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Rudolf Steiner: An Introduction to His Life and Work

Description:

Rudolf Steiner -- educator, architect, artist, philosopher and agriculturalist -- ranks amongst the most creative and prolific figures of the early twentieth century. Yet he remains a mystery to most people. This is the first truly popular biography of the man behind the ideas, written by a sympathetic but critical outsider.

Steiner is widely known for what he left behind: a network of Waldorf schools, biodynamic farming, Camphill schools and villages and pioneering work in holistic health and environmental research. Although his achievements are felt all over the world, few people understand this unusual figure. Steiner’s own writings fill several bookcases, but are often dense and ‘insider’ in tone.

Gary Lachman tells Steiner’s story lucidly and with great insight. He presents Steiner’s key ideas in a readable, accessible way, tracing his beginning as a young intellectual in the ferment of fin de siècle culture to the founding of his own metaphysical teaching, called anthroposophy.

This book is a full-bodied portrait of one of the most original philosophical and spiritual luminaries of the last two centuries.


Review

Select Guide Rating

About the Author

Gary Lachman is the former bass player and composer for Blondie, the guitarist for Iggy Pop, and leader of his own groups The Know and Fire Escape. He has written for the Times Literary Supplement, Literary Review and Mojo. He is the author of Turn Off Your Mind: The Mystic Sixties and the Dark Side of the Age of Aquarius, New York Rocker, A Secret History of Consciousness and In Search of P. D. Ouspensky. He lives in London.

Reviews:

5.0 out of 5 stars A good reading

C.C. · 22 December 2018

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 .

5.0 out of 5 stars Great summary

I. · 8 October 2023

An excellent summary of Steiner's life which works as a tremendous compliment to the man's own works.

4.0 out of 5 stars opened my eyes

Z.o.B. · 3 June 2009

I'm the parent of a child currently in a Waldorf nursery, who would shortly be entering the school proper in September. My partner has a cousin who is a Waldorf teacher in Germany and she is enamoured of this education style. I on the other hand have concerns, but without really knowing a great deal about Steiner, I didn't feel confident enough to act on these alone, and so I felt it was about time I informed myself about the man behind Anthroposophy so I picked up this book of my partner's from the bookshelf when I was housebound earlier this week.I found the author's honesty refreshing. While plainly someone with respect for Steiner, he refused to turn his work into a hagiography. He is not afraid to point out what he considers weaknesses in credibility in the philosophy.This book has filled in a lot of the gaps in my knowledge about Steiner. There is no doubt he was a philantrophist and had nothing but the best of intentions, however his reliance on obtaining truths via spiritual means clashes worries my empirical nature. The book left me a lot clearer about my position on his education system (which for the record is now one of mild disinclination).

5.0 out of 5 stars A Spiritual Giant

M.A.G. · 25 March 2014

I so enjoy reading Gary Lachman's books that I re-read them several months later and his Rudolf Steiner must be one of the best. He obviously has a high opinion of Steiner as a thinker and innovater despite misgivings about some details of his occult science. It's a pity that there was no one with Steiner's dynamism and leadership to guide the Anthroposophical Society following his death in 1925. Rudlof Steiner was slight in stature but a spiritual giant.

5.0 out of 5 stars Start out for Steiner

K. · 16 December 2018

Recommended if you are looking for a good introductory overview of who Steiner was and what his work was about. For an in-depth view of Steiner's life and work check out Christoph Lindenberg's biography.

5.0 out of 5 stars Sympathetic, balanced and insightful

P.C. · 25 August 2020

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.

5.0 out of 5 stars Good book

c. · 28 May 2018

Very informative

5.0 out of 5 stars Good book

D.S. · 5 September 2015

Interesting and well written.

Steiner's thought intertwined with his life story

M.S.A.O. · 17 August 2008

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.

Well written and worthwhile reading

D.H. · 16 September 2017

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.

Four Stars

T.T. · 28 July 2016

Good beginner's book to understand Rudolph Steiner and his teachings.

The most important philosopher you've never heard of

J.R. · 21 May 2009

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.

Important stuff in an accessible form

K.C. · 17 October 2013

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.

Rudolf Steiner: An Introduction to His Life and Work

Product ID: K0863156185
Condition: New

4.5

AED12745

Price includes VAT & Import Duties
Type: Paperback
Availability: In Stock

Quantity:

|

Order today to get by 7-14 business days

Delivery fee of AED 20. Free for orders above AED 200.

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Imported From: United Kingdom

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Rudolf Steiner: An Introduction to His Life and Work

Product ID: K0863156185
Condition: New

4.5

Rudolf Steiner: An Introduction to His Life and Work-0
Type: Paperback

AED12745

Price includes VAT & Import Duties
Availability: In Stock

Quantity:

|

Order today to get by 7-14 business days

Delivery fee of AED 20. Free for orders above AED 200.

Returns & Warranty policies

Imported From: United Kingdom

At BOLO, we work hard to ensure the products you receive are new, genuine, and sourced from reputable suppliers.

BOLO is not an authorized or official retailer for most brands, nor are we affiliated with manufacturers unless specifically stated on a product page. Instead, we source verified sellers, authorized distributors or directly from the manufacturer.

Each product undergoes thorough inspection and verification at our consolidation and fulfilment centers to ensure it meets our strict authenticity and quality standards before being shipped and delivered to you.

If you ever have concerns regarding the authenticity of a product purchased from us, please contact Bolo Support. We will review your inquiry promptly and, if necessary, provide documentation verifying authenticity or offer a suitable resolution.

Your trust is our top priority, and we are committed to maintaining transparency and integrity in every transaction.

All product information, images, descriptions, and reviews originate from the manufacturer or from trusted sellers overseas. BOLO is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or an authorized retailer for most brands listed on our website unless stated otherwise.

While we strive to display accurate information, variations in packaging, labeling, instructions, or formulation may occasionally occur due to regional differences or supplier updates. For detailed or manufacturer-specific information, please contact the brand directly or reach out to BOLO Support for assistance.

Unless otherwise stated, all prices displayed on the product page include applicable taxes and import duties.

BOLO operates in accordance with the laws and regulations of United Arab Emirates. Any items found to be restricted or prohibited for sale within the UAE will be cancelled prior to shipment. We take proactive measures to ensure that only products permitted for sale in United Arab Emirates are listed on our website.

All items are shipped by air, and any products classified as “Dangerous Goods (DG)” under IATA regulations will be removed from the order and cancelled.

All orders are processed manually, and we make every effort to process them promptly once confirmed. Products cancelled due to the above reasons will be permanently removed from listings across the website.

Description:

Rudolf Steiner -- educator, architect, artist, philosopher and agriculturalist -- ranks amongst the most creative and prolific figures of the early twentieth century. Yet he remains a mystery to most people. This is the first truly popular biography of the man behind the ideas, written by a sympathetic but critical outsider.

Steiner is widely known for what he left behind: a network of Waldorf schools, biodynamic farming, Camphill schools and villages and pioneering work in holistic health and environmental research. Although his achievements are felt all over the world, few people understand this unusual figure. Steiner’s own writings fill several bookcases, but are often dense and ‘insider’ in tone.

Gary Lachman tells Steiner’s story lucidly and with great insight. He presents Steiner’s key ideas in a readable, accessible way, tracing his beginning as a young intellectual in the ferment of fin de siècle culture to the founding of his own metaphysical teaching, called anthroposophy.

This book is a full-bodied portrait of one of the most original philosophical and spiritual luminaries of the last two centuries.


Review

Select Guide Rating

About the Author

Gary Lachman is the former bass player and composer for Blondie, the guitarist for Iggy Pop, and leader of his own groups The Know and Fire Escape. He has written for the Times Literary Supplement, Literary Review and Mojo. He is the author of Turn Off Your Mind: The Mystic Sixties and the Dark Side of the Age of Aquarius, New York Rocker, A Secret History of Consciousness and In Search of P. D. Ouspensky. He lives in London.

Reviews:

5.0 out of 5 stars A good reading

C.C. · 22 December 2018

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 .

5.0 out of 5 stars Great summary

I. · 8 October 2023

An excellent summary of Steiner's life which works as a tremendous compliment to the man's own works.

4.0 out of 5 stars opened my eyes

Z.o.B. · 3 June 2009

I'm the parent of a child currently in a Waldorf nursery, who would shortly be entering the school proper in September. My partner has a cousin who is a Waldorf teacher in Germany and she is enamoured of this education style. I on the other hand have concerns, but without really knowing a great deal about Steiner, I didn't feel confident enough to act on these alone, and so I felt it was about time I informed myself about the man behind Anthroposophy so I picked up this book of my partner's from the bookshelf when I was housebound earlier this week.I found the author's honesty refreshing. While plainly someone with respect for Steiner, he refused to turn his work into a hagiography. He is not afraid to point out what he considers weaknesses in credibility in the philosophy.This book has filled in a lot of the gaps in my knowledge about Steiner. There is no doubt he was a philantrophist and had nothing but the best of intentions, however his reliance on obtaining truths via spiritual means clashes worries my empirical nature. The book left me a lot clearer about my position on his education system (which for the record is now one of mild disinclination).

5.0 out of 5 stars A Spiritual Giant

M.A.G. · 25 March 2014

I so enjoy reading Gary Lachman's books that I re-read them several months later and his Rudolf Steiner must be one of the best. He obviously has a high opinion of Steiner as a thinker and innovater despite misgivings about some details of his occult science. It's a pity that there was no one with Steiner's dynamism and leadership to guide the Anthroposophical Society following his death in 1925. Rudlof Steiner was slight in stature but a spiritual giant.

5.0 out of 5 stars Start out for Steiner

K. · 16 December 2018

Recommended if you are looking for a good introductory overview of who Steiner was and what his work was about. For an in-depth view of Steiner's life and work check out Christoph Lindenberg's biography.

5.0 out of 5 stars Sympathetic, balanced and insightful

P.C. · 25 August 2020

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.

5.0 out of 5 stars Good book

c. · 28 May 2018

Very informative

5.0 out of 5 stars Good book

D.S. · 5 September 2015

Interesting and well written.

Steiner's thought intertwined with his life story

M.S.A.O. · 17 August 2008

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.

Well written and worthwhile reading

D.H. · 16 September 2017

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.

Four Stars

T.T. · 28 July 2016

Good beginner's book to understand Rudolph Steiner and his teachings.

The most important philosopher you've never heard of

J.R. · 21 May 2009

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.

Important stuff in an accessible form

K.C. · 17 October 2013

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.

Similar suggestions by Bolo

More from this brand

Similar items from “Teaching & Learning”