Rudolf Steiner, in his autobiography (chapters 35
and 36), speaks as follows concerning the character of this privately
printed matter:
The content of this
printed matter was intended as oral communications, not to be
printed ...
Nothing has ever been
said that is not in the utmost degree the purest result of developing
Anthroposophy ... Whoever reads this privately printed material can
take it in the fullest sense as containing what Anthroposophy
has to say. Therefore, it was possible without hesitation ... to
depart from the plan of circulating this printed matter only among
members [of the Anthroposophical Society]. It will be necessary,
however, to put up with the fact that erroneous matter is included in
the lecture reports that I have not revised.
The right to a judgment
about the content of such privately printed material can naturally be
conceded only to one who knows what is taken for granted as the
prerequisite basis of this judgment. For most of this printed
matter the prerequisite will be at least the anthroposophical
knowledge of the human being and of the cosmos to the extent that
their nature is set forth in Anthroposophy, and of what exists
in the form of ‘anthroposophical history’ in the
communications from the world of spirit.
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