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Becoming Human: Karl Konig Archives, cartea 08

Autor Karl Konig Traducere de Carlotta Dyson
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 22 iun 2011
Karl Konig, the founder of the Camphill movement, was very aware of the need for change in the social order he saw around him. In this revealing collection of imaginative thought and ideas, he shows, however, that true social change must begin in individuals.

He goes on to say that renewal is something each human being can practice themselves in the midst of everyday life."

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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780863158094
ISBN-10: 0863158099
Pagini: 183
Ilustrații: Illustrations, plans, ports.
Dimensiuni: 137 x 213 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.27 kg
Editura: Floris Books
Seriile KARL KONIG ARCHIVE, Karl Konig Archives


Notă biografică

Karl Konig (1902-66) was well-known as a physician, author and lecturer. He began his work at the Institute of Embryology at the University of Vienna. In 1940 he founded the Camphill Movement in Scotland. Based on the educational ideas of Rudolf Steiner, the special education schools for children and villages for adults with special needs are now established all over Britain and Europe, North America and Southern Africa. Richard Steel, born 1952 in Oxford, England, completed the Camphill seminar for Curative Education at Fohrenbuhl at Bodensee (Lake Constance), Germany, in 1975. He lived and worked there with his family in one of the households for children with special needs. Since 2008, he has shared responsibility for Karl Konig's estate and runs the Karl Konig Archive in Berlin.

Recenzii

'Threefolding in the social realm is not an easy concept to come to terms with, let alone realise ... All the more reason to pick up this very timely book and make an effort to understand how society could have organised itself; and what could still happen if social development stays connected with the true needs of humanity rather than be blinded by power and greed. At times it is heart-rending to read how the right path for humanity has time and again being side-tracked. Yet overall it is inspiring to know that this impulse has not simply failed and died out.' -- Camphill Correspondence