Searching Rudolf Steiner Lectures by Location (Dornach) Matches
You may select a new search term and repeat your search.
Searches are not case sensitive, and you can use
regular expressions
in your queries.
Query type:
Query was: value
Here are the matching lines in their respective documents.
Select one of the highlighted words in the matching lines below
to jump to that point in the document.
- Title: Lecture: The Alphabet
Matching lines:
- value as sounds. In Greek culture we still have a name for the first
- Title: Lecture: Truth Beauty and Goodness
Matching lines:
- never to undervalue the significance of beauty in education and in
- Title: Lecture: Exoteric and Esoteric Christianity
Matching lines:
- that the first heralds of Christianity attached great value to the
- resurrection. In the past, some value was still attached to this
- Title: Lecture: Elemental Beings and Human Destinies
Matching lines:
- long time now, indeed for hundreds of years, mankind has set no value
- begin to place very great value on them.
- Title: Lecture: Spiritual Wisdom in the Early Christian Centuries
Matching lines:
- of understanding the value and worth of personality, of
- Title: Lecture: Gnostic Doctrines and Supersensible Influences in Europe
Matching lines:
- the inherent value of the medieval mind. The point is to realise and
- Title: Lecture II: Ancient Myths
Matching lines:
- over the intellectual value so to say of the
- Title: Lecture IV: Ancient Myths
Matching lines:
- sense it is really of very little value. Forgive the remark
- as physical head, the human head is not of very much value. And when
- Title: Lecture V: Ancient Myths
Matching lines:
- that people pay no attention to the matter and give it no value. In
- Title: Lecture VI: Ancient Myths
Matching lines:
- not possess. Our present life only values head-knowledge. But true
- Title: Lecture VII: Ancient Myths
Matching lines:
- knows that that would be absolutely valueless. It would only
- have value years afterwards. The conscientious spiritual
- in what I say now I am passing no judgment on the value or lack of
- value of the so-called peace negotiations between the Central
- men do not know nor value this. At any rate it is almost ridiculous
- Title: Lecture: The Remedy for Our Diseased Civilisation
Matching lines:
- live. For we should always make a distinction between the value which
- and its value for the evolution of humanity. The intellectualism
- Title: Lecture: Salt, Mercury, Sulphur
Matching lines:
- meaning but who still felt that some great value was contained in
- Title: Lecture: Some Conditions for Understanding Supersensible Experiences
Matching lines:
- spiritualistic methods are apt to be valued more highly to-day than
- Title: Lecture: The Elemental World and the Future of Mankind
Matching lines:
- resort, chemistry and physics have no value whatever beyond the
- Title: Lecture: A Picture of Earth-Evolution in the Future
Matching lines:
- and personality. It is a phase by no means to be undervalued. It was necessary
- Title: Lecture: The Inexpressible Name, Spirits of Space and Time.
Matching lines:
- of great value. You know that many so-called lodges, which have not a
- the greatest value
- Title: Lecture: The Coming Experience of Christ
Matching lines:
- considered by them to be of value. From the way in which I had
- before one's life on earth has no very great value, but a
- of the greatest value to feel that what is in one as an adult has
- Title: Lecture: Modern and Ancient Spiritual Exercises
Matching lines:
- various directions have different values.
- Title: On the Duty of Clear, Sound Thinking
Matching lines:
- tone to science; people laid the greatest value on the results of
- Gardens and the like, (the value of which observation must be
- Title: Lecture: Realism and Nominalism
Matching lines:
- greatest value is placed on the question of Christ's descent. When
- Title: Lecture: Brunetto Latini
Matching lines:
- of greater or lesser value for the Universe.
- have its corresponding value. Then it will indeed have its
- value — not as anything complete, but as a new
- Title: Lecture: The Shaping of the Human Form out of Cosmic and Earthly Forces
Matching lines:
- have a value transcending both the physical and the moral,
- for they have a value which embraces both. The strength that
- Title: Lecture: Hygiene - a Social Problem
Matching lines:
- true value on matter because, in the different concrete processes, it
- Title: Fall/Darkness: Lecture 1: The Driving Force Behind Europe's War
Matching lines:
- the hustle and bustle and search for material values here on
- value.
- Title: Fall/Darkness: Lecture 10: The Influence of the Backward Angels
Matching lines:
- indeed ideals of great value. But the people of today are not
- Title: Fall/Darkness: Lecture 14: Into the Future
Matching lines:
- way in which events are grouped and by the value given to one
- Title: Lecture: Man's Fall and Redemption
Matching lines:
- I have shown repeatedly that these arguments are not of much value.
- Title: On the Mysteries of Ancient and Modern Times: Lecture 1
Matching lines:
- had their good meaning and their real value in those olden
- their value. As I have often said, the life of the Mysteries
- Title: On the Mysteries of Ancient and Modern Times: Lecture 2
Matching lines:
- the frontal portions of the brain are of far less value than
- Title: Lecture: East and West in the Light of the Christmas Idea
Matching lines:
- the true value and dignity of man. The feelings which we have in
- Title: Lecture: Human Freedom and Its Connection with the Mystery of Golgotha
Matching lines:
- Gospel will never lose its value. It will have an every greater
- value, but the Gospel must be added to the direct knowledge of
- Title: Lecture: Knowledge Pervaded with the Experience of Love
Matching lines:
- now fully valued — or this was the case — only
- the same value as other truths. The value is the same when, in
- another aspect, it must be greatly valued. But an inner push is
- Title: Lecture: The Golden Legend and a German Christmas Play
Matching lines:
- would then, and then only, be valued in the right way. We should then
- Title: Lecture: The Relation of Man to the Hierarchies
Matching lines:
- of suggestive value. For much was still contained within it of
- Title: Four Seasons/Archangels: Lecture I: The Michael Imagination
Matching lines:
- You reveal it according to the value of its substance
- You reveal it (iron) according to the value of its substance
- Title: Four Seasons/Archangels: Lecture IV: The St. John Imagination
Matching lines:
- much value at its present stage. But the heavens at midsummer give
- Title: St. Augustine
Matching lines:
- — “Unless a person knows how to value aright those
- Title: World History: Lecture I: Evolution of the Soul and of Memory
Matching lines:
- Even to-day it is still of no small value for a man's spiritual
- Title: World History: Lecture IV: Atlantean Wisdom in the Mysteries of Hibernia, Gilgamish and Eabani at Ephesus, Logos Mysteries of Artemis at Ephesus
Matching lines:
- with error and illusion, then one cannot value Being and Truth.
- And the pupils of Hibernia had to learn to value Being and
- Title: World History: Lecture V: Mysteries of the East, West, and of Ephesus
Matching lines:
- also living in their souls the treasure of untold value that
- Title: World History: Lecture VI: Mysteries of the Ancient Near East Enter Europe
Matching lines:
- Human Values in Education
- Human Values in Education
- Human Values in Education
- Title: World History: Lecture VII: The Fifteenth Century and the Transition from Mind-Soul to Spiritual-Soul
Matching lines:
- But it is of about as much value for a man to know that
- Title: Goethe, Comte and Bentham
Matching lines:
- allowed positivistic Science alone to have any value. — That
- Title: Whitsuntide in the Course of the Year
Matching lines:
- must in a sense learn to value the winter, because were it
- time our activity is only equal in value to that of the
- the greatest value, my dear friends, because it does not
- Title: Meditation and Concentration
Matching lines:
- science should recognise exactly the value of spiritual
- stomach-clairvoyance has not a certain value, in the highest
- sense of the word. It naturally has a value. But one must
- emphasise this, because it can be of value for the
- clairvoyance is also of great value to investigate in this
- — only then have these things a special value. In any
- Title: Karma of Vocation: Lecture I
Matching lines:
- that Goethe had learned to value so highly, but who presented
- Title: Karma of Vocation: Lecture III
Matching lines:
- of how what is often given little value on earth is so little
- he really create future values. When a person makes a nail over
- Title: Karma of Vocation: Lecture VIII
Matching lines:
- duty, as evidence of the value I attach to such goodness, to
- that are, perhaps, of far less significant value have a great
- order to value the world correctly, in order to come to the
- Title: Karma of Vocation: Lecture X
Matching lines:
- are not time spirits but are of equal value with the spirits
- Title: Mysteries of the Sun: Lecture I
Matching lines:
- judgment that only has limited value by being right in a
- Title: Eurhythmy (Introduction to a performance)
Matching lines:
- But the real artistic value of poetry is not determined by
- Title: Differentation of Primeval Wisdom into East, Middle, West
Matching lines:
- himself the desire to do what was of moral value. Therefore
- Title: Lecture: Human Knowledge and Its Significance for Man and the Cosmos
Matching lines:
- the grain of wheat from the point of view of the food-value of wheatmeal.
- of wheat contains constituents of nutritive value for the human being,
- and find that here we have in Nature something that is of value as a
- its value in the nourishment of human beings. There is a fundamental
- Title: Contrasting World-conceptions of East and West
Matching lines:
- ghosts has just as much cognitive value and substance as has
- Title: Spiritual Relations in the Configuration of the Human Organism: Lecture II
Matching lines:
- we are placing too much value also on that which is excreted by us as
- Title: Spiritual Relations in the Configuration of the Human Organism: Lecture III
Matching lines:
- forks, but we don't eat them, they are just there. What we value as
- light stood in relation to what the ancients valued as light much as
- Title: Social Question as a Problem: Lecture I: The Inner Experience of Language
Matching lines:
- prevent the abstract from having any longer a value in
- Title: Goetheanism as an Impulse for Man's Transformation - Lecture I: The Difference Between Man and Animal
Matching lines:
- Title: Goetheanism as an Impulse for Man's Transformation - Lecture III: Clairvoyant Vision Looks at Mineral, Plant, Animal, Man
Matching lines:
- a self-contained being, therefore what he experiences has value and
- Title: The Building at Dornach (Bn/GA 289): Lecture I: The Goetheanum
Matching lines:
- horrified at this tendency to symbolise. These members valued a Rose-Cross,
- Title: The Building at Dornach (Bn/GA 289): Lecture III: Lecture 3
Matching lines:
- of the Faust-figure. Do not, I beg you, attach any special value to
- principles have the value that they should have. It is a pressing necessity
- Title: Problem of Faust: Lecture IV: Faust and the "Mothers"
Matching lines:
- significant content, apart from the aesthetic value of the
- Title: Problem of Faust: Lecture VII: Some Spiritual-Scientific Observations
Matching lines:
- this life so highly valued by all the pedants, lies
- side-by-side, giving them all an equal value. When we observe
- Title: Problem of Faust: Lecture VIII: Spiritual Science Considered with the Classical Walpurgis-Night
Matching lines:
- waking life, few are able to set the right value on
- Title: Problem of Faust: Lecture IX: Goethe's Life of the Soul from the Standpoint of Spiritual Science
Matching lines:
- highest absolute values into the relativity of world events.
- Title: Problem of Faust: Lecture X: Faust's Knowledge and Understanding of Himself
Matching lines:
- Samothracian Mystery has naturally only historical value.
- Title: Pastoral Medicine: Lecture 2
Matching lines:
- their value. Otherwise one can no longer differentiate between a
- Title: Pastoral Medicine: Lecture 5
Matching lines:
- tell one is of little value. It is a matter of grasping what they say
- Title: Pastoral Medicine: Lecture 8
Matching lines:
- can be beneficial to humans in every way when they value it. This is
- Title: Pastoral Medicine: Lecture 9
Matching lines:
- of illness and live with them. Special value should be laid on this
- Title: Pastoral Medicine: Lecture 10
Matching lines:
- movement who have had scientific training will be of some value in
- Title: Pastoral Medicine: Lecture 11
Matching lines:
- value on studying a substance while it was being exposed to the
- Title: Broken Vessels: Lecture 2
Matching lines:
- their value. Otherwise one can no longer differentiate between a
- Title: Broken Vessels: Lecture 5
Matching lines:
- tell one is of little value. It is a matter of grasping what they say
- Title: Broken Vessels: Lecture 8
Matching lines:
- can be beneficial to humans in every way when they value it. This is
- Title: Broken Vessels: Lecture 9
Matching lines:
- of illness and live with them. Special value should be laid on this
- Title: Broken Vessels: Lecture 10
Matching lines:
- movement who have had scientific training will be of some value in
- Title: Broken Vessels: Lecture 11
Matching lines:
- value on studying a substance while it was being exposed to the
- Title: Lecture IV: Human Questions and Cosmic Answers
Matching lines:
- find them ourselves can we also value them as tradition. And as we
- Title: Origins of Natural Science: Lecture I
Matching lines:
- spoke are taken at face value — fanatically upholding the
- Title: Origins of Natural Science: Lecture III
Matching lines:
- placed great value on presenting his philosophical principles and
- Title: Origins of Natural Science: Lecture IV
Matching lines:
- But to give the scientific mode of thinking its proper value, it must
- actually assigning far greater value to science than do the modern
- Title: Philosophy/Cosmology/Religion: Lecture II: Exercises of Thought, Feeling and Volition
Matching lines:
- which they are refuted are of as much value as those on which it is
- Title: Philosophy/Cosmology/Religion: Lecture X: On Experiencing the Will-Part of the Soul
Matching lines:
- knowledge, moreover, which knows how to value the products of
- no more than an indication of the moral value which has unconsciously
- spiritual-psychic content. Everything of world-spiritual value that
- man during his presence on earth has developed into a real value in
- Title: Bridge between the Ideal and the Real: Lecture I
Matching lines:
- — “Unless a person knows how to value aright those
- Title: Bridge between the Ideal and the Real: Lecture II
Matching lines:
- to have any value. That means, only that which can be related
- Title: Inner Impulses: Lecture I
Matching lines:
- rulers set a high value on their title of Defender of the
- Title: Inner Impulses: Lecture II
Matching lines:
- value He has for Strauss is that the myths, which are distributed all
- Title: Inner Impulses: Lecture IV
Matching lines:
- We have spoken many times of the value of knowledge that is obtained
- Title: Mystery Centres: Lecture I
Matching lines:
- We can get an idea of the value of memory if we can have
- Title: Mystery Centres: Lecture VII: The Mysteries of Hibernia
Matching lines:
- is something we call knowledge, but it has really no value in the
- this side, that much that is valued on this side is worthless on
- Title: Mystery Centres: Lecture XII: The Mysteries of the Samothracian Kabiri
Matching lines:
- Greek sculpture, and which are greatly valued because people have no
- forms, which in one sense are rightly valued because they are
- Title: Lecture: Lecture I: Physiology and Therapeutics
Matching lines:
- natural science could go unrecognized and undervalued. This is
- This can become clear if one knows and understands rightly the value of
- Title: World Economy: Lecture I
Matching lines:
- domain, we speak of the value of a commodity. It is nonsense to define
- in the outer world. Likewise, we cannot simply ask: What is the value
- of a commodity? The value is different according as the commodity is
- the economists have tried to do is to grasp such things as Value,
- is Value? Or, what is Price? Whatever has Value must be considered as
- corresponding to a Value, as something in perpetual circulation. If
- the loft, it had no value in the economic process. Once its value had
- of money in those days. What did the value depend on in this case?
- of circulation before we can arrive at such things as Value, Price and
- they generally begin with definitions of Value and Price. That is
- Title: World Economy: Lecture II
Matching lines:
- the value of the house. Nay, there may be ten or fifteen other
- witness. Some say that all Value is inherent in Nature and that no
- especial value is added to the substance of natural objects by human
- Labour. Others believe that all true economic Value is really
- that produces real Value is Labour, and all that Capital obtains for
- itself is the surplus value abstracted from the yield of Labour.
- will. One can speak with strong apparent reasons of surplus value,
- value-forming factor in the work or labour that is expended on things.
- we wish to determine what is Value or a
- Value in the true economic sense, we must disregard this
- a true concept of economic value.
- is the value-forming factor. If we now ascend to man, that is, to
- Nature the same starting-point of Nature Value.
- arrive at the one aspect of Value in Political Economy. It arises
- Labour. It is only here that a true economic value first arises. So
- found in Nature, it has no other value than it has, for instance, for
- Nature-product so transformed begins to have economic value. We may
- therefore characterise this economic value as follows: An
- economic value, seen from this one aspect, is a Nature-product
- of Value in general, then we must simply say: One value-forming
- Maximum number of matches per file exceeded.
- Title: World Economy: Lecture III
Matching lines:
- circulation of values and the mutual interplay of fluctuating values
- when we merely study prices and values and so forth. It only begins to
- have a real meaning when we regard prices and values much as we regard
- labour, or of the social circulation of labour-values did not arise.
- historical moment the assignment of value to Labour in relation to the
- another, the various products will have certain values and
- value; will those he makes for himself have the same economic value?
- value as he expends on those that pass into general
- value. If he makes his own coat for himself, he will buy
- man has little or nothing to do with the value or price of the
- value to the economic life, the labour of his hands. It amounts to
- notice the fact. For we do not ask ourselves: What is it that values
- payment the value that is assigned to his work proceeds
- prices and values that depend not on the human beings but on the
- fluctuation of values. The cardinal question is the question of Price.
- Nature, and this is one point at which values are created. On the
- Spirit, and there arises the other kind of value. Value 1, Value 2.
- interaction of Value 1 and Value 2.
- Now these Values on either hand Value 1 and Value 2 are
- decrease in value. If on the other hand a man is working directly upon
- Maximum number of matches per file exceeded.
- Title: World Economy: Lecture IV
Matching lines:
- human Labour, it receives an economic value. In Economics we are
- economic value. The coal, the substantial coal, lying in mines under
- the earth, has no economic value; nor would it gain an economic value
- into a value? It is the Labour that has been impressed upon it, that
- which gives it economic value; and this is all we have to do with in
- economic value. But the moment the human Spirit organises Labour
- Labour at all points. Although the value is constituted not by' the
- This is one side from which economic values originate.
- whole invention; but now he earns more values than he can cope with by
- himself. Are these values to remain unused in the whole economic life?
- means of a different kind of Spirit. He will then turn the values to
- After a time, for instance, the values created by the inventor of the
- other man has already created certain economic values; these he must
- (for how else could the cartwright transmit his values to the smith?)
- externally expressed value which is gained in the economic process
- the true and proper representative of economic values created by the
- the Capital arose no longer has an economic value. The Spirit which
- the man applies in turning the Money to good account (giving it value)
- this alone will have economic value at this stage. For, however
- value by spiritual means. Therein lies its true economic significance.
- Maximum number of matches per file exceeded.
- Title: World Economy: Lecture V
Matching lines:
- which has as yet no value in the economic process we get the
- Capital, giving it additional value, as I described in the last
- Labour. Labour continues to evolve. Then the values evolved stream
- values that arise in the economic process within the sphere of
- elimination of these values. In consumption they are constantly being
- values. It is this that plays the other important part in the economic
- process this constant devaluation of values. Indeed it is just
- different point of view, the value-creating forces which we have been
- considering. Hitherto we have only shown how values arise as the
- process of production takes its course. But now, every time a value
- progressive, forward movement. Thus, values arise through the
- application of Labour to Nature; values arise through the application
- of the Spirit to Labour; values arise through the application of the
- In fact, we have been observing the value-creating movement in the
- There will be that development of values which arises as between
- production and consumption themselves. When a value enters the process
- degree of value, it no longer moves; for something now stands over
- the value enters into a very' different sphere from that which we have
- hitherto been studying. We have been considering the value in its
- certain point and being there arrested. Every time a value is
- Maximum number of matches per file exceeded.
- Title: World Economy: Lecture VI
Matching lines:
- counter-value for the product he has made, sufficient to enable him to
- the counter-value must satisfy the man's needs in the future
- demand a counter-value, literally, for the product which the man has
- a value which would only satisfy his needs, say, for five-sixths of
- motion, it inevitably happens in some cases that the values are
- Nature, Labour, Capital that is, Capital endued with value by
- when it is sold i.e., when land is given a value in the
- interest. If he has a low rate of interest to pay, the value of his
- value, namely, 100% would be extremely difficult to realise in
- such, is in any way value-creating in the economic sphere.
- the surplus value which the productive workers create. This worthy
- who is maintained simply by the surplus value of the productive
- my money; and the value is determined in the very moment at which I
- transfer of values from hand to hand, representing a process of free
- Commonwealth, where it is shown how values are to be transferred,
- lessen the value of the inheritance if, say, it has a value V and we
- divide the value V into two parts, V1 and V2
- business with the original value V, and the question will be whether
- Title: World Economy: Lecture VII
Matching lines:
- gift and purchase. The influences, which create the economic values
- Value in the economic system, as we have already seen, can only arise
- any other way. But what follows? If value can only arise in this way,
- and if moreover the price of the value is to be arrived at along the
- given product receives, as its counter-value, what he will require to
- were, reciprocally determine one another's value. And, after all, it
- reciprocal determination of value. We may fancy that we are paying for
- Labour or wage-nexus, it is values which are exchanged. The
- them it is his business to impart to them a higher value, by making
- expressions) to enhance their value.
- ladies and gentlemen, we cannot speak of a surplus value arising
- although the products reciprocally determine one another's values,
- although they have their real values, these values are not
- enough to see that all values are not really paid for. Take the case
- mean that the commodities decrease in value; it only means that the
- them at a higher value than one who gets his products in free
- obliged to value his goods more expensively. The consequence is that
- tendency of the industrialists to devalue Capital, to make Capital
- reason that there is a constant tendency to undervalue, as compared
- devalued; and we may say, on this side
- Maximum number of matches per file exceeded.
- Title: World Economy: Lecture VIII
Matching lines:
- science which cannot fertilise our practical life is of no real value.
- sovereign) were recognised by no one as a real value a value
- suddenly have quite a different value for him than the value of a pair
- kept (I use the pound to buy me something of equal value with the pair
- produce an altogether new value in the economic process. It is here
- process, commodities (or the money-values representing them) are
- land, even when we merely help with our rent to pay for the value of
- Rights-value with a Commodity-value. Again, when we appoint a school
- paying for spiritual faculties with the value of a commodity or a
- corresponding money-value. Thus there perpetually occur in the
- a purely spiritual value that is being paid for in commodity-values.
- value or at any rate a higher value to that which he
- extracted from the Labour as a surplus value. By economic thinking we
- have less value at the point where he sells them than at the point
- economic processes which are value-creating. Then the social conflicts
- Title: World Economy: Lecture IX
Matching lines:
- economic process must have a certain value. On the other hand we must
- value of which is not immediately expressed in the economic processes
- market prices of rye, the values he would thus insert would
- on his training was not so very different from the value of all the
- Title: World Economy: Lecture X
Matching lines:
- object of economic value. In the further course, as we saw, organised
- direct economic value in Labour (this has already been explained),
- nevertheless, it is Labour which sets economic value in motion. The
- worked upon; and the elaboration which gives it its value is the real
- reason why the object of economic value begins to move. It is so at
- namely this: There must be something to bring the values into
- other in the other increase in value. By the bare process of
- exchange, the things exchanged on both sides become of greater value.
- situations. The increase of value can only come about through that
- money has a greater value in my hands than it has in his; while in his
- as a whole, the commodity has a greater value in his hands than it has
- process, so that here, too, Labour or work gives value to the objects,
- value? Is there anything in the economic process comparable, as it
- immediate experiences of those concerned what the value of any
- wherein the value of a product may consist. We can only say; A product
- the economic process; and its value at a given place must be judged
- Title: World Economy: Lecture XI
Matching lines:
- equivalent of every product. There must be the money-value,
- commodity-value and the money-value is fluctuating. A product is worth
- They lose their value, and after a certain lapse of time are no longer
- lectures, that it must be constantly devalued. Indeed, it is just
- be devalued. The Physiocrats made the following mistake. They lived in
- a time when land (as is of course still the case) had capital value.
- value somehow, people will have to be brought into the country and the
- Labour elaborated and thus receives an economic value.
- that the values, primarily created as food-values within the purely
- Title: World Economy: Lecture XII
Matching lines:
- greater or less value to a certain sum of money. I mean value not only
- objective processes. But the value of money is very important even in
- terms of money, and that which constitutes the essential value of the
- place money must have a universally recognised value. But the question
- have universally recognised value you have said nothing. You have
- possible for it to have a high value. For this property makes money
- receives an economic value when it enters into the general economic
- that Labour only receives an economic value through the way it is
- organised or divided, and finally, that Capital only receives a value
- such receives its value by the free process of circulation. And now we
- would involve constant fluctuations of value in the process of
- foundation on which to estimate its value nay, you have no
- other need to estimate its value than this: How much will you get for
- must estimate the pound of meat according to its consumption-value.
- Your money may in the meantime have acquired a different value in
- value of the pound of meat cannot, properly speaking, change in course
- can only have a value for a certain period of time. For it goes bad.
- has a fixed numerical value under all conditions. No matter how it may
- value and is supposed to keep it permanently. But in reality it does
- its qualities for human life, must retain the same value (for general
- Maximum number of matches per file exceeded.
- Title: World Economy: Lecture XIII
Matching lines:
- economic values and which at the same time show how very difficult it
- is to value in the economic sense that which comes into the process
- exactly fictitious, but put in such a way that its value as an example
- value more than any other in the near future. So he buys
- significant reshuffling of economic values. Now what were the factors
- that contributed to this reshuffling of values? In the first place,
- the reshuffling of values, the bringing of it all into the hands of a
- can become, how many factors converge in the nature of value and how
- decisive importance for a true estimate of values which it will
- We saw how Nature, to acquire an economic value, must be transformed
- value to begin with. Now let us try to find our way into this picture.
- Values arise by the joining together of the material of Nature, if we
- function of value-formation. For instance, we can
- said; we see the economic value arise where the Nature-product is
- such a thing as the redistribution of values plays a considerable part
- in the movement of economic values. How shall we find anything
- Nature times Labour as the value which comes up from the
- in the economic sense will come to be valued economically.
- value? How will these things be valued in the whole economic
- forth economic values. If there were no need for sermons and school
- Maximum number of matches per file exceeded.
- Title: World Economy: Lecture XIV
Matching lines:
- the money has real value (on the contrary I believe that up to a point
- such a way that the value increased up to that year, and after that
- seller is concerned: his relative need for money, the value of the
- utility-value [Gebrauchswert] of money, if we may call it so, work in
- parallel process to goods, commodities, real values, which also wear
- between the real value and the token value? Truly we may
- respect to the values circulating through the economic life. As we
- begin the economic process at this point. Here, we may say, the value
- picture and thereby provides a value, a value for which real interest
- is felt (otherwise it would not be a value). If the production of the
- healthy, the artist must value it in this way: It must save him the
- ask how the two values are to be equated. The problem is to find
- something which will enable us to assess economic values one against
- begins from Nature; values are created there by the application of
- Labour; and it is these values taken to some definite point
- values. And these tickets must be handed over to those who need them,
- exchange values.
- in fact this which gives to each individual thing its exchange value.
- the actual exchange values, you would find a very close approximation.
- conditions under which the natural exchange values will arise. And if
- Maximum number of matches per file exceeded.
- Title: Rosicrucianism/Initiation: Lecture III: The Time of Transition
Matching lines:
- bold, brave spirit, he was one of those men who can value ideas, who
- Title: Rosicrucianism/Initiation: Lecture V: Occult Schools in the 18th and First Half of the 19th Century
Matching lines:
- value to us, were known and understood even as late as the nineteenth
- Title: Lecture: Festivals and The Mysteries. The Adonis Mystery. The Easter Thought
Matching lines:
- humanity. These things will show us the immense values which mankind
- Title: Lecture: The Mysteries of Ephesus The Aristotelian Categories
Matching lines:
- Iphigenia, or anything you value highly. Think of the rich
- Title: Significant Facts: Lecture II: Ancient Occult Magic. The Ahasver Mystery.
Matching lines:
- things are signs of the task and of the value to be attached to the
- Title: Spiritual Science and Medicine -- Lecture I
Matching lines:
- from Spiritual Science all that can be of value to physicians. It is
- give special attention to everything that may be of value to the
- apparent how little value in the long run, adheres to the results of
- Title: Spiritual Science and Medicine -- Lecture II
Matching lines:
- Osteology and Muscular Pathology of greater value for medicine than
- after-treatment if the whole treatment is to be of real value. And you
- Title: Spiritual Science and Medicine -- Lecture V
Matching lines:
- contains something of great significance and value. The plant sinks
- Title: Spiritual Science and Medicine -- Lecture VI
Matching lines:
- material value, but on account of its relationship with the Sun, and
- Title: Spiritual Science and Medicine -- Lecture IX
Matching lines:
- education — a form of self-education of great value for medical smell
- Title: Spiritual Science and Medicine -- Lecture X
Matching lines:
- strawberries. In such persons, the amazing value of the wild
- comparative value of prepared, i.e., cooked food and food in its raw
- Title: Spiritual Science and Medicine -- Lecture XI
Matching lines:
- actually only the value of an activator for the generation of internal
- value, even once to have realised and thought over this matter. The
- Title: Spiritual Science and Medicine -- Lecture XVII
Matching lines:
- great social value, and all that might tend to repress this healthy
- and one of great value for the whole reform of medical thinking that
- Title: Spiritual Science and Medicine -- Lecture XIX
Matching lines:
- same time an indication of its therapeutic value, and can use our own
- Title: Spiritual Science and Medicine -- Lecture XX
Matching lines:
- Now if such a fact were estimated at its true value, the ground would
- Title: Lecture: Curative Education: Lecture 3
Matching lines:
- real value can be said about fits if we do not know that at the
- Title: Lecture: Curative Education: Lecture 12
Matching lines:
- attention upon his own I, values his I too highly. What does it mean
- Title: Lecture: The Cycle of the Year: Lecture III
Matching lines:
- Easter thought loses nothing of value if the Michaelmas thought is
- actually attach primary value, I might say, to participating in what
- Title: Anthroposophic Movement: Lecture One: The Homeless Souls
Matching lines:
- something which will reflect his values. We have already been
- Title: Anthroposophic Movement: Lecture Eight: Responsibility to Anthroposophy
Matching lines:
- Title: Art/Mystery Wisdom: Lecture Three
Matching lines:
- significance and value. But on the other hand it is one of
- Title: Art/Mystery Wisdom: Lecture Seven
Matching lines:
- way on earth. This gives morality a very real value and makes
- Title: Evolution, Earth, Man: Lecture VIII
Matching lines:
- the other hand, sets value on a return to the spirit, but a return to
- Title: Evolution, Earth, Man: Lecture IX
Matching lines:
- is valued so highly today. People become more clever, certainly —
- far higher value than his own cleverness. One cannot grasp what
- Title: Evolution, Earth, Man: Lecture X
Matching lines:
- not do at all! The plants that have the greatest therapeutic value
- value is gradually discovered. As a rule, the soil in gardens where
- Title: Evolution, Earth, Man: Lecture XIII
Matching lines:
- potatoes for their nutritional value? He makes a laboratory
- Spiritual science will show you what nutritive value
- Title: On the Development of Human Culture: Lecture II
Matching lines:
- nonsense when people harp on that; anthroposophy sets value on
- Title: Nine Lectures on Bees: Lecture II
Matching lines:
- value to the bees. It is by no means pleasant for the bee to have to
- times been highly valued; in olden times especially, the bee was held
- Title: Nine Lectures on Bees: Lecture III
Matching lines:
- weather, and then only drones are hatched which have no value. Also,
- Title: Nine Lectures on Bees: Lecture IV
Matching lines:
- value? Science analyses certain food-substances to discover how many
- achieved something of great value with her honey treatments. What she
- old peasant rules are of about the same value as the saying:
- Title: Nine Lectures on Bees: Lecture V
Matching lines:
- Bee-keeping is so beautiful and of such great value that one cannot
- Title: Nine Lectures on Bees: Lecture VI
Matching lines:
- in this mechanical manner is valueless; one must be quite clear that
- Indeed, gentlemen, this will be of immense value, for the general
- value to such matters. Those whose children do not suffer from
- be of inestimable value.
- into this honey which is of so great value to human life. You will best
- time arrive at points of view of true value.
- Title: Nine Lectures on Bees: Lecture VII
Matching lines:
- but such matters have no great value in practical bee-keeping.
- Title: Nine Lectures on Bees: Lecture VIII
Matching lines:
- substances such as are usually called life-substances, are highly valued
- Title: Nine Lectures on Bees: Lecture IX
Matching lines:
- valued as the domestic bee, because it is mostly rather a nuisance.
- Title: Art of Lecturing: Lecture III
Matching lines:
- Germany, “surplus-value social democrats,”
- truth per se. It speaks of the values of morality and art — but
- ideology and class consciousness, is the concept of surplus value.
- value is attached to the economic product; of this value, he receives
- else, He designates the latter as “surplus value,” and
- occupies himself with this increment value, of which he has the
- feeling that he is deprived of it insofar as the value of the fruits
- the first place through its reality, through the value-producing
- economy. This value-producing economy does itself produce the surplus
- value out of the economic life. Through the balance of power that
- But we have spread an abstraction, the monetary value, over
- that, let us say, a poet has a net value of ten-thousand francs for a
- write his novel until it is finished. So this is the value of a poet
- four concepts, ideology, class consciousness, surplus value, capacity
- spiritual matters are over-valued — have only developed along
- possible value, the monetary yield, in other words, when the whole
- so on. But, oh, how the value of these spiritual properties has
- Title: Art of Lecturing: Lecture IV
Matching lines:
- the past because the old values are good, so one thinks, and one must
- to value the unchanging franc, which, as it were, has become
- certainly never speak to them about anything that has lasting value
- Title: Art of Lecturing: Lecture V
Matching lines:
- of money or its monetary value, until this reduction has
- an actual course of events. There were values contained in
- this check, which is money and has monetary value. It
- represented values. If you imagine how at that time
- and, instead, places that much more value on mental
- value for this practicing. You make progress if you take the
- value on this, then he labors under the same misconception as
- least put some value on the organism of speech and the genius
- Title: The Development of Thought from the 4th to the 19th Century - 2
Matching lines:
- external ordnance of the Church which is fulfilled in baptism. The value
- Title: Boundaries of Natural Science: Lecture III
Matching lines:
- have less cause to undervalue modern science than anyone. On the contrary,
- they know how to value it at its full worth. And many people —
- Title: Boundaries of Natural Science: Lecture IV
Matching lines:
- and I placed no value on any concurrence with the twaddle arising out
- Title: Boundaries of Natural Science: Lecture VI
Matching lines:
- concerning the natural world — for us at present this has value
- Title: Boundaries of Natural Science: Lecture VII
Matching lines:
- beings of the West, chiefly value, then we do not assimilate the essence
- Title: Boundaries of Natural Science: Lecture VIII
Matching lines:
- this. Natural science must not be undervalued! Indeed, we must seek
- Title: Anthro Medical Therapy: Lecture VII
Matching lines:
- the perception of the remedial value of a substance to be
- Title: Anthro Medical Therapy: Lecture VIII
Matching lines:
- this theory has no more value. Natural science must also pay
- Title: The Building at Dornach: Lecture II
Matching lines:
- Voltaire practically no value is attached to this work. But
- Title: The Building at Dornach: Lecture III
Matching lines:
- he serves, or even to the conception of the value of ideals
- Title: Ways/Architecture: Lecture I: The Acanthus Leaf
Matching lines:
- first and then carries them out, they will have no value. If
- one creates from concepts and ideas nothing of value will
- true, but what is the value of them? It is all far better in
- Title: Ways/Architecture: Lecture II: The House of Speech
Matching lines:
- Everything in the building will have an inner value. Every
- part of the larynx has inner value; no words could be uttered
- Title: Ways/Architecture: Lecture III: The New Conception of Architecture
Matching lines:
- it would be of no more value than if it were said that Maria
- Title: Ways/Architecture: Lecture V: The Creative World of Colour
Matching lines:
- any way to speak of the value of Carstens' art, nor to
- Title: Art of Lecturing: Lecture III
Matching lines:
- Germany, “surplus-value social democrats,”
- Title: Art of Lecturing: Lecture IV
Matching lines:
- secure the old. The old values are good! One must not shake
- Title: Art of Lecturing: Lecture V
Matching lines:
- of money or its monetary value, until this reduction has
- an actual course of events. There were values contained in
- this check, which is money and has monetary value. It
- represented values. If you imagine how at that time
- and, instead, places that much more value on mental
- value for this practicing. You make progress if you take the
- value on this, then he labors under the same misconception as
- least put some value on the organism of speech and the genius
- Title: Christmas Conference: Lecture 8: Continuation of the Foundation Meeting, 27 December, 10 a.m.
Matching lines:
- two realms are placed side by side as being of equal value in
- Title: Christmas Conference: Lecture 9: Continuation of the Foundation Meeting, 28 December, 10 a.m.
Matching lines:
- attach great value to the meeting taking place at Christmas
- Title: Christmas Conference: Lecture 16: Open Discussion of Swiss Delegates
Matching lines:
- thing that could have happened that one of our most valued
- Title: Christmas Conference: Lecture 20: On the Right Entry into the Spiritual World: The Responsibility Incumbent on Us
Matching lines:
- and that had a value for the gods, then the Guardian said:
- of the gods and they are of no value to the gods. That is why
- valueless for the gods are met, when they cross the threshold
- gathered ideas which have value for the gods and which are
- Title: Awakening to Community: Lecture VIII
Matching lines:
- no value; I am saying that they were excellent and vitally necessary.
- Title: Opponents to Anthroposophy
Matching lines:
- an opposing truth but stupidities, because then their values
- constructive eclecticism built on values of the past.
- Title: Eurythmy as Visible Singing: Lecture 4: The Progression of Musical Phrases; Swinging Over; the Bar Line
Matching lines:
- but on the contrary should place the greatest value upon the way the
- Title: Eurthmy as Visible Singing: Lecture 5: Choral Eurythmy
Matching lines:
- will be valued, for they are a means whereby the actual essence of musical
- Title: Eurythmy as Visible Singing: Lecture 6: The Sustained Note; the Rest; Discords
Matching lines:
- you have a transition which, in its note values, already presents a
- Title: Eurythmy as Visible Singing: Lecture 8: Pitch (ethos and pathos), Note Values, Dynamics, Changes of Tempo
Matching lines:
- Pitch (ethos and pathos), Note Values, Dynamics, Changes of Tempo
- Lecture 8:Pitch (Ethos and Pathos), Note Values,
- we must distinguish note values and dynamics. The three elements of
- pitch, note values and dynamics really give us the inner content of
- Note values: note values
- but lives in its own element in note values. From what I have said about
- note values. For it is indeed a fact that feeling is active to the greatest
- extent in note values. You need only recall in a feeling-way what you
- to our assistance when it is a question of experiencing note values;
- In note values a certain
- is expressed in note values. For this reason an aesthetic and pleasing
- There can be no doubt about the fact that in note values we have to
- Note values bring the human being into a certain connection with the
- values by a use of the head, looking either towards or away. The dynamics
- for pitch, for note values, and so on, but the body must make an abrupt
- Title: Chance/Necessity/Providence: Lecture 1: Probability and Chance
Matching lines:
- value to be derived from the realization that truth is hard to get at
- Title: Chance/Necessity/Providence: Lecture 6: Imaginative Cognition Leaves Insights of Natural Science Behind
Matching lines:
- Indeed, we might say that our sense of the value of things on the physical
- such ridicule upon us for the value we attach to much that exists on
- Title: Child's Changing Consciousness: Lecture I
Matching lines:
- value for the whole of one's life. It is important that
- Statistics do have their value, but to believe that they are
- value has emerged, a rather amusing theory has been formulated
- Title: Child's Changing Consciousness: Lecture IV
Matching lines:
- attitudes in our religion lessons, because it has little value
- Title: Child's Changing Consciousness: Lecture V
Matching lines:
- of immensely important values for life, as anyone can see who
- Title: Child's Changing Consciousness: Lecture VI
Matching lines:
- wants to base the value of work on the human energy spent
- the value of work consists of calculating the food consumption
- necessary for work to be done. This way of assessing the value
- Title: Child's Changing Consciousness: Lecture VIII:
Matching lines:
- value for later life, because this would be
- Title: Child's Changing Consciousness: Introduction to a Eurythmy Performance
Matching lines:
- places the main value on the first syllable or on both
- Title: Cosmic Prehistory: Lecture II: Lucifer and Ahriman
Matching lines:
- its value to life, in our thirties if we were left to our human life
- Title: How Can Mankind Find Christ Again?: Lecture 5: The Change in the Human Soul Constitution
Matching lines:
- attaches so little value to all that is traditional. These traditional
- Title: How Can Mankind Find Christ Again?: Lecture 7: Experiences of the Old Year and Outlook over the New Year (part 1)
Matching lines:
- human beings, this insistence of ours on the value of our own opinion!
- Title: Community Life: Address 1: The Goesch-Sprengel Situation - Part 1
Matching lines:
- are the least of our fellow human beings of irreplaceable value to us
- Title: Community Life: Address 2: The Goesch-Sprengel Situation - Part 2
Matching lines:
- things at face value and not reading more into them than is actually
- Title: Migrations ...: Lecture 1: The Social Homunculus
Matching lines:
- values from human labour. That this is possible, can't be grasped least
- with economic values. Plato and Aristotle still considered the existence
- accord to the separation of human labour from economic values. Even as the
- value, or merchandise as such, from that which has now become crystallised
- that manufactured goods do not contain human labour as an economic value.
- to work for you. Because you possess an object of value in this picture,
- can be sold. According to these economists, the economic value of a
- sides to-day; one declares that the economic value consists in the amount
- with the value which it possesses in the economic structure, in the
- definitions. One definition is that the economic value of a merchandise
- goods. The other definition is that the economic value of goods consists
- were really valued according to the labour employed for their
- economic circulation goods are valued neither in the one nor in the
- Suppose that the picture of which I have spoken, valued at £500
- Now, if you wish to define the economic value of the picture, you will
- Mendelssohn. As far as they are concerned, the economic value of the
- painter, the immediate value of the picture of course consists in the
- definition of the picture's value cannot be applied, if we bear in mind
- you may say that the economic value of something consists in the amount of
- workman, you may say that the economic value of something consists in the
- Maximum number of matches per file exceeded.
- Title: Migrations ...: Lecture 4: Three Conditions Which Determine Man's Position
Matching lines:
- that any excess value should be handed over to the community. My dear
- way of thinking in such a direction. What is surplus value? In the eyes
- of the marxistic proletariat, surplus values, or profits, are something
- order, is the abolition of surplus values, of profits. But one of its
- This represents, in fact, one of its ideals. Why? Because surplus values
- Title: The Social Question as a Question of Consciousness: Lecture 2
Matching lines:
- let us say in money — since we have converted our values into
- land tapes its value according to its productivity, that is, in accordance
- a clear concept of this simple land value, since in the modern capitalistic
- value for the people has been blurred by phantoms in the form of mortgage
- of an eye. But think of it simply as the economic value of the land
- are established where one individual can acquire more value than another.
- Title: The Social Question as a Question of Consciousness: Lecture 3
Matching lines:
- have come when the value of spiritual work and the work of the artist
- Title: The Social Question as a Question of Consciousness: Lecture 4
Matching lines:
- struggles. The third thing is the theory of surplus value, that is,
- the theory that surplus value arises through the unpaid labour of the
- theory of surplus value. The worker recognises that it is he who actually
- naturally thinks that all the surplus value goes to the capitalists
- surplus value. For what is surplus value? It is everything produced
- there were no surplus value, that everything went to the worker for
- labour. It cannot be a question therefore of the surplus value going
- bring surplus value and manual work into agreement. This will happen
- some understanding of where the surplus value goes.
- thought. I want the surplus value. That is the egoistic principle that
- also wanted the surplus value. Once again the proletariat takes on the
- of the soul, in the consciousness, the theory of surplus value which
- is eminently anti-social. For everyone who takes surplus value to his
- Title: The Social Question as a Question of Consciousness: Lecture 5
Matching lines:
- then we gave our attention to the theory of surplus value which has worked
- — in the striving to put all surplus value to egoistic uses.
- again put forward. Think of the question of surplus value to which we
- theory of surplus value rest? It rests actually upon what I was describing
- at present — that without the production of surplus value no subsistence
- will be forthcoming. But he must perceive how surplus value arises.
- see that without the creation of surplus value there can be no spiritual
- value. When the social organism is healthy, however, all this comes
- clear that taxes must come out of surplus value; while in the common
- Title: The Social Question as a Question of Consciousness: Lecture 6
Matching lines:
- a certain value, here it is worth very little. With the money question
- is united that of standard values. In big things and small, people are
- is a commodity or a mere token of value. One person deems it a commodity
- standard of value. Thus the medium of exchange is there and the carpenter
- stating its value. And there are economists who consider it quite unnecessary
- that the corresponding value in gold should be lying at the back. There
- are also, as you may know, individual States having only paper values
- derive its commodity value in the commodity market. The present curious
- dependence expressing itself in the remarkable relation between value
- wages rise, values fall, so that the worker often derives no benefit
- same time, which means that a change takes place in values, no other
- in values. The answer, and the only answer, is that as long as they
- with values at all, but leave the control of money and values to the
- world the value of which for everyday life can be, and is, very differently
- true a world-outlook is it cannot have universal value. There can be
- Title: The Social Question as a Question of Consciousness: Lecture 7
Matching lines:
- today considered of least value. What I have just been stating holds
- good for these; it does not hold good for what is of value. When today
- The goods valued least by modern mankind, the spiritual goods, are thus
- Title: The Social Question as a Question of Consciousness: Lecture 8
Matching lines:
- an absolute value; things derive their value from the place where they
- Title: The Karma of the Individual and the Collective Life of Our Time, Goethe
Matching lines:
- right sense and in the true light the value of these first
- Title: The Cyclic Movement of Sleeping and Waking
Matching lines:
- value so little, —we value it little because it is the
- starting-point of what we shall only value in the future. It is
- his calling that he creates the future values. Not through what
- Title: The Apocalypse: Lecture IV
Matching lines:
- same value as the rest of the planets. The sun was really
- Title: The Apocalypse: Lecture V
Matching lines:
- one's life and reduces one's moral value, and one will see that
- them in such a manner that it reduces their moral value
- curiosity doesn't have much value.
- Title: The Apocalypse: Lecture VIII
Matching lines:
- writes these letters with their numerical values and one
- Title: The Apocalypse: Lecture XVIII
Matching lines:
- committed suicide or went crazy. But it has no real value to
- Title: History of Art: Lecture 12: Greek and Early Christian Art, Symbolic Signs, the Mystery of Gold
Matching lines:
- highest value.
- in order to look behind the door of death to the eternal value of the
- Title: Real Being of Man
Matching lines:
- points clearly to pre-existence. One must not undervalue the
- Title: Mystery Trinity: Part 1, Lecture 1
Matching lines:
- conference on “spiritual values in education and social life,”
- Title: Mystery Trinity: Part 1, Lecture 2
Matching lines:
- conference on “spiritual values in education and social life,”
- Title: Mystery Trinity: Part 1, Lecture 3
Matching lines:
- conference on “spiritual values in education and social life,”
- Title: Mystery Trinity: Part 1, Lecture 4
Matching lines:
- conference on “spiritual values in education and social life,”
- Title: Course for Priests: Lecture II
Matching lines:
- undervalue how strong the present day untruthfulness, the inner
- Title: Course for Priests: Lecture IV
Matching lines:
- their feeling-value in the course of time. It is not possible
- not come down to directly taking the sentimental value attached
- Title: Redemption of Thinking: Lecture I:
Matching lines:
- apostolic succession.” Augustine now places much value on
- Title: Redemption of Thinking: Lecture III:
Matching lines:
- it to a reality, which philosophers of values like Windelband
- of the epistemological value of that which lives in us as a
- Title: Anthroposophic Movement (1938): Lecture III: Critical Judgment and Colour of the Times
Matching lines:
- written, and to which he himself attached no great value, and
- as a rule they are very valueless things that one finds
- Isis Unveiled, however, was not something valueless.
- Title: Anthroposophic Movement (1938): Lecture VI: The Two First Periods of the Anthroposophic Movement
Matching lines:
- anything could possibly have any value unless it were conceived
- Title: Anthroposophic Movement (1938): Lecture VIII: Conclusions: The Anthroposophical Society and its Future Conduct.
Matching lines:
- the first in his Revaluation, of all Values, to write a
- Values; first book, The Anti-Christ; —
- Title: First Class, Vol. I: Lesson 1
Matching lines:
- humanity and this fact should not cause us to undervalue those
- Title: First Class, Vol. I: Lesson 6
Matching lines:
- is worthy on earth, for the earthly values.
- But love of earthly values
- But love of earthly values
- love of earthly values
- But love of earthly values
- Title: Health and Illness I: Lecture II: Illnesses Occurring in the Different Periods of Life
Matching lines:
- Schools must again teach people something of value.
- Title: Health and Illness I: Lecture III: The Formation of the Human Ear
Matching lines:
- about, its purpose is to present something of value that can be
- Title: Health and Illness I: Lecture IV: The Thyroid Gland and Hormones
Matching lines:
- have the medicinal value it would have had the entire gland
- Then these manipulations wouldn't be valued quite so highly,
- Title: East and West, and the Roman Church: Lecture I
Matching lines:
- end of her life she learned to value their technical methods, their
- reads his Homer and his Aeschylus, and values them in a certain
- Title: Health and Illness II: Lecture VI: Diphtheria and Influenza; Crossed Eyes
Matching lines:
- proper care has great value.
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume I: Lecture I
Matching lines:
- little or no value to one who can think exactly. I was impressed, not
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume I: Lecture III
Matching lines:
- human value. It cripples you in soul. You must make good again this
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume I: Lecture IV
Matching lines:
- insight into and knowledge of karma only gains real value when it
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume I: Lecture V
Matching lines:
- out of theory is of very little value. In fact, you should only speak
- is no value in theorising about these things. Therefore I say, when
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume I: Lecture VIII
Matching lines:
- assess these things at their true value is a matter of vision, not of
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume I: Lecture IX
Matching lines:
- value in his life somewhat in the following way. — Eduard von
- value for any human being to know of such connections and apply them
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume I: Lecture XI
Matching lines:
- mixed more with people — one used to meet men who valued
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume II: Lecture II
Matching lines:
- they would attach no value to anything that was not a concrete fact
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume II: Lecture V
Matching lines:
- experienced? — A life abounding in things of external value
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume II: Lecture VI
Matching lines:
- life. For the study of karma has real value only when it flows into
- they no longer have the same value for me. Many things that I enjoyed
- value for him. For this, however, it is necessary that he should not
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume II: Lecture XV
Matching lines:
- birth, and has there an inherent value.
- Title: Lecture: Karmic Relationships, Volume III: Lecture V: Spiritual Conditions of Evolution Leading up to the Anthroposophical Movement
Matching lines:
- words. What they valued most was the inward experience,
- Title: Lecture: Karmic Relationships, Volume III: Lecture VII: The New Age of Michael
Matching lines:
- they know how to value what is taking place, as they
- Title: Lecture: Karmic Relationships, Volume III: Lecture XI: Evolution of the Michael Principle Throughout the Ages. The Split in the Cosmic Intelligence
Matching lines:
- that the thing of outstanding value in man's soul, namely
- Union for the Realisation of Spiritual Values).
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume IV: Lecture IV
Matching lines:
- threads of spiritual life which are indeed of the greatest value for
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume IV: Lecture VIII
Matching lines:
- probably be of great and deep value to you all. Though I almost shudder
- plant, of every stone. This conception only has real value if it
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume IV: Lecture IX
Matching lines:
- estrangement between the two, for the man was more inclined to value the
- Title: Spiritual Development: Lecture III: Man's Faculty of Cognition in the Etheric World
Matching lines:
- for what are real human values. It
- competent when dealing with chair-values.
- Title: Things Past and Present: Lecture VI: Death and Resurrection
Matching lines:
- which are without any spiritual value. Then we see that this
- Title: Things Past and Present: Lecture VIII: Thomas More and His Utopia
Matching lines:
- objectively evaluate the value of the Anglican Church which
- Title: Memory and Habit: Lecture II
Matching lines:
- of Lucifer and Ahriman is of no value whatever. If, however, we are
- 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.
Matching lines:
- misunderstood and immediately mixed up with value judgements. What I
- previously-held values instead of judging objectively.
- of value judgements that might insinuate themselves into our
- earthly sphere has as much value as the heavenly. I did not want
- their value. Thus, deep beneath our outer surface we carry this within
- Title: Lecture: Riddle of Humanity: Lecture Six: The Transformation of the Physical Body into the Head of the Next Incarnation. The Cosmic Significance of Human Knowledge.
Matching lines:
- its value as food for human beings. For if one were to question a
- Title: Lecture: Riddle of Humanity: Lecture Eleven: Memory and Habit as Metamorphoses of Former Spiritual Experiences that were Subject to Luciferic and Ahrimanic Influences.
Matching lines:
- valued lightly. I have already drawn your attention to this mistake,
- Title: Historical Necessity: Lecture 1: On the Functions of the Nervous System
Matching lines:
- feeling and cosmic ideas. These things are only of value if
- excessively, owing to the war. A “valued thought”
- “over-valued” when the nervous system is
- “over-valued.” The “valued” thought
- is sound, and from the valued thought one must conclude that
- the nerves also are sound. But if the thought is over-valued,
- “over-valued”; the nerve process is on one side
- and the idea “over-valued” on the other. People
- For instance, it would be an over-valued thought if I were to
- an over-valued thought. But it need not be
- “over-valued” if I really happened to be the King
- content. Hence the thought itself is not over-valued;
- that this man has formed the idea of over-valued thoughts.
- over-valued thought rules consciousness to such an extent
- bridling and limiting the over-valued thoughts. Thus a
- immediately connected with the center of the over-valued
- expression “over-valued thoughts,” we must accept
- that is determined by over-valued thoughts.
- Title: Historical Necessity: Lecture 3: Our Life with the Dead
Matching lines:
- between people. All this really has the value of a dream, of
- Even in art people no longer attach value to what arises
- ethical-moral value within the life of the community, we
- Title: Symptom 2 Reality: Lecture II: Symptomatology of Recent Centuries
Matching lines:
- value it owed in former times to the instinctive life,
- of surplus value and the theory of the class
- surplus value.
- when put to use, creates a greater value than its own value.
- The difference between the value of labour and its product,
- i.e. the surplus value, goes into the pocket of the
- capitalist. Such is the Marxist theory of surplus value and
- realized, namely, by eliminating surplus value and bringing
- superstructure; secondly that the real evil is surplus value
- Title: Symptom 2 Reality: Lecture III: Characteristics of Historical Symptoms in Recent Times
Matching lines:
- only be of value if we learn how to transform these forces by
- the evolution of mankind. Then they have positive value; in
- of value when permeated with spirit.
- Title: Symptom 2 Reality: Lecture IV: The Historical Significance of the Scientific Mode of Thinking
Matching lines:
- having equal value; the study itself will show that, in order
- Title: Symptom 2 Reality: Lecture VI: Brief Reflections on the Publication of the New Edition of 'The Philosophy of Freedom'
Matching lines:
- necessary, also has its ethical value. I am convinced that if
- spiritual values in a meeting attended by hundreds of my
- Title: Symptom 2 Reality: Lecture VII: Incidental Reflections on the Occasion of the New Edition of 'Goethes Weltanschauung'
Matching lines:
- exists super-sensible vision is of little value and is seldom
- valued. Outwardly and inwardly life in Weimar was wholly
- Title: Symptom 2 Reality: Lecture VIII: Religious Impulses of the Fifth Post-Atlantean Epoch
Matching lines:
- higher value and greater importance, saying:
- Title: Symptom 2 Reality: Lecture IX: The Relation Between the Deeper European Impulses and Those of the Present Day
Matching lines:
- organization is only of value if it is created imperceptibly
- valueless unless one is aware of these things. We must summon
- Title: Fundamental Social: Lecture 2: The Logic of Thought and the Logic of Reality
Matching lines:
- beings have no real value, but that we only create them for
- we look at the symptoms, and know how to value them, the
- Title: Fundamental Social: Lecture 3: The Metamorphosis of Intelligence
Matching lines:
- valueless. Insight into these things, that is the one thing
- Title: Fundamental Social: Lecture 4: The New Revelation of the Spirit
Matching lines:
- revelations will gradually become equal in value to the old
- Generally the greatest value is attached, in an antiquated
- incorporation into the living values of our time. Hence it is
- Title: Fundamental Social: Lecture 5: Understand One-Another
Matching lines:
- impulse to judge and value in the way we judge and value an
- another value — quite another meaning than of being
- judgments of relative value, in one way or another. At least,
- Title: Mysteries of Light: Lecture I: The Dualism in the Life of the Present Time
Matching lines:
- value only when it becomes the instrument for plunging down into the
- Title: Mysteries of Light: Lecture II: The Development of Architecture
Matching lines:
- that the value of the things advocated consists in being able to
- Title: Mysteries of Light: Lecture IV: The Old Mysteries of Light, Space, and Earth
Matching lines:
- when he has formed them, he thinks they have absolute value
- feeling for the fact that every thought that is to be of value to the
- Title: Man: Hieroglyph: Lecture Two
Matching lines:
- dimensions of equal value? We certainly speak of length, breadth and
- Title: Man: Hieroglyph: Lecture Three
Matching lines:
- value with the Zodiac, any more than we could conceive the plane which
- Title: Man: Hieroglyph: Lecture Five
Matching lines:
- The following example will show you the value of some of the
- way, as an example of the general value of human judgements.
- Title: Man: Hieroglyph: Lecture Six
Matching lines:
- talk is, as a matter of fact, not of much value. For if one man walks
- Title: Man: Hieroglyph: Lecture Nine
Matching lines:
- about these things should not be awarded any special value, for these
- Title: Man: Hieroglyph: Lecture Twelve
Matching lines:
- moral human value and the Christian Impulse in the evolution of the
- Title: Responsibility of Man: Lecture II
Matching lines:
- All that is of no real value for the knowledge of man as such.
- value. The moment one knows that the human being with his
- Title: Responsibility of Man: Lecture IV
Matching lines:
- must not undervalue the significance which lies in the word.
- Title: Responsibility of Man: Lecture V
Matching lines:
- only instinctive desires have a value, those desires which we
- those things in detail. One must be able to value the moral in
- Title: Materialism/Anthroposophy: Lecture I
Matching lines:
- full value, you will gradually learn to apprehend the facts
- this high value on the physical body, could have come to such
- stenography, they did not attach so great a value to
- Title: Materialism/Anthroposophy: Lecture II
Matching lines:
- say that they also have a positive aspect and are of value in
- Title: Materialism/Anthroposophy: Lecture VII
Matching lines:
- simplest human level and, at the same time, are valued by
- Title: Materialism/Anthroposophy: Lecture X
Matching lines:
- valued as insights and that they let flow into the impulses
- Title: Materialism/Anthroposophy: Lecture XII
Matching lines:
- basis of these traces will be attained only if less value is
- true value is sought in the forms of thought and feeling that
- Title: Materialism/Anthroposophy: Lecture XV
Matching lines:
- value that we place on personality today was certainly not
- why people did not place much value on personality in that
- Title: Materialism/Anthroposophy: Lecture XVII
Matching lines:
- Egyptians really placed no special value on the soul element
- increasing value on this soul element that lights up between
- Title: Therapeutic Insights: Lecture IV
Matching lines:
- them as organs of equal value, since both consist of cells,
- Title: Therapeutic Insights: Lecture V
Matching lines:
- of atoms, to calculate, by inserting a specific value, when,
- Title: Cosmosophy 1: Lecture IX
Matching lines:
- could not do anything with it because he primarily values the
- Title: Cosmosophy 1: Lecture XI
Matching lines:
- standpoint arising out of the study of the value of freedom
- find his own value and see himself within the cosmos as a
- Gospel will never lose its value. It will acquire an
- ever-greater value, but to the Gospel must be added the
- Title: Lecture: Supersensible Influences: Lecture II: The Education of Man through Modern Intellectualism, -or- Chartres and the Mysteries of the Templars
Matching lines:
- nobody realises is that his task is to sow the oats! Whatever the value
- Title: Man/World of Stars: Lecture II: Moral Qualities and the Life After Death. Windows of the Earth
Matching lines:
- attitude is just as if a man were to doubt the value of
- Title: Man/World of Stars: Lecture VI: Spiritualization of Knowledge of Space. The Mission of Michael
Matching lines:
- discomfort. He still attaches value to it in music; but even
- Title: Spiritual Communion: Lecture III: From Man's Living Together with the Course of Cosmic Existence Arises the Cosmic Cult
Matching lines:
- scientific thought place such a high value upon theory
- Title: Esoteric Studies: Easter: Lecture II: Moon-Birth and Sun-Birth
Matching lines:
- therapeutic value — sun-baths and the like — but only in
- Title: Esoteric Studies: Easter: Lecture IV: Decline of the Mystery System and the Rise of Freedom, I-A-O is Man, Aristotle's Categories
Matching lines:
- — anything you value very highly — and reflect on its rich
- Title: Festival of Easter: Lecture 1: The Mysteries of Adonis, -or- The Evolution of Our Festivals from the Ancient Mysteries
Matching lines:
- the festival of Easter, we realise the very special value that
- Title: Festival of Easter: Lecture 2: Moon-Birth and Sun-Birth
Matching lines:
- of thought, feeling, and will; he learnt what was of value on
- earth. Knowledge of Nature was not only of value on earth; man
- Title: Festival of Easter: Lecture 4: Decline of the Mystery System and the Rise of Freedom, I-A-O is Man, Aristotle's Categories
Matching lines:
- on which you set a high value, and think of its rich and mighty
- Title: Occult Movement: Lecture Two: Mediumistic Methods
Matching lines:
- symptomatically they have a value not to be overlooked. The
- Title: Occult Movement: Lecture Five: The Eighth Sphere
Matching lines:
- value than as if one were to say: human beings develop from
- Title: Occult Movement: Lecture Six: The Dangers of Aberation Along the Path into the Spiritual World
Matching lines:
- dare not proceed further, for the incredible loses its value
- a kind of adjunct and the chief value attached to the man.
- Title: Occult Movement: Lecture Eight: The Purpose of the Use of Symbols
Matching lines:
- their delight is unbounded. They do not value the symbolism
- Title: Occult Movement: Lecture Nine: Investigation of the Mineral World
Matching lines:
- value.
- become one who values nothing in the world, and it will soon
- Title: Occult Movement: Lecture Ten: Human Consciousness between Objective and Subjective Reality
Matching lines:
- but we must surmount such difficulties. And a different value
- Title: Golden Blade, 1962: Lecture 1: Natural Science and Its Boundaries
Matching lines:
- chiefly value, we are not assimilating the essence of these
- Title: Star Wisdom: Lecture I: Star Wisdom, Moon Religion, Sun Religion
Matching lines:
- no value to “history.” Those who were knowers and sages
- Title: Cosmic Workings: Lecture I
Matching lines:
- has great nutritive value, more perhaps than any other fish, and this
- Title: Cosmic Workings: Lecture III
Matching lines:
- absolutely essential. To speak only about surplus values, capital,
- and so forth, is of no fundamental value. If Communism ever succeeded
- Title: History of Art: Lecture I: Cimabue, Giotto, and Other Italian Masters
Matching lines:
- therefore, valued by nothing else than what he simply is as a
- Title: History of Art: Lecture II: Leonardo, Michelangelo and Raphael
Matching lines:
- the artistic or aesthetic impulses as such, attaching an excessive value
- Title: History of Art: Lecture III: Dürer and Holbein
Matching lines:
- created a work of immense educational value. You cannot do better
- Title: History of Art: Lecture IV: Mid-European and Southern Art
Matching lines:
- Movement through the work of this dear and valued member.
- Title: Man/Symphony: Lecture IX: Gnomes, Undines, Sylphs, and Salamanders and their Various Activities and Attitudes
Matching lines:
- is valued. But once we have crossed the threshold, all these beings
- Title: Man/Symphony: Lecture XI: Food, Digestion, Plants, and Carnivorous Animals
Matching lines:
- wish to test its value for human life you simply cannot do this by
- individual experience that they have value. I mention this in order to
- Title: Lecture: How Can We Gain Knowledge of the Supersensible Worlds?
Matching lines:
- plant, he is inwardly of the same value as a plant, for a plant's
- do thoughts reflect? What value should be attributed to thoughts,
- thoughts another value than that which consists in merely
- wish to attribute this one-sided value to thought (and most
- thought as a mere representation. The value of truth is
- determined by the value of reality grasped by thought. Thoughts
- with its value as an inner means of self-education. There are
- Title: Lecture: Man's Position in the Cosmic Whole, the Platonic World-Year
Matching lines:
- particular scorns to attribute any special value to the fact that we
- right way and if their true value is recognised, a connection with
- Title: Colour: Part Three: The Creative World of Colour
Matching lines:
- I do not want to discuss the value of his art, to unroll the tale of
- Title: Psychoanalysis: Lecture I: Anthroposophy and Psychoanalysis I
Matching lines:
- which is of no value whatever:
- Title: Reappearance/Christ: Lecture XII: Individual Spirit Beings and the Undivided Foundation of the World: Part 3
Matching lines:
- comprehension of one's own individual values but of the great
- the question, for example, about the brain. Does it have value
- — or does this brain actually have no more value than would
- point (and I am not speaking of something unreal) of bringing value
- to the brain, which before had value only as a mass on the scale,
- Title: Influences of Lucifer/Ahriman: Lecture One: The Incarnation of Lucifer in Asia in the Third Millenium B.C.
Matching lines:
- adopted in the orthodox sciences are of value only for apprehending
- longer value the spirit for the sake of the spirit or the soul for
- Title: Lucifer and Ahriman: Lecture I: The Incarnation of Lucifer in Asia in the Third Millenium B.C.
Matching lines:
- sciences are of value only for apprehending external nature,
- there are to-day who no longer value the spirit for the sake
- Title: Influences of Lucifer/Ahriman: Lecture Five: The Human as a Being of Will
Matching lines:
- worlds are maya means nothing: What is of value is the
- Title: Lucifer and Ahriman: Lecture V: The Human as a Being of Will
Matching lines:
- means nothing. What is of value is the realisation
- Title: Lecture: Mission of Michael: Lecture I: The Power and Mission of Michael
Matching lines:
- of Many Values
- The Power and Mission of Michael, Necessity of the Revaluation of Many Values
- understanding for the purpose and value of personality in the world if
- the revaluation of values. We have to take this very
- deal. It will have to transvalue many values.
- Title: Social Forms: Lecture I: The Waldorf School, Spiritual Science, Outer World, Inner World
Matching lines:
- goodness. It is of outstanding moral value, but even that is
- Title: Social Forms: Lecture III: Man's Twelve Senses in Relation to Imagination, Inspiration, Intuition
Matching lines:
- is looked upon as a lowly sense, this is a value judgment
- Title: Social Forms: Lecture VIII: East, Middle, West
Matching lines:
- discipline. Then, if one values a certain inner development,
- Title: Social Forms: Lecture IX: Hegel
Matching lines:
- value when taken up by such a spirit as Hegel's. Such a
- Title: Social Forms: Lecture XI: Man as a Mediator of the Spiritual Beings of the Cosmos
Matching lines:
- calculation have any value for the individual? Does it tell
- works itself out of it, attribute value to to this alone,
- that only the single chosen individuals had value in his
- whole of statistics has no direct value. Try sometime to
- that it had values may be evident from the fact that it could
- Title: Curative Eurythmy: Lecture 5
Matching lines:
- such exercises have a pedagogic-didactic value as well as therapeutic
- and hygienic value. The attempt should be made to have these exercises
- Title: Colour: Part One: Colour-Experience (Erlebnis)
Matching lines:
- the subjective experience of colour this is nevertheless of no value
- Title: Psychoanalysis: Lecture V: Connections Between Organic Processes and the Mental Life of Man
Matching lines:
- regards them as organs of equal value, since both consist of
- Title: Old/New Methods: Lecture One: Ahrimanic and Luciferic, Human Body, Soul, Spirit
Matching lines:
- profound and uplifting — namely, the world of moral values.
- to moral values, runs its course in accordance with external
- moral values. We have to see the content of this moral world as
- to serve moral values.
- moral values. The Platonic view of the world, containing as it did
- of moral values to which we may turn. It is the task of initiation
- moral values. It can only do so by using means of expression
- senses — living in the world of moral values, storms and flows,
- Title: Old/New Methods: Lecture Nine: The Threefold Human, Reincarnation, Heathens, Jews, Christians, Calderon
Matching lines:
- primal source of moral values which lies in the world between death
- directs its vision exclusively to the world of moral values; it
- Title: Lecture: Inner Nature of Music: Lecture IV
Matching lines:
- value on the nerve forces, and he makes more use of his nervous
- Title: Arts and Their Mission: Lecture VI
Matching lines:
- An age which sees value in exhibitions has lost its connection with
- Title: Colour: Part Two: Dimension, Number and Weight
Matching lines:
- I do not think, for example that the musician lays much value on
- Title: Education as a Social Problem: Lecture II: The Social Structure in Ancient Greece and Rome
Matching lines:
- their value determined by what they are as human beings but by
- abandoned cosmic value. In our kindling of electric flames
- value. Just consider what this means. It means that since the
- Title: Education as a Social Problem: Lecture III: Commodity, Labor, and Capital
Matching lines:
- social value. Only that person can know something about it
- every individual be permitted to contribute whatever of value
- Title: Education as a Social Problem: Lecture IV: Education as a Problem Involving the Training of Teachers
Matching lines:
- introduced. The greatest value is placed upon having the child
- equal value. Whether you dissect the lung or the brain, from
- Title: Karma: Lecture I
Matching lines:
- with exactness do not attribute any value. What made an
- Title: Karma: Lecture III
Matching lines:
- evil to another human being. This takes away from your value as
- Title: Karma: Lecture IV
Matching lines:
- insight into karma, knowledge of karma, gains real value only
- Title: Karma: Lecture V
Matching lines:
- mere theory. To speak out of theory has very little value. In
- comprehensible. There is no value in theorizing about these
- Title: Three Streams: Lecture III: The Mystery of Golgotha Must Be Approached Supersensibly
Matching lines:
- the most valuable thing on earth. What has most value for the earth
- Title: Three Streams: Lecture V: Free Human Personality by Self Training, Justinian and the Schools
Matching lines:
- value and reality of events.
- Title: Three Streams: Lecture VI: Augustus and the Roman Catholic Church, Rhetoric, Intellectual Soul and Consciousness Soul
Matching lines:
- to accept the spiritual, who value science only as technology,
- Title: Challenge/Times: Lecture II: The Present from the Viewpoint of the Present
Matching lines:
- labor that I live, not on my money. My money has no value
- work, then money will lose its value as a means for acquiring
- beginning of those years will no longer have any value. They
- will have matured and become valueless.
- will lose its value after a certain length of time if it has
- Title: Challenge/Times: Lecture III: The Mechanistic, Eugenic and Hygienic Aspects of the Future
Matching lines:
- although there is nothing more than a methodological value in
- Title: Young Doctors Course: Lecture I
Matching lines:
- value if you yourselves have a sufficiently true sense for
- Title: Young Doctors Course: Lecture II
Matching lines:
- degree of sensibility for the value of the different
- process, what value a carbohydrate, let us say, has for the
- Title: Young Doctors Course: Lecture V
Matching lines:
- knowledge is only of value when it is steeped in moral
- Title: Young Doctors Course: Lecture VII
Matching lines:
- Question: Is there any value in iris diagnosis,
- values. Modern physicians with their theories acknowledge the
- Title: Young Doctors Course: Easter Course: Lecture II
Matching lines:
- least value. So far as mere description and abstract
- Title: Anthroposophy Introduction: Lecture III: The Transition from Ordinary Knowledge to the Science of Initiation
Matching lines:
- of lovers, but the man who can value these sub-conscious impulses of
- Title: Anthroposophy Introduction: Lecture IV: Meditation and Inspiration
Matching lines:
- is not all we can say about it. It contains an element man must value
- willing. All this is connected with the moral world which you must value
- values but little — what they say. Well; this satisfies the head
- is unreal and of less value. From now on I shall only concern myself
- like that, but learns to value external life more than ever when one
- time, that we begin to value the spatial environment of the earth as
- Title: Anthroposophy Introduction: Lecture VIII: Dreams, Imaginative Cognition, and the Building of Destiny
Matching lines:
- men simply do not believe today that human actions have any value or
- Title: Anthroposophy Introduction: Lecture IX: Phases of Memory and the Real Self
Matching lines:
- the spiritual counter-images and counter-values of our earthly experience.
- of less value than before; so, if you judge reasonably, you will say:
- have experienced the spiritual value corresponding to an experience
- Our reality depends upon our value. Should we have hindered the evolution
- In fact, when he reads his value for the world in the countenances of
- Title: Three Streams: Lecture III: The Mystery of Golgotha Must Be Approached Supersensibly
Matching lines:
- the most valuable thing on earth. What has most value for the earth
- Title: Three Streams: Lecture V: Free Human Personality by Self Training, Justinian and the Schools
Matching lines:
- value and reality of events.
- Title: Three Streams: Lecture VI: Augustus and the Roman Catholic Church, Rhetoric, Intellectual Soul and Consciousness Soul
Matching lines:
- to accept the spiritual, who value science only as technology,
- Title: Thomas Aquinas: Lecture III: Thomism in the Present Day
Matching lines:
- examines the food value of the wheat in order to study the
- chemistry of food values. That investigates only something
- growth, so also the question of the knowledge-value of the
- We experience all that which is of value among us as a renewal
- Title: Search for the New Isis: Lecture I: A Christmas Lecture
Matching lines:
- shall we rightly value the Easter Mystery; and only when we perceive
- Title: Search for the New Isis: Lecture III: The Magi and the Shepherds: The New Isis
Matching lines:
- be of most value for knowledge and the will External earth life,
- Title: Search for the New Isis: Lecture IV
Matching lines:
- Which of the arts has permanent value and how are art and the people
- Title: Man as a Being: Lecture 2
Matching lines:
- be worth while, and he achieved nothing of any intrinsic value,
- that their true value lies. And indeed such knowledge is assailed on
- And it is the crucial test, not only of the value of modern culture,
- but also of the value of the modern scientific spirit, and of
- Title: Anthroposophy/Civilization
Matching lines:
- overlooked. These are things which must not be undervalued when
- Title: Human Soul/Evolution: Lecture III: The True Nature of Memory - 2
Matching lines:
- and can be of great value — someone who knows how to
- Title: Human Soul/Evolution: Lecture IV: The Human Soul in Relation to Moon and Stars
Matching lines:
- of the soul, we come to value our head with its knowledge
- Title: Human Soul/Evolution: Lecture VII: Modern and Ancient Spiritual Exercises
Matching lines:
- various directions have different values.
- Title: Human Soul/Evolution: Lecture VIII: The Elementary World and its Beings
Matching lines:
- chemistry and physics have no value whatever beyond the earth.
- Title: Philosophy, Cosmology and Religion: Lecture VI: The Transition from the Soul-Spiritual Existence in Human Development to the Sensory-Physical
Matching lines:
- greatest spiritual value here in earth life must be a
- Title: Philosophy, Cosmology and Religion: Lecture IX: The Continuation of Ego Consciousness after Death in Relation to the Christ
Matching lines:
- human value from what the cosmos inscribed into their
- Title: Occult Reading/Hearing: Lecture III: Inner Experiences and 'Moods' of Soul as the Vowels and Consonants of the Spiritual World
Matching lines:
- for the humanity of man. We learn to value it in all its
- Title: Occult Psychology: Lecture One
Matching lines:
- touch from the most varied sides, namely, what an appalling value is put today upon the mere
- Title: Occult Psychology: Lecture Three
Matching lines:
- serious sense. We must be able to give it its right value. Naturally in this connection we need
- value, namely, the understanding of what is known as Spiritual Science. For there is no doubt
- Title: i Spirituality: Lecture 1: Historical Symptomology, the Year 790, Alcuin, Greeks, Platonism, Aristotelianism, East, West, Middle, Ego
Matching lines:
- which die one who penetrates in this way will be valued, just as someone who works in some craft
- is valued. One does not go to the tailor to have boots made or to the shoemaker to be shaved, so
- this kind should work. That is all pointless. I attach no value to programmes or to statutes but
- Title: New Spirituality: Lecture 7: The New Spirituality and the Christ Experiance of the Twentieth Century - 6
Matching lines:
- easiest way and of value. From the way in which I had to speak yesterday it will be clear to you
- this kind before one's life on earth has no very great value, but a lively feeling for
- it is worth a great deal; it is something of the greatest value to feel that what has been
- I can get from the natural science that is so highly valued today, accounts for me only as an
- spiritual science may not be hostile towards Christianity, but is culturally valueless. And then
- comes the really good bit: spiritual science, he says, is culturally valueless for telepathy will
- Title: "Heaven and Earth will pass away but my words will not pass away"
Matching lines:
- the error which mixes up phenomena that have a very different value and
- arguments and judgment are of no more value than a person who says:
- Title: Tree of Life/Knowledge: Lecture IV: Harmonizing Thinking, Feeling and Willing
Matching lines:
- something of value, but must test every step, prove whatever comes to
- Title: Tree of Life/Knowledge: Lecture V: Tree of Knowledge - I
Matching lines:
- immense amount of value for the worlds in which man dwells; but they
- the value of the declamation that followed and about the substitute
- Title: First Class, Vol. I: Lesson 1
Matching lines:
- humanity and this fact should not cause us to undervalue those
- Title: First Class, Vol. I: Lesson 6
Matching lines:
- is worthy on earth, for the earthly values.
- But love of earthly values
- But love of earthly values
- love of earthly values
- But love of earthly values
- Title: First Class Lessons: Lesson XXIV (recapitulation)
Matching lines:
- Generally, we try to hatch thoughts from earthly values. We
The
Rudolf Steiner e.Lib is maintained by:
The e.Librarian:
elibrarian@elib.com
|