Donate books to help fund our work. Learn more→

The Rudolf Steiner Archive

a project of Steiner Online Library, a public charity

Search results 31 through 40 of 5726

˂ 1 2 3 4 5 6 ... 573 ˃
261. How the Spiritual World Interpenetrates the Physical: How Does One Gain Understanding of the Spiritual World I 09 May 1914, Karlsruhe
Tr. Harry Collison

Rudolf Steiner
To form a proper judgment of all this, we must understand clearly that the moment we turn to the study of spiritual life, we immediately have to consider what is called human fellowship.
If with reference to anything that happens to us in the physical world we could but succeed in finding the spiritual causes of some stroke of fate or misfortune, we should look beyond it, and understand that what seems supremely sad may be understood at the fount of Cosmic Wisdom. We must emphasize this over and over again. It does not alter the fact that much suffering may come to us; but it does alter our attitude to it, we do not sink under it and shut ourselves egotistically in our sorrow, or withdraw from the world's life, which we certainly ought not to do.
261. How the Spiritual World Interpenetrates the Physical: How Does One Gain Understanding of the Spiritual World II 10 May 1914, Karlsruhe
Tr. Harry Collison

Rudolf Steiner
For this reason Christ came to earth. Greater and greater must our understanding of this Christ become. What we gather from our anthroposophical knowledge, what we try to understand about the evolution of the world and of humanity, about the higher worlds and the Hierarchies in those worlds, really brings us at the last to understand more and more the Christ-Impulse which is within us, but which may also remain hidden within us, as do many other things which we do not attempt to understand or to experience.
Anyone who, with a truly open mind, approaches the most daring teachings of Anthroposophy can understand and grasp them. Souls have not passed through their former incarnations in vain; they can find within their souls the inward spiritual language wherewith to understand what the spiritual investigators say.
We can quite understand that this is now only possible for the few, and can understand why. It is because spiritual scientific development is only at its beginning; it has not yet produced in souls the capacities and powers that can act freely.
68b. The Human Cycle Within The World Of Sense, Soul And Spirit: How Do We Understand Illness and Death? 21 Jan 1907, Norrköping

Rudolf Steiner
Hartmann says that man is so constituted that at a certain time in his life he loses his understanding of his environment, and a younger generation must follow that has this understanding. Man would be a stranger within the world if he were not taken away. — You see, again nothing substantial!
The Bible is a strange book of secrets, and those who think they understand it best usually penetrate its spirit the least. We shall gain a better insight into our subject and a better understanding of it if we first try to understand it entirely from the mind of its author and from the thinking of the people from whose circle the Apostle Paul grew, the ancient Hebrew scholars. In this context, “sin” means something quite different from what we call moral transgression today. And anyone who understands sin in the way that it is understood in today's church doctrine does not understand this word.
191. Social Understanding from a Spiritual-Scientific Perspective: First Lecture 03 Oct 1919, Dornach

Rudolf Steiner
But what is perhaps more urgently to be taken into account is that more and more people are also speaking out and saying that it is necessary to create an anthroposophical foundation for the personal understanding of the idea of threefolding. The idea of threefolding would be much better understood if an anthroposophical basis were created.
We have experienced historical novels, folk novels, folk novellas in which people who understood nothing about the people For example, Berthold Auerbach or similar authors – who understood nothing about the people – described the way the people were or are, and what came from this side was then accepted as an occupation, a cognitive occupation with the people.
For the anthroposophical understanding, namely the earlier so-called theosophical understanding, has always stopped at this question.
191. Social Understanding from a Spiritual-Scientific Perspective: Third Lecture 05 Oct 1919, Dornach

Rudolf Steiner
Natural science comprehends only that in which man is not present. One can never understand social forces and social activity in terms of natural science concepts. One can only understand social activity through the kind of light thinking that comes from the feeling that we have as world citizens.
And in our age, we live in a phase of human development in which we must properly understand precisely this fact. If you look at the newer natural science, you will find that it imparts to you all kinds of physical, actually only physical things.
It just so happened that I had this discussion with this Catholic theologian under the well-known Raphael painting, the so-called 'Disputa'. The conversation led me to try to exemplify something from the 'Disputa'.
191. Social Understanding from a Spiritual-Scientific Perspective: Eighth Lecture 18 Oct 1919, Dornach

Rudolf Steiner
As long as you entertain the belief that what is out there is an external thing and what is in there is an internal thing, you cannot come to what I always call: understanding spiritual-scientific facts through common sense; because spiritual-scientific facts can only be understood if you take an unbiased look at them.
But only if one can acquire such seen ideas, not those that can be “proven”, but such seen ideas, then one again gets the possibility to understand the spiritual-scientific achievements through common sense. Because what we want arises in a certain way from the most external.
But hidden in our outermost being is a spiritual element that underlies the inner being, which is not readily accessible to people. And what happens in there, the spiritual - of course not what happens physically, but what goes parallel to this physical as a spiritual - that is not a present moment.
191. Social Understanding from a Spiritual-Scientific Perspective: Ninth Lecture 19 Oct 1919, Dornach

Rudolf Steiner
It becomes understanding of karma. This means that we have now reached the epoch in the world-historical process of human development in which humanity must acquire social understanding; for this social understanding provides an understanding of karma for the next incarnation. But no human being can acquire social understanding other than by acquiring understanding for the spiritual. You see how things are connected. You see how social understanding depends on spiritual understanding, on a spiritual view of the world and a spiritual philosophy of life.
191. Social Understanding from a Spiritual-Scientific Perspective: Tenth Lecture 23 Oct 1919, Dornach

Rudolf Steiner
And basically, it is already the case today that we can only understand the after-death life in the right way if we look at the prenatal life. You see, there are secrets of life.
So our languages are obstacles to understanding the social. Therefore, humanity will only advance in its understanding of the social if it emancipates itself from mere linguistic understanding.
What is written here on this hill will only be properly understood if one says to oneself: There are many demands of humanity in the present time that should have an answer.
68b. The Circular Flow of Man's Life within the World Of Sense, Soul And Spirit: How to Understand Illness and Death 29 Oct 1906, Munich

Rudolf Steiner
Rudolf Steiner of Berlin gave three theosophical lectures at Café Luitpold. The first dealt with the topic: “How do we understand illness and death?” After a general introduction about the theosophical views of the human being, the relationship between the inner life and spiritual forces and the physical body, their gradual manifestation in the different age groups, the speaker explained how the saying is proved: nature has invented death in order to have much life.
36. Collected Essays from “Das Goetheanum” 1921–1925: Understanding People (Brentano and Nietzsche) 16 Jul 1922,

Rudolf Steiner
Here we shall not go into the relationship that Brentano, in his way, finds between Jesus and Nietzsche, but only into Brentano's absolute rejection of the whole of Nietzsche's way of thinking. As understandable as this rejection may be for someone who knows the natures of both personalities, it is just as significant as an expression of a significant phenomenon of our time: the lack of understanding in general with which people today can face each other, who draw their education from the culture of the time.
But anyone who looks at certain social facts of today's life with an open mind can see that an immense amount will depend on an understanding accommodation of the most diverse individual views for the progress of civilized humanity, especially in the near future.
Recognition of the spiritual world will bring understanding of the human being; doubt in the paths of knowledge into the spiritual breaks the bridges from soul to soul.

Results 31 through 40 of 5726

˂ 1 2 3 4 5 6 ... 573 ˃