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- Title: Popular Occultism: Lecture 2: Man's Ascent into the Supersensible World
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- Our eyes and ears, all our sense-organs, are merely instruments used
- the organs enabling them to see this. But for a clairvoyant, the night
- Title: Popular Occultism: Lecture 3: The Different Conditions of Man's Life After Death
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- continues to exist, whereas the organs no longer exist. The soul yearns
- Title: Popular Occultism: Lecture 4: The Devachanic World
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- human being does not possess the organs which enable him to perceive
- Title: New Spirituality: Lecture 7: The New Spirituality and the Christ Experiance of the Twentieth Century - 6
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- what has been implanted in his blood and in his other organs by physically-inherited
- Title: "Heaven and Earth will pass away but my words will not pass away"
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- — already disintegrating organs in the head, and the Saturn man
- has head organs now scarcely discernable.
- Title: Tree of Life/Knowledge: Lecture V: Tree of Knowledge - I
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- Sun-existence. Although the first rudiments of our sense-organs had
- Earth, only there were they made organs of perception. These
- rudiments on Saturn were blind and unperceiving sense-organs. The
- sense-organs were first opened by the separation of the Sun and the
- Title: Tree of Life/Knowledge: Lecture VI: Tree of Knowledge - II
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- stressed that the first rudiments of the sense-organs were present in
- of human evolution, is that these sense-organs as such have to do
- germ of the sense-organs arose as a purely physical rudiment, for the
- development of the human sense-organs advances by the incorporation
- sense-organs are today essentially physical organs. You will easily
- be able to recognize the eyes, the ears, etc., as physical organs. To
- ). This physical nature of the sense-organs can be
- relation of the astral body in its activity to the other organs. I
- Title: Meditative Knowledge of Man: Lecture II: The Three Fundamental Forces in EducatioN
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- modified our organs, as deeply as into the skeletal system. A person who
- Title: Meditative Knowledge of Man: Lecture III: Spiritual Knowledge of Man as the Fount of Educational Art
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- motor nerves, that apparently run from the central organ to the organs of
- that run from the centre to the ends of the organs of movement. But they
- organs. These are at one and the same time the kind of organs that appear
- to be sense-nerve organs, and external physiology calls them that, yet in
- intimately connected with the organs of speech, understanding only comes
- making themselves into organs for receiving processes from the spiritual
- Title: Social Understanding: Lecture II: Social Understanding Through Spiritual Scientific Knowledge
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- organs, but fill our whole physical body. There is work in progress within
- this still happens today — the forces that create organs
- actual transformations of bodily organs are brought about; everything being
- Title: Raphael's Mission in the Light of the Science of the Spirit
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- use of their bodily organs, the spiritual secrets of existence
- organs. A withdrawal from sense impressions, in giving oneself
- Title: A Mongolian Legend
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- being, through all their organs, as an aura of love. This power
- Title: Impulse for Renewal: Lecture I: Anthroposophy and Natural Science
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- being? It is our physical organs. They respond to me in what
- inner organs answer me. I only get to know my inner human
- liver, heart and so on. The inner organs are, when you look at
- Title: Impulse for Renewal: Lecture II: The Human and the Animal Organisation
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- unfolds out of the functioning of his organs, and how an animal
- takes on form through his organs. In brief, one needs to search
- organs. The sense organs, or better said, the functions of the
- sense organs are more or less vital in everything which takes
- seven years of life, and goes right into the organs. As a
- we have with the upright related organisation of human organs a
- different situation to those in the animals, which have organs
- reorganises the organs, one also finds that certain organs are
- Title: Impulse for Renewal: Lecture IV: Anthroposophy and Pedagogy
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- years of life and in the preparation of the speech organs,
- Title: Impulse for Renewal: Lecture VI: Anthroposophy and Theology
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- inner development of spiritual organs which direct him to
- Title: Impulse of Renewal: Lecture VII: Anthroposophy and the Science of Speech
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- through the speech organs into words.
- Title: First Class, Vol. I: Lesson 6
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- more refined, into the vibration of the brain organs. And the
- organs it creates my mental pictures [representations]. But
- Title: First Class, Vol. I: Lesson 8
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- stomach. What we call our organs, what we call the physical
- being outside us. We are within our organs. We are outside of
- stars and so on - as one's own organs, observation of humanity
- Title: First Class, Vol. I: Lesson 9
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- all sensory organs: eyes, ears. The child experiences
- body, it is also different in the individual inner organs. You
- can direct your thoughts down to the individual organs and will
- stretches downward, so does thought illumine the inner organs,
- Title: First Class, Vol. II: Lesson 11
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- respiratory and circulatory organs are concentrated. All
- these organs are everywhere in the organism, are located in
- Title: First Class, Vol. II: Lesson 12
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- organs.
- experience it in the region of my speech organs; when I think,
- Title: First Class, Vol. II: Lesson 14
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- force of water forms the solid organs in us from the liquid
- become liquid, from which the organs are formed. All our
- sharply contoured organs are formed out of the liquid
- are nothing other than differentiated breathing organs. Eye,
- ear — all are refined breathing organs. Breathing
- Title: First Class, Vol. II: Lesson 15
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- all our organs are formed – the second, the
- Title: First Class, Vol. II: Lesson 16
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- which gives form to our organs, causing them to develop and
- Title: First Class Lessons: Lesson XXIII (recapitulation)
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- our support, we also feel, in that we feel our organs, that we
- our organs, that the water element forms us as human beings.
- Title: The Social Question: Lecture II: Comparisons at Solving the Social Question based on Life's Realities
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- recognise all the organs whose actions relate to metabolism. In
- nutritional organs. In relation to scientific methods we have
- organs, on those gifts and talents given to him, likewise
- particular organs to the outside world, so also can a state
- Title: The Social Question: Lecture VI: What Significance does Work have for the Modern Proletarian?
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- divided into governmental-, economic- and spiritual organs,
- Title: Lecture: Richard Wagner and Mysticism
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- Beethoven): The primal organs of creation and of nature are
- organs of creation, we can well understand why in his musical dramas
- instruments verily as if they were the primal organs of Nature.
- female organs of fertilisation, corresponds to the sexual system in
- chaste as that of the plant, and his organs of reproduction
- ideal was known as the Holy Grail the transformed reproductive organs
- Title: Polarities in Evolution: Lecture 1: Evolution and Consciousness, Lucifer, Ahriman
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- present-day sense organs, for it did not yet include
- Title: Polarities in Evolution: Lecture 5: How the Material Can Be Understood Only through the Spirit
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- You can say that the human being has two organs of
- deliberately did not tell you where these organs are to
- life has to be compared with the organs that serve the
- sphere of the social organism with the metabolic organs.
- Title: Polarities in Evolution: Lecture 6: Materialism and Mysticism, Knowledge as a Deed of the Soul
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- materiality, in the processes of its physical organs, is
- Title: Polarities in Evolution: Lecture 7: Materialism, Mysticism, Anthroposophy, Liberalism, Conservatism
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- processes involving our physical organs. Considering the
- Title: Polarities in Evolution: Lecture 9: East, West, and Middle
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- organs face the outside world and compare this with the
- in their brains, which had become sense organs. They were
- being sense organs to a state partly similar to that of
- in terms of organs perceptible to the outer senses. They
- the organs perceptible to the senses are created. Human
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