Searching Rudolf Steiner Lectures by GA number (GA0181) Matches
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- Title: The Earth As Being with Life, Soul, and Spirit: Lecture 1
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- nation-soul is not the empty abstraction of which
- Title: Earthly Death/Cosmic Life: Lecture 1: The Present Position of Spiritual Science
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- deep satisfaction. We may say that anyone who takes into
- sorrowful, yet on the other he may feel satisfaction in the hope that
- psycho-analyst, the whole transaction is the result of the connection
- cannot give man any true satisfaction. In the end that is the content
- Title: Earthly Death/Cosmic Life: Lecture 2: A Contribution to our Knowledge of the Human Being
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- as is here meant, other than the satisfaction of — I will not
- understand the mechanical action of a watch; one would have to
- Title: Earthly Death/Cosmic Life: Lecture 3: The Living and the Dead
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- movement, into action, man is even less conscious than he is of the
- way, even suffer through our distraction in purely material life. If
- Title: Earthly Death/Cosmic Life: Lecture 4: The Cosmic Thoughts and our Dead
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- material in his action and thought — he believes that he is
- actions, and the modern psychiatrist proves from the Gospels that
- Title: Earthly Death/Cosmic Life: Lecture 5: Man's Connection with the Spiritual World
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- retained by hands. Judgments of thoughts and actions are guided
- anything holds us back; the one kind are life-transactions, the other
- nature-transactions, which are checked and for that reason continue
- life-processes of man; and again we see also that our daily actions
- place in such a way, that for the ordinary transactions of life we
- actions undertaken as a result of ordinary reflection. The latter
- follow a straight line; the actions which arise from the
- within himself the stream of actions which traverses his destiny. Man
- human life. We perform actions. These actions in our life call forth
- in us a certain satisfaction — or dissatisfaction. Suppose we
- have done a good action which has given satisfaction; or suppose we
- by his actions, but we do not only form actions and experience
- conscious satisfaction or otherwise in so doing. We can see this best
- if with Spiritual Science we investigate actions that enter less
- deeply into our lives, actions that need not even have moral
- significance, e.g., the act of chopping wood. The action we
- actions such as chopping wood; but this fatigue has a far deeper
- can easily realise that the fatigue aroused by such actions is a dual
- process. (Actions that enter more into our moral or intellectual life
- spirituality of this radiation, we observe an action that is exposed
- Maximum number of matches per file exceeded.
- Title: Earthly Death/Cosmic Life: Lecture 6: Feelings of Unity and Sentiments of Gratitude: A Bridge to the Dead
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- things. We are united with all our actions, and they enter our karma
- situations, thoughts and actions of another as though they were his
- what has taken place in his soul. In reality a reaction has taken
- that a certain reaction has taken place in his feelings. In this
- Title: Earthly Death/Cosmic Life: Lecture 7: Confidence in Life and Rejuvenation of the Soul: A Bridge to the Dead
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- we have anything to do in life. Our actions extend to other beings,
- wherever our being has been united with another in action, something
- Title: Life Gifts: Lecture I: Folk Souls and the Mystery of Golgotha
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- not that unreal abstraction of which materialistically-minded men
- reciprocal action with the metabolism in the head, so, inasmuch as
- counteraction now comes from the rest of the body, and especially
- from the organism of the heart. This counteraction now operates as a
- Title: Life Gifts: Lecture II: The Relativity of Knowledge, and Spiritual Cosmology
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- again to be taken into account. I might say, for the satisfaction of
- Title: Life Gifts: Lecture III: Thoughts about the Life Between Death and Rebirth
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- brought about through the action of the outer world on our
- own organism, and balanced again, however, by the action of
- Title: Life Gifts: Lecture IV: The Eternal and the Imperishable
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- life does not only mean the satisfaction of our curiosity or
- book I had at that time a great satisfaction, as I set forth
- Title: Life Gifts: Lecture V: Thoughts on Life and Death
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- mineral, vegetable or animal dust. A continuous interaction
- have but little satisfaction in this thought. Such vague
- Title: Life Gifts: Lecture VII: Whitsuntide Lecture
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- works within it. In spiritual action something goes on
- Title: Sound Outlook: Lecture I: States of Consciousness
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- character of his actions, and to some extent his feelings.
- Title: Sound Outlook: Lecture II: The Building at Dornach
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- action.
- reactionary — when he has brought it into bold relief,
- Title: Sound Outlook: Lecture IV: History and Repeated Earth-Lives
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- concerned with actions and experiences in space, less like a
- business transaction! Under the influence of Venice, the
- Title: Sound Outlook: Lecture V: The Being and Evolution of Man
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- makes into an abstraction, a figure of straw. Such a man
- the abstraction, “ego,” not of the concrete human
- “defensive action” against the Church, and only
- freedom which Christ brings us is that the lower attractions
- Title: Sound Outlook: Lecture VI: Problems of the Time (I)
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- sense-transactions. That was the new thing in the fourth
- reaction from what is now taking shape there. But that is a
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