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Books > Religion & Spirituality > Alternative belief systems > Syncretist & eclectic religions & belief systems
`[The student] should look at the world with keen, healthy senses
and quickened power of observation, and then give himself up to the
feeling that arises within him... This feeling penetrates the
superficial aspect of things and in so doing touches their
secrets.' - Rudolf Steiner How can one progress from the ordinary,
everyday vision of the senses to a perception of the subtle life-
and spiritual forces around us - the very forces that shape nature?
Basing his work on the research of both J. W. Goethe and Rudolf
Steiner, Roger Druitt begins with the fundamental question, `What
can you see?' He presents a series of practical exercises for
observing nature which, through diligent practise, allow for the
maturation of subtle capacities of perception. Considering multiple
species of leaves, for example, leads to the concept of `leaf'
itself. After this basic groundwork is established, steps can be
taken towards a comprehension of further aspects, such as
metamorphosis, gesture and type. Druitt demonstrates how this
method - what he calls `anthroposophical phenomenology' - can be
applied in other fields of nature observation, opening the way for
its use in all areas of life. In each case, whether working with
bees, rocks, stars or colour, he shows how one can access the
`individuality' manifested in what is studied. Through a thorough
step-by-step process we are led to the ultimate task: that of
redeeming the beings of nature and of the earth itself.
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The Dark Fire
(Paperback)
Wilhelm Haller; Translated by Stephen A. Engelking
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R632
R561
Discovery Miles 5 610
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Delivered in the context of post-war cultural and social chaos,
these lectures form part of Rudolf Steiner's energetic efforts to
cultivate social understanding and renew culture through his
innovative ideas based on `threefolding'. Steiner develops a subtle
and discerning perception of how social dynamics could change and
heal if they were founded on real insight into our threefold nature
as individuals, social beings and economic participants in the
world. He doesn't offer a programmatic agenda for change, but a
real foundation from which change can organically grow. Social
forms and reforms, says Steiner, are `created together', not
imposed by lone geniuses. Nevertheless, the detail of some of the
thoughts and ideas he presents here as a possible model - down to
the economic specifics of commodity, labour, taxation, ground rent
and capitalism itself - are staggering in their clarity and
originality. This is no mystic effusion but a heartfelt plea,
backed by profound insights, to change our thinking and the world
we live in. As he points out, thoughts create reality, and so it is
vital how and what we think. Among the many contemporary and
highly-relevant topics Steiner discusses here are: the nature of
money and capital; taxation and the state; free enterprise and
initiative; capitalism and Marxism; the relationship between
employer and employee; `added value' theory and the concept of
commodity; and `class consciousness', the proletariat and the
bourgeoisie.
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The Solar Way
(Paperback)
Nina Roudnikova; Translated by Charlotte Cowell
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R512
R486
Discovery Miles 4 860
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As a spiritual teacher, Rudolf Steiner wrote many inspired and
beautifully-crafted verses. Often they were given in relation to
specific situations or in response to individual requests;
sometimes they were offered to assist generally in the process of
meditation. Regardless of their origins, they are uniformly
powerful in their ability to connect the meditating individual with
spiritual archetypes. Thus, the meditations provide valuable tools
for developing experience and knowledge of subtle dimensions of
reality. Matthew Barton has translated and selected Steiner's
verses, sensitively arranging them by theme. In this collection -
to promote harmony and healing - Rudolf Steiner helps us discover a
renewed sense of our true place in the world. The verses show how
we can learn to know ourselves by looking outwards to the
substances and processes at work in the cosmos, and in contrast to
know the world by looking inwards to the microcosmic depths of the
human self. By integrating spirit and matter within, we heal
divisions in our relationships with others. For modern people,
increasingly divorced from a living relationship with nature, these
verses help to unfold a world of interconnections.
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