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The Rudolf Steiner Archive

a project of Steiner Online Library, a public charity

Search results 221 through 230 of 458

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1. Goethean Science: From Art to Science
Translated by William Lindemann

Rudolf Steiner
[ 10 ] Here we should also recall the statement about the “joyful epoch in life” that the poet owed to Kant's Critique of the Power of Judgment 47 and for which he actually has only the fact to thank that he here “saw creations of art and of nature each treated like the other, and that aesthetic and teleological powers of judgment illuminated each other reciprocally.”
2. A Theory of Knowledge: The Inner Nature of Thought
Translated by Olin D. Wannamaker

Rudolf Steiner
[ 4 ] The fact that this sort of research has been neglected in those investigations concerning the theory of knowledge which are based upon Kant has been ruinous to this science. This omission has given an impulse to this science in a direction which is the very opposite of our own.
90b. Self-Knowledge and God-Knowledge II: About the Book of Genesis 17 Jan 1905, Cologne

Rudolf Steiner
Moses could therefore say: There are lights in the firmament of the heaven, which divide the day and the night, and give signs, times, days, and years. [Genesis 1:14] Kant says that space and time come from man himself. Moses said that even then. Everything that can be perceived by the senses only came into being when man became physical, mineral.
302a. Adult Education. Artistic Lesson Design I 21 Jun 1922, Stuttgart
Translated by Clifford Bax

Rudolf Steiner
The right kind of interest in other human beings is not possible if the right sort of world-interest is not aroused in the 15 or 16 year old. If they learn only the Kant-Laplace theory of the creation of the solar system and what one learns through astronomy and astrophysics today, if they cram into their skulls only this idea of the cosmos, then in social relationships they will be just such men and women as those of our modern civilization who, out of anti-social impulses, shout about every kind of social reform but within their souls actually bring anti-social powers to expression.
30. Collected Essays on Philosophy, Science, Aesthetics and Psychology 1884–1901: Goethe Studies Fundamental Ideas 01 Jul 1900, N/A

Rudolf Steiner
These commandments either come to him by way of revelation, or they enter his consciousness as such, as is the case with Kant's categorical imperative. Nothing is said about how this comes from the otherworldly "in itself" of things into our consciousness.
165. Festivals of the Seasons: Meditations on the New Year: On the Duty of Clear, Sound Thinking 01 Jan 1916, Dornach
Translated by Harry Collison

Rudolf Steiner
We can quite correctly compare this with the images which we see in the mirror; for the impressions are also images. Thus in the Lange and Kant train of thought we have a quite correct assertion—that man is concerned with images and that therefore, he cannot come into touch with anything real, with any actual ‘thing in itself.’
During the past year I have often communicated certain things to you from a celebrated thinker—Mauthner, the great critic of language. Kant occupies himself with Critique of Idea. Mauthner went further, (things that follow must always go further)—he wrote a Critique of Speech.
87. Ancient Mysteries and Christianity: The Pythagorean Doctrine 09 Nov 1901, Berlin

Rudolf Steiner
Therefore the Pythagorean did not initially think like the philosophers of the nineteenth century under the influence of Kant. He did not ask: How is it that my imagination inside me corresponds to the things outside? My experience is quite different.
For the philosophers of the nineteenth century who followed Kant, the question is this: How is it that the mind perceives what is outside it? - The Pythagorean does not say this at all: How is it that the mind perceives that which is apart from it?
165. On the Duty of Clear, Sound Thinking 01 Jan 1916, Dornach
Translator Unknown

Rudolf Steiner
We can quite correctly compare this with the images which we see in the mirror; for the impressions are also images. Thus in the Lange and Kant train of thought we have a quite correct assertion—that man is concerned with images and that therefore, he cannot come into touch with anything real, with any actual ‘thing in itself.’
During the past year I have often communicated certain things to you from a celebrated thinker—Mauthner, the great critic of language. Kant occupies himself with Critique of Idea. Mauthner went further, (things that follow must always go further)—he wrote a Critique of Speech.
191. Fundamentals of the Science of Initiation 17 Oct 1919, Dornach
Translator Unknown

Rudolf Steiner
On the other hand, you may perhaps also know that for certain thinkers there has always been a kind of abyss between that which is given, on the one hand, by the knowledge of Nature, and on the other hand, by ethical knowledge. The philosophy of Kant is based upon this abyss, which he is unable to bridge completely. For this reason, Kant has written a Critique of Theoretical Reason, of Pure Reason, as he calls it, where he grapples with natural science, and where he says all that he has to say about natural science, or the knowledge of Nature.
210. Old and New Methods of Initiation: Lecture XI 26 Feb 1922, Dornach
Translated by Johanna Collis

Rudolf Steiner
Herder was certainly not an intellectual; hence his anti-Kant attitude. He led Goethe beyond what—in a genuinely Faustian mood—he had been endeavouring to discover in connection with ancient magic.
5 . Johann Gottfried Herder, 1744-1803. Called Kant's system ‘a kingdom of never-ending whims, blind alleys, fancies, chimeras and vacant expressions.’

Results 221 through 230 of 458

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