Searching Rudolf Steiner Lectures by Location (Oslo) Matches
You may select a new search term and repeat your search.
Searches are not case sensitive, and you can use
regular expressions
in your queries.
Query type:
Query was: concept
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: Lecture: On the Reality of Higher Worlds
Matching lines:
- mental pictures, concepts, thought-content, into the centre of the
- from which the human being descends when through birth or conception,
- organs; how in a world of soul-and-spirit before birth or conception,
- gaze into the world he left at birth or conception and will enter
- Title: Mission of Folk-Souls (1929): Lecture 1
Matching lines:
- with the conception of the Folk-spirit, — and which underlies
- this conception, — is difficult to make clear to the man of our
- Today we shall endeavor to form a sort of conception of
- Title: Mission of Folk-Souls (1929): Lecture 2
Matching lines:
- the several books in which in any, part of the world the conception
- conceptions, if from the anthroposophical standpoint one observes a
- Title: Mission of Folk-Souls (1929): Lecture 3
Matching lines:
- It will now be a case of starting out from some conception with which
- you are acquainted, a conception that bears some likeness to the
- would then also have a number of inner conceptions, but there you
- conception of how the consciousness of the Archangels works. A world
- mathematical concepts only; it is man who is so imperfect that he is
- how new conceptions and new world-secrets have from time to time
- conceptions of Zeus and Athena if they had only relied upon external
- all this. A nation is not a race, the concept of a nation has nothing
- Title: Mission of Folk-Souls (1929): Lecture 4
Matching lines:
- fearful confusion into the conception of the actual evolution of
- Title: Mission of Folk-Souls (1929): Lecture 5
Matching lines:
- Now it is exceptionally difficult, as all conceptions
- Title: Mission of Folk-Souls (1929): Lecture 6
Matching lines:
- wish to form a conception of these seven with their various missions,
- If we want to obtain a satisfactory conception of the
- conception of this, you will acquire an inner knowledge of these
- Title: Mission of Folk-Souls (1929): Lecture 7
Matching lines:
- rank, then only do we obtain a correct conception of what is actually
- rich material for conceptions that may lovingly comprehend the
- Title: Mission of Folk-Souls (1929): Lecture 8
Matching lines:
- of similarity to other mythologies and concepts of the gods, is
- events have a past, and the conceptions which he thus acquires are
- concepts instead of those former pictures. The events which took
- Title: Mission of Folk-Souls (1929): Lecture 9
Matching lines:
- religious conception built up out of the whole Semitic tradition as
- mythologies and concepts of the world, but in none of them will you
- Title: Mission of Folk-Souls (1929): Lecture 10
Matching lines:
- body. But this form of world-conception which now appeared in Greece
- contains in pure concepts that which the Northman still saw as
- instance, we find there in the East the following conception: The
- all-embracing feeling, the concept of the Heavenly Father. In
- Father and the Earth-Mother. Universal as these conceptions are we
- conception so universal. We find in them clearly defined Divine
- in a differently developed form of conception and feeling, —
- concepts which characterize this fifth plane or spiritual world are
- conception of Christ has been able to come in the East than in
- conception of Christ is that held by the Russian philosopher,
- contains within it. But as regards the conception of Christ, if we
- But in Solovioff the concept of Christ is a very
- different one. He fully recognizes the two parts in this conception,
- put aside, because the ordinary conceptions do not suffice to make
- spiritual must be clearly distinguished. The concept of Christ rests
- Solovioff carries this duality into his conception of
- a wonderful way in Solovioff's conception of Christ, which like
- much further because this conception of Christ is felt to be a
- conceptions are able to offer concerning it. The conception of
- Christian conception of the State which hovers as a great ideal
- Maximum number of matches per file exceeded.
- Title: Mission of Folk-Souls (1929): Lecture 11
Matching lines:
- in a conception implanted in the Scandinavian Germanic mythology. The
- Title: Paths to Knowledge of Higher Worlds
Matching lines:
- definite concepts which can easily be surveyed are again and again
- that we completely surrender to such concepts, our thinking power
- shall be particularly successful in concentrating upon concepts which
- Such concepts can be obtained from an experienced
- to develop concepts which do not live in our memory. They are set in
- ourselves upon such a concept, or complex of concepts.
- Why must such a concept or complex of concepts be something quite
- conception, an idea or a thought, we cannot pass over at will to
- This conception leads to a standpoint that makes it appear childish
- of the conception of life, of what I call the etheric body, or body
- You are all acquainted with the physical concept of latent heat
- This conception — of course, duly modified and extended —
- appear in the child revealing a more sharply outlined concept of
- it is no longer entirely in keeping with Goethe’s conception;
- merely a concept. But when such a reality is suppressed, when we
- conception of the forces working in us from birth onwards, a
- conception of super-sensible forces working upon the physical body, we
- us a conception of the external physical world, so the steps
- our anthroposophical world-conception had in mind when they wished to
- spiritual world-conception, such as that contained in the
- Title: Lecture: The World Development in the Light of Anthroposophy
Matching lines:
- conception, as described the day before yesterday, a world in
- for the higher spiritual world, in which concepts must penetrate
- up to an artistic conception, we perceive the activity of the
- soul-spiritual in man, and we must rise up to such a conception
- concepts, as described today; we must rise up to the moral world
- the natural-scientific concept, that there should still exist
- Title: Lecture: Foundations of Anthroposophy
Matching lines:
- firm standpoint in life, we must first obtain a conception of our
- and as an introduction let me mention a few striking conceptions
- Title: Mission/Folk-Souls (1970): 1. Angels, Folk Spirits, Time Spirits: their part in the Evolution of Mankind.
Matching lines:
- find to be identical with the conception of the Folk Spirit and which
- underlies this conception. If we were to ask — to take a case
- Title: Mission/Folk-Souls (1970): 2. Normal and abnormal Archangels and Time Spirits.
Matching lines:
- have widely different conceptions of what constitutes a people.
- Title: Mission/Folk-Souls (1970): 3. The inner Life of the Folk Spirits. Formation of the Races.
Matching lines:
- some familiar conception, a conception that bears a close relation to
- conceptions are few and far between; man's consciousness has
- number of inner concepts. But here you would find much with which you
- concepts only; rather is it the consequence of man's
- Greeks have taken their conceptions of Zeus and Athene if they had
- ideas will be more elastic. A nation is not a race. The concept of
- the concept of race? Those Beings whom we describe as normal Spirits
- Title: Mission/Folk-Souls (1970): 5. Manifestation of the Hierarchies in the Elements of Nature.
Matching lines:
- phenomena has a totally different conception of this “rocky
- all conceptions change from one planetary condition to another it is
- Title: Mission/Folk-Souls (1970): 6. The Five Root Races of Mankind.
Matching lines:
- conception of these seven Elohim with their various missions and
- a progressively more definite and concrete conception of this racial
- Title: Mission/Folk-Souls (1970): 7. Advance of Folk Spirits to the Rank of Time Spirits.
Matching lines:
- the anthroposophical conception of the world such as it shall grow to
- Title: Mission/Folk-Souls (1970): 8. The Five Post-Atlantean Civilizations.
Matching lines:
- there was a large measure of agreement on fundamental conceptions of
- have a long ancestry and the conceptions he thus acquires we
- sophisticated terms, using concepts in place of images. In
- Title: Mission/Folk-Souls (1970): 9. Loki - Hodur and Baldur - Twilight of the Gods.
Matching lines:
- a religious conception built up out of the whole Semitic tradition as
- as you will through the many different mythologies and conceptions of
- peoples and our conception of our vision of the future. All this is
- Title: Mission/Folk-Souls (1970): 10. The Mission of Individual Peoples and Cultures in the Past, Present and Future.
Matching lines:
- in the form of pure concepts that which Nordic man still saw as
- the anthroposophical conception of successive planes or worlds
- culture. We find in the East, for example, the following conception:
- the Earth, is embodied in the concept of the Heavenly Father, in one
- as these conceptions are, we find them among the outposts of the
- mythology is this conception so universal. In the West we find
- East. In the conception of the Blessed Child there is again a world
- different, of course, in conception and feeling — which we have
- gradations of feelings of the Slavonic peoples and that the concepts
- conception of the Christ than Western Europe, except in those areas
- of the West where the conception of the Christ has been introduced by
- Spiritual Science the most advanced conception of Christ is that of
- the Russian philosopher, Solovieff. His conception of Christ is such
- look at the conception of Christ as presented by Hegel, for example,
- conception of Christ is very different. He fully recognizes the dual
- nature of this conception. He rejects the endless theological
- ordinary conceptions are inadequate for an understanding of the dual
- clearly distinguished. The concept of Christ rests upon a clear
- carries this duality into his conception of Christ and emphasizes
- that this conception can be meaningful only if one accepts the
- Maximum number of matches per file exceeded.
- Title: Mission/Folk-Souls (1970): 11. Nerthus, Freyja and Gerda.
Matching lines:
- imaginative conceptions of Teutonic mythology and has persisted so
- a purely materialistic conception of the manifestation of Christ. It
- Title: Fifth Gospel (1950): Lecture I
Matching lines:
- it — that in times to come the concept or idea of Christ
- concepts and thoughts must be summoned to his aid if he desires
- there can be any true conception of Christ. But if we turn
- even by theosophical conceptions towards an understanding of
- We need not think here of any conception of Christ in His
- great cosmic setting, but of much simpler conceptions of
- underlying reality, not merely the concepts and ideas
- thought to the conception of a spiritual origin of the Earth.
- conception derives its motive power from the Christian
- concepts that have become ingrained in us, to leave aside
- Title: Fifth Gospel (1950): Lecture II
Matching lines:
- something that seems like an affront against the conceptions of
- Title: Fifth Gospel (1950): Lecture III
Matching lines:
- expression to concepts and ideas of the modern mind. But many
- concepts already familiar to us from Theosophy —
- Gospel reveals that this event was something like conception in
- all ideas and concepts otherwise acquired concerning the
- form a really clear conception of the event of Pentecost
- concepts that are elaborated in Theosophy. We know that in
- conception of the infinite suffering undergone by the Christ
- concept of karma is not applicable.
- the concepts and ideas arising from these things are taken in
- the conception of Christ into the sphere of the earth. This was
- Title: Fifth Gospel (1950): Lecture V
Matching lines:
- conception of the world is making its appearance in Europe too,
- Title: Eternal Soul of Man in the Light of Anthroposophy
Matching lines:
- concepts, we would be doing something completely different of
- as a member of the entire cosmos, and he has a concept that is
- concepts, and, with the same intensity of soul life, now
- carries away in turn such concepts from consciousness; only one
- such concepts, such thoughts in a strong manner, the one who
- to these concepts.
- acquired conceptions stop. Think first of all about stopping
- these visual concepts and you know that the person will fall
- conceptions and then clears them away again. There then occurs
- Thus, the concepts that were first brought into consciousness
- the complex concepts of the consciousness are first powerfully
- exercises. Just as one can get rid of a concept, so can one get
- human being prior to birth or prior to conception actually
- through conception — and the descent to this earthly
- understanding. In the intellectual conceptions of today, people
- Title: Cosmic Forces in Man: Lecture I: Cosmic Forces in Man
Matching lines:
- the conception of the Cosmos as a great system of machinery to which
- Title: Cosmic Forces in Man: Lecture II: The Soul Life of Man ...
Matching lines:
- concepts, such a man merely thinks words. He becomes unfree
- Title: Cosmic Forces in Man: Lecture III: The Mission of the Scandanavian Peoples
Matching lines:
- there before birth or conception and has come down with us into the
- death assumes an egotistic form in the religious concepts of to-day.
- Gnostic conceptions, the wisdom-filled conceptions of Christianity now
- Title: Colour: Part Three: Colours as Revelations of the Psychic in the World
Matching lines:
- by means of some concept-illustration, how green, peach-colour, white
- Title: Foundations of Anthroposophy: Lecture I: Foundations of Anthroposophy
Matching lines:
- obtain a conception of our own nature. And it must be said that
- a few striking conceptions of modern investigators, examples
- bringing meditation concepts into our consciousness, and thus
- Title: Foundations of Anthroposophy: Lecture II: Man in the Light of Anthroposophy
Matching lines:
- or conception.
- conception with the physical substance given to us by our
- descends into a physical embodiment through conception and
- with conceptions flowing in the stream of time, so one
- conception of how after death man experiences in this reversed
- conception is just reversed: We are now centred in a world
- conception, and unites with the physical body.
- true conception of the way in which man develops here on earth
- soul-spiritual world becomes united through conception and up
- conception. The universe and man belong together not only
- Title: Foundations of Anthroposophy: Lecture III: World Development in the Light of Anthroposophy
Matching lines:
- descending into our physical being through birth or conception,
- physiology, and we then also form concepts as to how man's
- which concepts must penetrate by the methods described, but for
- contradicts this conception. Although modern scientists set up
- when we rise up to an artistic conception, we also perceive the
- such a conception if we wish to understand the human being. We
- were theoretical concepts, as I described to-day; we must rise
- Title: Lecture I: Man in the Light of Occultism
Matching lines:
- pursued in every serious world-conception, although in ordinary
- there of the ideas and conceptions to which he is accustomed. The
- concepts current among this people. The result is that occult
- is presented to us in ideas and concepts that we have already and in
- conception which has not a religious character, in the sense in
- the overthrow of all specialised world-conceptions and help to break
- Title: Lecture III: Man in the Light of Occultism
Matching lines:
- he can connect and combine the philosophical ideas and conceptions he
- Christ. No consistent philosophy can contain the conception of Christ.
- conception of the unspoken word, the unspoken
- To express in terms of scientific concepts and in correct logical
- scientific concepts. In theosophy, however, there is no such need. The
- in simple concepts; you know yourselves how little can suffice for an
- Title: Lecture IV: Man in the Light of Occultism
Matching lines:
- influence upon the religious conceptions of mankind. Hence the care
- It is difficult to form a conception of the nature of mysticism
- and conceptions that are acquired by use of the instrument of the
- Title: Lecture VIII: Man in the Light of Occultism
Matching lines:
- evoking some conception, some picture only of what is in very truth
- the picture of an amphibian. No, such a conception can hardly be
- Title: Lecture X: Man in the Light of Occultism
Matching lines:
- on your consciousness from without and concepts and ideas are called
- Word. And now you have acquired a conception of a Consciousness
- a higher world-conception. And whilst upon Earth universal brotherhood
- Title: Man's Being: Lecture I: On the Nature and Destiny of Man and World
Matching lines:
- correct conceptions of our experiences between falling
- anyone wishing to form a conception of man's
- knowledge from which is drawn a conception of the
- means of conception. At the moment of falling asleep, we
- birth, respectively before conception.
- beware lest people be shocked by such unusual concepts.
- Title: Man's Being: Lecture II: Life between Death and a New Incarnation
Matching lines:
- Abstract concepts are not understood by the dead. Hence I must
- Materialistic physiology has entirely wrong conceptions of
- about by conception. Physical matter is completely destroyed in
- engendered through the act of conception.
- Title: Man's Being: Lecture III: Our Experiences at Night, Life after Death
Matching lines:
- the spiritual world, we must learn to form conceptions of such
- Anyone able to form imaginative and inspired conceptions will
- with the Christ, and gain a living conception of what took
- (These conceptions have been modified, but still prevail
- The human being forms certain conceptions: One should act in a
- conceptual thinking only after acquiring the faculty of
- we could acquire no real conception of the spiritual world.
- the world are unable to form the slightest conception of
- Title: Man's Being: Lecture V: Man's Being, His Destiny and World Evolution - 2
Matching lines:
- conception of having a physical body that is slowly becoming a
- teaching given to us in school, from forming a conception of
- Title: Man's Being: Lecture VI: Man's Being, His Destiny and World Evolution - 3
Matching lines:
- that we are able today to have conceptions of how one animal
- Darwin-Haeckel conception that the human form has developed out
- Title: Esoteric Lessons Part II: Oslo, 6-20-10
Matching lines:
- who's born into a nation and family inherits certain concepts
- knowledge. But he mustn't place himself above the concepts that
- Title: Esoteric Lessons Part II: Oslo, 6-7-12
Matching lines:
- inspiration. It's not just words, concepts,
- ideals — it's words, concepts and ideals that are permeated
- Title: Esoteric Lessons Part II: Oslo, 6-9-12
Matching lines:
- concept, the knowledge that he exists. But if this would be a
- Title: Esoteric Lessons Part II: Oslo, 6-11-12
Matching lines:
- That's why everything is clothed in concepts and words that one
- Title: Lecture III: WORLD-PENTECOST: The Message of Anthroposophy
Matching lines:
- Mystery of Golgotha took place, man's conception of it was quite
- understanding, a new conception, must arise. It is the task of
- Title: Arts and Their Mission: Lecture VII
Matching lines:
- E MUST emphasize again and again that the anthroposophical world-conception
- thoughts. As a result, certain ideas give conceptual form to the phenomena
- concept.
- as sculptors, we abandoned head thinking, so now we lose the concept
- Title: Arts and Their Mission: Lecture VIII
Matching lines:
- that reason I cannot furnish conceptual proof that green, peach-blossom,
- time for painting to return to a more spiritual conception, to return
- say, in both directions a tendency toward naturalistic conception. In
- cosmos; then you will have a conception of what remains over when man
- by a world-conception, this is the crux of the matter. Art has always
- taken its rise from a world-conception, from inner world-experience.
- Title: The Fifth Gospel: Lecture I
Matching lines:
- Namely the concept of Christ will play a different and a
- secrets of the Christ Being and the Christ concept. Each
- concepts and ideas for a full understanding of what Christ
- correct concept of Christ.
- according to their concepts, but also according to their
- Title: The Fifth Gospel: Lecture II
Matching lines:
- stand up to the scientific concepts which dominate the
- Title: The Fifth Gospel: Lecture III
Matching lines:
- contemporary concepts. But we can approach that greatest of
- earthly secrets by using many of the concepts and ideas
- Christ-being, we must use the concepts we already have
- Christ, with the act of conception in a human being. The
- the concepts we have acquired about the successive stages
- the Fifth Gospel, we must use the concepts we have
- three-year earthly life for which the concept of karma in
- these concepts in the profoundest sense in order to
- the conception of Christ on earth.
- Title: The Fifth Gospel: Lecture IV
Matching lines:
- instruction. The conception appears for the first time in
- conception of bath qol sprang up in the period of the
- conception of the nature and means of Divine revelation
- Title: Lecture: Reading the Pictures of the Apocalypse: Part 2: Lecture Four
Matching lines:
- stage to stage we acquire the concept of history. A thinking human being
- Title: Lecture: Reading the Pictures of the Apocalypse: Part 2: Lecture Five
Matching lines:
- things, for the first time the concept of the “last will and
- did not yet have the concept of the single man or woman standing firmly
- Before this the concept of personality, the concept of the divine-spiritual
- Title: Lecture: Reading the Pictures of the Apocalypse: Part 2: Lecture Eight
Matching lines:
- succession of epochs is the concept of the Apocalyptic “books”
The
Rudolf Steiner e.Lib is maintained by:
The e.Librarian:
elibrarian@elib.com
|