Matter or Spirit: Which Do We Choose?
A new video essay on Trump's economic demolition of the U.S., plus our upcoming Steiner seminar
Hi Folks,
I just posted a video essay version of my recent essay on Trump’s catastrophic economic plan for the U.S., “Demolition Man”. Please check out the video version!
We are seeking to build our YouTube audience. If you could take a moment to “subscribe” to the channel (if you haven’t yet), “like” this video, and even “share” it if inspired, that would be superb!
While we find ourselves in the midst of a very fraught and challenging political moment in the U.S., that doesn’t mean we should neglect other approaches to the nature of reality. In fact, we might attain a much deeper understanding of where we are now by exploring the works of modern occult thinkers — particularly, most relevant of all, I believe, is Rudolf Steiner, who left an incredible legacy. Starting September 27, I am excited to be part of a month-long “Trialogue” on Steiner, with Anthroposophic thinkers who have studied his work at great depth. A ticket to our series allows you to both attend physically (if you are in NYC), or join us virtually from wherever you happen to be.
As we approach the date, here is a week-long special offer to pick up a ticket at 1/3rd off ($200):
I will also offer a 1/2 off discount for paid subscribers of this newsletter. Subscribe now to access this discount:
Along with the lectures / dialogues on Saturday afternoons, we will have a mid-week online discussion session and an online forum for continuing investigation. More information about this unique learning opportunity is below. I hope you will join us for it.
Partial and full scholarships are available for those in financial need. Please message us if that applies to you: info@liminal.news . We want to make this seminar available to anyone who is serious about exploring Steiner’s incredible thought-world.
Awakening the Western Soul
Awakening the Western Soul
A Four-Week Seminar, Live Sessions in NYC + Online Seminar
Hosted by Anthroposophy NYC and New Center for Holistic Learning NY
Featuring Daniel Pinchbeck, Mary Stewart Adams, Ralph White, Walter Alexander
September 27 - October 15
Three Saturdays, 4-6 pm, one Wednesday 7-9 pm (Live + Livestream) + Three Weekly Online Q&As
Starts September 27th, continues on October 4th, October 11th, and October 15th. One-hour (7pm-8pm) live-streamed Q&As on October 1, October 9th, and October 17th.
For decades, Western seekers have looked East — to Buddhism and yoga — and South — to indigenous shamanism — to find spiritual knowledge. But few have engaged with Rudolf Steiner — one of the most original and precise spiritual thinkers of the last thousand years. Steiner (1861 - 1925) was an Austrian philosopher who, as a young man, researched Goethe’s scientific writing, and wrote a refutation of Kantian dualism. He joined the Theosophical Society (under Annie Besant in 1902), but gradually formed his own movement, Anthroposophy, based on further development of the clairvoyant capacities he had possessed since childhood. He was expelled from the Theosophical Society in 1912.
Steiner was not a guru. He was a philosopher and scientist who founded a comprehensive esoteric system rooted in monistic idealism—the view that consciousness, not matter, is primary. Long dismissed by mainstream culture, this view is now gaining traction among leading scientists and philosophers as a sensible approach to the nature of mind and reality. Steiner placed great value on the clear thinking and exact methods of modern science, and brought them in modified form to the study of the spiritual or supersensible worlds, which, he proposed, were equally real and available as a subject of knowledge.
Steiner’s work has shaped far more of our culture than most realize. He strongly influenced Wassily Kandinsky and directly inspired the mystical painter Hilma af Klint, whose diagrammatic abstractions anticipated much of modern spiritual art. The radical artist and activist Joseph Beuys declared that his entire project—“every human being is an artist”—was an extension of Steiner’s insight into the evolving human spirit. Waldorf education, founded by Steiner in 1919, remains the largest independent school movement in the Western world, with over a thousand schools globally—committed to nurturing free, creative, morally grounded individuals. And his Biodynamic Agriculture, a crucial factor in the re-emergence of organic farming, is now worldwide and increasingly admired for the outstanding quality of its produce, wine and coffee. Its early practitioners helped inspire the environmental movement and Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring.
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This four-week series, held live at Anthroposophy NYC, the branch of the Anthroposophical Society in America at 138 W15th St in NYC, and streamed globally, offers a rare chance to explore Steiner’s essential insights in a clear and accessible way through presentations and conversations.
Each event features teaching sessions with Walter Alexander, a prominent NYC anthroposophist; Ralph White, Open Center founder and long-time lover of Anthroposophia; as well as author and cultural philosopher Daniel Pinchbeck (2012: The Return of Quetzalcoatl, Breaking Open the Head), who brings a contemporary lens to Steiner’s currently urgent relevance (please see bios below). The first session will include Mary Stewart Adams, the Anthroposophical Society’s General Secretary, and subsequent sessions will include other expert guests. Beyond opening presentations, each event will include conversations among the presenters on the session’s themes. Weekly online Q&As offer space to ask further questions, share reflections, and explore personal applications of Steiner's ideas, including spiritual exercises.
This is much more than a history of ideas. It’s a practical path to see your life, your mind, your relationships—and your role in the world—through a clearer lens. Understanding the deeper purpose of human evolution helps give us the strength we will need for what’s ahead. Steiner foresaw, at the end of the Great War, that a second world war was inevitable, along with terrible weapons, dehumanizing mechanization, and the fanning of nationalistic and tribal hatreds. He also noted the undermining, through purely materialistic thinking, of any sense of human purpose in connection with the earth and cosmos. In 1921, Steiner actually predicted an automatic, interlocking spider-like web covering the earth with super-natural intellect, but devoid of inspiration or new imagination.
The ideas explored in these sessions will be those Steiner brought specifically to support and strengthen our lives in these challenging times.
What You’ll Gain:
– A deeper understanding of your purpose and spiritual biography
– Insight into the forces shaping your inner life and outer challenges
– A living framework for developing intuition, presence, and moral clarity
– Tools for working with karma, destiny, and conscious evolution
– A renewed connection to the Western tradition— without dogma or abstraction
WEEK ONE: Introduction to Steiner
Rudolf Steiner was a rare figure: a clairvoyant who insisted on the value of scientific method and precise thinking. Born in 1861 in what is now Croatia, Steiner was a philosopher, educator, architect, playwright, and spiritual scientist. After editing Goethe’s scientific writings and completing a doctorate in epistemology, he gradually began to reveal his esoteric insights, which he called Anthroposophy—the wisdom of the human being.
Steiner argued that in the modern age, we must reconnect with the spiritual world, learning to approach it consciously and freely. His work laid the foundations for innovations in education (Waldorf), agriculture (biodynamics), medicine, the arts, and even economic theory (social three-folding). Unlike the mystics of the East, Steiner saw the Western path as one where individual freedom, clear thinking, and love work together to develop a strengthened self capable of spiritual perception as well as the moral character to sacrifice for the greater good.
This session introduces Steiner’s biography, cosmology, and mission: to initiate a new phase of evolution, in which the human being becomes a conscious co-creator with the spiritual world. We’ll also explore what it means to begin this path in today’s fragmented culture—and why Steiner’s time may finally have come.
WEEK TWO: The Evolution of Consciousness
Steiner taught that human consciousness evolves in stages, each with its own structure of perception and relation to the world. In ancient times—what he called the Polarian, Hyperborean, and Lemurian epochs—humans lived in a dreamlike, instinctive unity with the cosmos. In the Atlantean era, clairvoyant perception was still active, but the individualized ego was not yet fully present.
Only in the post-Atlantean cultural epochs—from ancient India through Egypt, Greece, and into the modern West—did the distinct sense of an isolated “I” gradually emerge. According to Steiner, we now live in the fifth post-Atlantean epoch, which began around 1413 CE and is marked by a fully developed intellectual consciousness—but also increasing spiritual disconnection, materialism, and existential crisis.
This seminar explores how the fragmentation and upheaval of our time—including the rise of AI, the ecological crisis, and a growing spiritual void—are signs not of collapse, but of a transition. We are being called to participate in the next phase of evolution: the awakening of the consciousness soul and, ultimately, the development of spirit self—a new form of being that harmonizes freedom, love, and spiritual vision
WEEK THREE: Spiritual Beings and the Supersensible World
For Steiner, the spiritual world is not a metaphor. It is a populated, structured reality—rich with hierarchies of beings who guide, challenge, and sometimes obstruct human evolution. Drawing on Christian esotericism, Neoplatonism, and direct clairvoyant experience, Steiner identified nine ranks of spiritual beings above the human—ranging from Angels and Archangels to Exusiai, Dynamis, and Seraphim—each with specific roles in shaping consciousness and world events.
He also warned of adversarial beings, including Lucifer, who tempts us toward pride, fantasy, and premature spiritual ascent, and Ahriman, who drags us toward materialism, technocracy, and soulless efficiency. These beings are not evil in a simple sense—they are necessary for evolution—but must be recognized and consciously balanced.
This session explores how these supersensible forces work in our lives and institutions, from education and media to AI and biotechnology. We’ll look at what Steiner meant by “Christ as the Being of the Earth,” and how developing spiritual perception begins with subtle shifts in attention, inner discipline, and ethical commitment.
WEEK FOUR: Karma, Reincarnation & the Future of Steiner’s Work
Steiner taught that we live not once, but many times—returning through cycles of incarnation to work out our individual and collective karma. He portrayed the drama of the soul’s progress between death and rebirth without reference to reward or punishment, but rather as a positive, transformative process. The former life actually “blooms” after death, and after review under wise guidance, the soul’s experience of its own imperfections creates the urge to return with a “new plan.” And, after a strengthening by the spiritual world, it does return–for the sake of its own, humanity’s and the earth's evolution. Also, Steiner described the interplay between humanity and adversarial spiritual beings whose redemption requires that humans become stronger and more conscious of their destiny as creative beings.
Unlike all fatalistic visions of karma, Steiner’s emphasizes human freedom: we can begin to take a necessary conscious responsibility for our destiny. With a spiritual awakening, we in the West can face the threats of technological, economic and psychological subjugation.
We’ll also ask: what is the future of Steiner’s work itself? Why did he say anthroposophy would almost be lost before it was rediscovered? How might it speak to younger generations now confronting collapse, disorientation, and a search for meaning?
Includes:
– Three Saturday late afternoon and one Wednesday evening teaching session (live + streamed)
– Three weekly integration Q&A calls (online)
– Full access to all recordings and digital materials
– A curated reading list and study guide
– A community of serious seekers engaging with Steiner’s work
This seminar is for you if…
– You’ve explored yoga, psychedelics, or meditation but want something rooted in the Western lineage
– You’ve had spiritual experiences but lack a coherent framework for understanding them
– You’re intellectually serious and spiritually curious
– You sense a deeper meaning in your life, relationships, and challenges—and want to work with it consciously
Join us to rediscover the Western path of initiation—and begin seeing your life as part of a much larger, multidimensional unfolding and harmonic orchestration
Register at www.liminal.news
In-person space is limited so please register early. Livestream access available worldwide.
Brief Bios of Presenters
Mary Stewart Adams
Mary Stewart Adams, General Secretary of the Anthroposophical Society in American, is an active star lore chronicler and historian, host of the weekly public radio program and podcast “The Storyteller’s Night Sky” and author of The Star Tales of Mother Goose~For Those Who Seek the Secret Language of the Stars (2021). As a global advocate for starry skies, Mary led the team that established the 9th International Dark Sky Park in the world in 2011, which later led to her home state of Michigan protecting 35,000 acres of state land for its natural darkness.
Ralph White
Ralph White taught the first course on holistic learning at NYU, and is the author of The Jeweled Highway: On the Quest for a Life of Meaning. He is director of the New Center for Holistic Learning NY www.newcenterny.org and was co-creator of the New York Open Center, the city's leading venue for holistic programs for over 35 years. Ralph also directs Esoteric Quest, a series of international conferences on the Western Esoteric Tradition, www.esotericquest.org, and is a long-time student of Rudolf Steiner's work
Daniel Pinchbeck
Daniel Pinchbeck is a philosopher, futurist and cultural critic. He helped to initiate the new psychedelic renaissance and consciousness movement through his books Breaking Open the Head , Quetzalcoatl Returns, and When Plants Dream. His 2017 book How Soon Is Now explored the systemic changes needed to avert ecological collapse and near-term extinction. Daniel has written features for The New York Times Magazine, Rolling Stone, Wired, and elsewhere. He speaks at festivals and conferences around the world.
Walter Alexander
Walter Alexander has long been a prominent facilitator and program director at Anthroposophy NYC. He has been a fiction writer, teacher (public and Waldorf), medical journalist (conventional and alternative) and is the author of Hearts and Minds: Reclaiming the soul of science and medicine (Lindisfarne 2019) and many articles.








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