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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: Cover Sheet
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  • Title: Lecture: Inner Nature of Music: Foreword
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    • with the general background and terminology of his anthroposophical
  • Title: Lecture: Inner Nature of Music: Back Cover
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    • Back Cover
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  • Title: Lecture: Inner Nature of Music: Lecture II
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    • recollection or impression back into his familiar state of
    • by the sleep, but he also brings back art from those worlds. When a
    • flows back to it again, so do its shadows, the tones, the harmonies.
  • Title: Lecture: Inner Nature of Music: Lecture III
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    • us imagine ourselves back in a distant age, the Lemurian age.
  • Title: Lecture: Inner Nature of Music: Lecture IV
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    • element. The further we go back into prehistoric times, the more
    • system he draws back into the stream of breathing when he sings
    • composes songs takes everything back into breathing, and therefore
    • of spiritual beings. Where he looks back at Saturn, Sun, Moon, Aries,
    • shaped for earthly conditions. When man takes speech back into song,
    • takes a step back, he brings the earthly affairs surrounding him to a
  • Title: Lecture: Inner Nature of Music: Lecture V
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    • the airborne tone back into the inner being of man in such a way that
    • back into our inner being. The ear is a reflecting apparatus for the
    • that in human evolution all musical experience first leads back to
    • the ancient Atlantean time — unless we wish to go back further,
    • could go back into the Atlantean age, you would find that the music
    • transition to the experience of the third actually can be traced back
    • then outside himself; his soul swings back and forth between
    • really strives to lead man back to what he lost in primeval times. In
  • Title: Lecture: Inner Nature of Music: Lecture VI
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    • teachers in school what they need as background for their
    • prime, second and third — by backward movements and in the case
    • perceiving itself, would have to look back upon itself; this, then,
  • Title: Lecture: Inner Nature of Music: Lecture VII
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    • evolution. Going back into the distant past of human evolution, to
    • man, as it were; how the cosmos penetrates man; how, when we go back
    • back into a still earlier time, an age of human earthly evolution
    • reaching back into the dimmest primeval past, which can be brought
    • lamentation. We thus can look back upon an epoch of the earth
    • with the air of the science of the spirit, one looks back at the



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