Yes
Tone Constellations of the Enneagram
goethean science
Liver Transplant Story
Rudolf Steiner's Astronomy Cycle
Characters of Theophrastus
Willy Wonka and the Software Factory
David Eyes

The Relationship of the Diverse Branches of Natural Science to Astronomy

About Rudolf Steiner

Rudolf Steiner (1861-1925) founded the Science of the Spirit known as Anthroposophy. At its basis was an application of Goethe's Natural Scientific approach to the phenomenon of Steiner's own perception of the spiritual world. Since childhood, he had been gifted with the power to perceive happenings in the spiritual world.

He received a thorough contemporary scientific education during his youth at the Vienna Technische Hochschule. He formed the epistomological basis for his work in his Philosophy of Freedom and further explored the foundations of the Goethean approach in A Theory of Knowledge Implict in Goethe's World-View. He worked at the Goethe-Schiller archives in Weimar, where he edited the definitive edition of Goethe's Scientific papers. His commentary in that edition has been published seperately in English as Goethe the Scientist.

These activities were preparatory to his career as the leading force in the spiritual movement that became known as anthroposophy. He gave over 6000 lectures and authored a number of written works on broad themes of human and cosmic spiritual evolution. Active in many areas - Agriculture (Bio-Dynamic farming), Medicine, Ecomonics; he is perhaps best known as the founder of the educational movement known today as the Waldorf Schools, of which there are hundreds world-wide.

As part of his training of the first teachers of the Waldorf Schools, he gave a series of the three lecture cycles specifically on the sciences. They are of particular interest in that they show how his spiritual science, rooted in the Goethean approach, feeds back again into the study of Natural Science.

For more links and background on Steiner, see the Anthroposophical Society in America's site.

The first two courses, The Light Course and the Warmth Course, are in print; the third has never been published other than in the form of mimeographed study notes. For this reason, they are being made available here.

Figures have been included only through Lecture Nine at present; additionally, numerous errors remain; work continues on providing a complete and clean version.

The Relationship of the Diverse Branches of Natural Science to Astronomy:
(Third Science Course)
Rudolf Steiner

Translator Unknown

English Translation available as study notes only
Stuttgart 1921

 

Lecture One

Lecture Six

Lecture Eleven

Lecture Sixteen

Lecture Two

Lecture Seven

Lecture Twelve

Lecture Seventeen

Lecture Three

Lecture Eight

Lecture Thirteen

Lecture Eighteen

Lecture Four

Lecture Nine

Lecture Fourteen

Lecture Five

Lecture Ten

Lecture Fifteen

Special thanks to Steve Bennett.

 

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