Lili Kolisko

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Lili Kolisko (born September 2, 1889 in Vienna , † November 20, 1976 in Gloucester ) was an Austrian anthroposophist . It was best known for the development of the riser method .

Life

Kolisko was born as the daughter of a typesetter in Vienna. After graduating from high school, she volunteered to work in a Viennese hospital in 1914 . In 1917 she married the doctor Eugen Kolisko . With their daughter, born in 1919, they moved to Stuttgart in 1920, where Eugen Kolisko was hired as a teacher and school doctor at the newly founded Waldorf School in Stuttgart . Kolisko and her husband took an active part in the Anthroposophical Society and were in close contact with Rudolf Steiner .

In 1934 the Kolisko family emigrated to England after a short stay in Unterlengenhardt . After the death of Eugen Kolisko in 1939, Kolikso translated her husband's work into English and founded the Kolisko archive.

In the 1950s she traveled several times to Germany and Switzerland to report on her studies there. In 1976 she died in Gloucester, England.

Create

Kolisko is the founder of the climbing image method , a process of the image-creating method in anthroposophically oriented research. The method is used for the assessment and quality assessment of plants, foodstuffs and biological substrates. Kolisko's studies on the riser method form the basis for the development of biodynamic agriculture . The rising pattern method was further developed by Rudolf Hauschka .

In 1961 she completed the biography of her husband Eugen Kolisko.

Works

  • Spleen function and platelet issue. Der Kommende Tag AG Verlag, Stuttgart 1922.
  • Physiological and physical proof of the effectiveness of the smallest entities. Anthroposophical working group. Doctors, Stuttgart 1923. New edition: Verlag am Goetheanum, Dornach 1997, ISBN 978-3-7235-0994-4 .
  • The agriculture of the future. With Eugen Kolisko, Schaffhausen 1953.
  • Eugene Kolisko. A picture of life. Self-published, Gerabronn 1961.

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Biographical entry in the anthroposophical research center Kulturimpuls. Retrieved May 11, 2020 .