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- Title: Lecture: Mathematics and Occultism.
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- construct bridges and bore tunnels by virtue of his training
- Title: Human Values in Education: Lecture I
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- the matter. Then we are led by virtue of necessity to build up
- Title: Human Values in Education: Lecture VI
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- his environment. Gratitude is the basic virtue in the
- does. This is love. Love is the virtue belonging to the second
- Title: Gospel of John (Basle): Lecture I
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- Very Beginnings, the Powers, Virtues, Dominions, the
- Title: Gospel of Luke: Lecture Two
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- highly developed by virtue of their spiritual faculties and could
- compassion is the very highest virtue but that without love humanity
- through their own powers as the lofty virtues of compassion and
- nature of those virtues was the Bodhisattva who incarnated for the
- Title: Gospel of Luke: Lecture Four
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- By virtue of their achievements they were the best leaders for their
- Title: Gospel of Luke: Lecture Six
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- he makes of himself, not by what is in him by virtue of his descent.
- Title: Lecture: The Etherisation of the Blood
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- The dream of Socrates, that virtue can be taught, will come true; more
- Title: Reappearance/Christ: Lecture IX: The Etherization of the Blood
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- The dream of Socrates, that virtue be able to be taught,
- Title: Gospel of Mark: Lecture 7
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- it came by virtue of the gifts that had been implanted in
- Title: Lecture Series: Tree of Knowledge and the Christmas Tree
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- the virtues of which we have spoken: first — valour,
- statement, when speaking of virtue, which we cannot
- Aristotle and embodied in his philosophy. He says: Virtue is
- virtue, the like of which no subsequent philosophy has
- to Plato, the first virtue is wisdom, and according to him,
- all directions, for this ideal must be what the virtue of the
- The virtue which is the particular emblem for this part of
- second, the middle virtue of Plato and Aristotle. It is that
- virtue which in the fourth post-Atlantean age still existed
- guided by another virtue, by the interest in the being to
- Liberality is a virtue, but Shakespeare also shows us that
- nature this virtue must accord with and be guided by
- virtue: love. It is that which, through the
- Christ-impulse, has become the special virtue of the
- mind-soul or intellectual-soul; it is the virtue which may be
- Sympathy is the virtue which in the future will produce the
- through virtue, which is creative, we build. We build through
- something in our actions, our virtue, our conduct towards
- given to mankind as original virtue.
- but to consider what may be spoken of as the virtue of the
- Maximum number of matches per file exceeded.
- Title: Et Incarnatus Est: The Time Cycle of Historic Events
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- sacrifice, the symbol of the highest human virtue. This virtue
- wisdom of the gods, the virtues of man, and the realization of
- concrete expression to the abstract laws of virtue than to
- truth and virtue, we may surely conclude that the influences of
- brought divine gifts of wisdom, virtue, and immortality to the
- as from a grave, by virtue of a power connected with the
- gifts of wisdom, virtue, and immortality. We must be able to
- Title: Lecture: The Threshold In Nature and In Man
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- by virtue of the powers of his soul, enters into the spiritual world
- Title: Lecture: Reincarnation and Karma
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- Great men have the faults of their virtues. It is our task to
- Title: Spiritual Teachings of Soul/World: Course I: Lecture I: The Eternal and the Transient in the Human Being
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- the purifying virtues were required from the pupil. He had to take off
- Title: Spiritual Teachings of Soul/World: Course I: Lecture III: The Nature of God from the Theosophical Standpoint
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- adores it, is to blame for something. He could see by virtue of the
- Title: Lecture: The Migrations of the Races
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- above all on personal qualities and virtues. A noteworthy
- led to personal qualities and virtues reaching their zenith.
- Title: History of the Middle Ages: Lecture I: Celts, Teutons, and Slavs
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- domestic and martial virtues, practical efficiency and activity
- Title: Origin and Destination of Humanity: Lecture III: Reincarnation and Karma
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- had to have developed certain virtues in himself; then the baptism
- Title: History of the Middle Ages: Lecture IV: Arabic Influence in Europe
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- virtue, and they found, especially through Boniface, their chief
- Title: Spiritual Teachings of Soul/World: Course V: Lecture IV: Is Theosophy Buddhist Propaganda?
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- a school of wisdom, to esotericism, after he had developed the necessary virtue,
- Title: Lecture: The Inner Development of Man
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- such inclinations, virtues or characteristics in one's mind. They must
- exercises and particularly if he develops certain virtues, which
- virtues in particular that must be developed that nearly turn man into
- development.. The three first-mentioned virtues, however, will lead to
- virtues, humility, gentleness and perseverance.
- and peace, as well as the other virtues mentioned above, he nourishes
- Title: Origin and Destination of Humanity: Lecture IX: On the Inner Life
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- it with this inclination, virtue or quality and incorporates it into
- particular if he develops certain virtues which can develop now and
- virtues that he must still develop, and that make him almost a seer.
- organs. However, these three virtues lead to gruesome negative virtues
- if they are not paired with three other virtues, with humility, mildness
- Title: Temple Legend: Lecture 9: The Essence and Task of Freemasonry from the Point of View of Spiritual Science - 3
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- themselves with the conventional bourgeois virtues, but are something
- Title: Schiller and Our Times: Lecture II: Schiller's Work and its Changing Phases
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- Title: Origin and Destination of Humanity: Lecture XII: Goethe's Secret Revelation I
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- virtues which are given to him one day. Without having attained this
- Title: Esoteric Development: Lecture VII: The Great Initiates
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- certain virtues, certain achievements of the soul, then, within
- practicing these eight virtues as vigorously as he can only do when
- find reference to certain virtues in the forefront of those
- pupil. These six virtues which you find mentioned in every
- composure. These six virtues, which one must practice consciously and
- six virtues, the six petals that were undeveloped in the past. Thus
- them is MAN.” Outwardly we have all contributed human virtues
- Title: Origin and Destination of Humanity: Lecture XVI: The Great Initiates
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- certain virtues, certain performances of the soul most carefully beside
- these eight virtues as intensely as possible,
- all theosophical manuals you can find certain virtues cited which someone
- in the forecourt. These six virtues, which you find cited in every theosophical
- and balance or what Angelus Silesius calls calmness. These six virtues,
- six petals, which were not developed in the past, with these six virtues.
- off-loaded all human virtues or weaknesses on the creatures outside.
- Title: Schiller and Our Times: Lecture IX: Schiller and Idealism
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- humanity that Socrates' view grew up that virtue is teachable.
- But virtue is something that lives in man and is natural to
- humiliation. In the mysteries virtue was not merely preached
- Title: Temple Legend: Lecture 13: Concerning the Lost Temple and How It Is To Be Restored - 3
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- heavenly virtue outward form into beauty, the words of man's ordinary
- perfection. When the three virtues, Wisdom, Beauty and Strength,
- Title: Riddles of the World: Lecture I: Haeckel, the Riddles of the World and Theosophy
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- mistakes of his virtues, too. The positive effect of his work
- Title: Foundations of Esotericism: Lecture XVIII
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- love, the giving virtue. This part of the astral body is called
- Title: Foundations of Esotericism: Lecture XXI
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- painting works directly on the etheric body. A virtue, on the other
- Title: Temple Legend: Lecture 20: The Royal Art in a New Form
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- through the faults of their own virtues. And although we can only
- Title: Riddles of the World: Lecture XIII: Lucifer
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- Hence, the Christian virtue became the virtues of community,
- the virtues of the harmony of the human souls. The god who
- the Christian virtue and as in the Christ virtue the human
- Christianity has put up moral virtue instead of the mere
- virtue by evoking inner, concealed forces in the human being.
- virtue to gain the spiritual with it; the occultist rouses
- inner virtues slumbering in the human being to gain the even
- external Christian virtues, we have an even deeper
- prospering in bright clearness. — Those virtues have to
- be added to all other virtues that are founded on science,
- virtues must completely develop as the necessary principles of
- Title: Riddles of the World: Lecture XVI: German Theosophists at the Beginning of the Nineteenth Century
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- their big virtues, and because Fichte was able to measure out
- Title: Riddles of the World: Lecture XVII: Siegfried and the Twilight of the Gods
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- sensuous existence developing the most various virtues and
- this higher level. Because bravery was the highest virtue with
- the virtue that leads to immortality, he unites with the
- Title: Riddles of the World: Lecture XVIII: Parzival and Lohengrin
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- Parzival is informed of the higher virtues, and there he
- Title: Riddles of the World: Lecture XX: Inner Development
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- virtues to start with, so that the strength that is taken away
- from the body is replaced by rhythm. These virtues are: control
- and negative criticism belong together. The provided virtues
- virtues, which should make the lower life rhythmical, give the
- Title: Esoteric Development: Lecture VIII: The Path of Knowledge and Its Stages
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- clothed in the enticing form of beauty, but virtues are in modest
- Title: Supersensible Knowledge: Lecture XI: Who are the Rosicrucians?
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- virtues should be developed. When the Rosicrucians spoke of
- virtue.
- change his vices into virtues.
- Title: Knowledge of Soul and Spirit: Lecture VI: The So-Called Dangers of Initiation
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- useless at all to preach virtue, unselfishness, and freedom to
- Title: The Influence of Spiritual Beings Upon Man: Lecture I
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- virtues or vices built into man's body when the flesh of these animals
- Title: The Influence of Spiritual Beings Upon Man: Lecture III
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- sub-stances from the earth and made their theatre the sun. By virtue
- Title: The Influence of Spiritual Beings Upon Man: Lecture VII
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- or a whole district and to transform them into virtues. To one who knows
- Title: Principle/Economy: Lecture II: Christianity in Human Evolution: Leading Individualities and Avatar Beings
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- exists by virtue of the fact that something of special value
- Title: Lecture: The Four Temperaments
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- possesses certain traits by virtue of being part of a succession of
- Title: Goethe's Secret Revelation: Lecture III
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- acquisition of all accomplishments and virtues which call for
- Title: Where/How/Spirit: Lecture XIII: The Riddles in Goethe's Faust - Exoteric
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- perfection and virtues, invokes choice, order, harmony and
- Title: Goethe's Secret Revelation: Lecture IV
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- virtues or vices. If Faust's soul were ripe for the Kingdom of
- its virtues are such as correspond to the spiritual world and
- Title: Where/How/Spirit: Lecture XIV: Riddles in Goethe's Faust - Esoteric
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- of its virtues or bad habits. If Faust's soul were ripe for the
- translated because its virtues comply with the spiritual world,
- Title: Where/How/Spirit: Lecture XV: Nietzsche in the Light of Spiritual Science
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- Socrates put up the sentence that virtue is teachable. He
- Title: Being of Man/Future Evolution: Lecture 7: Laughing and Weeping
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- globe. By virtue of the fact that man has acquired on this globe the
- have by virtue of being born an individuality. This stream takes on
- Title: Lecture: Isis and Madonna
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- virtue; and he ruled until he was killed by Set, his evil brother. He
- Title: Where/How/Spirit: Lecture XVI: Isis and Madonna
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- virtue, so he stands before the view of the ancient Egyptian
- Title: Principle/Economy: Lecture X: The God of the Alpha and the God of the Omega
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- and then by virtue of this growth it becomes ever more
- Title: Being of Man/Future Evolution: Lecture 9: Evolution, Involution and Creation out of Nothingness
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- relationships what is right, what is beautiful and those virtues that
- the thoughts, wealth of feeling and virtues he develops through the
- what I can practise in the way of virtue, I do not practise for the
- Title: Metaporphoses/Soul One: Lecture 1: The Mission of Spiritual Science
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- permeates himself with all perfections and virtues, summons forth order,
- Title: Wisdom of Man: III. Higher Senses, Inner Force Currents and Creative Laws in the Human Organism.
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- is a musical tone only by virtue of its harmonics
- Title: Deeper Secrets: Lecture II
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- the realisation that the mission that is his by virtue of his own
- reality of being. This kingdom exists by virtue of the fact that into
- Title: Metaporphoses/Soul One: Lecture 7: Human Egoism
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- perfections and virtues, invoking choice, order, harmony and meaning, and
- Title: Lecture: Spiritual Science and Speech
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- and desires into virtues, has co-ordinated phantasmal thinking by the
- Title: Metamorphoses/Soul Two: Lecture 1: Spiritual Science and Language
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- instincts and desires into virtues, if it orders muddled thinking by the
- Title: Metamorphoses/Soul Two: Lecture 8: Human Conscience
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- insist that virtue can be learnt. Socrates, indeed, says that if a man forms
- this knowledge of what virtue is, he can learn to act virtuously.
- the nature and character of virtue in order to arrive at an agreed estimation
- work — I mean Socrates — sets before us a concept of virtue which
- thinkers we always find the assertion that perfect virtue is something that
- of virtue speak through his words? The reason is, that the ideas, concepts
- Title: Metamorphoses/Soul Two: Lecture 9: The Mission of Art
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- corresponding virtue, self-reliant courage. Finally we come to wisdom, the
- virtue of the consciousness soul. Wisdom which fails to strive towards the
- Title: On the Mystery Plays: Lecture II: On the Rosicrucian Mystery, The Portal of Initiation
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- Title: The Christmas Festival In The Changing Course Of Time
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- Easter, so these cradles, by virtue of the holy mood that fills them,
- virtue of what streams forth as Christmas mood from our halls into all
- Title: Answers to Big Questions: Lecture VIII: Predisposition, Talent and Education of the Human Being
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- the qualities, virtues et cetera of the father and mother, of
- Title: Turning Points: Lecture 1: Zarathustra
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- widespread human being; the forces of greatest virtue are termed
- Title: Lecture: What Has Geology to Say About the Origin of the World?
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- which by virtue of its nature and its special tasks is able not only
- Title: Turning Points: Lecture 2: Hermes
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- in virtue of our senses working in conjunction with reason and
- their leaders in virtue of outstanding individualities and highly
- the Isis-Force within, in virtue of mere earthly wisdom born of
- Thus it came about that the aspirant, in virtue
- Isis-Forces, and in virtue of those supersensible primordial
- in virtue of knowledge obtained through the medium of its special
- Title: Background/Mark: Lecture Seven: The Higher Members of Man's Constitution
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- virtue of its rhythm also has in it something essentially
- Title: Turning Points: Lecture 3: Buddha
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- which he could discern in virtue of his clairvoyant
- mankind was truly in contact with the spirit realms in virtue of
- assumptions forced upon him in virtue of his being, we can
- that in virtue of such wisdom we are led onwards toward
- and in virtue of which we take our place as human personalities
- of Ego which is mine, but in virtue of a power that can enter
- Title: Turning Points: Lecture 4: Moses
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- its attributes and its virtues wins power to utter statements
- understand that it was only in virtue of his clairvoyant faculty
- Title: Inner Realities: Lecture 2: The Inner Aspect of the Sun-embodiment of the Earth
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- reply: The principal characteristic of these spirits is the virtue of
- bestowing virtue of the Spirits of Wisdom. And no one learns the real
- manifestation of the bestowing virtue of the macrocosm, and
- accurate idea of this virtue of giving. Let us bring home to our mind
- right conception of this productivity of the virtue of giving. This
- bestowing virtue of the Spirits of Wisdom.
- streaming, flowing wisdom as bestowing virtue. However, as this
- virtue returning to it; for we must not think of the ancient Sun as
- bestowing virtue of the Spirits of Wisdom on ancient Sun. Before
- Christ-Being when we grasp the idea of the bestowing virtue, the
- grace-bestowing virtue in its reflection in the light of the universe
- light-creating time and the bestowing Virtue and would reflect it out
- sacrificial Beings, the Beings of Bestowing Virtue, the Beings of
- Title: Evolution/Aspect: Lecture 3: The Inner Aspect of the Sun-embodiment of the Earth
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- characteristic of these spirits is the virtue of giving, of pouring
- appears as the great bestowing virtue of the Spirits of Wisdom. And
- means the manifestation of the bestowing virtue of the macrocosm, and
- idea of this virtue of giving. Let us bring home to our mind the
- of art, has the right conception of this productivity of the virtue
- — namely, the bestowing virtue of the Spirits of
- streaming, flowing wisdom is the virtue they give. However, as this
- virtue returning to it; for we must not think of the ancient Sun as
- born! Space comes into existence through the bestowing virtue of the
- the Christ-being when we grasp the idea of the bestowing virtue, the
- grace-bestowing virtue in its reflection in the light of the universe
- light-creating time and the bestowing Virtue and would reflect it out
- Beings of Bestowing Virtue, the Beings of warmth-giving bliss, of the
- Title: Inner Realities: Lecture 3: The Inner Aspect of the Moon-embodiment of the Earth - 1
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- something very far away, which we have called “the virtue of
- and the virtue of bestowal.
- virtue of bestowal added to that of sacrifice we ascend from the life of
- by reason of the bestowing virtue of the Spirits of Wisdom now
- that has taken place — sacrifice and the virtue of bestowal,
- Sun was such, that the sacrificing and the virtue of bestowal, which
- have come to them from the virtue of bestowal and all its diffused
- ancient Sun reappears as heat on the Moon; we see the virtue of
- as Heat; and that which was bestowing virtue appears in Maya as gas
- which is the virtue of bestowal, so is water as a substance, as an
- resignation to those of sacrifice and of the bestowing virtue we have
- evolve — sacrifice, bestowing virtue, resignation —
- living conceptions such as sacrifice, or the virtue of bestowal and
- Title: Evolution/Aspect: Lecture 4: The Inner Aspect of the Moon-embodiment of the Earth (Part 1)
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- something very far away, which we have called ‘the virtue of
- and the virtue of bestowal.
- When we saw the virtue
- Record. For by reason of the bestowing virtue of the Spirits of
- taken place — sacrifice and the virtue of bestowal, which we
- such, that the sacrificing and the virtue of bestowal, which
- have come to them from the virtue of bestowal and all its diffused
- Sun reappears as heat on the Moon; we see the virtue of bestowal
- as Heat; and that which was bestowing virtue appears in Maya as gas
- behind which is the virtue of bestowal, so is water as a substance,
- sacrifice and of the bestowing virtue we have come a step further,
- conception that we evolve — sacrifice, bestowing virtue,
- represent living conceptions such as sacrifice, or the virtue of
- Title: Inner Realities: Lecture 4: The Inner Aspect of the Moon-embodiment of the Earth - 2
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- bestowing virtue of certain Spiritual Beings. And we have learnt to
- “Bestowing Virtue,” which is radiated forth as Wisdom,
- Title: Evolution/Aspect: Lecture 5: The Inner Aspect of the Moon-embodiment of the Earth (Part 2)
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- recognised the bestowing virtue of certain Spiritual Beings. And we
- have called ‘Bestowing Virtue,’ which is radiated forth
- Title: Inner Realities: Lecture 5: The Inner Aspect of the Earth-embodiment of the Earth
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- those described as the willingness to sacrifice, and the virtue of
- bestowal or renunciation, in fact, to those virtues with which we can
- really to attribute such virtues as these to what we have to think of
- around our earth there really lies the virtue of giving, a really
- flowing virtue; if we may describe flowing water or the element of
- generous flowing virtue of giving, and Fluid the result of
- Title: Evolution/Aspect: Lecture 6: The Inner Aspect of the Earth-embodiment of the Earth
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- the willingness to sacrifice, and the virtue of bestowal or
- renunciation, in fact, to those virtues with which we can only become
- attribute such virtues as these to what we have to think of as the
- spread out around our earth there really lies the virtue of giving, a
- really flowing virtue; if (3) we may describe flowing water or the
- generous flowing virtue of giving, and Fluid the results of
- Title: Wisdom of the Spirit: I. Franz Brentano and Aristotles Doctrine of the Spirit.
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- insufficiencies and its virtues; in another, an excellent life; in a
- Title: Turning Points: Lecture 5: Elijah
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- Spiritual Science weighs and regards such matters and, in virtue
- circumstances evinced a faculty in virtue of which the hidden
- the new Ego, which was now his, by virtue of those qualities
- or not, in virtue of inherent divine powers possessed by the
- threatening message to Elijah-Naboth, because in virtue
- obtained through Spiritual Science show that Elisha, in virtue of
- virtue of his advanced spirituality would know and commune with
- knew quite well in virtue of her clairvoyant powers, that she
- Title: Wisdom of the Spirit: IV. Laws of Nature, Evolution of Consciousness and Repeated Earth Lives.
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- virtue of its inherent impulses, divinity passed through many
- Title: Turning Points: Lecture 6: Christ and the Twentieth Century
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- definite soul conditions had come about, in virtue of which this
- colour has existence only in virtue of the physical constitution
- Title: Human History: Lecture XIV: The Self-Education of the Human Being
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- recommended here as a special virtue, but if we face the one or
- Title: The Worldview of Herman Grimm in Relation to Spiritual Science
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- By virtue of the connection with this circle — as mentioned,
- Title: Raphael's Mission in the Light of the Science of the Spirit
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- ideas, but forms them into a picture. By virtue of its inner
- Title: Mysteries of the East: Lecture 1
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- mind and other inner virtues (virtues here meaning capabilities), he
- Title: Fairy Tales in the light of Spiritual Investigation
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- the inner battles that arise unconsciously by virtue of its
- certain periods of life, but simply by virtue of being human,
- to his country. And, by virtue of their influence on those in
- Title: Mysteries of the East: Lecture 4
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- virtues of Parsifal, while knowing that because of the modern
- Title: Leonardo's Spiritual Stature: Lecture
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- also by virtue of Leonardo's expressive colour! In these
- scientifically. Only by virtue of the loss of the old spiritual
- not do so by means of sense perception, but by virtue of
- Title: Spiritual Science/Treasure for Life: Lecture III: Spiritual Science and Denomination
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- all perfection and virtues, invoking choice, order, harmony and
- virtue and immortality and approach the first being, then it
- Title: Human and Cosmic Thought: Lecture IV
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- virtue of his earlier incarnation, the forces of Idealism and of
- Title: Human and Cosmic Thought: Lecture Four
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- virtue of his earlier incarnation, the forces of Idealism and of
- Title: Spiritual Science/Treasure for Life: Lecture X: Homunculus
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- with one “virtue,” that of conviction. They soon
- Title: Lecture Series: The Human Soul in Life and Death
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- by virtue of the inner development of our soul, to the invisible,
- Title: Destinies of Individuals and Nations: Lecture 6: Spiritual Perception Essential at the Present Time
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- virtue of going through the gate of death, even though he
- Title: Destinies of Individuals and Nations: Lecture 13: The Prophetic Nature of Dreams: Moon, Sun and Saturn Man
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- disperses and passes away. What man gains today by virtue
- Title: Ascension/Pentecost IV: WHITSUN: A Symbol of the Immortality of the Ego
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- virtue of the Ego that we are individuals. If we can say that
- Title: Toward Imagination: Lecture 3: The Twelve Human Senses
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- what the canon can understand by virtue of being a Catholic canon.
- Title: Building Stones: Lecture Two
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- Aristotle which, by virtue of its inherent disposition
- death the spirit dwelt in the souls of men so that by virtue
- virtue of its constitution, this organism must inevitably
- individual animal which is mortal in virtue of its organism.
- Title: Building Stones: Lecture Three
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- felt that “virtue” had gone out of Him. He turned
- Christ healed the woman He felt that “virtue” or
- powers from one person to another by virtue of His selfless
- namely, that the human body, in virtue of its original
- the fact that the animal is mortal by virtue of its
- Title: Building Stones: Lecture Four
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- virtue of its nature, can reproduce its kind. He looked upon
- Title: Building Stones: Lecture Seven
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- He therefore forbade those who, by virtue of their Christian
- Title: Building Stones: Lecture Eight
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- Constantine was not precisely a model of virtue, otherwise he
- Title: Building Stones: Lecture Nine
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- virtue of his individuality is far superior to the State, he
- Title: Building Stones: Lecture Ten
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- virtue of its inner forces is related to a spiritual sun in
- realistic novels which extolled the virtues of the German
- Title: Aspects/Evolution: Lecture I
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- Graeco-Latin culture by virtue of mankind's evolution in
- Title: Aspects/Evolution: Lecture VIII
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- “Impenetrability is the property by virtue of which two
- will no longer run, Impenetrability is the property by virtue
- Title: Karma of Materialism: Lecture 8
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- the confines of the physical world by virtue of changes in man's inner
- and conceptions to which man would be exposed by virtue of a relation
- Title: Karma of Materialism: Lecture 9
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- by virtue of the physical and etheric bodies. We have at present no
- enough to say that good will is a virtue and should be cultivated, or
- virtue and one can even get a sensuous feeling of pleasure from practicing
- it. A kind of cathechism of virtues could be devised: Thou shalt have
- of virtues and no understanding of any of them. It would in fact be
- a tendency to prejudice, biassed views and the like. No virtue can be
- some virtue and pride themselves over much in the fact, then people
- but this is no longer possible when one knows that virtues will of themselves
- he seemingly shows little respect for such virtues as selflessness and
- Title: Eternal Human Soul: Lecture III: Goethe as Father of Spiritual Research
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- virtue and immortality — the so-called postulates of
- Title: Eternal Human Soul: Lecture IV: Mind, Soul and Body of the Human Being
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- intellectual virtue not to use for the characteristic of the
- first to penetrate into the spiritual world. This virtue also
- Title: The Earth As Being with Life, Soul, and Spirit: Lecture 1
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- anyone can regard it as he likes, as virtue or fault.) Warmth meeting
- Title: Life Gifts: Lecture I: Folk Souls and the Mystery of Golgotha
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- virtue of the fact that man, between birth and death, is bound to a
- virtue or as vice. ) Warmth to warmth: this makes a man pliant,
- Title: Life Gifts: Lecture II: The Relativity of Knowledge, and Spiritual Cosmology
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- determined by virtue of the special circumstances of the Earth. I do
- Title: Life Gifts: Lecture IV: The Eternal and the Imperishable
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- birth up to death, and from which it was immune by virtue of
- Title: Life Gifts: Lecture VI: Spiritual Science, the Practice of Life and the Destinies of Souls
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- virtue of his being an arm- and leg-man. Through imaginative
- Title: Sound Outlook: Lecture V: The Being and Evolution of Man
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- appreciate the special virtues of Catholic ritual in relation
- Title: Knowledge of Healing: Lecture I
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- concept that we have to seek knowledge for this healing virtue, that
- Title: Gospel/Matthew (1965): Lecture 1
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- virtue of its special character, able to give to
- Title: Self-knowledge and the Portal of Initiation: Lecture
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- Such as he can be to-day by virtue of his own forces, man goes
- Title: Life Between ... VII: The Working of Karma in Life After Death
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- virtue of the monistic conception each member is condemned to
- in a one-sided sentimental sense but by virtue of its own nature.
- Title: Universal Human: Lecture Four: The Universal Human: The Unification of Humanity through the Christ Impulse
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- by virtue of what it contains, just as the Sistine Madonna
- Title: Lecture: On the Connection of the Living and the Dead
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- elemental world to which we ourselves belong by virtue of our etheric
- so only if you feel yourself, by virtue of this knowledge, within the
- Title: Lecture: The Souls Progress through Repeated Earth Lives
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- We acquire this power of forming mental pictures by virtue of the
- Title: Lecture: The Forming of Destiny in Sleeping and Waking
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- Primal Beginnings — by virtue of what it takes out into the
- Title: Gospel of Matthew: Lecture I
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- people, by virtue of their special character, were able to
- Title: Gospel of Matthew: Lecture IX
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- virtues man has acquired are again taken up. But the
- he can develop virtues which go from like to like, which are
- that something streams forth from the virtues of the rational
- Title: Lecture: The Significance of Spiritual Research For Moral Action
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- separate by virtue of what is enclosed within their skins. This they are,
- Title: Life Between ... XIV: Further Facts About Life Between Death and Rebirth
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- with other beings by virtue of his moral life. We may say therefore
- earth. He was initiated by virtue of the fact that He was there and
- Title: Rosicrucian Esotericism: Lecture III: The Nature and Being of Man
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- transcends by virtue of his ego bearer.
- Title: Lecture: The Structure of the Lords Prayer
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- the same time by virtue of the “Great Sacrifice” pours life into
- is a member of a community by virtue of certain qualities or
- Title: Gospel of St. John: Lecture I
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- that he was one of those who, by virtue of special spiritual gifts,
- as ‘I’. The ‘I’ is distinguished, by virtue of its very name, from all
- Title: Gospel of St. John: Lecture II
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- people who, by virtue of their natural gift of clairvoyance, could
- virtue. The third quality in which Jesus of Nazareth increased means
- Title: Gospel of John: Lecture II: Living Spiritual History.
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- virtue, nobility and wisdom indispensable for the birth of the Christ
- Title: Gospel of John: Lecture IV: The Hierarchical Beings of our Solar System and the Kingdoms of the Earth.
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- the virtue of sacrifice. But no matter how great a capacity for sacrifice
- Title: Gospel of St. John: Lecture VII
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- Gospel of St. John was initiated by Christ Jesus Himself. By virtue of
- Title: Gospel of St. John: Lecture IX
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- Himself especially called, by virtue of His impulse?
- virtue of this consanguineous marriage, possessed magic powers which
- wine? The magical force which took effect by virtue of the blood-tie
- Title: Gospel of John: Lecture IX: The Artistic Composition of the Gospel of St. John.
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- strength on this day by virtue of the divine force. — And it was
- Title: Gospel of John: Lecture X: What Occurred at the Baptism?
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- who found Him, by virtue of an increase in their soul force. To say
- over life and death by virtue of His power over the
- Title: Esoteric Lessons Part II: Kassel, 2-6-10
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- is the first virtue that one who wants to tread an esoteric path must
- Title: Principle/Economy: Lecture IX: Ancient Revelation and Learning How to Ask Modern Questions
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- astral body. Hence, they received Christianity by virtue of
- Title: Mission/Folk-Souls (1970): 2. Normal and abnormal Archangels and Time Spirits.
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- virtue of certain attributes are able to exercise the powers that
- Title: Mission/Folk-Souls (1970): 3. The inner Life of the Folk Spirits. Formation of the Races.
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- to cultivate them. Such is his individual destiny by virtue of which
- over the whole Earth. We find that, by virtue of the normal Spirits
- Title: Mission/Folk-Souls (1970): 6. The Five Root Races of Mankind.
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- virtue of this function as Regent and Guide of that sphere. The
- Title: Mission/Folk-Souls (1970): 11. Nerthus, Freyja and Gerda.
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- By virtue of this inherent power he is able to ensure that what could
- Title: Esoteric Lessons Part II: Oslo, 6-20-10
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- about good and evil, truth and other virtues that the creator Gods
- gradually live in accordance with these virtues out of his own
- Title: Man/Light of Occultism: Lecture III.
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- remnant at least of what the brain is capable of, by virtue of these
- Title: Man/Light of Occultism: Lecture VI.
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- by virtue of the senses as well as by virtue of the mechanism of arm
- involuntarily. Man, however, by virtue of his superior brain, wedges
- Title: Man/Light of Occultism: Lecture VII.
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- have here a people who manifest especially the virtue of courage, a
- Title: Man/Light of Occultism: Lecture VIII.
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- perceive the fact that the Resurrection took place by virtue of the
- Title: Man/Light of Occultism: Lecture X.
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- virtue of its own nature. Therefore in relation also to this truth
- Title: Question/Economic Life: Lecture: The Central Question of Economic Life
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- harmoniously together with the others by virtue of being able
- Title: Cosmic Forces in Man: Lecture III: The Mission of the Scandanavian Peoples
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- properly, we may leave undeveloped much that by virtue of his
- Title: Man's Being: Lecture I
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- some of his virtues and qualities moved, as it were, towards
- Title: Background/Mark: Lecture Thirteen: The Voice of the Angelos and the Speech of the Exousiai
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- Dynameis (Spirits of Movement, or Mights, also Virtues), and
- Title: Lecture: The Mysteries (Die Geheimnisse)
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- retained a lasting possession: those three human virtues which
- was possible for the king to receive these three virtues as
- In him I scarce as virtue may denote
- Title: Lecture Series: Christ in the 20th Century
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- could develop only what was implanted in him by virtue of belonging to a
- Title: Bhagavad Gita/Paul: Lecture III: The union of the three streams in the Christ Impulse, the Teaching of Krishna.
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- and virtue through Sattva, with the passions and affections, with the
- ordinary life feel enthusiasm for wisdom and virtue? Because he is
- enthusiasm for virtue, compassion and knowledge, his connection with
- Title: Poetry/Speech: Lecture VI: Speech-Formation and Poetic Form
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- drawn, by virtue of his intuitive and instinctive ability, to the
- Title: Lecture III: The Balance in the World and Man, Lucifer and Ahriman
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- day-consciousness, and only by virtue of this are we in a position to
- Title: Lecture: Brunetto Latini
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- the four Virtues of man, and to the knowledge of
- As to the four Virtues — Plato already named them:
- Philosophy, of the four Virtues, and of the God of Love.
- Title: Problem of Death: Lecture III
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- virtue of what he is in earthly life ... for this is
- Title: Tree of Life/Knowledge: Lecture II: Tree of Life - II
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- experiences, since this exists by virtue of what Lucifer has effected
- Title: Chance/Necessity/Providence: Lecture 5: Necessity and Past, Chance and Present
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- We can make a human virtue of transforming
- what name do we give the virtue that carries the past into further life
- stages? Loyalty! Loyalty is the virtue related to the past, just as
- love is the virtue related to the present, to immediate living.
- Title: Community Life: Lecture 6: The Concept of Love as it Relates to Mysticism
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- special treatment by virtue of being the reincarnation of somebody or
- Title: Occult Movement: Lecture Two
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- nature would be that by virtue of which nature as a whole
- Title: Lecture: The Christmas Thought and the Secret of the Ego
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- have this by virtue of the fact that we are able to have moments in
- way only by virtue of the fact that the Christ being has streamed
- Title: Riddle of Humanity: Lecture Three
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- free individuality by virtue of his thinking. Such a question,
- Title: Riddle of Humanity: Lecture Five
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- Plato says that there exist four virtues. The whole of morality takes
- particular virtues. The first virtue Plato mentions is wisdom
- wisdom now understood as a virtue, not as science. Since wisdom as a
- virtue is related to the way truth is experienced, it takes hold of
- by the virtue of strength of heart (Starkmut) I cannot
- this next in-pouring (yellow). Thus we now have wisdom as virtue in
- the head (green), strength of heart as virtue in the area of the chest
- Plato calls the third virtue temperance, sophrosyne, and he
- consciously experiencing them. It is no virtue to live a life that
- And then Plato refers to a fourth, comprehensive virtue that flows
- you yesterday. He calls this virtue dikaiosyne. We have to
- Title: Riddle of Humanity: Lecture Fifteen
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- races or peoples by virtue of their blood relationships, but because
- Title: Lecture: Inner Impulses: Lecture I
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- with Rome simply on this citizen concept. By virtue of this, when it
- Title: Lecture: Inner Impulses: Lecture II
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- strength who, by virtue of this authority, received the name The
- Title: Lecture: Inner Impulses: Lecture IV
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- the training toward virtue and then the communication of wisdom.
- Training in virtue and, in particular, the training of moral courage
- Title: Lecture: Inner Impulses: Lecture V
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- of happiness with the good, with virtue, there is an ahrimanic
- short, prosperity and the good, prosperity and virtue are not
- Title: Lecture: Inner Impulses: Lecture VII
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- in the old way, but that, by virtue of these fantastic ideas, they
- Title: History of Art: Lecture II: Leonardo, Michelangelo and Raphael
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- 86. The Three Virtues. (Vatican. Rome.)
- Title: Lecture: The Cyclic Movement of Sleeping and Waking
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- other creatures. He, by virtue of his organisation, can
- Through all that Goethe developed in himself by virtue of his
- spinal system, and by virtue of this relation we have a far
- by virtue of our senses-system, our head. And now consider: Man
- Title: of Early Human Destiny into Extraterrestial Relationships
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- is called by virtue of his inner qualities.’ Well, let us
- Title: Lecture: Factors of Karma/Deficiencies in Psychoanalysis
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- from the remainder of the organism (by virtue of the part it
- Title: Lecture: Matter Incidental to the Question of Destiny
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- self-criticism, and most of all with respect to the virtue of
- Title: Lecture: Hereditary Impulses and Impulses from Previous Earth Lives
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- many other things. A thing is important not by virtue of what
- Title: Lecture: The Relation of Man to the Hierarchies
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- itself, if I may say so, by its own inherent virtue, had a kind
- words by virtue of what the words have become through language.
- The words have lost their virtue, they have lost their old
- Title: Karma of Vocation: Lecture IX
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- come about by virtue of our correct or incorrect conception. As
- Title: Karma of Vocation: Lecture X
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- others remain here on earth. By virtue of his or her passing
- Title: History of Art: Lecture V: Rembrandt
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- by virtue of it he is the great and original spirit that he is.
- Title: History of Art: Lecture VI: Dutch and Flemish Painting
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- the citizen virtues of the Northern Netherlands reaching down into the
- Title: Karma of Untruthfulness I: Lecture Six
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- to chess, in which the vices and the virtues compete with one
- In Utopia there is also another peculiarity; good and evil, virtue
- punishment for virtue and vice.
- Title: Karma of Untruthfulness I: Lecture Seven
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- disbelief in the virtue of definitions and general principles and our
- Title: Karma of Untruthfulness I: Lecture Eleven
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- express opinions steeped in all kinds of moralistic virtues. But here
- Title: Karma of Untruthfulness II: Lecture Fourteen
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- embellish them, by virtue of an easy imagination which finds unexpected
- Title: History of Art: Lecture VIII: Raphael and the Northern Artists
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- virtue of the light itself. Here we do not take our start from the laws
- the inner virtues of the world of color, out of the inner essence of the
- Title: Fall/Darkness: Lecture 4: The Elemental Spirits of Birth and Death
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- others, will of course seek to develop certain virtues.
- nothing to be said against a desire for virtue, but the
- virtues. It is much more important to them to be able to feel
- consciousness of having one particular virtue or another is
- that virtue. They want to feel they have the virtue rather
- certain secrets connected with the virtues remain hidden to
- of reality when it comes to people having virtues.
- Perfection, benevolence, beautiful virtues, rights — it is
- say: A virtue — perfection, benevolence — goes in
- Title: Problem of Faust: Lecture VI: The Helena Saga and the Riddle of Freedom
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- unconsciously in human souls by virtue of the laws of
- Title: Reappearance/Christ: Lecture XII: Individual Spirit Beings and the Undivided Foundation of the World: Part 3
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- correctly God, virtue, and immortality. When one sees the things that
- through abstract theology; virtue is also regarded as something
- from this comer of the West, in exoteric literature, then God, virtue
- formulas of God, virtue, and immortality in something much more
- In the same schools about which we are speaking, virtue
- is not called virtue but is simply called health, and one endeavors
- one makes the abstract ideas of God, virtue, and immortality into
- health, and prolonging life in place of God, virtue, and immortality,
- upon the three-foldness of God, virtue, and immortality — gold,
- Title: Wrong and Right Use: Lecture 3
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- Immortality; Goethe called them God, Virtue and Immortality. If
- abstract theology, and virtue also as something abstract
- Western quarter anything is said about God, virtue or freedom,
- When “virtue” is discussed in these same schools,
- materialistic colouring; if the abstract ideas of God, virtue
- put in the place of God, virtue and immortality, so from the
- different way on the triad, God, virtue and immortality —
- Title: Mysteries of Ancient and Modern Times: Lecture 1
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- manipulations became real magic by virtue of these forces
- have become magical manipulations, simply by virtue of the
- Title: Mysteries of Ancient and Modern Times: Lecture 3
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- within him the Heavens of the fixed stars, by virtue of the
- Title: Problem of Faust: Lecture VII: Some Spiritual-Scientific Observations
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- what he is solely by virtue of his dependence on his own
- Title: Three Streams: Lecture IV: Consciousness Soul and Scientific Thinking, Sorat and 666
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- virtue of this age of the Consciousness Soul we have once more to
- Title: Three Streams: Lecture IV: Consciousness Soul and Scientific Thinking, Sorat and 666
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- virtue of this age of the Consciousness Soul we have once more to
- Title: Symptom 2 Reality: Lecture II: Symptomatology of Recent Centuries
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- virtues or his defects, according to one's point of view.
- Title: Symptom 2 Reality: Lecture III: Characteristics of Historical Symptoms in Recent Times
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- the present time? By virtue of what cosmic rhythm does the
- by virtue of its association with the earth, just as I can
- Title: Symptom 2 Reality: Lecture VIII: Religious Impulses of the Fifth Post-Atlantean Epoch
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- Title: Symptom 2 Reality: Lecture IX: The Relation Between the Deeper European Impulses and Those of the Present Day
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- People of the Christ, so too, by virtue of certain facts
- Thirdly: This veneration must consist in virtue and piety.
- involved and by virtue of which mankind ceases to develop
- This must not be accounted a virtue or defect of any
- Title: How Can Mankind Find Christ Again?: Lecture 6
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- with the Mysteries, who could make this choice by virtue of a certain
- Title: Goetheanism as an Impulse for Man's Transformation - Lecture II: St. John of the Cross
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- working in him the practice of certain virtues becomes easy which otherwise
- Title: Lecture: A Turning-Point in Modern History
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- rational necessity as the highest human virtue. Duty,
- Title: The Social Question as a Question of Consciousness: Lecture 3
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- to do and by virtue of this work has a claim to the articles essential
- Title: The Social Question as a Question of Consciousness: Lecture 6
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- people to be good Christians, and uphold all manner of virtues having
- Title: Art as a Bridge ...: Lecture: Art As A Bridge Between The Sensible And The Supersensible
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- themselves as excluded by virtue of their entire life situation from what
- personality. By virtue of this development of the human personality,
- “I” becomes interesting by virtue of giving
- Title: Mission of Michael: Lecture III. Michaelic Thinking.
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- can be symbolically expressed, as has been stated, by virtue of our
- now live by virtue of three evolutionary states having preceded our
- are perceiving and intelligent beings by virtue of our living in the
- We comprehend one another in this simple fashion only by virtue of our
- Title: Mysteries of Light: Lecture III: Historical Occurrences of the Last Century
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- fundamental social virtue. In our time of social demands this
- virtue is one of the rarest, for although people demand that everyone
- Title: Lecture III ..... Spiritual Science and Medicine
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- of soul and spirit. If I think or feel, I think and feel by virtue of
- Title: Lecture IV ...... Spiritual Science and Medicine
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- processes take place, by virtue of the same forces that develop the
- Title: Lecture V ....... Spiritual Science and Medicine
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- heals only through and by virtue of this process, so that, in actual
- form of drops, by virtue of their inner combination of forces. This is
- stems or trunks (by virtue of which trees become perennial) represents
- Title: Lecture VI ...... Spiritual Science and Medicine
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- mechanically by virtue of a force opposed to the pull of gravity but
- Title: Lecture VIII .... Spiritual Science and Medicine
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- virtue of their inner kinship. So you must say that what is diffused
- Title: Lecture X ....... Spiritual Science and Medicine
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- exist as men by virtue of our tendency perpetually to de-form the
- Title: Lecture XV ...... Spiritual Science and Medicine
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- virtue of sulphur. Now sulphur is within the mineral kingdom that
- Title: Lecture XVIII ... Spiritual Science and Medicine
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- centralised, in the human organism itself. By virtue of its lungs the
- Title: Lecture XIX ..... Spiritual Science and Medicine
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- albuminising processes? They are those by virtue of which all that is
- Title: Man: Hieroglyph: Lecture Eleven
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- virtue of the fact that these will return before the physical and
- Title: Thomas Aquinas: Lecture III: Thomism in the Present Day
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- begins to love virtue, and therefore practises virtue,
- Title: Redemption of Thinking: Lecture III:
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- spirituality and starts there loving virtue, and, therefore,
- practises virtue because it loves it out of
- Title: Social Forms: Lecture III
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- we are remaining still or moving simply by virtue of the
- Title: Social Forms: Lecture IX
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- Swabian by birth and by virtue of the region of his youth:
- Title: Social Forms: Lecture XII
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- represents by virtue of his astral body, we find the plant
- Title: Social Forms: Lecture XIII
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- thus established by virtue of brotherliness in the human soul
- Title: Boundaries of Natural Science: Lecture I
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- activity within them, so that there rises up within us, by virtue of this
- Title: Boundaries of Natural Science: Lecture V
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- Title: Lecture IV: Physiology and Therapeutics
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- works in a certain way by virtue of its striving upward, working in an
- Title: Spirituality: Lecture 1: Historical Symptomology, the Year 790, Alcuin, Greeks, Platonism, Aristotelianism, East, West, Middle, Ego
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- the human being by virtue of having clothed his soul-and-spirit nature with a physical and
- how Kant developed. Something else became of this pupil of Wolff by virtue of the fact that the
- Title: New Spirituality: Lecture 2: The New Spirituality and the Christ Experiance of the Twentieth Century - 1
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- the deeper forces playing in these conflicts. And although, by virtue of the whole make-up of the
- Title: New Spirituality: Lecture 3: The New Spirituality and the Christ Experiance of the Twentieth Century - 2
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- Eastern human beings, be it more or less consciously, by virtue of the particular
- his soul everything that comes to him by virtue of a kind of revelation. Reason — even when
- Title: Lecture: The Shaping of the Human Form out of Cosmic and Earthly Forces
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- expressed by virtue of having gone through the conditions of
- Title: Lecture: The Bridge between Morality and Nature
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- love as a moral virtue during our life between birth and death.
- Like a refinement in the microcosm appears the virtue of love,
- Title: Responsibility of Man: Lecture I
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- of Hierarchies. It is by virtue of the solid Earth, the firm
- Title: Responsibility of Man: Lecture III
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- virtue of our nerves-senses system, and the life of concepts
- Title: Materialism/Anthroposophy: Lecture II
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- ready-made, as it were, by virtue of its own nature, then
- Title: Curative Eurythmy: Lecture 1
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- from below in the rhythmic system into quiet; and by virtue of the fact
- Title: Curative Eurythmy: Lecture 3
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- these two different movements. You can observe what is present by virtue
- Title: Anthro Medical Therapy: Lecture V
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- human organism, by virtue of its imitative tendency, comes to
- Title: Materialism/Anthroposophy: Lecture IV
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- himself, he grasps only what he has become by virtue of the
- Title: Anthro Medical Therapy: Lecture VI
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- body simply by virtue of the fact that a human being is a
- Title: Curative Eurythmy: Lecture 5
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- certain people by virtue of their race. I brought such things to discussion
- Title: Materialism/Anthroposophy: Lecture VI
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- virtue of divine-spiritual power? It does not wish to do
- Title: Curative Eurythmy: Lecture 7
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- understanding. Simply by virtue of knowing what is going on in the
- Title: Materialism/Anthroposophy: Lecture IX
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- isolated human body, in what the human body is by virtue of
- Title: Materialism/Anthroposophy: Lecture X
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- virtue of which we comprehend the world. This was not so in
- Title: Materialism/Anthroposophy: Lecture XI
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- something that rests within me simply by virtue of the fact
- not possess a certain power by virtue of being a landowner.
- Title: Materialism/Anthroposophy: Lecture XII
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- and says: He is actually a man who had any number of virtues,
- Thus, says de Maistre, Locke was gifted with all virtues.
- Title: Lecture: Man, Offspring of the World of Stars
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- by virtue of their own inherent nature. They work here as Earth
- Title: Materialism/Anthroposophy: Lecture XIII
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- being by virtue of their own nature. Here, they are active as
- Title: Materialism/Anthroposophy: Lecture XVI
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- less of a still higher spiritual being, which he is by virtue
- Title: Therapeutic Insights: Lecture I
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- human being is human, so to speak, by virtue of the fact that
- Title: Therapeutic Insights: Lecture V
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- goes through the portal of death, he lives by virtue of
- Title: Lecture: Thinking and Willing as Two Poles of Human Soul-Life
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- All that we develop by virtue of our humanity is developed out of the
- Title: Lecture: Evil and the Power of Thought
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- faced, by virtue of the geographical features of the West and its
- by virtue of the terrestrial configuration of the West, to the
- virtue of his individual constitution, he was also able to penetrate
- Title: Cosmosophy 1: Lecture I
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- virtue of the geographical conditions of the Western world
- when he penetrated, by virtue of the earthly conditions of
- virtue of his particular, individual constitution, he was
- Title: Cosmosophy 1: Lecture VI
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- animal organization, we have by virtue of the constellations
- Title: Cosmosophy 1: Lecture VII
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- thought element, that he took with him. By virtue of having
- Title: Cosmosophy 1: Lecture VIII
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- there only by virtue of the particular shape given it by the
- realms. It is only there by virtue of the processes that the
- Title: Art of Lecturing: Lecture III
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- the economic life represent by virtue of having a price-tag? It is a
- Title: Art of Lecturing: Lecture IV
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- good or bad. Reluctance to speak is the virtue, not eagerness
- Title: Art of Lecturing: Lecture IV
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- that this small spot is maintained by virtue of being something
- Title: Cosmosophy 1: Lecture XI
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- that he has here by virtue of the predisposition for freedom
- Title: Old/New Methods: Lecture Ten
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- traditional concepts of beauty, wisdom, virtue and strength, he created
- Title: Old/New Methods: Lecture Twelve
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- pleases him, because what pleases him is good by virtue of the fact
- Title: Human Questions and Cosmic Answers: Lecture I
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- able, by virtue of the cosmic processes inherent within it, to work
- Title: Lecture I
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- body we are conscious by virtue of this upward driving force. Thus we
- Title: Lecture III
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- by virtue of the division of labour, extending as it does into the
- virtue of the division of labour is its own fundamental demand.
- Title: Lecture X
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- case, by virtue of his particular connection with the economic system
- do with it by virtue of his particular economic situation?
- Title: Lecture XII
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- obliged to admit the following. While the article itself, by virtue of
- economist if I used very young money. For the young money, by virtue
- Title: Lecture XIII
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- which he saves himself by virtue of it. Take these two economic fields
- Title: Philosophy, Cosmology and Religion: Lecture X: The Experience of the Soul's Will Nature
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- capacities. By virtue of these forces, it actually remains
- Title: Man/World of Stars: Lecture I: The Spirit-Seed of Man's Physical Organism
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- I mean the three manifestations of human nature by virtue of
- Title: Health and Illness I: Lecture VI: The Nose, Smell, and Taste
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- Indeed, all of you extend to Arlesheim by virtue of what you
- discriminate among these other things by virtue of what he had
- Title: Health and Illness I: Lecture VII: Spiritual-Scientific Foundations for a True Physiology
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- virtue of his skin, man is an entire sense organ. The skin of
- Title: Man/World of Stars: Lecture VII: Inner Processes in the Human Organism
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- something external by virtue of experiencing the processes of
- Title: Health and Illness I: Lecture VIII: Concerning the Soul Life in the Breathing Process
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- body. But man does not live by virtue of the senses; he lives
- well only by virtue of being constantly shielded from earthly
- certain length of time by virtue of the male
- Title: Origins/Natural Science: Lecture III
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- experience of the world by virtue of movements, (which can also be,
- Title: Origins/Natural Science: Lecture V
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- empty space containing within it minute particles that by virtue of
- Title: Origins/Natural Science: Lecture IX
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- lives inwardly in man by virtue of the etheric body. The work of this
- Title: Lecture: Salt, Mercury, Sulphur
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- what man has formed in his etheric body by virtue of which he
- Title: Lecture: Truth, Beauty and Goodness
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- not by virtue of his own spiritual life, but by virtue of some profession
- Title: Health and Illness II: Lecture VI: Diphtheria and Influenza; Crossed Eyes
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- soft skin. By virtue of living in the air, the bird is equipped
- Title: Lecture: Fall and Redemption
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- by virtue of a few anthroposophical catchwords like ‘physical
- Title: Lecture: Self Knowledge and the Christ Experience
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- as chance directed. Man who by virtue of his higher soul development is
- Title: Inner Nature of Music: Lecture VII
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- through his physical and etheric bodies. By virtue of the
- Title: The Cycle of the Year: Lecture V
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- * The third of the cardinal or Platonic virtues, called in
- Here you have the four Platonic concepts of virtue: Wisdom [Prudence],
- Title: Child's Changing Consciousness: Lecture VI
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- Here we need to consider three human virtues —
- general. They are three fundamental virtues. The first concerns
- Fundamentally, these are the three principal human virtues
- and, to a certain extent, encompass all other virtues.
- yet gratitude is a virtue that, in order to play a proper role
- The second fundamental virtue, which is love, then grows from
- else can be the basis for truly ethical virtue except a kind of
- Title: Child's Changing Consciousness: Lecture VII
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- freedom. I referred to the two fundamental virtues:
- fundamental virtue develops, which is the sense of duty.
- on the ability to love. If these two virtues have been
- Title: Arts and Their Mission: Lecture V
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- not think merely by virtue of his own inner force. In every
- Title: Arts and Their Mission: Lecture VI
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- their virtue. But this for Mary would he inappropriate. With her, virtue
- Mary soars up into a region beyond all virtues, where we cannot say
- of God that He is virtuous. He may, at most, be virtue itself. But this
- (virtue, in German) is related to taugen (to be fit, in German).
- term: semblance, the beautiful; wisdom is formless knowledge; virtue
- because of the way it is painted. In the middle, beauty; below, virtue,
- to virtue it is not a question of fitness for just anything, but of
- only by characterizing virtue in its outer appearance, let us say by
- contrasting it with vice. But an artistic presentation of virtue as
- 1. The English word virtue,
- Title: Course for Priests: Lecture IV
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- member of the whole cosmos, I will by virtue of the full
- Title: Four Seasons/Archangels: Lecture IV: The St. John Imagination
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- the other hand, all that is in human virtue and human excellence
- below and of human virtues with the shining beauty above, and if we
- Title: Four Seasons/Archangels: Lecture V: The Working Together of the Four Archangels
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- to transform their faults into virtues. For up above in the clouds
- they are pictures of all that by dint of virtue humanity has achieved.
- Title: World History: Lecture VIII: The Burning of the Ephesian Temple and the Goetheanum
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- preserve this form by virtue of the Earthly forces. Look at the
- Title: Young Doctors Course: Lecture VIII
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- So that by virtue of this very quality, gold works as a
- Title: IV: A MICHAEL LECTURE
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- virtue of the fluid element. You must conceive it rightly. The
- Earth. We behold the secrets reflected by virtue of the earth; they
- visions inscribed in the astral light by virtue of the air. This time
- by virtue of the resistance of the earth. There, to begin with, the
- written on the tablet by virtue of the air and water and earth.
- Title: Rosicrucianism/Initiation: Lecture VI: The Tasks of the Michael Age
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- virtue of the fluid element. You must conceive it rightly. The
- Earth. Man beholds the secrets reflected by virtue of the Earth; they
- inscribed in the astral light by virtue of the air. This time it goes
- by virtue of the resistance of the earth. There, to begin with, the
- reacts in turn on all that stands written on the tablet by virtue of
- Title: Anthroposophy Introduction: Lecture IX: Phases of Memory and the Real Self
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- life — in virtue of our memories — has spread itself through
- Title: Karma: Lecture I
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- being he has by virtue of his possessing an ego organism
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume I: Lecture II
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- by virtue of the ether, which pours in on to the earth from all
- virtue of the ether-body we are very much related to the world of
- life are connected with this inner quality which is ours by virtue of
- virtue of our nature, happy or miserable, as the case may be.
- of this world is taken that which determines our destiny by virtue of
- Title: Karma: Lecture II
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- virtue of its being a part of the human organism. The moment it
- — by virtue of our growing, something forms itself within
- connected with what is our inner quality by virtue of our ether
- By virtue of our
- that appears by virtue of his being born into a parental home,
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume I: Lecture III
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- on thus in a new life precisely by virtue of the way you helped in
- Title: Karma: Lecture IV
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- basis for that soul condition which sustains us by virtue of
- Title: First Class, Vol. I: Lesson 3
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- virtue of feeling yourself in the half-spiritual etheric
- Title: First Class, Vol. I: Lesson 3
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- virtue of feeling yourself in the half-spiritual etheric
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume I: Lecture VI
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- Seraphim, Cherubim, and Thrones — we are connected by virtue of
- Title: Karma: Lecture VI
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- virtue of our having intercourse with the world, from what we
- Title: First Class, Vol. I: Lesson 6
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- environment by virtue of his kinship with the earth-element.
- plant life of his environment by virtue of his kinship with the
- his own mineral nature, his own stone nature, by virtue of his
- Title: First Class, Vol. I: Lesson 6
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- environment by virtue of his kinship with the earth-element.
- plant life of his environment by virtue of his kinship with the
- his own mineral nature, his own stone nature, by virtue of his
- Title: First Class, Vol. I: Lesson 7
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- You strive in virtue.
- be lived as human virtue. And the Three appear before spiritual
- You strive in virtue.
- Title: First Class, Vol. I: Lesson 7
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- You strive in virtue.
- be lived as human virtue. And the Three appear before spiritual
- You strive in virtue.
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume II: Lecture II
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- virtue of the inner strength which (in its members) it had acquired
- by virtue of the peculiar quality of his spirit. For after all,
- Title: Moon-Birth and Sun-Birth. Necessity and Freedom. Stages of the Ancient Easter Initiation
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- yet by virtue of the Moon forces when they placed me into this earthly
- Title: Easter Festival: Lecture II:
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- become merely by virtue of the moon forces. Thus in the sun
- one attain strong inner forces of soul, by virtue of which one
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume II: Lecture III
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- virtue of an inner law, humility will unfold in him. The recognition
- Title: Young Doctors Course: Easter Course: Lecture III
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- yourselves as a virtue) heretics who experienced a strong
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume II: Lecture VI
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- whom I was on terms of intimacy by virtue of the habits and
- within the other man; and this not by virtue of your
- First, you disregard everything that is in man by virtue of his
- Title: Karmic Relationships, Volume II: Lecture XII
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- virtue of their earlier earthly lives bring into the spiritual world
- yourselves what this personality acquired by virtue of the fact that
- Title: Evolution, Earth, Man: Lecture I
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- Well now, it is usually quite a virtue if one can forget
- Title: Curative Education: Lecture 6
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- him by virtue of his antecedents; hence, and to that extent, there is
- Title: Curative Education: Lecture 9
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- it is most important that by virtue of the authority we have with the
- Title: Curative Education: Lecture 12
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- Ahrimanic aberrations. The virtue of mother's milk. In embryo
- with a grown person. The virtue for the child of the mother's milk,
- Title: Pastoral Medicine: Lecture 8
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- we can attain. It is by virtue of our past that we have become what
- Title: Broken Vessels: Lecture 8
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- we can attain. It is by virtue of our past that we have become what
- Title: Pastoral Medicine: Lecture 9
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- bodies, we know that by virtue of what these bodies are, certain
- unites spirit with physical substance by virtue of deep insight into
- Title: Broken Vessels: Lecture 9
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- bodies, we know that by virtue of what these bodies are, certain
- unites spirit with physical substance by virtue of deep insight into
- Title: First Class Lessons: Lecture XXVI (recapitulation)
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- Title: Pastoral Medicine: Lecture 11
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- at the position the substance had in the world process by virtue of
- Title: Broken Vessels: Lecture 11
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- at the position the substance had in the world process by virtue of
- Title: Book of Revelation: Lecture Fourteen
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- inwardly productive, including his virtues, from the spiritual
- Title: The Apocalypse: Lecture XIV
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- virtues and everything productive that they will find inwardly
- Title: Spiritual Hierarchies: Lecture 5
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- Virtutes, Virtues), or Spirits of Motion, and the Spirits of Form,
- Title: Lecture: Sermon on the Mount and the Return of Christ
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- Three virtues
- group of three virtues stand higher: Righteousness, Mercy,
- the first, we find that the first three virtues refer to the
- there are the virtues which lead up to the higher Beings.
- Title: Riddles of the World: Lecture IV: Spiritual Science and the Social Question
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- centuries. He had two virtues that enabled him to intervene in
- Title: Gospel of John: Lecture IV: The Raising of Lazarus
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- have to offer, I say by virtue of the initiation which has
- virtue of the initiation which the Lord has conferred upon
- Title: Gospel of John: Lecture VI: The "I AM"
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- of the gods, but by virtue of the densification of the
- Title: Gospel of John: Lecture VII: The Mystery of Golgotha
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- forces he has acquired by virtue of possessing a physical, an
- Title: Lecture: The Bible and Wisdom.
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- understood works upon every heart by virtue of its intrinsic mysteries. It
- Title: Ascension/Pentecost II: WHITSUN: the Festival of the free Individuality
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- different way to the two parents. The principle by virtue of which one
- belonged more to one's folk, by virtue of which one was related to the
- Title: Manifestations of Karma: Lecture 9: Karmic Effects Of Our Experiences As Men and Women. Death and Birth In Relationship to Karma
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- certain shadings in woman's soul life by virtue of her womanhood. It
- Title: Esoteric Lessons Part II: Hannover, 12-31-11
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- virtues, we couldn't develop freely at all. Since we would
- Title: World of the Senses and World of the Spirit: Lecture V
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- of senses, of glands and of digestion, has by virtue of these
- activity, muscle activity and the strength and effective virtue of
- round with him all the time. It is by virtue of what is behind
- Title: World of the Senses and World of the Spirit: Lecture VI
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- that the virtues which lie in the seed of a plant are differently
- connected with man than the virtues contained in the root. All that
- and virtue be born in the human heart. Let us strive after a real
- Title: Principle/Economy: Lecture I: The Principle of Spiritual Economy in Connection with Questions of Reincarnation: An Aspect of the Spiritual Guidance of Mankind
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- have changed by virtue of this collaboration. What today we
- Title: Lecture 5: Spiritual Beings in the Heavenly Bodies and in the Kingdoms of Nature
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- social system by virtue of this reciprocity, so is there also a
- Title: Lecture: The National Epics With Especial Attention to the Kalevala
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- the sister of Gunther, but who by virtue of his special qualities can
- Title: Occult Significance of the Bhagavad Gita: Lecture 5 of 9
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- the core and does not stop halfway. This is just the virtue of the
- Title: Education: Lecture VII: The Rhythmic System, Sleeping and Waking, Imitation
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- imagery, the impulse for these virtues becomes a second nature, for
- Title: Education: Lecture VIII: Reading, Writing and Nature Study
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- by virtue of his strength of will. The will grows inwardly strong if
- Title: Education: Lecture IX: Arithmetic, Geometry, History
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- and astral body. By virtue of its own inherent forces, it has ever the
- Title: Agriculture Course: Lecture 3
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- killed. Nevertheless, by virtue of its native essence it is the
- Title: Agriculture Course: Lecture 4
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- by virtue of its inherent life and mobility — as of a fuel. It
- But it is best of all if it is just at the point of dissolution by virtue
- itself, by virtue of the cow-horn manure. And now, suppose you extend
- Title: Agriculture Course (1938): Lecture IV
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- virtues in the manure. But they are only indications of
- Title: Agriculture Course: Lecture 5
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- creatures the virtue of preparing the right conditions and relationships
- as occurring by virtue of the processes that arise of themselves, here
- more stable nitrogen content, and with the added virtue of kindling
- Title: Agriculture Course (1938): Lecture V
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- of insight and not without it. We have learned the virtues of
- Title: Agriculture Course: Lecture 7
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- The fully developed insect, in effect, lives and moves by virtue of
- only live upon the earth by virtue of the tree-roots being there. However,
- assimilate earth and water, the animal itself must be there by virtue
- Title: Agriculture Course (1938): Lecture VII
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- already come into existence by virtue of air and warmth if it
- warmth. And in virtue of that quality it may be said that the
- Title: Agriculture Course: Lecture 8
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- they work there chiefly by virtue of the forces they unfold, not by
- Title: Egyptian Myths: Lecture 2: The Reflection of Cosmic Events in the Religious Views of Men.
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- the Virtues, Dominions, Thrones, Cherubim, and finally the Seraphim.
- Title: Egyptian Myths: Lecture 5: The Genesis of the Trinity of Sun, Moon, and Earth. Osiris and Typhon.
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- Virtues, or Dynameis, or Spirits of Motion; the Dominions, or
- Title: Christ and the Spiritual World: Lecture Five
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- knightly exercises and the code of knightly virtue; that she arranged
- Title: Lecture: Human Life in the Light of Spiritual Science
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- gained. What we have before us is something uniting human beings, by virtue
- Title: Life Between ... IX: Life After Death
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- because of previous earth lives, or by virtue of a special act of
- Title: Lecture: Christ In Relation To Lucifer and Ahriman
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- happening in the world outside. If by virtue of his karma a person
- Title: Address: The Spiritual-Scientific Basis of Goethe's Work
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- virtues. Selection, order, harmony, and purpose he calls to his
- Title: Occult Science and Occult Development
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- education of the soul in the virtue of moral courage, spiritual
- Title: Lecture: Knowledge and Initiation
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- essentially wakeful human beings. It is by virtue of our thinking
- Title: Mans Life on Earth: Lecture VI
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- can undergo it by virtue of the power of Christ which he has
- Title: Planetary Spheres: Lecture VI
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- can undergo it by virtue of the power of Christ which he has
- Title: Lecture: Man As A Picture of The Living Spirit
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- speech. For we could never speak by virtue of physical forces alone.
- Title: Principle/Economy: Lecture VI: On the Occasion of the Dedication of the Francis of Assisi Branch
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- of you, something else special happened by virtue of the fact
- Title: Life Between ... I: Investigations Into Life Between Death and Rebirth 1
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- our own virtues or defects, or indeed the effect of a headache. He
- Title: Theosophy/Rosicrucian: Lecture II: The Ninefold Constitution of Man
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- By virtue of this fourth member of his being, man is the crown of
- Title: Theosophy/Rosicrucian: Lecture IX: Planetary Evolution I
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- able to do so by virtue of having an etheric body. Its body,
- Title: Theosophy/Rosicrucian: Lecture X: Planetary Evolution II
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- man today. By virtue of the incorporation of the astral body into the
- Title: Theosophy/Rosicrucian: Lecture XIII: The Future of Man
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- can create his kind by virtue of uttering his own likeness, then is
- Title: Illusory Illness: Lecture II: Feverish Pursuit of Health
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- belongs to those virtues that most readily become a reality in
- Title: Lecture: Problems of Nutrition.
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- man could not be an ego being, and it is only by virtue of his ego
- Title: Principle/Economy: Lecture III: More Intimate Aspects of Reincarnation
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- capable of incarnating only by virtue of the fact that it
- Title: Metaporphoses/Soul One: Lecture 5: Human Character
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- part of the face. If a man achieves the special virtue of the Intellectual
- Title: Genesis: Lecture IV: The Forming and Creating of Beings by the Elohim.
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- translated “Virtues.” Cf. Milton's
- Title: Genesis: Lecture IV
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- translated “Virtues.” Cf. Milton's
- Title: Wonders of the World: Lecture 9
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- inner astrality by virtue of the strange astral cap or hood which
- Title: Wonders of the World: Lecture 9
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- inner astrality by virtue of the strange astral cap or hood which
- Title: Esoteric Christianity: The Christ Impulse as Living Reality - Lecture 1
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- virtue could be both taught and learnt. All this, however, will become
- Title: Initiation/Passing Moment: Lecture III
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- significant difference in the various beings that meet us. By virtue
- Title: Initiation/Passing Moment: Lecture VI
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- by virtue of their particular qualities that these men were only able
- Title: Life Between ... V: Life Between Death and Rebirth 1
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- existence by virtue of his constitution of soul.
- simply by virtue of the fact that we are human souls. From this other
- Title: Life Between ... XII: Life Between Death and Rebirth 1
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- we bring it with us by virtue of the feelings and thoughts towards
- virtue of the fact that the forces of souls who have died prematurely
- progress by virtue of unused forces so as to help souls who are in
- Title: Secrets/Threshold: Lecture II
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- abnormalities are the mirror image of what could be noble virtues in
- Title: Lecture: Perception of the Elemental World
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- can lead to a high order of virtues in the spiritual world. But if
- Title: Secrets/Threshold: Lecture III
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- a spiritual way can lead to a high order of virtues in the spiritual
- Title: Spiritual Foundation of Morality: Lecture I
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- is virtue?” Put together what the philosophers have said,
- Goodness and Virtue and you will see how many different attempts have
- virtues, and we know at once that we are expressing something which
- “bravery,” we have named the chief virtue brought by the
- the case — the other virtues are consequent upon this.
- self-same warlike deeds, which were the outcome of ancient virtue, to be
- the effect of the ancient Indian virtue as well as that of the
- goodness? What is virtue?
- outer appearances. His mother was a woman possessing the virtue of
- Title: Anthroposophical Ethics (1928): Anthroposophical Ethics I
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- virtue?” Put together what the philosophers have said,
- upon the nature of Goodness and Virtue and you will see how
- mention a single one of the principal virtues, and we know at
- “bravery,” we have named the chief virtue brought
- the more we find this to be the case — the other virtues
- virtue, to be a relic of the past, and in fact they are classed
- ancient Indian virtue as well as that of the ancient Germanic
- virtue?
- outer appearances. His mother was a woman possessing the virtue
- Title: Spiritual Foundation of Morality: Lecture II
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- path of goodness and virtue only those who later went over to
- Europe were those who shone by virtue of the qualities of which we
- that in him appeared the knightly virtues of the ancient European
- Amongst other things, Plato wrote about morals, about the virtues of
- worked, Plato described the highest virtues he recognised, namely,
- the virtues which the Greeks looked upon as those which a moral man
- virtues, and a fourth with which we shall later become acquainted.
- as virtue. This is justified, for in the most varied directions we
- corresponding to the Mysteries, as the second virtue —
- population of Europe. As the third virtue he described Temperance or
- Platonic virtues: Wisdom, Valour or Bravery; and Moderation or
- Finally, the harmonious balancing of these three virtues Plato
- describes as a fourth virtue, which he calls
- call “ I ” or the Ego. Bravery, which in Plato appears as virtue,
- virtues, wisdom, temperance, valour and justice, for we might receive
- Title: Anthroposophical Ethics (1928): Anthroposophical Ethics II
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- the path of goodness and virtue only those who later went over
- were those who shone by virtue of the qualities of which we
- Francis? We have seen that in him appeared the knightly virtues
- about morals, about the virtues of man. By the way in which he
- worked, Plato described the highest virtues he recognised,
- namely, the virtues which the Greeks looked upon as those which
- of all three virtues, and a fourth with which we shall later
- as such, Plato looked upon as virtue. This is justified, for in
- manner corresponding to the Mysteries, as the second virtue —
- population of Europe. As the third virtue he described
- are the three chief Platonic virtues: Wisdom, Valour or
- balancing of these three virtues Plato describes as a fourth
- virtue, which he calls “Justice.”
- as virtue, is here spiritualised and thereby becomes “
- Christian morality we cannot describe as the only virtues,
- Title: Spiritual Foundation of Morality: Lecture III
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- the virtues of which we have spoken: first — valour, bravery.
- virtue, which we cannot understand unless we know that what has
- says: Virtue is a human capacity or skill guided by reason and
- too much and the too-little. Aristotle here gives a definition of virtue,
- man must strive. According to Plato, the first virtue is wisdom, and
- what produces the virtue of the sentient-soul of man in the
- in the fourth post-Atlantean, or Graeco-Latin age. The virtue which
- second, the middle virtue of Plato and Aristotle. It is that virtue
- true love. But this true love must be guided by another virtue, by
- his living in all directions. Liberality is a virtue, but Shakespeare
- this virtue must accord with and be guided by interest. Interest,
- understanding which can guide us with respect to this second virtue:
- special virtue of the mind-soul or intellectual-soul; it is the
- virtue which may be described as human love accompanied by human
- understanding. Sympathy in grief and joy is the virtue which in the
- But if we give to the world what can be given to it through virtue,
- something in our actions, our virtue, our conduct towards them which
- renewal of what was given to mankind as original virtue.
- but to consider what may be spoken of as the virtue of the
- instinctive. Plato and Aristotle called it the chief virtue of the
- Maximum number of matches per file exceeded.
- Title: Lecture: Anthroposophical Ethics ... St. Francis, III
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- the virtues of which we have spoken: first — valour,
- statement, when speaking of virtue, which we cannot
- Aristotle and embodied in his philosophy. He says: Virtue is
- virtue, the like of which no subsequent philosophy has
- to Plato, the first virtue is wisdom, and according to him,
- all directions, for this ideal must be what the virtue of the
- The virtue which is the particular emblem for this part of
- second, the middle virtue of Plato and Aristotle. It is that
- virtue which in the fourth post-Atlantean age still existed
- guided by another virtue, by the interest in the being to
- Liberality is a virtue, but Shakespeare also shows us that
- nature this virtue must accord with and be guided by
- virtue: love. It is that which, through the
- Christ-impulse, has become the special virtue of the
- mind-soul or intellectual-soul; it is the virtue which may be
- Sympathy is the virtue which in the future will produce the
- through virtue, which is creative, we build. We build through
- something in our actions, our virtue, our conduct towards
- given to mankind as original virtue.
- but to consider what may be spoken of as the virtue of the
- Maximum number of matches per file exceeded.
- Title: Anthroposophical Ethics (1928): Anthroposophical Ethics III
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- Let us take the virtues of which we have spoken: first —
- virtue, which we cannot understand unless we know that
- in his philosophy. He says: Virtue is a human capacity or skill
- gives a definition of virtue, the like of which no subsequent
- Plato, the first virtue is wisdom, and according to him, he who
- produces the virtue of the sentient-soul of man in the
- Graeco-Latin age. The virtue which is the particular emblem for
- This was the second, the middle virtue of Plato and Aristotle.
- It is that virtue which in the fourth post-Atlantean age still
- by another virtue, by the interest in the being to whom we turn
- in all directions. Liberality is a virtue, but Shakespeare also
- nature this virtue must accord with and be guided by interest.
- virtue: Love. It is that which, through the Christ-impulse, has
- become the special virtue of the mind-soul or
- intellectual-soul; it is the virtue which may be described as
- grief and joy is the virtue which in the future must produce
- give to the world what can be given to it through virtue, which
- fellow-men and offer them something in our actions, our virtue,
- what was given to mankind as original virtue.
- have now but to consider what may be spoken of as the virtue of
- Maximum number of matches per file exceeded.
- Title: Apocalypse of John: Lecture VII
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- faults of their virtues and that great cleverness has the
- Title: Lecture: The Dead are With Us
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- historical life, all social life, all ethical life, proceed by virtue
- Title: Dead Are With Us: Lecture
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- ethical life, proceed by virtue of co-operation between the
- Title: Spiritual Ground: Lecture VI: The Teacher as Artist in Education
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- active by virtue of the volatile element which tends to scatter his
- Title: Spiritual Ground: Lecture VII: The Organisation of the Waldorf School
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- virtue of its heart. Now what matters in these staff meetings is not
- Title: Esoteric Cosmology: Lecture I: The Birth of the Intellect and the Mission of Christianity
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- universe. By virtue of this inexpressible, incommunicable self, man
- astral to the intellectual plane. It was by virtue of a new kind of
- Title: Esoteric Cosmology: Lecture VIII: The Christian Mystery
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- The Bearing of the Cross refers, symbolically, to a virtue of
- the soul. This virtue which consists in a sense of having ‘the
- Title: Esoteric Cosmology: Lecture IX: The Astral World
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- Only by virtue of spirituality can this health and equilibrium be
- Title: Esoteric Cosmology: Lecture X: The Astral World (continued)
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- is that whenever man develops one of the virtues, he unfolds a new
- acquisition of six virtues will, in times to come, develop the other
- six. These six virtues are: control of thought, power of initiative,
- harmony in the life of soul. When these virtues have been acquired,
- We find these virtues expressed again in signs and symbols, for
- Title: Karmic Relationships, V: Lecture VII
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- our cosmic body, we live by virtue of the cosmic word. The cosmic
- Title: Evolution of Consciousness: Lecture V: The Relation of Man to the Three Worlds
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- think.” By virtue of this “I think” it is possible
- Title: Lecture: Polarities in Health, Illness and Therapy.
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- cannot be understood if, by virtue of a specific point of view which one
- Title: Lecture: Pre-Earthly Deeds of Christ
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- Being walked upon the Earth of whom it may be said, “By virtue of this
- Title: Principle/Economy: Lecture IV: Results of Spiritual Scientific Investigations of the Evolution of Humanity: I
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- extraordinary humility and virtue, such as St. Francis of
- Title: Geographic Medicine: Lecture I
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- Title: Geographic Medicine: Lecture II
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- carried on their lives in an isolated way here. Precisely by virtue
- Title: At the Gates: Lecture II: The Three Worlds
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- renunciation. The two forms represent vice and virtue, and the story
- as beautiful, voluptuous and fascinating, virtue as ugly and repulsive.
- Title: Universe/Earth/Man: Lecture III: The Kingdoms of Nature
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- virtue or vice, but in things connected with the etheric body there is
- Title: Universe/Earth/Man: Lecture IV: The Outer Manifestations of Spiritual Beings in the Elements
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- esotericism, Spirits of Motion, or Virtues, or Dynamis.
- the virtue of the sun forces, for these were always associated with
- Title: Lecture: The Ten Commandments
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- virtues, and while desires as well as virtues exist in the
- Title: Occult History: Lecture 6
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- beauty, virtue, usefulness, purposiveness, what he wishes to achieve
- from wisdom, from the spiritual. Wisdom embraces virtue, beauty and
- Title: Esoteric Lessons Part II: Stuttgart, 2-12
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- may have moral virtues and be ever so intellectually developed, and
- Title: Man/Being/Spirit/Soul: Lecture I: Man as a Being of Spirit and Soul
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- renunciation becomes an inner intellectual virtue,
- intellectual conclusion, but an inner virtue, then this virtue
- from the sense world becomes a virtue and permeates the entire
- intellectual virtue over our own souls.
- renunciation into an intellectual virtue. Then we gradually
- Title: Man/Being/Spirit/Soul: Lecture II: The Psychological Expression of the Unconscious
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- the human being has to his environment and to himself by virtue
- Title: Spiritual-Scientific Consideration: Lecture 2: Esoteric Prelude to an Exoteric Consideration of the Social Question I
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- precisely by virtue of what we cultivate in our relations
- Title: Lecture: Supersensible Being of Man and the Evolution of Mankind
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- world, now sprang to life in his inner being by virtue of the fact
- Title: Practical Course/Teachers: Lecture III: On the Plastically Formative Arts, Music, and Poetry
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- lectures, purely in virtue of their inner structure, could be
- Title: Practical Course/Teachers: Lecture VII: The Teaching in the Ninth Year - Natural History - the Animal Kingdom
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- the most perfect creature in the world by virtue of his head.
- Title: Light Course: Second Lecture
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- brain. This is not there alone; there is also the buoyancy, by virtue
- virtue of the light that is pouring in, we see an illuminated
- Title: Light Course: Fifth Lecture
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- “time”, we ourselves have first created them by virtue of
- Title: Light Course: Sixth Lecture
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- crystal cube can exist by virtue of what it is within the compass of
- exist by virtue of all that is contained within it. The rose can only
- Title: Light Course: Seventh Lecture
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- element in consciousness. Indeed by virtue of this process, of
- Title: Light Course: Eighth Lecture
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- itself. It can only come to existence by virtue of its connection
- globe now contains came into being simply by virtue of what was
- Title: Warmth Course: Lecture III
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- virtue of the fact that it is a solid body. It has a form of itself,
- Title: Warmth Course: Lecture V
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- denser. Only by virtue of this fact can ice float on the surface of
- Title: Warmth Course: Lecture VII
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- had. It goes over into that form which is imposed upon it by virtue of
- virtue of our status as earth men, and because the earth, or at least
- Title: Warmth Course: Lecture IX
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- by pouring water on these paddle, and this water by virtue of its
- Title: Lecture: The Peoples of the Earth in the Light of Anthroposophy
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- his powers, imbues himself with perfections and virtues —
- himself to be led to true Spiritual Science, lest by virtue of his
- Title: Warmth Course: Lecture XI
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- but only by virtue of a certain habit of thinking about those limits
- Title: Warmth Course: Lecture XII
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- virtue of its inner molecular properties passes light through, and an
- Title: Warmth Course: Lecture XIV
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- terrestrial realm and active by virtue of the fact that these forces
- Title: Meditative Knowledge of Man: Lecture IV: The Art of Education Consists of Bringing Into Balance the Physical and Spiritual Nature of the Developing Human Being
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- in a child, who by virtue of his gift or through other circumstances may be
- Title: Astronomy Course: Lecture II
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- North celestial Pole (the Pole-Star). Whereas, by virtue of
- Title: Astronomy Course: Lecture III
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- that forces are there in the Earth by virtue of which it
- the old qualitative virtues in his ideas. I refer to
- Title: Astronomy Course: Lecture V
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- reproduction, by virtue of which the human race exists. Into
- Title: Astronomy Course: Lecture VI
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- virtue of conditions on the planet Earth and in the Universe
- Title: Astronomy Course: Lecture VII
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- it. The processes in which we live by virtue of these organs
- Title: Astronomy Course: Lecture VIII
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- said before, would have died long ago. It lives by virtue of
- Title: Astronomy Course: Lecture IX
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- this phenomenon within the human being comes about by virtue
- Title: Astronomy Course: Lecture X
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- virtue of the fact that the cosmic sphere is only active in
- Title: Astronomy Course: Lecture XII
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- essential that they wield their influence by virtue of what
- Title: Astronomy Course: Lecture XIII
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- there, by virtue of which the whole meaning of the planet's
- Title: Astronomy Course: Lecture XIV
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- develops a certain process by virtue of which a tiny fragment
- real at an earlier stage. It is precisely by virtue of this
- itself, by virtue of the Moon's effect. I might also draw the
- Title: Astronomy Course: Lecture XVI
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- being in his daily life simply by virtue of his internal
- man does precisely the same as in sleep. He sleeps by virtue
- Simple by virtue of the real conditions, the other end goes
- Title: Astronomy Course: Lecture XVII
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- of the outer or upper planets — work more by virtue of
- Title: Astronomy Course: Lecture XVIII
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- some complexity by virtue of their variations. Thus I can
- and simply by virtue of this arrangement the whole of it is
- system; purely and simply by virtue of the simple arrangement
- Title: Anthroposophy Science: Lecture IV
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- of a whole, and that this part can only exist by virtue of
- Title: Anthroposophy Science: Lecture V
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- members of our cosmic surroundings precisely by virtue of the
- Title: Fundamentals of Anthroposophical Medicine: Lecture I
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- that by virtue of its very position in the organism the
- that the human being is something very special by virtue of the
- human being by virtue of something other than their functions
- Title: Anthroposophical Approach to Medicine: Lecture I
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- now suppose that this is by no means correct; that by virtue of its
- man is something very special by virtue of the fact that he is a
- the human being virtue of something other than their excretory
- Title: Fundamentals of Anthroposophical Medicine: Lecture II
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- because some kind of terminology is necessary. By virtue of
- Title: Anthroposophical Approach to Medicine: Lecture II
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- necessary. By virtue of this Ego-organisation, the point where his
- Title: Fundamentals of Anthroposophical Medicine: Lecture III
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- special relationships that work in shaping the ear by virtue of
- the ear's position, notably by virtue of the fact that the ear
- Title: Anthroposophical Approach to Medicine: Lecture III
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- formative forces that work here in the ear by virtue of the ear's
- position, notably by virtue of the fact that the ear is at the
- air by virtue of the resistance of the solid and fluid organisms,
- Title: Anthroposophical Approach to Medicine: Lecture IV
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- healing process, and is then able to continue it by virtue of its own
- Title: Awakening to Community: Lecture I
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- virtues, and it is essential that it strive to acquire them. It must
- Title: Inner Nature of Music: Lecture V
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- us by virtue of gaining influence over us through the senses or by
- Title: Karmic Relationships, VI: Lecture IV
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- virtue of what happens through its impulse in the life of the
- Title: Karmic Relationships, VI: Lecture VI
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- him to fulfil his karma. And so, by virtue of his karma, the whole
- Title: Effects of Occult Development: Lecture II
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- order that a man — by virtue of his physical sheath,
- Title: Supersensible Man: Lecture V
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- is wrought there by virtue of the metallic ores.
- Title: True/False Paths: Lecture Five: The Inner Vitalization of the Soul through the Qualities of the Metallic Nature
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- therefore preserves that metallic virtue which reminds man of what
- Title: True/False Paths: Lecture Five: The Inner Vitalization of the Soul through the Qualities of the Metallic Nature
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- therefore preserves that metallic virtue which reminds man of what
- Title: True/False Paths: Lecture Six: Initiation-Knowledge, Waking Consciousness and Dream Consciousness
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- senses; an etheric body perceptible to Imagination by virtue of
- Title: True/False Paths: Lecture Six: Initiation-Knowledge, Waking Consciousness and Dream Consciousness
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- senses; an etheric body perceptible to Imagination by virtue of
- Title: Kingdom of Childhood: Lecture 5
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- faces please each other. It has many other virtues too, but as far as
- Title: True/False Paths: Lecture Seven: Knowledge of the World of Stars. Differentiation of the Historical Epochs of Mankind and their Spiritual Background
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- them the virtue of those forces that live in the emanations of man.
- by virtue of their fluid skin emanations. There is an interesting
- Title: True/False Paths: Lecture Seven: Knowledge of the World of Stars. Differentiation of the Historical Epochs of Mankind and their Spiritual Background
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- them the virtue of those forces that live in the emanations of man.
- by virtue of their fluid skin emanations. There is an interesting
- Title: True/False Paths: Lecture Eight: Potential Aberrations in Spiritual Investigation
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- motor car. They are beings who are able by virtue of their Ahrimanic
- Title: True/False Paths: Lecture Eight: Potential Aberrations in Spiritual Investigation
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- motor car. They are beings who are able by virtue of their Ahrimanic
- Title: True/False Paths: Lecture Ten: Influences of the Extra-Terrestrial Cosmos Upon the Consciousness of Man
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- remains that things will take their normal course for man by virtue
- of their inherent inertia, by virtue of the law of cosmic
- Title: True/False Paths: Lecture Ten: Influences of the Extra-Terrestrial Cosmos Upon the Consciousness of Man
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- remains that things will take their normal course for man by virtue
- of their inherent inertia, by virtue of the law of cosmic
- Title: True/False Paths: Lecture Eleven: What is the Position in Respect of Spiritual Investigation and the Understanding of Spiritual Investigation?
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- prepared for these other men, by virtue of this understanding, to
- Title: True/False Paths: Lecture Eleven: What is the Position in Respect of Spiritual Investigation and the Understanding of Spiritual Investigation?
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- prepared for these other men, by virtue of this understanding, to
- Title: Life Between ... X: Anthroposophy as the Quickener of Feeling and of Life
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- epidemics about, one also realizes the virtues that have to be
- Title: Goethe As Founder of a New Science of Aesthetics: Steiner's First Lecture
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- morality, through belief in God, virtue and immortality, we
- imbuing himself with all perfections and virtues, calling on
- a question of ascertaining the object. By virtue of what does
- Title: Macrocosm/Microcosm: Lecture 11: Man and Planetary Evolution
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- higher level by virtue of his, astral body and Ego. In our human
- Title: Mission/Rosenkreutz: Lecture III. The True Attitude to Karma
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- virtues even the very limited virtues of a boy of 18. If no
- Title: Esoteric Christianity: The True Attitude To Karma
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- not have come to me if in those days I had possessed all the virtues
- even the very limited virtues of a boy of eighteen. If no
- Title: Tension Between East and West: Lecture 3: East and West in History
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- opposite, we may say, is true of anyone today who, by virtue of
- virtue of the fact that our thinking cannot just be extended
- Title: Tension Between East and West: Lecture 5: Cosmic Memory
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- man must be a creature of love by virtue of his task on earth,
- Title: Tension Between East and West: Lecture 8: The Problem (Asia-Europe)
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- this system by virtue of having been born — by right, as
- Title: Tension Between East and West: Lecture 9: Prospects of its Solution (Europe-America)
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- interest them for a while by virtue of the piquancy of many
- Title: Tension Between East and West: Lecture 10: From Monolithic to Threefold Unity
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- Anyone who studies how, by virtue of the existence of this
- in the unity of the social organism as a whole, by virtue of
- Title: Michaelmas-Soul: Lecture II
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- He would be victorious for a very definite reason: by virtue of his
- Title: Lecture: Love and Its Meaning In The World
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- omniscience or of might into omnipotence, by virtue of which we attain
- Title: Lecture: The (Four) Great Virtues
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- The (Four) Great Virtues
- Here, the four Platonic Virtues (described in The Republic)
- VIRTUES
- understanding of what virtue and morality are.
- speak of human virtues we can distinguish four of these which we can
- describe in ordinary language. There is one virtue, as we shall
- reasons that are holy. All other virtues which exist in life, and
- of the four virtues which we shall consider, four virtues of which
- virtues in particular, because he was able to draw his wisdom from
- Mysteries Plato could distinguish the virtues better than later
- virtue which we must consider, if we speak about morality from a
- comprehensive knowledge of human nature, is the virtue of wisdom. But
- virtue can be called — though it is difficult to describe it
- exactly — the virtue of Courage. It contains the mood which
- strength and activity. It can be said that this virtue comes from the
- heart. Of one who has this virtue in ordinary life it can be said: he
- to get moving, confidently and bravely, we have this virtue. It is
- virtue can naturally be used in the physical course of life only
- consider a human heart-beat. If we have the virtue of courage, of
- virtue. They are organs for which we have still to use part of the
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- Title: Mystery of Death: Lecture I: The Four Platonic Virtues and Their Relation with the Human Members
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- The Four Platonic Virtues and Their Relation with the Human Members
- The Four Platonic Virtues and Their Relation with the Human
- virtue life of humanity. For people will learn to look at the
- moral life, at the life of virtue from a ken that goes beyond
- comprehensive view of virtue and moral life.
- we speak of the human virtues, we can distinguish four such
- virtues first of which one can speak as it were in the usual
- style of speech among people. One virtue, as we will indicate
- little as possible for holy reasons. All other virtues, which
- as special cases of the four virtues at which we want to look,
- those four virtues of which in particular antiquity has spoken
- these four virtues because he could scoop his wisdom still from
- the virtue better than the later philosophers or even those of
- first virtue, which we have to consider when we are speaking of
- cognition of the human nature, this is the virtue of wisdom
- Another virtue is that which we can call with a word that is
- hard to form, actually, the courage-like virtue
- The courage-like virtue comes, as you may say, from the heart.
- You can say of somebody who has this virtue in everyday life:
- “brave” is also good for this virtue, — then
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- Title: Lecture: How Can the Destitution of Soul in Modern Times Be Overcome?
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- civilisation, could be won at a stroke. In virtue of their respective
- Title: Lecture: The Influence of the Dead on the Life of Man on Earth
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- virtue of our etheric body — we are related to a number of
- Title: The Social Question: Lecture III: Fanaticism Versus a Real Conception of Life in Social Thinking and Willing.
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- virtues, how they should relate through love with their fellow
- Title: Social Future: Lecture III: The Task and Limitations of Democracy, Public and Criminal Law
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- administered when the judge is really able, by virtue of his own
- Title: Social Future: Lecture VI: National and International Life in the Threefold Social Organism
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- be credited to the noblest human virtues. If we contemplate maternal
- Title: Lecture: Spiritual Wisdom in the Early Christian Centuries
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- Church. The Church, by virtue of its continuity, claimed the right to
- Title: Community Building: Lecture Two
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- case of the Anthroposophical Society, by virtue of the
- Title: Polarities in Evolution: Lecture 10: Transition from the Luciferic to the Ahrimanic Age and the Christ Event to Come
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- heathen virtues and vices play a role, but there can be no such a thing
- this earth. It was considered a virtue to rise to a life that was not of
- Title: Problems of Our Time: Main Features of the Social Question and the Threefold Order of the Social Organism
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- of the Christian virtues, while a fire warms them which is fed
- virtue, religion, while their real practical life was in no way
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