Collected Letters Vienna 1879–September 28, 1890

GA 38-II · 10,977 words

Contents

1
To the Austrian Association of Engineers and Architects [md]
239 words
A draft letter to the Austrian Association of Engineers and Architects concerning the Ghega Foundation scholarship, which supported worthy and needy students at the Imperial and Royal Technical University in Vienna regardless of nationality or religion. The document reflects Steiner's engagement with technical education and institutional support structures during his Vienna period (1880–1883), when he received annual scholarship funding of 300 florins.
2
To the Administration of the Rudolfinum in Vienna [md]
186 words
A draft application to the Rudolfinum administration in Vienna requesting a study scholarship, likely composed during the 1879/80 academic year when the institution provided housing and materials to Technical University students. The fragmentary letter reveals an attempt to secure institutional support, though no evidence confirms the application was submitted or that any assistance was received.
3
To the command of Artillery Regiment No. 7, [md]
849 words
A draft application for admission as a one-year volunteer to Artillery Regiment No. 7 in Vienna (late 1880/early 1881), submitted by a graduate of the Imperial Technical University who sought to arrange favorable military service conditions under Austria-Hungary's universal conscription system. The request was ultimately rejected on grounds of physical unfitness, leading to substitute tax payments until age thirty-two.
4
To Josef Köck (?), Oberlaa? [md]
2,564 words
A profound nocturnal philosophical discovery about accessing the eternal within oneself through inner contemplation leads to counsel on love, renunciation, and spiritual nourishment through Goethe's *Faust* rather than Heine's cynicism. The letter urges the correspondent to cultivate noble ideals and authentic self-knowledge through engagement with Germany's greatest literary and philosophical works, particularly emphasizing the redemptive power of striving consciousness in Goethe's transformed Faust figure.
5
To an Editorial Office, Oberlaa? [md]
99 words
An incomplete draft letter addressed to an editorial office, likely intended for the Neue Freie Presse around January 1881, reveals correspondence concerning matters of public discourse during Steiner's Vienna period. The fragmentary nature of the text and its placement among study notes on magnetism suggest this represents an early attempt at engaging with Vienna's intellectual periodicals during his technical physics coursework.
6
To the Editors of the New Free Press in Vienna, Oberlaa [md]
60 words
A rejection letter from the editors of Vienna's *Neue Freie Presse* declines an unsolicited manuscript submission from Oberlaa, offering polite thanks but no explanation for the refusal. This brief editorial response documents an early professional setback during the formative Vienna period, illustrating the challenges faced in gaining acceptance for intellectual work in established periodicals.
7
To the Rector's Office of the Imperial and Royal Technical University in Vienna [md]
127 words
A request for examination approval in thermodynamics and general physics submitted to the Vienna Technical University's Rector's Office in 1881, likely representing a make-up exam following the winter semester course with Professor Viktor Pierre. The archival entry documents an administrative procedure for specialized physics study during Steiner's technical education in Vienna.
8
To Josef Köck (?) [md]
560 words
The pursuit of truth demands rigorous, selfless striving free from pedantry and self-deception, requiring one to engage even with flawed sources to develop genuine understanding. Rather than torment oneself with unattainable ideals, one should focus on achievable goals while recognizing that human suffering often stems from stupidity rather than wickedness, warranting compassion rather than condemnation.
9
To Rudolf Ronsperger [md]
2,305 words
Philosophy as an inner necessity drives the composition of the *Philosophy of Freedom*, which will adopt an essayistic prose style modeled on Schiller rather than rigid academic systematization. Materialism and shallow scientism (exemplified by Büchner and Dühring) must be opposed because they obstruct receptivity to higher truths, while genius and talent represent varying degrees of development within the human mind's inherent capacities, requiring external influences to actualize their potential.
10
To Rudolf Ronsperger [md]
1,123 words
German culture represents a renewal of Greek ideals, requiring realization through state institutions and popular education rather than literature alone. The letter celebrates Schiller's universal ideas through Gervinus's work while encouraging patient cultivation of aesthetic and philosophical understanding, illustrated by reflections on a village schoolmaster's poetry and the overlooked philosophical wisdom of rural populations.
11
To Rudolf Ronsperger [md]
854 words
A personal letter praising Ronsperger's poetic work while critiquing shallow materialism and advocating for philosophy and religion as reconciling forces against modern enlightenment pedantry. The writer urges rejection of Büchner's mechanistic materialism in favor of Fichte's idealism, which harmonizes reason and heart through coherent philosophical teaching.
12
To Rudolf Ronsperger [md]
1,159 words
The human essence consists fundamentally in longing for the absolute and eternal, a striving that constitutes true freedom; all other goals—nature, ego, matter—produce illusion and error. Recognition of highest truths brings reconciliation with oneself and the world, manifesting as supreme freedom and happiness, though such realities transcend ordinary language and elude the materialist worldview of the nineteenth century.
13
To Felix Ronsperger [md]
330 words
A correspondence revealing the formation of intellectual friendship through philosophical disagreement, wherein the writer advocates for parental awareness of a young man's significant personal matter, demonstrating the conviction that honest dialogue and mutual respect transcend generational and social boundaries.
14
To Rudolf Ronsperger [md]
522 words
A delicate intervention on behalf of a promising young friend: Rudolf Ronsperger's father receives a carefully composed letter introducing his son's intellectual struggles and aspirations, accompanied by explanatory remarks that seek to bridge the generational gap through respectful candor. The correspondence reveals Steiner's conviction that genuine friendship sometimes requires acting as an intermediary when direct communication fails, while promising further discussion of philosophical matters and literary criticism.