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  • Title: Inner Impulses: Introduction by Frédéric Kozlik
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    • crucial importance; we have found in Steiner's personal library a book
    • — perhaps a book available only in German — which tells of
    • us that Rudolf Steiner's library contained a book by Charles V.
    • practiced on the Spaniards as well as on others. However, this book,
    • the editor says in a footnote, relied on this book, especially when we
    • reference book. So the problem remains still unsolved.
  • Title: Inner Impulses: Back Cover Sheet
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    • The history presented in most modern textbooks is a collection of external facts, arranged chronologically, which seem to have occurred without rhyme or reason. Rudolf Steiner takes these facts fully into account in this work, but he also goes beyond them to describe the inner impulses at work which make the intense drama of human development understandable.
  • Title: Inner Impulses: Lecture I
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    • Greece from history books in which the deeds of the Greeks and their
    • All such history is, however, only one chapter of the great world book
  • Title: Inner Impulses: Lecture II
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    • in my book,
    • earthly gravity and by what belongs to the body. In his book, Elle
    • If you want to appreciate rightly Renan's book, to understand it as a
    • Strauss's book the “idea of Christ,” which runs through all
    • a fortiori; Jesus as an historical figure; a book that is
  • Title: Inner Impulses: Lecture III
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    • this book was written can be considered collectively as one fundamental
    • Renan's book is written out of a fundamental impulse that tries to
    • in the book
  • Title: Inner Impulses: Lecture IV
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    • book, good of its kind, has lately been written that endeavors to
    • a good book, recently published, that tries to show with a certain all
    • years ago as an important personality when his first book on European
    • conditions was published. This new book by Ku Hung Ming, a highly
    • be shed over much that meets one today when a book such as that of Ku
  • Title: Inner Impulses: Lecture V
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    • or in the book,
    • influenced. He wrote a book of just such a kind as to excite the
    • up longings to discover it. It was this book that induced Christopher
    • further in the cultural life. We must think of Marco Polo and his book
  • Title: Inner Impulses: Lecture VI
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    • said, “A certain Mr. Lewes has written a book, which was for some
    • time the most famous book on Goethe; one can even say the best. It is
    • a book treating of a personality who was supposed to have been born in
    • Then we also have a relatively good book in which Goethe's life and
    • last page with hatred and aversion. This book is by the Jesuit,
    • Baumgartner. It is an excellent but, in fact, a Jesuitical, book; but
    • One book, however, stands out in a quite unusual way. These are Herman
    • with Goethe. His book is an intelligent and excellent one that has
    • age when there were still Goethean traditions, but this book shows
    • all a book that has developed from Goethean traditions; it is both
    • that the book was written by an American, a German American! One can
    • call Grimm's lectures a book written by an American but in German. In
    • The book, Ruins (Shutt), by Anastasius Grün has been given to
  • Title: Inner Impulses: Lecture VII
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    • created in his book, from a certain atavistic clairvoyance, a picture
    • of which I speak, a most powerfully effective educational book,
    • ideas living in this book become familiar to the tenderest, earliest
    • age of childhood. This book has not only gone through hundreds of



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