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Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > Alternative belief systems > Syncretist & eclectic religions & belief systems > Post-renaissance syncretist / eclectic systems
Ita Wegman, born in 1876 to a Dutch family living in Indonesia,
first met Rudolf Steiner in Berlin in 1902 when she was 26 years
old. She studied medicine at the University of Zurich and in 1917,
following Steiner's indications, developed a treatment for cancer
using mistletoe. In 1921 she founded the first anthroposophical
medical clinic, in Arlesheim, Switzerland, followed in 1922 by the
Sonnenhof home for children with special needs. Karl Koenig first
met Wegman in 1927, and she quickly recognized his great potential,
as well as his weaknesses. She invited him to work at the Arlesheim
clinic as her assistant, and encouraged and advised him in his
medical work. This book includes the complete correspondence
between Koenig and Wegman.
This course of lectures was given at a pivotal point in the
development of the anthroposophic movement. Just months before, an
act of arson had caused the destruction of the first Goetheanum,
and its darkened ruins appeared to reflect the fragmentations
within the Anthroposophical Society. Divisions were appearing
amongst members and friends, with individual energies increasingly
routed to external initiatives and practical projects. It became
apparent that a new impetus was needed. In this turbulent context,
Steiner delivers these lectures in a calm, lively and informal
style. In the last decades of the nineteenth century, he says, a
yearning for spiritual nourishment arose within Western culture,
and organizations such as the Theosophical Society gained in
popularity. Despite his direct involvement in these events, Steiner
describes in dispassionate tones how the spiritual movements behind
theosophy and anthroposophy were able to work together
harmoniously, before an unavoidable separation took place.
Steiner's expansive review of the anthroposophic movement is an
important narrative account of the developing Western spiritual
tradition and the history of the Mysteries. These lectures also
offer rare perceptions of the life and philosophy of Rudolf
Steiner. Those who identify with the movement he founded will
discover revelatory insights to its background and possibilities
for its future development within the broader evolution of
humankind.
Based on many years of medical, artistic, therapeutic and
anthroposophical experience, the author presents a concentrated
foundation for the development of artistic therapy and the training
of therapists. Although written with the painting therapist in
mind, this clearly-formulated book - the fundamental work in its
field - will also be of interest to those involved in medical and
general therapeutic work, as well as to serious students of
anthroposophy. It includes fifty full-colour examples from
Hauschka's course at the School for Artistic Therapy. MARGARETHE
HAUSCHKA (1896-1980) studied Medicine in Munich and worked as a
doctor at the Ita Wegman Clinic, where she had responsibility for
artistic therapy and helped develop Rhythmical Einreibungen, a
method of rhythmical massage. After marrying Rudolf Hauschka, she
worked at the Biologischen Hospital in Hollriegelskreuth. From
1950, she devoted herself to course and seminar activity, and in
1962 she founded the School for Artistic Therapy and Massage in
Boll, Germany.
'What lies spiritually and cosmically at the foundation of a
community like the Anthroposophical Society? In wrestling with this
question, I have come to the inner conviction that it is justified
to speak of the Anthroposophical Society as a Michael community.' -
Paul Mackay How can one understand Rudolf Steiner's use of the word
'we' in the last part of the Foundation Stone Meditation ('What we
found from our hearts and direct from our heads with focused
will')? What characterizes this 'we'? In the first part of this
original and inspiring work, Paul Mackay takes this question as a
point of departure, developing a unique approach to working with
the seven rhythms of the Meditation. Based on personal experiences,
he comes to the conclusion that the rhythms are an expression of
the members of the human constitution, with the 'we' in the fifth
rhythm having the quality of 'Spirit-self'. The second part of the
book considers the same 'we' from a karmic perspective, with
reference to Rudolf Steiner's karma lectures, events in the fourth
and ninth centuries, the mystery of death and evil, and the
restoration of karmic truth.
A collection of best loved lectures containing practical insights
for day-to-day living.
Madame Blavatsky was a pioneering woman, and not only as a
traveller, writer and spiritual teacher. She was an inspiration to
men and women around the world in Victorian times who desired to
follow an independent path. In our own times, the New Age owes most
of its spiritual knowledge to her. Blavatsky's travels in Russia,
India and Tibet; her absorbing of many different cultures and her
personal magnetism, are the stuff of celebrated legend. Her
personal struggles against prejudice and ignorance are a record of
one woman's determination to usher in the Aquarian Age. By her own
efforts she established 'spirituality' as an ethos. She also taught
that the soul - the 'Inner World' - of any individual is mysterious
and precious. It is a sacred possession, one not to be feared, but
cherished. Many myths and exotic tales surround Madame Blavatsky.
This phenomenal individual saw herself as having a mission - to
inform and enlighten the world. Her beliefs and her vision are even
more relevant now than when she first voiced them.
Rudolf Steiner's watercolour painting 'The Archetypal Human-Animal'
presents us with the enigmatic image of a strange creature
apparently swimming in water. It has a human profile, showing a
clearly outlined nose and slightly-opened mouth, with a mysterious
eye, almost concealed in its greenish hair. It has appendages
similar to hands and feet, and dark-blue plant-like forms float
about in the water beneath the creature's bright red and yellow
body. Only the title provides us with a clue to its meaning: it is
an 'archetypal human-animal' form. But even this is enigmatic. What
is this strange, unusual creature - this archetypal human-animal?
We are presented with a perplexing image and a puzzling
description. In this original work, illustrated throughout with
full-colour paintings and images - many by the author herself -
Angela Lord takes us on a journey of discovery to realizing the
meaning of Rudolf Steiner's painting. From Goethe's theory of
metamorphosis in nature, we are introduced to Steiner's ideas of
human evolution, from the primal beginnings of the archetypal
human-animal on 'Ancient Moon'. Lord recounts myths and legends
from many cultures that tell of human-animal forms, and reflects on
the meaning of the fish in Christianity. She takes us through a
series of 'colour sequences' for repainting Steiner's human-animal
motif, and includes appendices that summarize evolutionary phases
of the earth and humanity from a spiritual-scientific perspective.
The Archetypal Human-Animal is both a valuable workbook for
painters and a fascinating insight into hidden aspects of human
evolution.
During 1924, before his last address in September, Rudolf Steiner
gave over eighty lectures on the subject of karma to members of the
Anthroposophical Society. These profoundly esoteric lectures
examine the underlying laws of reincarnation and karma, and explore
in detail the incarnations of certain named historical figures. In
Rudolf Steiner's words, the study of karma is '?a matter of
penetrating into the most profound mysteries of existence, for
within the sphere of karma and the course it takes lie those
processes which are the basis of the other phenomena of
world-existence?' In this fundamental first volume - and essential
basis for study of the later volumes - Rudolf Steiner gives an
overview of the laws and conditions of karma, and goes on to
consider the incarnations of Friedrich Nietzsche, Lord Bacon of
Verulam, Lord Byron and many others.
In the architecture of Rudolf Steiner's great cosmological temple,
this extraordinary course of lectures on spiritual beings forms the
central pillar with other important texts such as the fourth
chapter of An Outline of Esoteric Science, The Spiritual
Hierarchies and the Physical World, and Inner Experiences of
Evolution. These works, outlining a revolutionary angelological
cosmology, lie at the heart of Steiner's mission to transform our
understanding of the world by laying down a new, non-dual,
phenomenological path to a contemporary divine-spiritual-physical
cosmology that is angelological and theophanic. For Steiner, what
constitutes the world are "beings"-including the ground of the
world itself, the "Father being." Steiner's cosmology or angelology
is personal, and it is known in relationship; therefore, he
presents it in terms of states and deeds of conscious, and of the
divine-spiritual beings whose states and deeds they are. The
spiritual world is thus always a world of beings. The twin
realizations-that "I am an 'I'" and that "reality is constituted of
other "I-beings"-go together. Cosmology is angelology. Spiritual
beings define experience of the nature of reality. In these
lectures, the reader is led through a series of meditations to
recognize these spiritual beings and come to know their deeds.
Steiner's approach is "contemporary" in that, while continuous with
the most ancient understanding of the cosmos, he discovers it for
himself, out of his own experience and consciousness, and expresses
it in his own words with a logic and language appropriate to our
time. Thus he teaches us, his readers, to do the same.
"The two streams in the human being combine to produce what is
commonly known as a person's temperament. Our inner self and our
inherited traits co-mingle in it. Temperament is an intermediary
between what connects us to an ancestral line and what we bring
with us...Temperament strikes a balance between the eternal and the
ephemeral..." From personal spiritual insight, Rudolf Steiner
renews and broadens the ancient teaching of the four temperaments.
He explains how each person's combination of temperaments - with
one usually uppermost - is shaped. Steiner gives lively
descriptions of the passive, comfort-seeking phlegmatic, the
fickle, flitting sanguine, the pained, gloomy melancholic and the
fiery, assertive choleric. He also offers practical suggestions
aimed at teachers and parents for addressing the various
manifestations of the temperaments in children, as well as advice
intended for adults' personal development. Also available as an
Audio Book
Mental and emotional disorders have reached epidemic levels in
Western societies. Self-doubt, panic-attacks, anxiety disorders and
personal fears of all kinds present major challenges to
contemporary medical science. Rudolf Steiner's spiritual research
offers a startlingly original and complementary contribution to the
problem. True insight into psychological issues requires knowledge
of the influences of spiritual beings, he suggests. In everyday
life we are all confronted with metaphysical entities that can
hinder or progress our development. Many forms of anxiety and
self-doubt derive from such meetings on the border - or threshold -
of our consciousness. Further, these `threshold experiences' are
exacerbated today by a general loosening of the subtle bodies and
components of the human soul. As these constitutional changes
persist, says Rudolf Steiner, a condition of `dissociation' becomes
increasingly common. A healthy emotional life will only be possible
if individuals engage in a conscious practice of personal growth,
strengthening their constitution through the action of the `I' or
self. The expertly selected and collated texts in Self-Doubt offer
numerous cognitive and practical ideas for the improvement of
everyday mental and emotional health. Chapters include: The origin
of error, fear, and nervousness; Crossing the threshold in the
development of humanity and the individual; The polarity of shame
and fear; The polarity of doubt and terrifying disorientation; The
polarity of scepticism and claustrophobia, astraphobia, and
agoraphobia; The origin of panic; Anxiety; The multilayered nature
of terrifying disorientation; Healing aspects of the
anthroposophical path of training; The spiritual-scientific
qualities of fear compared with standardized diagnostic terms and
as a basis for therapy.
At the end of his life, Rudolf Steiner took up the task that was
his special destiny: to bring to the West a knowledge of
reincarnation and karma. To do this, he gave over eighty lectures
in 1924 in which he explicitly and concretely revealed the
destinies of various individuals from one life to the next in order
to show how the general laws of karma operate in individual cases.
He also revealed many details of the karmic streams of the members
of the Anthroposophical Society. These volumes constitute an
immeasurable contribution to the understanding of reincarnation and
karma, and the tasks of the Anthroposophical Society in connection
with the Archangel Michael. This new edition also includes
Steiner's last address along with; the karmic groups of souls
connected to Aristotelianism and Platonism, the karma of the
anthroposophical movement, as well as the individual incarnations
of Ernst Haeckel, Vladimir Solovioff and others.
Delivered more than 60 years ago, the lectures in this booklet
demonstrate Alfred Heidenreich's gift for kindling understanding of
the essence of Christianity and the nature and being of Christ.
Guided by spiritual science or anthroposophy, as founded by Rudolf
Steiner (1861-1925), Heidenreich presents an imaginative and
insightful reading of the meaning of Christ's 'resurrection body',
addressing the significance of 'original sin' and 'the Fall', and
how they relate to this metaphysical body. In his second lecture,
Heidenreich addresses 'the greatest mystery of our time', relating
to the true meaning of Christ's 'Second Coming' or 'appearance' in
the etheric realm of the earth. It is our responsibility, says the
author, to bring '...the awe and wonder of our thought, the mercy
and love of our hearts, the conscientiousness of our deeds', to
help illumine and strengthen this esoteric reality.
"Am I going too far if I declare that not a single one of the
opponents took a tenth of the pains I took with anthroposophy
before I joined the movement?" -- Friedrich Rittelmeyer Born in
southern Germany in 1872, Friedrich Rittelmeyer was a leading
figure in the Lutheran church at the beginning of the twentieth
century. His was an influential pulpit, and he was a pioneer of a
new meditative approach, seeking to re-establish the relevance of
the Gospels. His life took an unexpected turn when, in 1911, he
encountered Rudolf Steiner for the first time. He spent the next
ten years critically appraising and investigating Steiner's ideas.
This book is a fascinating and insightful autobiographical account
of those years, as well a rigorous scrutiny of anthroposophy. In
1922, he made the decision to leave the Lutheran church and lead a
new movement for religious renewal, The Christian Community, in
association with Steiner. His final conviction was that Steiner's
ideas were truly inspired. First published in English in 1929, this
book's honest struggle with key anthroposophical concepts has been
influential for generations of people.
Helena Petrovna Blavatsky (1831 91), writer, traveller and
spiritualist, is well known for her role in nineteenth-century
theosophy. Born in the Ukraine, Blavatsky travelled extensively and
claimed to have spent seven years studying esoteric mysteries in
Tibet. From 1863 she began working as a medium and later counted W.
B. Yeats among her followers. In 1875 she founded the Theosophical
Society with Henry Steel Olcott. Influenced by Eastern philosophy
and the Templars, Freemasons and Rosicrucians, the Society aimed to
unravel the occult mysteries of nature. First published in 1877,
this book outlines theosophy's precepts. The book is a mishmash of
Hermetic philosophy, Christian history and Asian theology, and was
allegedly dictated astrally from authorities including Plato,
Solomon and Roger Bacon. In Volume 1, Blavatsky addresses the
'infallibility of science', attacking the methods of Darwin and
others by arguing that scientific truth can only be accessed
through occult understanding.
Helena Petrovna Blavatsky (1831 91), writer, traveller and
spiritualist, is well known for her role in nineteenth-century
theosophy. Born in the Ukraine, Blavatsky travelled extensively and
claimed to have spent seven years studying esoteric mysteries in
Tibet. From 1863 she began working as a medium and later counted W.
B. Yeats among her followers. In 1875 she founded the Theosophical
Society with Henry Steel Olcott. Influenced by Eastern philosophy
and the Templars, Freemasons and Rosicrucians, the Society aimed to
unravel the occult mysteries of nature. First published in 1877,
this book outlines theosophy's precepts. The book is a mishmash of
Hermetic philosophy, Christian history and Asian theology, and was
allegedly dictated astrally from authorities including Plato,
Solomon and Roger Bacon. Volume 2 questions the 'infallibility of
religion'. Blavatsky attacks the Church's authority on spirituality
and outlines its historic crimes. The book also explores the
influence of Eastern philosophy on Christianity.
In the early part of the last century, Professor Hermann Beckh
began a search to discover the truth about the Mystery wisdom of
antiquity. As a recognized authority on Buddhist texts, he knew
that complete knowledge of such Mysteries was not to be found
within the limitations of waking consciousness, sense perception
and logic. Beckh was already aware that Gautama Buddha had
indicated the stages of higher knowledge. Furthermore, his studies
of Rudolf Steiner's anthroposophical teachings revealed that such
knowledge could be experienced directly, given disciplined
meditation. Clairvoyant cognition included the conscious
penetration of sleep consciousness, the dream state and an
experience of pre-natal consciousness. Both the Mysteries and
Rudolf Steiner's major books, he concluded, were founded on the
same perceptions. Beckh - a worldwide expert on Tibetan, Sanskrit,
Pali and Avestan texts - quickly became disenchanted with Madame
Blavatsky's Theosophy, as it displayed little precise academic
knowledge of primary records. At the same time, university
departments showed scant trace of understanding the texts they
analysed through philology and sociology. Thus, based on
comprehensive studies and personal experience, he resolved to
present his own perceptions and vision to the public. The results
are to be found in this invaluable book, bringing together for the
first time in English three groundbreaking publications: Our Origin
in the Light (Genesis 1-9) (1924); Zarathustra (1927) and From the
World of the Mysteries
Henry Steel Olcott (1832 1907), co-founder of the Theosophical
Society, was a versatile man. He is regarded as one of the pioneers
of American agricultural education and also served in the U.S. War
Department. Later Olcott was admitted to the New York Bar and
became interested in psychology and spiritualism, travelling to
India and Sri Lanka with Madame Blavatsky to explore eastern
spiritual traditions, especially Buddhism. In this volume
(published in 1900) Olcott chronicles how he and Madame Blavatsky
journeyed to India and Sri Lanka (then Ceylon) in the years 1878 to
1883 to oversee the foundation of new branches of their Society.
This is part classic travel writing in which the author gives
breathless descriptions of the beauty of Indian nature, culture and
philosophy and part characterisation of Madame Blavatsky's
'psychological eccentricities' as Olcott experiences them. To him
she was and remained 'an insoluble riddle'.
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