Man: The Bridge Between Two Worlds
Austrian-born author Dr. Franz E. Winkler was a follower of Dr. Rudolph Steiner, Austrian founder of anthroposophy, a spiritual philosophy of man.
In Man: The Bridge between Two Worlds, which was first published in 1960, Dr. Winkler applied anthroposophical concepts to the problems of our time. The book became a great success and was subsequently translated into German, Dutch and Russian.
"...a stirring of the life that glows in the deepest recesses of his reader's consciousness." — Barry Bingham, Louisville Courier-Journal, 1960
"Winkler points out things science has tended to ignore: the power of ideas, the reality of man's inner world." — Stanton Coblentz, Los Angeles Times, 1960
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Man: The Bridge Between Two Worlds
Austrian-born author Dr. Franz E. Winkler was a follower of Dr. Rudolph Steiner, Austrian founder of anthroposophy, a spiritual philosophy of man.
In Man: The Bridge between Two Worlds, which was first published in 1960, Dr. Winkler applied anthroposophical concepts to the problems of our time. The book became a great success and was subsequently translated into German, Dutch and Russian.
"...a stirring of the life that glows in the deepest recesses of his reader's consciousness." — Barry Bingham, Louisville Courier-Journal, 1960
"Winkler points out things science has tended to ignore: the power of ideas, the reality of man's inner world." — Stanton Coblentz, Los Angeles Times, 1960
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Man: The Bridge Between Two Worlds

Man: The Bridge Between Two Worlds

by Franz E. Winkler
Man: The Bridge Between Two Worlds

Man: The Bridge Between Two Worlds

by Franz E. Winkler

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Overview

Austrian-born author Dr. Franz E. Winkler was a follower of Dr. Rudolph Steiner, Austrian founder of anthroposophy, a spiritual philosophy of man.
In Man: The Bridge between Two Worlds, which was first published in 1960, Dr. Winkler applied anthroposophical concepts to the problems of our time. The book became a great success and was subsequently translated into German, Dutch and Russian.
"...a stirring of the life that glows in the deepest recesses of his reader's consciousness." — Barry Bingham, Louisville Courier-Journal, 1960
"Winkler points out things science has tended to ignore: the power of ideas, the reality of man's inner world." — Stanton Coblentz, Los Angeles Times, 1960

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781789123746
Publisher: Muriwai Books
Publication date: 01/13/2019
Sold by: Bookwire
Format: eBook
Pages: 231
File size: 896 KB

About the Author

Dr. Franz E. Winkler (1907-1972) was a prominent New York physician and psychologist who, along with his medical practice, had long been concerned with education at all levels.
Born in Austria in 1907, Franz E. Winkler received his M.D. from the University of Vienna, where he specialized in internal medicine and psychiatry. He had studied under Dr. Wagner von Jauregg, neurologist and psychiatrist, who received the Nobel Prize in Medicine in 1927. Dr. Winkler came to America as a young doctor in 1939 and practiced in New York City. He soon saw that the moral and psychological illness of Europe was also endemic in America. He wrote many articles and lectured widely on the cause and cure of this illness.
Dr. Winkler was a member of the teaching staff of the New York Medical College, President of the Myrin Institute for Adult Education, a Trustee of Adelphi University and consultant to various schools in the New York area, including the Rudolf Steiner Schools in New York City and the Waldorf School in Garden City, Long Island. He lectured extensively and some of his public lectures were published in the Proceedings of the Myrin Institute.
He died in New York in 1972, aged 64.



Born in Austria in 1907, Franz E. Winkler received his M.D. from the University of Vienna, where he specialized in internal medicine and psychiatry. He had studied under Dr. Wagner von Jauregg, neurologist and psychiatrist, who received the Nobel Prize in Medicine in 1927. Dr. Winkler came to America as a young doctor in 1939 and practiced in New York City. He soon saw that the moral and psychological illness of Europe was also endemic in America. He wrote many articles and lectured widely on the cause and cure of this illness.
Dr. Winkler was a member of the teaching staff of the New York Medical College, President of the Myrin Institute for Adult Education, a Trustee of Adelphi University and consultant to various schools in the New York area, including the Rudolf Steiner Schools in New York City and the Waldorf School in Garden City, Long Island. He lectured extensively and some of his public lectures were published in the Proceedings of the Myrin Institute.
He died in New York in 1972, aged 64.
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