cosmology in 1755 in which he anticipated the nebular hypothesis of Simon Pierre Laplace (1749–1827).
152. The Path of the Christ through the Centuries 14 Oct 1913, Copenhagen
Tr. Dorothy S. Osmond

Rudolf Steiner
Something very strange has happened—and the fact that we commented upon it caused great offence. Immanuel Kant, the philosopher, lived in the eighteenth century. What happened to him was that he confused the particular nature of the human soul since the fifteenth century with the nature of the human soul in general.
What he ought to have said was that this had been impossible only since the beginning of the fifteenth century. But as Lucifer had Kant firmly by the collar and had made him an arrogant individual, he believed that what he said applied to the whole human race!
See, The Fifth Gospel. Seven lectures given in Oslo and Cologne in 1913. (Rudolf Steiner Press.)2. See also The True Nature of the Second Coming.
130. Esoteric Christianity and the Guiding Spirits of Humanity: The Significance of the Year 1250 29 Jan 1911, Cologne

Rudolf Steiner
65. From Central European Intellectual Life: How Are the Eternal Powers of the Human Soul Investigated? 11 Feb 1916, Berlin

Rudolf Steiner
58. Metamorphoses of the Soul: Paths of Experience I: Asceticism and Illness 11 Nov 1909, Berlin
Tr. Charles Davy, Christoph von Arnim

Rudolf Steiner
67. The Eternal human Soul: Goethe as Father of Spiritual Research 21 Feb 1918, Berlin

Rudolf Steiner
Then the anatomist Bardeleben (Karl von B., 1849-1919) revised this part of Goethe's scientific writings. Then Goethe applied the same way of thinking to the plant realm.
Goethe wanted to go over everywhere from the mere thinking to the inner spiritual views, to the beholding consciousness as I have called it in my book The Riddle of Man. Hence, Goethe is dissatisfied because Kant said that the human being cannot approach the so-called “things in themselves” or generally the secret of existence, and that Kant called it an “adventure of reason” if the human being wants to ascend from the usual faculty of judgement up to the “beholding faculty of judgement.” Goethe said, if one accepts that the human being can ascend by virtue and immortality—the so-called postulates of practical reason with Kant—to a higher region, why one should not stand the “adventure of reason” courageously while beholding nature?
162. The Tree of Life and the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil: Harmonizing Thinking, Feeling and Willing 01 Aug 1915, Dornach
Tr. Unknown

Rudolf Steiner
69e. The Humanities and the Future of Humanity: Spiritual Science and the Spiritual World: Outlook on the Goals of Our Time 03 Jan 1914, Leipzig

Rudolf Steiner

Results 71 through 80 of 229

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