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The Rudolf Steiner Archive

a project of Steiner Online Library, a public charity

Search results 1 through 10 of 5726

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29. Collected Essays on Drama 1889–1900: “Die Zeche”, “Ein Ehrenhandel”, “Under Blonde Beasts”, “Dreams of Love” 29 Jan 1898,
Tr. Automated

Rudolf Steiner
The poet has a feeling that people become impatient when you bring up a matter and do not tell them everything they need to know if they want to understand it. When the curtain comes down after each of Fulda's two one-act plays, we have the feeling that we know everything we can ask for if the thing we are seeing is to make sense to us in a satisfactory way.
4. The Philosophy of Spiritual Activity (1963): Thinking in the Service of Understanding the World
Tr. Rita Stebbing

Rudolf Steiner
In thinking we have a principle which exists by means of itself. From this principle let us attempt to understand the world. Thinking we can understand through itself. So the question is only whether we can also understand other things through it.
However, the philosopher is not concerned with the creation of the world, but with the understanding of it. Therefore he has to find the starting point, not for the creation, but for the understanding of the world.
There is no denying: Before anything else can be understood, thinking must be understood. To deny this is to fail to realize that man is not a first link in creation, but the last.
45. Anthroposophy, A Fragment (2024): The World that Underlies the Senses
Tr. Automated

Rudolf Steiner
One need only think of how eyes do not develop in beings that live in the dark; or how, in beings that have developed eyes under the influence of light, these eyes atrophy when their bearers exchange their stay in the light for one in the dark.
One must distinguish between a world as it is given to man through the senses and one that underlies it. Is it impossible to say anything about this latter world through mere reflection? We can say something if we consider the following.
45. Anthroposophy, A Fragment (2024): The World Underlying the Sense Organs
Tr. Automated

Rudolf Steiner
When a concept is perceived, the concepts acquired in the person's previous life prove to be what absorbs the new concept. A person proves to be understanding of a concept that approaches him to the extent that he has previously absorbed this or that concept. In the understanding of a concept, there is therefore an opening of the person to the outside and a sinking of what has been absorbed into the structure of the already existing concept organism.
Not the visual experience, but the inner nature of light that underlies the visual experience, arouses a warmth that lives in the organ-forming power of the visual sense in the same way that the substance lives in the interaction with the sense of taste in the taste experience.
45. Anthroposophy, A Fragment (2024): The World Underlying the Organs of Life
Tr. Automated

Rudolf Steiner
The life processes must, before they can be present, be prepared by the organ-forming forces of the life organs. The forces that underlie the life organs are even more remote from human consciousness than those that build the sense organs.
If we now consider the forces that form the sense organs, also as a reversal of movement impulses and desires, we have an idea of how the human astral body, as the shaper of the sense organisms, is taken from an imperceptibly imperceptible world. - This presupposes a world underlying the world of sense experiences, which has been called the 'astral world'. We then have to take everything that man experiences through the senses as immediate reality and assume an astral reality hidden within it. The first is called the physical world. The astral world underlies it. It has now been shown that the latter is based on yet another. The formative forces of the life organs and the predispositions for hearing, warmth, sight and taste are rooted in this.
55. The Origin of Suffering the Origin of Evil Illness and Death: What Do We Understand by Illness and Death 13 Dec 1906, Berlin
Tr. Mabel Cotterell, Violet E. Watkin

Rudolf Steiner
Whoever is not content with a merely superficial understanding of both Old and New Testament records but penetrates really to their spirit, knows that a quite definite method of thinking—one might call it that of innate philosophy—forms the undercurrent of these records. The undercurrent is something of this kind: All living creatures in the world are directed towards a determined goal.
These concepts will be brought to mankind by spiritual science. Today this may well speak to the understanding of many people, but when the understanding has fully accepted the matter it will bring about in man a deep, harmonious mood of soul which will then become the wisdom of life.
175. Building Stones for an Understanding of the Mystery of Golgotha: Lecture IV 12 Apr 1917, Berlin
Tr. A. H. Parker

Rudolf Steiner
—Goethe could not understand how that which was derived from reality, like a tune or a colour, could be described as an idea.
Whoever expresses the view I have expressed today will not meet with the slightest understanding from those who think along the lines of natural science. None the less it is imperative that such views should be understood in the future.
You will recall that He said: “a jot shall in no wise pass from the law”. But as they were originally understood those words no longer provide any impulse for the present epoch. We must really develop within ourselves the power, under the present circumstances, to offer our cloak to whomsoever has taken our coat.
175. Building Stones for an Understanding of the Mystery of Golgotha: Lecture V 14 Apr 1917, Berlin
Tr. A. H. Parker

Rudolf Steiner
The printed words must, of course, be there, but in order to understand Faust one must grasp the meaning behind them, one must not adhere to the superficial meaning.
If the prophecies of John the Baptist and Christ Jesus concerning the end of the world are rightly understood, there will be no need to interpret them literally in the sense that the world will end at a definite moment in time.
Consequently not only are we unable to arrive at a right understanding of a particular issue, but our whole life is coloured by such influences and tends to see things in these terms.
175. Building Stones for an Understanding of the Mystery of Golgotha: Lecture VI 17 Apr 1917, Berlin
Tr. A. H. Parker

Rudolf Steiner
There were some emperors. however, who despite their irregular initiation, understood little of these secrets; but there were others who understood so much that they were able to divine something of the power and effectiveness of the Christ Mystery.
And this contention of the Christians was prophetic. You will now understand more clearly why the Senators and the Roman Emperors were alarmed, for they naturally associated the decline that was prophesied with the external empire which they saw slowly crumble under the impact of Christianity.
This legend is still vitally alive and survives in many things and under manifold forms. Today many things which appear in their purely physical aspects conceal a deeper layer of meaning.
175. Building Stones for an Understanding of the Mystery of Golgotha: Lecture VII 19 Apr 1917, Berlin
Tr. A. H. Parker

Rudolf Steiner
He wished to find out whether he could further his objective with the help of the Persian Mysteries. In order to understand the problem that faced Julian we must ask: What was it that Augustine could not understand in Manichaeism?
That he was doomed to fail was a necessity of the time. And we shall not understand the reason for his failure if we belittle his great achievements, if we fail to see him as a titanic figure, fighting for a realistic understanding of the relations between man and the universe.
This is what our age must learn to understand. And especially in our own time many forces are still arrayed against any understanding of the creative spirit and are actively engaged in suppressing that knowledge.

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