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"Anthroposophy is a path of
knowledge, to guide the Spiritual in the human being to the Spiritual in
the universe. It arises as a need of the heart, of the life of feeling;
and it can be justified only inasmuch as it can satisfy this inner need.
He alone can acknowledge Anthroposophy who finds in it what he himself in
his own inner life feels impelled to seek. Hence only they can be
anthroposophists who feel certain questions on the nature of man and the
universe as an elemental need of life, just as one feels hunger and
thirst."
Rudolf Steiner,
Anthroposophical Leading Thoughts
"When Rudolf Steiner founded Anthroposophy (a wisdom of the human being)
in the early part of [the 20th] century, his intention was not to create a
new sect or cult - of which we have hundreds today, some highly dangerous
- but to initiate a new striving for spiritual truth which, with its
detailed methodology and empirical, experiential basis (as opposed to
simple faith or belief) was in the tradition of the scientific thinking of
his time. In this sense he described Anthroposophy as a science of the
spirit. And thus he strove - in the face of the profound materialism of
the time - to communicate his knowledge of the spirit not through a vague
mysticism, but in a form that could be understood with clear human
thought."
Sevak Gulbekian,
At the Grave of Civilization? A Spiritual Approach to Popular Culture
The UK Anthroposophical Society has published to the
internet Waldorf educator Roy Wilkinson's booklet
Rudolf Steiner: An Introduction to His Spiritual World-View,
Anthroposophy - definitely
worth a look.
You'll find more useful links for
anthroposophy on our Resources and
Rudolf Steiner pages.
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