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Rudolf Steiner differentiated clearly between the spiritual concept
of Imagination and our everyday understanding of the word. As
living, pictorial thinking, Imagination is a primary aspect of the
contemporary path of inner schooling - the first of three levels of
initiate knowledge and cognition. Imagination leads us into a world
of flowing, living pictures: a realm of soul and spirit in which
everything is in continual movement. This anthology offers a survey
of the diverse aspects of Imagination and imaginative cognition. As
the thematically re-ordered texts reveal, Rudolf Steiner's
spiritual philosophy - anthroposophy - is itself often pictorial
and imaginative in nature. Many of its fundamental concepts, such
as the evolution of the world and the human being, were formulated
by Steiner in vivid, living pictures. However, whilst imaginative
perception leads us to the threshold of the spiritual world, we can
also fall prey there to illusions, visions and hallucinations. This
volume, expertly assembled by Edward de Boer, draws on the entirety
of Rudolf Steiner's collected works - from his earliest writings to
passages from his many lectures. It is conceived as a stimulus to
readers to practise, deepen and extend their own imaginative
consciousness. Steiner's commentary on `exemplary Imaginations', in
particular, encourages further study, contemplation and schooling
of our own pictorial thinking. Chapters include `Imagination as
Supersensible Cognition'; `The Rosicrucian Path of Schooling';
`Exercises to Develop Imagination'; `Understanding Imagination
Through Inspiration and Intuition'; `Illusions, Hallucinations and
Visions'; `Imaginative Perception as the Threshold to the Etheric
World'; `Goethe's Worldview' and `Exemplary Imaginations'
(including commentary on `The Fairy-tale of the Green Snake and the
Beautiful Lily', The Mystery Plays; The Great Initiates; the
`Apocalyptic Seals'; The Chymical Wedding of Christian Rosenkreutz
and the `Michael Imagination').
Rudolf Steiner draws a clear distinction between the spiritual
meaning of the word Intuition and its ordinary definition. As the
highest form of spiritual perception, Intuition has an existential
significance for our process of knowledge. Through systematic
schooling, thinking can be developed into an intuitive organ by
means of which the spiritual can consciously be understood and
penetrated. Intuition can reveal the essence of the spirit, the
processes through which human beings and the world came into
existence, and the events in our life after death. In his later
works, Steiner spoke of Intuition as a form of supersensible
knowledge that could provide direct insight into practical life, as
exemplified here in his commentary on geometry, architecture,
education, medicine, eurythmy, painting and the social organism.
The concept of Intuition is fundamental to Rudolf Steiner's
spiritual philosophy. It denotes a clear, pure mode of
comprehension akin to a mathematical concept. We meet it in his
earliest writings on Goethe, in the development of his
philosophical ideas and in his many lectures and addresses. Ably
compiled and introduced by Edward de Boer, this volume clarifies a
concept that evolved in Steiner's thinking. By following the idea
of Intuition in its gradual transformation and amplification
throughout Steiner's writing and lecturing career, the book offers
not only inspiring paths to spiritual knowledge, but also insights
into how anthroposophy developed. Chapters include: `The Perceptive
Power of Judgement - Goethe's Intuition'; `Moral Intuition -
Experiencing Thinking'; `The Human Being - Intuition as a Bridge to
the Spirit'; `The Schooling Path - Spiritual Development and the
Power of Intuition'; `Intuition Exercises'; `Three Stages of
Consciousness - Intuition in Relation to Imagination and
Inspiration'; `Knowledge of Destiny - Intuition and Repeated Earth
Lives'; `Intuition in Practice - Examples from Various Specialist
Fields'.
`I fall asleep. Until I awaken my soul will be in the world of
spirit, and there will meet the guiding impulse-giver of my earthly
life, my genius, who dwells in the world of spirit, hovering round
my head...' - Rudolf Steiner The night is an essential counterpart
to the day. By day we possess the capacity of conscious, logical
thought, whilst at night - leaving the physical body to regenerate
during sleep - we give ourselves up to a different form of
consciousness. Rudolf Steiner describes the night as the realm of
intuition, a place of deep spiritual encounter, but also as a
wellspring of renewal and healing. With its lucid introduction and
notes, The Night seeks to conjure the special atmosphere and
quality of the nocturnal hours, so that the real spiritual
encounters of night-time can fruitfully inform our daily life,
helping us to live in a fuller, healthier way. Night-time is when
we can, consciously or unconsciously, meet our higher self; we have
the opportunity to work with angelic beings, and even to access the
world of the dead. The night can be a source of poetic and artistic
inspiration, whilst for initiates it provides a field for conscious
awareness. It is also a special time - before going to sleep and
upon waking - for specific esoteric exercises. Edited by Edward de
Boer, the textual passages, lecture extracts, exercises and the
many verses and prayers in this anthology are an invitation to
readers to engage more consciously with the starry heavens and the
nightly realm.
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