Rudolf Steiner
Rudolf Steiner (1861–1925) was an Austrian-born philosopher, esotericist, and social reformer best known for founding anthroposophy, a spiritual movement he described as "spiritual science." He also influenced education through Waldorf schools and agriculture through biodynamic farming, and wrote widely on philosophy, spirituality, and social theory.
philosophy
spirituality
social theory
Human Values in Education
Occult Reading and Occult Hearing
The Inner Impulses of Evolution: The Mexican Mysteries and the Knights Templar
Christianity as mystical fact and the mysteries of antiquity
The Human Being in Body, Soul, and Spirit: Our Relationship to the Earth (English and German Edition)
Atlantis and Lemuria
Etherisation of the Blood: The Entry of the Etherica Christ into the Evolution of the Earth
Karmic Relationships 7: Esoteric Studies (CW 239) (Esoteric Studies, 7)
Atlantis and Lemuria
On the Enigmas of the Soul (Basic Anthroposophy)
Education as a Social Problem
NEWBORN MIGHT AND STRENGTH
Karma of Materialism: 9 lectures, Berlin, July 31–Sept. 25, 1917 (CW 176)
Karma and Its Effects in Life; National Disease; Maternal Love
The Foundations of Human Experience: Lecture 7 of 14
The Methodology of Waldorf Education (Work in Light of the Christmas Conference)
End of the Millennium and Beyond
The Waking of the Human Soul and the Forming of Destiny / The Need for Understanding the Christ
The Child's Changing Consciousness: As the Basis of Pedagogical Practice (CW 306) (Foundations of Waldorf Education, 16)
A lecture on Eurythmy: given at Penmaenmawr on 26th August 1923