Searching First Scientific Lecture-Course Matches
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Query was: describe
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- Title: Foreword: First Scientific Lecture-Course
Matching lines:
- described in Anthroposophia; also a knowledge of
- Title: First Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
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- colour, what we subjectively describe as the quality of colour is the
- all this, in order clearly to describe the point at which we pass,
- Title: Second Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
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- At the one pole is all that which we describe as yellow and the
- we may describe as blue and kindred colours — indigo and violet
- organization of the eye. To describe it we must say: our astral body
- Title: Third Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
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- described.
- get the phenomenon described before, only in this instance the circle
- Title: Sixth Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
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- — so they describe the process.
- when I describe it thus, is shifted upward too. In point of fact,
- complete in mind if I describe the whole human body as a single
- entity, — if I describe the different items so that they belong
- together. My task is not merely to describe what I see; I have to
- associated. Here, then, what is described as “electric
- Title: Seventh Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
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- to himself, and he went on to describe it somewhat as follows: When
- what may itself be described as an organism of vibrations, highly
- being” is at long last referred to — described in some
- kind of demonology — or rather, not described at all. We
- will describe them as the stage of Light, the stage of Warmth, and
- Title: Eighth Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
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- describe the human ear, and in a purely external sense we may aver:
- from outside, but the empty space — purely to describe the
- way to describe it. The tone, the sound that will appear when as I
- Title: Ninth Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
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- had discovered what Volta, a little later, was able to describe
- may in some sense be described as “physiological
- reversing the experiment which we have just described, warmth could
- the tube is not to be described as a wave-movement, propagated
- there from pole to pole, (or howsoever we may describe it;
- — so to describe it — which can be dealt with in a
- explosions of force, if we may so describe them, which can be
- in what may be described as the electrical domain. Moreover, all of
- described in former lectures. The same cannot be said so simply of
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