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Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > Alternative belief systems > Syncretist & eclectic religions & belief systems > Post-renaissance syncretist / eclectic systems > Theosophy & Anthroposophy
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The Solar Way
(Paperback)
Nina Roudnikova; Translated by Charlotte Cowell
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R555
R521
Discovery Miles 5 210
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Civil Society has become a major power in the world. The stunning
defeat of the controversial and secretive Multilateral Agreement on
Investments, the massive worldwide WTO protests and the yearly
meetings of the World Social Forum are testimony to its coming of
age. From these significant victories, civil society continued to
catch world attention with the Arab Spring, the grassroots movement
that helped elect former US President Barack Obama and the
significant gains of the anti-fracking campaign. With tens of
millions of citizens and over a trillion dollars involved in
advancing its agenda, civil society now joins the state and the
market as the third key institution shaping globalization. However,
it cannot fully mobilize its resources and power as it currently
lacks clear understanding of its identity. Shaping Globalization
argues that global civil society is a cultural institution wielding
cultural power, and shows how - through the use of this distinct
power - it can advance its agenda in the political and economic
realms of society without compromising its identity. Nicanor Perlas
outlines the strategic implications for civil society, both locally
and globally, and explains that civil society's key task is to
inaugurate `threefolding': the forging of strategic partnerships
between civil society, government and business. Such authentic
tri-sector partnerships are essential for advancing new ways for
nations to develop, and for charting a different, sustainable type
of globalization. Using the model of the Philippine Agenda 21, we
are shown how civil society and progressive individuals and
agencies in government and business are demonstrating the
effectiveness of this new understanding to ensure that
globalization benefits the environment, the poor and society as a
whole. This reprinted edition includes a new Afterword.
The healthy social life is found When in the mirror of each human
being The whole community finds its reflection And when in the
community The virtue of each one is living. From the beginning of
his public work, Rudolf Steiner saw his spiritual mission as
civilizational. He understood that individual spiritual development
means little unless, spreading through a community of
practitioners, it leads to larger societal and cultural
transformation. As always, his views were radical. He realized that
a healthy social life would depend, above all, on the
transformation of work from a commodity into a gift. As he said in
1905: Evolution is moving towards totally uncompensated work. No
one rejects the idea and no one can change it. Whereas Greek
workers performed their work in bondage to their master and modern
workers are compelled to work for pay, in the future all work will
be performed freely. Work and income will be completely separated.
That is the healthy state of social conditions in the future. That
same year, he formulated what he called "the fundamental social
law" The wellbeing of an entire group of individuals who work
together becomes greater the less individuals claim the income
resulting from their own accomplishments for themselves-that is,
the more they contribute this income to their fellow workers, and
the more their own needs are met not through their own efforts but
through the efforts of others. In this important book, Peter Selg
shows us a different Rudolf Steiner. Here, the emphasis of his
teaching is mostly on the need to cultivate selflessness and
readiness to sacrifice. Selg first describes the context in which
Steiner expressed these ideas, how much they meant to him, and how,
when they fell on barren ground, he selflessly laid them aside
while holding them in his heart in the hope of a more opportune
moment. He goes on to show how this moment came after World War I,
when Rudolf Steiner dedicated himself tirelessly to the Threefold
Social Organism, lecturing extensively on economics and social
policy. Finally, in a last, extraordinarily moving chapter, Selg
shows the essential Christ- and Gospel-inspired nature of these
ideas: As long as you feel pain That passes me by, The Christ works
unrecognized... Weak is the spirit That can feel suffering Only in
its own body. Anyone interested in a just, equitable, healthy, and
spirit-based social future should read this important book
In addition to the outer manifestation of Christianity as we know
it from history, there exists a second, hidden stream of Christian
thought and development, sometimes referred to as Esoteric
Christianity or Rosicrucian Christianity. Displaying an intimate
knowledge of his subject, Rudolf Steiner throws light on this once
secret spiritual movement. But rather than relying on historical
tradition or teaching, he presents wisdom and insight directly from
the original metaphysical sources of esoteric Christian
inspiration.
In these dynamic lectures, Steiner describes the influence of
Christ's power throughout history, the workings of karma, the role
of the Buddha and the Bodhisattvas, as well as the vital work of
Christian Rosenkreutz and other historical figures such as Jeshu
ben Pandira. This new edition -- indispensable for serious students
of esotericism -- contains for the first time all 23 lectures and
addresses of the original German collection. It features previously
scattered, classic lectures such as "The Etherisation of the
Blood", "Faith, Love, Hope" and "Cosmic Ego and Human Ego".
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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