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Query was: activity

Here are the matching lines in their respective documents. Select one of the highlighted words in the matching lines below to jump to that point in the document.

  • Title: Boundaries of Natural Science: Forword
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    • It is moreover a free activity. Spiritual training, says Steiner,
    • a more acute inner activity, and of higher forms of knowledge.
    • inner activity that one can exclude and suppress conceptual thinking from
  • Title: Boundaries of Natural Science: Lecture I
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    • all of man's thinking, all of his notional activity, was determined
    • activity within them, so that there rises up within us, by virtue of this
    • corporeal activity, what eventually becomes sensation and consciousness.
    • human mental activity [das Vorstellen], to the human soul, one finds
  • Title: Boundaries of Natural Science: Lecture III
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    • an activity of soul entirely different from that which underlies our
    • how is this inner activity of the soul that we need in mathematics,
    • activity of the soul different from that whereby we grasp external nature
    • activity, a certain inner mathematics, just in those first several years.
    • of teeth their activity begins to wane, but observe to take but one
    • therein the powerful activity of these three inner senses. And if one
    • mathematics active within man. This activity does not entirely cease
    • Inspiration we have something inwardly spiritual, the activity of which
    • activity continues. In doing mathematics we experience this in part.
    • But just what kind of activity is this? He demands that we trace external
    • He demands this as a scientific activity.
    • manifest their activity in the human being, how they proceed from man's
    • inner nature to manifest their activity externally. We shall have to
  • Title: Boundaries of Natural Science: Lecture IV
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    • reveals itself in its inner activity as a reality. Of this thinking
    • a theater of cognition; one has grasped the activity of universal being
    • simultaneously as an inner activity. It is an inner activity that can
    • activity alone. At the same time I indicated clearly in my
  • Title: Boundaries of Natural Science: Lecture V
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    • one makes the physical body one's own through the activity of the ego
  • Title: Boundaries of Natural Science: Lecture VI
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    • that the Oriental turned outward and employing it inwardly, as an activity
    • of plastic forms is insufficient. To perform this inner activity one
    • radiates activity. In short, one must immerse oneself in such a way
  • Title: Boundaries of Natural Science: Lecture VII
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    • let us say, and at the same time imbues the color with conceptual activity,
    • the picture-forming activity sent inward, so that the physical organism
  • Title: Boundaries of Natural Science: Lecture VIII
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    • engage his thinking activity on every page.
    • only a kind of musical score that one must read with inner thought activity
    • through this book with his own inner thinking activity and cannot confess
    • of the inner thought activity I myself have expended, what pure thinking
    • of such acute inner activity that one can exclude and suppress conceptual
    • and so on. If we thus bring our activity of perception into a state
    • concepts, engage in an activity that is in a way the opposite of that
    • of contemplation and meditation but without any other activity on our
    • and cerebral activity. And the part of the breathing that can be discerned
    • as active within the brain works upon our sense activity as perception.
    • of the blood. The descent of cerebral fluid is bound up with the activity



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