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Fidelio Magazine, Fall 2004
$20.00
Schiller Institute
9x12, 112pp, Periodical
Publisher: Schiller Institute, Incorporated; Place Published: Leesburg, VA; Date published: Book Condition: Excellent
Out of Print -- Periodical of the Schiller Institute, no longer in publication. Table of Contents -- Fall 2004 Those Populist Fools Who Would Seek A Contract Even With God, by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr. 4; A SHAKESPEARE DIALOGUE -- Will Shakespeare's Mission Be Ours? by Stanley Ezrol 25; A Look at Shakespeare's 'Legend' Plays, by Terry Jones 37; Shakespeare as a Historian: The Roman Plays -- Gerald Rose, 46; The One and the Many, And the Dialogue Among Cultures, by Helga Zepp LaRouche, 62; Indira Gandhi, In Memoriam, by Kenneth Kronberg, 68; LaRouche's India in Universal History, by Richard Welsh, 70; The LaRouche Youth Movement Fights For the Inalienable Rights of Man, LaRouche PAC To Mobilize 'Forgotten Man', Zepp LaRouche Sparks German 'Monday Rallies' The First Measurement of the Universe, Al-Andalus: A Renaissance Melting-Pot Culture, Verdi's LaTraviata—The Woman Who Went Astray; Close to Perfection: Mozart's Le Nozze di Figaro; Children of Satan -- Bush on the Couch Who are We?, Benjamin Franklin
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| Fidelio Magazine, Spring/Summer, 2004
$20.00
Schiller Institute
9x12, 112pp, Periodical
Publisher: Schiller Institute, Incorporated; Place Published: Leesburg, VA; Date published: Book Condition: Excellent
Out of Print -- Periodical of the Schiller Institute, no longer in publication. The issue contains three features: 1) “Religion and National Security: The Threat from Terrorist Cults,” by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.; 2) “Spain's Carlos III and the American System,” by William F. Wertz, Jr. and Cruz del Carmen Moreno de Cota; and 3) “A Symposium on Classical Drama and Historical Specificity,” which includes: “The Big Knife: Hollywood's Classical Drama!” by Harley Schlanger; “Approaching Classical Tragedy in American Life,” an interview with actor Robert Beltran; and “Clifford Odets' The Big Knife and 'Trumanism,' ” by Harley Schlanger. The feature on Spain's Carlos III reports on the extraordinary history of this king, whose 1759-88 reign was a reflection of the same Leibnizian influences that gave birth to the United States. Carlos III implemented Leibnizian economic and educational reforms, including the creation of a National Bank, banished the Grand Inquisitor from Madrid, expelled the Jesuits from Spain and its possessions, supported the American Revolution, and laid the basis for the later independence of the nations of Ibero-America. Contrary to the Synarchists, the positive cultural identity of Ibero-America is not “Hispanidad”—a concoction based on an anti-Semitic, ultramontane, feudalist version of Catholicism— but rather the legacy of Carlos III, a community of principled commitment to the General Welfare as enshrined in the Preamble to the U.S. Constitution.
The cover of the new issue of Fidelio is Francisco Goya's “The Third of May, 1808, or The Executions of Principe Pio Hill.” The issue also includes other paintings and etchings by Goya, who was the official painter to the court of Carlos III.
There are two translations in the magazine—Friedrich Schiller's 1793 essay, “Of the Sublime,” and excerpts from Abraham Gotthelf Kaestner's 1790 essay, “On the Conceptions that Underlie Space.” The issue contains five pages of Schiller Institute news; a Pedagogical Exercise—“Knowing the True Geometry, a Dialogue in Two Parts” by Bruce Director; a review of a Rembrandt exhibit by Bonnie James; and three book reviews: “Children of Satan II,” “Constantine's Sword: The Church and the Jews, A History,” and “Arthur Miller: His Life and Work.”
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Fidelio Magazine, Winter 2004
$20.00
Schiller Institute,
9x12, 112pp, Periodical
Publisher: Schiller Institute, Incorporated; Place Published: Leesburg, VA; Date published: Book Condition: Excellent
Out of Print -- Periodical of the Schiller Institute, no longer in publication. Follies of the Economic Hitmen: Re-Animating the World’s Economy Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr. 6; Francisco Goya,The American Revolution, and the Fight Against the Synarchist Beast-Man, Karel Vereycken, 20; An Introduction to Pythagorean Sphaerics, Los Angeles LYM Sphaerics Group,49; Editorial, Pedagogical, Defeat Bush’s Social Security Privatization: A Foot in the Door for Fascism; The Worst Flood Catastrophe in History: The World Needs a New, Just World Economic Order!; U.S. Conference: ‘Fight To Turn the Course of History’; LaRouche Webcast: We Need Beauty, Real Economics, European Conference: ‘A Turning Point in History; LYM Works to Master Bel Canto Singing Method; Morals and Immorality: The U.S. Crisis Now, Bernhard Riemann’s ‘Dirichlet’s Principle’; Lejeune Dirichlet and the Mendelssohn Youth Movement Verdi’s Il Trovatore: Sublime Love vs. Revenge; Rigoletto: Verdi’s Education of the Emotions Confessions of an Economic Hit Man The Second Bill of Rights Will in the World
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Fidelio Magazine, Volume X, No. 3, Fall 2001
$20.00
Schiller Institute,
9x12, 112pp, Periodical
Publisher: Schiller Institute, Incorporated; Place Published: Leesburg, VA; Date published: Book Condition: Excellent
Out of Print -- Periodical of the Schiller Institute, no longer in publication. Symposium on The Dialogue of Cultures -- Helga Zepp LaRouche: Invitation To Participate In an International Correspondence For a ‘Dialogue of Cultures’; Lyndon LaRouche in Rome: Toward a Dialogue of Civilizations; Andalusia, Gateway To the Golden Renaissance, Muriel Mirak Weissbach; Contributions to the Dialogue; Recent statements by Mohammad Hosni Mubarak, President of Egypt; Seyyed Mohammad Khatami, President of Iran; Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.; An Invitation for Dialogue With China — Pope John Paul II; Matteo Ricci and the Disaster of the ‘Rites Controversy’ Michael Billington; 81 The Continuing American Revolution—Versus Brzezinski and September 11; U.S. Meet: ‘Nothing to Fear But Denial Itself’; Berlin Seminar Urges New Monetary System; Italy Trips Spur Support for New Bretton Woods; LaRouche Addresses Russian Duma, Scientists; India’s Intelligentsia Absorbs global Overview; Ibero-Americqan Economists Dialogue with LaRouche; An Evening in the 'Simultaneity of Eternity'—With Shakespeare, Keats, and William Warfield; The Heavenly Guide; Nathan Still Inspires the Sublime; Recapturing a Proud German-Jewish Heritage; The Economics of the Noösphere; The Soldier and the State; How to Defeat Global Strategic Irregular Warfare; To Stop Terrorism, Shut Down ‘Dope, Inc.’
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Fidelio Magazine, Fall 2003
$20.00
Schiller Institute,
9x12, 112pp, Periodical
Publisher: Schiller Institute, Incorporated; Place Published: Leesburg, VA; Date published: Book Condition: Excellent
Out of Print -- Periodical of the Schiller Institute, no longer in publication. The 112-page fall issue includes: “Believing is Not Necessarily Knowing" by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr. As LaRouche writes in the introduction to this essay: "A see-saw battle between the opposing forces of Classical science and philosophical reductionism, has reigned throughout globally extended ancient, medieval, and modern European civilization, up through the present day. ... We must rapidly develop many veritable 'platoons' of truly qualified, young intellectual leaders steeped in a distillation of the most crucial products of the Classical tradition to date. For this, we require not only a movement for education, but a political movement which is education in and of itself.” “Shattering Axioms, Fighting for Our Future"—the complete, illustrated transcript of the Youth Panel from the Presidents' Day 2003 conference of the Schiller Institute, which embodies the kind of "political movement for education" described by LaRouche in his essay. “The Renaissance and the Rediscovery of Plato and the Greeks," by Torbjorn Jerlerup of Sweden, reports on the project begun by Petrarch to get the works of Classical Greece, especially Plato, translated and circulated in Europe, leading to the Council of Florence. “The Joy of Reading ‘Don Quixote,’ by Carlos Wesley: “How Cervantes used a madman, his crude peasant sidekick, and the method of paradox, to take aim at the evils of Hapsburg Spain.” Also in the issue are the following: A news report on the historic visit of U.S. Democratic Presidential pre-candidate Lyndon LaRouche and his wife, Helga Zepp LaRouche, to Turkey; A first-hand report by two members of the LaRouche Youth Movement on the visit of Maestro José Briano of Mexico to Los Angeles, where he conducted four days of bel canto voice training sessions; An obituary written in memory of long-time LaRouche associate Graham Lowry. Graham was the author of a seminal work on the history of America leading up to the American Revolution: “How the Nation Was Won: America's Untold Story, Volume I, 1630-1754.”; A commentary drafted in 1999 by Carlos Cota Meza, the intellectual leader of the International Caucus of Labor Committees and the Schiller Institute in Mexico, who died on March 21, 2002. The commentary is entitled: "The Great Debt of Ibero-America to the German-Jewish Renaissance: A Communication from Mexico.”
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Fidelio Magazine, Winter 2003
$20.00
Schiller Institute,
9x12, 112pp, Periodical
Publisher: Schiller Institute, Incorporated; Place Published: Leesburg, VA; Date published: Book Condition: Excellent
Out of Print -- Periodical of the Schiller Institute, no longer in publication. New Fidelio: Reversing the Tragedy of Today by Ken Kronberg Feb. 10 (EIRNS)—The recently released winter 2003 issue of the Schiller Institute journal Fidelio, poses the task of understanding the onrushing collapse of the world financial and monetary system not from the standpoint of “current events,” but as the culmination of a 40-year decline of American and European society into a modern-day version of the “bread and circuses” culture of Imperial Rome. It is owing to the need to address this as a degeneration in the quality of mental life of the population—both populace and leaders—that Lyndon LaRouche directs us in his “Shakespeare as a Scholar: U.S. Politics as Tragedy,” to the power of great drama to craft the historically specific metaphors needed to inspire us in this fight for humanity's future. ... LaRouche's argument is continued by presentations by Michael Liebig and Susan Kokinda—“Sophistry: Destroyer of Nations from Within” and “Plato's Dialogues, the Tragedy of Athens, and the Complex Domain”—on Ancient Greece's auto-cannibalization in the Peloponnesian War, a self-inflicted destruction wrought by the triumph of the ideology of sophistry over the political process, as Plato portrays Socrates in battle against it in his dialogues. But, as Kokinda writes, “If the dialogues were no more than a history of Athens' tragedy, they would have their place in the important literature of our culture. But, what makes them a cornerstone of Western civilization, is Plato's discovery of a solution to the tragedy—a solution found in his examination of immortality, and of the concept of the complex domain.” Kokinda demonstrates the underlying coherence between the discoveries of the Ancient Greeks and Plato, and those of the physical scientist Carl Gauss, using LaRouche's essay “Visualizing the Complex Domain” as a guide to understanding. This question is taken up later in the magazine's Pedagogical Exercise on “The Geometry of Change,” and in its Exhibit review, “Learning the Lessons Egypt Taught the Greeks.” How man can elevate himself above the world of the senses to become truly human through his participation in the eternal—immortality—is the subject of the Sublime. What better way to approach this, than Fidelio's Special Feature—“A Schiller Birthday Celebration!”—in which Helga Zepp LaRouche creates a dramatic dialogue from the writings of Friedrich Schiller, the great German “poet of freedom”.
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Fidelio Magazine, Volume IX, No. 2-3, Summer/Fall 2000
$20.00
Schiller Institute, 9x12, 130pp, Periodical
Publisher: Schiller Inst; Place Published: Leesburg, VA; Date published: Book Condition: Excellent
Out of Print -- Periodical of the Schiller Institute, no longer in publication. Special Double Issue On the Subject of Strategic Method Proceedings of the International Conference— Bad Schwalbach, Germany, May 26-28, 2000
KEYNOTE PRESENTATIONS: Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr. —On the Subject of Strategic Method; Helga Zepp LaRouche —Only a New Classical Period Can Save Humanity From A Dark Age; PANEL I: COGNITION VS. INFORMATION in SCIENCE: Dino De Paoli - How Ideas Change the Order of Space Time; Jonathan Tennenbaum - Bach and Kepler: The Polyphonic Character of Truthful Thinking; Dialogue: Bach, Kepler, Leibniz- and the Crisis in Russia Today; PANEL II: COGNITION VS. INFORMATION IN MUSIC: Anno Hellenbroich - J.S. BACH’S Musical Revolution; Prof. Yelena Vyazkova — Riddles and Meaning of J.S. Bach’s “Art of the Fugue; Ortrun Cramer - Beyond Bach: Beethoven’s Studies of Bach’s Works Dialogue: Bringing Great Music to the World; PANEL III: A NEW BRETTON WOODS: Hartmut Cramer—FDR’S New Deal: An example of American System Economics; Jacques Cheminade—FDR and Jean Monnet: The Battle Against British Imperial Methods Can Be Won; Editorial There Are No “In the Meantime” Solutions; News LaRouche at Rome Meet on New Bretton Woods; Egypt Conference Hears Land-Bridge Plan; Amelia Robinson Takes Voting Rights Fight to Poland (PDF); Democratic Officials Hold Ad Hoc Platform Hearings; Peruvian Patriots Turn to LaRouche To Stop “Dope, Inc”; Los Angeles Concert: A Tribute to the Spirit of Man; Obituary: Taras Muranivsky Has Passed On; Commentary: A Window into the Anglo-Saxon Renaissance; Exhibits: Gerrit Dou: The Lesson of Rembrand; Books: Drug Politics; Home and Exile; Arguing About Slavery
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Fidelio Magazine, Winter 1998
$20.00
Schiller Institute, 9x12, 120pp, Periodical
Publisher: Schiller Inst; Place Published: Leesburg, VA; Date published: Book Condition: Excellent
Out of Print -- Periodical of the Schiller Institute, no longer in publication.
Vol. VII, No. 4 Winter 1998, Special Issue -- Lyndon LaRouche — The Substance of Morality; Appendix: The Case of Classical Motivic Thorough Composition: Florentine bel canto; J.S. Bach and Inversion; The Scientific Discoveries of Bach’s “Art of the Fugue”; The “Royal Theme’ from “A Musical Offering’; Mozart’s Fantasy in C Minor and the Lydian Principle; “Time Reversal” In Mozart’s Works; Motivic Thorough-Composition in Late Beethoven; Brahms’ Fourth Symphony; Editorial: President Clinton Must Appoint Lyndon LaRouche As His Economic Adviser; News: European Conference: Dump Globalism; U.S.Conference: Challenge of Global Leadership; Schiller Delegates at China Land-Bridge Meeting; Brazil: Zepp LaRouche Calls for New Alliances; Mexico: Fight To Defend Music Education; Schiller Celebrations Focus on Classical Tragedy
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Fidelio Magazine, Fall 1998
$20.00
Schiller Institute, 9x12, 120pp, Periodical
Publisher: Schiller Institute, Incorporated; Place Published: Leesburg, VA; Date published: Book Condition: Excellent
Out of Print -- Periodical of the Schiller Institute, no longer in publication.
Vol. VII, No. 3 Fall 1998 -- Fred Haight, Beethoven’s Christ on the Mount of Olives: Gethsemane, As Schiller Would Treat It; Anno Hellenbroich, Beethoven’s Creative Process of Composition: Reflections on Leonore (1806) and Fidelio (1814) (Partial text only); Dennis Small— Laughing Between the Lines: Metaphor and Metric in Nicolaus of Cusa’s About Mind; Wlliam Wertz -- A Not So Distant Mirror: The Lessons of the Fourteenth-Century New Dark Age; Editorial: To Live in Real History; Translation: Friedrich Schiller: Philosophy of Physiology; News: D.C.Meet: LaRouche’s Forecast Proven Right; McDade-Murtha Bill A Stunning Victory for Justice; New Bretton Woods Proposal Presented in Bratislava; Aesthetical Education Theme of Germany Conferences; Mexico Concerts Launch Fight for Classical Music; Manual on Verdi Tuning Presented in Switzerland; Interview: Professor Norbert Brainin, Primarius of the Amadeus Quartet; Exhibits: Exploring Both the Cosmos and the Soul; Reviews: Amistad; The Committee
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