Notes
“The little Plateau experiment,” worked out
by the physicist J.A.E Plateau, 1801 – 1883. Compare the
description by Vincent Knauer in his lectures, “The Main
Problem of Philosophy,” Vienna and Leipzig 1892: “One of
the nicest experiments is the Plateau experiment. A mixture of water
and alcohol is prepared, having the exact weight of pure olive oil.
Into this is poured a rather large drop of oil. This does not float
on top of the liquid but sinks to the middle of it, in the form of a
ball. A small disc of cardboard is then perforated in the center by
a long needle and lowered carefully into the middle of the ball of
oil, so that the edge of the cardboard becomes the ‘equator’
of the ball. The disc is now set into motion, at first slowly, then
faster and faster. Naturally the movement is imparted to the ball of
oil, and as a result of the strength of the movement, parts of the
oil drop away and continue the movement separately for some time,
first in circles, then revolving as tiny balls. In this way there
arises something surprisingly similar to our planetary system: in
the center the largest globe, like our sun, and moving around it
smaller balls and rings, like our planets with their moons.”
This lecture was postponed to Thursday, July 3rd.
This lecture was postponed to Monday, July 7th.
Paris, May 25th – June 16th,
1906: “L'Esotérisme chrétien / Esquisse
d'une cosmogonie psychologique,” Paris 1957.
Eugen Dubois, 1858 – 1940, Dutch military doctor
and geologist. Discovered remains of Java man, a creature
intermediate between ape and man. See his publication
Pithecanthropus erectus, eine menschenähnliche Übergangsform
auf Java, Batavia, 1894.
The Second International Congress, Vienna, June 1 –
12, 1922. See
The Tension Between East and West.
Berthold Schwarz, Franciscan monk, Freiburg, around
1300.
Johann Gutenberg, 1394 – 1468.
Lao Tse, Chinese philosopher, 6th century
B.C.
Confucius, 531 – 478 BC., Chinese ethical
teacher.
The philosopher Karl Ludwig Michelet, 1801 –
1893, and the theologian and philosopher Eduard Zeller, 1814 –
1908. See Rudolf Steiner,
Study of Man: General Education Course,
Stuttgart, Aug. – Sept. 1919. Anthroposophic Press, New York.
See also
The Younger Generation: Educational and Spiritual impulses for Life in the Twentieth Century,
Stuttgart, October 1922. Anthroposophic Press, New York.
Hippocrates of Cos, 460 – 377 BC. Greek
physician, founder of ancient medicine.
Emperor Frederick III, 1831 – 1888. Suffered from
a disease of the larynx. It is not known who wrote the request.
Nicholas Copernicus, 1473 – 1543. Astronomer.
Arthur Schopenhauer, 1788 – 1860. Philosopher.
Venus's-flytrap: Dionaea muscipula, found in
swamps in the warmer part of North America. See Charles Darwin,
“Insectivorous Plants,” 1875.
Hermann Rollett, 1819 – 1904. Austrian writer.
See Rudolf Steiner,
The Younger Generation
(mentioned above), page 150.
See Rudolf Steiner,
Occult History, Lecture V:
“... so-called canals on Mars. There it is a matter of certain
streams of force which correspond to an earlier stage of the earth
...”
At Koberwitz, June 7 – 16, 1924. See Rudolf
Steiner, “Agriculture.”
This lecture was postponed to Saturday, Sept. 13th.
The “synodic” revolution, that is, the time
between two successive conjunctions or oppositions to the sun,
varies with Mars between 2 years 34 days and 2 years 80 days, the
average time therefore being 2 years 50 days.
Matthias Jakob Schleiden, 1804 – 1881.
Naturalist. Gustav Theodor Fechner, 1801 – 1887. Naturalist;
founder of psychophysics. See his publication “Professor
Schleiden und der Mond,” Leipzig 1856.
There is a period of 243 years 2 days in which the
intervals between the Venus transits are 8 years, 121.5 years, 8
years and 105.5 years. The last transit took place December 6, 1882.
According to astronomical calculation the next transit will be on
June 7, 2004.
The Waldorf School, Stuttgart, Germany, opened in 1919
under Rudolf Steiner's guidance. There are now more than 300 schools
in the international Waldorf School movement.
This lecture was postponed to Thursday, September 18th.
Ferdinand Hochstetter, 1829 – 1884. Geographer
and geologist.
Active volcano in Mexico.
Ernst Haeckel, 1834 – 1919. Biologist and
philosopher.
The so-called “little Weigel house,” built
in 1647, demolished in 1898 when Weigelstrasse was constructed. One
of the “Seven Wonders of Jena”. It was 7 stories high
and contained a circular staircase through which one could look up
by day and see the stars shining in the heavens.
Rudolf Falb, 1838 – 1903. See “Grundzüge
der Theorie der Erdbeben und Vulkanausbrüche,” Graz 1870;
“Gedanken und Studien über den Vulkanismus,” Graz
1875.
Goethe fought vehemently the ideas on volcanoes held by
Leopold von Buch and others, which were at that time becoming
well-known, and which in his opinion lacked a central idea that
could have illumined the individual facts. See his letter to Nees
von Esenbeck, June 13, 1823.
Julius Robert Mayer, 1814 – 1878. See “Beiträge
zur Dynamik des Himmels,” Heilbronn, 1848.
Karl von Nagler, 1770 – 1846, Prussian statesman.
Postmaster 1823 – 1846. Initiated our modern mail system.
See R. Hagen, “Die erste deutsche Eisenbahn,”
1885.
Sir Francis Drake, 1540 – 1596. Famous British
navigator.
J.J.L. Lalande, 1732 – 1807. French astronomer.
Joseph Johann Littrow, 1781 – 1840, “Über
den gefürchteten Kometen des Jahres 1832 and über Kometen
überhaupt,” Wien, 1832.
Wolfram von Eschenbach, 1170 – 1220, “Parzival,”
completed in 1210. Richard Wagner, 1813 – 1883, “Parsifal,
a sacred dramatic festival” appeared as poem in 1877; the
opera was finished in 1882.
Rudolf Steiner taught in the Arbeiterbildungschule, a
workmen's college, Berlin, 1899 – 1904. See
The Course of My Life chap. 28,
Dornach, 1962. Anthroposophic Press, Hudson.
Ferdinand Lassalle, 1825 – 1864. Founder of
Socialism in Germany.
This scheduled lecture did not take place. The lecture
of September 24, 1924, concluding this volume was the last Rudolf
Steiner was able to give to the workmen. His illness began within a
few days.
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