The 16 Steps to Freedom
A practical path of Ethical Individualism
The 16 Steps identify and organize the developmental path contained in The Philosophy of Freedom by Rudolf Steiner, presenting it in a more accessible and practical form. They consist of two Attitude Steps drawn from the original Preface, The Goal of Knowledge; seven Free Knowing Steps corresponding to Part I of The Philosophy of Freedom; and seven Free Selfhood Steps corresponding to Part II. The fourteen numbered Steps correspond to the fourteen chapters of The Philosophy of Freedom and are numbered 1–14 to preserve that correspondence.
An Ethical Individualist is someone who strives to cultivate individuality, develop free knowing, and realize free selfhood. The 16 Steps develop the fundamental human capacities through which individual freedom becomes possible, empowering the individual to live freely.
Each of the 16 Steps describes a fundamental transformation from a less free state to a more free one. Each Step is further developed through twelve corresponding Practice Steps that bring that transformation into everyday thought and life. Together, the 16 Steps and their 192 Practice Steps form the path by which the individual becomes an Ethical Individualist who intuits and actualizes free ethical impulses.
"That which you now seek with imperfect means, you will truly achieve if you walk the path given here—and much else besides.... Then a light would dawn."
— Rudolf Steiner, GA 240
THE GOAL OF KNOWLEDGE
Two Attitude Steps to Individuality
The 192 Practice Steps consist of:
- 24 Practices of Individuality
(The Goal of Knowledge) - 168 Practices of Freedom
(The Philosophy of Freedom)
All the Steps listed at Steps to Freedom
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