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Explore Histories Greatest Secrets:
Alchemy
Leonardo Da Vinci
Spiritual Sciences
Rudolf Steiner
Rosicrucians

Building Relationships for a
Better Tomorrow!

Build Mental Muscle . . . .
Expand Your Creative Mind
HUM 101 - 112
HUM 201 - 212
HUM 301 - 312
HUM 401 - 408
The "Mind" is a Terrible
thing to Waste

Ancient Secrets of Modern Technology

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Courses: 300 - 400
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COURSE DESCRIPTIONS &
COLLATERAL MATERIALS |
Humanities: 301-312 Humanities: 401-408
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HUM: 301
A
Bridge to the New World: Van
Gogh and Modern Art
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HUM:
302
Thinking
with the Heart
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HUM:
303
The Philanthropy Carnegie and
Tolstoy
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HUM:
304
Education
and Democracy
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HUM:
305
Walt
Whitman; Poet of the Sublime
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HUM:
306
Emerson,
Spiritual Teacher
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HUM:
307
The Roots
of Genius: Thomas Edison and
Henry Ford
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HUM:
308
Economics
for the 21st Century
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HUM:
309
An
Introduction to Holistic
education
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HUM:
310
Thinking
Beyond Darwin
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HUM:
311
Science
Values and the Future of Life
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HUM:
312
Evil and
World Order
Information on Ordering
the whole HUM 301-312 series
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HUM:
401
From the
Search for Meaning to the Source
of Meaning; Viktor Frankl and
Rudolf Steiner
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HUM:
402
Buddhism
and Spiritual Science
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HUM:
403
Habits of
Mind: Plato's Republic and
Steiner's Theosophy
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HUM:
404
The
Alchemy of Transformation
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HUM:
405
The
Alternative way to Recover
Pre-History
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HUM:
406
Leading
with Wisdom; Spiritual Based
Leadership in Business
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HUM:
407
The Ether
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HUM:
408
Eschatology and the End of the
Modern World
Information on Ordering
the whole HUM 401-408 series
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What we offer
in the "all-inclusive"
pricing of our educational programs:
We are "relationship" oriented and focus on
establishing a mentor/student relationship that
will provide you with the support necessary for
higher levels of accomplishment, life
integration and practical application to help
develop personal skill and directly improve the
quality of your life. We empower people to
become self-empowered in their own lives. The
Fee for each class includes:
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A lecture guide which
provides an introduction,
orientation and program
"overview" that familiarizes you
with the material.
-
We offer competency based
education - which means that all
test questions are required to
be answered in essay form in
order to measure comprehension
of "core concepts" contained
within the material that is
vital for it's actual
integration and practical
application into your daily
life.
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All programs come with
level-1 mentoring to ensure a
basic understanding of the
material itself and to the
process for accomplishment, with
the availability of continuing
services that will provide you
with ongoing support to ensure
your success.
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Review of all answers to
measure comprehension and
provide any further insights
into the material and provide
constructive feedback if
necessary.
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We point out and focus on the
'core concepts" necessary for
successful application in your
daily life.
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A certificate of completion
with possible CEU's or college
credits if desired.
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Humanities 101 - 112
Humanities 201-212 |
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HUM 301: A Bridge to the New World: Van Gogh and
Modern Art
Together with Paul Cezanne,
Georges Seurat, and Paul Gauguin, Vincent Van
Gogh is considered one of the founders of modern
art. Van Gogh's work is of an extremely personal
sort. With the exception of his countryman
Rembrandt, no other great artist has produced
more self-portraits (more than 40). His
landscapes, figures, interiors and still lifes
are in a sense self-portraits as well. It was
his method to fuse what he saw, and what he
felt, as quickly as possible into statements
that were revelations of himself. His artistic
career lasted only 10 years and yet his output
was astonishing: close to 1,700 of his works
survive. During his lifetime he sold only one
painting but today his paintings each sell for
many millions of dollars. This course helps to
explain his artistic greatness in a way that
will help the student to see ourselves and the
world anew.
At
the end of the 1870's a movement begins which
survives all the contempt, ridicule and
hostility directed against it and soon swells to
a powerful storm that sweeps away everything in
its path. The age of the "isms" begins that
supplant one another in dizzying succession
(Impressionism, Neo-Impressionism, Pointillism,
Symbolism, Expressionism, Fauvism, Futurism,
Cubism, Surrealism and so on).
This course will
also help students to understand what this is
all about and to appreciate Van Gogh in
particular as a bridge to a new level of
self-conscious awareness. Assigned reading will
be Art and Human Consciousness by Gottfried
Richter. Students will study Van Gogh's
paintings in depth. Questions and thoughts
follow the course guide which require response.
This course requires no prior learning but does
require the ability to think clearly and in an
unprejudiced manner. [Instructor: Andrew Flaxman]
(See also
Study Questions and the Gospel of John.)
HUM 301: $225
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HUM 302: THINKING WITH THE HEART
Woody Allen has been quoted
"It's very hard to get your
heart and head together in life.
In my case they're not even
friendly." This course will
focus on the obstacles to
uniting thoughts with feelings
and directions to overcome these
difficulties.
Deeply ingrained in our minds is
that the heart is a pump. Since
primary school we have been
barraged with pictures and TV
advertisements showing the heart
as a motor acting as a pressure
or suction pump. News articles
show pictures of the newest
portable implant with headlines
such as "A Boost for a Failing
Pump." This organ appears to
drive the blood through a system
of tubes, the hollow muscle that
brings about the pressure, the
valves that mechanically prevent
the backflow, the streaming from
places of higher pressure to
places of lower pressure. All of
this activity clearly seems to
speak for the heart as a
mechanism, the task of which is
to pump blood through the body.
There is an oppressive multitude
of data that shows the
achievements of the heart
considered as such and the
physiological function of the
circulation seems to be no
problem at all. Since the heart
has such obviously mechanical
devices like the valves, what is
wrong with this way of thinking
that has produced such amazing
medical successes?
The common and accepted picture
of the heart is nevertheless
seriously incomplete as it
pertains to healing and medical
practices as well as for
psychological and spiritual
reasons: How can we heal
ourselves or have feelings of
love and courage with a purely
mechanical heart? To a great
extent we are what we think we
are. We are missing significant
truths important for our
well-being when we maintain a
simplistic image of anatomy and
ourselves as Human Beings.
To be able to re-think the
scientific world view of what
the heart is students will read
Meditations through the Rag
Veda by Antonio T. de
Nicolas and Enlivening the
Chakra of the Heart by
Florin Lowndes. These books are
essential for anyone interested
in the practice of meditation.
Questions and thoughts follow
the course guide which require
response. This course requires
no prior learning but does
require the ability to think
clearly and in an unprejudiced
manner. [Instructor: Antonio T.
de Nicolas]
(See also
Bible
Study,
Love,
Gospel of
John,
Ten
Commandments,
Baptism,
Spiritual
Science,
Orthodox
Religion.)
HUM 302: $225
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HUM 303: THE PHILANTHROPY OF
CARNEGIE AND TOLSTOY
In the history of the world
there has never been such an
enormous gulf between
extravagant wealth and great
poverty. What should the
attitude and responsibility be
of the so very fortunate to the
very unfortunate? What should
our estate tax policy be? What
should the attitude be towards
all of us to each other,
regardless of our social
positions and wealth? This
course about philanthropy is
designed to help answer these
questions and to help us to
realize a greater sense of
purpose and meaning in our own
lives.
It would be difficult to find
two personalities in greater
contrast in their thought and
feeling and in their standard of
right and wrong than Andrew
Carnegie (1835-1919) and Leo
Tolstoy (1825-1910). On the one
hand is the famous influential
writer and on the other the
American millionaire, Carnegie.
Why should these two differing
personalities be compared? Just
as Tolstoy, out of the depths of
his soul, strives to solve the
problems of life satisfactorily,
even so Carnegie, in his own
way, endeavors with a practical
and intelligent outlook upon
life, to reach guiding
principles.
We all embody the way we think.
By penetrating the contrasting
philosophies of Leo Tolstoy's
Idealism with Andrew Carnegie's
Realism students will be able to
expand their own scope of
humanitarianism. The course
requires the reading of The
Gospel of Wealth by Andrew
Carnegie, the biography, Tolstoy
by A.N. Wilson and The Kingdom
of God is Within You by Tolstoy.
Questions and thoughts follow
the course guide which require
response. This course requires
no prior learning but does
require the ability to think
clearly and in an unprejudiced
manner. [Instructor: Andrew
Flaxman]
HUM 303: $225
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HUM 304: EDUCATION AND DEMOCRACY
No form of government is more
dependent upon education than is
democracy. Does it then follow
that we must establish high
standards and accountability for
mass education? For education to
remain free of governmental
controls, new approaches to
public education must be
discovered and promoted.
Furthermore, today's children
are an endangered species. As a
result of reductionism (the
tendency to reduce everything to
its lowest denomination), and
the homogenization of the stages
of human life, many children
seem to have lost their
childhood and been thrust into
the confusing and chaotic world
of adults. By assuming that
children can assimilate a
conceptual framework that was
once considered fit only for
adults, we have indeed turned
children into "little adults"
who (it would appear) can think
logically, make decisions for
themselves, and express
precocious sexual desires.
Deprived of the boundaries that
once separated the "world of
childhood" from the world of
adulthood, these children of
today are also capable of
promiscuous sexual behavior and
violence toward themselves and
others on a scale never seen
before. Is there any way for
childhood to be regained?
This course will help
increase awareness of the issues
involved. Students will read
The Millennial Child by Eugene
Schwartz, Educational Freedom
for a Democratic Society by
Ron Miller, ed., Deschooling
Society by Ivan Illich and
In Fear of Freedom by
Jeffrey Kane. Questions and
thoughts follow the course guide
which require response This
course requires no prior
learning but does require the
ability to think clearly and in
an unprejudiced manner. [Guide
by Jeffrey Kane and Andrew
Flaxman]
HUM 304: $225
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HUM 305: WALT WHITMAN: POET OF
THE SUBLIME
What is meant by "The
Sublime?" As the word, "Poetry,"
it is indefinable. Yet, one is
able to talk about it. Involved
are the essential, the eternal,
the enduring. Involved are the
words: Truth, Beauty, Goodness,
the Divine, God, the Word,
Spirit, Higher Consciousness,
Vision, the Higher Self, the
Virtues, Freedom, Individuality,
Compassion, Love.
Is it possible to find all
that expressed in the poetry of
Walt Whitman? Yes! Whitman is
celebrated as "The Poet of
Democracy," yet the democracy
which he envisioned was not what
existed during his lifetime, nor
does it exist in our own. It was
not license, violence, cruelty,
obscenity, corruption. Whitman
dreamed of democratic
individualism mingled with
divine values.
Walt Whitman was a seer and a
prophet whose genius has not yet
been wholly appreciated. Many of
his readers are not aware that
he is one of the great teachers
of Humankind, nor that his
poetry is an instrument for
helping to bring about a
transformation of consciousness
in each individual, and thereby,
a transformation of the whole
Earth toward higher being. He
recognized that in our age,
which is the age striving to go
beyond intellectualism, this
could no longer be relegated to
a special elite. The time had
arrived when each single
individual was capable of
becoming a spiritually self
conscious being. The guides on
the journey to the spiritual
self were to be the Poets (with
a capital "P").
Students will read a
biography of Whitman and a
selection of his poems.
Questions and thoughts follow
the course guide which require
response. This course requires
no prior learning but does
require the ability to think
clearly and in an unprejudiced
manner. [Guide by Daisy Alden]
(See also
Bible
Study,
Love,
Gospel of
John,
Ten
Commandments,
Baptism,
Spiritual
Science,
Orthodox
Religion
HUM 305: $225
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HUM 306: EMERSON, SPIRITUAL
TEACHER
Ralph Waldo Emerson, the
American transcendentalist,
poet, essayist, and reformer has
served as one of the founders of
America's cultural heritage. But
today he can also serve as a
spiritual teacher, a guide to
the intimate processes of
awakening our slumbering organs
of spiritual perception. In
countless ways, including the
example of his life, he showed
that "the holy and mysterious
sources of life" were available
to anyone, at any hour of the
day, who can "listen for the
right word." Emerson taught that
the harmony of one's own mind is
the basis for inner development
and self-transformation.
As Emerson wrote in The Times,
"There was never so great a
thought laboring in the breasts
of men as now. It almost seems
as if what was aforetime spoken
fabulously and hieroglyphaically
was now spoken plainly, the
doctrine, namely, of the
indwelling Creator in man." It
has been over one hundred and
fifty years since the powerful,
startling messages from his pen
began to flow out of Concord,
Massachusetts, to a small circle
of devoted readers in America
and England. After his death in
1882, American culture subsumed
much of that power into the
broader, pragmatic vision of
individualism and expansionism,
and the man who was once
understood as the seer of a
revolution in human
self-recovery was more weakly
read as America's beloved
idealist. It is now way past the
time to re-awaken to Emerson's
great wisdom.
This course emphases Emerson's
teaching that we can attain an
original relation to the
universe and not have to rely on
only the revelations and
traditions of earlier
generations. Students will read
Spiritual Teachings of Emerson
by Richard Geldard and Essays by
Emerson. Following the course
guide are questions and thoughts
which require response. This
course requires no prior
learning but does require the
ability to think clearly and in
an unprejudiced manner. [Guide
by Richard Geldard]
(See also
Bible
Study,
Love,
Gospel of
John,
Ten
Commandments,
Baptism,
Spiritual
Science,
Orthodox
Religion.)
HUM 306: $225
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HUM 307: THE ROOTS OF GENIUS:
THOMAS EDISON AND HENRY FORD
In Roman mythology Genius was
a guardian spirit. It was
believed that every individual,
family and city had its own
spirit-guide. These were
worshipped that they might
bestow success and intellectual
powers on devotees. Today we no
longer pray to our Geniuses. Yet
here lies the source of all the
accomplishments of civilization
and individuals.
What is a genius? According to
modern usage, a genius is a
person of great natural power of
mind. What are these powers
specifically? This mind would
have a rich imagination, great
intuitive abilities and a deep
source of inspiration. These
attributes would be coupled with
an independent, unconventional
nature. The person would most
likely have a wide range of
interests and be open to novel,
complex and ambiguous stimuli in
their surroundings.
The individual would have great
love for what he or she is
doing, so much so that the
motivation would be much more
powerful than just success,
important as that might be. The
genius often would want to be
alone because that would provide
the necessary space for creative
activity.
This course is intended to help
us to discover the spiritual
nature of our genius by looking
into the insights about
reincarnation of two prominent
geniuses of the past century,
Thomas Alva Edison and Henry
Ford. Students will read
Edison: Inventing the Century
by Neil Baldwin, Henry Ford,
Ignorant Idealist by David
Nye and Reincarnation: The
Phoenix Fire Mystery by Head
& Cranston. Questions and
thoughts follow the course guide
which require response. This
course requires no prior
learning but does require the
ability to think clearly and in
an unprejudiced manner.
[Instructor: Andrew Flaxman]
HUM 307: $225
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HUM 308: ECONOMICS FOR THE 21ST
CENTURY
More than any other subject,
humanity's understanding of
economic life stands in need of
the wide perspective that the
idea of evolution affords. It is
essential, for example, to
understand that economic life
and economic science are in
process of development, and that
our perception of both alters
with changes in our
consciousness. Thus, what Adam
Smith had to say needs to be
seen in terms of his experience,
his form of consciousness, and
his moment in time. He had much
to say that was very relevant,
but by extrapolating his
experience into a general theory
he, or more particularly his
followers, made a basic mistake.
Economic life does not stay
unchanged. It was different
before Smith and has changed
since. To distinguish between a
point of view, however valid,
and the totality of economics is
one of the most important tasks
we face. Sadly, the seemingly
scientific terminology and
methods of economics contradict
this fact, in that they tend to
seek and to use generalizations,
rather than to remain merely
descriptive and observational.
In economics, the moment one
moves from observation to theory
one can get easily lost, because
the way we think, rather than
the way things are, is forever
intervening, albeit without our
noticing.
This course discusses the
requirements of this evolution
of economic consciousness
through the studying of
Beyond the Market by Gaudenz
Assenza, The Meaning of Work
by Marjo Van Boeschoten and
Rudolf Steiner, Economist by
Christopher Houghton Budd.
The student will be expected to
engage in a dialog with the
instructor concerning new ways
of thinking about economic life.
Quest ions and assignments that
require written responses follow
the lecture/guide. This course
requires no prior learning but
does require the ability to
think clearly and in an
unprejudiced manner. [Guide by
Christopher Budd, et.al.]
HUM 308: $225
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HUM 309: AN INTRODUCTION TO
HOLISTIC EDUCATION
What is holistic education?
What are the primary
philosophies that distinguish it
from traditional education? Who
were the pioneers in holistic
education? How and where are
these ideas practiced today?
Throughout the 200-year history
of public schooling, a widely
scattered group of critics have
pointed out that the education
of young Human Beings should
involve much more than simply
molding them into future workers
or citizens. This course
explores the ideas of Rousseau,
the Swiss humanitarian Johann
Pestalozzi, the American
Transcendentalists Thoreau,
Emerson and Alcott, the founders
of "progressive"
education--Francis Parker and
John Dewey, and the pioneers
Maria Montessori, Krishnamurti,
Sri Aurobindo Ghose, Sazrat
Inayat Khan, and Rudolf Steiner.
The course will attempt to
demonstrate to the student that
education which does not result
in deep integration of thought,
feeling, and outlook is useless.
It will point out that many
contemporary methods of teaching
emphasize slavish conformity to
mass values and overstress
technique. For education to
encourage the development of the
true Human Being, the present
mass education must be
transformed into one that
stresses self-knowledge and take
place in a surrounding of
freedom and love for the child.
This course will provide a
penetrating inquiry into the
nature and requirements of the
kind of education which can lead
to self-fulfillment and to world
peace.
Questions and assignments
that require written responses
follow the lecture/guide. This
course requires no prior
learning but does require the
ability to think clearly and in
an unprejudiced manner. [Guide
by Ron Miller]
HUM 309: $225
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HUM 310: THINKING BEYOND DARWIN
Charles Darwin was born in
England in 1809 (on the same
exact day and year as Abraham
Lincoln). Along with Marx,
Einstein and Freud he has had a
great influence on the 20th
century and is one of the
founders of modern biology.
After the publication in 1859 of
his ground-breaking book, On
the Origin of Species, the
thought-world of humankind
changed. Darwin refuted the
common belief in the individual
creation of each species.
Instead people began to believe
that all of life descended from
a common ancestor, including by
extension the human being.
Darwin's theory challenged the
prevailing assumptions of a
God-created, purposeful
spiritual world. He postulated
that chance variation and
natural selection alone bring
forth the variety of life on
earth.
Darwin's theory of evolution has
had an enormous influence on the
modern world, not all to
Humankind's benefit. This course
will critically examine the
theory and point out the riches
that lie beyond its simplistic
strictures. Students will be
exposed to a Goethean approach
to evolutionary phenomena by
reading Thinking Beyond
Darwin by Ernst Michael
Kranich and One Long
Argument: Charles Darwin and the
Genesis of Modern Evolutionary
Thought by Ernst Mayr.
Questions and assignments that
require written responses follow
the lecture/guide. [Guide by
Craig Holdrege]
HUM 310: $225
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HUM 311: SCIENCE, VALUES AND THE
FUTURE LIFE
Modern natural science has,
of course, evolved from a
genuine search for truth. Its
pioneers strove to transcend the
subjective view of the world
conveyed to them through their
sense. Impressed by the
objective nature of mathematics,
they evolved in due course the
reductionistic method we have
today. (Reductionism in science
is the tendency to reduce things
to the smallest most basic level
to provide a working
explanation, something that
others can work with and use.)
It has become natural to equate
scientific understanding with
successful reductionistic
explanation. Beyond mere
satisfaction for the intellect,
such explanations have given
rise to novel technologies
through which practically all
realms of nature can be
manipulated. This power of
manipulation is cited as the
strongest proof of the
reductionistic doctrine.
On the other hand, the growing
problems of contemporary
civilization have led to a call
for holism. By taking the whole
to be the sum of its parts, the
reductionistic method has been
leading humanity into chaos.
Perhaps an objective science
that takes the world apart only
to reassemble it with the aid of
ever faster computers does not
lead to a rational view of the
world after all?
This course entails the studying
of three books about holistic
science: The Marriage of
Sense & Thought - Imaginative
Participation in Science by
Stephen Edelglass, Georg Maier,
Hans Gebert, and John Davy;
Genetics & the Manipulation of
Life by Craig Holdrege; and
Insight - Imagination, The
Emancipation of Thought and the
Modern World by Douglas
Sloan. These well written books
all require great
thoughtfulness. The student
thereby will be introduced to an
alternative approach to the
scientific reductionism
prevalent in the modern world.
Questions and assignments that
require written responses follow
the lecture/guide. This course
requires no prior learning but
does require the ability to
think clearly and in an
unprejudiced manner. [Guide by
Edelglass, Maier, Gebert and
Davy]
HUM 311: $225
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HUM 312: EVIL AND WORLD ORDER
Is evil a natural defect in
the Human Being, an imperfection
which disappears by itself as
the good increases? This is the
position of many people who
think that humans are born good
and that it is the family and
cultural environment that ruins
this goodness. This position
stems from thinkers such as
Rousseau who believed that
humans were naturally god and
then corrupted by society. The
opposing position stems from the
religious conviction most
pronounced in Calvin that humans
are born stained with original
sin and this evil has to be
suppressed by strict ordinances
and overcome by God's grace.
There is, however, a third
position that is not well known.
This is that the Human Being is
both good and evil and that Evil
is a genuine power that controls
our world by means of
temptations. In order to combat
it successfully, help must be
obtained through a much higher
degree of self-knowledge than
ordinary consciousness brings.
This attitude has been promoted
by Gnostics throughout the ages,
most recently by such educators
as Krishnamurti and Rudolf
Steiner.
This course will help the
student answer such questions as
"How is it that when we try to
do good we can often end up by
creating greater evil?" "How do
we make the world a better
place?" "Is it possible that
unenlightened people can
transform the world?" The
answers to these questions
require a transformed thinking
ability. To help us are some
insights about Sophia (the Being
of Wisdom) from the great
Russian philosopher Vladimir
Solovyov. He prophesized over
100 years ago that there would
be a great conflagration in the
Mid-east in the 21st century
involving all of the world's
peoples. Required readings are
Solovyov's War, Progress and
the End of History with his
story of the Anti-Christ and
Thompson's Evil and World
Order. This course requires
no prior learning but does
require the ability to think
clearly and in an unprejudiced
manner. [Andrew Flaxman,
Instructor]
HUM 312: $225
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HUMANITIES: 401 - 408 |
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HUM 401: FROM THE SEARCH FOR
MEANING TO THE SOURCES OF
MEANING: VIKTOR FRANKL AND
RUDOLF STEINER
This course is based on
reading two books which explore
the meaning of life: Man's
Search for Meaning, by
Viktor Frankl (1905-1997) and
Intuitive Thinking as a
Spiritual Path, by Rudolf
Steiner (1861-1925). The life
work of both authors leads us
into the deepest recesses of the
human soul in an attempt to
answer questions about what it
means to be human.
The question of meaning
immediately raises the question
of freedom. Can my life have any
meaning if I am compelled to do
the things I do? Many people
accept life just the way it is.
No questions. It could be argued
that as a creature of nature,
meaning lies in acting as
naturally as possible. This
leads to a completely
deterministic view of life. In
fact, Freud wrote, "The moment
one inquires about the sense or
value of life, one is sick"
(quoted by Frankl in The
Unheard Cry for Meaning).
After all, even a cog in a
machine plays a meaningful role
in the working of the machine.
Yes, but doesn't the meaning, in
that case, belong to the
machine? The cog is
interchangeable, replaceable.
There is no room for individual,
personal meaning. As part in the
machinery of nature we would
simply be mechanical robots.
Similarly, it could be argued
that the meaning of life refers
to the mysterious and ultimately
unknowable workings of a higher
power. All is written in the
stars. We live out the
inexorable destiny the gods
intended for us. Again, there
would be no personal meaning. We
would be marionettes dancing to
strings pulled by the gods. If
you feel satisfied with either
of these views, it would be best
if you do not take this course
and went on with your life.
These are perfectly
understandable ways to look at
the world. In fact, the majority
of people fall into one camp or
the other. There is an esoteric
saying: "Dissatisfaction is the
first step." Unless you have
questions about the meaning of
your particular life, the
concepts elaborated by these two
authors will remain empty
abstractions for you. The words
"question" and "quest" stem for
the same root.
There are questions following
this lesson that require email
responses. This course requires
no prior learning but does
require the ability to think
clearly and in an unprejudiced
manner. [Guide by Paul
Margulies]
(See also
Bible
Study,
Love,
Gospel of
John,
Ten
Commandments,
Baptism,
Spiritual
Science,
Orthodox
Religion.)
HUM 401: $250
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HUM 402: BUDDHISM AND SPIRITUAL
SCIENCE
The entry of Buddhism into
the stream of world history was
a moment of profound change in
the evolution of human
consciousness. Not only did the
religious tradition inspired by
Siddartha Gautama (circa 560-480
BC) provide the world with a new
understanding of the nature of
human suffering, but in his
realization of bodhi, or
enlightenment, the historical
Buddha made it possible for an
earth-bound humanity to aspire
to re-union with the spiritual
world.
This course compares Buddhism
with (Anthroposophy) Spiritual
Science. From the standpoint of
Anthroposophy, the events and
processes of history contain
meaning that materialistic
readings of history inevitably
overlook. Events generally
understood as mere legends,
myths, or anecdotes often
conceal matters of great
spiritual significance.
Students will study Rudolf
Steiner's commentaries on the
Gospel According to St. Luke
which will bring an especially
rich account of the relationship
between Christ and Buddha.
Steiner also shows us that the
apparent discrepancies between
the stories of Jesus' lineage
and childhood found in Luke and
the other synoptic gospels are
not contradictions, but clues to
a deeper, and radically new
understanding of the incarnation
of divinity in the person--or
persons--of Jesus. The idea that
there were two Jesus children in
first- century Palestine would
strike most Christians as
shockingly heterodox, yet the
awareness of these two boys and
their respective soul-properties
does much to explain the
superficial differences in the
gospels, and illuminates the
role of Buddha and other exalted
spirit beings in the formation
of historical Christian
consciousness. Although the fact
is not acknowledged by either
historians or religious
scholars, the deeds of the
Buddha and the Christ are
directly related events in the
evolution of human
consciousness. Steiner's
commentaries provide great
insight into the nature of the
relationship, and help
contemporary students build
vital bridges between history,
religion and myth.
Lecture/guide by Eric
Cunningham, Professor of
History, Gonzaga University,
Spokane, Washington
(See also
Bible
Study, Love, Gospel of John, Ten
Commandments, Baptism, Spiritual
Science, Orthodox Religion.)
HUM 402: $250
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HUM 403: HABITS OF MIND: PLATO'S
REPUBLIC AND RUDOLF STEINER'S
THEOSOPHY
Our American educational
policy is primarily a
theoretical exercise. The
classics, the moderns, the
contemporaries are dispensed in
the classroom within an
egalitarian wrapper of theory
that levels all historical and
cultural differences. To teach
is to theorize, either in the
heroic manner of the classics or
in the indecisive manner of the
contemporaries.
Antonio T. de Nicolas offers an
alternative philosophy of
education with an amazingly
simple theory: Higher education
in a free society must foster
the habits of mind that enable
individuals to perform free
mental acts. Plato first
identified these habits of the
free mind in The Republic
as the abstraction of images
from external objects, the
formation of opinion, and the
diverse operations of both
cognition and imagination. In
other words, we must hold
education responsible for
training inner mental
technologies, or skills, instead
of transferring accumulations of
facts, data, and information.
Rudolf Steiner updates Plato's
ideas in a way that shows the
path to become a free
individual.
Students are required to read
Habits of Mind, edited by de
Nicolas and Theosophy, by Rudolf
Steiner. The outcome of this
course will be for students to
become aware of their habits of
mind so that they can transform
these habits and become free
human beings. The success of
this course will be in the way
students are able to free
themselves from the "paradigm
rigidity" which threatens to
splinter modern life into
endless points of view. This
material should help students
meet the concrete problems that
modern society puts before us in
ever great number.
Lecture/guide by Antonio T. de
Nicolas, Professor of
Philosophy, Emeritus SUNY
(See also
Bible
Study,
Love,
Gospel of
John,
Ten
Commandments,
Baptism,
Spiritual
Science,
Orthodox
Religion.)
HUM 403: $250
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HUM 404: THE ALCHEMY OF
TRANSFORMATION
Alchemy is the ancient,
primordial, sacred science of
Nature. Present in all
historical cultures from India
and China in the East to the
Abrahamic West and always
adapting its practice to its
context, its origins are lost in
the depths of prehistory. In a
sense, it is the primal
cosmological revelation.
In the Alchemical tradition, the
highest goal a human being can
aspire to is the fertilization,
gestation, and birth of a higher
person within the soul of the
lower human personality. This
second birth is known
esoterically as the birth of the
Spirit Embryo. The first birth
is into a body of flesh. Given
to us by nature working through
our parents, the body of flesh
is governed by the laws of
nature and returns to nature
when we die. This is the natural
way of things. Alchemists,
however, know of another birth,
one that is, as Jung said, a
work against nature (opus
contra naturam). In the
second birth a Spirit embryo is
fertilized and then brought to
term by the conscious work of
the student. This Spirit Embryo
is called the "I Being" by
Rudolf Steiner, the "True Self"
by Carl Jung, and "the parent
who would never lie to us" by
the Kahunas of Hawaii. These
names all relate to different
functions of a being who resides
in human consciousness as if
asleep and is awakened only by
conscious acts of will and
rhythmical practices.
To understand Alchemy the
student will read The Seer's
Handbook, by Dennis Klocek,
and practice exercises suggested
in this book. This special
training is necessary so that
the student can build organs of
cognition that can function both
in the sense world and in the
hidden world of the spirit.
Lecture/guide by Dennis Klocek
HUM 404: $250
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HUM 405: AN ALTERNATIVE WAY TO
RECOVER PREHISTORY
Why don't thoughtful people
take the universal flood stories
more seriously? In addition to
the story of Noah in the Bible,
virtually every ancient
civilization has a similar tale.
The usual scientific explanation
of humanity is that humankind
began 750,000 B.C. (give or take
a few thousand years) with few
earth inhabitants, escalating in
the past two hundred years to
billions of people. People who
claim to take the Bible
seriously do not consider any
pre-Noah civilization, and
certainly not lasting millions
of years.
Before the turn of the last
century, W. Elliot-Scott wrote a
short book, Story of Atlantis
and the Lost Lemuria.
Included in this book are six
maps of the world as it looked
over great expanses of time
before and after Atlantis and
Lemuria were destroyed. Atlantis
was located in the area that is
now the Atlantic Ocean and
Lemuria occupied what is now the
Pacific Ocean. In 1904 the great
Austrian
educator-seer-philosopher Rudolf
Steiner gave a series of
lectures about the ability to
see into this remote past. In
great inner detail he presents
the story of Atlantis, Lemuria,
and the division of the sexes.
How many people lived in these
remote times? Why is there not
more evidence of this great
population? Is it at all
possible to recapture these
times? How would we do this?
What was humanity like before
Eve when there was only one sex?
If the Bible did not go into
details about these
civilizations, what is the
purpose of us doing so, even if
we could?
This course addresses these
questions in short lessons that
accompany Steiner's book,
Cosmic Memory - the story of
Atlanitis, Lemuria, and the
division of the sexes.
HUM 405: $250
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HUM 406: LEADING
WITH WISDOM: SPIRITUAL-BASED LEADERSHIP IN
BUSINESS
This course is primarily based on the book
with the same title as the course: Leading
with Wisdom: Spiritual-based Leadership in
Business (2007). Supplementary material can
be found at the website:
www.globaldharma.org/sbl-knowledgebase.htm.
This supplementary material consists of the full
length versions of the abridged and edited
interviews presented in the book.
All of us, at
some time or other in our lives, face what one
can refer to as personal-existential questions -
inquiries dealing with our deepest identity: Who
am I? Why am I here? What is a good life for me?
What brings happiness? What is success? What are
my obligations? In spite of their obvious
significance, such questions tend to challenge
us either early in our childhood or else in
connection with a personal crisis; seldom are
they part of our regular reflections.
Similar
existential inquiry is clearly relevant at an
organizational level: Who are we? Why are we
here? What is a good life for us? What brings
happiness to our organization? What is success
for us? What are our responsibilities? This
second set of questions is characterized by a
similar characteristic; in spite of their
obvious significance, they are seldom a matter
of explicit concern for the leaders of our
organizations.
The course deals
indirectly with both sets of questions. Its
primary focus is on the experiences of business
leaders who lead their organizations and
themselves from a spiritual basis. The course is
not structured in an academic or teaching mode.
Rather, it is designed to stimulate reflection
about the type of personal and organizational
inquiries referred to above via 'story telling'
- by presenting the reflections of 31 top
leaders in business from 15 countries on six
continents. These leaders have all agreed to be
interviewed as to how they combine their search
for 'fulfillment' in the external world of
business with their search for 'fulfillment' in
the internal world, where consciousness and
conscience, rather than the demands of the
market and shareholders, reign supreme.
In other words,
the course presents a framework for the student
to reflect on how the individual experiences of
these leaders from a wide variety of cultures,
industries and belief systems relate to one's
own experiences and context.
The course has
no prerequisites other that a sincere desire to
expand one's awareness as to some of the most
fundamental aspects of human activity - personal
and organizational leadership.
HUM 406: $250
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HUM 407: THE ETHER
In this deeply divided and hostility-ridden
era, despite the Internet and all our global
communications and travel, is there something
vitally missing from our awareness?
What is it that
provides the coherence, meaning, wholeness and
unity behind the endless diversity we presently
experience as this apparently random and
fragmented world?
Awareness of the
Ether is now re-awakening all over the
world in a wide variety of ways—scientific,
artistic, spiritual and in the arena of personal
well-being and responsibility.
Here's a chance
to gently attune your mind to this level of
reality and reap the benefits of such an
empowerment—without having to commit yourself to
any kind of belief system or organization.
For this course,
no specialist knowledge is required—scientific
or otherwise—only a willingness to think and
look afresh, be prepared to unlearn a few old
habits and ask searching questions.
HUM 407: $250
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HUM 408:
ESCHATOLOGY AND THE END OF THE MODERN WORLD
By Dr. Eric Cunningham, Department of
History, Gonzaga University
What will happen
in the future to our world? Since all history is
narrative, the quality of the narrative will in
large measure determine the quality of the
historical life that any civilization
experiences. Modernization seems, by any
interpretation, inadequate to describe the vast
scope and multi-layered richness of human
experience. This course argues that our current
mode of thinking needs to be replaced by some
more inclusive, more descriptive, more plausibly
fulfilling narrative. Dr. Cunningham's outlook
will be fruitful for students seeking to gain
greater understanding of how the various epochs
of human history unfold and it will provide the
core of that new and more satisfying narrative
of history that a humanity that sees itself on
the brink of disaster so clearly needs.
No prior
learning is necessary, only an inquiring and
open mind.
Required reading
is Meaning in History by Karl Lowith;
The Apocalypse of St. John by Rudolf
Steiner; and The Far Future Universe:
Eschatology from a Cosmic Perspective by
George F.R. Ellis, editor.
HUM 408: $250
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Humanities 101 - 112
Humanities 201-212
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