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- Title: Agriculture Course: Address by Dr. Rudolf Steiner
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- of their lives. There are the anthroposophists who live Anthroposophia
- and love it, making it the content of their lives. Generally, though
- tolerance among farmers — an intimate “live and let live”
- who thereby, perhaps, can understand what lives in the peasantry, in
- Title: Agriculture Course: Discussion after Lecture 4
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- in yesterday's lecture. For when you meditate you live quite differently
- of the peasants in all the things that touch their lives. It might have
- altogether different time. You lived with the peasants in the country,
- Title: Agriculture Course: Discussion after Lecture 8
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- Whatever is alive — the higher it is, the more it will tend to
- Title: Agriculture Course: Supplement
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- on sheep. The idea is that certain bacteria live in the paunch of the
- If you make a solution of nutritive salts, certain plants cannot live
- Title: Agriculture Course: Lecture 1
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- light in the realms of Anthroposophia, we also need to live in it
- forget that the silicon which lives thus in the mineral quartz is
- farther. Everything that lives in the silicious nature contains
- Title: Agriculture Course: Lecture 2
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- observe how all agricultural products arise; how Agriculture lives in
- itself grows inwardly alive and develops its own chemical processes,
- alive; moreover in winter it is most of all alive. If we human beings
- that live and abound in the distant planets are working, as we have
- shading. If on the other hand the earthly nature is to live strongly
- the midst between the two. The Sun-nature lives most of all in the
- given, does the cosmic nature live in the plant? It lives in the
- lives in the whole complex of Nature's household. In form and colour
- Title: Agriculture Course: Lecture 3
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- human Ego — the essential Spirit of man — lives in the
- carbon, so in a manner of speaking the Ego of the Universe lives as
- the Spirit of the Universe — lives via the sulphur in the
- our breathing it becomes alive again. Inside us it must be alive.
- in the air. But the moment it comes into the Earth, it is alive
- again. Just as the oxygen does, so too the nitrogen becomes alive;
- only becomes alive but sensitive inside the Earth; and this is
- so, it would be like a man who lived on a farm but wanted to remain
- alive, and astral. Hydrogen carries it upward and
- breathing. We live and weave in concentration and meditation.
- youth, at least, when I lived among the peasant folk, could witness
- plants, everything that belongs to nitrogen lives far more nearly
- cravings. See how it all becomes organic and alive! Take the chalk or
- effect, all that the limestone desires to have, lives in the
- aristocratic gentleman, silica, lives either in the ramparts of his
- plant itself live in the midst of this process? Down there below, the
- Title: Agriculture Course: Lecture 4
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- live cannot possibly be judged from such restricted aspects.
- to become inwardly alive — akin to the plant-nature. Now the same
- To manure the earth is to make it alive, so that the plant may not be
- the soil is sufficiently alive.
- outer world, the organism must live in this way: through the contours
- develop inner mobility; their body becomes inwardly quick and alive.
- outward, and lives with its environment, thereby receiving
- throughout the winter — in the season when the Earth is most alive
- — the entire content of the horn becomes inwardly alive. For the
- Earth is most inwardly alive in winter-time. All that is living is stored
- Title: Agriculture Course: Lecture 6
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- the earth, where it must live, the cosmic forces upon which its life
- nematode is a wire-like worm). But it cannot live up there, for the
- only live within certain limits of existence. You try to live in an
- Above and beneath this level you can no longer live. Nor can the nematode.
- It cannot live if the earth is not there, nor can it live unless the
- longer live. It shuns life if it has to live in an earth thus peppered.
- makes it to some extent alive in itself; awakens waves and weavings
- alive. The water, too, is mineral. There is of course no hard-and-fast
- the earth too strongly. The earth will become too much alive. Once more,
- live. Needless to say, you cannot merely speculate. Nevertheless, you
- Title: Agriculture Course: Lecture 7
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- The fully developed insect, in effect, lives and moves by virtue of
- the existence of the woods. Their larvae, too, live by the very existence
- only live upon the earth by virtue of the tree-roots being there. However,
- themselves, so to speak, from the tree-root-nature, and live more near
- earth-worm — how it lives together with the soil. These worms
- own essence, it is a creature that lives directly in the air and warmth.
- of the air and warmth. That is how the animal lives in the domain of
- absorbs the air and warmth. The plant lives directly with the earth
- may say: Having recognised that the plant lives directly with earth
- sense in which the animal lives by absorption of food, the plant lives
- from the world, and lives thereby. Thus the plant gives, and lives by
- you will often find this saying: Everything in Nature lives by give
- Title: Agriculture Course: Lecture 8
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- will emerge; but all of these will proceed from the one guiding live:
- way it lives in the Earth, the root absorbs this nascent Ego-force.
- substance into its head, so that it may have a live and mobile sense-relationship,
- a most beneficial effect on a morbid inclination of the liver. In effect,
- the liver of all Organs works with the greatest relative independence
- in the human body. Therefore, quite generally speaking, liver diseases
- — those that are rather diseases of the animal liver — can
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