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Rudolf Steiner: An Introduction to His Life and Work

Rudolf Steiner: An Introduction to His Life and Work, by Gary Lachman

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By Gary Lachman
Tarcher Book Publishers, February, 2007. Click to Buy this Book!

When speaking of the life and work of Rudolf Steiner, the greatest challenge is to express it in general terms. Gary Lachman has done just that. The other challenge for those who know Rudolph Steiner’s work is to speak of it in an unbiased way. Gary Lachman invites you to know Rudolf Steiner in his humanity; a man who had one foot on this earth and the other in the spiritual world that weaves through every physical Higgs boson particle.

At the core of Rudolf Steiner’s teaching lies the principle of metamorphosis. He invites us to observe and think deeply about the form-changing process we can observe in nature and apply that to human evolution. Gary Lachman uses this same principle to reveal the life of Rudolf Steiner through the pages of his book. Steiner himself wrote in his autobiography that its purpose was to “trace the course of his thought and to show how it evolved over time.” Yet many of his followers today embalm the Steiner they think he was in the ideas of a century ago when he lived.

One of the key principles to change is the encounter with a force of resistance. Through the journey that Gary sketches we come to understand that at every turn in his life Rudolf Steiner met with resistance in one form or another, both from without and from within his organization. He still does today. Why wouldn’t such a significant thinker be as well-known as Einstein? Einstein! the one whose theories do not metamorphose into modern scientific thought as well as he may have hoped. On the back cover of Gary’s book we read, “Rudolf Steiner — educator, architect, philosopher and agriculturist — ranks amongst the most creative and prolific figures of the early twentieth century. Yet he remains a mystery to most people.”

What Gary Lachman has written in this biography goes a long way to unraveling this mystery. Steiner wanted to find ways of expressing with utmost clarity what he called “the living activity of the human spirit.” Gary explains that from an early age Steiner was aware of things “seen” and things “not seen.” The things “not seen,” meaning not grasped by the senses, weren’t fantasies, or what we’d call “mere imagination.” They were inner events taking place on a kind of interior stage, the soul.” Gary says that “Rudolf Steiner talks about the visual world as a tapestry behind which is a great work.” More »

The Christmas Festival in the Changing Course of Time

The Christmas Festival In The Changing Course Of Time  By Rudolf Steiner

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Lecture by Rudolf Steiner, December 22, 1910, Berlin. GA 125

Published by Anthroposophic Press in 1988, translated by Ernst Katz and edited by Marguerite Miller Click to Buy this Book!

Offering a review on the Now I See bLog related to the Christmas season was felt to be appropriate, especially amidst the line-up of very serious, contemporary books currently presented on the bLog, or soon Coming. Each Christmas season, a non-fiction story from any source, including lectures, articles or books, can be offered. This year the selected lecture by Rudolf Steiner fits perfectly under the previously-established category: Steiner’s Works. This special Christmas review will continue on the Now I See home page through Epiphany, January 6, 2013.

Rudolf Steiner begins this lecture with reference to the city in which he was then living, Berlin: “When we wander this time of year through the streets of large cities, we find them full of all sorts of things which our contemporaries want to have for their celebration of the approaching Christmas festival. And yet, if we contemplate what will take place in the coming days in large cities such as ours, we may well ask: Does all this correspond rightly to what is meant to flow through the souls and hearts of men?” Such preparations and celebrations “… fit in poorly with all the other happenings of modern civilization around us, and equally poorly with what should live in the depth of the human heart as a commemorative thought of the greatest impulse which humanity has received in the course of its evolution.” He recalls a genuine mood that prevailed during the Christmas season as late as the time of his own childhood, when small groups of actors would perform plays of “The Holy Story” and “The Three Kings” that required many weeks of rehearsal. There was awareness then that the whole human being, including his mind and morals, must be cleansed and purified if he wished to partake in art in a worthy way. People then naturally felt man’s path from heaven to earth through the Fall – and the re-ascent of man through Christ from earth to heaven – and they understood what was meant when the Tree of Knowledge in paradise was mentioned.

Since neither the Christmas mood of old nor the modern celebrations are appropriate, how then is Christmas to be experienced in our time? Today we must have the opportunity “… to find again the divine-spiritual world, precisely by an even stronger and more meaningful deepening of the soul … We need ways which will lead us to a wellspring in human nature that lies deeper, to a wellspring of human nature which, in a certain sense, is independent of external time.” New moods and deeper feelings for the Christmas season can awaken in us “… if we consider what can be born in our own soul when our innermost wellspring is so well-attuned to what is sacred, so purified through spiritual knowledge, that this wellspring can take in the holy mystery of the Christ Impulse … When Christ will be born in our own soul at the Christmastide of our soul, we may then look forward to the Eastertide, the resurrection of the spirit in our own inner life … The child of light, whom we have nurtured throughout the entire year by immersing ourselves in the wisdom-treasures of Spiritual Science, is to be born.”

The symbols illustrated on the book cover shown are explained in Signs and Symbols of the Christmas Festival, a lecture by Rudolf Steiner, Berlin, 1906, GA 96. The symbols are placed on the new Christmas tree, and the star at the top of the tree signifies the star of mankind developing itself. In the Signs and Symbols lecture Rudolf Steiner also stresses: “Man lives on toward a state when the light shall be born in him.” – Review by Martha Keltz

This excellent lecture can be read and studied on-line at: http://wn.rudolfsteinerelib.org/Festivals/Christmas/ChrFes_index.html, or purchased from Amazon.com.

And now, a little bit about RUDOLF STEINER (1861-1925): Philosopher, scholar, scientist, and educator, he was the founder of Anthroposophy, a modern spiritual path or science. Out of his spiritual researches, he was able to provide indications for the renewal of many human activities, including education (the Waldorf Schools), agriculture (Biodynamics), medicine (Anthroposophical Medicine), special education (the Camphill Movement), economics, philosophy, and religion. In 1924, he founded the General Anthroposophical Society, which today has branches throughout the world.

Psychoanalysis in the Light of Anthroposophy

Psychoanalysis in the Light of Anthroposophy
By Rudolf SteinerPsychoanalysis in the Light of Anthroposophy
Published by Anthroposophic Press, Inc., New York, and Rudolf Steiner Publications, Co., London in 1946. Translated by May Laird-Brown. Click to Buy this Book!

 

In these five lectures on psychoanalysis, Rudolf Steiner lays the foundations for a truly spiritual and holistic psychology.

The first two lectures, given at Dornach, Switzerland in November, 1912, are entitled Anthroposophy and Psychoanalysis, I & II. Here, Steiner gives a  critical examination of the principles of Freud and Jung from the point of view of anthroposophy or spiritual science. Also mentioned are Breuer, Charcot, Nothnagel, Nietzsche, and Adler. Steiner argues that the phenomena animating psychoanalysis are real, but that because Freud did not recognize the spirit, human soul expe­rience was cut off from the larger whole and reduced to mere subjec­tive, personal history.

The last three lectures, given at Munich and Dornach in February, 1912 and July 1921, present an alternative program. Beginning (in Lecture III) with a phenomenological description of the threefold structure of human consciousness — reflective or mirror consciousness; supra-consciousness; and subconsciousness — Steiner goes on to outline a psychology that takes into account both the soul’s hidden powers (this is Lecture IV), and the complex connections between psychological and organic, bodily processes (in Lecture V). The third lecture in this series, Reflections in the Mirror of Consciousness, Superconsciousness and Subconsciousness, is available as another translation at the Rudolf Steiner Archive, Reflections of Consciousness, Super-consciousness and Sub-consciousness, published in 1935. Comparing the two translations can be rewarding! More »

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