Micky Leach provided us with three great lectures on the following subjects:
Micky Leach was first introduced to Anthroposophy as a college student in 1980, and has been active in the Anthroposophical Society and its initiatives for the past 45 years. She is a member of the School for Spiritual Science, former member of the Western Regional Council and a former member of the General Council. In the late 1980’s she was a founding Board Member of the City of Lakes Waldorf school in Minneapolis, MN. After her move to Santa Fe, NM was twice asked to serve as a Trustee for the Santa Fe Waldorf School. Growing up with the Christian Festivals brought meaning and questions to her inner life. After meeting anthroposophy this became the catalyst to continue this quest for what Rudolf Steiner spoke of as The Mystery of Golgotha. She is still deepening this search today.
Exploring Goethe’s way of seeing was a powerful study by Mark Riegner. We had approximately 20 people attending and everyone loved the indepth presentation by Mark. Please find below Mark’s bio and several images.
Mark Riegner has a PhD in Ecology and Evolution and taught for 35 years in the Environmental Studies Department at Prescott College, Prescott, Arizona, until his retirement in January 2023. Mark’s courses focused on animal biology — especially on birds and mammals — and on field ecology, including courses in Costa Rica, coastal Mexico, and Kenya. He was introduced to Goethean Science as a young college student at Emerson College, U.K., and he cultivated that interest in his later teaching and research. Regarding the former, for several decades he taught a popular course at Prescott College —”Form and Pattern in Nature”— where he introduced students to phenomenology, fractals and chaos theory, reading landscapes, and to Goethe’s dynamic way of understanding plants, animals, clouds, colors, etc. His own research and publications explore the morphology of mammals (inspired by Wolfgang Schad); color pattern in birds; the contemporary relevance of Goethe’s dynamic way of thinking to understanding evolutionary developmental biology (evo-devo); the morphodynamic convergence between parrots and people; and most recently, comparative morphological insights into hummingbird biology.
Beneath the Cross at the Hour of Death: