The
following lecture-course was given by Rudolf Steiner to an audience
familiar with the general background and terminology of his
anthroposophical teaching. It should be remembered that in his
autobiography,
The Course of my Life,
he emphasises the distinction between his written works on the one
hand and, on the other, reports of lectures which were given as oral
communications and were not originally intended for print. For an
intelligent appreciation of the lectures it should be borne in mind
that certain premises were taken for granted when the words were
spoken. “These premises,” Rudolf Steiner writes,
“include, at the very least, the anthroposophical
knowledge of Man and of the Cosmos in its spiritual essence; also
what may be called ‘anthroposophical history,’ told as an
outcome of research into the spiritual world.”
For the benefit
of readers a brief list of publications relevant to the main themes of
the lectures, and a summarised plan of the Complete Edition of Rudolf
Steiner's works in the original German, have been added at the end of
this volume.
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