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July 29, 2010

Finance at the Threshold - Rethinking the Real and Financial Economies

Why did the banks stop lending to one another, and why at this moment in history? Is the problem merely a matter of over loose credit due to the relaxation of...


June 24, 2010

New politics still waiting for breakthrough in the Philippines

When the Philippines went to the polls in May, more than 50 million voters chose candidates to fill a total of 18,000 offices ranging from the president through senators...


June 24, 2010

Mulberry students ‘draw their dreams’ for playground makeover

Students were asked to draw a picture of what they would like the remodeled playground to look like and the response ranged from simple ideas like a butterfly garden to...

Towards a Holistic Science

Discourse on the good, the true - the stuff of science - and the beautiful seem so distinct from one another, as distinct as religion is from science or art. And science is science. Or so it seems to be.

Yet it is our interests (an aesthetic drive?) as well as our beliefs which define the business of science: We believe that mathematics helps us understand the world, that the sun will rise tomorrow or that we are ultimately responsible for our technology.

An anthroposophically oriented science feels it important to take these more or less conscious moments of 'doing science' more seriously. Where are the sources of these so different thought-structures? How different is the gut certainty of two and three being five from the deliberations leading to the judgement that it is a 'plane and not a bird on wing flying overhead. And all of these require a more or less heart-felt interest for the issue to be kept in human consciousness.

This seemingly introspective approach serves to sharpen our perceptions of the individual phenomena, of their interconnections as well as of their consequences for the world. Rudolf Steiner called this extension of the scientific method Goetheanism.

There are several places in the world where the above kind of science with its strongly phenomenological bent is followed in Switzerland ( general,  Biology), Germany ( Flow Sciences,  Fluid mechanics and cancer research,  Goethean research,  landscape)  Great Britain, The  Netherlands (biology, genetic engineering) and the  USA.

You may find a list of the activities at the Goetheanum  here while some activities are coordinated in the  School of Nature

You may also peruse the list of scientific  publications to get an idea of research directions.

Responsible for these sections: David Auerbach