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Summary

When Rudolf Steiner gave these lectures eighty years ago, industrial farming was on the rise and organic methods were being replaced in the name of science, efficiency, and technology. With the widespread alarm over food quality in recent years, and with the growth of the organic movement and its mainstream acceptance, perceptions are changing. The qualitative aspect of food is on the agenda again, and in this context Steiner’s only course of lectures on agriculture is critical to the current debate.

With these talks, Steiner created and launched “biodynamic” farming―a form of agriculture that has come to be regarded as the best organically produced food. However, the agriculture Steiner speaks of here is much more than organic―it involves working with the cosmos, with the earth, and with spiritual beings. To facilitate this, Steiner prescribes specific “preparations” for the soil, as well as other distinct methods born from his profound understanding of the material and spiritual worlds. He presents a comprehensive picture of the complex dynamic relationships at work in nature and gives basic indications of the practical measures needed to bring them into full play.

These lectures are reprinted here in the “classic” translation made by Rudolf Steiner's English interpreter, George Adams. This edition also features a preface by Steiner's colleague the medical doctor Ehrenfried Pfeiffer, as well as eight color plates.

This is the course that began the biodynamic movement. Rudolf Steiner's Agriculture Course is the essential work for anyone wanting to understand and use Steiner's methods of food production.



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I give this book 8.5 out of 10 acorns.

Rudolf Steiner is a fascinating figure who blends spiritualism and agriculture in a way that captures the readers attention and holds onto it as he makes his variety of points. In his book, Agriculture Course - The Birth of the Biodynamic Method, the reader is taken through a series of lectures that build upon each other to teach the reader the fundamentals of what we would consider Biodynamics. Considering that these lectures are from the 1920s, there is still incredible value to the knowledge contained within the pages of this book.

There is heavy emphasis inside the book on manure management and how balance can be struct with fertilization and plant growth. I have particular appreciation for the author's concerns with the loss of nutrients in foodstuffs that are produced in more conventional means for the time. His worries and concerns still hold true to the modern day. I personally was turned off a little by the many interjections of spirituality within the book but I do appreciate how it is used a median to discuss the almost scientific discoveries that the author was having with his observations on plant life.

I would recommend this book to everyone.
 
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