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- Title: PoSA: Introduction - Rudolf Steiner as a Philosopher
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- individual objects into groups; and these groups are for us, then, abstract
- Title: PoSA: Chapter I: The Conscious Human Deed
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- highest sense only those actions which result from abstract judgments. But
- Title: PoSA: Chapter IV: The World as Perception
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- reflective, abstract consciousness. If he really does this, then he has
- Title: PoSA: Chapter V: The Act of Knowing the World
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- wants to avoid making “abstract” thinking the
- Thinking is abstract, empty of all concrete content. At most it can give an
- Title: PoSA: Chapter VI: The Human Individuality
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- things. The unthinking traveller and the scholar living in abstract
- Title: PoSA: Chapter VII: Are There Limits to Knowledge?
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- to overcome dualism. Even if one brings a few abstract elements from the
- and motion are abstractions derived from the rich sphere of perceptions.
- abstract scheme of concepts if he did not insist on “real” connections
- abstraction, is to him an unreal thought-picture, which the soul has put
- If one avoids getting lost in abstractions, it will be recognized
- Title: PoSA: Chapter VIII: The Factors of Life
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- attention on it. What then is left is something lifeless, abstract, the
- corpse of living thinking. If this abstract alone is considered, then it is
- reflection in the ordinary life of soul appears lifeless and abstract. No
- the intuitive thinker produces in abstract thoughts without feeling, and far
- Title: PoSA: Chapter IX: The Idea of Freedom
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- derived from a system of moral principles. In the form of abstract concepts
- Title: PoSA: Chapter X: Philosophy of Freedom and Monism
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- being, or else through submission to the authority of the abstract inner
- (abstracted) from the sense-world, and who do not give full recognition to
- which merely abstracts.
- Title: PoSA: Chapter XII: Moral Imagination
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- freedom is by no means an abstract ideal, but is a directive force inherent
- Title: PoSA: Chapter XIII: The Value of Life
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- We never want a certain quantity of pleasure in the abstract, but a concrete
- made in actual life, — not the one an abstract philosophy makes
- objects of this striving, not some abstract “happiness.” When pessimistic
- extermination of all striving after pleasure in order that bloodless abstract
- from the Creator, nor does he merely fulfill what he recognizes as abstract
- Title: PoSA: Chapter XIV: Individuality and Species
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- being is a problem. And every science which deals with abstract thoughts and
- Title: PoSA: The Consequences of Monism
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- outside of that world, by means of abstract conclusions. For monism,
- is mediated. Only as long as we consider in the abstract form of concepts
- abstract form in which he grasps it in his consciousness. But this
- its existence is possible only in a real connection with nature. An abstract
- itself the law that connects perceptions, we are dealing with mere abstract
- concepts. The abstract concept does not contain reality, but thinking
- are not able through abstract conceptual hypotheses (through pure conceptual
- mere abstract concepts; he sees in the concept, as such, only one side of
- abstract conclusions is nothing but a human being transplanted into the
- combination of two abstractions drawn from experience. Exactly the same is
- the world given us, is an abstraction to which no reality corresponds. We can
- abstract concepts that do not find their complements in perceptions and
- produced, monism recognizes as abstractions borrowed from experience; it is
- Title: PoSA: First Appendix
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- superfluous, as a remote and abstract spinning of thoughts. They may well
- Title: PoSA: Second Appendix
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- This book at first leads the reader into abstract regions, where thought
- technique. Abstract thinking thereby gains concrete, individual life. Ideas
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