 |
at Global Oneness Community.
Share your dreams and let others help you with the interpretation!
Dream Sharing Forum
|
 |
Anthroposophy - Place in Western Philosophy | A Wisdom Archive on Anthroposophy - Place in Western Philosophy |  | Anthroposophy - Place in Western Philosophy A selection of articles related to Anthroposophy - Place in Western Philosophy |  |
| We recommend this article: Anthroposophy - Place in Western Philosophy - 1, and also this: Anthroposophy - Place in Western Philosophy - 2. |
|
More material related to Anthroposophy can be found here:
|
|
|  | |
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
|  | |
|
ARTICLES RELATED TO Anthroposophy - Place in Western Philosophy |  |  |  | Anthroposophy - Place in Western Philosophy: Encyclopedia II - Anthroposophy - Place in Western PhilosophyThe Epistemic basis for Anthroposophy is contained in the seminal work, The Philosophy of Freedom, as well as in Steiner's doctoral thesis, Truth and Science. These and several other early books by Steiner anticipated 20th century continental philosophy's gradual overcoming of Cartesian idealism and of Kantian subjectivism. Like Edmund Husserl and Ortega y Gasset, Steiner was profoundly influenced by the works of Franz Brentano (whose lectures he had heard as a student at the University of Vienna) and had read Wilhelm Dilthey i ...
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 - Place in Western Philosophy |
|  |
|
 |  |  | Anthroposophy - Place in Western Philosophy: Encyclopedia II - Anthroposophy - Applications
Practical results of Anthroposophy include work in:
Architecture (Goetheanum),
Biodynamic agriculture,
Holistic Waldorf Education
Astrosophy as opposed to Astrology,
Anthroposophical Medicine (Weleda),
Philosophy (The "Philosophy of Freedom"),
Goethean Science resulting in new developments in the Arts,
Eurythmy ("movement as visible speech"),
Centres for helping the mentally handicapped (Camphill Villages) and ...
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 - Applications |
|  |
|
 |  |  | Anthroposophy - Place in Western Philosophy: 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 |
|  |
|
 |  |  | Anthroposophy - Place in Western Philosophy: 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 |
|  |
|
 |  |  | Anthroposophy - Place in Western Philosophy: 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 |
|  |
|
 |  |  | Anthroposophy - Place in Western Philosophy: 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 - 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 |
|  |
|
 |  |  | Anthroposophy - Place in Western Philosophy: Encyclopedia II - Anthroposophy - Relationship to Natural ScienceAnthroposophy explicitly extends natural science's mandate - to study the world as external observers (a mandate which has been shaken by quantum mechanics' rejection of the possibility of splitting the observer from the observed phenomena) - to explore human experience from within, as well. It postulates that, as we have learned over centuries and even millenia to treat our experience of the outer world in a clear and systematic way, w ...
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 - Relationship to Natural Science |
|  |
|
 |  |  | Anthroposophy - Place in Western Philosophy: Encyclopedia II - Anthroposophy - ApplicationsPractical results of Anthroposophy include work in:
Architecture (Goetheanum),
Biodynamic agriculture,
Holistic Waldorf Education
Astrosophy as opposed to Astrology,
Anthroposophical Medicine (Weleda),
Philosophy (The "Philosophy of Freedom"),
Goethean Science resulting in new developments in the Arts,
Eurythmy ("movement as visible speech"),
Centres for helping the mentally handicapped (Camphill Villages) and ...
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 - Applications |
|  |
|
 |  |  | Anthroposophy - Place in Western Philosophy: 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 - 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 - Description |
|  |
|
 |  |  | Anthroposophy - Place in Western Philosophy: Encyclopedia II - Anthroposophy - Aspects of Anthroposophic ThinkingAccording to Steiner, a real spiritual world exists out of which the material one gradually condensed, and evolved. The spiritual world, Steiner held, can in the right circumstances be researched through direct experience, by persons practicing rigorous forms of ethical and cognitive self-discipline. Steiner described many exercises he said were suited to strengthening such self-discipline. Details about the spiritual world, he said, could on such a basis be dis ...
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 - Aspects of Anthroposophic Thinking |
|  |
|
 |  |  | Anthroposophy - Place in Western Philosophy: Encyclopedia II - Anthroposophy - Critiques of AnthroposophySome critics maintain that some anthroposophists tend to elevate Steiner's personal opinions to the level of absolute truths. Supporters claim that if there is a degree of truth to this criticism, most of the blame belongs not to Steiner, but to a few of his students. They point out that Steiner frequently asked that everything he said be tested by sound reason, and not to be taken on faith or authority.
A fundamental question underlying the modern response to 'spiritual science' is: Is it possible for one's thinking to be both scient ...
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 - Critiques of Anthroposophy |
|  |
|
 |  |  | Anthroposophy - Place in Western Philosophy: Encyclopedia II - Anthroposophy - Critiques of AnthroposophyAnthroposophy's combination of clearly thought-through understanding with spiritual content is novel and thus can be controversial. Though spiritually based, it is an approach that strongly emphasizes individual freedom. Still, some critics maintain that some anthroposophists tend to elevate Steiner's personal opinions to the level of absolute truths. Supporters claim that if there is a degree of truth to this criticism, most of the blame belongs not to Steiner, but to a few of his students. They point out that Steiner frequently asked that everything he said be tested ...
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 - Critiques of Anthroposophy |
|  |
|
 |  |  | Anthroposophy - Place in Western Philosophy: Encyclopedia II - Anthroposophy - Successes of AnthroposophyOut of the anthroposophical movement have come nearly a thousand schools world-wide. These are often called Waldorf Schools, after the first such school, founded in 1919; they are also sometimes called Steiner Schools. They have been supported by the United Nations and other distinguished organizations and receive full or partial governmental funding in most European nations. They are successful in an unusual range of circumstances: in the impoverished barrios of San Paulo and the wealthy suburbs of New York City, in India, Egypt, Aus ...
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 - Successes of Anthroposophy |
|  |
|
 |  |  | Anthroposophy - Place in Western Philosophy: Encyclopedia II - Anthroposophy - Aspects of Anthroposophic ThinkingAccording to Steiner, a real spiritual world exists out of which the material one gradually condensed, and evolved. The spiritual world, Steiner held, can in the right circumstances be researched through direct experience, by persons practicing rigorous forms of ethical and cognitive self-discipline. Steiner described many exercises he said were suited to strengthening such self-discipline. Details about the spiritual world, he said, could on such a basis be dis ...
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 - Aspects of Anthroposophic Thinking |
|  |
|
 |  |  | Anthroposophy - Place in Western Philosophy: Encyclopedia II - Anthroposophy - Social Goals of AnthroposophyFor a period after World War I, Steiner was extremely active and well-known in Germany in part because in many places he gave lectures on social questions. A petition expressing his basic social ideas (signed by Herman Hesse, among others) was very widely circulated. His main book on social questions, Die Kernpunkte der Sozialen Frage (available in English today as Toward Social Renewal) sold tens of thousands of copies.
Today around the world there are a number of innovative banks, companies, charitable institutions, an ...
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 - Social Goals of Anthroposophy |
|  |
|
 |  |  | Anthroposophy - Place in Western Philosophy: Encyclopedia II - Anthroposophy - Successes of AnthroposophyOut of the anthroposophical movement have come nearly a thousand schools world-wide. These are often called Waldorf Schools, after the first such school, founded in 1919; they are also sometimes called Steiner Schools. Some have been supported by the United Nations and receive full or partial governmental funding in some European nations. They are successful in an unusual range of circumstances: in the impoverished barrios of San Paulo and the wealthy suburbs of New York City, in India, Egypt, Australia, Holland and Mexico. Usually su ...
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 - Successes of Anthroposophy |
|  |
|
 |  |  | Anthroposophy - Place in Western Philosophy: Encyclopedia II - Anthroposophy - Social Goals of AnthroposophyFor a period after World War I, Steiner was extremely active and well-known in Germany in part because in many places he gave lectures on social questions. A petition expressing his basic social ideas (signed by Herman Hesse, among others) was very widely circulated. His main book on social questions, Die Kernpunkte der Sozialen Frage (available in English today as Toward Social Renewal) sold tens of thousands of copies.
Today around the world there are a number of innovative banks, companies, charitable institutions, an ...
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 - Social Goals of Anthroposophy |
|  |
|
 | |
|
|
More material related to Anthroposophy can be found here:
|
|
|
Search the Global Oneness web site |
|
|
|
 |
|