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Searching The Inner Nature of Music and the Experience of Tone
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  • Title: Lecture: Inner Nature of Music: Foreword
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    • the spiritual world, speaking to us through tones as long as we are
  • Title: Lecture: Inner Nature of Music: Lecture I
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    • waking consciousness on the dream consciousness.
    • Because feelings are the innermost elements of the soul, akin to the
  • Title: Lecture: Inner Nature of Music: Lecture II
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    • consciousness, that is, the one we characterized as waking
    • transmits itself into man's entire life in waking
    • a still higher plane of Devachan, tone becomes something akin to
    • between sleeping and waking, man continuously passes from the
  • Title: Lecture: Inner Nature of Music: Lecture III
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    • elementary beginnings of singing and speaking took place.
    • but in the sense used here, where speaking is the soul resounding
  • Title: Lecture: Inner Nature of Music: Lecture IV
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    • we first focus on the mediating member of man, man's speaking,
    • civilization lies in speaking. Through speaking, people come together
    • here on earth; speaking is the bridge between two persons. Soul
    • unites with soul. We feel that in speaking we have an essential
    • speaking of these forms, one is not always referring only to the
    • sculptural form of the human organization. Not speaking symbolically
    • the breathing process unites with the movements taking place along
    • also into the head-breathing. When man shifts from speaking to
    • world of the stars. Though it appears that I am speaking
    • it sings to you in speaking, speaks in singing, and your perception
    • is actually a hearing of this speaking-singing, singing-speaking.
    • speaking human beings in two ways. Take the consonantal human
  • Title: Lecture: Inner Nature of Music: Lecture V
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    • however, is not as important here as it is otherwise. In speaking of
    • one's having to restrain oneself from making movements along
    • making the whole musical feeling an inward experience; the human
    • naturally gets into the habit of speaking in general concepts even in
    • taking hold of our astral nature. There it gains influence over our
  • Title: Lecture: Inner Nature of Music: Lecture VI
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    • akin to an expression of the word. One sang, but this was at the same
    • time a speaking of the spiritual world. One was conscious that if one
    • speaking of the gods and of the proceedings of the gods. As I
    • otherwise formed. Melody contains something akin to mental images,
    • Taking
  • Title: Lecture: Inner Nature of Music: Lecture VII
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    • give a biographical description of man's waking life, so one
    • human being experiences during his waking hours is experienced
    • one speaks of man's waking experiences, they necessarily
    • waking life. Likewise, man is in another world during sleep; this
    • in the waking state, we turn our eyes or other sense organs in the
    • bearer of his physical and etheric bodies. In a manner of speaking,
    • bodies. In a manner of speaking, man withdraws his experience of the



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