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Here are the matching lines in their respective documents. Select one of the highlighted words in the matching lines below to jump to that point in the document.

  • Title: Inner Impulses: Foreword by Stewart C. Easton
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    • has been able to assemble that may be considered to support Steiner's
  • Title: Inner Impulses: Introduction by Frédéric Kozlik
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    • important to consider at some length a few of the characteristics of
    • One further remark on this subject, to be taken into consideration
    • he was considered a true god ...” (Sah. I).
    • great wizard. ... This Quetzalcoatl they considered as a god; he was
    • as untouchable dogmas overruling all other considerations. Indeed the
    • consideration all the other facts he can find associated with the sun
  • Title: Inner Impulses: Lecture I
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    • have always to consider among the processes at work in the present,
    • we consider the Greek and Roman languages in their inward spiritual
    • Consider without sympathy or antipathy but purely historically what is
  • Title: Inner Impulses: Lecture II
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    • kept Greece within earthly evolution. In considering the course of
    • will first consider these phenomena in a purely historical way in
    • Considering art in respect of its representations of the Jesus
  • Title: Inner Impulses: Lecture III
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    • considerable part of its surface, mankind and an interest in mankind
    • leave this sub-earthly region and again consider the earthly, but
    • the two realms; we can do that later. Let us consider the question as
    • this book was written can be considered collectively as one fundamental
    • one would consider inner experience only, paying no attention to the
  • Title: Inner Impulses: Lecture IV
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    • only be considered in its true reality when one learns to know the
    • If we consider the evolution of humanity only in the way that ordinary
    • humanity changes considerably as time passes. The man of the tenth or
    • little inclined to look into mankind's evolution. If one considers the
    • one would expect when one really considered the evolution of humanity.
    • laid bare. It was this that was revealed. Just consider, then, that a
    • will have it. That is the point. If one considers the
  • Title: Inner Impulses: Lecture V
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    • so, we should soon be considering ourselves much cleverer than a god,
    • realize, even from history, that this is so. Plato did not consider
    • sight as being so passive a faculty as we consider it in the fifth
    • to produce a mentality that considers truth to be found in sensory
    • the soul was left out of consideration.
    • considering the problem of evil, man's thought is turned to the
  • Title: Inner Impulses: Lecture VI
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    • When we consider it, among much that brings rejoicing to the soul,
    • that, a considerable number. Something quite remarkable and powerful
    • about the culture of the East and of Russia, you will not consider it
  • Title: Inner Impulses: Lecture VII
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    • always considers what has happened earlier to be the cause of what
    • Let us consider, for instance, the origin of the orthodox English
    • Catherine of Aragon, was divorced from him and, considered quite
    • lead up to a consideration of his character. One can really gain some
    • particular evolution took the course it did only when one considers
    • Let us first consider the fact that a religious body was created in
    • to apply thinking to what he considers to be concerns of the religious
    • moulded by it, is generally never considered at all. All of
    • mentioned had not come about before, is not considered at all. In



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