Searching Oswald Spengler, Prophet of World Chaos Matches
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- Title: Oswald Spengler: Lecture I: On Spengler's "Decline of the West"
Matching lines:
- those who do not grasp the nature of the impulses of
- inner nature of what is working in social, political, and
- Such is the nature of initiation-wisdom. But how can we expect
- is the nature of the things which you encounter wherever the
- Title: Oswald Spengler: Lecture II: Oswald Spengler - I
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- everything of a declining nature exactly because all his
- today to lifeless, inorganic, mineral nature. Perhaps some of
- issue. In surveying inorganic nature, the matter of concern is
- grasp by means of it only lifeless, inorganic nature; but that,
- thinking, as it holds sway in lifeless nature, can later rise
- with the machine, with that which has given the very signature
- hand is foreign to man's nature, yet is on the other precisely
- the ground up. Till then nature had given service; now it is
- nature, whose waterpower has already been harnessed in
- emotions, it must seem that at that time nature reeled. In
- conceives the very nature of the unliving as lacking any
- nature and character of present-day cognition — which is
- when someone who knows nothing of the real nature of the
- bears in itself the plant-nature in the same form we today bear
- the mineral nature. It is characteristic of Oswald Spengler,
- is nature that gives in sleep. Such is the thinking of one of
- sleep-nature of the plant has even some highly
- of a cosmic nature, as dwell in peoples, parties, armies,
- Title: Oswald Spengler: Lecture III: Oswald Spengler - II
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- just as nature-forces; whereas the modern thought-images no
- a plantlike nature, he really brings forth in a living state:
- Title: Oswald Spengler: Article I: Spengler's "Perspectives of World History"
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- beginning directs our observation toward nature. “Regard
- nature, which is accomplishing itself near, with, and in the
- in his mind? Is the mood provoked by this gaze at nature
- nature had rendered services, but now she was tied to the
- nature herself was tottering ... And these machines become in
- was it looking at lifeless nature. Ever since man approached
- nature of the ink in which a letter is written when we want to
- lifeless nature man sees in complete clarity all that he needs
- can dispense with all but what inorganic nature shows in full
- as in the case of the pictures of lifeless nature. Goethe felt
- the picture-knowledge of what is alien to their nature in order
- darkness of man's own nature. It becomes clear for the first
- impulses and contents of his own nature, which cannot be clear.
- nothing through their own nature. They are impotent. But if a
- has trained himself to experience lifeless nature, then he
- previously dreamed more or less as it ensouled nature.
- Title: Oswald Spengler: Article II: The Flight From Thinking
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- really creative plant-like forces in human nature:
- Title: Oswald Spengler: Article IV: Spengler's Spirit-Deserted History
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- everything spiritual in nature and history.
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