Education as a Social Problem

Nonfiction, Reference & Language, Education & Teaching, Educational Theory, Philosophy & Social Aspects
Cover of the book Education as a Social Problem by Rudolf Steiner, Steinerbooks
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Rudolf Steiner ISBN: 9781621510024
Publisher: Steinerbooks Publication: January 1, 1984
Imprint: SteinerBooks, Collected Works 296 Language: English
Author: Rudolf Steiner
ISBN: 9781621510024
Publisher: Steinerbooks
Publication: January 1, 1984
Imprint: SteinerBooks, Collected Works 296
Language: English
The six lectures in this volume were given one month before the opening of the first Waldorf School in Stuttgart in September 1919, in the context of Germany's post-war social ferment. Steiner points to negative tendencies present in modern social life as inner drowsiness, mechanization, and animalization. Attempts to find a social solution must include not only economics and legal rights, but also the third element of the free cultural life, which has become maya (illusion) for the civilized West. Education is "the most urgent problem of the present time," Steiner announces. He goes on to explain how only a proper nurturing of imitation, reverence , and love in the three periods of child development can prepare adults who are ripe to live the corresponding three virtues of a healthy social structure: cultural freedom, legal equality, and economic brother hood. This picture is then connected to Steiner's threefold ideas of the human soul, economics, and higher knowledge. He urges us to overcome at their roots one-sided intellectual cleverness, lack of inner direction, schematic thinking, and centralized socialism through an inwardly mobile pedagogical thinking able to respond to the inner riddle of each child.
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
The six lectures in this volume were given one month before the opening of the first Waldorf School in Stuttgart in September 1919, in the context of Germany's post-war social ferment. Steiner points to negative tendencies present in modern social life as inner drowsiness, mechanization, and animalization. Attempts to find a social solution must include not only economics and legal rights, but also the third element of the free cultural life, which has become maya (illusion) for the civilized West. Education is "the most urgent problem of the present time," Steiner announces. He goes on to explain how only a proper nurturing of imitation, reverence , and love in the three periods of child development can prepare adults who are ripe to live the corresponding three virtues of a healthy social structure: cultural freedom, legal equality, and economic brother hood. This picture is then connected to Steiner's threefold ideas of the human soul, economics, and higher knowledge. He urges us to overcome at their roots one-sided intellectual cleverness, lack of inner direction, schematic thinking, and centralized socialism through an inwardly mobile pedagogical thinking able to respond to the inner riddle of each child.

More books from Steinerbooks

Cover of the book Vladimir Soloviev by Rudolf Steiner
Cover of the book The Influence of the Dead on Destiny by Rudolf Steiner
Cover of the book Start Now! by Rudolf Steiner
Cover of the book Gentle Will by Rudolf Steiner
Cover of the book Auragole and the Last Battle: Book Four of Aurogoles Journey by Rudolf Steiner
Cover of the book Old Age by Rudolf Steiner
Cover of the book Glossolalia by Rudolf Steiner
Cover of the book Earthly and Cosmic Man by Rudolf Steiner
Cover of the book Sensitive Crystallization Processes by Rudolf Steiner
Cover of the book The Evolution of Language from an Organic Point of View (Lecture 2 of 6) by Rudolf Steiner
Cover of the book The Roots of Education by Rudolf Steiner
Cover of the book Camino Walk by Rudolf Steiner
Cover of the book The Child's Changing Consciousness: Lecture 6 of 8 by Rudolf Steiner
Cover of the book Reincarnation and Karma: Lecture 4 of 5 by Rudolf Steiner
Cover of the book The Waldorf Kindergarten Snack Book by Rudolf Steiner
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy