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The Rudolf Steiner Archive

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317. Curative Education: Lecture V 30 Jun 1924, Dornach
Translated by Mary Adams

Rudolf Steiner
Wegman will put at our disposal a boy whom we have had here under treatment for some considerable time, and in whom we shall be able to demonstrate a condition that is strikingly typical.
We must raise them to the surface, and we must go about it, not with psycho-analysis as it is understood today, but with a true and right psycho-analysis. We must observe the child and find out what kind of thing it is that is inclined to disappear in him.
He will not be able to do it. He does not rightly understand what he has to do. That is, he understands quite well the words we say, but he does not convey their meaning to his legs; it is as though the legs did not want to receive it.
317. Curative Education: Lecture VI 01 Jul 1924, Dornach
Translated by Mary Adams

Rudolf Steiner
He is also learning quite quickly to speak and understand German. There, then, you have the description of the immediate facts and findings. And now, if you will begin to observe the child for yourselves—(to the boy) Come here a minute!
Believe it or not, the boy is a genius. What do I mean by that? (He doesn't understand what we are saying.) I mean that, in accordance with his karmic antecedents, he could have been a genius.
There will have to be a feeling and understanding in the anthroposophical movement for what “movement”, mobility, really is! I do not want to enlarge on this subject, but I can assure you that I never meet with less understanding than when, in answer to a question as to what is to be done in a certain situation, I reply: “Have enthusiasm!”
317. Curative Education: Lecture VII 02 Jul 1924, Dornach
Translated by Mary Adams

Rudolf Steiner
And then I must tell you of another idiosyncrasy. The boy will every now and then suddenly undergo a change, something like the changes we read of in the Werewolf stories. For a considerable time, for instance, he thought he was a lion and went about roaring like a lion.
Try asking the boy to do something which he quite well understands; he will just grin a little, he won't meet what you say with openness and candour. I shall have more to say afterwards about this case.
And this principle must be observed throughout all the teaching we undertake with him. We must have the patience and perseverance to carry it through. First, we must bring it about that the boy's attention is thoroughly roused.
317. Curative Education: Lecture VIII 03 Jul 1924, Dornach
Translated by Mary Adams

Rudolf Steiner
The radical change which the bodily nature of the child undergoes at birth is concerned, first or all, with the breathing system. The child comes into connection with the outside air.
In certain circumstances it can happen that an incapacity on the part of the father to bring the forces of his organisation into the limbs is transferred to the child; in which case the head organisation, which is under the influence of the mother, is bound to undergo an inordinate development. And now you have the explanation of the fact that the mother loved to have the child in her womb.
She is only biting my sleeve. She weighed at birth a little under 4 ¼ lb., but had been carried in the womb for the full nine months. Thus the embryo period had been gone through in the regular manner.
317. Curative Education: Lecture IX 04 Jul 1924, Dornach
Translated by Mary Adams

Rudolf Steiner
He is engaged in preparing microscopic slides; he will look round in all directions for objects to bring under the microscope, and in this regular—and at the same time irregular—way, satisfy his longing to acquire things for himself.
And if he should go so far as to click his tongue at the same time, then things will go very badly with him. Once we have the insight to see and understand things of this kind when we meet them in life, the insight itself will guide us to the right method of dealing with them.
Appetite and evacuation of the bowels were in order. You must understand that it is impossible to steer clear of such crises—unless one is prepared to steer clear of all hope of a cure!
317. Curative Education: Lecture X 05 Jul 1924, Dornach
Translated by Mary Adams

Rudolf Steiner
There is in our time great need that young men and women should rise up among us and exercise a regenerating influence upon mankind; and what I am now going to say is not said out of misunderstanding of the Youth Movement of our day, nor from lack of understanding, but out of a true understanding of it. It is a necessity, this Youth Movement, it is something of quite extraordinary significance; for those older people who can understand it, the modern Youth Movement is interesting in the highest degree.
And in the morning you have to think: Here is a circle (blue); here is a point (yellow). Yes, you have to understand that a circle is a point, and a point a circle. You have to acquire a deep, inner understanding of this fact.
Adopting this line of approach, trying, that is, to understand man inwardly, you will learn to understand the whole of man. You must, first of all, be quite clear in your mind that these two figures, these two conceptions, are one and the same, are not at all different from one another.
317. Curative Education: Lecture XI 06 Jul 1924, Dornach
Translated by Mary Adams

Rudolf Steiner
And right in the midst of all these members stands man in his very own individuality, which individuality goes through repeated earth lives and has the task of bringing under control this whole connection of various members, has the task of uniting them, on the principle of freedom, under one individual ordering.
L. came to me and explained that there was a deep feeling among the Lauenstein members of the importance of the task they were undertaking; they felt they were about to embark upon what would prove to be a new mission within the Anthroposophical Movement, and it would surely be good if the karmic connections between those who are engaging in the work could be thoroughly explained and understood.
Consider how it is, for instance, with regard to Goethe's Theory of Metamorphosis. In the form it was able to develop under Goethe himself, who was after all a clever man, it appears to us today, does it not, as an abstract theory?
317. Curative Education: Lecture XII 07 Jul 1924, Dornach
Translated by Mary Adams

Rudolf Steiner
We have, as you know, to begin with, our physical body, which derives from Saturn times and has been gradually formed and completed with such wonderful artistic power in four majestic stages of development. Then we have the etheric body, which has undergone three stages of development. And we have besides the astral body, which has undergone only two.
For you will never find that one who is genuinely undergoing development will complain that this or that hinders him from meditating. In point of fact we are not really hindered by these things that seem to come in our way.
Suppose you have the intention of undertaking work with backward children. The first thing you have to do is to study and observe the pedagogy that is followed in the anthroposophical movement.
318. Pastoral Medicine: Lecture I 08 Sep 1924, Dornach
Translated by Gladys Hahn

Rudolf Steiner
First and foremost, dear friends, there must be an absolutely clear understanding in the part of the theologians and on the part of the physicians what is now going to be made possible by their working together: namely, a new pastoral medicine.
It is tremendously important that this should be thoroughly understood by both sides. A great deal will depend upon it. Apparently the thought has even been entertained that theologians should actually acquire medical knowledge.
In contrast, when you are working as a physician or therapist you draw the patient's soul directly into his or her physical body. Indeed we can say if physicians understand their profession properly, they realize that they enter directly into the realm of the spiritual.
318. Pastoral Medicine: Lecture II 09 Sep 1924, Dornach
Translated by Gladys Hahn

Rudolf Steiner
Only its purely mineral and physical nature can be understood with the methods of knowledge that are brought to it today. What the etheric body impresses upon it is not to be reached at all by those methods.
In short, if we want to find the impression of the astral body upon the physical body, upon the breathing and blood circulation, we are obliged to bring a musical understanding to it. Still more difficult to understand is the ego organization. For this one needs to grasp the meaning of the first verse of the Gospel of St.
But we can think of a personality in a later epoch who went through these stages under the wise direction of her confessors, so that she could devote herself undisturbed to her inner visions.

Results 5101 through 5110 of 6073

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