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How I Teach Anthroposophy 2011

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The key takeaways are that anthroposophy forms the basis of Waldorf education and it is important for teachers to gain an understanding of anthroposophical concepts. However, anthroposophy can be difficult to define and teach.

Some concepts from anthroposophy that are discussed include reincarnation, etheric and astral bodies, the seven life processes, and the etheric body.

The author approaches teaching anthroposophy by integrating dialogue about student questions and thoroughly presenting selected concepts. The author aims to create an open and critical atmosphere for both exploring what is interesting in anthroposophy and nurturing a critical attitude.

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How I Teach Anthroposophy


Arve Mathisen
Published in Meddelelser til lrerne (Information for Waldorf School Teachers) nr. 46, 2011

Waldorf education has its source in Rudolf Steiners anthroposophy. Concepts and thoughts
from anthroposophy have a central position in Steiners ideas about children, school and
education from his early work in 1906 and right through to the last lectures about Waldorf
education in 1924. Waldorf education was founded upon and presented through the same
anthroposophical concepts which Steiner otherwise used in almost all of his innumerable
lectures. I have taught Waldorf education and anthroposophy for many years, first in seminars
for parents at the Steiner School in Brum (Norway), later at the University College of
Eurhythmy in Norway and now at the Rudolf Steiner University College for teacher and
preschool teacher students.
Is it possible to teach anthroposophy? one might ask oneself. And I have certainly often
thought that it really isnt possible. For what is anthroposophy? Is it the contents of Steiners
books and lectures? Is it a belief or a world view, or a kind of science? Is anthroposophy a
road to knowledge, a method for understanding the human being and the world? Or is it
something quite different? Considering the fact that concepts such as knowledge and learning
appear to be nearly impossible to define, I will not attempt to formulate a concise definition of
anthroposophy. But for a student of Waldorf education it is important, despite these
difficulties, both to attain an understanding of anthroposophy and to form own opinions and
attitudes related to anthroposophy. If you are a recently educated teacher interested in further
developing your pedagogical practice, it is, in my view, useful to know about the ideas that
created and continue to create the basis for Waldorf education. Knowledge is the key word
here. Through knowledge, understanding is deepened, criticism is sharpened and educational
practice is changed. Anthroposophy can be a profound source of inspiration for working with
children and adolescents. In the following, I will give an account of thoughts and teaching
content from lessons in anthroposophy at the Rudolf Steiner University College. I wont
describe any kind of set plan that I use again and again. Each year has a different focus, and
the subject matter also varies. This text combines teaching material from several student
groups.
Anthroposophy and sex instruction
Each time I teach a group of students in anthroposophy, I ask them what they wish to learn
and what kind of expectations they have. Of course I receive many different answers, but
there are two subjects that often come up. The students want to learn about anthroposophy in
a way that is related to working with children and adolescents, and they want to understand
anthroposophy better. They want clear and straightforward explanations. Many also express
that they are sceptical of anthroposophical ideas. They do not want to accept the idea of
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reincarnation right away and feel alienated from or troubled by concepts like etheric or astral
bodies. For this reason I have chosen to compose the lectures by integrating dialogue about
questions coming from the students and a thorough presentation of selected concepts from
Waldorf education and anthroposophy. Teaching anthroposophy reminds me in many ways of
sex instruction in the lower secondary school years. There is knowledge that can be
communicated, but the value of the teaching depends on all the participants feeling free to
make their own decisions and form their own attitudes. A norm for what anthroposophy can
mean for each individual is just as non-existent as a normal sexuality. This has been a prime
concern for me in teaching anthroposophy: how can I contribute to making an open, critical
and inquiring atmosphere which both opens for what is interesting and potentially valuable in
anthroposophy and at the same time nurtures a critical attitude? This is not as simple as it
perhaps sounds. For as soon as I start using anthroposophical concepts, such as etheric body,
for example, and try to present theoretical and practical perspectives on this, a kind of tacitly
understood acceptance of the existence of an etheric body begins hovering in the classroom.
According to the French thinker Michael Foucaults ideas, it is evident that something as
simple as a conversation and a reflection on a concept at the same time involves an influence
upon those participating in such activities. I discuss this with the students and ask them to be
careful. I want to contribute to an understanding of anthroposophy, not to the spreading of
what I call anthroposophical conceptual realism. By this, I mean that such things that
Steiner describes in his lectures are automatically expected to have a parallel in the students
experience. Ideas should be treated as ideas. It is then up to each individual to decide how the
ideas can relate to his or her own thinking, personal experience and practice. The intention of
the lectures is to work with Steiners basic ideas and concepts with the students in an
understandable manner, without the individual student blindly accepting the whole or parts of
Steiners world of thought. As I see it, a pronounced critically oriented teaching can penetrate
deeply into anthroposophys descriptions of the human being and the cosmos.
Basic ideas?
What is meant by basic anthroposphical ideas? Steiners work covers innumerable themes
from religion, art and science. A catchword catalogue published in 1998 filled over 2500
pages
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. Who can take this in or have the courage to present parts of such an overwhelming
amount of material? Luckily, one might say, Steiner has nevertheless tied most of his
presentations to just a few major concepts. Yes, to put it simply, it can be said that Steiner
expressed large parts of his anthroposophy from two perspectives. The one perspective is
thinking-feeling-willing. Steiner uses this triad of concepts when he presents topics like the
human physical body as well as psychological and spiritual phenomena. At the founding of
the first Waldorf School in 1919, it was just these three thinking, feeling and willing that
were the point of departure for Steiners presentation of central pedagogical and human

1
Steiner, Rudolf, Mtteli, Emil (1998). Register zur Rudolf Steiners Gesamtausgabe. Dornach: Rudolf Steiners
Verlag.
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aspects of Waldorf education
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. The other major complex of concepts in Steiners work builds
upon a fourfold division of the phenomena of the world, best known through the so-called
kingdoms of nature and the four elements. Steiner arranged minerals, plants, animals and
mankind in a fourfold concept structure. All of them have a physical body and may be
observed and placed as materially perceptible phenomena. Plants, animals and mankind have
a life in themselves that Steiner characterizes as their etheric body. Animals and the human
being use their senses and ability to move in a conscious and often intelligent way. They
communicate with their environment. According to Steiner, the fundamental abilities of
consciousness such as sensing, moving, wakefulness and communication are the qualities of
an astral body. In addition, the human being has the ability of reflection, self-reflection and
restraint. Steiner associates these qualities with the so-called ego. These four the physical,
etheric, astral and the ego are concepts in anthroposophy which very often turn up in
Steiners descriptions. In Waldorf education they are key concepts.
Ideas in dialogue
Thus, there exist a triad and a fourfoldedness of basic concepts in anthroposophy, and these
are, in my opinion, very well suited for the teaching of anthroposophy. The students get the
opportunity to accumulate knowledge which is essential for understanding Waldorf education,
and at the same time, they become acquainted with concepts that can be further pursued in
other aspects of Steiners works. Its like learning a language.
One of the really big problems for anyone who wishes to understand anthroposophy is that it
has partly existed in a kind of vacuum regarding communication and sharing of knowledge.
Steiner was set on emphasizing what was unique about his anthroposophical project and
marked a critical distance to many, if not most, of his contemporaries. Waldorf education, for
example, has much in common with reform education of that day, but Steiner rarely pointed
out similarities or relationships in this instance. On the contrary, he propounded critical
comments on contemporary reform educational experiments. For a current understanding of
anthroposophy, it is my opinion that a kind of restoration process must take place. It is not
only a question of building bridges here. Perhaps the image of opening the dams could be a
better metaphor. Wherever I get deeply absorbed in philosophy, education, sociology,
psychology or the theory of science, I find themes that touch upon and converse with
anthroposophy. In the same way that it is difficult to really know ones own country before
one has been abroad, it is my opinion that anthroposophy is very hard to understand or work
on without dealing with it comparatively. That is why I have generally related the study of
Steiners basic concepts to other thinkers who have taken up similar themes.
The idea of understanding education based on thinking, feeling and willing is by no means
new with Steiner. We find germs to such a pedagogical idea in Platos work. Comenius, who
is often characterized as the father of modern education, emphasizes that learning must take

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This is especially expressed in the lectures published in the book: The Study of Man. This can be
called a classic in the Waldorf education world. At the same time the book, through its complexity
and enigmatic contents can also be characterized as being on the border of the understandable.
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place in all these areas. Most famous is perhaps the Swiss educational pioneer, Johan Heinrich
Pestalozzi, who built his educational practice on a balanced engagement of head, heart and
hand. John Dewey, still of current interest, has reflected upon this, and today there are
countless pedagogical theories that emphasize emotional learning and different forms of
learning by doing in addition to cognitive or intellectual schooling.
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There is something
intuitively and almost pedagogically self-evident about theoretical learning belonging to
emotional involvement and happening when pupils gather concrete experience. A theory of
education based on this triad of concepts invites children and adolescents to learn and develop
in a complete way. Thinking, feeling and willing refer to activities. The verbs to think, to
feel and to act say something about what children and adolescents do in kindergarten and
school. When these activities are put into an educational and developmental perspective,
Waldorf educational reflection and developmental work is underway. In Waldorf
kindergartens and Waldorf schools, thinking and the formation of concepts builds upon
emotional experiences, which in turn build upon the most basic learning by doing. The
integration of thinking, feeling and willing means that the establishment of identity and ethics
connects with learning. The pupil is given the opportunity to be emotionally present and
actively prepared for his or her thoughts. Based upon the intuitively pedagogical side of the
ideas of thinking, feeling and willing and on how other pedagogues have worked on these
ideas, anthroposophys distinctive character and its normality can come into view. In many
ways it is alluring how this triad of concepts in Waldorf education appears popular and
understandable. On the one hand, an aspect of anthroposophy appears as an almost
mainstream view on education. On the other hand, some of Steiners reflections on thinking,
feeling and willing lead way, way out into what are, for most people, unknown waters. Those
who have read, or have tried to read, The Study of Man know what I am talking about. After a
comparative study of the idea of thinking, feeling and willing, selected aspects of this book
may be introduced for discussion and reflection. In the article Pedagogical Aspects of
Slowness. Aristotelian and Platonic Elements within Knowledge of Man
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, I have discussed a
few of Steiners descriptions of thinking, feeling and willing, also comparatively. In addition
to reading excerpts from Steiners original texts, I have let the students read this article.
Sometimes, the students have summarized and given introductions for discussion, while other
times, I have done so.
Complex and fourfold
Steiners descriptions of the fourfoldedness of nature and the human being are experienced by
many students as being far less intuitive than the ideas of thinking, feeling and willing. The
mere words ether and astral cause many to shake their heads. In the same way, the old idea
that nature is built up hierarchically with minerals at the bottom and the human being on the

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A current book that argues in favour of the interplay of thinking, feeling and doing is: Ellis, Ralph D., Newton,
Natika (2010): How the mind uses the brain: to move the body and image the universe. Chicago: Open Court.
Both authors are philosophers, and the book emphasizes a kind of basic research that in many ways converses
well with Steiners understanding of the human being and education.
4
The article can be downloaded from: www.arvema.com/tekster/Slowness_LivingEducation3_2007.pdf
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top, will be unacceptable. Several students will point out that animals communicate and have
their own ways of thinking.
During the lectures, we take our time studying and reflecting upon the idea of the
fourfoldedness of the human being and world. This is a very old idea that we can trace from
early Indian Upanishads via Aristotle and Plato in Ancient Greece and into our own time. The
idea flourished in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, and is still kept alive by certain
thinkers, also outside anthroposophy. I have compiled a compendium documenting this
ideas many historical expressions through short excerpts of original texts
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.

A print from the book Liber de Intellectu (Paris, 1510) by the French author, philosopher and theologian Charles
de Bouvelles (1471-1553). The picture illustrates the division of the kingdoms of nature into four levels: est (to
be, exist), vivit (to live), sentit (to sense, feel, experience) and intelligit (understand). On the left hand side of the
picture, levels from mineral to the human being can be seen, while the right hand side shows how the human
being sinks down if he succumbs to deadly sins such as lust (luxuria), gluttony (gula) or sloth (acedia).

Two interesting current thinkers who have concerned themselves with the idea of dividing
reality into different levels are Michael Polanyi
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and Norbert Wiley
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. Polanyi argues for the

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If you are interested, you can download the compendium here:
http://dl.dropbox.com/u/383934/Kompendium_de_fire_2010.pdf
6
Polanyi, Michael (2009). The tacit dimension. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press.
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existence of a creative tension between various levels both in the human constitution and in
the world, as, for example, between biology and the mind. Instead of claiming that everything
boils down to material processes, or that everything is biology, that everything is basically
psychology, or everything is language, etc., these two authors point out how a composite
understanding of the human being has many advantages. Like Steiner, they see a value in
approaching the human being as a complex material, biological, mental, lingual-reflective-
social being. There are plenty of arguments against such a fourfoldedness. While thinkers
who partially share Steiners ideas are given space, it is of course necessary to present
conflicting or alternative thoughts.
The idea of a hierarchical division of nature from imperfect minerals, plants and animals to
the human being towering freely at the top of the creation has been associated with value
ranking and, later, discriminating ideologies of various kinds. Quite a few authors have
discussed the problems of such thoughts, and especially in the last few years, there has been a
great interest in the characteristics of animals
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. Steiner often expresses himself along the same
lines as classic value ranking and hierarchical ideas when he describes the relationship
between animals and mankind, but there are also important exceptions to this in Steiners
work. I have chosen to emphasize some of these in my teaching. The printed picture from the
1500s shows the human being in possession of all four qualities or levels, while animals and
plants have fewer. In several accounts, Steiner reacts to such a lacking description of
minerals, plants and animals. He claims that everything existing on earth has all four qualities,
they are just put together in different ways: This fourness exists in all beings on earth
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. In
this way, a mutual equality between the various citizens of the planet Earth is emphasized.
Another example of a way of thinking that represents both a clear contradiction and an
interesting thought development in relation to Steiner is Michael Foucaults work. While
Steiner was to a great extent preoccupied with the ego as an expression for the ability of
speaking, thinking and free action, Foucault researched the various mechanisms and structures
of power that influence the human subject, often in such subtle ways that the person believes
himself to be acting of his own will and freely. Foucault has, for example, referred to how
knowledge and language discipline and structure people. Interestingly enough, it turns out that
many of Steiners statements about the ego are far from being in contradiction with
Foucaults analyses here. In Steiners concept of the ego there lie qualities of both giving and

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Wiley, Norbert (1994). The semiotic self. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Se kapittel 6, 7 og 8.
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Calarco, Matthew (2008). Zoographies: the question of the animal from Heidegger to Derrida. New York:
Columbia University Press.
Derrida, Jacques, Mallet, Marie-Louise (2008). The animal that therefore I am. New York: Fordham University
Press.
Lurz, Robert W. (2009). The Philosophy of animal minds. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Gould, Stephen Jay (1977). Ontogeny and phylogeny. Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap Press of Harvard University
Press.
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Steiner, Rudolf (2001). Bewusstsein - Leben - Form (GA 89). Dornach: Rudolf Steiner Verlag, s. 293.


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receiving, the ability to both influence the environment and be influenced by the environment.
At the end of his life, when Foucault was preoccupied with the selfs concern for itself
through self-developing exercises, his thinking coincided to a large degree with Steiners
thoughts on ethics and human development.
Etheric body visible and invisible
Now, it can appear that the teaching of anthroposophy to a great extent is philosophically
orientated and has less focus on education and practical career relevance. However, I try to
create a balance here. As an example of how pedagogical reflection and conversations on the
concrete teaching of children also have their place, I will finish off by bringing up some
aspects of how we have approached Steiners concept of the etheric body. Having looked at a
couple of Steiners original texts, it becomes clear that his understanding of the living (the
etheric) has to do with processes in time that express themselves rhythmically. According to
Steiner, the etheric body is the carrier of habit, character, conscience and memory
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. These
catchwords alone open for a cascade of themes of concrete pedagogical relevance. For
example, how can the school contribute to the development of good habits? How can teaching
be done in a life-promoting and rhythmic way? The close connection between etheric and
artistic activity becomes a topic. Also, Steiners thoughts on the seven life processes are
appropriate as a starting point for conversations on how a life-promoting, varied and
nourishing education can be formed. In addition, we have worked comparatively. It turns
out that habits have been one of the most discussed pedagogical topics throughout all eras. On
the one hand, we have Plato, Augustine, Luther and Bourdieu, just to mention a few, who
have seen habits as an obstacle, a reduction of the human beings freedom, and even as the
location of original sin, according to Luther. On the other hand, pedagogically relevant
thinkers such as Aristotle, Dewey and Deleuze have shown how habits are central to the
human beings development. Often, the formation of good habits is related to educational
ideals regarding the development of ethical and self-determining individuals
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. In this context
I let the students read excerpts of an article I have written, where the practical pedagogical
relevance of habits is discussed in relation to art and artistic teaching. Here, ideas from Steiner
meet similar thoughts of Dewey and Bourdieu.
I dont know how many lectures we use to dwell on the topic of life (the etheric) in the
teaching of anthroposophy. By looking at life in relation to experience and pedagogical
thinking in general, in addition to the presentation of Steiners thoughts, these lectures invite
each student to work out his or her own understanding and assessment of a concept like
etheric body. For while the etheric is both invisible and, to a large extent, an unrecognized
concept, habit, character, memory, art and rhythm have clear connections with both
completely visible everyday school life and with pedagogical thinking beyond Waldorf
education. In addition, a concept like etheric body can lead to both feelings and reflections

10
Steiner, Rudolf (1983). Die Erkenntnis des bersinnlichen in unserer Zeit und deren Bedeutung fr das
heutige Leben (GA 55). Dornach: Rudolf Steiner Verlag, s. 123.
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For an inspiring introduction to the history of the concept of habit, see: Carlisle, Clare (2006). Creatures of
habit: The problem and the practice of liberation. Continental Philosophy Review 38, 19-39.
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that touch on lifes greater questions and secrets. It makes way for marvelling at the entire
world, for new thoughts about ones own life and for new perspectives and possibilities in
working with children and adolescents.
For me, anthroposophy can be like a garden, even a secret garden, where it is not first of all
a question of what grows there, but where the value lies in all that can happen with whoever
works and lives in the garden. The garden is a meeting place where diversity and differences
not only are tolerated, but make up the basis of life. From year to year, other and perhaps new
plants grow in a garden, and both flowers and weeds belong there. The garden as a metaphor
fits well with the above reflections. The garden symbolizes a living world, a partly visible and
partly invisible microcosm. In medieval literature, the garden was frequently used as an image
for a place of initiation and at the same time, the garden is a piece of nature where the
dandelion stands smiling strong and yellow.
Translated in cooperation with the author by Ann Stackpole

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