The average rating for Occult Movement in 19th Century based on 2 reviews is 4 stars.
Review # 1 was written on 2014-07-14 00:00:00 Karan Price Nearly 90 years after the Rudolf Steiner's death, the Christian Mystery becomes ever more obscured by the New Age-Theosophical hijacking of Western spirituality. Here is what so gravely troubled Rudolf Steiner - and in this book he tackles Theosophy like nowhere else. Now, Steiner hoped the Anthroposophic movement could be a solution for the new millennium - helping millions of people and yet it is like a damp squib compared to his hopes. Faced by the failure of Anthroposophy and the dominance of Theosophical-New Age thinking everywhere now, what can one do? My answer involves what Steiner says here: These are very strange things indeed. That what he was so opposed to was the only wakeful consciousness within our sleeping civilization … For reasons indicated at the above link that I do not wish to rate this book. I simply want to say I have read it and that whilst Steiner served to free me from Eastern Theosophy and the New Age scene I found at Findhorn, Valentin Tomberg, in turn, provided me with a very different hermeneutic with which to engage Steiner. I hope the above link however can contribute a little to the tangled issues involving Steiner and Tomberg - and why I believe this "very different hermeneutic" is necessary for a world plunging into a dark, mechanised society ... |
Review # 2 was written on 2013-01-01 00:00:00 Amanda Urban This book gives a good understanding of the "crime" is and how this concept has developed thorough the history. I was reading it to understand better why corporate crime has been described many years ago but did not find any legal regulation. I would say that the book is really makes you think about causes, law and order. |
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