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Related discussions:

The Bhadavad Gita and Rudolf Steiner's How to Know Higher Worlds

Mystics after Modernism by Rudolf Steiner

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Rudolf Steiner Biography - Page 4

Without spiritual freedom, culture withers and dies. Individuality and community are lifted beyond conflict only when they are recognized as a creative polarity rooted in basic human nature, not as contradictions. Each aspect must find the appropriate social expression. We need forms that ensure freedom for all expressions of spiritual life and promote community in economic life. The health of this polarity, however, depends on a full recognition of the third human need and function -- the social relationships that relate to our sense of human rights. Here again, Steiner emphasized the need to develop a distinct realm of social organization to support this sphere -- one inspired by the concern for equality that awakens as we recognize the spiritual essence of every human being. This is the meaning and source of our right to freedom of spirit and to material sustenance.

These insights are the basis of Steiner's responses to the needs of today, and have inspired renewal in many areas of modern life. Doctors, therapists, farmers, business people, academics, scientists, theologians, pastors, and teachers all approached him for ways to bring new life to their endeavors. The Waldorf school movement originated with a school for the children of factory employees at the Waldorf-Astoria cigarette factory. Today, Waldorf schools are all over the world. There are homes, schools, and village communities for children and adults with special needs. Biodynamic agriculture began with a course of lectures requested by a group of farmers concerned about the destructive trend of "scientific" farming. Steiner's work with doctors led to a medical movement that includes clinics, hospitals, and various forms of therapeutic work. As an art of movement, eurythmy also serves educational and therapeutic work.

Rudolf Steiner spoke very little of his life in personal terms. In his autobiography, however, he stated that, from his early childhood, he was fully conscious of the invisible reality within our everyday world. He struggled inwardly for the first forty years of his life not to achieve spiritual experience but to unite his spiritual experiences with ordinary reality through the methods of natural science. Steiner saw this scientific era, even in its most materialistic aspects, as an essential phase in the spiritual education of humanity. Only by forgetting the spiritual world for a time and attending to the material world can new and essential faculties be kindled, especially the experience of true individual inner freedom.

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During his thirties, Rudolf Steiner awakened to an inner recognition of what he termed "the turning point in time" in human spiritual history. That event was brought about by the incarnation of the Christ. Steiner recognized that the meaning of that turning point in time transcends all differences of religion, race, or nation and has consequences for all of humanity. Rudolf Steiner was also led to recognize the new presence and activity of the Christ. It began in the twentieth century, not in the physical world, but in the etheric realm -- the invisible realm of life forces -- of the Earth and humanity. Steiner wanted to nurture a path of knowledge to meet today's deep and urgent needs. Those ideals, though imperfectly realized, may guide people to find a continuing inspiration in anthroposophy for their lives and work. Rudolf Steiner left us the fruits of careful spiritual observation and perception (or, as he preferred to call it, spiritual research), a vision that is free and thoroughly conscious of the integrity of thinking and understanding inherent in natural science.

This information about Rudolf Steiner is courtesy of www.SteinerBooks.org.

Rudolf Steiner Courses at EYFT
(using books by Rudolf Steiner or inspired by him)

HUM 401: FROM THE SEARCH FOR MEANING TO THE SOURCES OF MEANING: VIKTOR FRANKL AND RUDOLF STEINER

HUM 112: ECONOMICS AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF RESPONSIBLE INDIVIDUALISM

HUM 204: THE BHAGAVAD GITA AND SELF-EDUCATION

HUM 209: TOWARD A NEW FORM OF CONSCIOUSNESS

HUM 302: THINKING WITH THE HEART

HUM 309: AN INTRODUCTION TO HOLISTIC EDUCATION

Rudolf Steiner main page

Rudolf Steiner's Spiritual Science, click here

Rudolf Steiner's Anthrosophy, click here

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