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    • Austrian occultist

      • Rudolf Joseph Lorenz Steiner (27 or 25 February 1861 [ 1 ] – 30 March 1925) was an Austrian occultist, [ 10 ] social reformer, architect, esotericist, [ 11 ][ 12 ] and claimed clairvoyant. [ 13 ][ 14 ] Steiner gained initial recognition at the end of the nineteenth century as a literary critic and published works including The Philosophy of Freedom. [ 15 ]
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  2. Rudolf Joseph Lorenz Steiner (27 or 25 February 1861 [1] – 30 March 1925) was an Austrian occultist, [10] social reformer, architect, esotericist, [11] [12] and claimed clairvoyant. [13] [14] Steiner gained initial recognition at the end of the nineteenth century as a literary critic and published works including The Philosophy of Freedom. [15]

  3. Rudolf Steiner 1861-1925. Rudolf Steiner was born on the 27th of February 1861 in Kraljevec in the former Kingdom of Hungary and now Croatia. He studied at the College of Technology in Vienna and obtained his doctorate at the University of Rostock with a dissertation on Theory of Knowledge which concluded with the sentence: «The most important ...

  4. Rudolf Steiner was an Austrian-born spiritualist, lecturer, and founder of anthroposophy, a movement based on the notion that there is a spiritual world comprehensible to pure thought but accessible only to the highest faculties of mental knowledge. Attracted in his youth to the works of Goethe,

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    Schema FMC00.124gives an overview on Rudolf Steiner's adult life and especially his lecturing activity in the three main seven year periods (in colour), the three moon nodes (in grey on the left), and some milestones in the right columns. Schema FMC00.365 provides a non-exhaustive overview of biographical literatureon the life and person of Rudolf ...

    address on 27 February 1931 in London (from the book: 'Ita Wegman – Esoteric Studies – The Michael Impulse'). here shortened SWCC, with selected highlights Note on Rudolf Steiner's illness and death, published as a forum post contribution to anthropper website:

    Note 1 - Recommendations re table FMC00.366

    Most of these are in German. It is suggested to look into second hand bookshops online to find certain works no longer readily available. In English, good introductory reads as an introduction to the personal side of Rudolf Steiner are No 21 or 22 in the table 1. No 21 - Rudolf Steiner - Recollections by some of his pupils (published by the Golden Blade, 1985) 2. No 22 - A Man Before Others: Rudolf Steiner Remembered (1993) 3. or else also Rittelmeyer eg No 27 'Rudolf Steiner Enters My Life'...

    Note 2 - Additions to tables FMC00.365 and FMC00.366

    As mentioned, tables FMC00.365 and FMC00.366 are surely not complete. The section below logs some additions that will be part of the next update of these Schemas. Please let us knowif you know of any others. FMC00.365 1. Rudolf Meyer: Wer war Rudolf Steiner? (1961) 2. Herbert Wimbauer: 'Die Individualität Rudolf Steiners, das offenbare Geheimnis der Anthroposophie' (1979) 3. Karen Swassjan: Rudolf Steiner - Ein Kommender (2005) 4. Ita Wegman (Peter Selg editor): 'Erinnerung an Rudolf Steiner'...

  5. Rudolf Steiner's Biography. Rudolf Steiner was born in 1861 and died in 1925. In his autobiography, The Course of My Life 1 Published in parts from 1923–5, and never completed. The titles given for Dr. Steiner's books are those of the English translations.

  6. Austrian philosopher and educational reformer Rudolf Steiner (1861–1925) remains perhaps best known for the educational methods he pioneered in his Waldorf schools, which have spread slowly but steadily around the world since his death.

  7. Rudolf Steiner was born in Kraljevic (then in Austria, now in Croatia) in 1861, and died in Dornach, Switzerland, in 1925. He thus saw the end of an old era and the birth pangs of a new one. His life echoes the transition intimately.