AT first glance the title of this book may be somewhat misleading for
the British reader. It may suggest to him associations with
Anglo-Indian Theosophy and the Theosophical Society founded by H. P.
Blavatsky.
Rudolf Steiner, however, uses the term independently and with
different and much wider connotation. In earlier centuries,
particularly in Central Europe, Theosophy was a recognised
section of Philosophy and even of Theology. Jacob Boehme was known as
the great theosopher. In English the term goes back to the
seventeenth century.
Ultimately it leads us back to St. Paul who says (I Cor. ii, 6-7):
Howbeit we speak wisdom among them that are perfect: yet not the
wisdom of this world ... But we speak the wisdom of God (Greek
Theosophia) in a mystery, even the hidden wisdom which God
ordained before the world unto our glory.
All theosophy implies a knowledge of the spiritual world,
and such knowledge has been attained in different ways at different
epochs of man's history. The Rosicrucian way referred to in the title
is the way suited to modern man in this age of world knowledge and
individual freedom.