Searching Rudolf Steiner Lectures by Location (Dornach) Matches
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- Title: Lecture: Outlooks for the Future
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- Once upon a time there lived a man such as Homer. If you read with
- you will have to ask yourself the question: How was Homer able to be
- Homer? He was Homer through the fact that he was still guided by a higher
- spirit. Homer was well aware of this. His epics therefore never begin
- Homer knew that a higher spirit was inspiring him. But at the present
- time, Homer's words are looked upon as phrases, just as the following
- etc. In so far as Homer reincarnates, only the “man” Homer
- Title: Lecture: Self Knowledge and the Christ Experience
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- the other realms of nature. His home is elsewhere than on the earth. His
- home lies essentially in the super-sensible world. And this belief was no
- Title: The Individuality of Elias, John, Raphael, Novalis
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- home”, united with those with whom he had most loved to be in the Elijah
- Title: Lecture: The Origin of Speech and Language
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- to home were discussed. There was a particularly great interest in
- Title: Lecture: The Recovery of the Living Source of Speech
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- found His home in the hearts of men on Earth; He enters with His
- Title: Lecture: Gnostic Doctrines and Supersensible Influences in Europe
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- became their home and there they entered upon their later phase of
- is their home just as it is the home of physical humanity. They are
- Title: Lecture I: Ancient Myths
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- waited at home in Egypt. Isis, the consort of Osiris, did not permit
- and brought it back home to Egypt. Typhon now became angrier and tore
- Title: Lecture III: Ancient Myths
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- things: for example, that there was no Homer, etc. the
- Title: Lecture IV: Ancient Myths
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- when it stands in Cancer, one says: the moon has its home, its house,
- Title: Lecture VII: Ancient Myths
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- spiritually, the wide universe is our home between death and a new
- takes in needs a few years for it to become at home in his organism.
- Title: Lecture: Goethe and the Evolution of Consciousness
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- the affairs of human beings. But he really did not feel at home in
- feels at home. And, if we study all that he produced after that time,
- Goethe did not feel at home either with the principles of measure,
- Any history written with psychological insight will bring home to our
- Title: Lecture: Concerning the Origin and Nature of the Finnish Nation
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- Homers epic poems. Yet the Kalevala streamed out
- Title: Perception of the Nature of Thought
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- centuries B.C.; it lies before Homer, before historical times. But
- Title: Lecture: A Picture of Earth-Evolution in the Future
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- our own sphere of existence. Their home is the sphere lying between the moon
- Title: Lecture: Technology and Art: Their Bearing on Modern Culture
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- conception. Recall to your minds the shockingly homely simile I used
- Building — and here comes the shockingly homely simile —
- Title: Lecture: Brunetto Latini
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- By way of introduction, let me bring home to you with an
- instead of riding home, he rode into a neighbouring forest,
- Title: Lecture: Thinking and Willing as Two Poles of the Human Soul-Life
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- be fathomed by means of pictures. You must take up a position
- Title: Fall/Darkness: Lecture 8: Abstraction and Reality
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- no more crockery is broken in the home is to break all the
- Title: Fall/Darkness: Lecture 10: The Influence of the Backward Angels
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- no knowledge of the Greek gods, no world of Homer, Sophocles,
- who have made themselves at home in human heads. Yes, the
- Title: On the Mysteries of Ancient and Modern Times: Lecture 2
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- to-day to bring this fact home to his consciousness, so as to draw
- Title: On the Mysteries of Ancient and Modern Times: Lecture 3
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- home to the consciousness of men. It was, however, a very
- Title: Lecture: East and West in the Light of the Christmas Idea
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- of a large community. We see Buddha abandoning his home and going
- spaces, from the Home of the Father. The writer of the Gospel of
- Title: Lecture: Knowledge Pervaded with the Experience of Love
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- feel quite at home upon the earth. And he does not yet strive
- Title: Lecture: The Golden Legend and a German Christmas Play
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- in this simple way it could be brought home to people that something
- Title: Lecture: Matter Incidental to the Question of Destiny
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- of destiny in human life. The fact is brought home to us when we attempt
- quite ignorant of their home country — for
- to have the Neckar — the little river of his home country
- been in the first train, but had been sitting quietly at home
- home to many individuals. Riddles are being set by life
- over there. In short, social Karma too is brought home to us if
- Title: Lecture: Hereditary Impulses and Impulses from Previous Earth Lives
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- human life in its significance, can be brought home to us most
- Title: Architectural Forms
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- poets, of Homer, and Greek plastic art, even of Greek
- art, to show how it found a home in Pre-Raphaelite, in
- Title: World History: Lecture I: Evolution of the Soul and of Memory
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- intimately to the home as does the picture of the Madonna that
- we meet with in the homes of the people, when we go a little
- Motherland of Greece was the home of a people with
- before his death. One day he left his home, bought a ticket at
- Title: World History: Lecture II: Mysteries of 'Asia'
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- Homer. Wherever he sets the Trojans over against the Greeks,
- Title: World History: Lecture III: Asiatic Mysteries of Ephesus, Gilgamesh and Eabani
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- different from their experience at home. For man's
- and was returning home again, he did in fact possess a high
- bank, until he came again to his home, to the home of his
- choice. But before he reached home, because he did not receive
- darkened, so that he arrived home without it.
- Title: World History: Lecture IV: Atlantean Wisdom in the Mysteries of Hibernia, Gilgamish and Eabani at Ephesus, Logos Mysteries of Artemis at Ephesus
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- bearings in the Cosmos, to be, as it were, at home in the
- Greece after the Homeric period only as a beautiful semblance,
- Title: World History: Lecture VI: Mysteries of the Ancient Near East Enter Europe
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- in these academies made a home for the ancient wisdom, where
- Title: World History: Lecture VIII: The Burning of the Ephesian Temple and the Goetheanum
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- home and a dwelling place in the Mysteries. And when in those
- wisdom has a home. And when the Mysteries were spoken of among
- stones! They can exist on Earth by themselves, they are at home
- Title: Goethe, Comte and Bentham
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- elevating it, bringing it home to him that he is deceived; and
- Title: Karma of Vocation: Lecture I
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- of his Patrician Frankfurt home. What was dominant in the
- Frankfurt and most intimately influenced Goethe's home. The
- important world events were part of the life in his home, and
- extraordinarily freely in his parents' home under the austere
- lectures, which were in a way continued in the home of
- hemorrhaging. He was weakened, had to return home, and could
- away his time during his frequent visits to the pastor's home
- could return home. The practice of law began, but there was a
- Homer, or Shakespeare. He stands in a different relationship to
- Title: Karma of Vocation: Lecture VI
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- over the bridge, but was sitting at home by the fire. Then he
- Title: Karma of Vocation: Lecture VIII
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- thievish. They were entirely too much at home in these
- Title: Differentation of Primeval Wisdom into East, Middle, West
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- is the real home of Ethos, of ethics.
- home that, in the works of art which he sees proceeding out
- Title: Man and Nature: Intellect in Man and Nature Bereft of the Gods
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- the West, I tried to bring home to you the significance
- what we must bring home to ourselves. In this Nature that is
- were made to bring home to the traditional religions in
- outer world. I mention this in order to bring home to you
- knowledge of the being of man and brings home the truth that
- to feel at home with this thought if you dissociate it from
- Title: Spiritual Relations in the Configuration of the Human Organism: Lecture III
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- home before he came down to earth. He does not quite fit into the earthly
- Title: Goetheanism as an Impulse for Man's Transformation - Lecture II: St. John of the Cross
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- approach cannot be properly fathomed, cannot be recognised in their
- Title: The Building at Dornach (Bn/GA 289): Lecture III: Lecture 3
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- they are spoken, actually home to the hearts of men. As a rule one may
- Title: Problem of Faust: Lecture I: The Problem of Faust
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- spiritually wishes to see. He now returns home to his cell
- Title: Problem of Faust: Lecture III: Goethe's Feeling for the Concrete.
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- graduate educated at Jena, who when he goes home to his
- don't go home quite absolute.” We see the connection
- corporeal world where Faust as his home.
- In murkiness thou art at home.”
- In murkiness thou art at home.”
- The rhyme to ‘home’ is missing.
- Mephistopheles feels at home there. This is perhaps why
- Thou'llt stay at home, most weighty work to do.
- Title: Problem of Faust: Lecture IV: Faust and the "Mothers"
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- nature of the astrologer's art is brought home to us. That is
- Title: Problem of Faust: Lecture V: Faust and the Problem of Evil
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- Title: Problem of Faust: Lecture VI: The Helena Saga and the Riddle of Freedom
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- home-country; otherwise thou wilt become thy father's
- he had grown up, his home. At last he wandered from Corinth
- far from his father's home, was told: When the youth grows up
- Song of Homer describes how significantly Paris thereby
- Title: Problem of Faust: Lecture VIII: Spiritual Science Considered with the Classical Walpurgis-Night
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- making of man's being than can be known or fathomed either by
- still coming into being, and is at home and all that is done
- by Pigmies, that is to say, at home in all that such beings
- Mephistopheles remained in his northern home, that is to say
- Title: Problem of Faust: Lecture X: Faust's Knowledge and Understanding of Himself
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- be transformed into Home. In the meantime, while they are on
- Home. Goethe had a deep respect for Thales conception of the
- Title: Lecture III: Human Questions and Cosmic Answers
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- from subconscious depths of his being cannot be fathomed and
- must be fathomed either between death and rebirth, or in the realm of
- Title: Lecture IV: Human Questions and Cosmic Answers
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- naturally be conceived as being present in a homeopathic form, but it
- earthly house. That is where our spirit-and-soul are at home when
- Title: Bridge between the Ideal and the Real: Lecture II
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- delusion in man's consciousness, elevating it, bringing it home
- Title: Lecture: The Revelation of the Cosmic Christ
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- his life of feeling, his life of soul and spirit brought home to him
- Title: Inner Impulses: Lecture I
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- Another chapter includes the poems of Homer, the poetical works of
- Title: Inner Impulses: Lecture II
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- the primal phenomenon into practical life. As you know, it is at home
- Title: Inner Impulses: Lecture III
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- around them. Everyone would only desire to live in the home of his own
- Title: Inner Impulses: Lecture VI
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- Golgotha. Its first important home was close to the place where
- With toil they dragged it home as new found treasure;
- Title: Mystery Centres: Lecture II
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- traveler.” Thus do Homer's poems begin. Klopstock, who lived at
- Title: Mystery Centres: Lecture IV: The Ephesian Mysteries of Artemis
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- knowledge by Imaginative vision is not yet quite at home when he
- here use the expression — in a super-homeopathic dilution they
- said, in super-homeopathic dilution into our nervous system and most
- excessive harm, in this fine super-homeopathic dilution it is
- that super-homeopathic condition and at this high temperature take
- super-homeopathic part of the lead which passes over continually into
- Title: Mystery Centres: Lecture XI: The Secret of Plants, of Metals, and of Men
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- thou dost not feel at home in this. In the warm air thou canst feel
- at home in such a way, that this warm air seeks to bear thee up into
- strange, not at all at home in it. Thou feelest, when thou
- Title: Mystery Centres: Lecture XIII: Transition from the Spirit of the Ancient Mysteries to the Spirit of the Mysteries of the Middle Ages
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- vegetation, though often only to be found there in homeopathic doses.
- homeopathic traces sometimes of this if we turn our attention to the
- Title: World Economy: Lecture I
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- When we tried to bring the Threefold Commonwealth home to them, people
- Title: World Economy: Lecture II
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- Economics comes home to a man directly [when/if] he has anything to buy
- Title: World Economy: Lecture IX
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- in her good books, French Capital found a home for instance,
- Title: World Economy: Lecture XII
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- will be brought home to us in its full significance in the course of
- Title: Rosicrucianism/Initiation: Lecture IV: The Relationship of Earthly Man to the Sun
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- planetary system including the Sun. Man has not his home on Earth, he
- Title: Rosicrucianism/Initiation: Lecture VI: The Tasks of the Michael Age
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- board, thereby bringing home to myself what is really there within
- Title: Lecture: Michaelmas IV: A Michael Lecture
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- me; but I draw the triangle on the board, thereby bringing home to
- Title: Lecture: The Moon-secret Spring and Autumn mysteries
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- starting-point in bringing home the planetary system to the
- idea of resurrection was brought home to man by such festivals as the
- Title: Significant Facts: Lecture I: A Convulsive Element in Humanity in the Nineteenth Century
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- the way it had arisen I also tried to bring home the fact that men
- traveled some distance from their home on the way to Lhassa, they
- brought home more vividly by presenting sharply contrasting
- Title: Significant Facts: Lecture II: Ancient Occult Magic. The Ahasver Mystery.
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- said and this will be sufficient to bring home the significance of
- Title: Significant Facts: Lecture III: The Tragic Wrestling with Knowledge. The Secrets of the Future Sixth Cultural Period.
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- Homer. Read carefully what I have said in different lectures and
- and you will find yourselves asking: How did Homer
- higher Spirit. Homer well knew that it was so. Hence his poems do
- Homer knew that a higher Spirit was inspiring him. It is only in the
- In so far as Homer
- whom Homer was inspired will be encountered in the etheric world —
- Title: Spiritual Science and Medicine -- Lecture II
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- digestion. But if I may use the expression — we can homeopathise, we
- what happens if one dilutes in the way of homeopathic doses. Here
- homeopathic way. In a certain sense it is diametrically opposed to the
- might say that when the homeopathic chemist manufactures his minute
- Title: Spiritual Science and Medicine -- Lecture IV
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- form of the homeopathic principle. For it is precisely from the
- conspicuous homeopathic process. This process shows that at the very
- liberated through homeopathic dosage. This subject shall be given
- Title: Spiritual Science and Medicine -- Lecture V
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- the public; that waged by the advocates of homeopathy and of allopathy
- remedy is subjected within the organism to a homeopathic process and
- methods, by the homeopathic processes of the organism under treatment.
- of this homeopathic function, or not. This is simply because the
- these remedies after they have been gradually homeopathised, whereas
- in which it is impossible to relieve the organism of this homeopathic
- Homeopathic dosage has really up to a point been very carefully copied
- Title: Spiritual Science and Medicine -- Lecture VI
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- treated as all-sufficient. The homeopathic system strives to get
- Title: Spiritual Science and Medicine -- Lecture IX
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- essentially in producing a high degree of homeopathic distribution —
- Title: Spiritual Science and Medicine -- Lecture X
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- “agitating” for anything. I know that even homeopathic physicians have
- Title: Spiritual Science and Medicine -- Lecture XI
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- spiritually scientific concept of the aim and purpose of homeopathic
- that even homeopathic practitioners are somewhat afraid of becoming
- homeopathic treatment (do not misunderstand me, it is necessary to use
- attempt to prepare homeopathic remedies; including for our present
- when homeopathic preparations are made? For it is the preparation
- These definite symptoms, according to the views of the homeopathist,
- Title: Spiritual Science and Medicine -- Lecture XII
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- speak, a homeopathic agent in the operations of the other four.
- Title: Spiritual Science and Medicine -- Lecture XX
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- truly akin to the continuous homeopathising process of the upper human
- out that a scrutiny of homeopathic medicine does not always furnish
- satisfactory results. True, homeopathy attempts to handle the human
- professional literature of homeopathy brings to light something else
- Title: Lecture: Curative Education: Lecture 1
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- anthroposophical homes for handicapped children.] We shall in
- Title: Lecture: Curative Education: Lecture 3
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- grasp this, then the conviction may also be brought home to you in
- occasion brings it home to them. One can be an exceptionally proper
- Title: Lecture: Curative Education: Lecture 4
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- to bring something home to the child, to call up ideas in him, then
- children. Such a fact can help to bring it home to you that we do
- Lauenstein Home for backward children. In view of the government
- Title: Lecture: Curative Education: Lecture 5
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- something strikes home into the astral organisation; that too
- Title: Lecture: Curative Education: Lecture 6
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- home for backward children in Arlesheim, Switzerland.] all
- home, as it were; no, it must be arrived at by conversation, by
- nature of each particular sound, and be absolutely at home in
- Title: Lecture: Curative Education: Lecture 7
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- see, completely at home in the sound R. Do not forget that in a
- it a right and fit home for the embryo, which requires of course
- Title: Lecture: Curative Education: Lecture 8
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- comes home to us when studying the riddles of human nature is that
- Title: Lecture: Curative Education: Lecture 9
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- thick and thin. The child does not remain at home in the family, he
- home to the child's intellect, and by attempting it too early we can
- home, we reinforce it by applying mustard compresses to the feet
- Title: Lecture: Curative Education: Lecture 10
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- [Curative home in
- this, but you may any day receive into your Home quite little
- We are not having the girl with us in the Home, she will come
- almost immediately after the Home was opened. The children were brought
- Title: Lecture: Curative Education: Lecture 11
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- Lauenstein and the Trüper Homes in Hanover? Goethe's Theory of
- properly at home in the organism the reason being that its
- Home for Curative Education, is the necessity for constant
- (S. asks, what connection has the Lauenstein Home with the fact that
- Educational Homes for backward children which were started in Hanover
- On your homeward way, good people,
- Title: Lecture: The Cycle of the Year: Lecture III
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- be fathomed. Only think how short a time lies behind us since
- Title: Lecture I: Nutrition and Health
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- quantities of their own homemade bread which contains the grain from
- Title: Lecture II: Nutrition and Health
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- children are hardened! Nowadays (in wealthy homes, of course, but
- Title: Anthroposophic Movement: Lecture One: The Homeless Souls
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- The Homeless Souls
- woman, create a scene at home because of such disappointed life
- themselves remarkably at home on earth; who feel thoroughly
- make themselves at home, are homeless souls, and grow beyond the
- paths and did not put such obstacles in the way of homeless souls,
- hint of such homelessness about them.
- The tendency to such homelessness could be anticipated: the
- rapidly growing evidence of a longing in homeless souls for an
- fashionable there were those who were also homeless souls.
- materialism of the time. And the homeless souls who were driven in
- possessed of a homeless soul, became acquainted with a way of looking
- As I said, such homeless souls can be found everywhere. But
- in the late 1880s, in a group which consisted entirely of such homeless
- homelessness was visible for anyone to see even then, because many of
- the following. I was sitting in a circle of such homeless souls and
- But as more and more of these homeless souls began to appear at
- narrators, grasped these ideas with their homeless souls as essential
- The way in which souls unwilling to admit to their homelessness
- proven was so unsatisfactory for many homeless souls, was useless to
- spiritual phenomena to which those who developed into the homeless
- Maximum number of matches per file exceeded.
- Title: Anthroposophic Movement: Lecture Two: The Unveiling of Spiritual Truths
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- satisfy their spiritual yearning are homeless souls in a certain
- Title: Anthroposophic Movement: Lecture Three: The Opposition to Spiritual Revelations
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- coming together of those whom I described as homeless souls.
- Title: Anthroposophic Movement: Lecture Five: The Decline of the Theosophical Society
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- Thus these souls whom I described as homeless, whose earlier earth
- Now the position of anthroposophy in relation to these homeless
- Today how many souls have a hint of such homelessness about them?
- tendency to such homelessness has become an integral element in many
- of a longing in homeless souls for an attitude to life which was not
- Title: Anthroposophic Movement: Lecture Six: The Emergence of the Anthroposophic Movement
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- movement in Munich many homeless souls were already organized in the
- He took me to his home, a little way outside Hanover. It was perhaps
- thrust of my companion's argument. Then we arrived at his home and he
- Title: Anthroposophic Movement: Lecture Seven: The Consolidation of the Anthroposophic Movement
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- people had an interest in creating a home for the real substance of
- Title: Anthroposophic Movement: Lecture Eight: Responsibility to Anthroposophy
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- homeless souls were motivated by the material which Blavatsky
- the world which will satisfy homeless souls is morality and ethics.
- homeless soul, feels when we talk about nature today. It feels that
- store is set in our modern times. But homeless souls do have an
- because of the special nature of their homeless souls, were prompted
- Title: Art/Mystery Wisdom: Lecture One
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- courage to make yourself at home in this development of
- Title: Art/Mystery Wisdom: Lecture Six
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- and when we try to make ourselves at home in the kind of
- Title: Evolution, Earth, Man: Lecture IV
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- monkeys.” The boy came home with this piece of wisdom. The
- Title: Evolution, Earth, Man: Lecture VI
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- fact that they eat large quantities of their own homemade bread which
- Title: Evolution, Earth, Man: Lecture VII
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- wealthy homes, of course, but then other people quickly follow suit)
- Title: Evolution, Earth, Man: Lecture X
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- homeopaths — they're not right about everything, but they're
- right about a good many things — these homeopaths take
- homeopaths of all, for they absorb tiny, minute particles from all
- Title: Evolution, Earth, Man: Lecture XIII
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- have indeed become more nervous. You yourselves, when you get home
- Title: Nine Lectures on Bees: Lecture II
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- bring home what they gather from the plants, and work it up in their own
- Title: Nine Lectures on Bees: Lecture IV
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- Frauenfeld Children's Home, Amden,” by Dr. Paula Emrich.
- In this Children's Home an attempt was made to give honey treatments
- Title: Nine Lectures on Bees: Lecture V
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- neighbourhood of my parents' home were mostly farmers, and honey was
- Title: Nine Lectures on Bees: Lecture VIII
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- their noses. Much homely and useful knowledge is derived from a
- Title: The Development of Thought from the 4th to the 19th Century - 1
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- perhaps brought home to us most strongly of all when we realise the light
- home to men and that a beneficial and desirable form of social life
- he tried to bring home the difference between the concepts of sin and
- significance will be brought home to us all the more when we realise
- Title: The Development of Thought from the 4th to the 19th Century - 2
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- Europe maintained their own existence and acquired a permanent home
- Title: Boundaries of Natural Science: Lecture V
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- are placed before the spiritual scientist, he is thoroughly at home
- scientist comes to consider this matter he feels himself right at home. It
- Title: Anthro Medical Therapy: Lecture IV
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- complain that we give very little homework at the Waldorf
- children with homework. Homework is frequently the concealed
- acts homeopathically; it breaks up the metals itself as they
- Title: Anthro Medical Therapy: Lecture VI
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- homeopathic. Mercury is an important remedy in this
- Title: Anthro Medical Therapy: Lecture VIII
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- never-ending conflict between homeopathy and allopathy will
- homeopathy; on the other hand, people who are not in the
- larger doses in smaller doses makes him well. The homeopath
- homeopathic rule is the means to set right the conflict
- between homeopathy and allopathy.
- dilute a substance homeopathically to such a degree that by
- etheric — remaining in the etheric by this homeopathizing
- Title: The Building at Dornach: Lecture I
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- the time to which Homer's epics refer. In fact, the entire
- former age to a later one, as recounted by Homer. It is our
- this was brought home to us was heartrending, and rightly so.
- of material on Homer's life, or Shakespeare's. From a certain
- grateful to history for leaving us no documents about Homer
- of Homer, Shakespeare, and so on, it is one sided with regard
- that a truth brought home to us from one side only can never
- Goethe must be regarded differently from Homer. On the same
- Homer? Could we get to know him by any better means than
- Yes, Homer's age was able to bring forth such works, through
- which the soul of Homer is laid bare. Countless examples
- during the Homeric age, much as we ourselves hope and long
- return to their homeland. We know, too, that Homer describes
- unfathomably deep into Homer's soul, when we know — are
- ourselves to be misled by them? Homer spoke at a time when
- We know what Homer knows and believes and how he regards the
- all. We do not only behold in Agamemnon, through Homer, a
- wonderfully magical light. Homer is humorous enough to show
- home. Thus it rests finally with the persuasive arts of
- Homer's soul and discern in Agamemnon a lifelike portrayal of
- Maximum number of matches per file exceeded.
- Title: The Building at Dornach: Lecture II
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- humanity. I pointed out how in Homer's works we find a figure
- Agamemnon and Achilles, Homer has created figures in which he
- than Homer. He considered German culture to be still
- Front and some to remain at home, one of the tutors spoke
- her Homer and her Shakespeare. Certainly, the Russian State
- Title: The Building at Dornach: Lecture III
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- follows: Full of beauties and of errors, the old Homer has my
- course, could never have expressed himself about Homer in
- Luke, Napoleon, Mahomet all of us together are it! That is
- Title: The Building at Dornach: Lecture V
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- Homer's “Iliad” that information is given by
- Ethiopia and will not return home for twelve days —
- are prevented — then it is brought home to us that men
- Title: Ways/Architecture: Lecture I: The Acanthus Leaf
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- bring home these thoughts to you, I should like to start
- feel at home when it looks at form. In our building we must
- Title: Ways/Architecture: Lecture II: The House of Speech
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- to fulfil the tasks which arise every day. It brings home to
- that I would like to press home to you this evening.
- Title: Ways/Architecture: Lecture IV: True Aesthetic Laws of Form
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- home on all the heavenly bodies, as you have often heard; not
- Title: Ways/Architecture: Lecture V: The Creative World of Colour
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- again to Carstens. He takes the Iliad of Homer, and he
- Homeric figures in the eighteenth and the beginning of the
- Title: Christmas Conference: Lecture 2: The Opening of the Christmas Foundation Conference, by Rudolf Steiner
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- centre and its home here on Swiss soil in the manner
- Title: Christmas Conference: Lecture 3: Rudolf Steiner's Opening Lecture and Reading of the Statutes
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- its home. All possible work was prevented by a tax situation
- will become the home of the
- amongst the ruins, a poor, a terribly poor shack of a home.
- to find its home in the Anthroposophical Society, namely,
- in which today's youth could feel fully at home, then what
- home in being linked to what is going on at the
- Title: Christmas Conference: Lecture 7: Continuation of the Foundation Meeting, 26 December, 10 a.m.
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- home and put something in it every day. When it is full you
- money-box home with them will see that similar money-boxes
- Naturally if you do not have your own money-box to take home,
- Title: Christmas Conference: Lecture 8: Continuation of the Foundation Meeting, 27 December, 10 a.m.
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- we get home? Will the members have to be presented with all
- Title: Christmas Conference: Lecture 13: Continuation of the Foundation Meeting, 30 December, 10 a.m.
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- questions about this too. Let us hope, when we return home
- Title: Awakening to Community: Lecture V
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- allows. Homer's verses flow in a way that directly manifests the
- Title: Awakening to Community: Lecture IX
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- the need to recall one's super-sensible home, which the cultus meets,
- Title: Problem of Death: Lecture I
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- his new home, hoping to get him to think of other things.
- Title: Problem of Death: Lecture III
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- centre on this hill. May there be a home here for this
- Title: Opponents to Anthroposophy
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- him? Just so nobody has ever fathomed the depth of God as the
- Title: Eurythmy as Visible Singing: Lecture 1: The Experience of Major and Minor
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- could seriously bring home to ourselves is that we tend to push (schieben)
- Title: Eurythmy as Visible Singing: Lecture 4: The Progression of Musical Phrases; Swinging Over; the Bar Line
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- Title: Chance/Necessity/Providence: Lecture 1: Probability and Chance
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- work like Goethe's Faust or Homer's epics. What is Goethe's
- Title: Chance/Necessity/Providence: Lecture 7: The Physical Body Binds Us to the Physical World
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- to sense that the many hundreds of geniuses: Homer, Shakespeare, Goethe,
- Title: Child's Changing Consciousness: Lecture I
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- nurture the spirit — without its proper earthly home
- us private lessons at home. His body was emaciated, his face
- Title: Child's Changing Consciousness: Lecture VI
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- really be direct contact with the parental home — that
- child's home background, through contact with the parents, is
- child by simply watching and imitating the mother at home. To
- at home in their subjects to the degree that they were entirely
- Title: Child's Changing Consciousness: Lecture VIII:
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- life at home can provide the proper background for children.
- Title: Child's Changing Consciousness: Introduction to a Eurythmy Performance
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- untruths being spread about anthroposophy, we could not go home
- Title: Colour and the Human Races: Lecture II: Color and the Human Races
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- at home in these three parts of the earth.
- Title: How Can Mankind Find Christ Again?: Lecture 7: Experiences of the Old Year and Outlook over the New Year (part 1)
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- to homelessness, slavery and despair. One of the most spiritual peoples on
- Title: Community Life: Lecture 1: Requirements of Our Life together in the Anthroposophical Society
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- given by one of our members, and came home saying, “Well, I learned
- Title: Community Life: Lecture 3: Swedenborg: An Example of Difficulties in Entering the Spiritual World
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- as beings who have their home on other planets of our solar system.
- It has been said of Homer that he declared that each thing has two names,
- — like someone believing he is the reincarnation of Homer but
- feeling no need to do anything to prove that something of Homer's genius
- is welling up in him. Since Homer already put in all the effort, the
- Title: Community Life: Lecture 5: Sexuality and Modern Clairvoyance, Freudian Psychoanalysis and Swedenborg as a Seer
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- of some kind and brought it home with him. She insisted that it should
- Title: The Cyclic Movement of Sleeping and Waking
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- brought home to his waking consciousness. Nevertheless, men
- Title: Real Being of Man
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- — these Ahrimanic beings can in reality only feel at home
- Title: Mystery Trinity: Part 1, Lecture 1
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- Homer, who in olden times had sought the
- Title: Redemption of Thinking: Lecture I:
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- — Homer began honestly
- psyche through them. This is no commonplace phrase if Homer
- Title: Redemption of Thinking: Lecture II:
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- epic poems as Homer did: sing to me, goddess, on the rage of
- Title: Anthroposophic Movement (1938): Lecture I: Homeless Souls
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- Homeless Souls
- Homeless Souls
- includes the majority of people, are remarkably ‘home-gifted’
- souls, who feel so thoroughly at home as souls in their warm
- home-gifted, are homeless souls, grow out of the snug nest
- seen these homeless souls — soul-homeless souls, that is,
- call a certain streak of this homelessness.
- the homeless souls, these homeless souls would be much more
- certain streak of this homelessness in a great number of
- present day, and how in fact this tendency to homelessness has
- this homelessness within them, — the longing for
- to the homeless-soul class. But amongst those, too, who were
- respectable fashion, there were also such as were homeless
- happened to be persons, who as homeless souls were more
- whom there dwelt homeless souls, an opening, through which to
- homeless souls of this kind were to be found; one did find
- plenty of such homeless souls. But this Wagner field was
- especially characteristic; there these homeless souls might be
- one might say out of homeless souls.
- this homelessness displayed itself in those days, even on the
- Maximum number of matches per file exceeded.
- Title: Anthroposophic Movement (1938): Lecture II: The Theosophical Society: A Common Body with a Conscious Self. Blavatsky Phenomenon
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- of way, homeless souls. Now at the end of the nineteenth and
- beginning of the twentieth centuries, these homeless souls in
- Title: Anthroposophic Movement (1938): Lecture III: Critical Judgment and Colour of the Times
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- two days ago under the name ‘homeless souls’, came from those
- Title: Anthroposophic Movement (1938): Lecture IV: Blavatsky's Orientation: Spiritual, but Anti-Christian
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- home in a world which they saw dis-played before them in
- painted frescoes, bringing home to them the life of the
- Title: Anthroposophic Movement (1938): Lecture V: Anti-Christianity. - The Healing of the Gulf.
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- speech which was at work in the many homeless souls of whom I
- can understand then that the souls I described as homeless
- — towards these people who were homeless souls. They
- Title: Anthroposophic Movement (1938): Lecture VI: The Two First Periods of the Anthroposophic Movement
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- a great number there of these homeless souls, who were already
- matter of more or less indifference, who had only, as homeless
- of modern culture; in which, on the other hand, these homeless
- Title: Anthroposophic Movement (1938): Lecture VII: The Third Stage: The Present Day. - Life-Conditions of the Anthroposophical Society
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- such a home of their own.
- Title: Anthroposophic Movement (1938): Lecture VIII: Conclusions: The Anthroposophical Society and its Future Conduct.
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- further for the main impulse for these homeless souls, than to
- familiar to these homeless souls, as coming from the quarter
- for these homeless souls; and that is the moral and
- This is what is felt by minds of greater depth, by homeless
- people, who are homeless souls, have a very strong notion of it
- peculiarly homeless souls, had received such impulses from
- Title: First Class, Vol. I: Lesson 1
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- Where in the Self the world is fathomed:
- Where in the Self the world is fathomed:
- existence must be fathomed from all that acts and works in the
- real knowledge must be fathomed from what is revealed in the
- Where in the Self the world is fathomed:
- Title: Cosmogony/Freedom/Altruism: Lecture III: Fundamental Impulses in History
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- a homely phrase, is spurting out from the spiritual
- Title: Impulses of Utility: Lecture II: Utilitarianism and Sacramentalism
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- even a poem of Homer is not comprehensible without something
- Title: Health and Illness I: Lecture VIII: Concerning the Soul Life in the Breathing Process
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- experience that you came home to a locked house and cannot get
- Title: East and West, and the Roman Church: Lecture I
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- reads his Homer and his Aeschylus, and values them in a certain
- what resounds from ancient European times? He reads his Homer, and
- of the wrath of Achilles!” Homer does not say he is relating
- opposition that meets us to-day whenever we compare Homer with
- Aeschylus. Homer sings while letting the Muse sing, Homer sings as
- way as once Homer spoke of the Muse. It is, moreover, something
- Homecoming of the Heretic: A Guide by Hans Ehrenberg, being a
- Title: East and West, and the Roman Church: Lecture II
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- home to you, I should like to quote an instance which is altogether
- Title: Health and Illness II: Lecture I: Fever Versus Shock; Pregnancy
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- at home, was extremely bored. The result was that she lacked
- to the local pub, so they amuse themselves at home by abusing
- Title: Health and Illness II: Lecture II: The Brain and Thinking
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- runs home again, only to return not alone but with a number of
- Title: Health and Illness II: Lecture III: The Effects of Alcohol on Man
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- questionable antidote against a hangover. When they come home
- years old, I had an hour's walk from our home to school every
- Title: Health and Illness II: Lecture IV: The Power of Intelligence as the Effect of the Sun; Beaver Lodges and Wasps Nests
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- female beaver had prepared her isolated home so that it was
- Title: Health and Illness II: Lecture V: The Effect of Nicotine; Vegetarian and Meat Diets; On Taking Absinthe; Twin Births
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- which purges the system. This done, they can return home and
- Title: Health and Illness II: Lecture VI: Diphtheria and Influenza; Crossed Eyes
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- still functioning when he gets home: he places his hat at the
- Title: Health and Illness II: Lecture VIII: The Effect of Absinthe; Hemophilia;The Ice Age; The Declining Oriental and the Rising European Cultures; On Bees
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- and he goes home in the evening. His co-workers say of him that
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume I: Lecture II
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- at home. These are simply the districts where the universe so works
- is born to such and such parents, in such and such a home, at a
- home in the world when he thus learns to place his sensations, his
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume I: Lecture IV
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- my dear friends, to picture, if I may, in homely and familiar
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume I: Lecture VII
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- it would not be put like this in Wurttemburg, but in my homeland in
- allowed to go home but would spend the night on some makeshift bed at
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume I: Lecture VIII
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- forced to flee from his home, and he found refuge among those who
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume I: Lecture XI
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- absorbed, not even going home for meals.
- hitting straight home. You must here observe a peculiar nuance in
- the very construction of his sentences, something in the home-thrusts
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume II: Lecture I
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- on to questions which concern us more intimately and will bring home
- taken by Bacon led from Bagdad, his home in Asia, to England. And
- returned home — he was all alone — he found another man
- home and estate he immediately went away into some foreign country.
- lost home and property and had become a kind of slave, appeared
- dart had struck home.
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume II: Lecture III
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- home to his wife, while he spent his time sullenly loafing about. His
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume II: Lecture XIII
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- body and then return into it as into our house and home ... and lo!
- Title: Lecture: Karmic Relationships, Volume III: Lecture V: Spiritual Conditions of Evolution Leading up to the Anthroposophical Movement
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- own home. Such was man's feeling.
- and less able to afford a home, a dwelling place for the
- spiritual worlds was thoroughly brought home to them. In
- Title: Lecture: Karmic Relationships, Volume III: Lecture VI: The School of Chartres
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- that here or there at any rate there might arise a home and
- Title: Things Past and Present: Lecture IX: Celtic Symbols and Cult, Jesuit State in Paraguay
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- Greek literature from Homer right up to Aristophanes to see
- Title: Memory and Habit: Lecture I
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- past day nor recall from unfathomed depths what we have experienced
- nearly such a long time. Numbers of them knew the poems of Homer from
- Title: Lecture: Riddle of Humanity: Lecture One: Greetings to the Builders Working on the Goetheanum. Otto Weininger, a Decadent Genius. Distorted Pictures of Imaginative Knowledge.
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- any case, in the books, and can be read up at home in less
- Then he returns home, having recently felt much distress at the
- Title: Lecture: Riddle of Humanity: Lecture Three: The Duality of Human Nature -- The Heavenly and the Earthly Aspects of Man. Uranus and Gaia. Influences of One Incarnation on the Next: Metamorphoses of the Body.
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- ever been accomplished by the likes of Homer, say, and Dante, and
- Title: Lecture: Riddle of Humanity: Lecture Eight: How Twelvefoldness, Sevenfoldness, Fourfoldness, and Threefoldness are Mirrored. Pathological Experiences of the Soul. Thinking Backward as a Preparation for Spiritual Experience.
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- the soul which are the home of human astrality and human egoity, of
- Title: Lecture: Riddle of Humanity: Lecture Eleven: Memory and Habit as Metamorphoses of Former Spiritual Experiences that were Subject to Luciferic and Ahrimanic Influences.
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- ancient Greeks knew the Homeric poems from beginning to end. But they
- Title: Wrong and Right Use: Lecture 1: Secret Brotherhoods-1, -or- Wrong and Right Use of Esoteric Knowledge-1, -or- Individual Spirit Beings and the Undivided Foundation of the World-Part 1
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- particularly good home for spiritual life, protected against
- Title: Wrong and Right Use: Lecture 3: Secret Brotherhoods-3, -or- Wrong and Right Use of Esoteric Knowledge-3, -or- Individual Spirit Beings and the Undivided Foundation of the World-Part 3, -or- German Philosophy: Kant, Schelling, Hegel, Goethe
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- things: they are important and real. What I want to bring home
- Title: Symptom 2 Reality: Lecture II: Symptomatology of Recent Centuries
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- world in which he was never really at home. If we look a
- Title: Symptom 2 Reality: Lecture VII: Incidental Reflections on the Occasion of the New Edition of 'Goethes Weltanschauung'
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- a devotional work; then it was set for homework. One did not
- Title: Symptom 2 Reality: Lecture IX: The Relation Between the Deeper European Impulses and Those of the Present Day
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- the Papacy. The doctrine of Athanasius could be brought home
- Title: Fundamental Social: Lecture 1: The Transforming of Instinctive into Conscious Impulses
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- observe these things in his home country — to travel to
- Title: Fundamental Social: Lecture 2: The Logic of Thought and the Logic of Reality
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- life. I only wish to bring it home to you that other
- Title: Fundamental Social: Lecture 3: The Metamorphosis of Intelligence
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- is true) in Russia the head man is at home. Let our Russian
- Russia the heart-man is at home, and the head, of all things,
- only be brought home to human insight from the standpoint of
- thoroughly at home in the scientific methods of the present
- Title: Mysteries of Light: Lecture I: The Dualism in the Life of the Present Time
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- home of our own, the movement felt impelled to find a style of its
- Title: Man: Hieroglyph: Lecture Three
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- Copernicus, on slightly different lines. This was brought home to me
- Title: Responsibility of Man: Lecture IV
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- only feel at home in the realms which surround us in the
- Title: Materialism/Anthroposophy: Lecture V
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- has its home in a super-sensible sphere and is destined for
- soul from its spiritual home. Greek culture must definitely
- naturally cannot be conceived of as the home of Christ. From
- Title: Materialism/Anthroposophy: Lecture VII
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- who now still has — a home!
- too, had no home. “Fly, bird! Rasp your song in sounds
- of wasteland birds.” He had no home because this is the
- his home town of Wuppertal he is also a devout
- Title: Materialism/Anthroposophy: Lecture XI
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- resembling ancient Homeric Greece; in France, a partial legacy of the
- from those in Homeric times.
- Homeric era, which in Greece was outgrown in the tragic age
- behind in the Homeric age, and we were already in the year
- Title: Materialism/Anthroposophy: Lecture XV
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- Erigena, whose home was across the
- home within the purely intellectual perception.
- Title: Lecture: Supersensible Influences: Lecture I: Supersensible Influences in Old Persian, Egyptian, and Greek Time
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- obliged to wander homeless about the earth. Under such conditions they
- mummies were the homes of Gods, dwelling places of Moon-Beings who were
- which Homer applied himself when he was developing the hexameter, in
- “Songs of Homer” finds a way out by saying that Homer never
- science to understand Homer, and according to a mentality that has
- by the academic mind do not exist! Homer is incomprehensible —
- you will find sculptured heads of Homer. I am not saying that the
- likeness is particularly good, but when we look at this blind Homer,
- listening; for Homer listens. Without the distraction of sight,
- of flies ... Homer heard the hexameter and, undisturbed by sight or
- Homer from this point of view. The form of marble or plaster gives the
- the interplay between them. Contemplation of the head of Homer should
- the existence of Homer. The reasons produced by scholars when they
- argued away the existence of Homer were so subtle and deceptive that
- first to argue away the existence of Homer and even Goethe could not
- Goethe always had a feeling of horror at the thought that Homer had
- work ... not to bring Homer to life again, for he had not really
- ourselves with Homer, nor with Wolf who is supposed to have demolished
- Homer, not as a philologist reads it but as a human being reads it. Let
- not fail. Then he said: It would indeed be strange if Homer had never
- Title: Lecture: Supersensible Influences: Lecture II: The Education of Man through Modern Intellectualism, -or- Chartres and the Mysteries of the Templars
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- is normally the case, the traditional heads of Homer in sculpture give
- touching, of touching that is also hearing. Homer listens to those
- yesterday, become homeless. I told you that the dwelling places
- homeless on the earth, took up their abode in the mummies; in contrast
- Greece and to whom Homer “listened”. We can speak of
- Moon-Beings who, having become homeless, were obliged to find dwelling
- hope of the future, are not homeless in humanity but they wander about
- the Moon-Beings who had become homeless, so it is our task now to help
- Title: Lecture: Supersensible Influences: Lecture III: The Revelation of the Spiritual World in Old Indian Culture, -or- Old Egypt
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- civilisation, the Moon-Spirits found themselves homeless during the
- Title: Lecture: Supersensible Influences: Lecture IV: The Egyptian Mysteries, Indian Yoga and Egyptian Mummy Cult
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- homeless about the earth, found dwelling places in the mummies. These
- Title: Lecture: Supersensible Influences: Lecture VI: Spiritual InFluence in History, -or- Pope Nicholas I
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- life of the super-sensible worlds, in bringing home to him that his soul
- the home of devout belief sustained by dogmas, combined with a world of
- Title: Man/World of Stars: Lecture I: The Spirit-Seed of Man's Physical Organism
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- Basle to buy your butter there, and bring it home with you.
- Title: Man/World of Stars: Lecture III: Man's Relation to the World of the Stars
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- have disdained to make their home on the Moon, and have in an
- watery elements of the Earth press home the opposite view. In
- Title: Man/World of Stars: Lecture VI: Spiritualization of Knowledge of Space. The Mission of Michael
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- real home to be what he called the Kingdom of Light, the
- in pre-earthly existence. They strive to be at home on the
- Title: Spiritual Communion: Lecture II: The Mysteries of Man's Nature and the Course of the Year
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- sadness and mourning through which it was to be brought home to
- Title: Occult Movement: Lecture One: Seership and Thinking
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- great teaching which once had its home in the island of
- materialistic tendencies of the age and yet to bring home to
- Title: Occult Movement: Lecture Two: Mediumistic Methods
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- esotericists who had made the compromise was to bring home to
- Title: Occult Movement: Lecture Four: The Attempt Made by the Occultists to Avert the Lapse into Materialism
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- from materialistic thinking and not easily fathomed. —
- Title: Star Wisdom: Lecture I: Star Wisdom, Moon Religion, Sun Religion
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- this merely in parenthesis. Such things may bring home to
- Title: Star Wisdom: Lecture III: Characteristics of Judaism
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- called Syria where the Jews had their home, the influences and
- Title: Cosmic Workings: Lecture II
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- uses calcium in high dilution, in homeopathic doses, as one says, not
- allopaths and homeopaths. The allopaths cure allopathically and the
- homeopaths, homeopathically. Well, but as a matter of fact many
- illnesses cannot be cured homeopathically, many must be cured
- does not go in for catchwords — allopathic — homeopathic
- successful. Homeopathy is successful when the source of the illness
- have often cured such and such ... and the homeopath says: I have
- Title: History of Art: Lecture I: Cimabue, Giotto, and Other Italian Masters
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- kindled in their souls. Such pictures bring home to us the
- Italy where Raphael and his predecessors had their home, we see
- Title: History of Art: Lecture II: Leonardo, Michelangelo and Raphael
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- was not altogether at home there. True, he was a Florentine, but he
- took with him from his home country.
- as though it were, in a world-historic sense, the best of homely remedies.
- Title: History of Art: Lecture IV: Mid-European and Southern Art
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- his experiences in his own house and home, even the house of his
- Title: History of Art: Lecture VIII: Raphael and the Northern Artists
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- at home in Italy, and thence the priests and monks absorbed and carried
- But it must be said that the people whose home was in the German-speaking
- it did not truly appeal to them, it did not strike home. They had not
- Title: History of Art: Lecture IX:
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- them strongly enough to bring them home — however little —
- especially to the Homer which will now follow: —
- 36. Homer. (Museum. Naples.)
- Title: Man/Symphony: Lecture I: Man as Microcosm
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- from the eagle. [* Homer compares the speed of the Phaeacian ships to
- Title: Man/Symphony: Lecture VII: Gnomes, Undines, Sylphs, and Salamanders and their Relations to Ethers and Plants
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- of well-being, because here they are really at home, when they are
- They have their home in the earthly-moist element; there they live
- air that they find themselves at home; and at the same time they
- or less in a state of sleep, feel most in their element, most at home,
- Title: Colour: Part Three: The Creative World of Colour
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- On the other hand let us look at Carstens. He takes Homer's Iliad and
- nineteenth centuries to the Homeric figures from Raphael to the
- Title: Psychoanalysis: Lecture I: Anthroposophy and Psychoanalysis I
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- home at night often walk in the middle of the street instead of
- other conditions. The home is stirred up, the whole
- there as at home.
- Title: Influences of Lucifer/Ahriman: Lecture Two: The Advance Preparation of Ahriman for His Future Incarnation
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- home to you in these lectures — how Lucifer and Ahriman
- Title: Lucifer and Ahriman: Lecture II: The Advance Preparation of Ahriman for His Future Incarnation
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- untold significance. For such things as I want to bring home
- Title: Influences of Lucifer/Ahriman: Lecture Five: The Human as a Being of Will
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- played by humankind in shaping earth existence cannot be fathomed by
- Title: Lucifer and Ahriman: Lecture V: The Human as a Being of Will
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- shaping earth-existence cannot be fathomed by means of
- Title: Poetry/Speech: Lecture I: The Art of Recitation and Declamation
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- anew – nor doth my restless soul ever feel here at home. Long
- is worse than all. A man, as fortune bids, at home
- gentle, holy arms! O, daughter of Jove, hast thou led home the man
- hast thou led home the godlike
- our mother, his finest treasures at home, O then at last restore
- spirit feel at home.
- Man rules alike at home and in the
- home,
- Title: Poetry/Speech: Lecture II: The Art of Recitation and Declamation
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- so lightly, is something to which Homer, the great writer of Greek
- It is not Homer, but the Muse who is singing.
- understanding that lies hidden behind the opening of the Homeric
- Homeric poems; but in this respect he lived entirely in abstract
- feeling had been completely lost for what Homer meant to convey
- to reveal themselves. One must, therefore, regard what Homer placed
- Homer:
- from super-sensible spheres. Homer says: “Sing, O Muse, of the
- Homeric epic we are given something musical. Both, however, from
- Title: Poetry/Speech: Lecture III: The Art of Recitation and Declamation
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- haunting the homestead and vastly tall.
- Title: Poetry/Speech: Lecture IV: Poetry and the Art of Speech
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- Of youth, and home, and that sweet
- Title: Old/New Methods: Lecture Three: The Development of Religious Experience in Post-Atlantean Civilization
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- much going on. Then we go home, and next morning the newspaper
- Title: Old/New Methods: Lecture Eleven: Faust and Hamlet in Relation to the Turning Point of the 15th Century
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- and has brought home with him a certain mood of spirit — Hamlet
- black and white, one carries home and then goes through it.’
- Title: Old/New Methods: Lecture Twelve: The Transition from the 4th to the 5th Post-Atlantean Period, Shakespeare, the Spiritual Struggle of Schiller and Goethe
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- being of man. The being of man is too rich to be fathomed by thoughts
- Title: Lecture: Inner Nature of Music: Lecture VII
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- artistic forces of creativity just as Homer did, who said, “Sing,
- Title: Arts and Their Mission: Lecture I
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- to Greek tragedy, to the epics of Homer, in their human element, insofar
- Homer's description of Hector or of Achilles. Feel what immense importance
- Title: Arts and Their Mission: Lecture II
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- something to bring about a harmonization with his new home.
- part, Midgard, man's earthly home; and, below, what also belongs
- to the earth, Jotunheim, home of the giants.
- Not hell as the abode of the devil; hell as the home of the giants,
- Title: Arts and Their Mission: Lecture III
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- at home, inasmuch as their movements and conversation, there, are much
- must draw your attention again to the way Homer begins his Iliad:
- This is no mere phrase. Homer experienced in a positive way the need
- fructifying forces: the Muses. Homer had to offer himself up to these
- the upper gods speak; means putting one's person at their disposal. Homer
- had seen or thought out. Why do what everybody can do for himself? Homer
- Title: Arts and Their Mission: Lecture IV
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- if we would enter our true home and discover what bears a relationship
- realms, home of his soul. Sense-evidence should be purified, elevated
- after he returned home.
- Title: Arts and Their Mission: Lecture V
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- what could be fathomed only by studying the relationship between stars
- We still can divine what it meant for Homer when he said: “Sing,
- Muse lives in one particular planet. It was into this planet that Homer
- Title: Arts and Their Mission: Lecture VI
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- something for church or home to an isolated phenomenon. If we paint
- Title: Oswald Spengler: Lecture III: Oswald Spengler - II
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- vitality of the muses of Homer and of Pindar, but at any rate
- Title: Education as a Social Problem: Lecture II: The Social Structure in Ancient Greece and Rome
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- means to risk taking such a step. So, he went to his home town
- Title: Karma: Lecture II
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- human being is born into a parental home. He is born on a
- that appears by virtue of his being born into a parental home,
- and more at home in the world by his learning in this way to
- Title: Three Streams: Lecture IV: Consciousness Soul and Scientific Thinking, Sorat and 666
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- certain sense to bring home nature to modern consciousness in a
- Title: Three Streams: Lecture V: Free Human Personality by Self Training, Justinian and the Schools
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- — a being equivalent to earthly man but not at home on this
- Title: Challenge/Times: Lecture VI: The Innate Capacities of the Nations of the World
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- Indian expression — become a “homeless”
- Title: Roman Catholicism: Lecture I
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- revolt. There it was a question of ceaselessly pressing home the
- Title: Roman Catholicism: Lecture II
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- My dear friends, what I am really trying to bring home to you is that
- campaign. But what I am primarily trying to bring home to you is how
- Title: Young Doctors Course: Easter Course: Lecture IV
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- fathomed at all by human beings. Christianity came into the
- Title: Anthroposophy Introduction: Lecture VII: Dream-life and External Reality
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- of mine who one day, without his conscious knowledge, left his home
- he had done at home; the rest was obliterated. It was necessary to trace
- Title: Anthroposophy Introduction: Lecture VIII: Dreams, Imaginative Cognition, and the Building of Destiny
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- and will only be at home in the plant-growth of the following year. It
- Title: Three Streams: Lecture IV: Consciousness Soul and Scientific Thinking, Sorat and 666
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- certain sense to bring home nature to modern consciousness in a
- Title: Three Streams: Lecture V: Free Human Personality by Self Training, Justinian and the Schools
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- — a being equivalent to earthly man but not at home on this
- Title: Thomas Aquinas: Lecture I: Thomas and Augustine
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- soul, of sinful man's salvation.” Homer began, equally
- phrase, when Homer lets the Muse sing, in place of himself. The
- Title: Thomas Aquinas: Lecture II: The Essence of Thomism
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- spoke honestly and sincerely, who, like Homer, for instance,
- Title: Search for the New Isis: Lecture IV
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- realities of life I was very much at home in an international
- Title: Driving Force: Lecture III
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- creative powers. Like Homer, who said: ‘Sing me, O
- Title: Driving Force: Lecture VII
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- but because he felt his soul to be at home in the realm of
- Title: Human Soul/Evolution: Lecture II: The True Nature of Memory - 1
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- notes can, like any possession, be comfortably taken home. And
- home. It is said, however, that anthroposophical lectures do
- what is written down about them and comfortably taken home.
- Title: Philosophy, Cosmology and Religion: Lecture I: The Three Steps of Anthroposophy
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- home with a certain measure of gratification. When we who have
- Title: Philosophy, Cosmology and Religion: Lecture II: Soul Exercises in Thinking, Feeling, and Willing
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- which the ego of man, the true ego, has its innate home. Since
- Title: Philosophy, Cosmology and Religion: Lecture X: The Experience of the Soul's Will Nature
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- especially happy if you took home with you the feeling that the
- Title: Occult Reading/Hearing: Lecture I: Human Being and his Relationship to the World
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- home and have pleasure in it, put it in a vase and so on. We
- form a peculiar pattern.’ I cannot take this home like the
- Title: i Spirituality: Lecture 1: Historical Symptomology, the Year 790, Alcuin, Greeks, Platonism, Aristotelianism, East, West, Middle, Ego
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- Greek, who was naturally at home in the particular soul-constitution of the Greek peoples which
- Title: New Spirituality: Lecture 4: The New Spirituality and the Christ Experiance of the Twentieth Century - 3
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- be so completely severed from their homeland as the Germans who became Americans, and yet
- Title: New Spirituality: Lecture 7: The New Spirituality and the Christ Experiance of the Twentieth Century - 6
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- structure in such a way that this human nature can be at home in it; and when one strives,
- Title: Tree of Life/Knowledge: Lecture III: The Power of Thought
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- thinks, but one becomes at home in the fashioning forces of the
- home in the forming forces of thought life, but nevertheless in so
- world-conception becomes at home in a reflection of the life of
- thought. One should become at home in the thought-world as if one
- and Japanese religions, does not become at home in the living being,
- at home in the existing evolution; they felt themselves to be
- figure, constitutes the greatness in the works of Homer and
- Title: Tree of Life/Knowledge: Lecture V: Tree of Knowledge - I
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- earth and has its home under the earth and never comes above the
- it, he wants to pluck the little rose, he wants to take it home with
- home.’ She, Nature, would like to do with all her objects
- Title: World Downfall and Resurrection
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- mystery of existence be fathomed. But neither Dionysius the
- Title: Imperialism: Lecture 1
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- English friends, who will soon be going home, to be able to take as
- go to the colonies, become rich, then spend their riches at home, but
- Title: First Class, Vol. I: Lesson 1
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- Where in the Self the world is fathomed:
- Where in the Self the world is fathomed:
- existence must be fathomed from all that acts and works in the
- real knowledge must be fathomed from what is revealed in the
- Where in the Self the world is fathomed:
- Title: First Class, Vol. II: Lesson 15
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- at home in spiritual surroundings just as sense-perceptible
- beings we feel at home in sense-perceptible surroundings. We
- Title: First Class Lessons: Lesson XX (recapitulation)
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- Where in the Self the world is fathomed:
- Where in the Self the world is fathomed:
- the distance from their homes cannot attend. As members of the
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