Searching Rudolf Steiner Lectures by Location (Vienna) Matches
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- Title: Tension Between East and West: Lecture 3: East and West in History
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- enter the world of Greek art, Greek literature, Greek
- — will discover quite empirically that the Greeks
- separated from our physical organism, so too in Greek
- experiences of the Greek soul. By the same token, all the
- will say: the Greeks really had no natural science; they had a
- present in the Greek mind, not in the controlled and conscious
- Greece. And, fundamentally, Greek philosophy can only be
- detail. But if you will look at Greek sculpture with sound
- will find that the Greek sculptor did not work from a model as
- being one with what the spirit of the Greek language made
- manifest to a Greek.
- Greek civilization was still at work, we can see that even
- even in Greek civilization there is something separate from
- and on the other hand the religious life to which the Greek
- idea that the Greeks operated according to the laws by which
- Title: Tension Between East and West: Lecture 7: The Individual Spirit and the Social Structure
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- become — in the Greek sense, it is true — wise men,
- philosophers. Within Greek civilization, in fact, the
- or less taken over from the Ancient East; what the Greeks
- the Greek as yet no separation of body and spirit, such as
- by it. For the Greeks it was different. And that is why Goethe
- Greeks had no such concept of body and spirit as we have. For
- late Greek, does the distinction begin to creep in. Although
- man and man among the Ancient Greeks, and recognize how it has
- Greek and Roman, there then arose something that could maintain
- Title: Tension Between East and West: Lecture 8: The Problem (Asia-Europe)
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- the extent that Greek culture itself has influenced European
- not usually emphasized. In his study of Greek tragedy, from
- existence. This is not what it meant for the Greeks; it meant
- Greek view of art: that the Greeks saw in tragedy, side by side
- civilization of the Greeks, “Know thyself!” was
- the features of Oriental-Greek civilization even as it
- mysteries, and for the development of which the Greek regarded
- When we describe Oriental-Greek man, with the dignity that gave
- appears once more as a spiritual residuum in the Greek
- that, for Greek doctors in the early period, knowledge and
- Title: Regarding Higher Worlds
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- of the ancient Greek words of wisdom: “Know
- Title: What is Self-knowledge?
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- old, beautiful saying of the wise Greeks: “Whoever wants
- Title: Macrocosm/Microcosm: Lecture 3: The Inner Path Followed by the Mystic. Experience of the Cycle of the Year.
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- a time when the Greeks had already reached a high stage of
- intellectuality. It was the mission of the Greeks to prepare what we
- could not have been written in the days of ancient Greece, but Greek
- Title: Life Between ... IV: Recent Results of Occult Investigation Into Life
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- is illumined by spiritual beings. That is why the Greeks called
- Title: Life Between ... VIII: Between Death and a New Birth
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- most strongly prevalent during the Greek epoch. At the end of the
- to its peak as expressed in the beauty of Greek art. But as we go
- Greek games. The more a person leaves his soul-spiritual nature in
- Title: Poetry/Speech: Lecture V: Poetry and Recitation
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- found among the Greeks, and even in earlier forms of Central
- within, into tone; whereas when the man of Greek or
- Greek culture. Out of this, stemming from his feeling for such art
- as was still to be seen, came an understanding of Greek art He
- understood that the Greeks created their art in accordance with the
- Title: Goethe As Founder of a New Science of Aesthetics: Steiner's First Lecture
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- evidence much later. The Greek spirit, so happily
- come to us from any other source. The Greeks found in reality
- the world that surrounds us. The Greek did not grow out of and
- opposite of the Greek spirit, which found everything in Nature.
- light. Just as little as the Greeks could gain a knowledge of
- great idealist of the Greeks, the ‘divine Plato,’ had been, of
- standpoint of the Greeks should be superseded, is not without
- Title: The Subconscious Forces
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- with which Central Europe once absorbed the Greek and Latin
- Title: Mystery of Death: Lecture VIII: The War, an Illness Process
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- Central Europe as this Central Europe took up the Greek and
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