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  • Title: Inner Impulses: Contents
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    • The Influence of Luciferic and Ahrimanic Beings on Historical Development. The clear Perception of the Sensory World and Free Imaginations as the Task of Our Time. Genghis Khan and the Discovery of America
  • Title: Inner Impulses: Footnotes
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    • 2 *This distinction between pure perception free of memory pictures
  • Title: Inner Impulses: Introduction by Frédéric Kozlik
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    • understandable suprasensible perceptions. But such premises must they
    • that such perception does not exist! A man blind from birth cannot do
    • existence of any other kind of perception than his own he will seek to
    • shape being simply the result of ordinary perception, shared by
  • Title: Inner Impulses: Lecture I
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    • of the Romans, they developed such forceful perceptions and feelings
  • Title: Inner Impulses: Lecture II
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    • Development. The clear Perception of the Sensory World and Free
    • The Influence of Luciferic and Ahrimanic Beings on Historical Development. The clear Perception of the Sensory World and Free Imaginations as the Task of Our Time. Genghis Khan and the Discovery of America
    • bodily forces — must be active. First, a clear perception of the
    • itself an ahrimanically perverted perception of sense reality. As
    • Goethe had a beautiful understanding of this clear perception, which,
    • clear, pure perception of reality and of his primal phenomenon. Goethe
    • not only gave the first impulse for perceptions free of any visions
    • * This distinction between pure perception free of memory pictures and
    • typical intellectual perception. You will find it described in detail
    • the fifth post-Atlantean age, concerning both the perception of the
  • Title: Inner Impulses: Lecture III
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    • atavistic, visionary perception but whenever they desired his
    • Here, the natural impulse of primal phenomenon perception is carried
  • Title: Inner Impulses: Lecture IV
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    • form what works and lives behind sense perceptions.
    • judge from the standpoint of human feeling and moral perception the
  • Title: Inner Impulses: Lecture V
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    • that the thoughts, the perceptions, and also the social life of the
    • gift of material perception. I have characterized this by calling the
    • ideal of material perception, in the sense of Goethe's “primal
    • phenomenon,” the pure perception, the pure beholding of external
    • the perception of material reality was invariably mingled with what
    • revival of that kind of initiation that led to actual perception of
    • of the senses, and to actual perception of the One Great Spirit.
    • certain faculties of perception that can only be engendered through an
    • post-Atlantean epoch must be protected from direct perception of the
    • striving is directed to a perception, to an experiencing, of man's
    • It is the same as regards Lucifer. The impulse of perception, of
  • Title: Inner Impulses: Lecture VI
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    • say the perception of those spiritual worlds that are accessible to
    • his willing, feeling, thinking and sense perception. These, indeed,
  • Title: Inner Impulses: Lecture VII
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    • many ideas, perceptions, feelings and will impulses; spiritual science
    • perception, he created the idea of a social relationship among men. I



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