Searching Rudolf Steiner Lectures by GA number (GA0200) Matches
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- Title: Lecture: The Coming Experience of Christ
Matching lines:
- culture of Middle Europe, as we have come to know it in recent weeks,
- to take spirit-self into it in the next, the sixth, culture-epoch. I
- amount of intellectual culture enables them to solve the riddle of
- can absorb from modern culture — that culture which today is
- Title: i Spirituality: Lecture 1: Historical Symptomology, the Year 790, Alcuin, Greeks, Platonism, Aristotelianism, East, West, Middle, Ego
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- culture, had basically faded away between
- quiet note, for much of Greek culture was still alive in him. It develops then with particular
- vehemence in the Roman culture within which it had been prepared long before Aristotle, and,
- a particular culture, or the first hints of it, was being prepared alongside that which lived on
- was a highly spiritual culture which arose from an inner perception living pre-eminently in
- within this occidental culture, the way of thinking which comprehends primarily what takes place
- out with full force in the Middle (or Central) culture. Thus we can distinguish between the
- Eastern culture — the time in which the 'I' is first experienced, but dimly — and the
- Middle (or Central) culture — primarily that in which the 'I' is experienced. And we see
- during the development of all that can originate out of this I-culture.
- We then see how, within the I-culture of the
- this I-culture. For what is it that arises through Kant? Kant looks at our perception, our
- Central culture in which the 'I' came to full consciousness, to an inner experience — was
- involved with the culture of Central Europe — that which is now the culture of the West.
- This came to meet him in the person of David Hume and it was here that the culture of the West
- [of this culture]
- lie? In the oriental culture we
- express themselves, spread out, in imaginative pictures. In the Western culture we find that, in
- the human being of the Western culture the 'I' is already below this sphere. It is below
- the Central region of the earth's culture still set itself against this with all force in Fichte,
- Maximum number of matches per file exceeded.
- Title: New Spirituality: Lecture 3: The New Spirituality and the Christ Experiance of the Twentieth Century - 2
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- From the Roman culture, and even already from the
- Hellenistic culture there developed, as we know, what took hold of the human beings of the Centre
- culture when one considers at first that all three branches of human experience — the
- Western regions to begin with, is that Roman culture spreads as a sum-total of people towards
- culture —what took shape, that is, through the intersection of these two lines (see
- culture embodied in a language — it dissolves into it, assumes it. It grows into this
- Latin, culture. Thus, in a certain respect, in so far as Western humanity is submerged in the
- lived on as Puritanism and the like but which had no connection with the real world culture. We
- — something one does not allow to be touched by outer culture.
- colour, revealed through colour, what has inspired and worked through different human cultures
- Title: New Spirituality: Lecture 4: The New Spirituality and the Christ Experiance of the Twentieth Century - 3
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- blossoming of oriental culture; in Greek art as he construed this for himself from Italian works
- Thus, in a later phase of European culture, there
- modern people, in the culture of ancient Greece. Goethe also strove towards this Greek element.
- intimate context what exists in a less refined form in external culture at large. A crude
- spiritual-scientific culture which not only wishes to enter, but must enter, the world
- Title: New Spirituality: Lecture 5: The New Spirituality and the Christ Experiance of the Twentieth Century - 4
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- knowledge of their culture, perceived a spiritual element in all the manifestations of nature;
- culture was retained as a heritage from the ancient Orient. And when people still had this last
- Europe. European thought and culture was, as it were, closed off from access to the Orient. But
- dialectical-legal aspect. The economy was a minor element in the ancient theocratic cultures
- money was gradually lost and the dialectical-legal culture spread in Europe as a kind of economy
- forgotten; spiritual culture could be forgotten, but machines would remain. They would simply be
- Title: New Spirituality: Lecture 6: The New Spirituality and the Christ Experiance of the Twentieth Century - 5
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- whole human nature during the ancient oriental culture. Those who worked out of the Mysteries
- Title: New Spirituality: Lecture 7: The New Spirituality and the Christ Experiance of the Twentieth Century - 6
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- culture of Middle Europe, as we have come to know it in recent weeks, will be wedged.
- now I am preparing myself to take spirit-self into it in the next, the sixth, culture-epoch. I
- culture, people are still not able to solve the riddle of man. Man is missing from what can be
- as a cosmic being. Out of all that modern culture — this much-praised, idolized culture of
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