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The Rudolf Steiner Archive

a project of Steiner Online Library, a public charity

Search results 341 through 350 of 1160

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284. Images of Occult Seals and Columns: Foreword

Hella Wiesberger
The house at 70 Landhausstrasse in Stuttgart, built in 1911, was the first building in the history of the anthroposophical movement to be built by the society itself. Until then, events in Stuttgart had also taken place in various rented rooms; larger and public events were set up by the three branches that existed at the time, which had joined together in 1909 to form the “Association of Stuttgart Branches”, in the Bürgermuseum (Citizens' Museum) opposite Hegel's birthplace.
According to Imme von Eckhardtstein, who participated in the event and helped paint the dome, the first celebratory announcement of the founding of a “Society for Theosophical Art and Culture” took place on this day in 1911. The Stuttgart Hall of Columns was the only space in which Rudolf Steiner could truly realize the union of knowledge, art and cult.
However, just one year later, the house had to be abandoned due to the ban on the Anthroposophical Society in Germany by the National Socialists. The interior furnishings were removed. The sandstone columns of the lower hall (height 1.98 m) were placed in the park grounds of the “Wiesneck” clinic in Buchenbach near Freiburg im Breisgau to form a pergola.
251. The History of the Anthroposophical Society 1913–1922: Disciplining Humanity as it Becomes More Aware 12 Jun 1917, Hanover

Rudolf Steiner
This is one of the first publications of the Theosophical Society, which then became the Anthroposophical Society. There were difficult struggles. But, my dear friends, there is still much to come, because today we see the matter as having reached a kind of climax.
You see, spiritual science could flourish without a society. If you had a few people in different German cities who organized lectures every winter, spiritual science could flourish for humanity without the Anthroposophical Society. There are two things: the Anthroposophical Society and spiritual science. The Anthroposophical Society must be something in itself, must be a reality in itself in its impulses.
251. The History of the Anthroposophical Society 1913–1922: Discussion About the Founding of a Trading Company “Ceres” 06 Feb 1913, Berlin

Rudolf Steiner
Basically, we cannot elect a commission; we cannot become a consumer association as an Anthroposophical Society. Things must develop in such a way that someone finds inspiration in their impulses and others go to them.
We can only be understanding consumers as an Anthroposophical Society. We can exchange our views. There are many things to consider. It is extremely important that this trade association does not take a purely materialistic point of view, but above all takes the point of view of offering support to good, appropriate production.
It is understandable that some of us producers have certain difficulties as such. A producer cannot count on a purely anthroposophical clientele. There are many details to be considered. After further interjections, Dr.
Cosmosophy Vol. I: Foreword
Translated by Alice Wuslin, Michael Klein

Alan Howard
Some of these courses were given to members of the Anthroposophical Society who had been familiar with the subject for many years. Others were given to the general public.
Michaelmas and the Soul-Forces of Man: Introduction
Translated by Samuel P. Lockwood, Loni Lockwood

Stewart C. Easton
Much of Germany, including Berlin, was cut off from him in that year of uncontrolled inflation but here in Vienna he could feel himself truly at home, as he refounded the Anthroposophical Society in Austria and gave these wonderful lectures on the human Gemüt. In his Christmas letter to the members that forms part of the Michael Mystery Rudolf Steiner in 1924 emphasized in a single marvelously compressed paragraph the task of man especially in the middle period of the age of the consciousness soul in which we are now living.
Health and Illness, Volume I: Introduction
Translated by Maria St. Goar

Marie Steiner
Later, they were given by other members of the Anthroposophical Society as well. Eventually, however, the workmen asked if Rudolf Steiner himself could spare them some time to satisfy their thirst for knowledge.
259. The Fateful Year of 1923: Meeting of the “Circle of Confidence of the Stuttgart Institutions” 07 Sep 1923, Stuttgart

Rudolf Steiner
Kolisko then spoke again about his journey, which he had already reported on in detail at the meeting on August 15, and about the planned new organization of the “Anthroposophical Society in Germany,” which he had already presented on September 5. [No notes are available for these two meetings.]
A circle of trusted individuals is to accept each member individually into the Society. Only then should they join a branch where the esoteric work is to take place. Stein and von Grone also reported again on their trip to Thuringia.
262. Correspondence with Marie Steiner 1901–1925: 235. Letter to Marie Steiner in Stuttgart 20 Mar 1925, Dornach

Rudolf Steiner
And so, since his factory was sold, he received a sum of money that will only last him a short time. He would have to be supported within the Anthroposophical Society in the future. But what should be done if this tendency to make him impossible in the Society keeps recurring?
Met Rudolf Steiner at the medical week in October 1922 in Stuttgart and from then on became a permanent member of the staff in Stuttgart. He was an editor for various anthroposophical journals.
258. The Anthroposophic Movement (1993): Blavatsky's Spiritual but Anti-Christian Orientation 13 Jun 1923, Dornach
Translated by Christoph von Arnim

Rudolf Steiner
But the term they have come across has nothing to do with what called itself the Theosophical Society. Within the Anthroposophical Society, at any rate, such things ought to be taken very seriously.
Because that will provide us with the bridge to something of a quite different nature: to the Anthroposophical Society. In considering Blavatsky, it is important that her attitude was what might well be called an anti-christian one.
All this takes its effect unconsciously, instinctively. And it has to be said that the Anthroposophical Society as it has developed had its origins in small beginnings. To begin with, it had to work in the most basic way with very small groups, and there is much to be said about the ways and means in which work took place in such small groups.
259. The Fateful Year of 1923: Concluding Words Following the Lecture for Members 02 Sep 1923, London

Rudolf Steiner
It was the concern for the further construction of the Goetheanum, which was to be a sign here on earth for that which is to come into the world through anthroposophical spiritual science. At the time, the concern I expressed was met with understanding. [On November 19, 1922, see references below.] Since that time, what is written as an unspeakable pain in the history of the anthroposophical movement has come to pass. This pain could not be averted. It was deeply inscribed in the destiny of the anthroposophical movement by the hostile forces that oppose it.
[Rudolf Steiner, who came to the September conference of the Anthroposophical Society in Stuttgart, is taking part in the following session.

Results 341 through 350 of 1160

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