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Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling

Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling (German: [ˈfʁiːdʁɪç ˈvɪlhɛlm ˈjoːzɛf ˈʃɛlɪŋ];[8][9][10][11] 27 January 1775 – 20 August 1854), later (after 1812) von Schelling, was a German philosopher. Standard histories of philosophy make him the midpoint in the development of German idealism, situating him between Johann Gottlieb Fichte, his mentor in his early years, and Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, his one-time university roommate, early friend, and later rival. Interpreting Schelling's philosophy is regarded as difficult because of its evolving nature.

Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling
Schelling by Joseph Karl Stieler, 1835
Born(1775-01-27)27 January 1775
Died20 August 1854(1854-08-20) (aged 79)
EducationTübinger Stift, University of Tübingen
(1790–1795: M.A., 1792; Licentiate, 1795)
Leipzig University
(1797; no degree)
Era19th-century philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
SchoolContinental philosophy
German idealism
Post-Kantian transcendental idealism[1] (before 1800)
Objective idealism
Absolute idealism (after 1800)[2]
Naturphilosophie (a combination of transcendental realism and transcendental naturalism)[3]
Jena Romanticism
Romanticism in science
Correspondence theory of truth[4]
InstitutionsUniversity of Jena
University of Würzburg
University of Erlangen
University of Munich
University of Berlin
ThesisDe Marcione Paulinarum epistolarum emendatore (On Marcion as emendator of the Pauline letters) (1795)
Doctoral advisorsGottlob Christian Storr
Main interests
Naturphilosophie, natural science, aesthetics, metaphysics, epistemology, Christian philosophy
Notable ideas
List
Signature

Schelling's thought in the main has been neglected, especially in the English-speaking world. An important factor in this was the ascendancy of Hegel, whose mature works portray Schelling as a mere footnote in the development of idealism. Schelling's Naturphilosophie also has been attacked by scientists for its tendency to analogize and lack of empirical orientation.[12] However, some later philosophers have shown interest in re-examining Schelling's body of work.

Life edit

Early life edit

Schelling was born in the town of Leonberg in the Duchy of Württemberg (now Baden-Württemberg), the son of Joseph Friedrich Schelling and Gottliebin Marie.[13] From 1783 to 1784, Schelling attended the Latin school in Nürtingen and knew Friedrich Hölderlin, who was five years his senior. Subsequently Schelling attended the monastic school at Bebenhausen, near Tübingen, where his father was chaplain and an Orientalist professor.[14] On 18 October 1790,[15] at the age of 15, he was granted permission to enroll at the Tübinger Stift (seminary of the Evangelical-Lutheran Church in Württemberg), despite not having yet reached the normal enrollment age of 20. At the Stift, he shared a room with Hegel as well as Hölderlin, and the three became good friends.[16]

Schelling studied the Church fathers and ancient Greek philosophers. His interest gradually shifted from Lutheran theology to philosophy. In 1792, he graduated with his master's thesis, titled Antiquissimi de prima malorum humanorum origine philosophematis Genes. III. explicandi tentamen criticum et philosophicum,[17][18] and in 1795 he finished his doctoral thesis, titled De Marcione Paulinarum epistolarum emendatore (On Marcion as emendator of the Pauline letters) under Gottlob Christian Storr. Meanwhile, he had begun to study Kant and Fichte, who influenced him greatly.[19] Representative of Schelling´s early period is also a discourse between him and the philosophical writer Jacob Hermann Obereit [de], who was Fichte´s housemate at that time, in letters and in Fichte´s Journal (1796/97) on interaction, the pragmatic and Leibniz.[20]

In 1797, while tutoring two youths of an aristocratic family, he visited Leipzig as their escort and had a chance to attend lectures at Leipzig University, where he was fascinated by contemporary physical studies including chemistry and biology. He also visited Dresden, where he saw collections of the Elector of Saxony, to which he referred later in his thinking on art. On a personal level, this Dresden visit of six weeks from August 1797 saw Schelling meet the brothers August Wilhelm Schlegel and Karl Friedrich Schlegel and his future wife Caroline (then married to August Wilhelm), and Novalis.[21]

Jena period edit

After two years tutoring, in October 1798, at the age of 23, Schelling was called to University of Jena as an extraordinary (i.e., unpaid) professor of philosophy. His time at Jena (1798–1803) put Schelling at the centre of the intellectual ferment of Romanticism. He was on close terms with Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, who appreciated the poetic quality of the Naturphilosophie, reading Von der Weltseele. As the prime minister of the Duchy of Saxe-Weimar, Goethe invited Schelling to Jena. On the other hand, Schelling was unsympathetic to the ethical idealism that animated the work of Friedrich Schiller, the other pillar of Weimar Classicism. Later, in Schelling's Vorlesung über die Philosophie der Kunst (Lecture on the Philosophy of Art, 1802/03), Schiller's theory on the sublime was closely reviewed.

In Jena, Schelling was on good terms with Fichte at first, but their different conceptions, about nature in particular, led to increasing divergence. Fichte advised him to focus on transcendental philosophy: specifically, Fichte's own Wissenschaftlehre. But Schelling, who was becoming the acknowledged leader of the Romantic school, rejected Fichte's thought as cold and abstract.

Schelling was especially close to August Wilhelm Schlegel and his wife, Caroline. A marriage between Schelling and Caroline's young daughter, Auguste Böhmer, was contemplated by both. Auguste died of dysentery in 1800, prompting many to blame Schelling, who had overseen her treatment. Robert Richards, however, argues in his book The Romantic Conception of Life that Schelling's interventions were most likely irrelevant, as the doctors called to the scene assured everyone involved that Auguste's disease was inevitably fatal.[22] Auguste's death drew Schelling and Caroline closer. Schlegel had moved to Berlin, and a divorce was arranged with Goethe's help. Schelling's time at Jena came to an end, and on 2 June 1803 he and Caroline were married away from Jena. Their marriage ceremony was the last occasion Schelling met his school friend the poet Friedrich Hölderlin, who was already mentally ill at that time.

In his Jena period, Schelling had a closer relationship with Hegel again. With Schelling's help, Hegel became a private lecturer (Privatdozent) at Jena University. Hegel wrote a book titled Differenz des Fichte'schen und Schelling'schen Systems der Philosophie (Difference between Fichte's and Schelling's Systems of Philosophy, 1801), and supported Schelling's position against his idealistic predecessors, Fichte and Karl Leonhard Reinhold. Beginning in January 1802, Hegel and Schelling published the Kritisches Journal der Philosophie (Critical Journal of Philosophy) as co-editors, publishing papers on the philosophy of nature, but Schelling was too busy to stay involved with the editing and the magazine was mainly Hegel's publication, espousing a thought different from Schelling's. The magazine ceased publication in the spring of 1803 when Schelling moved from Jena to Würzburg.

Move to Würzburg and personal conflicts edit

After Jena, Schelling went to Bamberg for a time, to study the Brunonian system of medicine (the theory of John Brown) with Adalbert Friedrich Marcus [de] and Andreas Röschlaub.[23] From September 1803 until April 1806 Schelling was professor at the new University of Würzburg. This period was marked by considerable flux in his views and by a final breach with Fichte and Hegel.

In Würzburg, a conservative Catholic city, Schelling found many enemies among his colleagues and in the government. He moved then to Munich in 1806, where he found a position as a state official, first as associate of the Bavarian Academy of Sciences and Humanities and secretary of the Royal Academy of Fine Arts, afterwards as secretary of the Philosophische Klasse (philosophical section) of the Academy of Sciences. 1806 was also the year Schelling published a book in which he criticized Fichte openly by name. In 1807 Schelling received the manuscript of Hegel's Phaenomenologie des Geistes (Phenomenology of the Spirit or Mind), which Hegel had sent to him, asking Schelling to write the foreword. Surprised to find critical remarks directed at his own philosophical theory, Schelling wrote back, asking Hegel to clarify whether he had intended to mock Schelling's followers who lacked a true understanding of his thought, or Schelling himself. Hegel never replied. In the same year, Schelling gave a speech about the relation between the visual arts and nature at the Academy of Fine Arts; Hegel wrote a severe criticism of it to one of his friends. After that, they criticized each other in lecture rooms and in books publicly until the end of their lives.

Munich period edit

Without resigning his official position in Munich, he lectured for a short time in Stuttgart (Stuttgarter Privatvorlesungen [Stuttgart private lectures], 1810), and seven years at the University of Erlangen (1820–1827).[24] In 1809 Caroline died,[25] just before he published Freiheitsschrift (Freedom Essay) the last book published during his life. Three years later, Schelling married one of her closest friends, Pauline Gotter, in whom he found a faithful companion.[25]

During the long stay in Munich (1806–1841) Schelling's literary activity came gradually to a standstill. It is possible that it was the overpowering strength and influence of the Hegelian system that constrained Schelling, for it was only in 1834, after the death of Hegel, that, in a preface to a translation by Hubert Beckers of a work by Victor Cousin, he gave public utterance to the antagonism in which he stood to the Hegelian, and to his own earlier, conception of philosophy. The antagonism certainly was not new; the 1822 Erlangen lectures on the history of philosophy expressed the same in a pointed fashion, and Schelling had already begun the treatment of mythology and religion which, in his view, constituted the true positive complements to the negative of logical or speculative philosophy.[25]

Berlin period edit

Public attention was powerfully attracted by hints of a new system which promised something more positive, especially in its treatment of religion, than the apparent results of Hegel's teaching. The appearance of critical writings by David Friedrich Strauss, Ludwig Feuerbach, and Bruno Bauer, and the disunion in the Hegelian school itself, expressed a growing alienation from the then dominant philosophy. In Berlin, the headquarters of the Hegelians, this found expression in attempts to obtain officially from Schelling a treatment of the new system that he was understood to have in reserve. Its realization did not come about until 1841, when Schelling's appointment as Prussian privy councillor and member of the Berlin Academy, gave him the right, a right he was requested to exercise, to deliver lectures in the university.[25] Among those in attendance at his lectures were Søren Kierkegaard (who said Schelling talked "quite insufferable nonsense" and complained that he did not end his lectures on time),[26] Mikhail Bakunin (who called them "interesting but rather insignificant"), Jacob Burckhardt, Alexander von Humboldt[27][28] (who never accepted Schelling's natural philosophy),[29] future church historian Philip Schaff[30] and Friedrich Engels (who, as a partisan of Hegel, attended to "shield the great man's grave from abuse").[31] The opening lecture of his course was attended by a large and appreciative audience. The enmity of his old foe, H. E. G. Paulus, sharpened by Schelling's success, led to surreptitious publication of a verbatim report of the lectures on the philosophy of revelation. Schelling did not succeed in obtaining legal condemnation and suppression of this piracy and he stopped delivering public lectures in 1845.[25]

Works edit

 
A February 1848 daguerreotype of Schelling

In 1793, Schelling contributed to Heinrich Eberhard Gottlob Paulus's periodical Memorabilien. His 1795 dissertation was De Marcione Paullinarum epistolarum emendatore (On Marcion as emendator of the Pauline letters).[14] In 1794, Schelling published an exposition of Fichte's thought entitled Ueber die Möglichkeit einer Form der Philosophie überhaupt (On the Possibility of a Form of Philosophy in General).[32] This work was acknowledged by Fichte himself and immediately earned Schelling a reputation among philosophers. His more elaborate work, Vom Ich als Prinzip der Philosophie, oder über das Unbedingte im menschlichen Wissen (On the I as Principle of Philosophy, or on the Unconditioned in Human Knowledge, 1795), while still remaining within the limits of the Fichtean idealism, showed a tendency to give the Fichtean method a more objective application, and to amalgamate Spinoza's views with it. He contributed articles and reviews to the Philosophisches Journal of Fichte and Friedrich Immanuel Niethammer, and threw himself into the study of physical and medical science. In 1795 Schelling published Philosophische Briefe über Dogmatismus und Kritizismus (Philosophical Letters on Dogmatism and Criticism), consisting of 10 letters addressed to an unknown interlocutor that presented both a defense and critique of the Kantian system.

Between 1796/97, there was written a seminal manuscript now known as the Das älteste Systemprogramm des deutschen Idealismus ("The Oldest Systematic Program of German Idealism"). It survives in Hegel's handwriting. First published in 1916 by Franz Rosenzweig, it was attributed to Schelling. It has also been claimed that Hegel or Hölderlin was the author.[33][34]

In 1797, Schelling published the essay Neue Deduction des Naturrechts ("New Deduction of Natural Law"), which anticipated Fichte's treatment of the topic in Grundlage des Naturrechts (Foundations of Natural Law). His studies of physical science bore fruit in Ideen zu einer Philosophie der Natur (Ideas Concerning a Philosophy of Nature, 1797), and the treatise Von der Weltseele (On the World-Soul, 1798). In Ideen Schelling referred to Leibniz and quoted from his Monadology. He held Leibniz in high regard because of his view of nature during his natural philosophy period.

In 1800, Schelling published System des transcendentalen Idealismus (System of Transcendental Idealism). In this book Schelling described transcendental philosophy and nature philosophy as complementary to one another. Fichte reacted by stating that Schelling's argument was unsound: in Fichte's theory nature as Not-Self (Nicht-Ich = object) could not be a subject of philosophy, whose essential content is the subjective activity of the human intellect. The breach became unrecoverable in 1801 after Schelling published Darstellung des Systems meiner Philosophie ("Presentation of My System of Philosophy"). Fichte thought this title absurd since, in his opinion, philosophy could not be personalized. Moreover, in this book Schelling publicly expressed his estimation of Spinoza, whose work Fichte had repudiated as dogmatism, and declared that nature and spirit differ only in their quantity, but are essentially identical. According to Schelling, the absolute was the indifference to identity, which he considered to be an essential philosophical subject.

The "Aphorismen über die Naturphilosophie" ("Aphorisms on Nature Philosophy"), published in the Jahrbücher der Medicin als Wissenschaft (1805–1808), are for the most part extracts from the Würzburg lectures, and the Denkmal der Schrift von den göttlichen Dingen des Herrn Jacobi ("Monument to the Scripture of the Divine Things of Mr. Jacobi")[25] was a response to an attack by Jacobi (the two accused each other of atheism[35]). A work of significance is the 1809 Philosophische Untersuchungen über das Wesen der menschlichen Freiheit und die damit zusammenhängenden Gegenstände (Philosophical Inquiries into the Essence of Human Freedom), which elaborates, with increasing mysticism, on ideas in the 1804 work Philosophie und Religion (Philosophy and Religion).[25] However, in a change from the Jena period, evil is not an appearance coming from quantitative differences between the real and the ideal, but is something substantial. This work clearly paraphrased Kant's distinction between intelligible and empirical character. Schelling himself called freedom "a capacity for good and evil".

The 1815 essay Ueber die Gottheiten zu Samothrake ("On the Divinities of Samothrace") was ostensibly a part of a larger work, Weltalter ("The Ages of the World"), frequently announced as ready for publication, but of which little was ever written. Schelling planned Weltalter as a book in three parts, describing the past, present, and future of the world; however, he began only the first part, rewriting it several times and at last keeping it unpublished. The other two parts were left only in planning. Christopher John Murray describes the work as follows:

Building on the premise that philosophy cannot ultimately explain existence, he merges the earlier philosophies of Nature and identity with his newfound belief in a fundamental conflict between a dark unconscious principle and a conscious principle in God. God makes the universe intelligible by relating to the ground of the real but, insofar as nature is not complete intelligence, the real exists as a lack within the ideal and not as reflective of the ideal itself. The three universal ages – distinct only to us but not in the eternal God – therefore comprise a beginning where the principle of God before God is divine will striving for being, the present age, which is still part of this growth and hence a mediated fulfillment, and a finality where God is consciously and consummately Himself to Himself.[36]

No authentic information on Schelling's new positive philosophy (positive Philosophie) was available until after his death at Bad Ragatz, on 20 August 1854. His sons then issued four volumes of his Berlin lectures: vol. i. Introduction to the Philosophy of Mythology (1856); ii. Philosophy of Mythology (1857); iii. and iv. Philosophy of Revelation (1858).[25]

Periodization edit

Schelling, at all stages of his thought, called to his aid outward forms of some other system. Fichte, Spinoza, Jakob Boehme and the mystics, and finally, major Greek thinkers with their Neoplatonic, Gnostic, and Scholastic commentators, give colouring to particular works. In Schelling's own view, his philosophy fell into three stages. These were:[25]

  1. Transition from Fichte's philosophy to a more objective conception of nature (an advance to Naturphilosophie)
  2. Formulation of the identical, indifferent, absolute substratum of both nature and spirit (Identitätsphilosophie).
  3. Opposition of negative and positive philosophy, which was the theme of his Berlin lectures, though the concepts can be traced back to 1804.

Naturphilosophie edit

The function of Schelling's Naturphilosophie is to exhibit the ideal as springing from the real. The change which experience brings before us leads to the conception of duality, the polar opposition through which nature expresses itself. The dynamic series of stages in nature are matter as the equilibrium of the fundamental expansive and contractive forces, light (with its subordinate processes of magnetism, electricity, and chemical action) and organism (with its component phases of reproduction, irritability and sensibility).[37]

Schelling initially adopted the concept of self-organization as Kant had developed it in his Critique of Judgment for the reproduction of organisms. However, Schelling extended this concept by the aspect of the original emergence of life as well as the emergence of new species and genera. He intended it to be a comprehensive theory of natural history that bears similarities to modern theories of self-organization.[38]

Reputation and influence edit

Some scholars characterize Schelling as a protean thinker who, although brilliant, jumped from one subject to another and lacked the synthesizing power needed to arrive at a complete philosophical system. Others challenge the notion that Schelling's thought is marked by profound breaks, instead arguing that his philosophy always focused on a few common themes, especially human freedom, the absolute, and the relationship between spirit and nature. Unlike Hegel, Schelling did not believe that the absolute could be known in its true character through rational inquiry alone.

Schelling is still studied, although his reputation has varied over time. His work impressed the English romantic poet and critic Samuel Taylor Coleridge, who introduced his ideas into English-speaking culture, sometimes without full acknowledgment, as in the Biographia Literaria. Coleridge's critical work was influential, and it was he who introduced into English literature Schelling's concept of the unconscious. Schelling's System of Transcendental Idealism has been seen as a precursor of Sigmund Freud's Interpretation of Dreams (1899).[39]

 
Slavoj Zizek is one example of contemporary philosophers influenced by Schelling's philosophy.[40]

The Catholic Tübingen school, a group of Roman Catholic theologians at the University of Tübingen in the nineteenth century, was greatly influenced by Schelling and attempted to reconcile his philosophy of revelation with Catholic theology.[41]

Up to 1950, Schelling was almost a forgotten philosopher even in Germany. In the 1910s and 1920s, philosophers of neo-Kantianism and neo-Hegelianism, like Wilhelm Windelband or Richard Kroner, tended to describe Schelling as an episode connecting Fichte and Hegel. His late period tended to be ignored, and his philosophies of nature and of art in the 1790s and first decade of the 19th century were the main focus. In this context Kuno Fischer characterized Schelling's early philosophy as "aesthetic idealism", focusing on the argument where he ranked art as "the sole document and the eternal organ of philosophy" (das einzige wahre und ewige Organon zugleich und Dokument der Philosophie). From socialist philosophers like György Lukács, he was regarded as anachronistic. Martin Heidegger, during the period when he was involved with the Nazi Party, found in Schelling's On Human Freedom central themes of Western ontology - being, existence, and freedom - and expounded on them in his 1936 lectures.

In the 1950s, the situation began to change. In 1954, the centennial of his death, an international conference on Schelling was held. Several philosophers, including Karl Jaspers, gave presentations about the uniqueness and relevance of his thought, the interest shifting toward his later work on the origin of existence. Schelling was the subject of Jürgen Habermas's 1954 dissertation.[42]

In 1955, Jaspers published Schelling, representing him as a forerunner of the existentialists and Walter Schulz, one of organizers of the 1954 conference, published "Die Vollendung des Deutschen Idealismus in der Spätphilosophie Schellings" ("The Perfection of German Idealism in Schelling's Late Philosophy") claiming that Schelling had made German idealism complete with his late philosophy, particularly with his Berlin lectures in the 1840s. Schulz presented Schelling as the person who resolved the philosophical problems which Hegel had left incomplete, in contrast to the contemporary idea that Schelling had been surpassed by Hegel much earlier. Theologian Paul Tillich wrote: "what I learned from Schelling became determinative of my own philosophical and theological development".[43] Maurice Merleau-Ponty likened his own project of natural ontology to Schelling's in his 1957–58 Course on Nature.

In the 1970s, nature was again of interest to philosophers in relation to environmental issues. Schelling's philosophy of nature, particularly his intention to construct a program which covers both nature and the intellectual life in a single system and method, and restore nature as a central theme of philosophy, has been reevaluated in the contemporary context. His influence and relation to the German art scene, particularly to Romantic literature and visual art, has been an interest since the late 1960s, from Philipp Otto Runge to Gerhard Richter and Joseph Beuys. This interest has been revived in recent years through the work of the environmental philosopher Arran Gare who has identified a tradition of Schellingian science overcoming the opposition between science and the humanities, and offering the basis for an understanding of ecological science and ecological philosophy.[44]

In relation to psychology, Schelling was considered to have coined the term "unconsciousness". Slavoj Žižek has written two books attempting to integrate Schelling's philosophy, mainly his middle period works including Weltalter, with work of Jacques Lacan.[45][46] The opposition and division in God and the problem of evil in God examined by the later Schelling influenced Luigi Pareyson's thought.[47][48][49]

Quotations edit

  • "Nature is visible spirit, spirit is invisible nature." ["Natur ist hiernach der sichtbare Geist, Geist die unsichtbare Natur"] (Ideen, "Introduction")
  • "History as a whole is a progressive, gradually self-disclosing revelation of the Absolute." (System of Transcendental Idealism, 1800)
  • "Now if the appearance of freedom is necessarily infinite, the total evolution of the Absolute is also an infinite process, and history itself a never wholly completed revelation of that Absolute which, for the sake of consciousness, and thus merely for the sake of appearance, separates itself into conscious and unconscious, the free and the intuitant; but which itself, however, in the inaccessible light wherein it dwells, is Eternal Identity and the everlasting ground of harmony between the two." (System of Transcendental Idealism, 1800)
  • "Has creation a final goal? And if so, why was it not reached at once? Why was the consummation not realized from the beginning? To these questions there is but one answer: Because God is Life, and not merely Being." (Philosophical Inquiries into the Nature of Human Freedom, 1809)
  • "Only he who has tasted freedom can feel the desire to make over everything in its image, to spread it throughout the whole universe." (Philosophical Inquiries into the Nature of Human Freedom, 1809)
  • "As there is nothing before or outside of God he must contain within himself the ground of his existence. All philosophies say this, but they speak of this ground as a mere concept without making it something real and actual." (Philosophical Inquiries into the Nature of Human Freedom, 1809)
  • "[The Godhead] is not divine nature or substance, but the devouring ferocity of purity that a person is able to approach only with an equal purity. Since all Being goes up in it as if in flames, it is necessarily unapproachable to anyone still embroiled in Being." (The Ages of the World, c. 1815)
  • "God then has no beginning only insofar as there is no beginning of his beginning. The beginning in God is eternal beginning, that is, such a one as was beginning from all eternity, and still is, and also never ceases to be beginning." (Quoted in Hartshorne & Reese, Philosophers Speak of God, Chicago: U of Chicago P, 1953, p. 237.)

Bibliography edit

Selected works are listed below.[50]

  • Ueber Mythen, historische Sagen und Philosopheme der ältesten Welt (On Myths, Historical Legends and Philosophical Themes of Earliest Antiquity, 1793)[14]
  1. Ueber die Möglichkeit einer Form der Philosophie überhaupt (On the Possibility of an Absolute Form of Philosophy, 1794),[32]
  2. Vom Ich als Prinzip der Philosophie oder über das Unbedingte im menschlichen Wissen (Of the I as the Principle of Philosophy or on the Unconditional in Human Knowledge, 1795), and
  3. Philosophische Briefe über Dogmatismus und Kriticismus (Philosophical Letters on Dogmatism and Criticism, 1795).[25]
  • 1, 2, 3 in The Unconditional in Human Knowledge: Four Early Essays 1794–6, translation and commentary by F. Marti, Lewisburg: Bucknell University Press (1980).
  • De Marcione Paulinarum epistolarum emendatore (1795).[51]
  • Abhandlung zur Erläuterung des Idealismus der Wissenschaftslehre (1796).[52] Translated as Treatise Explicatory of the Idealism in the 'Science of Knowledge' in Thomas Pfau, Idealism and the Endgame of Theory, Albany: SUNY Press (1994).
  • Ideen zu einer Philosophie der Natur als Einleitung in das Studium dieser Wissenschaft (1797) as Ideas for a Philosophy of Nature: as Introduction to the Study of this Science, translated by E. E. Harris and P. Heath, introduction R. Stern, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press (1988).
  • Von der Weltseele (1798).
  • System des transcendentalen Idealismus (1800) as System of Transcendental Idealism, translated by P. Heath, introduction M. Vater, Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia (1978).
  • Ueber den wahren Begriff der Naturphilosophie und die richtige Art ihre Probleme aufzulösen (1801).
  • "Darstellung des Systems meiner Philosophie" (1801), also known as "Darstellung meines Systems der Philosophie", as "Presentation of My System of Philosophy," translated by M. Vater, The Philosophical Forum, 32(4), Winter 2001, pp. 339–371.
  • Bruno oder über das göttliche und natürliche Prinzip der Dinge (1802) as Bruno, or on the Natural and the Divine Principle of Things, translated with an introduction by M. Vater, Albany: State University of New York Press (1984).
  • On the Relationship of the Philosophy of Nature to Philosophy in General (1802). Translated by George di Giovanni and H.S. Harris in Between Kant and Hegel, Albany: SUNY Press (1985).
  • Philosophie der Kunst (lecture) (delivered 1802–3; published 1859) as The Philosophy of Art (1989) Minnesota: Minnesota University Press.
  • Vorlesungen über die Methode des akademischen Studiums (delivered 1802; published 1803) as On University Studies, translated E. S. Morgan, edited N. Guterman, Athens, Ohio: Ohio University Press (1966).
  • Ideas on a Philosophy of Nature as an Introduction to the Study of This Science (Second edition, 1803). Translated by Priscilla Hayden-Roy in Philosophy of German Idealism, New York: Continuum (1987).
  • System der gesamten Philosophie und der Naturphilosophie insbesondere (Nachlass) (1804). Translated as System of Philosophy in General and of the Philosophy of Nature in Particular in Thomas Pfau, Idealism and the Endgame of Theory, Albany: SUNY Press (1994).
  • Philosophische Untersuchungen über das Wesen der menschlichen Freiheit und die damit zusammenhängenden Gegenstände (1809) as Of Human Freedom, a translation with critical introduction and notes by J. Gutmann, Chicago: Open Court (1936); also as Philosophical Investigations into the Essence of Human Freedom, trans. Jeff Love and Johannes Schmidt, SUNY Press (2006).
  • Clara. Oder über den Zusammenhang der Natur- mit der Geisterwelt (Nachlass) (1810) as Clara: or on Nature's Connection to the Spirit World trans. Fiona Steinkamp, Albany: State University of New York Press, 2002.
  • Stuttgart Seminars (1810), translated by Thomas Pfau in Idealism and the Endgame of Theory, Albany: SUNY Press (1994).
  • Weltalter (1811–15) as The Ages of the World, translated with introduction and notes by F. de W. Bolman, jr., New York: Columbia University Press (1967); also in The Abyss of Freedom/Ages of the World, trans. Judith Norman, with an essay by Slavoj Žižek, Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press (1997).
  • "Ueber die Gottheiten von Samothrake" (1815) as Schelling's Treatise on 'The Deities of Samothrace', a translation and introduction by R. F. Brown, Missoula, Mont.: Scholars Press (1977).
  • Darstellung des philosophischen Empirismus (Nachlass) (1830).
  • Philosophie der Mythologie (lecture) (1842).
  • Philosophie der Offenbarung (lecture) (1854).
  • Zur Geschichte der neueren Philosophie (probably 1833–4) as On the History of Modern Philosophy, translation and introduction by A. Bowie, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press (1994).
Collected works in German
AA Historisch-kritische Schelling-Ausgabe der Bayerischen Akademie der Wissenschaften. Edited by Hans Michael Baumgartner, Wilhelm G. Jacobs, Jörg Jantzen, Hermann Krings and Hermann Zeltner, Stuttgart-Bad Cannstatt: Frommann-Holzboog, 1976 ff.
SW Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph von Schellings sämmtliche Werke. Edited by K. F. A. Schelling. 1st division (Abteilung): 10 vols. (= I–X); 2nd division: 4 vols. (= XI–XIV), Stuttgart/Augsburg 1856–1861. The original edition in new arrangement edited by M. Schröter, 6 main volumes (Hauptbände), 6 supplementary volumes (Ergänzungsbände), Munich, 1927 ff., 2nd edition 1958 ff.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Nectarios G. Limnatis, German Idealism and the Problem of Knowledge: Kant, Fichte, Schelling, and Hegel, Springer, 2008, pp. 166, 177.
  2. ^ Frederick Beiser, German Idealism: The Struggle Against Subjectivism, 1781–1801, Harvard University Press, 2002, p. 470.
  3. ^ Frederick Beiser, German Idealism: The Struggle Against Subjectivism, 1781–1801, Harvard University Press, 2002, p. 483.
  4. ^ Joel Harter, Coleridge's Philosophy of Faith: Symbol, Allegory, and Hermeneutics, Mohr Siebeck, 2011, p. 91.
  5. ^ The term absoluter Idealismus occurs for the first time in 1802. See Ueber das Verhältniß der Naturphilosophie zur Philosophie überhaupt or Vorlesungen über die Methode des academischen Studiums.
  6. ^ Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling, Ideen zu einer Philosophie der Natur als Einleitung in das Studium dieser Wissenschaft (1797): Second Book, ch. 7: "Philosophie der Chemie überhaupt".
  7. ^ Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph von Schelling by Saitya Brata Das in Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy, 2011.
  8. ^ "Friedrich – Französisch-Übersetzung – Langenscheidt Deutsch-Französisch Wörterbuch" (in German and French). Langenscheidt. Retrieved 20 October 2018.
  9. ^ "Wilhelm – Französisch-Übersetzung – Langenscheidt Deutsch-Französisch Wörterbuch" (in German and French). Langenscheidt. Retrieved 20 October 2018.
  10. ^ "Joseph – Französisch-Übersetzung – Langenscheidt Deutsch-Französisch Wörterbuch" (in German and French). Langenscheidt. Retrieved 20 October 2018.
  11. ^ Wells, John C. (2008). Longman Pronunciation Dictionary (3rd ed.). Longman. ISBN 978-1-4058-8118-0.
  12. ^ Bowie, Andrew (19 July 2012). "Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph von Schelling". In Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  13. ^ Richard H. Popkin, ed. (31 December 2005). The Columbia History of Western Philosophy. Columbia University Press. p. 529. ISBN 978-0-231-10129-5.
  14. ^ a b c Adamson & Mitchell 1911, p. 316.
  15. ^ John Morley (ed.), The Fortnightly Review, Voll. 10, 12, London: Chapman & Hall, 1870, p. 500.
  16. ^ Frederick C. Beiser, ed. (1993). The Cambridge Companion to Hegel. Cambridge University Press. p. 419. ISBN 978-1-139-82495-8.
  17. ^ History of Philosophy: From Thales to the Present Time, Volume 2, C. Scribner's Sons, 1874, p. 214.
  18. ^ The thesis is available online at the Munich Digitization Center.
  19. ^ Adamson & Mitchell 1911, p. 316–318.
  20. ^ Hüttner, Jörg; Walter, Martin (2021). "'What, at the End, is the Real in our Ideas?' A Discourse between Schelling and Obereit. (= 'Was ist am Ende das Reale in unsern Vorstellungen?' Ein Diskurs zwischen Schelling und Obereit.)". Schelling-Studien. 8: 3–25.
  21. ^ Robert J. Richards, The Romantic Conception of Life: Science and Philosophy in the Age of Goethe (2002), p. 149.
  22. ^ Richards, p. 171 note 141.
  23. ^ Wallen, Martin (2004). City of Health, Fields of Disease: Revolutions in the Poetry, Medicine, and Philosophy of Romanticism. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. p. 123. ISBN 978-0-7546-3542-0.
  24. ^ Konzett, Matthias. Encyclopedia of German literature. Routledge, 2015. p. 852.
  25. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Adamson & Mitchell 1911, p. 317.
  26. ^ See On the Concept of Irony with Continual Reference to Socrates by Søren Kierkegaard, 1841.
  27. ^ Lara Ostaric, Interpreting Schelling: Critical Essays, Cambridge University Press, 2014, p. 218.
  28. ^ at egs.edu.
  29. ^ Nicolaas A. Rupke, Alexander von Humboldt: A Metabiography, University of Chicago Press, p. 116.
  30. ^ “The Life of Philip Schaff, in Part Autobiographical” by David Schaff.
  31. ^ Tristram Hunt, Marx's General: The Revolutionary Life of Friedrich Engels (Henry Holt and Co., 2009: ISBN 978-0-8050-8025-4), pp. 45–46.
  32. ^ a b Adamson & Mitchell 1911, p. 319.
  33. ^ Crites, Stephen (1 November 2010) [1998]. Dialectic and Gospel in the Development of Hegel's Thinking. Penn State Press. p. 62. ISBN 978-0-271-04386-9.
  34. ^ Kai Hammermeister, The German Aesthetic Tradition, Cambridge University Press, 2002, p. 76.
  35. ^ John Laughland, Schelling Versus Hegel: From German Idealism to Christian Metaphysics (Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., 2007: ISBN 978-0-7546-6118-4), p. 119.
  36. ^ Christopher John Murray, Encyclopedia of the Romantic Era, 1760–1850 (Taylor & Francis, 2004: ISBN 978-1-57958-422-1), pp. 1001–02.
  37. ^ "The briefest and best account in Schelling himself of Naturphilosophie is that contained in the Einleitung zu dem Ersten Entwurf (S.W. iii.). A full and lucid statement of Naturphilosophie is that given by K. Fischer in his Gesch. d. n. Phil., vi. 433–692" (Adamson & Mitchell 1911, p. 318).
  38. ^ It was the philosopher Marie-Luise Heuser-Keßler who elaborated these parallels and later became assistant to one of the founders of physical self-organization theories, Hermann Haken, at the University of Stuttgart. Nobel laureate Manfred Eigen wrote that Heuser-Keßler had "penetrated to the core of the physical problem of self-organization" (Marie-Luise Heuser/ Wilhelm G. Jacobs (Ed.): Schelling und die Selbstorganisation. Neue Forschungsperspektiven. Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 1994, p. 234, ISBN 3-428-08066-1.). Andrew Bowie wrote in his book "Schelling and Modern European Philosophy“ (London/New York 1993) p. 34-5: „In her account of Schelling’s Naturphilosophie Marie-Luise Heuser-Kessler makes an important distinction between ‚self-organization‘ and ‚self-reproduction‘ (…).“ Or on p. 38: „Heuser-Kessler has made the implications of these thoughts particularly clear in relation to Prigogine’s (…).“
  39. ^ Bowie, Andrew (1990). Aesthetics and Subjectivity. From Kant to Nietzsche. Manchester University Press. p. 89. ISBN 978-0-719-04011-5.
  40. ^ "Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling". Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 10 May 2017.
  41. ^ O'Meara, Thomas (1982). Romantic Idealism and Roman Catholicism: Schelling and the Theologians. University of Notre Dame Press. p. 90-92. ISBN 9780268016104.
  42. ^ Habermas, Jurgen (1954). Das Absolute und die Geschichte. Von der Zwiespältigkeit in Schellings Denken (in German). Gummersbach.
  43. ^ Paul Tillich, A History of Christian Thought 438 Simon and Schuster, 1972.
  44. ^ Gare, Arran (2013). "Overcoming the Newtonian paradigm: The unfinished project of theoretical biology from a Schellingian perspective". Progress in Biophysics and Molecular Biology. 113 (1): 5–24. doi:10.1016/j.pbiomolbio.2013.03.002. hdl:1959.3/315891. PMID 23562477.
  45. ^ Žižek, Slavoj (1996). The indivisible remainder: An essay on Schelling and related matters. London: Verso. ISBN 978-1-859-84094-8.
  46. ^ Žižek, Slavoj (2009). The parallax view (1st paperback ed.). Cambridge, Mass.: MIT. ISBN 978-0-262-51268-8.
  47. ^ Braidotti, Rosi (2014). After Poststructuralism. Transitions and Transformations. Abingdon-on-Thames: Routledge. p. 105. ISBN 978-1-317-54681-8.
  48. ^ Distaso, Leonardo V. (2004). The Paradox of Existence. Philosophy and Aesthetics in the Young Schelling. Springer Science+Business Media. p. 7. ISBN 978-1-402-02490-0.
  49. ^ Pagano, Maurizio (2007). "Introduction. The Confrontation between Religious and Secular Thought" (PDF). In Benso, Silvia; Schroeder, Brian (eds.). Contemporary Italian Philosophy. Crossing the Borders of Ethics, Politics, and Religion. Albany, New York: SUNY Press. pp. 8–9. ISBN 978-0-791-47135-7.
  50. ^ For a more complete listing, see Stanford bibliography.
  51. ^ Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph von Schelling; Gottlob Christian Storr (1795). De Marcione Paullinarum epistolarum emendatore. Rodopi. ISBN 978-90-6203-202-0.
  52. ^ Adamson & Mitchell 1911, p. 317 fn. 1.

References edit

Further reading edit

  • Bowie, Andrew (1993). Schelling and Modern European Philosophy: an Introduction. New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415756-35-8.
  • Ffytche, Matt. The foundation of the unconscious: Schelling, Freud and the birth of the modern psyche (Cambridge University Press, 2011).
  • Gare, Arran (2011). "From Kant to Schelling and Process Metaphysics". Cosmos and History: The Journal of Natural and Social Philosophy. 7 (2): 26–69.
  • Fenichel, Teresa. Schelling, Freud, and the Philosophical Foundations of Psychoanalysis: Uncanny Belonging (Routledge, 2018).
  • Gentile, Andrea (2018), Bewusstsein, Anschauung und das Unendliche bei Fichte, Schelling und Hegel. Über den unbedingten Grundsatz der Erkenntnis, Freiburg, München: Verlag Karl Alber, ISBN 978-3-495-48911-6
  • Golan, Zev (2007), God, Man and Nietzsche, NY: iUniverse. (The second chapter, listed as "A dialogue between Schelling, Luria and Maimonides", examines the similarities between Schelling's texts and the Kabbalah; it also offers a religious interpretation of Schelling's identity philosophy.)
  • Grant, Iain Hamilton (2008). Philosophies of Nature after Schelling. New York: Bloomsbury Academic. ISBN 978-1-847064-32-5.
  • Hendrix, John Shannon (2005). Aesthetics & the Philosophy of Spirit: From Plotinus to Schelling and Hegel. New York: Peter Lang. ISBN 978-0-820476-32-2.
  • Heuser-Keßler, Marie-Luise (1992), Schelling’s Concept of Selforganization. In: R. Friedrich, A. Wunderlin (Ed.): Evolution of dynamical structures in complex systems. Springer Proceedings in Physics, Berlin/Heidelberg/New York (Springer), 395–415, https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-642-84781-3_21.
  • Heuser-Keßler, Marie-Luise (1986), Die Produktivität der Natur. Schellings Naturphilosophie und das neue Paradigma der Selbstorganisation in den Naturwissenschaften, Berlin: Duncker&Humblot, ISBN 3-428-06079-2.
  • Le, Vincent. "Schelling and The Sixth Extinction: The Environmental Ethics Behind Schelling’s Anthropomorphization of Nature." Cosmos and History: The Journal of Natural and Social Philosophy 13.3 (2017): 107-129. online
  • Pahman, Dylan. "FWJ Schelling: A philosophical influence on Kuyper’s social thought." Kuyper Center Review 5 (2015): 26-43. online[dead link]
  • Stone, Alison. Nature, Ethics and Gender in German Romanticism and Idealism (Rowman & Littlefield, 2018).
  • Tilliette, Xavier (1970), Schelling: une philosophie en devenir, two volumes, Paris: Vrin. (Encyclopedic historical account of the development of Schelling's work: stronger on general exposition and on theology than on Schelling's philosophical arguments.)
  • Tilliette, Xavier (1999), Schelling, biographie, Calmann-Lévy, collection "La vie des philosophes".
  • Yates, Christopher. The Poetic Imagination in Heidegger and Schelling (A&C Black, 2013).
  • Wirth, Jason M. (2005). Schelling Now: Contemporary Readings. Bloomington, Ind.: Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0-253217-00-4.
  • Wirth, Jason (2015). Schelling's Practice of the Wild. New York: SUNY. ISBN 978-1-4384-5679-9.
  • Žižek, Slavoj (1996). The Indivisible Remainder: an Essay on Schelling and Related Matters. London: Verso. ISBN 978-1-859849-59-0.

External links edit

  • Works by or about Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling at Internet Archive
  • Works by Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph von Schelling, 1807 On the Relation of the Plastic Arts to Nature. New York: German Publication Society. Retrieved 24 September 2010. (c. 1913–1914)
  • Martin Arndt (1995). "Schelling, Friedrich Wilhelm (von) Joseph". In Bautz, Traugott (ed.). Biographisch-Bibliographisches Kirchenlexikon (BBKL) (in German). Vol. 9. Herzberg: Bautz. cols. 104–138. ISBN 3-88309-058-1.
  • Friedrich Jodl (1890). "Schelling, Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph von". Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB) (in German). Vol. 31. Leipzig: Duncker & Humblot. pp. 6–27.
  • Watson, John, 1847–1939, 1882 Schelling's Transcendental Idealism. Chicago, S. C. Griggs and company. 1882. Retrieved 28 September 2010.
  • Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph von Schelling by Saitya Brata Das in Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy, 2011
  • Links to texts
  • Copleston, Frederick Charles (2003). 18th and 19th Century German Philosophy. A&C Black. p. 138. ISBN 978-0-8264-6901-4.
  • Böhme, Traugott (1920). "Schelling, Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph von" . Encyclopedia Americana.
  • Schelling's partial translations of Dante's Divine Comedy and two essays about it at academia.edu

friedrich, wilhelm, joseph, schelling, confused, with, contemporaneous, german, philosopher, poet, friedrich, schiller, german, ˈfʁiːdʁɪç, ˈvɪlhɛlm, ˈjoːzɛf, ˈʃɛlɪŋ, january, 1775, august, 1854, later, after, 1812, schelling, german, philosopher, standard, his. Not to be confused with contemporaneous German philosopher and poet Friedrich Schiller Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling German ˈfʁiːdʁɪc ˈvɪlhɛlm ˈjoːzɛf ˈʃɛlɪŋ 8 9 10 11 27 January 1775 20 August 1854 later after 1812 von Schelling was a German philosopher Standard histories of philosophy make him the midpoint in the development of German idealism situating him between Johann Gottlieb Fichte his mentor in his early years and Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel his one time university roommate early friend and later rival Interpreting Schelling s philosophy is regarded as difficult because of its evolving nature Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph SchellingSchelling by Joseph Karl Stieler 1835Born 1775 01 27 27 January 1775Leonberg Wurttemberg Holy Roman EmpireDied20 August 1854 1854 08 20 aged 79 Bad Ragaz SwitzerlandEducationTubinger Stift University of Tubingen 1790 1795 M A 1792 Licentiate 1795 Leipzig University 1797 no degree Era19th century philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolContinental philosophyGerman idealismPost Kantian transcendental idealism 1 before 1800 Objective idealismAbsolute idealism after 1800 2 Naturphilosophie a combination of transcendental realism and transcendental naturalism 3 Jena RomanticismRomanticism in scienceCorrespondence theory of truth 4 InstitutionsUniversity of JenaUniversity of WurzburgUniversity of ErlangenUniversity of MunichUniversity of BerlinThesisDe Marcione Paulinarum epistolarum emendatore On Marcion as emendator of the Pauline letters 1795 Doctoral advisorsGottlob Christian StorrMain interestsNaturphilosophie natural science aesthetics metaphysics epistemology Christian philosophyNotable ideasList Coining the term absolute idealism 5 System of NaturphilosophiePhilosophy of chemistry 6 Identitatsphilosophie de philosophy of identity Positive Philosophie de positive philosophy Unconscious infinity as the basic character of art 7 SignatureSchelling s thought in the main has been neglected especially in the English speaking world An important factor in this was the ascendancy of Hegel whose mature works portray Schelling as a mere footnote in the development of idealism Schelling s Naturphilosophie also has been attacked by scientists for its tendency to analogize and lack of empirical orientation 12 However some later philosophers have shown interest in re examining Schelling s body of work Contents 1 Life 1 1 Early life 1 2 Jena period 1 3 Move to Wurzburg and personal conflicts 1 4 Munich period 1 5 Berlin period 2 Works 3 Periodization 3 1 Naturphilosophie 4 Reputation and influence 5 Quotations 6 Bibliography 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksLife editEarly life edit Schelling was born in the town of Leonberg in the Duchy of Wurttemberg now Baden Wurttemberg the son of Joseph Friedrich Schelling and Gottliebin Marie 13 From 1783 to 1784 Schelling attended the Latin school in Nurtingen and knew Friedrich Holderlin who was five years his senior Subsequently Schelling attended the monastic school at Bebenhausen near Tubingen where his father was chaplain and an Orientalist professor 14 On 18 October 1790 15 at the age of 15 he was granted permission to enroll at the Tubinger Stift seminary of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Wurttemberg despite not having yet reached the normal enrollment age of 20 At the Stift he shared a room with Hegel as well as Holderlin and the three became good friends 16 Schelling studied the Church fathers and ancient Greek philosophers His interest gradually shifted from Lutheran theology to philosophy In 1792 he graduated with his master s thesis titled Antiquissimi de prima malorum humanorum origine philosophematis Genes III explicandi tentamen criticum et philosophicum 17 18 and in 1795 he finished his doctoral thesis titled De Marcione Paulinarum epistolarum emendatore On Marcion as emendator of the Pauline letters under Gottlob Christian Storr Meanwhile he had begun to study Kant and Fichte who influenced him greatly 19 Representative of Schelling s early period is also a discourse between him and the philosophical writer Jacob Hermann Obereit de who was Fichte s housemate at that time in letters and in Fichte s Journal 1796 97 on interaction the pragmatic and Leibniz 20 In 1797 while tutoring two youths of an aristocratic family he visited Leipzig as their escort and had a chance to attend lectures at Leipzig University where he was fascinated by contemporary physical studies including chemistry and biology He also visited Dresden where he saw collections of the Elector of Saxony to which he referred later in his thinking on art On a personal level this Dresden visit of six weeks from August 1797 saw Schelling meet the brothers August Wilhelm Schlegel and Karl Friedrich Schlegel and his future wife Caroline then married to August Wilhelm and Novalis 21 Jena period edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message After two years tutoring in October 1798 at the age of 23 Schelling was called to University of Jena as an extraordinary i e unpaid professor of philosophy His time at Jena 1798 1803 put Schelling at the centre of the intellectual ferment of Romanticism He was on close terms with Johann Wolfgang von Goethe who appreciated the poetic quality of the Naturphilosophie reading Von der Weltseele As the prime minister of the Duchy of Saxe Weimar Goethe invited Schelling to Jena On the other hand Schelling was unsympathetic to the ethical idealism that animated the work of Friedrich Schiller the other pillar of Weimar Classicism Later in Schelling s Vorlesung uber die Philosophie der Kunst Lecture on the Philosophy of Art 1802 03 Schiller s theory on the sublime was closely reviewed In Jena Schelling was on good terms with Fichte at first but their different conceptions about nature in particular led to increasing divergence Fichte advised him to focus on transcendental philosophy specifically Fichte s own Wissenschaftlehre But Schelling who was becoming the acknowledged leader of the Romantic school rejected Fichte s thought as cold and abstract Schelling was especially close to August Wilhelm Schlegel and his wife Caroline A marriage between Schelling and Caroline s young daughter Auguste Bohmer was contemplated by both Auguste died of dysentery in 1800 prompting many to blame Schelling who had overseen her treatment Robert Richards however argues in his book The Romantic Conception of Life that Schelling s interventions were most likely irrelevant as the doctors called to the scene assured everyone involved that Auguste s disease was inevitably fatal 22 Auguste s death drew Schelling and Caroline closer Schlegel had moved to Berlin and a divorce was arranged with Goethe s help Schelling s time at Jena came to an end and on 2 June 1803 he and Caroline were married away from Jena Their marriage ceremony was the last occasion Schelling met his school friend the poet Friedrich Holderlin who was already mentally ill at that time In his Jena period Schelling had a closer relationship with Hegel again With Schelling s help Hegel became a private lecturer Privatdozent at Jena University Hegel wrote a book titled Differenz des Fichte schen und Schelling schen Systems der Philosophie Difference between Fichte s and Schelling s Systems of Philosophy 1801 and supported Schelling s position against his idealistic predecessors Fichte and Karl Leonhard Reinhold Beginning in January 1802 Hegel and Schelling published the Kritisches Journal der Philosophie Critical Journal of Philosophy as co editors publishing papers on the philosophy of nature but Schelling was too busy to stay involved with the editing and the magazine was mainly Hegel s publication espousing a thought different from Schelling s The magazine ceased publication in the spring of 1803 when Schelling moved from Jena to Wurzburg Move to Wurzburg and personal conflicts edit After Jena Schelling went to Bamberg for a time to study the Brunonian system of medicine the theory of John Brown with Adalbert Friedrich Marcus de and Andreas Roschlaub 23 From September 1803 until April 1806 Schelling was professor at the new University of Wurzburg This period was marked by considerable flux in his views and by a final breach with Fichte and Hegel In Wurzburg a conservative Catholic city Schelling found many enemies among his colleagues and in the government He moved then to Munich in 1806 where he found a position as a state official first as associate of the Bavarian Academy of Sciences and Humanities and secretary of the Royal Academy of Fine Arts afterwards as secretary of the Philosophische Klasse philosophical section of the Academy of Sciences 1806 was also the year Schelling published a book in which he criticized Fichte openly by name In 1807 Schelling received the manuscript of Hegel s Phaenomenologie des Geistes Phenomenology of the Spirit or Mind which Hegel had sent to him asking Schelling to write the foreword Surprised to find critical remarks directed at his own philosophical theory Schelling wrote back asking Hegel to clarify whether he had intended to mock Schelling s followers who lacked a true understanding of his thought or Schelling himself Hegel never replied In the same year Schelling gave a speech about the relation between the visual arts and nature at the Academy of Fine Arts Hegel wrote a severe criticism of it to one of his friends After that they criticized each other in lecture rooms and in books publicly until the end of their lives Munich period edit Without resigning his official position in Munich he lectured for a short time in Stuttgart Stuttgarter Privatvorlesungen Stuttgart private lectures 1810 and seven years at the University of Erlangen 1820 1827 24 In 1809 Caroline died 25 just before he published Freiheitsschrift Freedom Essay the last book published during his life Three years later Schelling married one of her closest friends Pauline Gotter in whom he found a faithful companion 25 During the long stay in Munich 1806 1841 Schelling s literary activity came gradually to a standstill It is possible that it was the overpowering strength and influence of the Hegelian system that constrained Schelling for it was only in 1834 after the death of Hegel that in a preface to a translation by Hubert Beckers of a work by Victor Cousin he gave public utterance to the antagonism in which he stood to the Hegelian and to his own earlier conception of philosophy The antagonism certainly was not new the 1822 Erlangen lectures on the history of philosophy expressed the same in a pointed fashion and Schelling had already begun the treatment of mythology and religion which in his view constituted the true positive complements to the negative of logical or speculative philosophy 25 Berlin period edit Public attention was powerfully attracted by hints of a new system which promised something more positive especially in its treatment of religion than the apparent results of Hegel s teaching The appearance of critical writings by David Friedrich Strauss Ludwig Feuerbach and Bruno Bauer and the disunion in the Hegelian school itself expressed a growing alienation from the then dominant philosophy In Berlin the headquarters of the Hegelians this found expression in attempts to obtain officially from Schelling a treatment of the new system that he was understood to have in reserve Its realization did not come about until 1841 when Schelling s appointment as Prussian privy councillor and member of the Berlin Academy gave him the right a right he was requested to exercise to deliver lectures in the university 25 Among those in attendance at his lectures were Soren Kierkegaard who said Schelling talked quite insufferable nonsense and complained that he did not end his lectures on time 26 Mikhail Bakunin who called them interesting but rather insignificant Jacob Burckhardt Alexander von Humboldt 27 28 who never accepted Schelling s natural philosophy 29 future church historian Philip Schaff 30 and Friedrich Engels who as a partisan of Hegel attended to shield the great man s grave from abuse 31 The opening lecture of his course was attended by a large and appreciative audience The enmity of his old foe H E G Paulus sharpened by Schelling s success led to surreptitious publication of a verbatim report of the lectures on the philosophy of revelation Schelling did not succeed in obtaining legal condemnation and suppression of this piracy and he stopped delivering public lectures in 1845 25 Works edit nbsp A February 1848 daguerreotype of SchellingIn 1793 Schelling contributed to Heinrich Eberhard Gottlob Paulus s periodical Memorabilien His 1795 dissertation was De Marcione Paullinarum epistolarum emendatore On Marcion as emendator of the Pauline letters 14 In 1794 Schelling published an exposition of Fichte s thought entitled Ueber die Moglichkeit einer Form der Philosophie uberhaupt On the Possibility of a Form of Philosophy in General 32 This work was acknowledged by Fichte himself and immediately earned Schelling a reputation among philosophers His more elaborate work Vom Ich als Prinzip der Philosophie oder uber das Unbedingte im menschlichen Wissen On the I as Principle of Philosophy or on the Unconditioned in Human Knowledge 1795 while still remaining within the limits of the Fichtean idealism showed a tendency to give the Fichtean method a more objective application and to amalgamate Spinoza s views with it He contributed articles and reviews to the Philosophisches Journal of Fichte and Friedrich Immanuel Niethammer and threw himself into the study of physical and medical science In 1795 Schelling published Philosophische Briefe uber Dogmatismus und Kritizismus Philosophical Letters on Dogmatism and Criticism consisting of 10 letters addressed to an unknown interlocutor that presented both a defense and critique of the Kantian system Between 1796 97 there was written a seminal manuscript now known as the Das alteste Systemprogramm des deutschen Idealismus The Oldest Systematic Program of German Idealism It survives in Hegel s handwriting First published in 1916 by Franz Rosenzweig it was attributed to Schelling It has also been claimed that Hegel or Holderlin was the author 33 34 In 1797 Schelling published the essay Neue Deduction des Naturrechts New Deduction of Natural Law which anticipated Fichte s treatment of the topic in Grundlage des Naturrechts Foundations of Natural Law His studies of physical science bore fruit in Ideen zu einer Philosophie der Natur Ideas Concerning a Philosophy of Nature 1797 and the treatise Von der Weltseele On the World Soul 1798 In Ideen Schelling referred to Leibniz and quoted from his Monadology He held Leibniz in high regard because of his view of nature during his natural philosophy period In 1800 Schelling published System des transcendentalen Idealismus System of Transcendental Idealism In this book Schelling described transcendental philosophy and nature philosophy as complementary to one another Fichte reacted by stating that Schelling s argument was unsound in Fichte s theory nature as Not Self Nicht Ich object could not be a subject of philosophy whose essential content is the subjective activity of the human intellect The breach became unrecoverable in 1801 after Schelling published Darstellung des Systems meiner Philosophie Presentation of My System of Philosophy Fichte thought this title absurd since in his opinion philosophy could not be personalized Moreover in this book Schelling publicly expressed his estimation of Spinoza whose work Fichte had repudiated as dogmatism and declared that nature and spirit differ only in their quantity but are essentially identical According to Schelling the absolute was the indifference to identity which he considered to be an essential philosophical subject The Aphorismen uber die Naturphilosophie Aphorisms on Nature Philosophy published in the Jahrbucher der Medicin als Wissenschaft 1805 1808 are for the most part extracts from the Wurzburg lectures and the Denkmal der Schrift von den gottlichen Dingen des Herrn Jacobi Monument to the Scripture of the Divine Things of Mr Jacobi 25 was a response to an attack by Jacobi the two accused each other of atheism 35 A work of significance is the 1809 Philosophische Untersuchungen uber das Wesen der menschlichen Freiheit und die damit zusammenhangenden Gegenstande Philosophical Inquiries into the Essence of Human Freedom which elaborates with increasing mysticism on ideas in the 1804 work Philosophie und Religion Philosophy and Religion 25 However in a change from the Jena period evil is not an appearance coming from quantitative differences between the real and the ideal but is something substantial This work clearly paraphrased Kant s distinction between intelligible and empirical character Schelling himself called freedom a capacity for good and evil The 1815 essay Ueber die Gottheiten zu Samothrake On the Divinities of Samothrace was ostensibly a part of a larger work Weltalter The Ages of the World frequently announced as ready for publication but of which little was ever written Schelling planned Weltalter as a book in three parts describing the past present and future of the world however he began only the first part rewriting it several times and at last keeping it unpublished The other two parts were left only in planning Christopher John Murray describes the work as follows Building on the premise that philosophy cannot ultimately explain existence he merges the earlier philosophies of Nature and identity with his newfound belief in a fundamental conflict between a dark unconscious principle and a conscious principle in God God makes the universe intelligible by relating to the ground of the real but insofar as nature is not complete intelligence the real exists as a lack within the ideal and not as reflective of the ideal itself The three universal ages distinct only to us but not in the eternal God therefore comprise a beginning where the principle of God before God is divine will striving for being the present age which is still part of this growth and hence a mediated fulfillment and a finality where God is consciously and consummately Himself to Himself 36 No authentic information on Schelling s new positive philosophy positive Philosophie was available until after his death at Bad Ragatz on 20 August 1854 His sons then issued four volumes of his Berlin lectures vol i Introduction to the Philosophy of Mythology 1856 ii Philosophy of Mythology 1857 iii and iv Philosophy of Revelation 1858 25 Periodization editSchelling at all stages of his thought called to his aid outward forms of some other system Fichte Spinoza Jakob Boehme and the mystics and finally major Greek thinkers with their Neoplatonic Gnostic and Scholastic commentators give colouring to particular works In Schelling s own view his philosophy fell into three stages These were 25 Transition from Fichte s philosophy to a more objective conception of nature an advance to Naturphilosophie Formulation of the identical indifferent absolute substratum of both nature and spirit Identitatsphilosophie Opposition of negative and positive philosophy which was the theme of his Berlin lectures though the concepts can be traced back to 1804 Naturphilosophie edit Main article Naturphilosophie The function of Schelling s Naturphilosophie is to exhibit the ideal as springing from the real The change which experience brings before us leads to the conception of duality the polar opposition through which nature expresses itself The dynamic series of stages in nature are matter as the equilibrium of the fundamental expansive and contractive forces light with its subordinate processes of magnetism electricity and chemical action and organism with its component phases of reproduction irritability and sensibility 37 Schelling initially adopted the concept of self organization as Kant had developed it in his Critique of Judgment for the reproduction of organisms However Schelling extended this concept by the aspect of the original emergence of life as well as the emergence of new species and genera He intended it to be a comprehensive theory of natural history that bears similarities to modern theories of self organization 38 Reputation and influence editSome scholars characterize Schelling as a protean thinker who although brilliant jumped from one subject to another and lacked the synthesizing power needed to arrive at a complete philosophical system Others challenge the notion that Schelling s thought is marked by profound breaks instead arguing that his philosophy always focused on a few common themes especially human freedom the absolute and the relationship between spirit and nature Unlike Hegel Schelling did not believe that the absolute could be known in its true character through rational inquiry alone Schelling is still studied although his reputation has varied over time His work impressed the English romantic poet and critic Samuel Taylor Coleridge who introduced his ideas into English speaking culture sometimes without full acknowledgment as in the Biographia Literaria Coleridge s critical work was influential and it was he who introduced into English literature Schelling s concept of the unconscious Schelling s System of Transcendental Idealism has been seen as a precursor of Sigmund Freud s Interpretation of Dreams 1899 39 nbsp Slavoj Zizek is one example of contemporary philosophers influenced by Schelling s philosophy 40 The Catholic Tubingen school a group of Roman Catholic theologians at the University of Tubingen in the nineteenth century was greatly influenced by Schelling and attempted to reconcile his philosophy of revelation with Catholic theology 41 Up to 1950 Schelling was almost a forgotten philosopher even in Germany In the 1910s and 1920s philosophers of neo Kantianism and neo Hegelianism like Wilhelm Windelband or Richard Kroner tended to describe Schelling as an episode connecting Fichte and Hegel His late period tended to be ignored and his philosophies of nature and of art in the 1790s and first decade of the 19th century were the main focus In this context Kuno Fischer characterized Schelling s early philosophy as aesthetic idealism focusing on the argument where he ranked art as the sole document and the eternal organ of philosophy das einzige wahre und ewige Organon zugleich und Dokument der Philosophie From socialist philosophers like Gyorgy Lukacs he was regarded as anachronistic Martin Heidegger during the period when he was involved with the Nazi Party found in Schelling s On Human Freedom central themes of Western ontology being existence and freedom and expounded on them in his 1936 lectures In the 1950s the situation began to change In 1954 the centennial of his death an international conference on Schelling was held Several philosophers including Karl Jaspers gave presentations about the uniqueness and relevance of his thought the interest shifting toward his later work on the origin of existence Schelling was the subject of Jurgen Habermas s 1954 dissertation 42 In 1955 Jaspers published Schelling representing him as a forerunner of the existentialists and Walter Schulz one of organizers of the 1954 conference published Die Vollendung des Deutschen Idealismus in der Spatphilosophie Schellings The Perfection of German Idealism in Schelling s Late Philosophy claiming that Schelling had made German idealism complete with his late philosophy particularly with his Berlin lectures in the 1840s Schulz presented Schelling as the person who resolved the philosophical problems which Hegel had left incomplete in contrast to the contemporary idea that Schelling had been surpassed by Hegel much earlier Theologian Paul Tillich wrote what I learned from Schelling became determinative of my own philosophical and theological development 43 Maurice Merleau Ponty likened his own project of natural ontology to Schelling s in his 1957 58 Course on Nature In the 1970s nature was again of interest to philosophers in relation to environmental issues Schelling s philosophy of nature particularly his intention to construct a program which covers both nature and the intellectual life in a single system and method and restore nature as a central theme of philosophy has been reevaluated in the contemporary context His influence and relation to the German art scene particularly to Romantic literature and visual art has been an interest since the late 1960s from Philipp Otto Runge to Gerhard Richter and Joseph Beuys This interest has been revived in recent years through the work of the environmental philosopher Arran Gare who has identified a tradition of Schellingian science overcoming the opposition between science and the humanities and offering the basis for an understanding of ecological science and ecological philosophy 44 In relation to psychology Schelling was considered to have coined the term unconsciousness Slavoj Zizek has written two books attempting to integrate Schelling s philosophy mainly his middle period works including Weltalter with work of Jacques Lacan 45 46 The opposition and division in God and the problem of evil in God examined by the later Schelling influenced Luigi Pareyson s thought 47 48 49 Quotations edit Nature is visible spirit spirit is invisible nature Natur ist hiernach der sichtbare Geist Geist die unsichtbare Natur Ideen Introduction History as a whole is a progressive gradually self disclosing revelation of the Absolute System of Transcendental Idealism 1800 Now if the appearance of freedom is necessarily infinite the total evolution of the Absolute is also an infinite process and history itself a never wholly completed revelation of that Absolute which for the sake of consciousness and thus merely for the sake of appearance separates itself into conscious and unconscious the free and the intuitant but which itself however in the inaccessible light wherein it dwells is Eternal Identity and the everlasting ground of harmony between the two System of Transcendental Idealism 1800 Has creation a final goal And if so why was it not reached at once Why was the consummation not realized from the beginning To these questions there is but one answer Because God is Life and not merely Being Philosophical Inquiries into the Nature of Human Freedom 1809 Only he who has tasted freedom can feel the desire to make over everything in its image to spread it throughout the whole universe Philosophical Inquiries into the Nature of Human Freedom 1809 As there is nothing before or outside of God he must contain within himself the ground of his existence All philosophies say this but they speak of this ground as a mere concept without making it something real and actual Philosophical Inquiries into the Nature of Human Freedom 1809 The Godhead is not divine nature or substance but the devouring ferocity of purity that a person is able to approach only with an equal purity Since all Being goes up in it as if in flames it is necessarily unapproachable to anyone still embroiled in Being The Ages of the World c 1815 God then has no beginning only insofar as there is no beginning of his beginning The beginning in God is eternal beginning that is such a one as was beginning from all eternity and still is and also never ceases to be beginning Quoted in Hartshorne amp Reese Philosophers Speak of God Chicago U of Chicago P 1953 p 237 Bibliography editSelected works are listed below 50 Ueber Mythen historische Sagen und Philosopheme der altesten Welt On Myths Historical Legends and Philosophical Themes of Earliest Antiquity 1793 14 Ueber die Moglichkeit einer Form der Philosophie uberhaupt On the Possibility of an Absolute Form of Philosophy 1794 32 Vom Ich als Prinzip der Philosophie oder uber das Unbedingte im menschlichen Wissen Of the I as the Principle of Philosophy or on the Unconditional in Human Knowledge 1795 and Philosophische Briefe uber Dogmatismus und Kriticismus Philosophical Letters on Dogmatism and Criticism 1795 25 1 2 3 in The Unconditional in Human Knowledge Four Early Essays 1794 6 translation and commentary by F Marti Lewisburg Bucknell University Press 1980 De Marcione Paulinarum epistolarum emendatore 1795 51 Abhandlung zur Erlauterung des Idealismus der Wissenschaftslehre 1796 52 Translated as Treatise Explicatory of the Idealism in the Science of Knowledge in Thomas Pfau Idealism and the Endgame of Theory Albany SUNY Press 1994 Ideen zu einer Philosophie der Natur als Einleitung in das Studium dieser Wissenschaft 1797 as Ideas for a Philosophy of Nature as Introduction to the Study of this Science translated by E E Harris and P Heath introduction R Stern Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1988 Von der Weltseele 1798 System des transcendentalen Idealismus 1800 as System of Transcendental Idealism translated by P Heath introduction M Vater Charlottesville University Press of Virginia 1978 Ueber den wahren Begriff der Naturphilosophie und die richtige Art ihre Probleme aufzulosen 1801 Darstellung des Systems meiner Philosophie 1801 also known as Darstellung meines Systems der Philosophie as Presentation of My System of Philosophy translated by M Vater The Philosophical Forum 32 4 Winter 2001 pp 339 371 Bruno oder uber das gottliche und naturliche Prinzip der Dinge 1802 as Bruno or on the Natural and the Divine Principle of Things translated with an introduction by M Vater Albany State University of New York Press 1984 On the Relationship of the Philosophy of Nature to Philosophy in General 1802 Translated by George di Giovanni and H S Harris in Between Kant and Hegel Albany SUNY Press 1985 Philosophie der Kunst lecture delivered 1802 3 published 1859 as The Philosophy of Art 1989 Minnesota Minnesota University Press Vorlesungen uber die Methode des akademischen Studiums delivered 1802 published 1803 as On University Studies translated E S Morgan edited N Guterman Athens Ohio Ohio University Press 1966 Ideas on a Philosophy of Nature as an Introduction to the Study of This Science Second edition 1803 Translated by Priscilla Hayden Roy in Philosophy of German Idealism New York Continuum 1987 System der gesamten Philosophie und der Naturphilosophie insbesondere Nachlass 1804 Translated as System of Philosophy in General and of the Philosophy of Nature in Particular in Thomas Pfau Idealism and the Endgame of Theory Albany SUNY Press 1994 Philosophische Untersuchungen uber das Wesen der menschlichen Freiheit und die damit zusammenhangenden Gegenstande 1809 as Of Human Freedom a translation with critical introduction and notes by J Gutmann Chicago Open Court 1936 also as Philosophical Investigations into the Essence of Human Freedom trans Jeff Love and Johannes Schmidt SUNY Press 2006 Clara Oder uber den Zusammenhang der Natur mit der Geisterwelt Nachlass 1810 as Clara or on Nature s Connection to the Spirit World trans Fiona Steinkamp Albany State University of New York Press 2002 Stuttgart Seminars 1810 translated by Thomas Pfau in Idealism and the Endgame of Theory Albany SUNY Press 1994 Weltalter 1811 15 as The Ages of the World translated with introduction and notes by F de W Bolman jr New York Columbia University Press 1967 also in The Abyss of Freedom Ages of the World trans Judith Norman with an essay by Slavoj Zizek Ann Arbor The University of Michigan Press 1997 Ueber die Gottheiten von Samothrake 1815 as Schelling s Treatise on The Deities of Samothrace a translation and introduction by R F Brown Missoula Mont Scholars Press 1977 Darstellung des philosophischen Empirismus Nachlass 1830 Philosophie der Mythologie lecture 1842 Philosophie der Offenbarung lecture 1854 Zur Geschichte der neueren Philosophie probably 1833 4 as On the History of Modern Philosophy translation and introduction by A Bowie Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1994 Collected works in GermanAA Historisch kritische Schelling Ausgabe der Bayerischen Akademie der Wissenschaften Edited by Hans Michael Baumgartner Wilhelm G Jacobs Jorg Jantzen Hermann Krings and Hermann Zeltner Stuttgart Bad Cannstatt Frommann Holzboog 1976 ff SW Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph von Schellings sammtliche Werke Edited by K F A Schelling 1st division Abteilung 10 vols I X 2nd division 4 vols XI XIV Stuttgart Augsburg 1856 1861 The original edition in new arrangement edited by M Schroter 6 main volumes Hauptbande 6 supplementary volumes Erganzungsbande Munich 1927 ff 2nd edition 1958 ff See also editHistory of aesthetics before the 20th century Nondualism Perennial philosophyNotes edit Nectarios G Limnatis German Idealism and the Problem of Knowledge Kant Fichte Schelling and Hegel Springer 2008 pp 166 177 Frederick Beiser German Idealism The Struggle Against Subjectivism 1781 1801 Harvard University Press 2002 p 470 Frederick Beiser German Idealism The Struggle Against Subjectivism 1781 1801 Harvard University Press 2002 p 483 Joel Harter Coleridge s Philosophy of Faith Symbol Allegory and Hermeneutics Mohr Siebeck 2011 p 91 The term absoluter Idealismus occurs for the first time in 1802 See Ueber das Verhaltniss der Naturphilosophie zur Philosophie uberhaupt or Vorlesungen uber die Methode des academischen Studiums Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling Ideen zu einer Philosophie der Natur als Einleitung in das Studium dieser Wissenschaft 1797 Second Book ch 7 Philosophie der Chemie uberhaupt Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph von Schelling by Saitya Brata Das in Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy 2011 Friedrich Franzosisch Ubersetzung Langenscheidt Deutsch Franzosisch Worterbuch in German and French Langenscheidt Retrieved 20 October 2018 Wilhelm Franzosisch Ubersetzung Langenscheidt Deutsch Franzosisch Worterbuch in German and French Langenscheidt Retrieved 20 October 2018 Joseph Franzosisch Ubersetzung Langenscheidt Deutsch Franzosisch Worterbuch in German and French Langenscheidt Retrieved 20 October 2018 Wells John C 2008 Longman Pronunciation Dictionary 3rd ed Longman ISBN 978 1 4058 8118 0 Bowie Andrew 19 July 2012 Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph von Schelling In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Richard H Popkin ed 31 December 2005 The Columbia History of Western Philosophy Columbia University Press p 529 ISBN 978 0 231 10129 5 a b c Adamson amp Mitchell 1911 p 316 John Morley ed The Fortnightly Review Voll 10 12 London Chapman amp Hall 1870 p 500 Frederick C Beiser ed 1993 The Cambridge Companion to Hegel Cambridge University Press p 419 ISBN 978 1 139 82495 8 History of Philosophy From Thales to the Present Time Volume 2 C Scribner s Sons 1874 p 214 The thesis is available online at the Munich Digitization Center Adamson amp Mitchell 1911 p 316 318 Huttner Jorg Walter Martin 2021 What at the End is the Real in our Ideas A Discourse between Schelling and Obereit Was ist am Ende das Reale in unsern Vorstellungen Ein Diskurs zwischen Schelling und Obereit Schelling Studien 8 3 25 Robert J Richards The Romantic Conception of Life Science and Philosophy in the Age of Goethe 2002 p 149 Richards p 171 note 141 Wallen Martin 2004 City of Health Fields of Disease Revolutions in the Poetry Medicine and Philosophy of Romanticism Ashgate Publishing Ltd p 123 ISBN 978 0 7546 3542 0 Konzett Matthias Encyclopedia of German literature Routledge 2015 p 852 a b c d e f g h i j Adamson amp Mitchell 1911 p 317 See On the Concept of Irony with Continual Reference to Socrates by Soren Kierkegaard 1841 Lara Ostaric Interpreting Schelling Critical Essays Cambridge University Press 2014 p 218 Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling Biography at egs edu Nicolaas A Rupke Alexander von Humboldt A Metabiography University of Chicago Press p 116 The Life of Philip Schaff in Part Autobiographical by David Schaff Tristram Hunt Marx s General The Revolutionary Life of Friedrich Engels Henry Holt and Co 2009 ISBN 978 0 8050 8025 4 pp 45 46 a b Adamson amp Mitchell 1911 p 319 Crites Stephen 1 November 2010 1998 Dialectic and Gospel in the Development of Hegel s Thinking Penn State Press p 62 ISBN 978 0 271 04386 9 Kai Hammermeister The German Aesthetic Tradition Cambridge University Press 2002 p 76 John Laughland Schelling Versus Hegel From German Idealism to Christian Metaphysics Ashgate Publishing Ltd 2007 ISBN 978 0 7546 6118 4 p 119 Christopher John Murray Encyclopedia of the Romantic Era 1760 1850 Taylor amp Francis 2004 ISBN 978 1 57958 422 1 pp 1001 02 The briefest and best account in Schelling himself of Naturphilosophie is that contained in the Einleitung zu dem Ersten Entwurf S W iii A full and lucid statement of Naturphilosophie is that given by K Fischer in his Gesch d n Phil vi 433 692 Adamson amp Mitchell 1911 p 318 It was the philosopher Marie Luise Heuser Kessler who elaborated these parallels and later became assistant to one of the founders of physical self organization theories Hermann Haken at the University of Stuttgart Nobel laureate Manfred Eigen wrote that Heuser Kessler had penetrated to the core of the physical problem of self organization Marie Luise Heuser Wilhelm G Jacobs Ed Schelling und die Selbstorganisation Neue Forschungsperspektiven Duncker amp Humblot Berlin 1994 p 234 ISBN 3 428 08066 1 Andrew Bowie wrote in his book Schelling and Modern European Philosophy London New York 1993 p 34 5 In her account of Schelling s Naturphilosophie Marie Luise Heuser Kessler makes an important distinction between self organization and self reproduction Or on p 38 Heuser Kessler has made the implications of these thoughts particularly clear in relation to Prigogine s Bowie Andrew 1990 Aesthetics and Subjectivity From Kant to Nietzsche Manchester University Press p 89 ISBN 978 0 719 04011 5 Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy 10 May 2017 O Meara Thomas 1982 Romantic Idealism and Roman Catholicism Schelling and the Theologians University of Notre Dame Press p 90 92 ISBN 9780268016104 Habermas Jurgen 1954 Das Absolute und die Geschichte Von der Zwiespaltigkeit in Schellings Denken in German Gummersbach Paul Tillich A History of Christian Thought 438 Simon and Schuster 1972 Gare Arran 2013 Overcoming the Newtonian paradigm The unfinished project of theoretical biology from a Schellingian perspective Progress in Biophysics and Molecular Biology 113 1 5 24 doi 10 1016 j pbiomolbio 2013 03 002 hdl 1959 3 315891 PMID 23562477 Zizek Slavoj 1996 The indivisible remainder An essay on Schelling and related matters London Verso ISBN 978 1 859 84094 8 Zizek Slavoj 2009 The parallax view 1st paperback ed Cambridge Mass MIT ISBN 978 0 262 51268 8 Braidotti Rosi 2014 After Poststructuralism Transitions and Transformations Abingdon on Thames Routledge p 105 ISBN 978 1 317 54681 8 Distaso Leonardo V 2004 The Paradox of Existence Philosophy and Aesthetics in the Young Schelling Springer Science Business Media p 7 ISBN 978 1 402 02490 0 Pagano Maurizio 2007 Introduction The Confrontation between Religious and Secular Thought PDF In Benso Silvia Schroeder Brian eds Contemporary Italian Philosophy Crossing the Borders of Ethics Politics and Religion Albany New York SUNY Press pp 8 9 ISBN 978 0 791 47135 7 For a more complete listing see Stanford bibliography Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph von Schelling Gottlob Christian Storr 1795 De Marcione Paullinarum epistolarum emendatore Rodopi ISBN 978 90 6203 202 0 Adamson amp Mitchell 1911 p 317 fn 1 References edit nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Adamson Robert Mitchell John Malcolm 1911 Schelling Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph von Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 24 11th ed pp 316 319 Further reading editBowie Andrew 1993 Schelling and Modern European Philosophy an Introduction New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 415756 35 8 Ffytche Matt The foundation of the unconscious Schelling Freud and the birth of the modern psyche Cambridge University Press 2011 Gare Arran 2011 From Kant to Schelling and Process Metaphysics Cosmos and History The Journal of Natural and Social Philosophy 7 2 26 69 Fenichel Teresa Schelling Freud and the Philosophical Foundations of Psychoanalysis Uncanny Belonging Routledge 2018 Gentile Andrea 2018 Bewusstsein Anschauung und das Unendliche bei Fichte Schelling und Hegel Uber den unbedingten Grundsatz der Erkenntnis Freiburg Munchen Verlag Karl Alber ISBN 978 3 495 48911 6 Golan Zev 2007 God Man and Nietzsche NY iUniverse The second chapter listed as A dialogue between Schelling Luria and Maimonides examines the similarities between Schelling s texts and the Kabbalah it also offers a religious interpretation of Schelling s identity philosophy Grant Iain Hamilton 2008 Philosophies of Nature after Schelling New York Bloomsbury Academic ISBN 978 1 847064 32 5 Hendrix John Shannon 2005 Aesthetics amp the Philosophy of Spirit From Plotinus to Schelling and Hegel New York Peter Lang ISBN 978 0 820476 32 2 Heuser Kessler Marie Luise 1992 Schelling s Concept of Selforganization In R Friedrich A Wunderlin Ed Evolution of dynamical structures in complex systems Springer Proceedings in Physics Berlin Heidelberg New York Springer 395 415 https link springer com chapter 10 1007 978 3 642 84781 3 21 Heuser Kessler Marie Luise 1986 Die Produktivitat der Natur Schellings Naturphilosophie und das neue Paradigma der Selbstorganisation in den Naturwissenschaften Berlin Duncker amp Humblot ISBN 3 428 06079 2 Le Vincent Schelling and The Sixth Extinction The Environmental Ethics Behind Schelling s Anthropomorphization of Nature Cosmos and History The Journal of Natural and Social Philosophy 13 3 2017 107 129 online Pahman Dylan FWJ Schelling A philosophical influence on Kuyper s social thought Kuyper Center Review 5 2015 26 43 online dead link Stone Alison Nature Ethics and Gender in German Romanticism and Idealism Rowman amp Littlefield 2018 Tilliette Xavier 1970 Schelling une philosophie en devenir two volumes Paris Vrin Encyclopedic historical account of the development of Schelling s work stronger on general exposition and on theology than on Schelling s philosophical arguments Tilliette Xavier 1999 Schelling biographie Calmann Levy collection La vie des philosophes Yates Christopher The Poetic Imagination in Heidegger and Schelling A amp C Black 2013 Wirth Jason M 2005 Schelling Now Contemporary Readings Bloomington Ind Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253217 00 4 Wirth Jason 2015 Schelling s Practice of the Wild New York SUNY ISBN 978 1 4384 5679 9 Zizek Slavoj 1996 The Indivisible Remainder an Essay on Schelling and Related Matters London Verso ISBN 978 1 859849 59 0 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Friedrich Wilhelm Schelling nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling nbsp Wikisource has the text of the Nuttall Encyclopaedia article Schelling Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Works by or about Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling at Internet Archive Works by Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph von Schelling 1807 On the Relation of the Plastic Arts to Nature New York German Publication Society Retrieved 24 September 2010 c 1913 1914 Martin Arndt 1995 Schelling Friedrich Wilhelm von Joseph In Bautz Traugott ed Biographisch Bibliographisches Kirchenlexikon BBKL in German Vol 9 Herzberg Bautz cols 104 138 ISBN 3 88309 058 1 Friedrich Jodl 1890 Schelling Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph von Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie ADB in German Vol 31 Leipzig Duncker amp Humblot pp 6 27 Watson John 1847 1939 1882 Schelling s Transcendental Idealism Chicago S C Griggs and company 1882 Retrieved 28 September 2010 Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph von Schelling by Saitya Brata Das in Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy 2011 Links to texts Copleston Frederick Charles 2003 18th and 19th Century German Philosophy A amp C Black p 138 ISBN 978 0 8264 6901 4 Bohme Traugott 1920 Schelling Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph von Encyclopedia Americana Schelling s partial translations of Dante s Divine Comedy and two essays about it at academia edu Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling amp oldid 1186964321, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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