Rudolf Steiner: An Introduction to His Life and Work
M**L
Steiner's thought intertwined with his life story
This work leaves the impression that it is not possible to discuss either the thought or life story of Rudolf Steiner separately. It is a very good introduction and should be the first book read by someone seeking to understand this prolific man who has contributed so many great things to society. Steiner's own writings are very dense and it is quite helpful to have a base foundation for his life and ideas before undertaking the task of seriously studying him.The book follows a chronological path, details of which can be dry reading, but Lachman explains how this is necessary to understand the evolution of Steiner's writing. Lachman also does an excellent job of explaining the major influences and events that shaped the character of this great man, especially how he evolved from spiritual philosopher to spiritual teacher. Some of the more notable stories include how Steiner was given the task of editing Goethe's collected works, how Steiner decided to open up his inner world to the public, the founding of the Anthroposophical Society, the (re-)building of the Goetheanum, as well as people he helped along the way.The first half of the book is mostly biographical, but it is in the latter half where the reader will understand the theories that made this man so prolific and revered. Steiner called his work Spiritual Science, in that his teachings were not to be taken as abstract theories, but as actual realities that we can all experience given the proper development of our higher faculties. The path of self-initiation into these higher worlds is, for Steiner, clear thinking, as it is thought that links us to spirit.It could be said that Steiner made it his life's work to boil down the essence of the esoteric doctrines of the ages into clear understandable prose the whole world could understand, made available to all those who choose this path. However Steiner's own writings, even the most introductory ones, are very dense and require careful study.This book by Gary Lachman does an excellent job of presenting Steiner in a readable form. Reading Steiner directly at first may be a hindrance without having a proper footing in the history and landscape of ideas out of which Steiner's thought grew. This book is highly recommended as the place to begin understanding Spiritual Science.
J**E
The most important philosopher you've never heard of
Summarizing a career as broad and spectacular as Steiner's is no easy feat. As Lachman describes in the introduction,Steiner's ideas about consciousness, the nature of thought and the relationship between the mind and the external world were, quite literally, revoluationary, and they had me rethinking the history of Western philosophy. Yet I could turn to another lecture and there Steiner would tell me about reading to the dead or about the work of the Buddha on Mars...and a kind of `Tilt' sign would light up in my brainPractical revolutionary practices, followed by seemingly zany and impossible claims. Can we remove the parts we like from Steiner's amazing body of work while dissecting the imaginative but bizarre accounts of reincarnation, death and spiritual beings? I don't know if we can, curative education, biodynamic farming and Waldorf Schools have yielded amazing results but are ultimately based on Steiner's perceptions of the spirit world. Quite a paradox.What I appreciated the most about Lachman's work were his attempts to summarize the most revolutionary concepts from Steiner's writings and lectures which, to my knowledge, these summaries were successful and are important in their own right. The balanced approach towards Steiner's life is equally important, I feel like I could pass this book along to a friend to introduce Steiner's ideas without scaring them off when they would have reached Steiner's dissertations on Atlantis, Lemuria, Ahriman Jesus and Lucifer in his original works. Steiner may be ridiculed by the more rational among us, especially the evangelists of materialism, yet he had insights almost a hundred years ago that are only prepared to receive. He was one of the most important thinkers of the 20th century. Yet it is a puzzle why few recognize his Philosophy of Freedom as such a seminal work.Some of the ideas I found most important included the concept that our eyes may perceive a world that is a simple, immediate perception yet really that world is already infused with the content of our inner world. That the world is merely physical and absolute is half the equation. Descartes sitting and contemplating was failing to contemplate that his perceptions were already influenced by himself. Steiner wrote,When one who has a rich mental life sees a thousand things which are nothing to the mentally poor, this show as clearly as sunlight that the content of reality is only the reflection of the content of our mindsAdditionally he argued that our cognition and awareness is not something extra, tacked on to our biology. Our knowledge of the world is part of the world, as important as our life is to the ecosystem. This isn't new age jargon, it is an argument against Kant's limits to knowledge. Steiner challenged humanity in the same way as Nietzsche, that there is more to the human than we can ever imagine. Yet Steiner took it a step farther to say that there were no limits to knowledge other than those set by laziness. Through a focus on timeless ideas and growth/creation process of the world around us, we can develop the active imagining most humans fail to curate.The thoughts I shared above are just the top layer of a deep career filled with thousands of lectures and revolutionary concepts. At the end, I had to conclude for myself that the fundamental practical solutions Steiner offered cannot be accepted if the tremendous imagination of his mind is ignored. This account of Steiner's life is the perfect introduction to the most important philosopher you've never read.
K**R
Important stuff in an accessible form
Many of the materials about Rudolf Steiner are so difficult to read, this is much more human and appealing. A friend and I both read this and feel that it presents more of a rounded human being, a knowable person, than the other biographies and even helps Steiner's own autobiography become more understandable.
D**S
Excellent and accessible biography
Gary Lachman has become one of best new writers on matters of esoterica and ageless wisdom, and the socio-cultural impact of these things in modern times. That impact began long ago as a result of the life and work of people like Rudolf Steiner. Steiner has the strange misfortune of being a towering figure in the intellectual and spiritual development of the modern Western world, and at the same time, being relatively unknown by most people. In my own attempts to better acquaint myself with his work I have not, to this point, had much success. Lachman's biography resolved most of that problem for me. He writes about Steiner in respectful but not non-critical way, and for me, it really brought Steiner the man closer. Lachman demonstrates a firm grasp of the intellectual and cultural issues of the German speaking European world of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, but he does not write about these things in an obscure or complicated way. The only thing I did not like about this book was the absence of any photos from Steiner's life. Apart from that, this is a great book for meeting, and appreciating, a truly remarkable man, Rudolf Steiner.
I**M
Great summary
An excellent summary of Steiner's life which works as a tremendous compliment to the man's own works.
D**H
Well written and worthwhile reading
I found this an extremely interesting and well written summary of Dr. Steiner's origins, the development of his experience and his thinking. I read this to be able to communicate with a good friend of mine who has been involved with Anthroposophy since I met her in 1972. This has given me a much better understanding of Dr Steiner's wide breadth of knowledge and contribution to the world.It is easy to read and is a good lead-in to further study.
C**A
A good reading
A clever and contemporary approach to the biography of the influential twentieth-century philosopher , mystic and highly creative educator, artist, scientist, who unfortunately remains a mystery despite many who benefit from his ideas mainly through the Waldorf pedagogy among other movements, like biodynamic agriculture and holistic medicine based on his Spiritual Science - the Anthroposophy .
T**.
Four Stars
Good beginner's book to understand Rudolph Steiner and his teachings.
P**E
Sympathetic, balanced and insightful
A sympathetic, balanced and insightful study of the life and work of Rudolf Steiner. If you want a quick 240 page account, look no further. This is it.
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