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Rudolf Steiner Biography & Notes


Rudolf Steiner (February 27, 1861, Murakiraly, Hungary (today Donji Kraljevec, Medjimurje county, Croatia- March 30, 1925) was an Austrian philosopher, literary scholar, architect, playwright, educator, and social thinker, who is best known as the founder of anthroposophy and its practical applications, including Waldorf education, biodynamic agriculture, the Camphill movement for disabled adults and children, anthroposophical medicine, the new art of eurythmy and other new impulses in art, architecture, and others.

Steiner characterized history as essentially shaped by changes formed through a progressive development of human consciousness. The activity of individualised human thinking was seen as a relatively recent advance which led to the dramatic developments of the Renaissance and the Industrial Revolution. In his epistemological works, he advocated the Goethean view that thinking itself is a perceptive instrument for ideas, just as the eye is a perceptive instrument for light.

Steiner's father was a huntsman in the service of Count Hoyos in Geras, and later became a telegraph operator and stationmaster on the Southern Austrian Railway. When Rudolf was born, his father was stationed in Murakiraly in the Murakoz region, then part of Hungary. When he was two years old, the family moved into Burgenland, Austria, in the foothills of the eastern Alps.

Steiner displayed a keen and early interest in mathematics and philosophy. From 1879-1883 he attended the Technische Hochschule (Technical University) in Vienna, where he concentrated on mathematics, physics, and chemistry. In 1891, with his thesis Truth and Knowledge, he earned a doctorate in philosophy at the University of Rostock in Germany.

In 1888, Steiner was invited by Grand Duchess Sophie of Saxony to edit the complete edition of Goethe's scientific works in Weimar, where he worked until 1896. During this time he also collaborated in a complete edition of Arthur Schopenhauer's work.

He wrote his seminal philosophical work, Die Philosophie der Freiheit (The Philosophy of Freedom) in 1894, which advocated the possibility that humans can become spiritually free beings through the conscious activity of thinking.

In 1896, Friedrich Nietzsche's sister, Forster-Nietzsche, asked Steiner to set the Nietzsche archive in Naumburg in order. Her brother by that time was no longer compos mentis. Forster-Nietzsche introduced Steiner into the presence of the catatonic philosopher and Steiner, deeply moved, subsequently wrote the book Friedrich Nietzsche, Fighter for Freedom. This book may be of interest, but arguably is not in the category of Steiner's most important works. Students of philosophy in particular are likely to find much more substantial grist if they start with Steiner's Philosophy of Freedom and his doctoral thesis, Truth and Science (Wahrheit und Wissenschaft).

In 1897, Steiner moved to Berlin to edit the Magazin für Literatur.

A turning point came when, in the August 28, 1899 issue of this magazine, he published an article entitled "Goethe's Secret Revelation" on the esoteric nature of Goethe's fairy tale, The Green Snake and the Beautiful Lily. This article led to an invitation by the Count and Countess Brockdorff to speak to a gathering of theosophists on the subject of Nietzsche. Steiner continued speaking regularly to the members of the Theosophical Society, eventually becoming the head of its German section. It was also within this society that Steiner met Marie von Sievers, who would to become his second wife.

Beginning around this time, c. 1900, till his death in 1925, Steiner articulated an ongoing stream of "experiences of the spiritual world"- experiences he said had touched him from an early age on. Steiner sought to apply all his training in mathematics, science, and philosophy in order to produce rigorous, intersubjectively testable presentations of those experiences. He also sought to bring a consciousness of spiritual life and non-physical beings into many practical domains-medicine, education, science, architecture, special education, social reform, agriculture, drama, among others. Steiner held that non-physical beings were in everything, and that through freely chosen ethical disciplines and meditative training, anyone could develop the ability to experience such beings, and thus be strengthened for creative and loving work in the world.

Steiner sought to be phenomenological. Like Edmund Husserl and Jose Ortega y Gasset, but preceding them, Steiner was intimately familiar with the philosophical work of Franz Brentano and Wilhelm Dilthey, both of whom were central precursors of the phenomenological movement in European philosophy. Steiner was also deeply influenced by Goethe's phenomenological approach to science.

Unlike the theosophists, Steiner encouraged the development of artistic efforts within the Society- and this was poorly received. Steiner also strongly objected when the leaders of the Theosophical Society declared that Krishnamurti was the reincarnation of Christ (Krishnamurti himself later repudiated the attempt to make him into a reincarnated messiah, shocking the other Theosophical leaders). Steiner quickly denied Krishnamurti was Christ, and held that Christ's earthly incarnation was a unique event. Steiner held that what trained spiritual vision could discover about most of the rest of humanity-namely that the human being goes through a series of repeated earth lives-did not apply to Christ. These and other conflicts eventually led Steiner and most of the German branch of theosophists to separate from the main body of theosophists, and found the Anthroposophical Society in 1912.

The society remained active, and after years of extensive touring and lecturing, the organization needed a home for their activities. In 1913, construction began on the first Goetheanum building, in Dornach, Switzerland, designed by Steiner himself. It was built entirely by the work of volunteers who offered their skills of craftsmanship and trade. Once World War I started in 1914, the Goetheanum volunteers could hear the sound of cannon fire beyond the Swiss border, but despite the war, people from all over Europe worked peaceably side by side on the building's construction. By 1919, the world premiere of a complete production of Goethe's Faust had been produced there- the same year as the founding of the first Waldorf school in Stuttgart.

The Goetheanum developed as a cultural centre which included activities in mathematics, medicine, biodynamic agriculture, and schools of painting, sculpture, speech and drama, and eurythmy, a new movement art form Steiner developed in conjunction with Marie Steiner. On New Year's Eve, 1922, the first Goetheanum building was burned down by arsonists. Unwavering, Steiner began work on a second Goetheanum building- still under construction when he died in 1925.

During the Christmas conference in 1923, he founded the School of Spiritual Science. At this time, Steiner said that, while the foundation stone for the first Goetheanum had been laid in the earth, he wished to lay the new foundation stone in the hearts of those gathered. The distinction makes clear that the first Goetheanum was a building, a "physical" architecture embodying the spirit, hence it was known as the house of the word, while the new impulse consists of the spiritual architecture of those human beings active in it. This School of Spiritual Science has become increasingly active since Steiner's day, and is structured like a university. As such, it has various sections or faculties. Within the society, it is seen as a centre of activity in education, agriculture, art, natural science, medicine, literature, philosophy, and economics.

Waldorf education

As a young man, Steiner already supported the independence of educational institutions from governmental control. In 1907, he wrote a long essay, titled Education in the Light of Spiritual Science, in which he described the major phases of child development and suggested that these would be the basis of a healthy approach to education.

In 1919, Emil Molt, on behalf of workers of the Waldorf-Astoria cigarette factory in Stuttgart, invited him to lecture on the topic of education. This, and subsequent lectures, formed the basis for the Waldorf Education movement, known in some countries as Steiner Education- including, perhaps, the largest independent schooling system in the world. As of 2004, there are some 870 schools worldwide, including about 170 in the United States, Canada, and Mexico.

Somewhat independently of the Waldorf schools, a separate school for Spiritual Science was founded at the Goetheanum during Christmas, 1923. Within the Anthroposophical Society, it is seen as a centre of research in education, agriculture, art, natural science, medicine, and economics. This school has become increasingly active since Steiner's day.

Activism and the threefold nature of social life

For a period after World War I, Steiner was extremely active and well-known in Germany in part because in many places he gave lectures on social questions. A petition expressing his basic social ideas (signed by Herman Hesse, among others) was very widely circulated. His main book on social questions, Die Kernpunkte der Sozialen Frage (available in English today as Toward Social Renewal) sold tens of thousands of copies. Today around the world there are a number of innovative banks, companies, charitable institutions, and schools for developing new cooperative forms of business, all working partly out of Steiner's social ideas. One example is The Rudolf Steiner Foundation (RSF), incorporated in 1984, and as of 2004 with estmated assets of $70 million. RSF provides "charitable innovative financial services". According to the independent organizations Co-op America and the Social Investment Forum Foundation, RSF is "one of the top 10 best organizations exemplifying the building of economic opportunity and hope for individuals through community investing."

Outlook on social history

In Steiner's various writings and lectures he held that there were three main spheres of power comprising human society: the cultural, the economic, and the political. In ancient times, those who had political power were also generally those with the greatest cultural/religious power and the greatest economic power. Culture, state, and economy were fused (for example in ancient Egypt). With the emergence of classical Greece and Rome, the three spheres began to become more autonomous. This autonomy went on increasing over the centuries, and with the slow rise of egalitarianism and individualism, the failure to adequately separate economics, politics, and culture was felt increasingly as a source of injustice.

The three kinds of social separations Steiner wanted strengthened

1) Increased separation between the State and cultural life

Examples: The state should not be able to control culture; i.e., how people think, learn, or worship. A particular religion or ideology should not control the levers of the State. Steiner held that pluralism and freedom were the ideal for education and cultural life.

2) Increased separation between the economy and cultural life

Examples: The fact that churches, temples and mosques do not make the ability to enter and participate dependent on the ability to pay, and that libraries and museums are open to all free of charge, is in tune with Steiner's notion of a separation between cultural and economic life. In a similar spirit, Steiner held that all families, not just rich ones, should have freedom of choice in education and access to independent, non-government schools for their children. Other examples: A corporation should not be able to control the cultural sphere by using economic power to bribe schools into accepting 'educational' programs larded with advertising, or by secretly paying scientists to produce research results favorable to the business's economic interests.

3) Increased separation between the State and the economy (associative economics)

Examples: A rich man should be prevented from buying politicians and laws. A politician shouldn't be able to parlay his political position into riches earned by doing favors for businessmen. Slavery is unjust, because it takes something political, a person's inalienable rights, and absorbs them into the economic process of buying and selling. Steiner also advocated a more humanly oriented form of capital economy precisely because unfettered capital tends to absorb the State and human rights into the economic process and transform them into mere commodities.

Education's relation to the state and the economy

Steiner's view of education's social position calls for special comment. For Steiner, separation of the cultural sphere from the political and economic spheres meant education should be available to all children regardless of the ability of families to pay for it and, on the elementary and secondary level, should be provided for by private and|or state scholarships that a family could direct to the school of its choice. Steiner was a supporter of educational freedom, but was flexible, and understood that a few legal restrictions on schools (such as health and safety laws), provided they were kept to an absolute minimum, would be necessary and justified.

"Liberty, Equality, Fraternity"

"Liberty, Equality, Fraternity" and three examples of macrosocial imbalance:

1. Theocracy,
2. Communism/state socialism,
3. Conventional capitalism

Steiner held that the French Revolution's slogan, "Liberty, Equality, Fraternity," expressed in an unconscious way the distinct needs of the three social spheres at the present time: liberty in cultural life, equality in a democratic political life, and (uncoerced) fraternity/sorority in economic life. According to Steiner, these values, each one applied to its proper social realm, would tend to keep the cultural, economic and political realms from merging unjustly, and allow these realms and their respective values to check, balance and correct one another. The result would be a society-wide separation of powers. Steiner argued that increased autonomy for the three spheres would not eliminate their mutual influence, but would cause that influence to be exerted in a more healthy and legitimate manner, because the increased separation would prevent any one of the three spheres from dominating. In the past, according to Steiner, lack of autonomy had tended to make each sphere merge in a servile or domineering way with the others.

For example, under theocracy, the cultural sphere (in the form of a religious impulse) fuses with and dominates the economic and political spheres. Under communism and state socialism, the political sphere fuses with and dominates the other two spheres. And under the typical sort of capitalist conditions, the economic sphere tends to dominate the other two spheres. Steiner points toward social conditions where domination by any one sphere is increasingly reduced, so that theocracy, communism, and the standard kind of capitalism might all be gradually transcended.

For Steiner, threefolding was not a social recipe or blueprint. It could not be "implemented" like some utopian program in a day, a decade, or even a century. It was a complex open process that began thousands of years ago and that he thought was likely to continue for thousands more.

Apart from his central book on social questions, Toward Social Renewal, there are at least two others available in English: World Economy (14 lectures from 1922) and The Social Future (revised edition 1972).

Architecture, eurythmy and free spiritual culture

Steiner developed an organic style of architecture for the design and construction of some seventeen buildings. The most significant of these are the first and second Goetheanums. These two structures, both built in Dornach, Switzerland (the first beginning in 1913), were intended to house a University for Spiritual Science.

The first Goetheanum was burned down by arsonists on New Year's eve 1922. Several surrounding buildings he designed survived the blaze (the Glasshaus, Haus Duldeck, the Transformerhaus, etc.).

Construction of the second Goetheanum building began on the same site shortly before he died in 1925. He conceived it as an organic extension and metamorphosis of the first building, inspiring and pre-dating architects such as Le Corbusier, and Eero Saarinen's Kennedy Airport (1962).

Within the Society, Steiner met his wife Marie von Sievers, with whom he developed a new artform (that also has therapeutic uses) known as Eurythmy (German: "Eurythmie")- sometimes referred to as "visible speech and visible song". Eurythmy is a work in progress; Steiner could only introduce foundational principles that continue to be developed today. The underlying idea is that there are archetypal movements or gestures that correspond to every aspect of speech- the sounds, or phonemes, the rhythms, the grammatical function, and so on- to every soul quality- laughing, despair, intimacy, etc.- and to every aspect of music - tones, intervals, rhythms, harmonies, etc.

Eurythmy performances are still held at the Goetheanum in Dornach, and at various theatres throughout the world. There are now a number of Eurythmy schools where a full four-year training is given.

As a playwright, Steiner wrote four "Mystery Dramas" between 1909 and 1913, including "The Portal of Initiation" and "The Soul's Awakening". They are still performed today.

As a sculptor, his primary work was The Representative of Humanity (1922). This enormous work carved in wood is still on display at the Goetheanum in Dornach.


Weleda, biodynamic farming, Camphill

A philosophic basis rooted in a practical sensibility yielded continuations to his work. In 1921, pharmacists and physicians gathered under Steiner's guidance to create a pharmaceutical company called Weleda, which now distributes natural medical products worldwide.

In 1924, a series of lectures to a group of farmers concerned about the destructive trend of "scientific farming" originated the practice of biodynamic agriculture, which is now practiced throughout much of Europe, North America, and Australasia. Biodynamic farming is not merely organic- in addition it works with the movement patterns of the stars and the moon, and with the non-physical beings in nature, and seeks to do testable research on how agriculture can produce the best quality food.

In 1939, based on a series of lectures Steiner gave in the 1920s on special education, physician Karl Konig founded the Camphill Movement in Scotland as a place to provide treatment for children with severe learning disabilities. There are currently more than a dozen Camphill Villages and eight Colleges providing a home for more than 1000 residents.

A few aspects of Steiner's way of thinking

According to Steiner, a real spiritual world exists out of which the material one gradually condensed, so to speak, and evolved. The spiritual world, Steiner held, can in the right circumstances be researched through direct experience, by persons practicing rigorous forms of ethical and cognitive self-discipline. Steiner described many exercises he said were suited to strengthening such self-discipline so that a practitioner's consciousness could enter the 'spiritual world'. Details about the spiritual world, he said, could on such a basis be discovered and reported, not infallibly, but with approximate accuracy.

Yet Steiner was periodically at pains to discourage taking his spiritual research reports as either accurate or inaccurate 'information' - an interpretation he considered relatively superficial. Steiner preferred for readers to enter into the process of his thinking and not cling too rigidly to the fixed results, i.e. the thoughts that crystallized out of that process. He often said there was a hidden life in thinking and advised people to attend more to the spirit or 'drift' of his words than to the letter. Otherwise readers would fall into an excessive literalism and turn his work into a doctrine, a result he said he wanted to avoid.

Those of Steiner's students alert to this distinction (e.g. Georg Khulewind, author of From Normal to Healthy) are wont to affirm Steiner's claim that remaining actively within the process, as opposed to the results of Steiner's thinking, can have the effect of awakening one gradually into forms of superconscious spiritual awareness. Steiner claims to offer a gradual experiential path from ordinary conceptual thinking into forms of thinking perceptive of living spiritual beings and mobile realities in the spiritual world. Perhaps because the spiritual path Steiner offers claims to be based, in many respects, on the gradual transformation of thinking into a wholly new activity of the whole person - an activity of thought, feeling and will seamlessly integrated into a form of spiritual awareness that eventually leaves the body and peregrinates through spiritual worlds - Steiner's teaching has attracted a number of trained scientists, physicians, and scholars in various fields.

Steiner periodically affirmed that gaining access to the unusual forms of consciousness supposedly embodied in some of his works was not a matter of believing in or having faith in whatever he chose to say about spiritual beings. It was rather that some of the thinking in some of those works, if adequately penetrated with one's own active questioning, thinking and feeling, would eventually reveal itself as a kind of spiritual music full of aesthetic tensions and relaxations and various kinds of spiritual dynamism, and this spiritual dynamism, full of complex metamorphoses of form and color, would itself eventually be perceived as the speaking and singing of real, living spiritual beings and of a real spiritual world. And this would still be only a hint of what a student could experience who learned to enter the spiritual world fully and carry out further 'research.'

Steiner also occasionally averred that this consciousness of the spirit was not so much related to the content of his statements, where he tells readers the characteristics of this or that spiritual being (or something similar) that he says he has perceived. It was not so much such content that was effective, he said, but rather something a bit deeper, within the content, that he indicated would lead one to begin to enter higher states of awareness and 'hear' or 'see' spiritual beings as one thought through his 'research reports'. The mere content was so to speak thrown up to the surface of Steiner's thinking by the style, or more precisely, by the movement and metamorphic-metaphoric process of his thinking, and it was this underlying formative process (or portions of it in some of his lectures and books), he said, that could gradually lead to a sort of superconsciousness awareness of living in spiritual worlds at least as real and persuasive as the physical world. Whereas mere content could be memorized like recipes, and then parroted mindlessly, formative process could only be experienced if one actively recreated it from within.

Some of Steiner's more philosophically inclined students argue that an obstacle to 'getting' Steiner, in the just mentioned sense, is that reading for people today is rarely a process where the dynamic birth of the conceptual out of a pre-conceptual background is felt and recreated as we read each word. When reading is creative today, that creativity tends to be confined within conceptual life, and only rarely extends to the threshold between conceptual and pre-conceptual life, the threshold where not just this or that concept, but conceptuality itself, can be experienced in the process of its creative origination, and seen at its core as fundamentally an imaginative birthing activity. Lacking awareness of this particular threshold, we also lack consciousness of the elastic poetic dynamism at the very basis not only of our most 'literal' ideas and scientific terminologies, but at the basis of the world process itself.

Again, some philosophical students of Steiner claim that one way of remaining within the process (as opposed to the results) of Steiner's thinking, would be to gradually learn through his works how to live consciously at the threshold where conceptuality comes into being. There one would supposedly no longer be confined to observing things that already are - one would begin to see realities emerging into being, and that would mean seeing to some extent into 'non-being' itself, and discovering there more than mere nothingness: a hidden life of creative non-material beings and processes in a non-material world.

Breadth of Activity

Rudolf Steiner is certainly remarkable for the breadth of his achievements. The school movement he founded has become as successful as those of Maria Montessori. Biodynamic agriculture is one of the two pillars of the modern organic farming movement, and is easily as important today as the ideas of Sir Albert Howard (recognized as the other founder of modern organic agriculture). Anthroposophic medicine has achieved as broad a range of medicinal remedies as Hahnemann's homeopathy; in addition, a broad range of supportive therapies- artistic and biographical- have arisen out of Steiner's work. The homes for the handicapped based on his work are as successful as those of L'Arche. His paintings and drawings have been exhibited in famous museums and galleries, and his pupils include Joseph Beuys and other significant modern artists. His two Goetheanum buildings are generally accepted to be amongst the masterpieces of organic architecture, and other anthroposophical architects have contributed thousands of innovative buildings to the modern scene. One of the first institutions to practice social banking was an anthroposophical bank. There are probably as many stage groups practicing his movement art, eurythmy, as those practicing Martha Graham's contemporary dance style. This list could be extended considerably.

The above comparisons are there to illustrate the point that anyone who had the success in any one of these fields that Steiner achieved would be of historical note. Since the Renaissance, there has probably been no one else who managed to found significant and successful movements in so many different fields. This is not to judge these movements themselves, merely to note the unusual breadth of his work.

Steiner's literary estate is correspondingly broad. Steiner's writings are published in about forty volumes, including essays, plays ('mystery dramas'), verse and an autobiography. His collected lectures make up another approximately 300 volumes, and nearly every imaginable theme is covered somewhere here. (Steiner's complete works in German are searchable at the Rudolf Steiner Archive).

In addition to these written works and lectures, Steiner's drawings are separately published in a whole series of volumes. Many publications have covered his architectural legacy and his sculptural work.


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Ahrimanic Deception by Rudolf Steiner ( 1985)

Angiogenesis Key Principles-Science-Technology-Medicine by Rudolf Steiner, Paul B. Weisz ( 1992)

Anthroposophy and the Inner Life by Rudolf Steiner ( 1983)

Apocalypse of St. John by Rudolf Steiner ( 1985)

Aspects of Human Evolution by Rudolf Steiner ( 1987)

Background to the Gospel of St. Mark Background to the Gospel of St. Mark 13 Lectures Given in Berlin, Munich, Hanover and Coblenz, Between 17th October, 1910 and 10th June, 1911 by Rudolf Steiner ( 1986)

The Being of Man and His Future Evolution by Rudolf Steiner ( 1981)

Between Death and Rebirth Ten Lectures Given in Berlin Between 5th November 1912 and 1st April 1913 by Rudolf Steiner ( 1975)

Boundaries of Natural Sciences Boundaries of Natural Sciences by Rudolf Steiner ( 1987)

Calendar of the Soul Calendar of the Soul by Rudolf Steiner ( 1994)

Chance, Providence, and Necessity Chance, Providence, and Necessity Eight Lectures Held in Dornach Between August 23 and September 6, 1915 by Rudolf Steiner ( 1988)

The Child's Changing Consciousness and Waldorf Education by Rudolf Steiner ( 1988)

Christ and the Human Soul by Rudolf Steiner ( 1984)

Christ and the Spiritual World The Search for the Holy Grail by Rudolf Steiner ( 1983)

The Christmas Conference for the Foundation of the General Anthroposophical Society 1923-1924 by Rudolf Steiner ( 1987)

The Christ Impulse and the Development of the Ego-Consciousness by Rudolf Steiner ( 1991)

Christianity in Human Evolution by Rudolf Steiner ( 1979)

The Christmas Festival in the Changing Course of Time by Rudolf Steiner ( 1988)

Correspondence and Documents 1901-1925 by Rudolf Steiner ( 1988)

Cosmic Memory Atlantis and Lemuria by Rudolf Steiner ( 1981)

Discusses the period of time between the creation of the Earth and the beginning of recorded history, focusing on the peoples of Lemuria and Atlantis.
Course of My Life by Rudolf Steiner ( 1986)

Curative Eurythmy by Rudolf Steiner ( 1984)

Cosmic and Human Metamorphoses by Rudolf Steiner ( 1989)

Cycle of the Year by Rudolf Steiner, Margaret Dawson ( 1984)

Deeper Insights in Education The Waldorf Approach by Rudolf Steiner ( 1983)

Deeper Secrets in Human History in the Light of the Gospel of St. Matthew by Rudolf Steiner ( 1985)

Destinies of Individuals and of Nations by Rudolf Steiner ( 1990)

Discussion With Teachers by Rudolf Steiner ( 1986)

The Easter Festival in the Evolution of the Mysteries Four Lectures Given in Dornach; April 19-22, 1924 by Rudolf Steiner ( 1988)

Education As a Social Problem Six Lectures, Dornach, August 9-17, 1919 by Rudolf Steiner ( 1984)

Egyptian Myths and Mysteries Egyptian Myths and Mysteries by Rudolf Steiner ( 1987)

Steiner reveals here the deep spiritual connection of our modern epoch with Egypt and why it is important to study its civilization with its profound wisdom, its extraordinary knowledge of cosmic laws, and its myths, which are meaningful for us now. He goes into the experiences of the Egyptian initiations, facts of occult anatomy and physiology, the stages of evolution of the human form, and more, culminating with a lecture on Christ as the conqueror of matter.
Building Stones for an Understanding of the Mystery of Golgotha by Rudolf Steiner ( 1972)

Encyclopedia of American Education Encyclopedia of American Education by Rudolf Steiner, Harlow G. Unger ( 1996)

Brief entries cover important people, institutions, events, concepts, and teaching methods in American education.
Esoteric Development Selected Lectures and Writings from the Work of Rudolf Steiner. by Rudolf Steiner ( 1982)

Etherisation of the Blood The Entry of the Etherica Christ into the Evolution of the Earth by Rudolf Steiner, Arnold Freeman ( 1985)

Evolution in the Aspect of Realities A Course of Six Lectures Given at Berlin, Germany in November 1911 by Rudolf Steiner, Bernard J. Garber ( 1989)

Esoteric Christianity and the Mission of Christian Rosenkreutz by Rudolf Steiner ( 1984)

Earthly Death and Cosmic Life by Rudolf Steiner ( 1989)

The Evolution of the Earth and Man and Influence of the Stars 14 Lectures to the Workmen by Rudolf Steiner ( 1987)

The Four Temperaments Lecture Given in Berlin on March 4, 1909 by Rudolf Steiner ( 1987)

From Jesus to Christ by Rudolf Steiner ( 1973)

Fundamentals of Therapy An Extension of the Art of Healing Through Spiritual Knowledge by Rudolf Steiner ( 1983)

The Gospel of Saint John in Relation to the Other Gospels by Rudolf Steiner ( 1982)

The Gospel of Saint Mark by Rudolf Steiner ( 1990)

Gospel of St. Mark A Cycle of Ten Lectures by Rudolf Steiner ( 1986)

Gospel of st John by Rudolf Steiner ( 1984)

Steiner here lays the foundation for a new Christology out of his insights into the Gospel of St. John. He says it is not a book of instruction but a force that can become active within our souls. As Marie Steiner says in her introduction, "With this book we penetrate into the innermost structure of Rudolf Steiner's activities. For all his endeavors had this one goal -- to pave for the world the way to Christ".
Goethes Faust by Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe, Rudolf Steiner, Heinrich O. Proskauer, Karl Julius Schroer ( 1982)

Jarrell worked on this translation, expressed in several meters and blank verse, for the seven years preceding his death in 1965. Here, illustrations by the Czech artist Peter Sis accompany the text.
The Forming of Destiny and Life After Death by Rudolf Steiner ( 1989)

Health and Illness by Rudolf Steiner ( 1983)

Creative Speech The Nature of Speech Formation by Rudolf Steiner ( 1978)

Health and Illness Lectures to the Workmen by Rudolf Steiner ( 1983)

How Can Mankind Find the Christ Again? by Rudolf Steiner ( 1984)

The Human Soul in Relation to World Evolution Nine Lectures Delivered in Dornach Between April 29 and June 17 of 1922 by Rudolf Steiner ( 1985)

Foundations of Esotericism Notes of an Esoteric Course in the Form of Thirty-One Lectures Held in Berlin from 26th, Sept to Nove 5, 1095 by Rudolf Steiner ( 1983)

Karma of Materialism by Rudolf Steiner, Barfield Owen ( 1986)

Karmic Relationships Esoteric Studies, Vol. 7 by Rudolf Steiner ( 1973)

Karmic Relationships Esoteric Studies by Rudolf Steiner ( 1975)

Karmic Relationships Esoteric Studies, Volume 8 by Rudolf Steiner ( 1975)

Karmic Relationships Esoteric Studies Vol 2 by Rudolf Steiner, C. Davy, M. Cotterell ( 1974)

Genesis Secrets of the Bible Story of Creation by Rudolf Steiner ( 1982)

An Introduction to Eurythmy Talks Given Before Sixteen Eurythmy Performances by Rudolf Steiner ( 1983)

Karmic Relationships Esoteric Studies Vol 1 by Rudolf Steiner, C. Davy, M. Cotterell, Rev ( 1981)

Karmic Relationships, Vol. 4 Karmic Relationships, Vol. 4 by Rudolf Steiner ( 1983)

Knowledge of Higher Worlds and Its Attainment Knowledge of Higher Worlds and Its Attainment by Rudolf Steiner ( 1997)

Knowledge of the Higher World Knowledge of the Higher World by Rudolf Steiner ( 1983)

Life, Nature and Cultivation of Anthrosophy by Rudolf Steiner ( 1983)

The Fifth Gospel by Rudolf Steiner ( 1985)

Learning to See into the Spiritual World Lectures to the Workmen at the Goetheanum, June 28-July 18, 1923 by Rudolf Steiner ( 2009)

What is the relationship between seeing the secrets of the universe and one's understanding of life? How far must one go before one finds higher worlds on the path of natural science? What connection do plants have with the human being and the human body? To answer these questions, Steiner covers a wide range of topics including the development of independent thinking and the ability to think backward; the "physiology" of dreams as well as living into nature and the spiritual aspect of different foods.
Man As a Picture of the Living Spirit by Rudolf Steiner ( 1972)

Man in the Past, the Present and the Future by Rudolf Steiner ( 1982)

Eurythmy As Visible Speech by Rudolf Steiner ( 1984)

Manifestations of Karma by Rudolf Steiner ( 1976)

Materialism and the Task of Anthroposophy Seventeen Lectures Given in Dornach Between April 2 and June 5, 1921 by Rudolf Steiner ( 1987)

Metamorphoses of the Soul Paths of Experience by Rudolf Steiner ( 1983)

Metamorphoses of the Soul by Rudolf Steiner, C. Davy ( 1983)

Michaelmas and the Soul Forces of Man by Rudolf Steiner ( 1982)

Modern Art of Education Modern Art of Education by Rudolf Steiner ( 2004)

Necessity and Freedom Five Lectures Given in Berlin Between January 25 and February 8, 1916 by Rudolf Steiner ( 1988)

Nutrition and Health Two Lectures to Workmen by Rudolf Steiner ( 1987)

Occult Reading and Occult Hearing by Rudolf Steiner ( 1976)

The Inner Nature of Music and the Experience of Tone Selected Lectures from the Work of Rudolf Steiner by Rudolf Steiner ( 1983)

The Constitution of the School of Spiritual Science by Rudolf Steiner ( 1980)

Occult Science and Occult Development Occult Science and Occult Development Christ at the Time of the Mystery of Golgotha and Christ in the Twentieth Century by Rudolf Steiner ( 1983)

The Origins of Natural Science Nine Lectures Delivered in Dornach, December 24 to 28, 1922, and January 1 to 6, 1923 by Rudolf Steiner, Norman MacBeth ( 1985)

An Outline of Occult Science by Rudolf Steiner ( 2007)

The Lords Prayer An Esoteric Study by Rudolf Steiner ( 1977)

The Occult Movement in the Nineteenth Century and Its Relation to Modern Culture Ten Lectures Given in Dornach, 10th to 25th October, 1915 by Rudolf Steiner ( 1973)

The Philosophy of Spiritual Activity Basic Features of a Modern World View Results of Soul Observation by the Scientific Method by Rudolf Steiner ( 1986)

Practical Advice to Teachers Fourteen Lectures Given at the Foundation of the Waldorf School, Stuttgart, from 21 August to 5 September 1919 by Rudolf Steiner ( 1988)

The Philosophy of Freedom A Philosophy of Spiritual Activity by Rudolf Steiner ( 1989)

On the Life of the Soul by Rudolf Steiner ( 1985)

Gospel of Saint Matthew by Rudolf Steiner ( 1985)

How Can Mankind Find the Christ Again? The Threefold Shadow-Existence of Our Time and the New Light of Christ Eight Lectures Delivered in Dornach by Rudolf Steiner ( 1984)

The Philosophy of Spiritual Activity Basic Features of a Modern World View Results of Soul Observation Arrived at by the Scientific Method by Rudolf Steiner ( 1986)

Practical Advice to Teachers Practical Advice to Teachers by Rudolf Steiner ( 2000)

Knowledge of Higher Worlds Knowledge of Higher Worlds Rudolf Steiner's Blackboard Drawings by Rudolf Steiner, Lawrence Rinder, Walter Kugler, Berkeley Art Museum, Pacific Film Archive ( 1998)

Prayers for Mothers and Children by Rudolf Steiner ( 1983)

The Principle of Spiritual Economy in Connection With Questions of Reincarnation An Aspect of the Spiritual Guidance of Man by Rudolf Steiner ( 1986)

The Renewal of the Social Organism by Rudolf Steiner ( 1985)

Occult History Historical Personalities and Events in the Light of Spiritual Science by Rudolf Steiner ( 1982)

Redemption of Thinking Redemption of Thinking A Study in the Philosophy of Thomas Aquinas by Rudolf Steiner ( 1983)

Rudolf Steiner an Autobiography by Rudolf Steiner ( 1977)

Inner Impulses of Human Evolution The Mexican Mysteries and the Knights Templar by Rudolf Steiner ( 1984)

Occult Science An Outline by Rudolf Steiner ( 1969)

Secrets of the Threshold by Rudolf Steiner ( 1988)

Cosmosophy by Rudolf Steiner ( 1985)

The Seven Training Sketches for the Painter by Rudolf Steiner by Rudolf Steiner, Marie Groddeck ( 1982)

Planetary Spheres and Their Influence on Man's Life on Earth and in Spiritual Worlds by Rudolf Steiner ( 1982)

The Karma of Materialism Nine Lectures Given in Berlin Between July 31 and September 25, 1917 by Rudolf Steiner ( 1986)

The Reappearance of Christ in the Etheric Selected Lectures from the Work of Rudolf Steiner by Rudolf Steiner ( 1983)

Reincarnation and Immortality by Rudolf Steiner ( 1970)

The Cycle of the Year As Breathing-Process of the Earth Five Lectures Given in Dornach, 31 March to 8 April, 1923 by Rudolf Steiner ( 1984)

The Roots of Education The Roots of Education by Rudolf Steiner ( 1997)

We must develop an art of education that will lead us out of the social chaos into which we have fallen during the past few years and decades. The only way out of this social chaos is the bring spirituality into human souls through education, so that humanity may find the way to progress and further the evolution of civilization out the spirit itself. The special feature of these lectures is the deep insight into the mystery of soul and spiritual forces in a child's development. they deal with the metamorphoses of the child's being as these forces unfold and how teaching should be related to such fundamental changes. In such education the child is prepared to become a citizen not only of the earth but of the spiritual world as well. Only through recognizing our spiritual citizenship can we in fact truly become social beings on earth and creative in the building of new worlds.
The Significance of Spiritual Research for Moral Action by Rudolf Steiner ( 1981)

Soul Economy and Waldorf Education by Rudolf Steiner ( 1986)

Study of Man by Rudolf Steiner ( 1981)

Spiritual Science As a Foundation for Social Forms by Rudolf Steiner ( 1986)

Study of Man Study of Man General Education Course by Rudolf Steiner ( 2004)

Supersensible Knowledge by Rudolf Steiner ( 1987)

The Temple Legend Freemasonry and Related Occult Movements from the Contents of the Esoteric School by Rudolf Steiner ( 1998)

Theosophy An Introduction to the Supersensible Knowledge of the World and the Destination of Man by Rudolf Steiner ( 1987)

The Spiritual Hierarchies and Their Reflection in the Physical World by Rudolf Steiner ( 1995)

From Buddha to Christ by Rudolf Steiner ( 1987)

Theosophy by Rudolf Steiner ( 1968)

Mystery Centers by Rudolf Steiner ( 1989)

Towards Social Renewal by Rudolf Steiner ( 1992)

The Gospel of Saint Luke The Gospel of Saint Luke by Rudolf Steiner ( 1990)

The Way of Initiation The Way of Initiation How to Attain Knowledge of the Higher Worlds by Rudolf Steiner ( 1960)

Fruits of Anthroposophy by Rudolf Steiner ( 1986)

Mysticism at the Dawn of the Modern Age by Rudolf Steiner ( 1985)

Toward Imagination Culture and the Individual by Rudolf Steiner ( 1990)

Theosophy of the Rosicurcian by Rudolf Steiner ( 1981)

Macrocosm and Microcosm by Rudolf Steiner ( 1986)

Universe, Earth and Man In Their Relationship to Egyptian Myths and Modern Civilization by Rudolf Steiner ( 1987)

Supersensible Man by Rudolf Steiner ( 1991)

Theosophy of the Rosicrucian by Rudolf Steiner ( 1981)

Pastoral Medicine The Collegial Working of Doctors and Priests Eleven Lectures Delivered in Dornach in September of 1924 by Rudolf Steiner ( 1987)

World Economy by Rudolf Steiner ( 1990)

Threshold of the Spiritual World by Rudolf Steiner ( 1994)

Rosicrucianism and Modern Initiation by Rudolf Steiner ( 1982)

Woman and Society by Rudolf Steiner ( 1986)

World History in the Light of Anthroposophy And As a Foundation for Knowledge of the Human Spirit by Rudolf Steiner ( 1977)

Karmic Relationships, Vol. 5 by Rudolf Steiner ( 1983)

The Karma of Vocation by Rudolf Steiner ( 1984)

The Human Being in Body, Soul, and Spirit Our Relationship to the Earth by Rudolf Steiner ( 1989)

Man's Being, His Destiny, and World-Evolution Man's Being, His Destiny, and World-Evolution Six Lectures Christiania by Rudolf Steiner ( 1984)

The Presence of the Dead on the Spiritual Path Seven Lectures Held in Various Cities Between April 17 and May 26, 1914 by Rudolf Steiner ( 1990)

The Occult Significance of the Bhagavad Gita Nine Lectures by Rudolf Steiner ( 1984)

The Universal Human The Evolution of Individuality Four Lectures Given Between 1909 and 1916 in Munich and Bern by Rudolf Steiner ( 1990)


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