The Philosophy of Freedom
Intuitive Thinking As A Spiritual Path, Lipson translation
copyright © Anthroposophic Press, 1995.
Buy book at SteinerBooks [1]
Audio by Dale Brunsvold [2]
Intuitive Thinking As A Spiritual Path (original title Philosophy of Freedom)
CONTENTS
Translator’s Introduction [2] vii
Introduction by Gertrude Reif Hughes [2] xiii
Preface to the Revised Edition, 1918 [2]
PART I : THEORY
The Knowledge of Freedom
1. Conscious Human Action [2] 5
2. The Fundamental Urge for Knowledge [2] 18
3. Thinking in the Service of Understanding
the World [2] 27
4. The World as Percept [2] 49
5. Knowing the World [2] 73
6. Human Individuality [2] 97
7. Are There Limits to Cognition? [2] 104
PART II : PRACTICE
The Reality of Freedom
8. The Factors of Life [2] 127
9. The Idea of Freedom [2] 135
10. Freedom-Philosophy and Monism [2] 163
11. World Purpose and Life Purpose
(Human Destiny) [2] 173
12. Moral Imagination
(Darwinism and Ethics) [2] 180
13. The Value of Life
(Pessimism and Optimism) [2]194
14. Individuality and Genus [2] 225
FINAL QUESTIONS
The Consequences of Monism [2] 231
Appendix 1 & Appendix 2 (1918) [2]
Bibliography 259
Index 263