Searching Rudolf Steiner Lectures by Location (Dornach) Matches
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- Title: Lecture: The Moral as the Source of World-Creative Power
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- Kepler and then diluted into theory by Newton, was tabooed by the
- Title: On the Mysteries of Ancient and Modern Times: Lecture 2
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- Science (Newtonian physics), as you will find it to-day in
- Title: St. Augustine
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- memory of such people as Newton or Galileo, or Kepler; the
- Title: Karma of Vocation: Lecture I
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- color in order to oppose Newton, and the ways he depicts the
- Title: Problem of Faust: Lecture IX: Goethe's Life of the Soul from the Standpoint of Spiritual Science
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- men, in the so-called Newtonian theory of colors — in that
- theory built up by Newton on a certain hypothesis. This
- is immaterial whether it is represented, as it was by Newton
- Foolish. He studied this Newtonian physics, this Newtonian
- he could do nothing with it. This Newtonian physics serves
- as those of Newton or spencer, that is to say, if we cloud by
- perceived that, when he formed concepts like those of Newton,
- Title: Origins of Natural Science: Lecture IV
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- Copernicus, Galileo, Kepler, or Newton.
- On the other hand, Newton shows mathematics completely on its own.
- the essential facts. Newton is pretty much the first to approach the
- kind of successor to Copernicus, Newton becomes the real founder of
- It is interesting to see in Newton's time and in the age that
- problems with which some of these people wrestled. See how Newton,
- the greatest thinkers. Thus Newton really does not know why he takes
- Newton's, Bishop Berkeley,
- than Newton was, but Berkeley illustrates the conflicts taking place during
- hear, he was not satisfied with Newton, but he was especially struck
- by the way that Newton took these concepts as his basis without any
- avail. One feels this. Therefore, Newton is only beginning to juggle
- want to describe Newton's abilities in a telling manner. One of
- the concepts thus utilized by Newton is that of space. He manipulates
- Therefore one can say that Newton takes the trivial idea of space
- Newton's physics we meet for the first time ideas of nature
- Newtonian physics.
- By Newton's time mathematics has become abstracted. Man has
- from God. And in this utterly abstract form, Newton now applies
- Later on, interestingly enough, Newton goes somewhat deeper. This is
- Maximum number of matches per file exceeded.
- Title: Origins of Natural Science: Lecture VII
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- Now Newton applies Galileo's abstracted principle to the
- Newton, a so-called “objective” something is excogitated
- Thus we can say that through Newton the whole abstracted physical
- Newton was still quite certain that he could assume absolute
- Newtonism. This theory of relativity is a natural historical result.
- Title: Bridge between the Ideal and the Real: Lecture I
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- memory of such people as Newton or Galileo, or Kepler; the
- Title: Rosicrucianism/Initiation: Lecture I: Research into the Life of the Spirit During the Middle Ages
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- unhappy Newtonian Theory of Colour. The Initiates continued to smile
- at Newton's theory till the eighteenth century, but in that
- of Newton's Theory of Colour. If one is still inwardly
- censured so hardly as when he had to censure Newton, he went for him
- recognise the Newtonian Theory of Colour is a fool in the eyes of the
- Title: Boundaries of Natural Science: Lecture I
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- had said that a second Newton would never be found who could explain
- second Newton had been found in Darwin, that Darwin had actually tried,
- Title: The Building at Dornach: Lecture II
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- physics receives its stamp from Newton, but how, in Goethe,
- against Newton. It is wonderful to see how two discoverers of
- Leibnitz and Newton, entirely in conformity with the relation
- Title: Colour and the Human Races: Lecture I: The Nature of Color
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- artificial science about color was the Englishman Newton. Out
- cleverness Newton said something like this: Let us look at the
- Newton said: Let us look at the
- Now Newton made an artificial rainbow by
- indigo, violet colors. What did Newton then say?
- Newton said to himself: The white light
- simplest possible way. Newton said that the sun already
- That is what Newton did with the colors.
- as, for instance. Newton.
- Newton's way; he simply says that everything is in the sunlight
- the point where people generally believed in what Newton had
- the Newtonian and the Goethean theory. For the most part other
- to the physicists: there the Newtonian theory of color is
- Newtonians certainly know, but they do not admit, that when one
- something; that tells us something. With the Newtonian
- impelled him to oppose the Newtonians and the
- manner. It can never be done from Newton's color-theory which
- Title: Man: Hieroglyph: Lecture Three
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- we shall learn to understand also that the Sun is not, as Newton calls
- Title: Man: Hieroglyph: Lecture Four
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- can be found in Newton's principles. It is just this Newtonism that
- You see that Newton's theory finds it necessary to assume some kind of
- Title: Man: Hieroglyph: Lecture Eight
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- All this is a further development of the theory of Newton who
- Title: Colour: Part Two: The Connection of the Natural with the Moral-Psychical. Living in Light and Weight.
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- Newton, really things very materialistically; or he imagines some sort
- Newton as the force of attraction. In western civilization the time
- Title: Colour: Part One: Colour-Experience (Erlebnis)
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- Newtonian fallacy; if we observe these things without prejudice, we
- Title: Colour: Part Three: The Hierarchies and the Nature of the Rainbow
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- nothing but the unfortunate Newtonian theory of Colour, over which the
- In order to speak in the sense of this Newtonian theory, it is really
- furious as on the occasion when he castigated Newton; he was simply
- not recognize the Newtonian teaching concerning colour is looked upon
- Title: Young Doctors Course: Bridge Lecture 2: The Moral as the Source of World-Creative Power
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- diluted into theory by Newton, was tabooed by the Roman
- Title: Driving Force: Lecture II
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- Newton except the head? Newton lives on in history as a head
- Title: Anthroposophy/Civilization
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- civilisation dreamers calculate by Newton's laws of
- Title: Occult Psychology: Lecture One
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