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Query was: rome

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  • Title: Inner Impulses: Contents
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    • The Effects of Greece and Rome on Our Time
  • Title: Inner Impulses: Back Cover Sheet
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    • These lectures take us to ancient Greece to witness the struggle with the spirit of groundless fantasy, and to ancient Rome and the struggle against the forces of centralized political domination. We hear of how these two forces, opposed to humanity, threatened to reach a tragic climax in the bloody Aztec mysteries of ancient Mexico, until they were thwarted by the heroic efforts of a Mexican Sun-initiate.
  • Title: Inner Impulses: Lecture I
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    • The Effects of Greece and Rome on Our Time
    • The Effects of Greece and Rome on Our Time
    • Rome. Let us try to picture to ourselves what the Greek world means to
    • overripe in part, it was conquered, in an outer sense by Rome. An
    • extraordinary process, this so-called conquest of Greece by Rome! In
    • during this epoch. Externally, Greece was subjected to Rome in such a
    • Now let us look at Rome, which stands in a different relation to our
    • gray depths of the spirit, so to speak. It is not so with Rome, which
    • Rome. People little realize the extent to which this is true.
    • degree by Rome. This is true not only in the names and terms used, but
    • Let us now place ancient Rome side by side with ancient Greece, which
    • am taking Greece and Rome as belonging to modern times) a greater
    • eloquent of soul and spirit. Rome, on the contrary, had nothing in its
    • Then we see this marvelously free Greek life made subject to Rome, a
    • science nor of art was Rome in any way original. When Rome conquered
    • Even if we think of the greatest poets of Rome, compared with the
    • Rome, however, became great in quite another sphere, one in which the
    • This distinction between Greece and Rome is especially revealed when
    • powerful stream of Rome as it has become. He wanted college students
    • history of Rome. It is the content of the first chapter that
    • Maximum number of matches per file exceeded.
  • Title: Inner Impulses: Lecture II
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    • and Rome in order to obtain an idea of the influences that have been
    • description of the civilizations of Greece and Rome.
    • ahrimanic beings disappointed in Rome and the way it developed. The
    • in Rome, just as the luciferic beings did in Greece. They calculated
    • entirely blind obedience and subjection to Rome. What did the
    • ahrimanic powers want to accomplish in Rome? They wanted to establish
    • entirely from Rome with the strictest centralization and the utmost
    • lulled into the luciferic dream, nor could Rome be hardened as these
    • ahrimanic powers desired, because in Rome, too, something was working
    • All this alone, however, would not have been of much avail. Rome had
    • also received Christianity, which in Rome would have assumed a form
    • Europe. Through this onslaught on Rome, the mechanizing of the world
    • migrations of the peoples. If Rome had developed in such a way that a
    • remains. This is what he tried to do to the civilization of Rome. Here
    • what they had developed in Atlantean times into Greece and Rome. Now,
    • What Rome had achieved in the Church and in the ecclesiastical state
    • and mind that has its source in the heathen Rome of ancient times. You
  • Title: Inner Impulses: Lecture III
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    • in the civilization of Rome was only a feeble echo of what those who,
  • Title: Inner Impulses: Lecture V
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    • culture of Greece and Rome. What had been direct experience in
    • of fantasy, and the egoism of Rome were to develop in the fourth
    • forces upon the culture of Greece and Rome, and later upon the culture
  • Title: Inner Impulses: Lecture VII
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    • from Rome, became the opponent of the Pope because he refused to annul
    • Church issuing its orders from Rome, and simply on his own authority
    • is, does not recognize the separation of the English Church from Rome.



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