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Anthroposophy - History | A Wisdom Archive on Anthroposophy - History |  | Anthroposophy - History A selection of articles related to Anthroposophy - History |  |
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Anthroposophy, Anthroposophy - Applications, Anthroposophy - Aspects of Anthroposophic Thinking, Anthroposophy - Critiques of Anthroposophy, Anthroposophy - Description, Anthroposophy - History, Anthroposophy - Place in Western Philosophy, Anthroposophy - See Also, Anthroposophy - Social Goals of Anthroposophy, Anthroposophy - Social Threefolding, Anthroposophy - Steiner's Outlook on Social History, Anthroposophy - Successes of Anthroposophy, Anthroposophic Society (Goetheanum), Rudolf Steiner Archive (online works, see especially the Books section), The Anthroposophy Network, Sociedade Antroposófica no Brasil, Anthroposophical Initiatives in India, Anthroposophical Society in America
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ARTICLES RELATED TO Anthroposophy - History |  |  |  | Anthroposophy - History: Encyclopedia II - Anthroposophy - HistoryIn his early twenties, Steiner was asked to edit Goethe's scientific writings for a major publication of that writer's complete works. In the course of this work, Steiner began publishing various works that foreshadowed his later ideas, but were still set within the philosophical and scientific framework of his age: chiefly Goethe's Conception of the World and his commentaries on Goethe's scientific essays. His first masterwork, Die Philosophie der Freiheit (translated variously as The Philosophy of Spiritual Activity, < ...
See also:Anthroposophy, Anthroposophy - History, Anthroposophy - Description, Anthroposophy - Place in Western Philosophy, Anthroposophy - Applications, Anthroposophy - Social Goals of Anthroposophy, Anthroposophy - Steiner's Outlook on Social History, Anthroposophy - Social Threefolding, Anthroposophy - Aspects of Anthroposophic Thinking, Anthroposophy - Successes of Anthroposophy, Anthroposophy - Critiques of Anthroposophy, Anthroposophy - See Also Read more here: » Anthroposophy: Encyclopedia II - Anthroposophy - History |
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 |  |  | Anthroposophy - History: Encyclopedia II - Anthroposophy - History
In his early twenties, Steiner was asked to edit Goethe's scientific writings for a major publication of that writer's complete works. In the course of this work, Steiner began publishing various works that foreshadowed his later ideas, but were still set within the philosophical and scientific framework of his age: chiefly Goethe's Conception of the World and his commentaries on Goethe's scientific essays. His first masterwork, Die Philosophie der Freiheit (translated variously as The Philosophy of Spiritual Activity, < ...
See also:Anthroposophy, Anthroposophy - History, Anthroposophy - Description, Anthroposophy - Place in Western Philosophy, Anthroposophy - Relationship to Natural Science, Anthroposophy - Applications, Anthroposophy - Social Goals of Anthroposophy, Anthroposophy - Steiner's Outlook on Social History, Anthroposophy - Social Threefolding, Anthroposophy - Aspects of Anthroposophic Thinking, Anthroposophy - Successes of Anthroposophy, Anthroposophy - Critiques of Anthroposophy, Anthroposophy - Critical views Read more here: » Anthroposophy: Encyclopedia II - Anthroposophy - History |
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 |  |  | Anthroposophy - History: Encyclopedia II - Anthroposophy - DescriptionAnthroposophy, though appreciative of all religions and cultural developments, emphasizes recent Western (rather than older Hindu or Buddhist) esoteric thought as being more appropriate to contemporary needs, and perceives Christ and His mission on earth as having a particularly important place in human evolution, though these are not viewed in the same way as in the mainstream Christian churches. Steiner emphasized that the being that manifests in Christianity also manifests in all faiths and religions; it is the being that unifies all reli ...
See also:Anthroposophy, Anthroposophy - History, Anthroposophy - Description, Anthroposophy - Place in Western Philosophy, Anthroposophy - Relationship to Natural Science, Anthroposophy - Applications, Anthroposophy - Social Goals of Anthroposophy, Anthroposophy - Steiner's Outlook on Social History, Anthroposophy - Social Threefolding, Anthroposophy - Aspects of Anthroposophic Thinking, Anthroposophy - Successes of Anthroposophy, Anthroposophy - Critiques of Anthroposophy, Anthroposophy - Critical views Read more here: » Anthroposophy: Encyclopedia II - Anthroposophy - Description |
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 |  |  | Anthroposophy - History: Encyclopedia - AnthroposophyAnthroposophy, also called spiritual science by its founder, Rudolf Steiner is a spiritual philosophy and approach to investigating non-physical levels of, and influences on, reality. Steiner described his approach as "soul-observations using scientific methodology". (Steiner, [1893] 1995). Steiner's ideas have their roots in the flowering of Germanic culture that resulted in the transcendent philosophy of Hegel, Fichte and Schelling, on the one hand, and the poetic and scientific works of Goethe, upon whom Steiner draws heavily, on t ...
Including:
Read more here: » Anthroposophy: Encyclopedia - Anthroposophy |
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 |  |  | Anthroposophy - History: Encyclopedia - Rudolf SteinerRudolf Steiner (February 27, 1861, Murakirály, Hungary (today Donji Kraljevec, Croatia, (Medjimurje county) – March 30, 1925) was an Austrian philosopher, literary scholar, architect, playwright, educator, and social thinker, who is best known as the founder of Anthroposophy and its practical applications, including Waldorf School, Biodynamic agriculture, the Camphill Movement, and the Christian Community.
Steiner characterized history as essentially shaped by changes formed through a progressive development of human conscio ...
Including:
Read more here: » Rudolf Steiner: Encyclopedia - Rudolf Steiner |
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 |  |  | Anthroposophy - History: Encyclopedia II - Waldorf Education - CriticismWaldorf schools have been criticized for downplaying their spiritual nature, which many interpret to be religious. Some critics feel that the teachers influence the children with Anthroposophy, Rudolf Steiner's spiritual science, which most Waldorf teachers study. Some even go as far as to say that the schools are front organizations for indoctrination into Anthroposophy. Supporters respond that in a genuine Waldorf school Anthroposophy is never taught.
Waldorf educators are also questioned about not teaching reading and academics until approximately age 6-7. Critics claim that ...
See also:Waldorf Education, Waldorf Education - Description, Waldorf Education - Pedagogy, Waldorf Education - Teacher training, Waldorf Education - Wider Social Purpose, Waldorf Education - History, Waldorf Education - Criticism, Waldorf Education - Replies to criticism, Waldorf Education - See Also, Waldorf Education - List of Waldorf Schools, Waldorf Education - Sources, Waldorf Education - Primary sources, Waldorf Education - Secondary sources Read more here: » Waldorf Education: Encyclopedia II - Waldorf Education - Criticism |
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 |  |  | Anthroposophy - History: Encyclopedia II - Waldorf Education - HistoryWaldorf education was developed by Rudolf Steiner as an attempt to establish a school system that would facilitate the inclusive, broadly based, balanced development of children. Though he had written a book on education, The Education of the Child in the Light of Anthroposophy, twelve years before, his first opportunity to open such a school came in 1919 in response to a request by Emil Molt, the owner and managing director of the Waldorf-Astoria Cigarette Company in Stuttgart, Germany. The name Waldorf thus comes fr ...
See also:Waldorf Education, Waldorf Education - Description, Waldorf Education - Pedagogy, Waldorf Education - Teacher training, Waldorf Education - Wider social purpose, Waldorf Education - History, Waldorf Education - Debate surrounding the Waldorf teaching method, Waldorf Education - List of Waldorf Schools, Waldorf Education - Sources, Waldorf Education - Primary sources, Waldorf Education - Secondary sources Read more here: » Waldorf Education: Encyclopedia II - Waldorf Education - History |
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 |  |  | Anthroposophy - History: Encyclopedia II - Occult - OccultismOccultism is the study of supposed occult or hidden wisdom. To the Occultist it is the study of Truth, or rather the deeper truth that exists beyond the surface: 'The Truth Is Always Hidden In Plain Sight'. It may be considered by some to be a 'grey' area, perhaps larger than any other in the realm of religion. It can deal with subjects ranging from talismans, magic (alternatively spelled and defined as magick), sorcery, and voodoo, to ESP (Extra-sensory perception), numerology, lucid dreams, or even religions such as Hinduism and Buddhism. ...
See also:Occult, Occult - Occultism, Occult - History, Occult - The Occult and Christianity Read more here: » Occult: Encyclopedia II - Occult - Occultism |
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 |  |  | Anthroposophy - History: Encyclopedia II - Waldorf Education - DescriptionWaldorf Education is principaly based on the work of Rudolf Steiner and was later developed by Hermann von Baravalle and Caroline von Heydebrand among others. Waldorf schools employ a curriculum that focuses on the developmental stages of childhood. In general, there are three larger phases: early childhood, when learning is experiential and sensory; the middle years (corresponding roughly to the elementary school years), when learning is imaginative and takes place through creative, and especially artistic activity; and adolescence, when learning is abstract and intellectually rigorous. Inside these roughly sev ...
See also:Waldorf Education, Waldorf Education - Description, Waldorf Education - Pedagogy, Waldorf Education - Teacher training, Waldorf Education - Wider Social Purpose, Waldorf Education - History, Waldorf Education - Criticism, Waldorf Education - Replies to criticism, Waldorf Education - See Also, Waldorf Education - List of Waldorf Schools, Waldorf Education - Sources, Waldorf Education - Primary sources, Waldorf Education - Secondary sources Read more here: » Waldorf Education: Encyclopedia II - Waldorf Education - Description |
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 |  |  | Anthroposophy - History: Encyclopedia II - Waldorf Education - Wider Social PurposeBesides seeking to foster creative development of the "whole child," Steiner also started the Waldorf movement in order to help fulfill a social purpose: that education, while remaining fully accessible and available to all regardless of economic background, should eventually cease to be controlled by the State, and should instead come to depend on the free choices of families and teachers freely developing a highly plurali ...
See also:Waldorf Education, Waldorf Education - Description, Waldorf Education - Pedagogy, Waldorf Education - Teacher training, Waldorf Education - Wider Social Purpose, Waldorf Education - History, Waldorf Education - Criticism, Waldorf Education - Replies to criticism, Waldorf Education - See Also, Waldorf Education - List of Waldorf Schools, Waldorf Education - Sources, Waldorf Education - Primary sources, Waldorf Education - Secondary sources Read more here: » Waldorf Education: Encyclopedia II - Waldorf Education - Wider Social Purpose |
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 |  |  | Anthroposophy - History: Encyclopedia II - Waldorf Education - HistoryWaldorf education was developed by Rudolf Steiner as an attempt to establish a school system that would facilitate the inclusive, broadly based, balanced development of children. His first opportunity to open such a school came when Emil Molt of the Waldorf-Astoria Cigarette Company asked him to do so in 1919 in Stuttgart, Germany. Steiner insisted upon four conditions before opening:
that the school be open to all children;
that it be coeducational;
that it be a unified twelve-year school;
that the te ...
See also:Waldorf Education, Waldorf Education - Description, Waldorf Education - Pedagogy, Waldorf Education - Teacher training, Waldorf Education - Wider Social Purpose, Waldorf Education - History, Waldorf Education - Criticism, Waldorf Education - Replies to criticism, Waldorf Education - See Also, Waldorf Education - List of Waldorf Schools, Waldorf Education - Sources, Waldorf Education - Primary sources, Waldorf Education - Secondary sources Read more here: » Waldorf Education: Encyclopedia II - Waldorf Education - History |
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 |  |  | Anthroposophy - History: Encyclopedia II - Waldorf Education - Replies to criticismProponents cite research, by Piaget and others, which supports the view that early academic learning actually interferes with the development in early childhood of faculties that will enhance later learning capacity. (David Elkind: Early Childhood Education: Developmental or Academic) They maintain that the literacy-building techniques Waldorf schools use during early childhood—storytelling, music and singing, games, speech, and movement exercises—help to nourish imagination and a love of language which will be carried long after the chi ...
See also:Waldorf Education, Waldorf Education - Description, Waldorf Education - Pedagogy, Waldorf Education - Teacher training, Waldorf Education - Wider Social Purpose, Waldorf Education - History, Waldorf Education - Criticism, Waldorf Education - Replies to criticism, Waldorf Education - See Also, Waldorf Education - List of Waldorf Schools, Waldorf Education - Sources, Waldorf Education - Primary sources, Waldorf Education - Secondary sources Read more here: » Waldorf Education: Encyclopedia II - Waldorf Education - Replies to criticism |
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Waldorf Education - List of Waldorf Schools.
See the separate article , List of Waldorf Schools.
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See also:Waldorf Education, Waldorf Education - Description, Waldorf Education - Pedagogy, Waldorf Education - Teacher training, Waldorf Education - Wider Social Purpose, Waldorf Education - History, Waldorf Education - Criticism, Waldorf Education - Replies to criticism, Waldorf Education - See Also, Waldorf Education - List of Waldorf Schools, Waldorf Education - Sources, Waldorf Education - Primary sources, Waldorf Education - Secondary sources Read more here: » Waldorf Education: Encyclopedia II - Waldorf Education - See Also |
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 |  |  | Anthroposophy - History: Encyclopedia II - Waldorf Education - DescriptionWaldorf Education is principaly based on the work of Rudolf Steiner and was later developed by Hermann von Baravalle and Caroline von Heydebrand among others. Waldorf schools employ a curriculum that focuses on the developmental stages of childhood. In general, there are three larger phases: early childhood, when learning is experiential and sensory; the middle years (corresponding roughly to the elementary school years), when learning is imaginative and takes place through creative, and especially artistic activity; and adolescence, when learning is abstract and intellectually rigorous. Inside these roughly sev ...
See also:Waldorf Education, Waldorf Education - Description, Waldorf Education - Pedagogy, Waldorf Education - Teacher training, Waldorf Education - Wider social purpose, Waldorf Education - History, Waldorf Education - Debate surrounding the Waldorf teaching method, Waldorf Education - List of Waldorf Schools, Waldorf Education - Sources, Waldorf Education - Primary sources, Waldorf Education - Secondary sources Read more here: » Waldorf Education: Encyclopedia II - Waldorf Education - Description |
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 |  |  | Anthroposophy - History: Encyclopedia II - Waldorf Education - Wider social purposeBesides seeking to foster creative development of the "whole child," Steiner also started the Waldorf movement in order to help fulfill a social purpose: that education, while remaining fully accessible and available to all regardless of economic background, should eventually cease to be controlled by the State, and should instead come to depend on the free choices of families and teachers freely developing a highly plurali ...
See also:Waldorf Education, Waldorf Education - Description, Waldorf Education - Pedagogy, Waldorf Education - Teacher training, Waldorf Education - Wider social purpose, Waldorf Education - History, Waldorf Education - Debate surrounding the Waldorf teaching method, Waldorf Education - List of Waldorf Schools, Waldorf Education - Sources, Waldorf Education - Primary sources, Waldorf Education - Secondary sources Read more here: » Waldorf Education: Encyclopedia II - Waldorf Education - Wider social purpose |
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 |  |  | Anthroposophy - History: Encyclopedia II - Waldorf Education - Debate surrounding the Waldorf teaching methodWaldorf education does not teaching reading and academics until approximately age 6-7. Critics claim that a "window" of intellectual opportunity is lost.
Studies in England have shown that, in fact, Waldorf pupils' reading skills tend to lag behind state-educated pupils in the first few grades, but they also show that by 5th grade (11 years of age) the Waldorf pupils have caught up and thereafter are ahead of children of the same age who are educated in state schools. Research by Piaget and others also supports the view that early aca ...
See also:Waldorf Education, Waldorf Education - Description, Waldorf Education - Pedagogy, Waldorf Education - Teacher training, Waldorf Education - Wider social purpose, Waldorf Education - History, Waldorf Education - Debate surrounding the Waldorf teaching method, Waldorf Education - List of Waldorf Schools, Waldorf Education - Sources, Waldorf Education - Primary sources, Waldorf Education - Secondary sources Read more here: » Waldorf Education: Encyclopedia II - Waldorf Education - Debate surrounding the Waldorf teaching method |
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 |  |  | Anthroposophy - History: Encyclopedia II - Rudolf Steiner - Steiner criticismThough the emphasis anthroposophists place on individual freedom and thought limits the tendency toward group-think and prevents anthroposophy from turning into a cult - if a cult is something that deprives its members of spiritual and intellectual freedom - a critical approach to the works of Steiner is not as common as some would like and not always welcomed within some Anthroposophic circles. Given Steiner's clear statements about political democracy being the proper kind of State for humanity, his consistent and emphatic support for libe ...
See also:Rudolf Steiner, Rudolf Steiner - Goethean scholar philosopher phenomenologist of spirit and sense perception, Rudolf Steiner - Waldorf education, Rudolf Steiner - Steiner the activist and the threefold nature of social life, Rudolf Steiner - Steiner's outlook on social history, Rudolf Steiner - The three kinds of social separations Steiner wanted strengthened, Rudolf Steiner - Education's relation to the state and the economy, Rudolf Steiner - Liberty Equality Fraternity, Rudolf Steiner - Architecture eurythmy and free spiritual culture, Rudolf Steiner - Weleda biodynamic farming Camphill, Rudolf Steiner - A few aspects of Steiner's way of thinking, Rudolf Steiner - Breadth of Activity, Rudolf Steiner - Steiner criticism, Rudolf Steiner - Philosophical debate, Rudolf Steiner - Selected bibliography Read more here: » Rudolf Steiner: Encyclopedia II - Rudolf Steiner - Steiner criticism |
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