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Book Details
Book Details
Anthroposophy and the Accusation of Racism: Society and Medicine in a Totalitarian Age
Author: Peter Selg
Format: Paperback
Pages: 324
Features: Bibliography, Notes
Condition: New
The original subtitle of Rudolf Steiner's Philosophy of Freedom (1894)—"the basis for a modern worldview"—points to the lifelong project with which he was engaged: laying the basic groundwork for modern (contemporary) human beings to be able to comprehend the world in which we live, beginning with ourselves as individual, utterly unique embodiments of humanity.
It's a spiritual worldview born of the essence of the modern scientific reckoning with knowledge. But its detractors, critics, and outright opponents, speaking from the standpoint of other worldviews and denying the validity of this one, from the early 1900s to today, have continued to portray it in a very different light. One such critic, typical of others, writing in 2019, deemed it "dogmatic, irrational, anti-Enlightenment, racist..."
Those with even a passing knowledge of this worldview and the fruits of its application to life may wonder how such a modern, innovative, universally inclusive, and rational approach—one that has led to such positive and beneficial results in the world—could be so distorted and defamed. What is the substance of these accusations and are they at all well-founded?
With this book, out of his comprehensive grasp of Steiner's work (its history, background, and subsequent development), together with the contextual background of twentieth-century European totalitarianism and the contemporary landscape, Peter Selg addresses these and other related questions head on.
CONTENTS:
Preliminary Note
Introduction
Rudolf Steiner, Anthroposophy, and the Accusation of Racism
Self-Determination and Foreign Determination
The Dangers of Nationalism and Racism
On Judaism: Diaspora and Assimilation
An Ethnic Nation State?
The Sephiroth Tree and the Future
Rudolf Steiner's Critique of Anti-Semitism
Anthroposophy in the Sights of the Radical Right and Clerical Circles
In the Eyes of the NSDAP, the SS, and the Gestapo
Adaptation and ResistanceThe Aims of Nazi Medicine
The Counter-positions of Anthroposophic Medicine
Spiritual-Scientific Foundations of a Medical Anthropology
The Otherness of Others
Therapeutic Resistance
A "Key Role" in Nazi Medicine?
Anthroposophic Doctors in the Third Reich
Ita Wegman's "Exile"
Medicine, Conscience, and Education
Anthroposophy and Its Reception in the Twentieth Century
Bibliography
Notes
Books by Peter Selg in English Translation
Peter Selg (1963-Present), studied medicine in Witten-Herdecke, Zurich, and Berlin and, until 2000, worked as the head physician of the juvenile psychiatry department of Herdecke Hospital in Germany. Dr. Selg is director of the Ita Wegman Institute for Basic Research into Anthroposophy (Arlesheim, Switzerland), professor of medicine at the Alanus University of Arts and Social Sciences (Germany), and co-leader of the General Anthroposophical Section at the Goetheanum. He is the author of numerous books on Rudolf Steiner, anthroposophy, medical ethics, and the development of culture and consciousness.
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