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- Title: Lecture: The Alphabet
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- We can get an approximate idea of the signs of the Zodiac if we relate
- Title: Lecture: The Moral as the Source of World-Creative Power
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- Roman Catholic Church. No orthodox Catholic was allowed to believe it.
- Title: Lecture: The Path to Freedom and Love and their Significance in World Events
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- [e.Ed: See Oxford Dictionary.]
- another, oxygen; they are merely differently grouped. This is simply
- Title: Lecture: Search for the New Isis, the Divine Sophia: The Quest for the Isis-Sophia
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- equinox and only reappeared at the autumn equinox. The Egyptians wanted to
- Title: Lecture: The Human Heart
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- are situated (to speak approximately) above the diaphragm. Marvelous
- someone a box on the ears, all is inscribed into the astral body. Even
- coincide only approximately with the physical) man's own etheric heart
- Title: Lecture: The Invisible Man Within Us
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- itself with the astral forces, taking hold of oxygen and only then,
- if we absorbed more oxygen. The more the carbonic acid formation
- process of the blood counters the absorption of oxygen in the
- of oxygen directly from the ego or the astral body. Thus by taking in
- Title: Lecture: Spiritual Emptiness and Social Life
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- or feeling for it? Men such as Troxler, and
- men. This is one of the paradoxes implicit in the historic evolution
- It certainly seems paradoxical when these things, which are of
- is paradoxical to speak as I am speaking now — he does not know how what
- Title: Lecture: Exoteric and Esoteric Christianity
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- spirituality. We might express approximately in this way the content
- Title: Lecture: The Origin of Speech and Language
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- the oxygen of the air. We take in air. The blood changes. This
- Title: Lecture: The Sense-Organs and Aesthetic Experience
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- even approximately correct ... only four!
- Title: Lecture: Elemental Beings and Human Destinies
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- these boundary lines are of course only approximate. Here then we have
- Title: Lecture: Man, Offspring of the World of Stars
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- corresponds approximately to half the time required by Mars to
- Title: Lecture: The Recovery of the Living Source of Speech
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- of course be no more than approximate. In one region of the earth
- Title: Lecture: Gnostic Doctrines and Supersensible Influences in Europe
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- earthly world. Approximately at the turn of the third and fourth
- Title: Lecture III: Ancient Myths
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- way that I can only relate today approximately, superficially, even
- man's evolution. It implies approximately: In ancient times,
- Title: Lecture IV: Ancient Myths
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- corresponds to the rising of the sun at the vernal equinox in the
- of Cancer at the vernal equinox the first post-Atlantean civilization
- that it took its course while the vernal equinox of the Sun was in
- the Sign of Gemini, the Twins, at the Vernal Equinox. And then
- as long as the Vernal Equinox continued to be in Gemini, we have
- this was the age when the sun at the Vernal Equinox entered Taurus,
- the Spring equinox stands in Taurus are connected
- Aries, the Ram, at the Vernal Equinox. This corresponds to the
- Title: Lecture V: Ancient Myths
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- catastrophe, which again lasted for approximately 2,160 years, and
- Title: Lecture VI: Ancient Myths
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- abstract, it seems paradoxical and hard to understand, but yet the
- characteristic that a really paradoxical love for the sweet little
- traditions, the Russian Christianity, the Orthodox Christianity.
- paradoxically, somewhat extremely: so that Europe had
- Title: Lecture VII: Ancient Myths
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- Lemurian civilization. It lies approximately 25,900 years before our
- the constellation of Aries, the Ram, at the Vernal Equinox. Here in
- abstract, paradoxical, but they correspond to profound realities;
- Title: Lecture: The Relation of the Movement for Religious Renewal to the Anthroposophical Movement
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- those persons who came to me may be summed up approximately in the
- Title: Lecture: Perceiving and Remembering
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- forward their opinions, they consider them either mad or paradoxical.
- Title: Perception of the Nature of Thought
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- to the zodiacal signs, we are then living approximately in the sphere
- approximate), 700 – 800 years in the sentient soul, 700 – 800
- Title: Lecture: The Elemental World and the Future of Mankind
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- discovers the atomic weight of hydrogen, oxygen and nitrogen, and
- that he finds out how hydrogen and oxygen combine into water to be
- Title: Lecture: The Spiritual Communion of Mankind
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- those days. To the orthodox modern scientist the Sun is a ball of gas
- Title: Lecture: The Coming Experience of Christ
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- of this difference. And if men did not box themselves up within their
- Title: Lecture: Modern and Ancient Spiritual Exercises
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- and fall in all directions. Someone who is intoxicated or feels faint
- Title: Lecture: The Universe
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- say: The stars in the proximity of Aries send their
- influence from outside, also those in the proximity of
- Title: Lecture: The Templars
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- oxygen of the air and make carbonic acid gas, so does the ether body use up
- Title: On the Duty of Clear, Sound Thinking
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- box on the ear, would I then say (as these are but images I see in
- the mirror) that one reflection has given the other reflection a box
- Title: Lecture: Exoteric and Esoteric Christianity
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- approximately, was the substance of the esoteric teaching given
- Title: Lecture: Fundamentals of the Science of Initiation
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- indeed so — although this may seem paradoxical to a modern man
- a strange paradox: — I have often explained to you here that
- this wisdom which appears so paradoxical to-day. For in our time many
- paradoxical. You see, two things are possible to-day. Someone may
- something which may seem rather paradoxical. Let us suppose that
- You see this is a paradox.
- Undoubtedly they are, at least for a time, temporarily noxious
- Many grotesque paradoxes can be found not only in rather
- Title: Lecture: Cosmogony, Freedom, Altruism
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- — very often so put, that the answers seem paradoxical
- Title: Lecture: Hygiene - a Social Problem
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- just said may seem paradoxical, for people do not place the
- Title: Lecture: The Problem of Jesus and Christ in Earlier Times
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- approximately, that Moses and the prophets as well as the
- Title: Lecture: Thinking and Willing as Two Poles of the Human Soul-Life
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- if I may say so without sounding too paradoxical — it is good
- Title: Vortrage: Denken, Fühlen, Wollen - Das Muspilhgedicht
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- so sagen darf, obwohl es zunächst paradox klingt —,
- Title: Fall/Darkness: Lecture 7: Working from Spiritual Reality
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- penetrate every human sphere. To put it as a paradox —
- paradoxes never represent the actual facts, of course, but we
- Title: Fall/Darkness: Lecture 8: Abstraction and Reality
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- makes them — forgive the paradoxical way of putting
- Title: Fall/Darkness: Lecture 9: The Battle between Michael and 'The Dragon'
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- approximately equals the time between the beginning of the
- paradoxical to say something like this. But if one reads
- Title: Fall/Darkness: Lecture 11: Recognizing the Inner Human Being
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- composition, for human beings have approximately as many
- vertebrae. The reason why the figure is only approximate will
- lion does, and the fox, the ant, the ladybird, and so on. It
- Title: Fall/Darkness: Lecture 12: The Spirits of Light and the Spirits of Darkness
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- paradoxical, but it is true. In future, humanity cannot be
- Title: Fall/Darkness: Lecture 13: The Fallen Spirits' Influence in the World
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- such wrong direction, which is about as paradoxical as is
- Title: Fall/Darkness: Lecture 14: Into the Future
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- is sitting on the box and guiding the horse with the reins.
- ‘voting machine’ — which is approximately
- Title: Lecture: Man's Fall and Redemption
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- case we should very probably have seen this is a paradox, but it is
- Title: On the Mysteries of Ancient and Modern Times: Lecture 1
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- the orthodox historian describes as ‘historic
- man to-day combines oxygen and hydrogen — well, he
- Title: On the Mysteries of Ancient and Modern Times: Lecture 2
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- coinciding approximately with the Winter Solstice. Easter is
- Easter thoughts. For we may even say, paradoxical as it may
- Title: On the Mysteries of Ancient and Modern Times: Lecture 3
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- calculated approximately — is a certain fraction of the
- course, arc only to be taken approximately), our head has
- Title: Lecture: East and West in the Light of the Christmas Idea
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- indicate an approximate epoch, we may say: Only at the turn of
- Title: Lecture: Man and Cosmos
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- perceptions can approximately be described as
- you to form, even approximately and vaguely, a picture of what
- human being does not only perceive what is, approximately
- are applied to hydrogen, oxygen, etc., or whether one adheres to
- Title: Lecture: Knowledge Pervaded with the Experience of Love
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- paradoxically, we may say that modern man likes thoughts which
- Title: Lecture: The Golden Legend and a German Christmas Play
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- an ox and an ass, the Child and two figures representing Joseph and
- Title: Lecture: The Christmas Thought and the Secret of the Ego
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- disappeared even in rural areas in approximately the middle of the
- there, and therefore a stall, in which were placed an ox and an ass,
- Title: Conferencia: La Comunión Espiritual de la Humanidad
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- días. Para el científico moderno ortodoxo, el Sol es una bola
- Title: Lecture: Factors of Karma, Deficiencies in Psychoanalysis
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- drive away the noxious effects to which such teaching
- these things are approximate. During this time we shall
- Title: Lecture: Hereditary Impulses and Impulses from Previous Earth Lives
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- its course in this way: There is a first section, approximately
- approximate term). Bourgeoisdom has come to
- an orthodox Catholic — following the Roman see — to
- Title: Lecture: The Relation of Man to the Hierarchies
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- — a space approximately empty. Only then could one
- something paradoxical — when we are rightly able to
- Title: Four Seasons/Archangels: Lecture II: The Christmas Imagination
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- hydrogen and oxygen. It would be absurd for anyone to suppose that
- water consists of hydrogen and oxygen only. In the case of mineral
- oxygen: that is only a first approximation. All water, wherever
- told, consists of oxygen and nitrogen and other elements. But in fact
- this is not so: the air is not made up merely of oxygen and nitrogen,
- will seem highly paradoxical.
- Title: Four Seasons/Archangels: Lecture III: The Easter Imagination
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- oxygen atoms: no such thing exists. In the carbonic acid we breathe
- atom of carbon and two of oxygen, is merely an abstraction, an
- Title: Four Seasons/Archangels: Lecture IV: The St. John Imagination
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- are of course bound to be only approximate — an
- Title: Four Seasons/Archangels: Lecture V: The Working Together of the Four Archangels
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- medical textbooks always describe how man breathes in oxygen from the
- air and how the carbon within him takes up the oxygen; this process
- of external substances combine with oxygen. The whole process
- in the human organism, whereby oxygen is taken up by carbon, is then
- oxygen with carbon in man and thinks of it as combustion is
- these people talk in speaking of the combustion of oxygen and carbon
- human organism when carbon unites with oxygen there — a process
- Title: St. Augustine
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- especially strongly! he says approximately: “My mode of
- Title: Architectural Forms
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- Rudolf Steiner, by permission of H. Collison, M.A. (Oxon),
- Title: World History: Lecture I: Evolution of the Soul and of Memory
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- ape-being. Such is approximately the usual conception of
- Title: World History: Lecture II: Mysteries of 'Asia'
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- devoid of spirit. To speak as we do, of oxygen and nitrogen
- To him oxygen was spirit, it was that spiritual thing which
- the atmosphere together with oxygen, was also spiritual; it was
- for example, of oxygen and nitrogen. And he knew all the
- a certain time in the epoch of Asiatic evolution, approximately
- Title: World History: Lecture III: Asiatic Mysteries of Ephesus, Gilgamesh and Eabani
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- its surface and surrounded by a sphere of air containing oxygen
- Title: World History: Lecture VII: The Fifteenth Century and the Transition from Mind-Soul to Spiritual-Soul
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- — hydrogen, oxygen and the like — affords no true
- combination. It is composed, so they say, of carbon, oxygen,
- sulphur, carbon, oxygen, nitrogen and hydrogen are in any way
- nitrogen, hydrogen and oxygen, all of which analysis is
- Title: World History: Lecture IX: World History in the Light of Anthroposophy
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- approximately — but in the whole Cosmos something is
- offshoots in the orthodox schools of to-day. If what has been
- built from orthodox science to what it is our aim to found in
- Title: Whitsuntide in the Course of the Year
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- about a lecture: “One person sees the world as a box of
- Title: Karma of Vocation: Lecture I
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- approximately the same — “a wretched fellow who cannot even
- Title: Karma of Vocation: Lecture III
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- have reached a point where an especially paradoxical fact comes
- Title: Karma of Vocation: Lecture IV
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- post-Atlantean period which began, as we know, approximately in
- that when sulphur, oxygen, and some other substance — hydrogen
- Title: Karma of Vocation: Lecture V
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- development of children from approximately the seventh to the
- Title: Karma of Vocation: Lecture VII
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- passes through a period of seven years, approximately to the
- — a comprehensive, approximate expression, but nevertheless
- madness, for the orthodox Catholic to lay claim to freedom of
- Title: Karma of Vocation: Lecture IX
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- things, and here again I make a somewhat paradoxical statement,
- Title: Karma of Vocation: Lecture X
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- orthodox, or let's say, more recent Catholicism. At any rate,
- life. He is married to a lady, the daughter of a very orthodox
- mother and herself very orthodox in view. This lady is deeply
- Title: Mysteries of the Sun: Lecture II
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- vision; that is approximately so, only I have drawn it small.
- Title: Mysteries of the Sun: Lecture III
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- up to approximately the middle of the eighth pre-Christian
- is approximately blue. And now pushing up here, the real
- Title: Man and Nature: Intellect in Man and Nature Bereft of the Gods
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- to-day, drawn as they are from the dicta of orthodox science,
- Title: Year's Course as a Symbol for the Great Cosmic Year
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- at this time of the year, approximately around New Year's Eve.
- Title: Spiritual Relations in the Configuration of the Human Organism: Lecture II
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- beings. That we can be earthly beings is brought about by oxygen which
- the ether body as foodstuffs oxygen of the air is taken up. Therefore,
- on earth between birth and death (diagram 1, white). It is oxygen that
- in our ether body. Oxygen is that kind of substance which brings into
- heart is connected with the lung and takes up oxygen the food that is
- that what is taken up by our ether body and is saturated by oxygen,
- has now been revived, and saturated by oxygen — is forwarded into
- a kind of radiation into the organism. It is approximately somewhat
- driven to the point where they are killed. Then we get approximately
- that approximately during the whole time from the 4th until the 14th
- vivacious movement. Because we have carbon in us, we receive oxygen
- living being who consists of protein — carbon, oxygen, nitrogen
- Title: Spiritual Relations in the Configuration of the Human Organism: Lecture III
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- — the Light Age, which once existed (approximately in the 7th
- — approximately, of course — who can be exposed to light
- But that is not true. Only the salts remain approximately the same.
- Title: Goetheanism as an Impulse for Man's Transformation - Lecture I: The Difference Between Man and Animal
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- earth, the earth is under the head organism in all animals, approximately
- Title: Goetheanism as an Impulse for Man's Transformation - Lecture II: St. John of the Cross
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- spiritual scientist that an orthodox Catholic may pronounce if he has
- an aim at all. All that may be striven for by an orthodox Catholic is
- two kinds of gifts which, in the sense of the orthodox Catholic Church,
- the objections an orthodox, hallmarked, Roman Catholic cleric would
- by orthodox Rome. In the second place we have to remember the accusation
- should be for orthodox Catholic Christians who through this vision my
- as an orthodox Father of the Church. Take these words first in relation
- it is recognised, for example, that an orthodox Father of the Church,
- the orthodox Roman Catholic clericalism it is definitely intended that
- Title: Goetheanism as an Impulse for Man's Transformation - Lecture 4: Human Qualities Which Oppose Antroposophy
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- you are blinded. It is approximately the same with the relation between
- Title: Goetheanism as an Impulse for Man's Transformation - Lecture 5: Paganism, Hebraism, and the Greek Spirit, Hellenism
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- We could speak of this point in paradox—had men not taken upon
- is an orthodox Catholic who experiences Christ-Jesus in all His mystery
- intoxicated by the sound of words simply words are there—the matter
- Title: The Building at Dornach (Bn/GA 289): Lecture III: Lecture 3
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- into proximity with death. Thus Death had to be brought into proximity
- influence is predominant. As a result, the human form approximates more
- Title: Problem of Faust: Lecture I: The Problem of Faust
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- “red lion” (mercury-oxide, sulphurated mercury)
- Title: Problem of Faust: Lecture III: Goethe's Feeling for the Concrete.
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- produce. He often expressed himself strangely and in paradox
- Title: Problem of Faust: Lecture IV: Faust and the "Mothers"
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- prompter's box making his insinuations from there.
- himself sitting, insinuatign from the prompter's box, and the
- Title: Problem of Faust: Lecture VI: The Helena Saga and the Riddle of Freedom
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- paradoxical when one asserts that it is good for men that
- Title: Problem of Faust: Lecture IX: Goethe's Life of the Soul from the Standpoint of Spiritual Science
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- their essential nature. One can indeed put this in a paradox.
- takes approximately the same view as anyone who says he
- Title: Problem of Faust: Lecture XII: Goetheanism In Place of Homunculism and Mephistophelianism
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- almost like a set of cardboard boxes fitting into one
- another. And then, as for development, one box represents the
- and that then, one after another, cardboard box out of
- cardboard box, the successive stages always proceeded out of
- his attitude to the whole wide universe. Approximately at the
- evolution goes on in a straight line, one cardboard box
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume III: Lecture I
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- say, ‘In the air in which we breathe is oxygen,’ so did these
- the thoughts.’ And as we say ‘We breathe in the oxygen of the
- that the oxygen he receives in breathing were not received by
- know that the oxygen of the air circulates through our organism
- within them, yet only in the sense in which we hold the oxygen
- Title: Pastoral Medicine: Lecture 2
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- This was approximately her path.
- Title: Pastoral Medicine: Lecture 3
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- find in them what can only be called a paradox: the healthy
- remarkable paradox: one sees illness from another side. One sees
- through the present into the future. That is approximately how time
- Title: Pastoral Medicine: Lecture 6
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- to a meager intake of oxygen and a strong saturation of carbon
- dioxide. Breathing irregularities — from a physical point of
- do not allow the proper balance of oxygen and carbon dioxide in the
- Title: Pastoral Medicine: Lecture 7
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- as our immediate environment, so approximately they are also then
- described as the combining of some substance or other with oxygen;
- given a certain temperature, any substance can combine with oxygen
- process, exhalation — from the inhaling of oxygen to the
- forming of carbon dioxide. The inhalation process shows itself in
- amorphous oxygen. In the oxygen that we regard, mistakenly, simply as
- breathe out. We breathe out carbon dioxide. At the conclusion of
- other organic processes carbon dioxide is, in a certain sense,
- go from the inner activity of forming carbon dioxide to the process
- Title: Pastoral Medicine: Lecture 10
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- happens approximately every 25,920 years. There we have found a
- through approximately 25,920 of our ordinary years.
- approximate numbers — we find eighteen breaths a minute. If we
- be approximate.) Now take a human life (again approximate) of
- Every time we go to sleep we not only breathe carbon dioxide out, but
- element, while with our physical breath we breathe in oxygen. With
- “approximately.” For our human calculation never comes
- Title: Broken Vessels: Lecture 2
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- This was approximately her path.
- Title: Broken Vessels: Lecture 3
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- find in them what can only be called a paradox: the healthy
- remarkable paradox: one sees illness from another side. One sees
- through the present into the future. That is approximately how time
- Title: Broken Vessels: Lecture 6
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- to a meager intake of oxygen and a strong saturation of carbon
- dioxide. Breathing irregularities — from a physical point of
- do not allow the proper balance of oxygen and carbon dioxide in the
- Title: Broken Vessels: Lecture 7
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- as our immediate environment, so approximately they are also then
- described as the combining of some substance or other with oxygen;
- given a certain temperature, any substance can combine with oxygen
- process, exhalation — from the inhaling of oxygen to the
- forming of carbon dioxide. The inhalation process shows itself in
- amorphous oxygen. In the oxygen that we regard, mistakenly, simply as
- breathe out. We breathe out carbon dioxide. At the conclusion of
- other organic processes carbon dioxide is, in a certain sense,
- go from the inner activity of forming carbon dioxide to the process
- Title: Broken Vessels: Lecture 10
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- happens approximately every 25,920 years. There we have found a
- through approximately 25,920 of our ordinary years.
- approximate numbers — we find eighteen breaths a minute. If we
- be approximate.) Now take a human life (again approximate) of
- Every time we go to sleep we not only breathe carbon dioxide out, but
- element, while with our physical breath we breathe in oxygen. With
- “approximately.” For our human calculation never comes
- Title: Lecture II: Human Questions and Cosmic Answers
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- be described approximately in the following way.
- Title: Lecture IV: Human Questions and Cosmic Answers
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- our earth consists of oxygen and nitrogen, Nitrogen is, to begin with,
- of little use for our physical life. Oxygen we inhale; in the body it
- undergoes a change and carbon dioxide is formed, which we exhale. So
- nitrogen, which does not enter into chemical combination with oxygen,
- but lives out there in a kind of intimate mixture with oxygen? In
- nitrogen we cannot live; for that, we need oxygen. But without
- body and our etheric body need the oxygen from the air; our ego and
- Title: Origins of Natural Science: Lecture V
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- I may use such a paradox. The concepts of blossoming and decaying, of
- Title: Origins of Natural Science: Lecture VI
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- knowledge put him in opposition to the views of orthodox science, and
- stronger to approximate man to the animal. The search for a
- in this state. I separate the oxygen from hydrogen, because I need
- nature, just as chemist needs deoxygenized hydrogen and therefore has
- Title: Origins of Natural Science: Lecture VII
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- this process. Water consists of hydrogen and oxygen; the two must be
- you will) and so does oxygen. These intermingle, collide, and cling
- Title: Origins of Natural Science: Lecture IX
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- as are active in oxygen and other gases. In these, the astral body is
- Title: Bridge between the Ideal and the Real: Lecture I
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- especially strongly; he says approximately “My mode of
- Title: Lecture: The Revelation of the Cosmic Christ
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- orthodox theology proclaiming the view that in reality the Gospels
- Title: Inner Impulses: Lecture II
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- about 747 B.C. These are of course, approximate dates. I have just
- give birth to an idea. In the moment of its birth it intoxicates me,
- intoxicates me, but next morning it fills me with loathing. This
- Title: Inner Impulses: Lecture III
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- name that, when we try to transpose it into our speech approximates
- Title: Inner Impulses: Lecture IV
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- know that it begins approximately in the period that is also described
- its course approximately in the middle of the nineteenth century. As
- Title: Inner Impulses: Lecture V
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- sound that approximates Taotl. Taotl is an ahrimanic distortion of the
- Being may be expressed by a combination of syllables that approximate
- Title: Inner Impulses: Lecture VI
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- the approximate locale of Lemurian evolution. This region of the earth
- Title: Inner Impulses: Lecture VII
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- Let us consider, for instance, the origin of the orthodox English
- an apparently orthodox recognition of it, and a soul that has grown
- certain times we are approximately at the places where Mercury was,
- similar things could be recorded. Today, in orthodox physics, one
- Title: Mystery Centres: Lecture V
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- atmosphere we take oxygen into ourselves, that our relation to the
- general that this atmosphere, consisting in oxygen and nitrogen,
- oxygen and nitrogen play the chief part, carbon and hydrogen play a
- possible to speak of oxygen, nitrogen, carbon, sulphur and so on,
- spiritual being of that time and speak of carbon, oxygen, nitrogen,
- It is possible to speak today of oxygen, nitrogen, carbon, etc., but
- as it has within it today. Oxygen, nitrogen, potassium, sodium and so
- become denser, what we now call carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen
- substance. Carbon is not present there as carbon, nor oxygen as
- oxygen, but there is a substance of a higher nature. As I have said,
- epoch, if, let us say, we could set up a little sentry box somewhere
- Such things naturally sound paradoxical because they
- sulphurous. Oxygen gradually gained the upper hand over the sulphur,
- oxygen, the alkaline heavy metals, and the like. These things were
- Title: Mystery Centres: Lecture IX
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- centuries after the rise of Christianity and approximately to the
- Valentine Andreae, who became later an orthodox pastor, and wrote
- 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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- into it oxalic acid, which can be extracted from clover, and mix with
- the oxalic acid an equal part of glycerin. We then heat the oxalic
- remains over is formic acid. The oxalic acid is transformed in losing
- carbonic acid into formic acid. I beg you to take note: oxalic acid,
- oxalic acid, yes, that is most predominant in clover but oxalic acid
- influence of oxalic acid.
- exercises an influence on this oxalic acid, which exists especially
- this carbon dioxide. You can compare the retort with the heated
- mixture of glycerin and oxalic acid quite well with the human
- It is correct, however, that if man were not able to develop oxalic
- man was unable to transform oxalic acid into formic acid his astral
- etheric body oxalic acid. For his astral body he requires formic
- transformation of oxalic acid into formic acid. This view must be
- world is spread. Now, of course, radically speaking we find oxalic
- reality oxalic acid is spread out everywhere in the world of
- Oxalic acid is everywhere in the vegetable kingdom, and we find
- ants, for they approach rotting wood in order to get to the oxalic
- on the plants, who transform the oxalic acid of the plants into
- process of transformation from oxalic acid into formic acid, but in
- experienced the metamorphosis of oxalic acid into formic acid, when
- Maximum number of matches per file exceeded.
- Title: Mystery Centres: Lecture XIV: Human Soul-Strivings During the Middle Ages the Rosicrucian Mysteries
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- in the form they took in the Middle Ages, approximately from the 10th
- life, i.e., oxygen, and to which most of the other metals are so
- thoroughly receptive. Oxygen does not affect or alter gold. This
- that because gold has no relationship with oxygen, with the breath of
- the breath of life — oxygen — is attracted by something
- oxygen and repels it, will have nothing to do with it, and therefore
- exists in man as carbon has a direct relationship with oxygen.
- carbon dioxide. We unite carbon with oxygen. The plants require
- carbon dioxide for their life; and this carbon possesses the opposite
- transformation of oxalic acid into formic acid — while these
- Title: Lecture: Lecture I: Physiology and Therapeutics
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- This paradox led to skepticism among many physicians, especially to the
- Title: Lecture: Lecture II: Physiology and Therapeutics
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- In this way just as Troxler suggested in the first half of the
- to this sentence in a paradoxical way To know the spirit means to
- Title: Lecture: Lecture IV: Physiology and Therapeutics
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- When you apply what may initially appear paradoxical to you, even
- Title: World Economy: Lecture I
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- approximation to English conditions, a development of the industrial
- Now, it is approximately the same when, within a given economic
- Title: World Economy: Lecture III
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- This is approximately what I desired to set forth in the essay I
- Title: World Economy: Lecture VII
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- start from the several factors which are enumerated by orthodox
- Title: World Economy: Lecture VIII
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- approximately so for the circulation of commodities as seen from the
- Title: World Economy: Lecture X
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- process; then we shall get approximate conceptions only
- approximate ones, it is true but conceptions which will be of
- Title: World Economy: Lecture XIII
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- form; they are only there in an approximately absolute sense. After
- is always actually the case, only it sometimes approximates more to
- Title: World Economy: Lecture XIV
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- in the economic process spiritual services ox products come to meet
- the actual exchange values, you would find a very close approximation.
- Title: Rosicrucianism/Initiation: Lecture I: Research into the Life of the Spirit During the Middle Ages
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- name one substance as oxygen, another as nitrogen, and so on. Oxygen,
- Air is. Today men know only that air consists of oxygen, nitrogen and
- oxygen and nitrogen. We say very much, on the other hand, if we know:
- Title: Rosicrucianism/Initiation: Lecture II: Hidden Centres of the Mysteries in the Middle Ages
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- paradoxical to you after all — if you are able to do this, then
- Title: Rosicrucianism/Initiation: Lecture V: Occult Schools in the 18th and First Half of the 19th Century
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- Paradoxical as it may sound, it is yet true that such a book as my
- in a sentence that will naturally appear ludicrous and paradoxical to
- Title: Rosicrucianism/Initiation: Lecture VI: The Tasks of the Michael Age
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- expressed approximately as follows:
- Title: Lecture: Michaelmas IV: A Michael Lecture
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- approximately as follows: The Initiates of the old Persian epoch
- Title: Lecture: Festivals and The Mysteries. The Adonis Mystery. The Easter Thought
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- which were held about the time of the Spring Equinox (which still
- essence and meaning with the Heathen festivals of the Spring Equinox.
- Ether, approximately three days after the human being here upon Earth
- Title: Lecture: Moon-birth and Sun-birth. Necessity and Freedom. Stages of the Ancient
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- Spring Equinox. The Easter Festival of the year is fixed for the
- Title: Significant Facts: Lecture I: A Convulsive Element in Humanity in the Nineteenth Century
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- an audience of orthodox believers that the existence of the two Jesus
- utterly heterodox figures of gods. And now, he who knows nothing
- Title: Spiritual Science and Medicine -- Lecture I
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- the noxious effects of this confusion, a confusion of soul forces with
- certain facts about Troxler of great interest in this connection.
- Troxler taught medicine at the University of Berne and in the first
- mischief here. Troxler wanted to work in this direction. And however
- A friend and I once had the opportunity of inquiry into Troxler's
- to say about Troxler: that he had caused much disturbance in the
- Title: Spiritual Science and Medicine -- Lecture II
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- to test it, at least in orthodox scientific circles.
- Title: Spiritual Science and Medicine -- Lecture III
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- Here we come to a chapter where again there is in the orthodox study
- Title: Spiritual Science and Medicine -- Lecture IV
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- carbon with oxygen, by changing it into carbon dioxide, and thus we
- begin to enlarge, and certain approximations to the bladder appear. So
- bacillus itself is the noxious agent, it is the forces active within
- carbon dioxide. In the same way, the process contained in the life of
- approximates to the form which it reaches in mankind, the more evolved
- whole way in which nature works. For, however paradoxical, it is
- Title: Spiritual Science and Medicine -- Lecture V
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- bodies and egos. This may appear paradoxical, but the activity
- Title: Spiritual Science and Medicine -- Lecture VI
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- Vernal Equinox; this amounts to 25,920 of our terrestrial years. Here
- Title: Spiritual Science and Medicine -- Lecture IX
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- yesterday what may be termed the approximation of the
- by bringing him into an atmosphere richer in oxygen, so that his
- oxygenated atmosphere, causes a certain improvement in cases of
- will term the process of carbon dioxide formation in external nature.
- necessary to follow up the carbon dioxide process in curative
- starting — point in the digestive system. All carbon dioxide
- Title: Spiritual Science and Medicine -- Lecture X
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- it up. To use an apparent paradox to eat would be a perpetual process
- certainly get clear how far there must be infection (approximately at
- associated with carbon and carbon dioxide — bears in itself the
- Title: Spiritual Science and Medicine -- Lecture XI
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- earth process is in connection with oxygen consumption. The earth's
- carbon content regulates the oxygen content of the atmospheric
- carbonisation of the earth and the oxygen process in the atmosphere,
- processes appertaining to the oxygen content of the atmosphere, that
- Title: Spiritual Science and Medicine -- Lecture XII
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- the spiritual scientist can fully appreciate. As you are aware, oxygen
- oxygen and nitrogen, and one can therefore assume from the outset that
- there is some significance in the relation of oxygen to nitrogen in
- oxygen to nitrogen, in either direction — is associated with
- of oxygen and nitrogen in the external atmosphere. Both correspond in
- us; these are oxygen and nitrogen. So these main components of the
- Oxygen and nitrogen are linked with the functions of the human
- oxygen, nitrogen, hydrogen, and, in addition, sulphur, as, so to
- under another influence; namely, of the four elements, oxygen,
- It is important to remember that in speaking of oxygen, hydrogen and
- detail, we must identify the external operation of oxygen with the
- external world by carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, and their
- Title: Spiritual Science and Medicine -- Lecture XV
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- and dies in the most violent paroxysms. If the plant is near at hand,
- Title: Spiritual Science and Medicine -- Lecture XVI
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- are toxic activities in the organism. This must not be overlooked. The
- activity; and counteracts these toxic conditions continually through
- against the powerful toxic effects caused by our higher consciousness.
- we perceive an excessive inner organic activity caused by toxic
- dreadful Dementia Præcox may result. That is the true origin of
- Dementia Præcox. And a sound objective education is a splendid
- Dementia Præcox will be on the way to disappear. For such educational
- Title: Spiritual Science and Medicine -- Lecture XVII
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- the one hand dementia precox as I have already stated, and, on the
- already obvious in the child; dementia præcox will not easily
- Title: Spiritual Science and Medicine -- Lecture XVIII
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- poisoning, a toxication of the lower abdominal
- the action of light has more importance after approximately fourteen
- Title: Spiritual Science and Medicine -- Lecture XIX
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- temperatures it can oxidize — burn in a peculiar manner. The white
- caused in man by toxic action, are of such a nature that at the right
- Title: Spiritual Science and Medicine -- Lecture XX
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- individual in question can sustain — is not curative, but toxic.
- carries the antidote to this toxic process; an antidote proportioned
- tends to auto-intoxication through sleep; but this tendency is
- paradoxical that it should be left for spiritual science to advocate
- this apparent paradox is due to the powerful antithesis between the
- Title: Lecture: Curative Education: Lecture 3
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- much the same way as hydrogen and oxygen combine in water. It is not
- Title: Lecture: Curative Education: Lecture 4
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- nevertheless it is a fact that hydrogen and oxygen, for example,
- oxygen in a particular relation to one another. If this relation were
- if we have a certain relation of hydrogen, sulphur and oxygen that is
- appearance in the course of the next three days, approximating to the
- Title: Lecture: Curative Education: Lecture 5
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- oxygen, nitrogen, hydrogen, and in proportion too
- Title: Lecture: Curative Education: Lecture 7
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- chatterbox! That is part of the illness. It is for him a real need;
- Title: Lecture: Curative Education: Lecture 10
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- them to him. The dates were 6th December, 1909, approximately 4 a.m.,
- and 18th May, 1921, approximately 3 a.m., both at Jena.) How does
- Title: Lecture: Curative Education: Lecture 11
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- horoscope, Mars, Venus and Uranus are in close proximity, exactly as
- for a complete opposition, there is an approximation to opposition.
- Title: Lecture: Curative Education: Lecture 12
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- eagle, or the ox; or again, he gives evidence of being wrenched away
- Title: Lecture: The Cycle of the Year: Lecture I
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- relation to sub-earthly and super-earthly powers, the equinoxes, the
- the spring equinox, the end of March. Then we shall have to picture
- after the full moon following the spring equinox. And anyone who is
- calendar on September 29, a few days after the fall equinox
- Title: Lecture: The Cycle of the Year: Lecture II
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- relation to sub-earthly and super-earthly powers, the equinoxes, the
- placed in relation to the fall equinox approximately in the same way
- as Christmas is to the winter solstice, Easter to the spring equinox,
- return to approximately the same conditions of weather, of
- kind of intoxication with regard to the spiritual will come over
- intoxicating forces, the humanity of the Earth will go into decline
- intoxicating forces that rise out of the Earth. This he can do by
- equinox, the soul must feel its strength when appeal is made not to
- Title: Lecture: The Cycle of the Year: Lecture III
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- relation to sub-earthly and super-earthly powers, the equinoxes, the
- season, which would approximate our months of April, May, June, July;
- a wet season, comprising approximately our months, August, September,
- rigidly fixed according to the months but are only approximate; they
- Title: Lecture: The Cycle of the Year: Lecture IV
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- relation to sub-earthly and super-earthly powers, the equinoxes, the
- year something approximating the human ego-consciousness on the one
- described, they would have given an answer highly paradoxical to
- paradox in what these ancient people would have said. They would have
- paradoxical as it sounds to modern people, and it was as follows: With
- Title: Lecture: The Cycle of the Year: Lecture V
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- relation to sub-earthly and super-earthly powers, the equinoxes, the
- of him that he should learn to know Nature. Thus at the autumn equinox
- experienced something of the earthly during the autumnal equinox. But
- We might say: At the time of the autumn equinox man felt in his
- spring, the spring equinox (see diagram).
- equinox we have what was perceived as the activity of repentance.
- Title: Lecture I: Nutrition and Health
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- breathe: that is also a way of taking in nourishment. You take oxygen
- oxygen combines with carbon in the blood, you have carbon dioxide. And
- you know carbon dioxide quite well: you only have to think of Seltzer
- water with the bubbles in it: they are the carbon dioxide. It is a
- gas. So one can have this picture: A human being inhales oxygen from
- the air, the oxygen spreads all through his blood; in his blood he has
- carbon, and he exhales carbon dioxide. You breathe oxygen in, you
- breathe carbon dioxide out.
- poisoned by the carbon dioxide coming from the human beings and
- different character from those kingdoms. Plants do not take in oxygen:
- they take in the carbon dioxide that human beings and animals exhale.
- Plants are just as greedy for the carbon dioxide as human beings are
- for oxygen.
- blossoms: the plant absorbs carbon dioxide in every part of it. And
- now the carbon in the carbon dioxide is deposited in the plant, and
- the oxygen is breathed out by the plant. Human beings and animals get
- it back again. Man gives carbon dioxide out and kills everything; the
- plant keeps back the carbon, releases the oxygen and brings everything
- to life again. And the plant could do nothing with the carbon dioxide
- the plant and lets the oxygen go free. Our blood combines oxygen with
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- Title: Lecture II: Nutrition and Health
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- Protein consists of carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, hydrogen and sulphur.
- nitrogen, oxygen, hydrogen, and sulphur. You see how it is? now the
- oxygen from the air and that this oxygen combines with the carbon we
- in carbon dioxide, keeping a part of it back. So now we have that
- carbon and oxygen together in our body. We do not retain and use the
- oxygen that was in the protein; we use the oxygen we have inhaled to
- and instead of using the oxygen that was in the protein, we use oxygen
- coming out of the air. Also, as we breathe oxygen in we breathe
- intestinal toxins from meat and wants to avoid them. His instinct is
- intestinal toxins from meat. These things must be considered.
- Title: Anthroposophic Movement: Lecture Three: The Opposition to Spiritual Revelations
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- And now I have to say something extremely paradoxical, which is
- Title: Anthroposophic Movement: Lecture Six: The Emergence of the Anthroposophic Movement
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- The first period, up until approximately 1907, can be described as
- by others. This period concludes approximately with the publication of my
- societies. I only want to point out that the close proximity of the
- approximately as many copies as we were able to sell. Once an issue
- task of the second stage up to approximately 1914. As a consequence I
- approximately the view which people associated with Annie Besant
- Title: Anthroposophic Movement: Lecture Seven: The Consolidation of the Anthroposophic Movement
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- I said that in the first phase — approximately up to 1907,
- Title: Anthroposophic Movement: Lecture Eight: Responsibility to Anthroposophy
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- paradoxical, given the immense spiritual confusion of language which
- the third stage, which began approximately in 1914. No traces were
- oxygen to produce heat, resulting in less of a transformation into
- Title: Art/Mystery Wisdom: Lecture Two
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- and has an approximate conception of them, one may easily
- are only an approximation, but we could say that the astral
- Title: Art/Mystery Wisdom: Lecture Four
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- macrocosm, surrenders in a state of intoxication to the
- Title: Art/Mystery Wisdom: Lecture Six
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- another tone has so-and-so many vibrations, or that oxygen
- Title: Evolution, Earth, Man: Lecture I
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- oxygen and nitrogen but relatively little carbon and hydrogen and
- not only oxygen and nitrogen but also hydrogen, carbon, sulphur. That
- Title: Evolution, Earth, Man: Lecture II
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- hydrogen and oxygen, was separated off later; it has developed only
- present air contains essentially oxygen and nitrogen; the other
- existed in great amounts and consisted of silica and oxygen —
- great deal of oxygen, because we need it for breathing. Yes, there is
- a good deal of oxygen: 28 to 29% of the whole mass of the earth. But
- you must count everything. Oxygen is in the air and in many solid
- But silica, which when united with oxygen in the quartz
- breathe oxygen in and we breathe carbon dioxide out. We can't live if
- When we breathe, the oxygen goes down to the metabolism
- means, he is taking in oxygen. Below, the oxygen unites with carbon
- and forms carbon dioxide which he then exhales. But above, the silica
- is united in us with the oxygen and goes up into our head, as silicic
- Title: Evolution, Earth, Man: Lecture III
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- them: oxygen and nitrogen. We can say therefore that in the earth we
- oxygen.
- Nitrogen and oxygen, however, are only the main
- an egg, in the white of a hen's egg. Oxygen, nitrogen, hydrogen,
- the sulphur, hydrogen and carbon are closely combined with the oxygen
- think if the oxygen and nitrogen in the air had not separated off and
- nitrogen and oxygen have therefore also perished. We gaze into
- today there are nitrogen and oxygen, with carbon, hydrogen and
- carbon that is in us with the oxygen we inhale and exhale the two
- together as carbon dioxide. In our human existence we breathe in
- oxygen and breathe out carbon dioxide; our life consists of that. We
- with carbon dioxide had there not been something else on the earth:
- oxygen. They take up the carbon dioxide eagerly, hold on to the
- carbon and give out the oxygen again.
- complement each other! We human beings need the oxygen out of the
- exhale carbon and oxygen together as carbon dioxide. The plants
- breathe this in and breathe the oxygen out again, and so there is
- always oxygen in the air.
- carbon dioxide is exhaled today by animal and man, in ancient times a
- world show that carbon and oxygen have not always had the role they
- Title: Evolution, Earth, Man: Lecture IV
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- lions, nor cows, nor oxen, nor bulls, nor kangaroos — none of
- Title: Evolution, Earth, Man: Lecture VI
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- nourishment. You take oxygen in from the air; you breathe it in. But
- our body. Or we are a coal field! But now when oxygen combines with
- carbon in the blood, you have carbon dioxide. And you know carbon
- dioxide quite well: you only have to think of Seltzer water with the
- bubbles in it: they are the carbon dioxide. It is a gas. So one can
- have this picture: A human being inhales oxygen from the air, the
- oxygen spreads all through his blood; in his blood he has carbon, and
- he exhales carbon dioxide. You breathe oxygen in, you breathe carbon
- dioxide out.
- everything would long ago have been poisoned by the carbon dioxide
- Plants do not take in oxygen: they take in the carbon dioxide that
- carbon dioxide as human beings are for oxygen.
- stem, leaves, blossoms: the plant absorbs carbon dioxide in every
- part of it. And now the carbon in the carbon dioxide is deposited in
- the plant, and the oxygen is breathed out by the plant. Human beings
- and animals get it back again. Man gives carbon dioxide out and kills
- everything; the plant keeps back the carbon, releases the oxygen and
- the carbon dioxide if it did not have its green sap, the chlorophyll.
- carbon back inside the plant and lets the oxygen go free. Our blood
- combines oxygen with carbon; the green plant-sap separates the carbon
- Maximum number of matches per file exceeded.
- Title: Evolution, Earth, Man: Lecture VII
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- Protein consists of carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, hydrogen
- carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, hydrogen, and sulphur. You see how it is? —
- inhale oxygen from the air and that this oxygen combines with the
- exhale carbon in carbon dioxide, keeping a part of it back. So now we
- have that carbon and oxygen together in our body. We do not retain
- and use the oxygen that was in the protein; we use the oxygen we have
- our intestines and instead of using the oxygen that was in the
- protein, we use oxygen coming out of the air. Also, as we breathe
- oxygen in we breathe nitrogen in too; nitrogen is always in the air.
- intestinal toxins from meat and wants to avoid them. His instinct is
- intestinal toxins from meat. These things must be considered.
- Title: Evolution, Earth, Man: Lecture X
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- interesting that there has been all this talk about the proximity of
- develop from the grubs. There is a period of approximately four years
- remember that a man draws approximately 18 breaths a minute, you can
- 25,920, which is approximately the same as this number 25,915! In a
- Title: Evolution, Earth, Man: Lecture XI
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- Question: Has Mars' proximity to the earth
- Title: Evolution, Earth, Man: Lecture XIII
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- finds carbohydrates, which consist of carbon, oxygen, and hydrogen in
- Title: Evolution, Earth, Man: Lecture XIV
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- oxygen and breathes out carbon dioxide — as if he did nothing
- approximately — how many days a human being lives on the earth.
- Title: On the Development of Human Culture: Lecture II
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- were no poor-boxes, that kind of thing is a modern invention. At that
- Title: Nine Lectures on Bees: Lecture II
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- the period of time during which the Sun, approximately speaking,
- more or less an equal one; it is approximately equal over the whole
- is possible to calculate approximately the time when there will be no
- Title: Nine Lectures on Bees: Lecture IV
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- spring equinox is now in this Sign of the Fishes. The Sun remains in
- Title: Nine Lectures on Bees: Lecture V
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- sold it, he put the money into the children's money boxes — or
- Title: Nine Lectures on Bees: Lecture VI
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- wooden hives as one does today. Box-hives are made of wood, and wood
- the seventies or eighties, phyloxera appeared and is destroying the
- Title: Nine Lectures on Bees: Lecture VII
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- Sun, and the Sun needs approximately the same time to revolve once
- The drones then appear as somewhat drowsy, but still approximately
- Title: Nine Lectures on Bees: Lecture IX
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- only oxygen and nitrogen, but that throughout Nature there
- not enough of it, then one must give him oxalic acid. One must take
- is in the liver, or the intestines, he must be given oxalic acid. The
- remarkable thing is that the man to whom one has given oxalic acid,
- will before long himself change the oxalic acid into formic acid. The
- oxalic acid, and from this it produces formic acid.
- plants, The clover is merely especially characteristic, for oxalic acid
- there oxalic acid everywhere in Nature and in the human body.
- and put into the retort some oxalic acid — it is like salty,
- acid. In here, I had oxalic acid and glycerine. The glycerine
- stomach I introduce oxalic acid. The body already possesses something
- of the nature of glycerine. I have then in the intestines oxalic acid
- oxalic acid into formic acid.
- in the plants is oxalic acid. And now think of the insects; with the
- everywhere there is oxalic acid, and these creatures make formic acid
- and oxygen. But gentlemen, in very, very minute quantities there is also
- acid which is the transformed oxalic acid of the plants. Thus it
- intestines, it is actually the case that oxalic acid is perpetually
- hover above them. Below is the oxalic acid; the insects flutter towards
- not the oxalic acid first been there. The little creatures hovering
- Maximum number of matches per file exceeded.
- Title: Art of Lecturing: Lecture I
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- we fall over ourselves. Such, approximately, is the effect of
- Title: Art of Lecturing: Lecture III
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- This is the approximate
- approximately in this form.
- reveals itself in a threefold way — this is approximately how a
- toothbrush or a philosophical work; in life, there are powder boxes
- a powder box, if it is of especially high quality, costs ten
- Fr. Powder Box
- economic life. For this is how matters developed since approximately
- make a paradoxical impression among the people of the middle-class as
- awareness of the fact that you appear paradoxical. You can do this by
- going through a village where someone nearly gave you a box
- Title: Art of Lecturing: Lecture V
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- even so far as to modulation — how, approximately,
- “how, approximately, something like that could be
- Title: Boundaries of Natural Science: Lecture II
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- so peaceably. One must use just such a paradoxical expression in describing
- Title: Boundaries of Natural Science: Lecture III
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- at approximately that time of life when the child changes teeth. One
- within to organize us. Yes, within the child until approximately its
- Title: Boundaries of Natural Science: Lecture IV
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- book, he had not been conscious that in the distance a music box was
- playing. Even the sounds of the music box had remained unconscious at
- webs that are nothing but the forgotten melody of the music box. One
- melody of the music box.
- Title: Boundaries of Natural Science: Lecture V
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- appear grotesque and paradoxical to these who hear them for the first
- appeared paradoxical and grotesque, and human evolution will not advance
- Title: Boundaries of Natural Science: Lecture VI
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- eye for the First time, might seem paradoxical, yet that is fully grounded
- — if you will allow me to use a paradoxical expression —
- approximately the seventh and fourteenth years. The independent soul-spirit
- Title: Boundaries of Natural Science: Lecture VIII
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- an approximate idea of such an experience, which takes place only in
- Title: Anthro Medical Therapy: Lecture I
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- force are approximately balanced. Regarding the
- Title: Anthro Medical Therapy: Lecture II
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- only to warmth and light ether. This is only approximately
- Title: Anthro Medical Therapy: Lecture III
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- and oxygen we have a continuous interplay of the astral and
- oxygen and carbon proceeds. In this tract of the human
- Title: Anthro Medical Therapy: Lecture IV
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- outside the human being by means of oxygen — all these
- Title: Anthro Medical Therapy: Lecture VI
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- we are brought to the paradoxical statement that the lung
- out. Thus they also excrete carbon dioxide externally. Such
- external excretion of carbon dioxide is the essential thing
- in breathing. These organs absorb oxygen and give off carbon
- dioxide, and this holds good not only for the lung but for
- excretion of carbon in carbon dioxide. But the inward
- Title: Anthro Medical Therapy: Lecture VIII
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- approximately balanced. This is naturally the case in a
- Title: Ways/Architecture: Lecture I: The Acanthus Leaf
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- ox for instance! It is Spiritual Science that must
- Title: Ways/Architecture: Lecture III: The New Conception of Architecture
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- The hyperbola also has two foci which lie approximately here.
- Title: Ways/Architecture: Lecture IV: True Aesthetic Laws of Form
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- approximately seven years each, and — as I tried last
- seven such periods, therefore, he has reached approximately
- and paradoxical to many people but which will explain, for
- — to use a radical and therefore paradoxical expression
- Title: Art of Lecturing: Lecture I
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- we fall over ourselves. Such, approximately, is the effect of
- Title: Art of Lecturing: Lecture III
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- going through a village where someone nearly gave you a box
- Title: Art of Lecturing: Lecture V
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- even so far as to modulation — how, approximately,
- “how, approximately, something like that could be
- Title: Christmas Conference: Lecture 7: Continuation of the Foundation Meeting, 26 December, 10 a.m.
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- most admirable way has modelled a very fine money-box
- produced. You will find these money-boxes outside the doors.
- beautiful forms tempt you to want to own such a money-box
- money-box home with them will see that similar money-boxes
- Naturally if you do not have your own money-box to take home,
- purse while you are here, so that these money-boxes may be
- Title: Christmas Conference: Lecture 13: Continuation of the Foundation Meeting, 30 December, 10 a.m.
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- dear friends, we expected Mr Dunlop in Stratford, in Oxford,
- both boys together. We shall try to set up a money box for
- Title: Christmas Conference: Lecture 20: On the Right Entry into the Spiritual World: The Responsibility Incumbent on Us
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- approximately — that something is happening not only on
- Title: Awakening to Community: Lecture X
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- highly paradoxical statement. A person whose soul is attuned to the
- Title: Hegel, Schopenhauer, Thought, Will
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- same time something intoxicating, something wilful which throbs
- into existence if the paradox could have been entered,
- Title: Problem of Death: Lecture I
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- the world who are called gossips, chatterboxes. If we ask
- these chatterboxes why they flock together in their cafes
- Title: Problem of Death: Lecture III
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- it thus is — I should like to use the paradoxical
- world in approximately the following words:
- Title: Spiritual Science, History, Reincarnation, Culture, Examples
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- scientific research sometimes seem paradoxical; yet this is the
- are often paradoxes. These things can't be solved by
- Various things will be discovered which appear paradoxical but
- have experienced, I might say, how through a real paradox this
- Title: Eurythmy as Visible Singing: Lecture 2: Experience and Gesture; the Intervals
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- is such a thing, that is the paradox, but you must sense that this is
- Title: Eurythmy as Visible Singing: Lecture 3: Melodic Movement; the Ensouling of the Three Dimensions through Pitch, Rhythm and Beat
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- This is the approximate
- to hear approximately this correspondence between the main vowels and
- the scale; if the sounds are articulated properly they do approximate
- the musical sounds. We have to become clear about the approximate correspondence
- Title: Eurythmy as Visible Singing: Lecture 4: The Progression of Musical Phrases; Swinging Over; the Bar Line
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- is always pronounced ‘Dörfi’, [approximately,
- Title: Eurythmy as Visible Singing: Lecture 7: Musical Physiology; the Point of Departure; Intervals; Cadences
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- the hand itself. Feel the sixth here in the base of the fingers [proximal
- Title: Chance/Necessity/Providence: Lecture 1: Probability and Chance
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- This is approximately how a person with the
- I entertained myself working out an approximate
- doubt. Faust contains approximately 300,000 letters. Now the probability
- Title: Chance/Necessity/Providence: Lecture 3: Necessity and Chance in Historical Events
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- A person who only knows that this drawing approximates a circle and
- Title: Child's Changing Consciousness: Lecture I
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- orthodox scientific approach. And since the teacher has indeed
- orientation. Even people of a strictly orthodox religious
- world orientation to the results of orthodox science. The
- This kind of thing easily escapes notice, because the orthodox
- approximately fifty percent of the pupils.
- Orthodox physiology might eventually go this far — if not
- approximately between the ages of thirty-five and forty-five as
- Title: Child's Changing Consciousness: Lecture II
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- tentative observations. Orthodox science has achieved quite
- is so real that orthodox physiology will one day be able to
- What orthodox physical psychology maintains is perfectly
- one has to resort to a paradoxical definition. Materialism is
- Title: Child's Changing Consciousness: Lecture III
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- paradoxical, it is nevertheless true. The child's entire
- worked on inwardly, approximately between the seventh and
- vicinity will speak. To express it somewhat paradoxically, the
- Title: Child's Changing Consciousness: Lecture IV
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- approximately the fourteenth or fifteenth year. What manifests
- approximately the fifteenth year; I compared that with an
- Title: Child's Changing Consciousness: Lecture V
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- Between the ages of seven and approximately fourteen,
- Title: Child's Changing Consciousness: Lecture VI
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- of a lack of effort and attention, “Here the ox stands
- means literally “to stand there like the ox facing the
- one can live in these thoughts while in close proximity to the
- Title: Child's Changing Consciousness: Lecture VII
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- box-making in our Waldorf school craft lessons, if it were not
- this case is not that a pupil makes a particular cardboard box
- us to change to bookbinding now, and then to box-making. All
- appear paradoxical for many people. They wonder why a pedagogy
- Title: Colour and the Human Races: Lecture I: The Nature of Color
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- hand our whole body works to bring oxygen into the eye so that
- then the blood is destroyed, oxygen is absorbed from
- the body and the eye vitalized through the oxygen. And now we
- oxygen, into the eye. And by our own
- reddened light properly. For the oxygen which is drawn out of
- also properly assimilate the oxygen in them through the
- stimulate man to develop oxygen inwardly, then I gradually
- which contain much oxygen
- oxygen —
- call up all the oxygen in me and renew myself, bring about
- intake of' oxygen, when one is thoroughly exposed to the light,
- carbonic acid. Carbonic acid, the counterpart of oxygen, wants
- oxygen
- oxygen, the oxygen comes up into the head and animates the head
- processes, the life processes. But when the oxygen is given up
- the light sucks the oxygen up into the head. Then he will get a
- oxygen and the person has it at his disposal.
- oxygen ray goes out from the body. Pure oxygen rays go to meet
- inwardly by the oxygen rays: he becomes inwardly an oxygen
- pictures which the course of the oxygen engraved into them.
- Maximum number of matches per file exceeded.
- Title: Development of the child up to puberty
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- spiritual realities in whose proximity we are between falling
- Title: Cosmic Prehistory: Lecture I: The Threefoldness of Space and the Unity of Time
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- was approximately: If I live here below on earth I live in the threefoldness
- paradoxical this may sound: modern man most certainly has an abstract
- Title: Cosmic Prehistory: Lecture II: Lucifer and Ahriman
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- for itself and can be approximately grasped at the time. This middle
- seen in ito reality, takes place as spirit-conflicts, However paradoxical
- on not merely as paradoxical, but as foolish and fantastic, yet which
- things sound a paradox when one points to the realm of reality) —
- in from duration, but at approximately the age of 28 we should get sclerosis
- Title: Cosmic Prehistory: Lecture III: Romanism and Freemasonry
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- into the lower nature. The paradoxical truth appears before our soul
- The toxic effect, however, no longer changes the individuality of the
- nobles — they belong already far too much to the antitoxic, working
- tissue. Their wealth has arisen from it and is bound up with it; a toxic
- sought in that Centre which in a high degree — approximately at
- paradoxical they appear, often have an exactly opposite purpose to what
- Title: How Can Mankind Find Christ Again?: Lecture 3: Brotherliness and Freedom ...
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- of its own — if I may use such a paradox. So the very people who
- Title: How Can Mankind Find Christ Again?: Lecture 4: Contrasting Principles of Ancient and Modern Initiation
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- the body. (I have to use a paradoxical expression for lack of something
- This seeming paradox is already being indirectly prepared by the fact
- reality would not exist. This paradox relating to a supersensible fact
- may be an example of many paradoxes with which you must come to terms if
- Title: How Can Mankind Find Christ Again?: Lecture 5: The Change in the Human Soul Constitution
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- thinking has remained. It is applied today to oxygen, hydrogen, electrons,
- Title: How Can Mankind Find Christ Again?: Lecture 6: Transformation of the Human Being in the Course of Evolution
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- for you approximately what happened in the third post-Atlantean period
- approximately, of the Mystery of Golgotha, in order to attain initiation
- 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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- When people were in a state of utter intoxication and dreaming, when,
- Title: How Can Mankind Find Christ Again?: Lecture 8: Experiences of the Old Year and Outlook over the New Year (part 2)
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- relate ourselves to human beings. When someone boxes our ears and we
- with present conditions to say to oneself: I've had my ears boxed; or
- reckon. Naturally, if someone boxes our ears, we can't return it to
- Title: Community Life: Lecture 6: The Concept of Love as it Relates to Mysticism
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- experienced and described only by artists (approximately since the
- Title: The Social Question as a Question of Consciousness: Lecture 2
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- life too lightly. However strange and paradoxical it may seem, this
- Title: The Social Question as a Question of Consciousness: Lecture 3
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- one maintains that his standpoint is orthodox Marxism, another says
- leads from Karl Marx to Lenin. For Lenin claims to be the most orthodox
- Title: The Social Question as a Question of Consciousness: Lecture 7
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- on just such factual as the following: We continually breathe in oxygen
- end breathe out dead carbonic acid; in us the oxygen is transformed
- no doubt that oxygen changes inside us to deadly poison, but for our
- and animal bodies is unthinkable without the inhaling, of oxygen. And
- Title: The Karma of the Individual and the Collective Life of Our Time, Goethe
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- age, when he carried with him to Weimar in his box the Scene we
- Title: Insertion of Early Human Destiny into Extraterrestial Relationships
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- believe that a substance consists of sulphur and oxygen and
- Title: The Apocalypse: Lecture III
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- approximately the halfway point in world evolution, we have the
- reality, if you'll permit me to use this paradoxical
- Title: The Apocalypse: Lecture V
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- incorporate this proximity of death into his moral soul.
- sun is now in Pisces at the vernal equinox it was previously in
- Title: The Apocalypse: Lecture VI
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- are vowels. Of course these things are always approximate, but
- Title: The Apocalypse: Lecture VII
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- physical stream of heredity, approximately in the way that
- Title: The Apocalypse: Lecture IX
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- in two directions. Man doesn't eat the oxygen in the air
- what nan does with oxygen to produce carbonic acid is something
- Title: The Apocalypse: Lecture X
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- consider what appears in close proximity to this significant
- Title: The Apocalypse: Lecture XII
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- be placed approximately in the center of this age, if we take
- Title: The Apocalypse: Lecture XIII
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- their cash boxes would soon be empty. They want to have people
- Title: The Apocalypse: Lecture XIV
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- has real hydrogen and real oxygen and one combines them one
- indicated the approximate number of years which the development
- Title: The Apocalypse: Lecture XVII
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- a place in the Apocalypse that seems to be paradoxical or
- seemingly paradoxical things in the Apocalypse enable one to
- Title: Real Being of Man
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- paradoxical it may appear to modern humanity that one should
- Title: Man and Cosmos
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- approximately. And a more exact observation would show
- — even if merely approximately — to form a picture
- else, that in reality is only a proxy. It is still a sense
- organ. Its use on earth is only a kind of proxy, because with
- or oxygen; one can keep to the old terms if one likes. The
- Title: Mystery Trinity: Part 1, Lecture 1
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- in Oxford (and London) against the background of the Manchester College
- Title: Mystery Trinity: Part 1, Lecture 2
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- in Oxford (and London) against the background of the Manchester College
- belongs to the physical world. If someone gives us a box on the ears
- Title: Mystery Trinity: Part 1, Lecture 3
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- in Oxford (and London) against the background of the Manchester College
- precisely the orthodox believers who ranged themselves on the side of
- Gottschalk, and his teaching remained the orthodox Catholic
- condemned by the orthodox Church and his writings were only later
- orthodox Catholic teaching of the transubstantiation of bread and
- Title: Mystery Trinity: Part 1, Lecture 4
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- in Oxford (and London) against the background of the Manchester College
- Title: Course for Priests: Lecture III
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- which only God's proximity could enable. We come through such
- Title: Redemption of Thinking: Lecture II:
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- only as something paradox: the fact that Augustine really
- For the modern human being this seems paradox, maybe even
- is approximately true —
- Title: Redemption of Thinking: Lecture III:
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- With other words, as paradox this sounds,
- nevertheless, one has to say of these paradoxes, Kant searches
- is in other words, and this is just the paradox: we have truth
- Title: Anthroposophic Movement (1938): Lecture III: Critical Judgment and Colour of the Times
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- exceedingly paradoxical, but which nevertheless is true. This
- Title: Anthroposophic Movement (1938): Lecture VI: The Two First Periods of the Anthroposophic Movement
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- approximate; but that is the case with the historic evolution
- of everything) — it ends approximately, I might say, with
- the atom of some physical substance: Hydrogen or Oxygen; and
- Title: Anthroposophic Movement (1938): Lecture VIII: Conclusions: The Anthroposophical Society and its Future Conduct.
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- paradoxical terms of expression.
- blue, or at least approximately red, approximately the colour
- Title: First Class, Vol. I: Lesson 5
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- and death exists. It contains the vivifying oxygen; it contains
- abstraction: Air consists of oxygen and nitrogen. Yes, as long
- as we remain in normal consciousness one says: oxygen and
- however, it becomes clear that oxygen is the external
- the air there is a battle in which the Luciferic oxygen-spirits
- abstraction: oxygen and nitrogen. When we arrive at the
- Threshold, it consists of Ahriman and Lucifer, and the oxygen
- oxygen-spirits, what exists in the life-element when one wishes
- Title: First Class, Vol. I: Lesson 6
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- know that oxygen is transformed into carbon dioxide in man.
- This reception of carbon dioxide in the finer branches of
- carbon dioxide. It is a mineralization process. And the more we
- are able to internalize this capture of carbon dioxide by
- oxygen, the more we are conscious of the mineralization
- Title: Cosmogony/Freedom/Altruism: Lecture I: Social Impulses for the Healing of Modern Civilization
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- paradoxical compared with what one is inclined to assume from a
- Title: Cosmogony/Freedom/Altruism: Lecture III: Fundamental Impulses in History
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- kept very nicely in a special little box all to itself, and as
- different conformation. Paradoxical as it may seem to the men
- Title: Social Life: Lecture I
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- years and see how much carbon dioxide, carbonic-acid the air
- dioxide into the air with each expiration, — and you will
- absorb this carbon dioxide, and excrete the carbon; they form
- Title: Social Life: Lecture III
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- paradoxical. Just place before your souls, that of which it has
- Title: The Real Being of Man
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- friends, in conclusion, something quite paradoxical. Just
- Title: Health and Illness I: Lecture II: Illnesses Occurring in the Different Periods of Life
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- and can freely distribute the oxygen to the benefit of both the
- Title: Health and Illness I: Lecture IV: The Thyroid Gland and Hormones
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- the body. The body then contains the toxic substances of
- various toxic substances produced in the body come to permeate
- Title: Health and Illness I: Lecture V: The Eye; Colour of the Hair
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- enters the eye here, and reaches approximately to here.
- (sketching). Here we have the larynx, the voice box, which goes
- we have a little box. I stand with my back to it; I have not
- Title: Health and Illness I: Lecture VII: Spiritual-Scientific Foundations for a True Physiology
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- box, I feel it and its solidness because of the nerve bulbs. If
- the box were cold, I would also feel the cold through such a
- Title: Health and Illness I: Lecture VIII: Concerning the Soul Life in the Breathing Process
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- one of inhalation. From the air around us we inhale the oxygen
- we breathe in oxygen it spreads out everywhere in our body and
- combines with the carbon. When oxygen combines with solid
- coal, a new gas, carbon dioxide, arises. This is a combination
- of oxygen and carbon, and it is this gas that we then exhale.
- world by inhaling oxygen and exhaling carbon dioxide.
- inhaled only pure oxygen, however, we would have to contain an
- immense amount of carbon, and the carbon dioxide would have to
- carbon dioxide we produce is lethal. Indeed, if oxygen is life
- for us, carbon dioxide is death. If this room were now filled
- with carbon dioxide, we would all perish. Our life alternates
- of carbon in your big toe. You inhale, and oxygen spreads out.
- combines with the oxygen, and tomorrow this little particle of
- dioxide. That is really what happens. During his lifetime man
- must be supplied with oxygen from the mother's body. But now
- capability to live. After all, man cannot live without oxygen.
- Although in the mother's womb he exists without oxygen from the
- receives oxygen from outside, whereas before he was able to
- oxygen and carbon. We can deduce from this that we live in the
- has taken its first breath. Earlier, it had absorbed oxygen in
- Maximum number of matches per file exceeded.
- Title: Health and Illness I: Lecture IX: Why do We Become Sick?
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- penetrates into what you inhale as oxygen, which is also a
- evaporation and mingles with the oxygen that is inhaled.
- with oxygen damages the nervous system in particular, because
- the nerves require healthy oxygen, not oxygen that has
- evaporating improperly into oxygen and thereby disturbing the
- become afflicted with dementia praecox, so-called
- Title: Health and Illness II: Lecture I: Fever Versus Shock; Pregnancy
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- difficulty breathing and doesn't receive enough oxygen, one can
- don't know if you gentlemen have seen it, to watch an Orthodox
- Jew pray. When a devout Orthodox Jew prays, he does not take
- Title: Health and Illness II: Lecture III: The Effects of Alcohol on Man
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- state of intoxication and then consumes, let us say, a large
- Title: Health and Illness II: Lecture V: The Effect of Nicotine; Vegetarian and Meat Diets; On Taking Absinthe; Twin Births
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- doesn't receive enough oxygen, since a certain amount is
- blood demands too much oxygen. The breathing process does not
- supply enough oxygen, and a slight shortness of breath occurs.
- before. During a period of approximately seven to eight years,
- Consider a cow or an ox. After some years the flesh within it
- has been entirely replaced. With oxen the exchange takes place
- yourselves this. The ox itself has produced the flesh in its
- imagine that an ox suddenly decided that it was too tiresome to
- In other words, the ox would begin to eat meat, though it could
- What would happen if the ox were to eat meat directly instead
- the unused energy in the ox's body cannot simply be lost, so
- the ox is finally filled with it, and this pent-up force does
- produced. Therefore, if an ox were suddenly to turn into a meat
- system and the brain. The result is that if an ox were to
- secreted; they would enter the brain, and the ox would go
- crazy. If an experiment could be made in which a herd of oxen
- mad herd of oxen. That is what would happen. In spite of the
- gentleness of the pigeons, the oxen would go mad.
- because if oxen only ate pigeons and if only the material
- Instead, the oxen would turn into terribly wild, furious
- Title: Health and Illness II: Lecture VII: The Relationship Between the Breathing and the Circulation of the Blood; Jaundice; Smallpox; Rabies
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- Smallpox
- Circulation of the BloodJaundice — Smallpox
- make him ill. The expelled air contains carbon dioxide. The
- individual, a person takes approximately eighteen breaths per
- whole body. Hence, air, or particularly the oxygen in the air,
- of the body to replenish itself there. What happens? Smallpox
- is the result. This is the connection between smallpox and the
- sketch); there is also a red line signifying that oxygen from
- blood in the correct way, however, smallpox results. What is
- smallpox? Smallpox is really the result of the development of
- vaccinate with cowpox vaccine. What is really accomplished
- through cowpox vaccine? The vaccine inwardly permeates the
- surface thus is prevented. Smallpox inoculation does indeed
- smallpox. Imagine that a person is bitten by a rabid dog or
- becomes involved in detoxifying the poison. He may be too weak
- its spinal cord removed and dried for approximately twenty
- this produces carbon dioxide. Now, most of this carbon dioxide
- worst dopes. A part of the carbon dioxide must continuously
- enter our nervous system, which needs carbon dioxide, because
- this deadening carbon dioxide. Through inhaling air it
- Maximum number of matches per file exceeded.
- 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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- As I have told you, however, the human body is approximately
- Title: Health and Illness II: Lecture IX: The Relationship of the Planets to the Metals and their Healing Effects
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- they once had. Only oxen, cows, sheep, and other animals, not
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume I: Lecture I
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- to study the ox externally, in the untold variety of its forms, and
- then to say: The ox comes from the germ-cell. There were already the
- the ox. Accordingly, the germ-cell is an extremely complex body ...
- ox. For it would have to contain all that presses and moulds and
- ox with its manifold forms.
- chaos which the germ-cell is to begin with, no ox could ever arise —
- then does it become the ox? Because at this stage the whole universe
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume I: Lecture II
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- we begin with the right foundations. Why does a man get small-pox in
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume I: Lecture III
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- I shall now say may sound paradoxical to you, yet it is true. In
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume I: Lecture IV
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- thrashing their fellow-man or from boxing his ears or otherwise
- paradoxical. Nevertheless, they are as I have said.
- which will seem grotesque and paradoxical. The spiritual world is
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume I: Lecture VI
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- approximate. Thus, even crudely, anatomically considered it is so:
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume I: Lecture VII
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- sounds paradoxical and grotesque, but for all that it is a question
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume I: Lecture VIII
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- course paradoxical to speak of these things as one speaks of earthly
- paradoxical as it may appear, one does not really arrive at the
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume I: Lecture X
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- may at first seem like a paradox, but the paradox will disappear the
- no more of it. And even if things have a paradoxical effect, they
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume I: Lecture XII
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- friends — I shall have to say something paradoxical here! —
- is necessary to say such a thing, paradoxical though it may sound,
- and approximately in the same decade, had been his pupils in that
- led back to the Hibernian Mysteries — it sounds like a paradox
- of many other striking, paradoxical things. Today I wanted to give
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume II: Lecture III
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- Paradoxical as it
- first seem paradoxical, but if you look more closely, if you look
- paradoxical and foolish to those who set the tone of thought in our
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume II: Lecture VII
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- approximately, is the process.
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume II: Lecture VIII
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- man becomes an incessant chatterbox, laughing even when he is talking
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume II: Lecture IX
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- As approximately a
- example. — If you gave someone a box on the ears, you do not
- the feelings of the other person whose ears you boxed. You live
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume II: Lecture X
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- — If during my life on earth I have given someone a box on the
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume II: Lecture XIII
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- Venus, and so forth. Paradoxical as it will seem, I am nevertheless
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume II: Lecture XIV
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- their lives in close proximity. The section of the world presented to
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume II: Lecture XV
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- what it seems. I must utter the paradox: — it is not what it
- Title: Lecture: Karmic Relationships, Volume III: Lecture I: Introduction to these Studies on Karma
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- the air in which we breathe is oxygen,’ so did these
- breathe-in the oxygen of the air,’ so did these
- that the oxygen he receives in breathing were not received
- the oxygen of the air circulates through our organism in a
- in which we hold the oxygen which belongs to the outer air.
- Title: Lecture: Karmic Relationships, Volume III: Lecture V: Spiritual Conditions of Evolution Leading up to the Anthroposophical Movement
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- important, which we find, approximately, in the fourth,
- Title: Lecture: Karmic Relationships, Volume III: Lecture VII: The New Age of Michael
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- approximately with the deeds of Alexander and with the
- Title: Lecture: Karmic Relationships, Volume III: Lecture XI: Evolution of the Michael Principle Throughout the Ages. The Split in the Cosmic Intelligence
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- approximately every 11 years we have a period of Sun-spots,
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume IV: Lecture II
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- approximately, in the time of Augustus himself.
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume IV: Lecture VIII
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- many a paradox, seen from an earthly point of view.
- say that he was intoxicated by his own deeds so that they seemed deeds
- extreme cases and connections, seeming almost paradoxical in the world
- Title: Spiritual Development: Lecture I: The Inner Experience of the Activity of Thinking
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- What I have to tell you now will sound paradoxical,
- Title: Spiritual Development: Lecture II: The Physical World and the Moral-Spiritual Impulses
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- hydrogen and oxygen combining in accordance with neutral laws
- of nature bat in which hydrogen and oxygen
- Title: Spiritual Development: Lecture III: Man's Faculty of Cognition in the Etheric World
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- chemist divides water into hydrogen and oxygen,
- two parts, hydrogen and oxygen.
- that hydrogen will not only combine with oxygen, as in water,
- different combinations. And likewise oxygen, when
- acid, oxygen plus calcium becomes
- Title: Things Past and Present: Lecture I
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- because in many connections, intoxication also dominates in
- the reincarnated Christ appears. And being a true orthodox
- Title: Things Past and Present: Lecture IV: Secrets of Freemasonry
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- seem paradoxical because there are terrible things there
- Title: Things Past and Present: Lecture VI: Death and Resurrection
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- the moonlight after the Spring Equinox than, shall we say,
- Title: Things Past and Present: Lecture VII: Man's Four Members
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- Word, then you have an approximate idea of what is meant by
- would assume forms which would approximately resemble the
- Title: Memory and Habit: Lecture I
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- a very approximately correct one. You can see from this example what
- Title: Memory and Habit: Lecture III
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- the Heavens. This still seems a paradox to the modern age but it is a
- 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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- knowledge. They are paradoxically expressed, but they contain
- the extent that his plant nature gains the upper hand. Paradoxical!
- But by no means a mad idea just one that has been paradoxically
- Title: Lecture: Riddle of Humanity: Lecture Two: Two Spheres of Existence in Nature and in Man: the Realm of Regularity and the Realm of Irregularity. The Ancient Hebrews' Jubilee year as the Expression of Formative Powers of the Soul. The Christ Incarnation.
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- such an extreme, radically paradoxical fashion. They are there in the
- number comes out at 4182. One has to say that this is approximate, but
- 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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- which I just alluded. For, paradoxical though it may sound, the
- the change of teeth at approximately the seventh year. As you know,
- paradox that it is very important to understand. For, during the
- Title: Lecture: Riddle of Humanity: Lecture Four: Human Organism, Results of Prenatal Formative Powers. Dual Nature of Man. Powers behind the Existence of the Body as Expressed Pictorally by the Body and as Expressed in a Draughtsmanlike Fashion by the Head.
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- There paradoxical and strange though it may seem there
- 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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- little boxes and everyone likes to have them arranged prettily beside
- is called, The reversion, a paradox of
- this paradox. He attempts to think some particular cases backwards. I
- deer, foxes and elk imagine how these tracks would criss-cross
- world, he would view it as the paradoxical work of some devilish
- And this metaphysics takes as its starting point the paradox of
- Title: Lecture: Riddle of Humanity: Lecture Ten: Loss of the Ability to Orient Oneself in Reality and the Helplessness of Modern Scientific Driteria in a Materialistic Age.
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- But that is all nonsense. (I use approximately the same expressions as
- 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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- true description and even their descriptions were only approximations
- Title: Lecture: Riddle of Humanity: Lecture Twelve: How Thoughts are Engraved into the Substance of the Cosmos and the Consequences Following from This. Metamorphosis of Memory and Habit.
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- falsely and only four are able to speak the approximate truth. For
- Title: Lecture: Riddle of Humanity: Lecture Thirteen: Allocation of the Whole Human Form to the Cosmos. Technical Discoveries and the Human Physical Organization. Collisions between Thinking that Accords with Reality and Thinking that is in Opposition to Reality.
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- that could with justification be called paradoxical. For these things
- may well sound paradoxical when they are set against the materialism
- nerves. So the apparent paradox of, for example, the reappearance in
- ages? My answer to this question will also sound somewhat paradoxical.
- Paradoxical as it may sound, people of the future will study
- one that must be expanded, still sounds like a paradox to us today.
- Today I would still like to speak about a third, similar paradox. It
- Some of you might well be acquainted with the paradoxical events that
- ahrimanic truths if I may use this paradoxical turn of
- Title: Lecture: Riddle of Humanity: Lecture Fourteen: Metamorphoses of the Twelve Sense Zones through Luciferic and Ahrimanic Influences.
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- referring to, one is forced to say something quite paradoxical. As
- Title: Lecture: Riddle of Humanity: Lecture Fifteen: The Twelve Senses. The Reorganization of the Seven Life Processes by Luciferic and Ahrimanic Powers. Francis Bacon Inaugurates Materialism and the Science of Idols.
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- not for this ahrimanic influence we would not inhale as much oxygen in
- knowledge, one must accustom oneself to some paradoxes.
- 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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- so, just as it is essential for an orthodox professor of
- Title: Historical Necessity: Lecture 1: On the Functions of the Nervous System
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- approximately to the real facts. The ideas ruling today are
- Title: Historical Necessity: Lecture 4: The Rhythmical Relationship of Man with the Universe
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- approximately 71 years, and if we consider this life as a
- is 25,920 (again, approximately one year). In this length of
- read here on earth we have approximately twelve consonants
- letters — approximately twelve consonants and seven
- Title: Symptom 2 Reality: Lecture I: The Birth of the Consciousness Soul
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- approximate; but what is not approximate in life? Whenever
- approximation. It is impossible to determine the precise
- Title: Symptom 2 Reality: Lecture II: Symptomatology of Recent Centuries
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- and paradoxical situation. On the one hand, everything that
- the ballot box and the majority decides! That is simple
- Title: Symptom 2 Reality: Lecture III: Characteristics of Historical Symptoms in Recent Times
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- their views through the ballot-box. They were free to speak;
- element had made deeper inroads into Russian orthodoxy, even
- Title: Symptom 2 Reality: Lecture IV: The Historical Significance of the Scientific Mode of Thinking
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- the Consciousness Soul began approximately in 1413. In the
- year, approximately, mankind was given the opportunity of
- perhaps seem paradoxical, but it is none the less true
- strange paradox mankind is led to a renewed experience of the
- Title: Symptom 2 Reality: Lecture V: The Supersensible Element in the Study of History
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- must provoke even more paradoxical emotions in contemporary
- Title: Symptom 2 Reality: Lecture VII: Incidental Reflections on the Occasion of the New Edition of 'Goethes Weltanschauung'
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- the later German Romantics, approximately up to the middle of
- Title: Symptom 2 Reality: Lecture VIII: Religious Impulses of the Fifth Post-Atlantean Epoch
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- approximately; we can only hint at them. And you must
- namely, that, paradoxically, external events often contradict
- the Russian Orthodox Church, this troubled alliance between
- Title: Symptom 2 Reality: Lecture IX: The Relation Between the Deeper European Impulses and Those of the Present Day
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- Church than to the Russian Orthodox Church, in which however
- from the East. This Roman impulse needed, paradoxically,
- the fashion of the Jesuits. And paradoxical as it may seem
- Title: Fundamental Social: Lecture 1: The Transforming of Instinctive into Conscious Impulses
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- modern form of State which itself dates back, approximately,
- paradoxical judgment upon these words. What does it mean to
- Title: Fundamental Social: Lecture 2: The Logic of Thought and the Logic of Reality
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- orthodox Believer will interest himself in some philosophy,
- it gives him a justification or a basis for his Orthodox
- Title: Fundamental Social: Lecture 3: The Metamorphosis of Intelligence
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- and through by the spirit of Russian Orthodoxy. Not in its
- Marxism in Russia bears the stamp of Orthodox Faith.
- correlate of Thought. And when there is oxygen in man —
- oxygen not yet converted into carbonic acid, oxygen that is
- the Will. Where oxygen pulsates in man — oxygen not yet
- also call the oxygen pole — as to how they are
- Title: Fundamental Social: Lecture 4: The New Revelation of the Spirit
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- generally is: Approximately fifteen hundred millions. The
- Title: Fundamental Social: Lecture 5: Understand One-Another
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- paradoxical, but so only because it is fraught with such deep
- language which will seem paradoxical to many a modern man and
- paradox before you. My dear friends, you know well that I am
- (approximately in the 12th century) till far beyond the
- dear friends, the most valuable truths are paradoxes today,
- paradoxical are things in their reality. For on the one hand
- Title: Mysteries of Light: Lecture I: The Dualism in the Life of the Present Time
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- paradoxical things today, if we wish to speak the truth (actually
- Title: Mysteries of Light: Lecture II: The Development of Architecture
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- in a style of architecture which only approximates the real Gothic,
- Title: Mysteries of Light: Lecture III: Historical Occurrences of the Last Century
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- noxious insects which approach us; we try to get rid of them, and
- the middle of the century, approximately speaking. The new forces
- Title: Man: Hieroglyph: Lecture Three
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- approximately the time of the growth of the milk teeth. We observe the
- approximately resemble the movements connected with the course of the
- Title: Man: Hieroglyph: Lecture Four
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- year in what we call the precession of the equinoxes, when we consider
- Taking this as the cycle of the precession of the equinoxes, and
- equinoxes, and call it, not a Platonic year, but a great Day of the
- Spring Equinox moves further and further away, the fixed star has
- behind the fixed stars. Now these 72 years are approximately the
- the Equinoxes, indicating the macrocosmic year, as already known to
- Initiates — though not of course the orthodox Rabbis of the Old
- Title: Man: Hieroglyph: Lecture Five
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- of the equinoxes. This points to the fact that the effects upon us of
- transmutation of inhaled oxygen into exhaled carbonic acid, the lungs
- but what they do with the oxygen brings them into relation with the
- where they come into relation with oxygen, are in relation with the
- Title: Man: Hieroglyph: Lecture Six
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- manifests in the phenomena of the precession of the equinoxes —
- the movement of the point of sunrise at the Spring-equinox through the
- matter of fact, to the course of the vernal equinox in the Zodiac, to
- future. When the vernal equinox has come back again to the same place,
- Title: Man: Hieroglyph: Lecture Seven
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- paradox — it fails to comprehend matter, because it sticks fast
- long will they gain only an approximate idea of the similarity of the
- Title: Man: Hieroglyph: Lecture Eight
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- within Man himself. The real process is approximately as follows. We
- two. And should we then go on and attempt to form some approximate
- literally, but such is the approximate course of events. So you will
- gravity may be obviated — there is a box. Inside it is a man who
- out of the box and see — they begin to fall — and fall until
- the box is drawn up. The stone and the down — owing to the
- they are. When the bottom of the box reaches them, it takes them
- imagine what would happen were this picture taken in earnest! A box,
- attract (by gravitation) the stone and the down; and inside this box a
- his down, they of course need no air!), and now the box is suspended
- such a thing — while the box is raised! One can in truth say that
- Title: Man: Hieroglyph: Lecture Ten
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- are completed approximately in the circle of the first year. The
- Title: Man: Hieroglyph: Lecture Eleven
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- so-called period of Saturn's revolution is approximately 30 days, a
- are only approximate, they do not suffice for a solar system. Such
- Title: Man: Hieroglyph: Lecture Twelve
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- by the astral body upon the etheric. Approximately from two and a half
- Title: Man: Hieroglyph: Lecture Fourteen
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- pulse beats, and approximately 18 respirations — again the
- the consciousness that we ourselves think. Oxygen, iron and other
- Title: Man: Hieroglyph: Lecture Fifteen
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- breathing, when we bring oxygen into the blood-course, is planetary.
- the lungs with its absorption of oxygen, and giving out of carbonic
- circulatory course: ‘I do not share either in the oxygenating
- Einstein box by means of which the theory of gravity is to be
- Title: Man: Hieroglyph: Lecture Sixteen
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- officials there in the Bank at all. This is approximately the logic of
- virtually — of course virtually and approximately — the
- Title: Responsibility of Man: Lecture I
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- Now, still something of a complete paradox: Bring before your
- Title: Responsibility of Man: Lecture IV
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- how paradoxical it may appear to modern humanity that one
- Title: Materialism/Anthroposophy: Lecture I
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- Paradoxical as it may sound, it is nevertheless a fact that
- Title: Materialism/Anthroposophy: Lecture II
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- Expressing myself paradoxically, I might say that we die not
- Title: Materialism/Anthroposophy: Lecture III
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- question here, approximately from the fourth pre-Christian
- Title: Materialism/Anthroposophy: Lecture IV
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- considered to be the approximate sphere the human being
- assumption approximately like that is entertained by modern
- picture not a human being but a bull, an ox.
- Title: Materialism/Anthroposophy: Lecture VII
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- approximately the same experience as the one we have when we
- by means of which Nietzsche plunged as if intoxicated into nature
- intoxicated plunge into nature. He endeavored to experience
- this intoxicated plunge into nature in his life by traveling
- approximately Nietzsche's state of mind in the years 1886 and
- Title: Materialism/Anthroposophy: Lecture VIII
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- approximately in the same way we execute them nowadays.
- concretely, we can interpret it in approximately the
- Title: Materialism/Anthroposophy: Lecture XI
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- epoch until approximately the year 747 (see sketch) before
- culmination point occurs approximately in the year 333 after
- develops in the way it existed in Greece approximately until
- because of the Orthodox religion, particularly the Orthodox
- Title: Materialism/Anthroposophy: Lecture XII
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- Orthodox Catholic, Russian religion. From there, he wished to
- Title: Materialism/Anthroposophy: Lecture XV
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- Channel, who was born approximately in the year 815 and lived
- approximately as follows. With the concepts we from and the
- in the eighth pre-Christian century, approximately in the year
- the paradox that in the materialistic age human beings
- Title: Materialism/Anthroposophy: Lecture XVI
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- approximately the same answer his disciples had received when
- Title: Materialism/Anthroposophy: Lecture XVII
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- was educated in approximately this way in the Athenian school
- Title: Therapeutic Insights: Lecture I
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- possible, at least approximately, to create an empty space by
- approximately empty — that it would be possible to
- of oxygen by the blood. We have within us this dual rhythm. I
- the human being takes approximately eighteen breaths per
- have the total for one day, approximately 25,920 breaths for
- human being. We also know that the spring equinox moves
- Title: Therapeutic Insights: Lecture III
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- say, carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, and sulfur are
- combined. We know that when carbon and oxygen combine and
- form carbon dioxide, a gas of a certain density arises. When
- molecule, the cellular molecule, consists of carbon, oxygen,
- Title: Therapeutic Insights: Lecture IV
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- with our deeds. However strange and paradoxical it may sound
- paradoxical as it sounds, is connected with the air element.
- approximately the same figure, 25,920. If I had not started
- Title: Cosmosophy 1: Lecture III
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- body and I on the other. Although it is only approximately
- Title: Cosmosophy 1: Lecture IV
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- disintegrate, to become world. This lasts until approximately
- Title: Cosmosophy 1: Lecture V
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- give only an approximation of the actual truth, but even this
- approximation is extraordinarily valuable.
- Title: Cosmosophy 1: Lecture X
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- approximate mental image of what the human being carries
- Title: Lecture: Supersensible Influences: Lecture I: Supersensible Influences in Old Persian, Egyptian, and Greek Time
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- Title: Lecture: Supersensible Influences: Lecture III: The Revelation of the Spiritual World in Old Indian Culture, -or- Old Egypt
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- writer Steven, or men like Troxler, or Schubert who wrote so
- Title: Lecture: Supersensible Influences: Lecture IV: The Egyptian Mysteries, Indian Yoga and Egyptian Mummy Cult
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- night in a state of intoxication, he met his death by falling over a
- Title: Lecture: Supersensible Influences: Lecture VI: Spiritual InFluence in History, -or- Pope Nicholas I
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- the reign of Pope Nicholas I, approximately in the middle of the ninth
- and ritual of the Eastern Church, the Orthodox Russian Church, with the
- Title: Man/World of Stars: Lecture I: The Spirit-Seed of Man's Physical Organism
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- contain, in addition to oxygen and nitrogen for our breathing,
- Title: Man/World of Stars: Lecture III: Man's Relation to the World of the Stars
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- a man passes a meadow where there is an ox, and a week
- that the ox has exercised an influence upon him. Neither must
- ox he passes in the meadow and the flesh of which he afterwards
- Title: Man/World of Stars: Lecture VI: Spiritualization of Knowledge of Space. The Mission of Michael
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- began approximately in the eighth century B.C. and continued
- Title: Man/World of Stars: Lecture VII: Inner Processes in the Human Organism
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- — if I may use an expression which, though paradoxical,
- penetration within, the higher — to use a paradox —
- Title: Spiritual Communion: Lecture I: Midsummer and Midwinter Mysteries
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- of those days. To the orthodox modern scientist, the Sun is a
- Title: Spiritual Communion: Lecture III: From Man's Living Together with the Course of Cosmic Existence Arises the Cosmic Cult
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- night. Paradoxical as this seems at first hearing, in this
- approximately the same way, we find in it nothing else than
- Title: Spiritual Communion: Lecture IV: The Relation of the Movement for Religious Renewal to the Anthroposophical Movement
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- to those persons who came to me may be summed up approximately
- Title: Esoteric Studies: Easter: Lecture I: The Mysteries of Adonis, -or- The Evolution of Our Festivals from the Ancient Mysteries
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- equinox that plays a part in determining the date of Easter, to
- equinox festivals. On the contrary: comparing it with those of
- approximately as follows:
- Title: Esoteric Studies: Easter: Lecture II: Moon-Birth and Sun-Birth
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- approximate a realization of what the ancient neophyte
- Sunday after the first full Moon after the spring equinox? We place
- Title: Easter Festival: Lecture I: The Mysteries of Adonis, -or- The Evolution of Our Festivals from the Ancient Mysteries
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- equinox, an event which, though not identical with
- corresponds to the pagan equinox celebrations. Rather, a
- Title: Easter Festival: Lecture II: Moon-Birth and Sun-Birth
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- following the first full moon after the spring equinox.
- Title: Festival of Easter: Lecture 1: The Mysteries of Adonis, -or- The Evolution of Our Festivals from the Ancient Mysteries
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- connected with the period of the Spring equinox, which have
- which took place approximately at the same time, was a kind of
- festival held at the time of the Spring equinox; but if we
- Title: Festival of Easter: Lecture 2: Moon-Birth and Sun-Birth
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- the Spring equinox? And they fix the Easter Festival of the
- Title: Occult Movement: Lecture Two: Mediumistic Methods
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- clumsy word. What was arranged can be expressed approximately
- approximately the situation in the seventies of the
- Title: Occult Movement: Lecture Four: The Attempt Made by the Occultists to Avert the Lapse into Materialism
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- forgive the paradox! It is false to say that the material
- Title: Occult Movement: Lecture Six: The Dangers of Aberation Along the Path into the Spiritual World
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- already something similar or approximating to it has been
- M.D.(Oxon.), from Vol. II of Goethe's
- Title: Occult Movement: Lecture Seven: Investigation of the Life between Death and a New Birth
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- said that the time spent in Kamaloka is approximately one
- approximately to a third of the time of the earthly life; the
- Title: Occult Movement: Lecture Ten: Human Consciousness between Objective and Subjective Reality
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- or “insistent” idea approximates more closely
- Title: Star Wisdom: Lecture II: The Easter Festival and Its Background
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- [Approximate translation: We shake our rattles around
- Title: Cosmic Workings: Lecture I
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- substances which it contains in addition to hydrogen and oxygen, are
- oxygen. So too with the earth, one does not notice that all the time
- Title: Cosmic Workings: Lecture III
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- order to discover what quantities of carbon, oxygen, nitrogen,
- matter, with the percentages of carbon, oxygen, nitrogen contained in
- the abstract that foodstuffs are composed of so much carbon, oxygen,
- Title: Cosmic Workings: Lecture IV
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- oxygen contained in the air. This we do in breathing, for the air
- consists of oxygen and nitrogen — of many other things too but
- they play a less important part. We take in the oxygen with our
- be carbonic acid, that is to say, carbon and oxygen; and there must be
- carbon ourselves, we take the oxygen from the air and the sodium from
- breathing. We breathe in oxygen; we breathe out carbonic acid gas. If
- animals. Moreover, the oxygen takes our carbon away — it
- must first have it. To this end we must take food. Oxygen is
- the oxygen, we should at once get fits of suffocation when the carbon
- get out. We should suffocate at once. Oxygen is really greedy. Our
- stomach must also take in food. Just as the oxygen takes up carbon
- might imagine that if oxygen were in our stomach, it could get out
- through the mouth and nose. The oxygen is there inside: it absorbs
- substance very like oxygen is in the stomach and is continuously
- light. Chlorine is very similar to oxygen.
- organs it is the oxygen of the air which continuously extracts the carbon
- Title: Cosmic Workings: Lecture V
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- general way it is quite correct that the plants give off oxygen which
- night the plant does indeed need rather more oxygen. During the night
- things are rather different. The plant does not need as much oxygen
- as man, but it needs oxygen. Thus in the darkness it makes demands on
- altogether of oxygen, but he gets too little and that is harmful.
- Title: Cosmic Workings: Lecture VI
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- by applying this theory he would get an ox out of the habit of
- eating. He gave the ox less and less fodder and although it became
- the ox had been able to do without this last stalk, it would still be
- from the red foxglove.
- Title: Die Soziale Frage als Bewußtseinsfrage: Lecture II
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- sonderbar und paradox das erscheint. So daß
- Title: Die Soziale Frage als Bewußtseinsfrage: Lecture III
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- ganz auf orthodox-marxistischem Standpunkt, der andere
- Title: Die Soziale Frage als Bewußtseinsfrage: Lecture VIII
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- man in einer bestimmten Inkarnation gesetzt ist. So paradox das
- wird heute den meisten Menschen eben durchaus als paradox
- Title: Gegenwärtiges Geistesleben und Erziehung: Erster Vortrag
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- Geistessitz, in Oxford. Und vielleicht darf ich annehmen,
- Title: Gegenwärtiges Geistesleben und Erziehung: Dritter Vortrag
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- etwas paradox; aber der moderne Mensch wird sich schon dazu
- Title: Gegenwärtiges Geistesleben und Erziehung: Vierter Vortrag
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- wird das etwas paradox aussehen, daß ich gerade, um den
- Zähnen spreche, allein das scheint nur deshalb paradox,
- Kind entwickelt nämlich die Zähne, so paradox es
- paradoxen Ausdrucks bedienen darf. Das erste Übersinnliche
- oder weniger approximativ. Bei dem einen Menschen kommt die
- wirkliche Angaben, sondern eben nur approximative Angaben. Aber
- Title: Gegenwärtiges Geistesleben und Erziehung: Fünfter Vortrag
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- zum einundzwanzigsten Jahre, approximativ natürlich, wie
- einundzwanzigsten Jahre approximativ ist der Mensch noch nicht
- Erde bis approximativ zum einundzwanzigsten Lebensjahre.
- Title: Gegenwärtiges Geistesleben und Erziehung: Sechster Vortrag
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- Einflüsse. So paradox das dem heutigen, materialistisch
- Title: Gegenwärtiges Geistesleben und Erziehung: Siebenter Vortrag
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- siebenten und vierzehnten Jahre, approximativ
- Title: Gegenwärtiges Geistesleben und Erziehung: Elfter Vortrag
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- sogar paradox, und dennoch ist es tief wahr — zur rechten
- Title: Gegenwärtiges Geistesleben und Erziehung: Dreizehnter Vortrag
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- sieht ja vielleicht etwas paradox aus, aber dennoch bin ich der
- weiß, daß das paradox aussieht, aber ich glaube eben,
- Oxford, die hat er merkwürdigerweise immer nicht
- Title: Gegenwärtiges Geistesleben und Erziehung: Abschiedsansprache: Vierzehnter Vortrag
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- Wunsch, den ich wirklich, so paradox er klingt, als einen
- Unterricht. Und wir sehen, wie in Winchester, in Oxford Schulen
- Title: Apokalypse: Vortrag III
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- ist zwar die Zeit - wenn ich mich des paradoxen Ausdruckes
- Title: Apokalypse: Vortrag VI
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- natürlich sind die Dinge immer approximativ -, und Sie
- Title: Apokalypse: Vortrag XIV
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- eine bestimmte Anzahl von Jahren approximativ angegeben
- Title: Apokalypse: Vortrag XVII
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- für das Erfassen etwas Paradoxes bietet, so hören Sie
- Paradoxa der Apokalypse dazu, das, was der heutige Mensch ja so
- Title: Anthroposophie, soziale Dreigliederung und Redekunst: Dritter Vortrag
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- werden Sie allerdings paradox wirken, sowohl bei der
- paradox wirken. Das können Sie dadurch, daß Sie eben gerade
- Title: History of Art: Lecture I: Cimabue, Giotto, and Other Italian Masters
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- sound paradoxical to modern ears. Nevertheless, for a deeper
- paradox to describe the holy man of Assisi as the first great
- Title: History of Art: Lecture II: Leonardo, Michelangelo and Raphael
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- understood as little of Art as an ox, having eaten grass throughout
- 5. Death: An Allegory. (Oxford.)
- Title: History of Art: Lecture III: Dürer and Holbein
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- may conceive extending approximately from Saxony to Thuringia, to
- Title: History of Art: Lecture V: Rembrandt
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- have thrown them all together into a little box, shaken them up, and
- Title: Man/Symphony: Lecture I: Man as Microcosm
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- make this paradoxical statement: on the physical plane the same forces
- the case of the camel or the ox. There the digestion burdens the
- lion; let us consider the ox or cow. In other connections I have often
- synthesis of eagle, lion, and ox or cow.
- imagination that man consists of eagle, lion, and cow or ox, which,
- the constitution, from the organization, of the ox or cow. But in his
- What today sounds grotesque or paradoxical, what may seem almost
- Title: Man/Symphony: Lecture II: The Sun in Relation to the Outer Planets
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- represented by the ox or cow, we can today turn our attention to man's
- Title: Man/Symphony: Lecture III: Physical and Spiritual Substance
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- You see, the three animals, eagle, lion, ox or cow, they were created
- Title: Man/Symphony: Lecture V: Butterflies, Birds and Bats
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- bundle on his head, boxes growing together with his arms, and a
- higher animals, one with lungs. Into the lungs comes oxygen, and there
- the heart and lungs in order to come into contact with oxygen.
- more widely. And now the oxygen enters in everywhere, and spreads
- consists of oxygen, nitrogen and other constituents, but this is not
- Strange and paradoxical as it may sound, this dream-order of the bats
- beings we do not only inhale oxygen and nitrogen with the air, we also
- Title: Man/Symphony: Lecture VI: Evolution of Animals and Man
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- But water is certainly not just the combination of hydrogen and oxygen
- hydrogen and oxygen. Just as the butterfly feels itself to be a
- Title: Man/Symphony: Lecture IX: Gnomes, Undines, Sylphs, and Salamanders and their Various Activities and Attitudes
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- Such approximately are the words of the sylphs, the words of the
- Title: Man/Symphony: Lecture X: The Origin of the Different Systems of Man: Metabolism, Rhythmic, Nerve
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- him. This is sought out by oxygen, becomes changed into carbonic acid,
- oxygen. The oxygen, which is drawn in through breathing, masters the
- oxygen and carbon, is then exhaled. But before exhalation occurs, the
- carbon — in that it combines with the oxygen, in that it combines
- carbon taken up by the oxygen is left behind in his whole organism,
- regards its rising, point at the vernal equinox the sun traverses the
- Title: Lecture: How Can We Gain Knowledge of the Supersensible Worlds?
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- begin with truth takes on a paradoxical form, for this has always
- Title: Colour: Part Three: The Creative World of Colour
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- makes himself white has approximately the same significance, on
- Title: Psychoanalysis: Lecture II: Anthroposophy and Psychoanalysis II
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- regions. That sounds paradoxical, but it was really the
- Title: Influences of Lucifer/Ahriman: Lecture One: The Incarnation of Lucifer in Asia in the Third Millenium B.C.
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- adopted in the orthodox sciences are of value only for apprehending
- Title: Lucifer and Ahriman: Lecture I: The Incarnation of Lucifer in Asia in the Third Millenium B.C.
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- soul and spirit, for the methods adopted in the orthodox
- Title: Influences of Lucifer/Ahriman: Lecture Two: The Advance Preparation of Ahriman for His Future Incarnation
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- make you think that all these matters are very paradoxical. But in
- reality they are not. It is we who are paradoxical in our
- Title: Lucifer and Ahriman: Lecture II: The Advance Preparation of Ahriman for His Future Incarnation
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- paradoxical. But in reality they are not. It is man who is
- paradoxical in his relationship to truth. What he must
- Title: Influences of Lucifer/Ahriman: Lecture Five: The Human as a Being of Will
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- to five centuries as highly paradoxical. It is generally thought that
- catastrophe. The orthodox geologist will naturally trace this
- [Representing, approximately, the total population of
- the outcome of the other. This, approximately, is how the geologist
- Title: Lucifer and Ahriman: Lecture V: The Human as a Being of Will
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- paradoxical. It is generally thought that the evolution of
- came the great Atlantean catastrophe. The orthodox geologist
- approximately, is how the geologist describes the process of
- Representing, approximately, the total population of the earth.
- Title: Influences of Lucifer/Ahriman: Lecture Four: The Luciferic Origin of Ancient Wisdom, Ahrimanization...
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- orthodox representative of modern learning sitting in a corner and
- Title: Lucifer and Ahriman: Lecture IV: The Luciferic Origin of Ancient Wisdom, Ahrimanization...
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- some orthodox representative of modern learning sitting in a
- Title: Lecture: Mission of Michael: Lecture I: The Power and Mission of Michael
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- spirit, and thus teaches a heresy opposed to the orthodox belief that
- Title: Lecture: Mission of Michael: Lecture IV: The Culture of the Mysteries and the Michael Impulse.
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- approximately in the fifth century before the occurrence of the
- say, approximately, four and one half centuries. Thus we have to
- Naturally, this seems paradoxical; nevertheless, subjectively this
- Title: Lecture: Mission of Michael: Lecture V: The Michael Deed and the Michael Influence as Counter-pole of the Ahrimanic Influence
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- that henceforth the orthodox Christian was to think of man as
- use the paradoxical expression, in order to obscure, through
- Title: Lecture: Mission of Michael: Lecture VI: The Ancient Yoga Culture and the New Yoga Will.
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- process, we inhale fresh oxygen and exhale unusable carbon. A similar
- Title: Social Forms: Lecture I: The Waldorf School, Spiritual Science, Outer World, Inner World
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- in this manner they can only be indicated approximately.
- Title: Social Forms: Lecture IV: World Events, Initiation Knowledge and the Impulse toward Freedom
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- paradoxically. We cannot persist today in talking in the
- paradoxical. The spirited materialist may be more filled with
- Title: Social Forms: Lecture VI: New Social Forms, Soul, Material World
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- attain to an even approximately correct natural science, much
- obnoxious to a person when, in all the big cities of Europe,
- Title: Social Forms: Lecture VII: Trends of Souls in People of the East, West, and Middle of Europe
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- Orthodox Russian ritual, incomprehensible even to those who
- Title: Social Forms: Lecture VIII: East, Middle, West
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- materialistic, physical world-view finds nitrogen and oxygen
- the West. I made use of a paradox, but this paradox quite
- Title: Social Forms: Lecture IX: Hegel
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- number of cardboard boxes. Furthermore, Plate stated the
- Title: Social Forms: Lecture X: The Tapestry of the Senses, Memory, and the Spiritual World, -or- Spiritual-Cosmic Tasks of Man
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- what lives approximately in the middle — the rhythmic
- describes oxygen, hydrogen, nitrogen, fron oxide, sodium
- Title: Social Forms: Lecture XII: The Members of the Human Being and their Relationship with the Social Organism
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- the horse, the oxen and donkey do not move about in a
- oxen, now into a cow, now into a Butterfly. We would
- Title: Poetry/Speech: Lecture II: The Art of Recitation and Declamation
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- approximately 72. Hence we can say that the number of pulse-beats
- Title: Curative Eurythmy: Lecture 2
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- cannot walk properly. It can be summed up approximately so: for people
- Title: Curative Eurythmy: Lecture 3
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- himself up into an ox, you see, is the one from whom a cannon-like O
- Title: Curative Eurythmy: Lecture 6
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- that part of the physiological which we discover in the proximity of
- the aura in their proximity. This expresses itself in turn in its
- Title: Curative Eurythmy: Lecture 7
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- from the fore in the formation of carbon dioxide (white).
- Title: Colour: Part One: Colour-Experience (Erlebnis)
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- peach-blossom colour — which would approximate human
- Title: Colour: Part One: The Luminous and Pictorial Nature of Colours
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- approximations. It could be achieved only, you see, if we had a
- Title: Colour: Part One: The Phenomenon of Colour in Material Nature
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- characteristic of the new Physics, for it is based approximately on
- Title: Psychoanalysis: Lecture V: Connections Between Organic Processes and the Mental Life of Man
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- and paradoxical it may sound to anyone clever in the modern
- of water; and the kidney system, paradoxical as it sounds,
- being, 72 years, and you have approximately the same result. If
- 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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- profundity, it makes its appearance in paradoxical words. For
- Title: Old/New Methods: Lecture Thirteen: The Transition from the 4th to the 5th Post-Atlantean Period, Shakespeare, Schiller, Goethe, -or- The Search for the Spirit
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- Title: Old/New Methods: Lecture Fourteen: The 5th Post-Atlantean Period, the French Revolution, Schiller, Goethe, the Freedom Problem, -or- Berlin University Course Report - 2
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- the combination of oxygen or hydrogen in some laboratory process. But
- Title: Lecture: Inner Nature of Music: Lecture VII
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- paradoxical expression — he cannot bring his consciousness into
- paradoxical as this might sound — who believes that the drink
- but this is only an approximation, a mean point in time, as it were.
- Title: Arts and Their Mission: Lecture I
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- now prevalent settled into men's souls. Or approximately the same ideas.
- a “folk.” Today this seems paradoxical; we find it hard to
- Title: Arts and Their Mission: Lecture II
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- Paradoxical as it may sound, materialists feel embarrassed to state
- sound paradoxical. In ancient times people did not express themselves
- Title: Arts and Their Mission: Lecture III
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- while standing at the foot of a mountain, to see in close proximity the
- Title: Arts and Their Mission: Lecture IV
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- is — I must coin a paradoxical expression — at once heroic
- go further. It is characteristic of Goethe — the paradox may strike
- was intoxicated by his search for spirituality: Goethe could feel that.
- Title: Arts and Their Mission: Lecture V
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- At present such a question appears paradoxical, even nonsensical. But
- Title: Colour: Part Two: Dimension, Number and Weight
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- really of himself nothing. He is the product of the oxygen in the air,
- Title: Lecture IV: The Sun-Initiation of the Druid Priest and His Moon-Science
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- proximity of the Black Sea. The spiritual content of these Mysteries
- Title: Colour: Part Three: The Hierarchies and the Nature of the Rainbow
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- what the air is. Today one knows only that the air consists of oxygen
- air as a cosmic phenomenon when you say it consists of oxygen and
- Title: Oswald Spengler: Lecture I: On Spengler's "Decline of the West"
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- paradoxical. But we live in a time when the old
- Title: Oswald Spengler: Lecture II: Oswald Spengler - I
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- Oxford, I will give another lecture next week Wednesday.
- Title: Oswald Spengler: Lecture III: Oswald Spengler - II
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- lectures for a short time until my return from Oxford, it must
- Title: Karma: Lecture I
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- been the endeavor of the modern view to observe an ox outwardly
- in its complicated form and then to say: “Well, the ox
- resulted in the full-grown ox. Therefore, the ovum is an
- in order that out of the little ovum the complicated ox may
- ovum, no ox could ever come into existence, for this ovum is
- just a chaos. Why, then, does an ox come forth from it?
- Title: Karma: Lecture II
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- his twenty-fifth year has small pox, thus passing through the
- Title: Karma: Lecture III
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- shall now say may sound paradoxical to you, yet it is true. In
- Title: Karma: Lecture IV
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- approximate.
- their fellow-man, or boxing his ears, striking him, or doing
- at times paradoxical. Nevertheless, they are facts, most
- escape hearing things which seem grotesque and paradoxical,
- Title: Karma: Lecture VI
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- course, only approximate terms. But even thus crudely
- Title: Three Streams: Lecture I: The Lower Three Human Members and the Spirits of Form
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- appears to be, he analyses it into hydrogen and oxygen. Spiritual
- flowing water of a river there is hydrogen and oxygen, but I see
- Title: Three Streams: Lecture III: The Mystery of Golgotha Must Be Approached Supersensibly
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- naturally be held up by the external world as an absurdity, a paradox.
- the Mystery of Golgotha are approximately these: The Son of God is
- — such is the paradoxical way in which man is placed into the
- world — even though in an unorthodox
- Title: Three Streams: Lecture IV: Consciousness Soul and Scientific Thinking, Sorat and 666
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- approximately what he says. — Philosophers and philosophy
- Beast, and he uses approximately these words: The number of the Beast
- Title: Three Streams: Lecture V: Free Human Personality by Self Training, Justinian and the Schools
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- outer world to-day; they are still considered paradoxical. You know how
- Title: Three Streams: Lecture VI: Augustus and the Roman Catholic Church, Rhetoric, Intellectual Soul and Consciousness Soul
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- years before the Mystery of Golgotha, until approximately 1413, when
- 1413. These are approximate dates. Then follows the age of the
- Up to the year 1827 orthodox Catholics were forbidden to accept the
- Title: Challenge/Times: Lecture II: The Present from the Viewpoint of the Present
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- approximately twice that amount in fourteen years under a
- Title: Challenge/Times: Lecture III: The Mechanistic, Eugenic and Hygienic Aspects of the Future
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- approximately with the founding of the ancient Roman kingdom,
- population occupying the area approximately eastward from the
- 4:30 and Saturday night at approximately 10:30. From this
- Title: Challenge/Times: Lecture IV: Social and Antisocial Instincts
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- two human beings, in other words, shows a most paradoxical
- Paradoxical as
- Paradoxical as
- paradoxical to discover what a complicated being man is. You
- the path that is approximately right. In our epoch it is of
- Title: Young Doctors Course: Lecture I
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- than the teachings of orthodox physiology and anatomy. You
- acid but will be inclined, when its oxalic acid content is
- oxalic acid. In cases where nothing can be done with formic
- acid, it is often necessary to apply an oxalic acid cure,
- because formic acid is produced out of the oxalic acid in the
- Title: Young Doctors Course: Lecture II
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- one who puts the earth back again. This, approximately, is a
- that oxygen is necessary in the air but that nitrogen is not
- about oxygen and nitrogen, we might imagine that it does not
- nitrogen in the air, provided there is enough oxygen. But the
- Title: Young Doctors Course: Lecture III
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- approximately, lies where the hairs grow in a kind of vortex
- Title: Young Doctors Course: Lecture IV
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- paradoxical, but as you want to know in what way things are
- Title: Young Doctors Course: Lecture V
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- on speaking about hydrogen, oxygen, carbon, nitrogen, sulfur,
- as a human being and somewhere outside there is oxygen or
- oxygen or nitrogen is something quite direct. Physiology
- are to oxygen and nitrogen.
- Title: Young Doctors Course: Lecture VI
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- science says: Air is composed of oxygen, nitrogen and a few
- Title: Young Doctors Course: Lecture VII
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- you may fully understand, I want to say something paradoxical
- on this subject, but the paradox here happens to be the
- comes the paradox — are experienced by one's whole
- one—the true therapy of smallpox. Real smallpox calls
- studying the therapy of smallpox as a physician you will
- understand the connection, to go among smallpox patients
- voice a paradox. I am going to speak now of a reality in
- experience. Think of the illness of smallpox which reveals
- smallpox who in his astral body and ego organization had the
- body having smallpox. In the astral body and ego
- must experience the illness of smallpox. In other words: you
- physical illness. The illness of smallpox is the physical
- now that in smallpox there is proceeding, but in this case
- smallpox is, because it is only the physical projection of
- Title: Young Doctors Course: Lecture VIII
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- through chemical analysis you get hydrogen and oxygen out of
- oxygen. Then, you will say to yourselves: The human being
- lives through having oxygen; he lives through perpetually
- working in oxygen. In the etheric body, as you know,
- etheric body because it refuses to be combined with oxygen.
- healing power in the etheric body for what oxygen, for
- where hydrogen and oxygen enter into a chemical combination
- — just as if in water, hydrogen and oxygen were
- Title: Young Doctors Course: Easter Course: Lecture I
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- molecule. Carbon is there combined with hydrogen and oxygen
- Title: Young Doctors Course: Easter Course: Lecture II
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- repugnance that you may feel, you must take the orthodox and
- criticize orthodox medicine. One has passed through the whole
- Title: Young Doctors Course: Easter Course: Lecture IV
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- factor alone that modern orthodox medicine is working. No
- approximately twenty grams, because, according to the
- weight of only approximately twenty grams. So it is with
- Title: Young Doctors Course: Bridge Lecture 2: The Moral as the Source of World-Creative Power
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- Catholic Church. No orthodox Catholic was allowed to believe
- Title: Young Doctors Course: Bridge Lecture 3: The Path to Freedom and Love and their Significance in World Happenings
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- hydrogen, at another, oxygen; they are merely differently
- Title: Anthroposophy Introduction: Lecture II: Meditation
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- and auto-intoxication, self-poisoning, is set up. Thus it is harmful
- suffering from auto-intoxication and many other things because they are
- likely to get diphtheria, or even small-pox. If they only take twenty
- Title: Anthroposophy Introduction: Lecture IV: Meditation and Inspiration
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- true that what people think of as a mixture of oxygen and nitrogen enters
- and leaves is composed of oxygen and nitrogen and some other things.
- Title: Anthroposophy Introduction: Lecture V: Love, Intuition and the Human Ego
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- of the following: The human brain weighs approximately 1,500 grammes.
- that? A stone cannot do it, nor can calcium, or chlorine, or oxygen,
- Title: Anthroposophy Introduction: Lecture VI: Respiration, Warmth and the Ego
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- in oxygen and give off carbonic acid. But we are not so much concerned
- to rest as it were in some chest or box and to re-appear when remembered.
- Title: Anthroposophy Introduction: Lecture VIII: Dreams, Imaginative Cognition, and the Building of Destiny
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- One might also say, speaking paradoxically (one must begin to speak
- in paradoxes to some extent when one speaks of the spiritual world,
- Title: Three Streams: Lecture I: The Lower Three Human Members and the Spirits of Form
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- appears to be, he analyses it into hydrogen and oxygen. Spiritual
- flowing water of a river there is hydrogen and oxygen, but I see
- Title: Three Streams: Lecture III: The Mystery of Golgotha Must Be Approached Supersensibly
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- naturally be held up by the external world as an absurdity, a paradox.
- the Mystery of Golgotha are approximately these: The Son of God is
- — such is the paradoxical way in which man is placed into the
- world — even though in an unorthodox
- Title: Three Streams: Lecture IV: Consciousness Soul and Scientific Thinking, Sorat and 666
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- approximately what he says. — Philosophers and philosophy
- Beast, and he uses approximately these words: The number of the Beast
- Title: Three Streams: Lecture V: Free Human Personality by Self Training, Justinian and the Schools
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- outer world to-day; they are still considered paradoxical. You know how
- Title: Three Streams: Lecture VI: Augustus and the Roman Catholic Church, Rhetoric, Intellectual Soul and Consciousness Soul
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- years before the Mystery of Golgotha, until approximately 1413, when
- 1413. These are approximate dates. Then follows the age of the
- Up to the year 1827 orthodox Catholics were forbidden to accept the
- Title: Thomas Aquinas: Lecture II: The Essence of Thomism
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- approximately clearly depicted in their histories. There are
- man of to-day finds it really paradoxical when he hears what we
- does. To a modern man this paradox appears perhaps meaningless.
- Title: Thomas Aquinas: Lecture III: Thomism in the Present Day
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- apply causality to things. In other words, paradoxical though
- it sounds — though it is paradoxical only historically in
- to things. This means — and here is the paradox —
- Title: Search for the New Isis: Lecture II: The Quest for Isis-Sophia
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- spring equinox owing to the position of the sun — the shadow
- the autumn equinox. The Egyptians tried to express in this pyramid
- Title: Man as a Being: Lecture 1
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- I said a long time ago, and I am always repeating it, that orthodox
- Title: Man as a Being: Lecture 3
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- carbon, oxygen, hydrogen, nitrogen, sulphur combine to
- Title: Driving Force: Lecture I
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- approximately in the following way. — After the age of
- paradoxical in our times, namely that the human ego and
- Title: Driving Force: Lecture II
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- forces spoken of in orthodox science today. As we heard
- Title: Driving Force: Lecture III
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- permitted this paradoxical expression, would be super-sensible
- paradoxical though it may sound, as a person who believes
- approximation applying merely to the central period, whereas
- Title: Driving Force: Lecture IV
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- century of our era is to be regarded approximately as the
- man. Yesterday I indicated this proximity pictorially by
- then became in the strictest sense an orthodox Roman Catholic
- the manner of orthodox science, seeing only that this muscle
- Title: Driving Force: Lecture V
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- what a terrible scene an orthodox professor would make if a
- question today of learning in orthodox zoology about a camel?
- Title: Driving Force: Lecture VI
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- apparently paradoxical but for all that an extraordinarily
- speak rather paradoxically here but it is exactly how things
- within us — I am of course speaking approximately
- thoughts — robs us of freedom. However paradoxical it may
- Title: Healing Factors for the Social Organism: Lecture I
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- about the paradox in the character of our present time. It seems
- Oswald Spengler I had to tell you the most extreme paradox. I had
- phenomenon, that the paradoxes interweave in our time, and that
- human beings are extremely dulled in regard to these paradoxes,
- paradoxes the life of our time actually brings, and what makes
- these paradoxes necessary in life.
- speak to you of the paradoxes in life out of the characteristics
- Title: Healing Factors for the Social Organism: Lecture II
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- approximately the same way, as though one would say: when it was
- appears to be paradoxical, and yet is true, when one says:
- Title: Human Soul/Evolution: Lecture I: The Human Soul in Relation to World Evolution
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- take oxygen from the external air and modify it. Our life is
- the lungs' intake of oxygen. Man is aware of what he owes to
- the lungs' intake of oxygen because it is a robust and strongly
- Title: Human Soul/Evolution: Lecture II: The True Nature of Memory - 1
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- child that a mouse is running up his arm to hide in a box
- perceptions and then walk into a sort of savings-box within the
- Title: Human Soul/Evolution: Lecture III: The True Nature of Memory - 2
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- pours through the whole organism. The oxygen takes up the
- Title: Human Soul/Evolution: Lecture VI: The Formation of the Etheric and the Astral Heart
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- above the diaphragm (that is not quite exact but approximately
- chop wood, or we give someone a box on the ear, all is
- puberty — the astral process coincides only approximately
- Title: Human Soul/Evolution: Lecture VII: Modern and Ancient Spiritual Exercises
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- Someone who is intoxicated or feels faint loses his balance
- Title: Human Soul/Evolution: Lecture VIII: The Elementary World and its Beings
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- chemist discovers the atomic weight of hydrogen, oxygen and
- nitrogen, and that he finds out how hydrogen and oxygen combine
- Title: Philosophy, Cosmology and Religion: Lecture II: Soul Exercises in Thinking, Feeling, and Willing
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- body, can be compared with the breathing in of real oxygen.
- Title: Philosophy, Cosmology and Religion: Lecture III: The Imaginative, Inspirative, and Intuitive Method of Cognition
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- I should like to make this paradoxical statement: Only he is a
- learned to speak. This is the paradox which, I think, makes it
- Title: Philosophy, Cosmology and Religion: Lecture V: The Soul's Experiences in Sleep
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- childhood — however paradoxical that sounds to
- Title: Philosophy, Cosmology and Religion: Lecture VIII: Ordinary and Higher Consciousness
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- only intuition finally unveils it. Paradoxical as it may sound,
- Title: Philosophy, Cosmology and Religion: Lecture IX: The Continuation of Ego Consciousness after Death in Relation to the Christ
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- circulatory system. As paradoxical as it sounds to ordinary
- Title: Occult Reading/Hearing: Lecture II: Identification with the Signs and Spiritual Realities of the Imaginative World
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- paradoxical, absurd. It is possible for something strange and
- something that seems paradoxical, perhaps even absurd. I
- Title: Occult Reading/Hearing: Lecture III: Inner Experiences and 'Moods' of Soul as the Vowels and Consonants of the Spiritual World
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- given, and even although it can only be an approximately
- Title: La Comunión Espiritual de la Humanidad
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- Imaginativo de aquellos días. Para el científico moderno ortodoxo, el Sol es
- Title: Occult Psychology: Lecture Three
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- is approximately to this effect — Weininger maintains that the human soul during life
- Title: New Spirituality: Lecture 2: The New Spirituality and the Christ Experiance of the Twentieth Century - 1
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- the Oxford professors that has been published in the last few days
- untruthful impulses. I am not suggesting here that these Oxford professors — who are
- over-individualization — a kind of, if I may put it so paradoxically, unegoistic egoism.
- This, too, is an egoistic sentiment. This is something that can be called, paradoxically, an
- 10. In October 1920, professors and doctors of Oxford University sent an
- Title: New Spirituality: Lecture 3: The New Spirituality and the Christ Experiance of the Twentieth Century - 2
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- 9. Roger Bacon (1214–1294), Franciscan, taught at Oxford University. Return
- Title: Tree of Life/Knowledge: Lecture I: Tree of Life - I
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- Golgotha lies approximately at the conclusion of the first third of
- begins approximately with the Mystery of Golgotha, with the reign of
- approximately there is a balance between the Frankish element and the
- Title: Lecture: Art As A Bridge Between The Sensible And The Supersensible
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- lived in close proximity to each other. One can hardly imagine two
- are right. If we sense the approximate arithmetical middle of all this,
- Title: Imperialism: Lecture 1
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- This is so paradoxical for the contemporary mind, that it seems
- Title: First Class, Vol. I: Lesson 5
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- and death exists. It contains the vivifying oxygen; it contains
- abstraction: Air consists of oxygen and nitrogen. Yes, as long
- as we remain in normal consciousness one says: oxygen and
- however, it becomes clear that oxygen is the external
- the air there is a battle in which the Luciferic oxygen-spirits
- abstraction: oxygen and nitrogen. When we arrive at the
- Threshold, it consists of Ahriman and Lucifer, and the oxygen
- oxygen-spirits, what exists in the life-element when one wishes
- Title: First Class, Vol. I: Lesson 6
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- know that oxygen is transformed into carbon dioxide in man.
- This reception of carbon dioxide in the finer branches of
- carbon dioxide. It is a mineralization process. And the more we
- are able to internalize this capture of carbon dioxide by
- oxygen, the more we are conscious of the mineralization
- Title: First Class, Vol. II: Lesson 14
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- and in the ears with highly rarefied silica. Carbon dioxide
- “Kohlensäure” = carbon dioxide (red)] In the
- Man lives downward by converting oxygen to carbon dioxide. He
- combining oxygen with silica, forming very fine silicic acid.
- breath turns to blood, it generates carbon dioxide; when breath
- downward and outward through breath: carbon dioxide; toward
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