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Rudolf Steiner e.Lib
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Education
Rudolf Steiner e.Lib Document
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Education
On-line since: 31st January, 2010
Education
Rudolf Steiner e.Lib Document
Lectures Section
These lectures form one of the most comprehensive introductions to the
philosophy of Waldorf education. They have been published under the titles:
Education and Modern Spiritual Life,
The New Art of Education, and
A Modern Art of Education.
The spiritual values inherent in the education of children is the main
thrust of these lectures. In addition to education, Steiner connects the
results of a pedagogy based on spiritual insights and values with a
mature, responsible, adult way of life. The negative results of not
incorporating ethical, spiritual ideas and values in education is
contrasted to the results of a positive, spiritual methodology. Steiner
also points to the practice and realizations in daily life of a living
proof of his ideas: the founding of the first Waldorf School in 1919.
By Rudolf Steiner
Edited by H. Collison
Bn/GA 307
The spiritual values inherent in the education of children is the main
thrust of these lectures. In addition to education, Steiner connects the
results of a pedagogy based on spiritual insights and values with a
mature, responsible, adult way of life. The negative results of not
incorporating ethical, spiritual ideas and values in education is
contrasted to the results of a positive, spiritual methodology. Steiner
also points to the practice and realizations in daily life of a living
proof of his ideas: the founding of the first Waldorf School in 1919.
These lectures form one of the most comprehensive introductions to the
philosophy of Waldorf education. They have been published under the titles:
Education and Modern Spiritual Life,
The New Art of Education, and
A Modern Art of Education.
Published in German as,
Gegenwaertiges Geistesleben und Erziehung,
this edition is presented here with the kind permission of the
Rudolf Steiner Nachlassverwaltung, Dornach, Switzerland.
Copyright © 1943
This e.Text edition is provided through the wonderful work of:
The Rudolf Steiner Publishing Co. London
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| Cover Sheet |
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| Preface |
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| Foreword by Marie Steiner |
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| Contents |
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| Summary |
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Lecture I | SCIENCE, ART, RELIGION, MORALITY |
August 05, 1923 |
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Education
strives to work creatively upon the human being — Nature's most
sublime work of art. What was implied in the old term “Pedagogy”
must be superseded. In modern times, intellectual knowledge, art, religion
and morality have grown apart from each other, but there was an age
in which they were one. Modem science eliminates the element of art.
Man's inner activity of thought has gradually been lost; he is
content to let thoughts be aroused by external objects. The inner
forces of thought work creatively in childhood. Active thinking can
rise to Imagination and become contemplative knowledge, leading to
art. When this kind of thinking has matured, it must be transcended
by a moral act. The spiritual world may then enter man's
consciousness as Inspiration or creative knowledge which can flow
directly into art. Through art, man is then able to give expression
to Divine Will; artistic creation becomes a divine office. Formerly
art could lead men directly to religion. All religion has proceeded
from Inspiration. When man was aware of a divine-creative power
within him, he was able to visualise the presence of the God not only
in the sanctuary but in the world. This is true morality. When man
has found his place in the world of the spirit through a life of true
religion, Intuition imbues him with morality. We need this Intuition
for the renewing of our civilization, in order that we may rediscover
the harmony between science, art, religion and morality.
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Lecture II | PRINCIPLES OF GREEK EDUCATION |
August 06, 1923 |
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The art of
education must reckon with the historical course of human civilization,
with the changes brought about in the souls of men through epochs. If man,
as a being of body, soul and spirit, is to find his right place in
social life, education must be founded on a knowledge of man as he is
in the present epoch. Three stages in the development of education:
(1) The Greek ideal was the Gymnast — one who knew how to
express in the beauty of his bodily actions the divine beauty of; the
Cosmos. The separation of spirit, soul and body began with Roman
culture. Training of the soul qualities, with bodily training in the
background. (2) The Rhetorician is the ideal of mediæval
education. Halfway through the Middle Ages comes the impulse to
intellectualism. The man of knowledge, no longer the man of practical
skill in action, is now the ideal of education. (3) In modern
civilization the ideal is the Doctor, or Professor. The ideal of our
own times is the “Human Universal.”
The culture of
ancient Greece was a continuation of oriental civilization — Body,
soul and spirit are one. On earth, between birth and death, soul and
spirit live in the body. The work of the Gymnast carried further the
deeply spiritual philosophy of the East. “Orchestric,”
song and the playing of the zither. Their connection with the systems
of breathing and blood circulation in man. “Palestric”
and wrestling.
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Lecture III | GREEK EDUCATION AND THE MIDDLE AGES |
August 07, 1923 |
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Significance of
education at home up to the age of seven. The natural forces of growth and
the being of soul and spirit are not as yet separate. They are a unity up
to the seventh year. This inner force in the child is active in the
pushing upward of the second teeth. After the change of teeth,
certain forces are withdrawn from the body that the soul may develop
the finer forces of her life. After puberty, the spirit is made
manifest. The Greek saw the child of seven as a spiritual being who
had descended into a physical body. After the seventh year, this
being descends a second step, acquiring an earthly sheath of its own;
before this age, pre-earthly forces have been working in the body.
The task of the Gymnast was to understand the divine forces working
in the human body and to develop them further.
The peoples
streaming in from the East, who founded mediaeval civilization, brought
the new consciousness of the unworthiness of slavery; greater respect
was paid to woman; the idea of ‘Faith’ superseded the primal
Wisdom that had previously poured through man. Primal Wisdom became
tradition that must be memorised.
The Gymnast
sought to preserve the forces of childhood until the time of earthly
death. Musical talent developed naturally from breathing and blood
circulation; intellectual thinking from Gymnastics; a
marvellous memory from habitual bodily activities. The
experience of individual consciousness (which emerges only after the
age of puberty) began in the Middle Ages. The experience of inner
freedom.
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Lecture IV | THE CONNECTION OF THE SPIRIT WITH BODILY ORGANS |
August 08, 1923 |
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We must now
reach a concrete understanding of the spirit. To-day we theorize about
the spirit. We have a skeleton of spirit as the result of intellectual
thinking. Abstract ideals must give place to truly human qualities of
soul. An example of the working of Spirit in the body. The teeth
develop not merely for the purposes of eating and speaking, but also
in order that the faculty of thinking may emerge. After the change of
teeth, the corresponding physical force appears as the power of
thought. The physical force hitherto concentrated in the organs now
becomes a force of soul. Living thought alone can understand these
truths. Through Imaginative knowledge we understand the relation of
man's etheric body to the surrounding universe. Some of these etheric
forces are freed when the child gets his second teeth, and they then
become the forces of thought.
A transformation
of the whole being takes place between the seventh and fourteenth years.
Puberty is merely an outer symptom of this transformation. Feeling
has been freed from the bodily nature. The larynx and rhythmic system
express this in their changing form. At puberty, the astral nature
becomes independent of the body. To perceive the astral nature,
Inspiration must be added to Imagination. The teacher has to aid this
second super-sensible member of man's being to become independent.
It is the task
of the teacher gradually to make speech free of the bodily nature. At the
age of seven years, organic activity is expressed in the labial
sounds; at the age of fourteen, the soul-quality of feeling pours
into the formation of the labials. Transition from organic to
psychical activity. A truly religious attitude can alone help to
permeate the feeling-life of the child with spirit, and this must be
our attitude before we can penetrate to the full reality of the spirit.
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Lecture V | EMANCIPATION OF THE WILL IN THE HUMAN ORGANISM |
August 09, 1923 |
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Until about the
twentieth year the will is highly dependent on organic activity. At about
the twenty-first year, the will becomes free. Until this age the human
being is strongly subject to the forces of earthly gravity and
struggles with them. An upward impulse then strikes into his blood.
The direction of the will is from below upwards; thinking, from above
downwards. If the life of feeling is rightly developed between the
ages of seven and fourteen, these two streams of force harmonize, and
with them, thinking and willing. In man, this process is of the
nature of a moral act. In their gymnastics, the Greeks stimulated the
flow of force from head to limbs. We must learn to understand the
sense in which the will becomes free within the organs of movement at
the twenty-first year of life. This will fill us with reverence for
the process of man's development, and then we can educate in the true
sense.
The first line
of the Gospel of St. John. To the Greeks, the ‘Word’ was a direct
call to the human will. The Word lived in the movements of the human body.
The Word embraced all natural phenomena, was creative. The Logos
vibrated through the whole cosmos. Greek gymnastics were an
expression of the Word. Musical education contained an echo of the
Word. The Word itself was active in Greek wrestling; in the Greek
dance there was an echo of the Word in the element of music. Spirit
worked right down into the being of man. Then came the Middle Ages.
The dead Word was offered to man in the Latin language. The living
essence of the Logos, as contained in the Gospel according to
St. John, died in the feeling-life of man. This lack is felt to-day
and is the cause of the many demands for educational reforms. We have
lost the spirit in the Word. In olden times the spirit was immanent
in the Word. But the Word became an ‘idol’ — this
was the beginning of intellectualism. Man turned away from the Logos
to the world of sense. The new era in education will begin with the
rediscovery of the spirit of the Word, in the sense of the Gospel of
St. John.
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Lecture VI | WALKING, SPEAKING, THINKING |
August 10, 1923 |
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Living ideas
pass over into will and deed. The education of the child must begin directly
after birth. This means that education is a concern of the whole of
humanity. The first three years of life are the most important for
the whole of future development. At first the child is one great
sense-organ. His sense of taste is spread over the whole of his
being. Forces that in the adult are localised in the different
senses, are spread over the child's whole organism. In the child,
spirit, soul and body are not separate; everything in the environment
is imitated. Three fundamental faculties acquired by the child during
the first three years of life: walking, speaking, thinking. To walk
means to adjust oneself to the directions of space. The forces of
orientation issue from organic impulses. The teacher may not exercise
the slightest coercion; he must be a helper only. If we follow with
inner love every manifestation of human nature in the child, we
stimulate health-bringing forces within him. The faculty of speech
develops from the process of orientation in space; it arises from
man's organism of movement. Speaking is thus an outcome of walking.
The forces of movement are carried over to the head structure; this
is revealed in speech. As we help the child to speak we must be
inwardly true, for the truthfulness of speech is absorbed by the
physical organism. The delicate process of in-breathing and
out-breathing is imitated by the child. Oxygen changes into carbonic
acid in the more intimate regions of human life. The capacity to
effect this change in the right way depends upon whether we have been
handled truthfully or untruthfully during the time we were learning
to speak. Thinking arises in turn out of speech. Since the child is
one great sense-organ and imitates the spiritual in his spiritual
being, clarity and precision must permeate our own thinking if we are
to help the child in this connection. Confused thinking in the
child's environment is the primary cause of nervous troubles.
Diseases connected with the metabolic process are the result of being
unwisely taught to walk. Digestive disturbances may be the outcome of
untruthfulness in the way the child has been taught to speak;
nervous troubles result from confused thinking.
Inner as well
as outer punishment can be inflicted on the child. We must help to build
up the child's brain like a sculptor who works on his medium with
mobile, delicate hand. The child's play. Artistic qualities of
playthings. If we give intellectual training to the child before the
fourth or fifth years we shall bring him up to be a materialist. He
must be left in his gentle, dream-like existence as long as
possible.
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Lecture VII | THE RHYTHMIC SYSTEM. SLEEPING AND WAKING. IMITATION |
August 11, 1923 |
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Man is an
imitative being up to the time of the change of teeth, and the effects of
this imitation continue in his physical constitution through the whole of
earthly life. Up to the age of seven the child is an inner sculptor;
the formative forces proceed from the head and give shape to the
whole being. The moral qualities observed in the environment play a
part in building up the system of veins, blood circulation,
breathing, and so forth, although much may be corrected in later life
by moral strength. The rhythmic system is of paramount importance
after the change of teeth. The whole teaching at this age must bear a
rhythmic quality. We help the child to breathe in a healthy way if we
bring an artistic quality into the teaching. There is little artistic
feeling in modern civilization. An artistic conception of
civilization as a whole can lead to principles of health-bringing
education. In the first period of life (to the age of seven) the
child is an inner sculptor; after the seventh year these plastic
forces become forces of soul. There must be a musical interplay
between teacher and child. Intellectual training must follow artistic
development. The child must be taught to use his intellect, but it
must never be forced. The rhythm of sleeping and waking. The rhythmic
system never tires. Intellect and will cause fatigue. Teaching that
is permeated by an artistic quality flows into the rhythmic system.
To coerce the child to think is to generate forces connected with
salt-deposits and the forming of bone. Thus, if writing is taught in
a purely intellectual way, the tendency to sclerosis in later life is
set up. From the artistic qualities that are brought into play in
drawing and painting, we can lead over from the picture to the
concept or idea. Working from the basis of the artistic, we can
educate the human being in such a way that he will feel a sense of
inner well-being with every step and every movement of the hand.
Bodily activity works upon the life of sleep. The nature of Will. In
the activity of milling, a process of combustion is set up in the
organism, and this can only be regulated in sleep. Purely
conventional exercises for the body prevent the child from getting
the deep, sound sleep that is necessary for the regeneration of the
organism. Care of the body in education.
After the
seventh year the principle of education must be that of natural authority.
Only after the age of fourteen is the child ready to form personal
judgments.
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Lecture VIII | READING, WRITING, AND NATURE-STUDY |
August 13, 1923 |
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Characteristic
examples of the way in which writing should be taught. Vowels are an
“expression of the inner being.” Eurhythmy. Reading and
the development of conceptual life. Between the ninth and tenth
years, the child begins to make a distinction between himself and the
outer world. All outer things must be so described that they seem to
speak as living beings to the child. Plant-lore. The earth as a
living being. Up to the twelfth year the child has no interest in or
understanding of mineral substance. We must develop in the child a
living, not a dead intellect. Animal-lore. The animal kingdom in its
connection with man. ‘Man is the synthesis of the animal species
spread over the earth.’ Man bears the spirit within him and thus is
raised above the animal world. This living conception of the relation
of man to the animal world strengthens the will. Thinking, feeling,
and willing.
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Lecture IX | ARITHMETIC, GEOMETRY, HISTORY |
August 14, 1923 |
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Painting,
drawing, writing, plant-lore, arithmetic and geometry affect the child's
etheric body as well as his physical body. The etheric body preserves
the after-effects of these activities during sleep. Animal-lore, history
and the like, are taken up by the astral body and Ego into the
spiritual world during sleep. Geometry and concrete conceptions of
space. The right way to teach arithmetic. One particular subject
should be continued for three or four weeks, and we should then pass
on to another, finally returning to the first. History should be
taught in a living way. The child has no understanding of causality
until he has reached the age of twelve. Our teaching of history must
appeal to the child's life of feeling and will. Preparation of the
subject-matter of the lessons.
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Lecture X | PHYSICS, CHEMISTRY, HAND-WORK, LANGUAGE, RELIGION |
August 15, 1923 |
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Teaching in
connection with minerals and stones should not begin until the child has
reached the age of eleven or twelve. Physics and chemistry work upon
the intellect alone. Only at this age should the child be taught the
relations between cause and effect and the so-called ‘objective’
connections in history and geography. Handwork, spinning, weaving,
technical chemistry. The child should be given apractical
understanding of modern industrial life.
Speech and its
connection with the whole being of man. How to teach languages. Consciousness
becomes self-consciousness between the ninth and tenth years. This is
the age when we can begin to teach the rules of grammar and syntax.
In all religious
instruction we must bear in mind the particular age of the child. At
first he must be taught to understand the Divine-Spiritual immanent
in the world. If we have so taught him about plants, clouds, springs,
and the like that his whole environment seems to live, we can easily
pass on to the divine ‘Father Principle.’ Gratitude and love.
Not until the child has reached the age of ten ought we to begin to speak
of ‘duty.’ At this age we can lead him on to have some
understanding of the Mystery of Golgotha.
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Lecture XI | MEMORY, TEMPERAMENTS, BODILY CULTURE AND ART |
August 16, 1923 |
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The right way
in which to develop the child's memory. Three golden rules. The teacher
must have an intuitive understanding of certain symptoms of health and
disease in the child. Treatment of children according to their particular
temperaments. Contact between parents and teachers. Special class in
the Waldorf School for backward children. Individual treatment.
Curative Eurhythmy. The moment we begin to teach the child physics
and chemistry, we must add some form of artistic work as a counter
balance. Art is not a mere invention of man; it is a domain in which
the human being is able to gaze into the secrets of Nature at a level
different from that of ordinary thought.
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Last Modified: 23-Nov-2024
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