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  • Title: Lecture: Yuletide and the Christmas Festival
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    • authorities on Germanic mythology and sagas, men who with
  • Title: Memória e Amor
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    • Portanto, há uma genuína verdade no que é expresso nas línguas mais antigas ao denominarem Logos a soma das forças e dos pensamentos do mundo. Esse é o outro lado, o lado suprafísico daquilo que tem expressão física na fala. Não apenas inspiramos e expiramos seres superiores entre a morte e o renascimento, mas também falamos, embora essa fala seja ao mesmo tempo um canto. Na alternância entre irmos aos seres espirituais e retornarmos a nós mesmos, falamos um falar espiritual com os seres das hierarquias superiores. Quando estamos no estado de nos tornarmos um com os seres do mundo espiritual, olhamos para eles, embora estejam dentro de nós. Quando nos libertamos deles novamente e voltamos a nós mesmos, então temos o efeito posterior, somos então nós mesmos. Lá eles expressam seu próprio ser em nós, nos dizem o que são – o Logos vive em nós. Na Terra, isso é invertido; na fala e na canção, nosso próprio ser é expresso. Expressamos todo o nosso ser no processo de expiração; ao passo que quando entre a morte e o renascimento liberamos os seres espirituais, recebemos, no Logos, todo o ser do mundo.
  • Title: Reincarnation and Immortality: Lecture II: The Historical Evolution of Humanity
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    • sagas, pictures. And they knew more about the impulses to be
  • Title: Third Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
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    • could fill the vessel with a gas thinner than air (
  • Title: Fourth Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
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    • to gas; it burns and volatilizes. We make a spectrum of the sodium as
    • from the Sun or from a glowing solid body but from a glowing gas, we
  • Title: Fifth Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
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    • gas; however this picture only shews one or more single lines of
    • with glowing sodium gas: in the midst of a very feeble spectrum there
  • Title: Seventh Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
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    • into the gaseous or airy element. Then are we living in the airy
  • Title: Ninth Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
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    • air or gas, called for more detailed study, in which many
    • the tube has reached a state no longer merely gaseous but beyond
    • the gaseous condition. He thinks of it as radiant matter —
  • Title: Tenth Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
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    • which the air or gas was highly rarefied, led scientists to see in
    • gaseous but even more attenuated, — revealing also that
    • gas or air under the influence of warmth and in relation to its
  • Title: Warmth Course: Lecture I
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    • sun is a kind of glowing gas ball, but the sun is not a glowing ball
    • of gas by any means. Consider a moment, you have matter here on the
    • rarefaction is thought of and a rarefied glowing gas is postulated.
    • theories. Such a one is the following: a gas enclosed in a vessel
    • is then asserted, “the gas particles in the vessel are in a
    • reality nothing but the impact and collision of the little gas
    • This is the Clausius theory of what goes on in a gas-filled space.
    • thought to be. Within a gas-filled space things are quite otherwise
    • gas-filled space are set down as differentials in accordance with the
  • Title: Warmth Course: Lecture II
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    • Now we can in the same way investigate the expansion of a gaseous
    • simply warm the air in the vessel, which air constitutes a gaseous
    • at once rises. Why does it rise? Because the gaseous body in the
    • you see that the gaseous body has expanded. We may conclude that
    • solid, liquid and gaseous bodies all expand under the influence of the
    • liquids to the expansion of a gas. I have already stated that
    • for gaseous
    • not different for various gases but that this expansion coefficient as
    • that as we advance from solid bodies to gases, genuinely new
    • relations with heat appear. It appears that different gases are
    • related to heat simply according to their property of being gases and
    • them. The condition of being a gas is, so to speak, a property which
    • gases known to us on earth, the property of being a gas gathers
    • say that as we proceed from solid bodies to gases, the different
    • kind of unity, or single power of expansion for gases. Thus if I
    • expansion relations enter in when we proceed from solids to gases. But
    • gaseous condition there enters in a unification of properties for all
    • from the solid to the gaseous through the liquid state a unification
    • expansion in bodies, followed finally by change into the gaseous state
    • fluid and into the gaseous state, could not happen if the earth were
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  • Title: Warmth Course: Lecture III
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    • called today, solid, fluid, and gaseous bodies may be transformed one
    • If I select a gas — a body that has been
    • open vessel such as I use for the liquid, it will be lost. Such a gas
    • the gas spreads out in all directions.
    • not so for a gas or vaporous body which extends itself in every
    • Thus, in the case of a gas, I have a form only when I shut it in a
    • will note that the solid and gaseous bodies may be described as
    • the gaseous body, namely the completely surrounding boundary.
    • Now, however, a peculiar thing occurs in the case of a gas. When you
    • put a gas into a smaller volume
    • gas but contracting the walls all around, you must use pressure. You
    • overcome the pressure of the gas. You do it by exerting pressure on
    • the walls which give form to the gas. We may state the matter thus:
    • that a gas which has the tendency to spread out in all directions is
    • define a polaric contrast between a gas and a solid body in the
    • following way: That which I must add to the gas from the outside is
    • present of itself in the solid. But now, if you cool the gas, you
    • something is present which is not present in a gas. If we hold a wall
    • we enclose a gas in a vessel, the gas presses against the solid wall.
    • the form of solid bodies, the diffusing tendency of gases and the
  • Title: Warmth Course: Lecture IV
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    • gaseous bodies. I have also spoken of the relation of heat to the
    • from the fluid to the gaseous or vaporous condition. Now I wish to
    • with gases or vapors. We already know that these are so connected with
    • heat that by means of this we bring about the gaseous condition, and
    • liquid from a gas. Now you know that when we have a solid body, we
    • water vapor. That is, a gas does not prevent another gas from
    • by saying that gaseous or vaporous bodies may to a certain extent
    • increase the pressure on the gas its volume decreases. We must extend
    • gas and the pressure exerted on it have an inverse ratio to each
    • greater the volume the smaller must be the pressure acting on the gas.
    • pressure of gases are so related that the volume-pressure product is a
    • belonging in the realm of the mechanical. The dependence of gas
  • Title: Warmth Course: Lecture V
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    • a gas, and there again we find the disappearance of the temperature
    • gaseous condition. These facts make up a series that you can
    • observations, another thing appeared. We could see that the gas
    • the re-establishment of it. The gas shows us the dissolution, the
    • and the gas and the liquid, the fluid body standing between. This
    • the gas and the solid
    • In a gas we never have such a
    • in the relation of the latter to the earth. The gas diffuses. The
    • picture. Gases have no surface at all.
    • And again, when we pass on from the fluid to the gaseous, we come to
    • understand that the gaseous removes itself from the influence of the
    • for the activities of a gas, we must bring in the environment of the
    • forces involved. When we wish to learn the laws of the gaseous state,
    • into the gaseous condition, then we come to the point where the
    • surface is loosened. The instant we go from a liquid to a gas, the
    • of the extra-terrestrial. When we consider a gas, the forces active in
  • Title: Warmth Course: Lecture VI
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    • the fluid and the gaseous or vapor states. You know that solid bodies
    • more or less than a representation of a gas that is enclosed all
    • for explanatory purposes, represents a gas set free and distributing
    • material way in a gas.
    • of the gaseous state of aggregation. When we picture solids properly,
    • state, in the fluid a representation of the gaseous, in the gaseous a
    • the bridge for thought from gases to heat. It will become clearer
    • In fluids the picture of the gaseous state;
    • In gases the picture of the heat state;
    • to the point where we have a picture in the gaseous state which is
    • that by rightly seeking the representations of heat in the gaseous
    • which the gases can reveal to us — the real being of heat.
    • the nature of this entity, although we can do it best in the gaseous
    • distinction between the manifestation in the gas where it shows itself
  • Title: Warmth Course: Lecture VII
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    • that when we observe the gaseous or vapor condition — air is
    • vaporous, gaseous in reality — we have represented in a material
    • way in the phenomena of gases a picture of what takes place in the
    • through gas. From this we can conclude or rather simply state, since
    • gaseous, into the gaseous bodies. And in what goes on in gases we will
    • in the heat being by a manifestation of certain phenomena in gases.
    • is, by making solid bodies fluid and fluid bodies gaseous. I will now
    • ceases. Gas does not form a surface. If we wish to give form to a gas,
    • vessel closed on all sides. In passing from the liquid to the gas we
    • by the liquid. And we see also that all gases are grouped together in
    • co-efficient of expansion; gases as a whole represent material
    • same relation to the gaseous, striving outward in all directions that
    • possible to speak of such a thing. And beings who lived on a gaseous
    • Beings dwelling on a gaseous planet instead of seeing bodies falling
    • solid planet. In passing from the solid to the gaseous planet, we go
    • relative. But when we conduct heat to a gas (the experiment has been
    • the gas shows you again the picture I am trying to bring before you.
    • Does not that which is active in the gas really lie on the far side of
    • a solid to a gaseous planet we pass through a null-point? Below we
    • When I pass from the fluid to the gas, I have the diffusion, the
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  • Title: Warmth Course: Lecture VIII
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    • dissolved, disappears, when solids become liquids. In the gaseous
    • If we look in an unbiased manner on gaseous or aeriform bodies we can
    • to the realm of acoustics, the tone world. In the gas, as you know,
    • with condensation and rarefaction in the body of the gas as a whole.
    • Thus if we pass over the liquid state and seek to find in the gas what
    • and rarefaction. In the solid we have a definite form; in the gas,
    • And now we pass to the realm next adjacent to the gaseous. Just as the
    • pictures the fluid, the fluid gives the foreshadowing of the gaseous,
    • so the gas pictures the realm which we must conceive as lying next to
    • the gaseous, i.e. the realm of heat. The realm lying next above heat,
    • Gas — Negative FormCondensation-rarefaction
    • gaseous and by this process to have simply changed its original form
    • the condensation and rarefaction in gases you pass to a region of
    • gases there is a thorough-going manifestation of heat — it plays
    • complete picture of heat. I can state it thus: the gas is in its
    • pass from solids through fluids to gases. Or, liquefaction and
  • Title: Warmth Course: Lecture IX
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    • for itself a liquid surface. Then we reach the gaseous bodies,
    • We then come to the region bordering on the gaseous, the heat region,
    • Gaseous Bodies}condensationrarefaction
    • a circumscribed for; in gas a changing form, so to speak, in
    • speak of gas, the phenomena there enacted present a kind of picture of
    • what goes on in the realm of heat. We can say therefore, in the gas we
    • no other manner than that we have to consider gas and heat as mutually
    • interpenetrating each other, as so related that gaseous phenomena are
    • really taking place in the realm of heat expresses itself in the gas
    • between gases and heat. Solids show the same sort of relationship to
    • fluids do to gases and as gases do to heat.
    • instance, in the realm of the gaseous by means of the forces of form.
    • these condensations and rarefactions in a gaseous body entirely with
    • gas that uses the condensations and rarefactions as an agency when
    • condition. But when we bring about in a gas certain orderly
    • for the gaseous something that simply penetrates it, but belongs to
    • another realm, finding in the realm of the gaseous the opportunity so
    • point from the other side. Or, I might say: I observe the gas, it
    • a picture. It impregnates the gas, so to speak, and manifests as a
    • solid, and attains a form. Similarly, form appears in the gas as tone
  • Title: Warmth Course: Lecture X
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    • then we go over to the gaseous realm. In the gaseous we have a kind of
    • consciousness from the realms of gas and heat? Here again when you
  • Title: Warmth Course: Lecture XI
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    • solids, through fluids, to condensation and rarefaction, i.e. gases,
    • gaseous body, that is a development from form as a definite thing. And
  • Title: Warmth Course: Lecture XII
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    • gaseous bodies, heat, X, Y, Z and below the solid and bordering on it
    • heat or in gases must have a relation to the essence of tone. For tone
    • gases or aeriform bodies. We may therefore suspect that where we have
  • Title: Warmth Course: Lecture XIII
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    • movement of the gaseous or aeriform body. And now comes up an
    •   gaseous
    • and Z realms, the gaseous, fluid, solid and the U realms are to be
    • and the phenomena manifested in a gaseous mass. We are able to observe
    • that the gaseous body manifests in its material configuration, what is
    • before us materially in the gas. Now if we will cultivate a vivid
    • insight into what occurs in this interplay between gaseous matter and
    • the realm of gases and the x-realm. We need only consider what we have
    • otherwise to gases than does heat. The gas does not follow changes in
    • light spreads, the gas does not do likewise, it does not show
    • Therefore when light is playing through a gas, the relationship is
    • different from the one existing between the gas and heat playing
    • through it. Thus, when light is active through the gas, there is a
    • different relation involved than when heat is active through the gas.
    • between gas and solids, heat between gases and the X realm. Also the
    • solid realm foreshadows the gaseous, and the gaseous gives a picture
    • realm while heat is itself pictured in the gaseous. We have, as it
    • were, in the gaseous, pictures of pictures of the X realm. Imagine
    • an independent status in the gas. The matter may be figuratively
    • build up a concept of the action of X in a gas-filled space by
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  • Title: Warmth Course: Lecture XIV
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    • The gaseous or aeriform world, denoted by X′
    • gaseous realms in order for the chemical effects to manifest
    • gaseous realm. The other realms also work within each other. These
    • gaseous or aeriform bodies. When I say “chemical effect” you
    • out (figuratively speaking) the next realm, the gaseous, or its
    • gaseous which shows an inner relationship to the manifestation of this
    • have as in the gaseous, a process in which the chemical effect
    • gaseous or aeriform matter. This leads us to something further. It
    • in tone effects in the gaseous realm, the imponderable is less able to
    • periphery into the world and the material of the gas, the aeriform
    • warmth, or even in gas or in water. But especially when we perceive
  • Title: Lecture: Younger Generation: Lecture VII
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    • to listen to the explanations given to old myths and sagas. And oh!
  • Title: Lecture: Lecture II: Occult Signs and Symbols
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    • on earth is meant, but all that is fluid. Then all the gaseous
  • Title: Cosmic New Year: Lecture I: The Three Streams in the Life of Civilization. The Mysteries of Light, of Man, and of the Earth.
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    • earlier population. In the Sagas and Myths, and indeed also in
  • Title: Fundamentals of Anthroposophical Medicine: Lecture I
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    • airy, gaseous being, and a being of warmth as well.
    • consider what is gaseous, what is aeriform in us. It is known,
    • gaseous, and above all in the case of the warmth. This will
  • Title: Fundamentals of Anthroposophical Medicine: Lecture II
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    • that the gases filling his being are in a state of perpetual
    • inner interchange of the gases in the human being, the vortex
    • formed with the interworkings of the gases. Just as there is an
    • within the airy or gaseous organism — if I may use this
    • lawfulness that directly underlies the airy or gaseous organism
    • solid and fluid but first of all penetrates the gaseous
    • gaseous, fluid, and solid organizations, and the same is true
    • directly related, the gaseous still less directly, and the
    • esophagus, and then finally a gastrointestinal system, which
    • radiate out from this gaseous organization in the human
    • begin with, the gaseous organization radiates out, makes man
  • Title: Fundamentals of Anthroposophical Medicine: Lecture III
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    • this warmth-man then permeates the airy, the gaseous man. In
    • from the warmth organization and the airy, gaseous
    • are in mutual interaction, inasmuch as the fluid and gaseous
    • the gaseous, and again a phase between the gaseous and the
  • Title: Fundamentals of Anthroposophical Medicine: Lecture IV
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    • course, in the gaseous being of man — and they
    • congestion, but there are actually gas bubbles that are rounded
  • Title: Anthroposophical Approach to Medicine: Lecture I
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    • airy, gaseous being, and a being of warmth as well. The solid part of
    • difference in the case of the fluids and gases, and above all in the
  • Title: Anthroposophical Approach to Medicine: Lecture II
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    • when we come to the airy nature of man, it appears that the gases in
    • the inner permutation of the gases in man. Just as there is an inner
    • postulate the existence of a law within the airy or gaseous organism
    • gaseous organism, as astral law, as the astral organisation.
    • gaseous, fluid and solid organisations; and the same is true of the
    • related, the gaseous still less directly, and the element of warmth
    • substance. The astral-organic forces radiate out from this gaseous
    • backward course. To begin with, the gaseous organisation radiates
  • Title: Anthroposophical Approach to Medicine: Lecture III
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    • gaseous being. In the forces proceeding from the Ego and astral
    • working primarily from the warmth organisation and the airy, gaseous
    • the fluid and gaseous organisations permeate one another in the
    • intermediate phase between the fluid and the gaseous, and again a
    • phase between the gaseous and the element of warmth.
  • Title: Anthroposophical Approach to Medicine: Lecture IV
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    • which works, of course, in the gaseous being of man — and they
    • these gas-bubbles, which are really striving to become organs, are
    • the attacks of colic and gastric convulsions. Such a remedy by
    • probably be adequate when the gastric trouble is slight. The organism
  • Title: Study of Man: Lecture VII
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    • gas.” These relationships do exist, but we should not get
  • Title: Study of Man: Lecture XII
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    • takes up the oxygen, and carbon dioxide gas arises through the union
    • Actually it is true that when man breathes out carbonic acid gas, he
  • Title: Fruits/Anthroposophy: Lecture 5: From Sense Perception to Spirit Imaging
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    • gastrulation, the development of a cup-like form where the cells do
    • entity, the Gastraea, that was once supposed to have had that form in
    • at this early stage of embryonic development, the gastrula stage. In
    • 1834–1919. With reference to his ‘Gastraea,’ see
  • Title: Occult History: Lecture 2
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    • only then do we realise why it is that myths and sagas so often tell
  • Title: Karmic Relationships, VI: Lecture VI
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    • were given in a more poetic form and contained in legends and sagas,
    • burning gas or the like. It is by no means so! Suppose you were on
  • Title: Anthroposophie, Ihre Erkenntniswurzeln und Lebensfruchte: Funfter Vortrag
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    • studiert, den man die Gastrulation nennt, das Herausbilden des
    • hat in der Phantasie konstruiert die Gasträa, ein
    • Frühstadium der Embryonalentwickelung, im Gastrulastadium,
  • Title: Anthroposophie, Ihre Erkenntniswurzeln und Lebensfruchte: Achter Vortrag
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    • gesprochen, indem auf das Jogasystem hingewiesen worden ist und
  • Title: Deeper Education: Lecture II: Forces Leading to Health and Illness in Education
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    • up to the brain and produces “marsh gas,” such as
    • really physical, for the production of marsh gas or carbon
    • development of marsh gas in the head. If we bring as many
    • either marsh gas or carbon dioxide. We feel we are standing
  • Title: Esoteric Lessons Part III: Stuttgart, 3-5-'14
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    • shiny pearls? They're just empty gas bubbles filled with a substance
  • Title: Poetry/Speech: Lecture VII: The Uttering of Syllables and the Speaking of Words
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    • of evil, and gasping horrible, envious
    • a gash of light,
  • Title: Poetry/Speech: Lecture IX: The Alliteration and Terminal Rhyme
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    • older sagas and poems. This is another version of Beowulf,
  • Title: Universe, Earth and Man: Lecture IV: The Outer Manifestations of Spiritual Beings in the Elements. Their connection with Man. Cosmic partitions. The Myth of Osiris.
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    • gas, “air”; everything that can be perceived as having any
  • Title: Universe, Earth and Man: Lecture V: The sacrifice of the substance by the Thrones, Kyriotetes, Dynami's, and Exusiai. Jehovah and the Elohim, and their co-operative activity in the stages of human Development.
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    • physical body is permeated by air or gas; lastly, you find in it
    • gaseous; if you imagine his physical body formed only of warmth, such
    • place. The Sun consisted not only of warmth, but also of gas and air
    • these, currents of gas which form the physical body, how does the
    • clairvoyant see this gas in the Akashic Record? He perceives it in a
    • pours in from outside) the moment this gas or air separates from the
    • body was a kind of germinal body of warmth, composed of gaseous or
    • consisted of three parts water, gas or air, and warmth; and the
  • Title: Universe, Earth and Man: Lecture VIII: Mans connection with the various planetary bodies. The earth's mission.
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    • warmth and gas, and beings passing through their human development
  • Title: Astronomy Course: Lecture VIII
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    • Kinetic Theory of Gases, of of Heat itself, — the
    • condition of gas. Instead of this phenomena will become clear
    • light, must bear a negative sign. For air or gas the sign



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