Searching First Scientific Lecture-Course Matches
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Query was: relation
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- Title: First Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
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- few men have ever had so clear an understanding of the relation of
- relation of natural phenomena to those mathematical formulations
- of pure Geometry. What a cube or an octahedron is, and the relations
- he knew what is the only possible relation of Mathematics to Natural
- relation is even of Man himself to all his study and contemplation of
- a clearer picture of Man's relation to Nature and how it needs to be.
- Title: Second Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
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- Here then you have the real relationship to man. To understand what
- to the relation you enter into with the outer world whenever you
- relations too, and about one of these — leaping a little ahead
- — I wish to speak today. I mean the relation to the outer world
- space. Manifestly we then come into quite another relation to the
- Title: Third Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
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- relation to the rest of Physics, and will therefore provide a good
- prism — the phenomena of colour, in all their polar relation to
- these phenomena? Evidently there is an active relation between the
- emerges for us from the relation of the eye to the outer world. Now
- partly take our start tomorrow in studying the relation of the eye to
- Title: Fourth Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
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- an irradiation of light, in relation to which it is dark. Below,
- kind of relation to it, it may well have a dimming or even
- Title: Fifth Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
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- remaining time — we shall now have to consider the relation of
- problem looking for the relations between the colours and what we
- Concerning the relation of the colours to the bodies we see around us
- relation to the light? How do they, simply by dint of their material
- existence so to speak, develop such relation to the light that one
- coloured light. The Bologna stone had acquired a relation to the
- come into relation to the light, changing it through their own nature
- we see the mutual relation between the light and the chlorophyll.
- inasmuch as we through our astral body come into relation to what the
- You must refer it to an astral relation to the light. But you may
- see, the case is different. Here too you have an astral relation; but
- from the astral relation you enter into with the colour in this
- light — spectral colours. There you have astral relations of a
- something you none the less entertain astral relations to what we
- the astral relation — please think it through as thoroughly as
- Title: Sixth Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
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- relation of our life of soul to mass, — how we are put
- Title: Seventh Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
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- no other relation to the objectively existent ether than all the
- relation I am in to light with the relation I am in to
- warmth?”, you will have to answer, “While my relation
- really perceiving when we come into relation to the
- its relation, in ever-balancing and compensating interplay, with
- we have three stages in man's relation to the outer world — I
- connection. Look open-mindedly at your relation to the element of
- number, a certain figure expresses the relation which can be
- the numerical expression of the relation between the two.
- Title: Ninth Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
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- behaves, in relation to a magnet, just as matter would behave. The
- flowing along here, but in its movement and in relation to other
- them have one property in common. Their relation to ourselves is
- our relation to the electrical phenomena. We do not perceive
- Title: Tenth Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
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- very near relation to those of electricity and magnetism. Now the
- establishing the near relation of these rays to the ordinary
- numerical relations also empirical in kind. They then use the
- gas or air under the influence of warmth and in relation to its
- respect of the relation of man to the external world the
- in a Baltic University, on the relation of Physics and Technics,
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