fbpx
Wikipedia

Karl Christian Friedrich Krause

Karl Christian Friedrich Krause (German: [ˈkʁaʊzə]; 6 May 1781 – 27 September 1832) was a German philosopher whose doctrines became known as Krausism. Krausism, when considered in its totality as a complete, stand-alone philosophical system, had only a small following in Germany, France, and Belgium, in contradistinction to certain other philosophical systems (such as Hegelianism) that had a much larger following in Europe at that time. However, Krausism became very popular and influential in Restoration Spain not as a complete, comprehensive philosophical system per se, but as a broad cultural movement. In Spain, Krausism was known as "Krausismo", and Krausists were known as "Krausistas". Outside of Spain, the Spanish Krausist cultural movement was referred to as Spanish Krausism.

Karl Christian Friedrich Krause
Karl Christian Friedrich Krause, lithograph by Heinrich Dragendorff, published in Die reine d.i. allgemeine Lebenlehre und Philosophie der Geschichte (Göttingen, 1843)
Born6 May 1781
Died27 September 1832 (1832-09-28) (aged 51)
Alma materUniversity of Jena
Era19th-century philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
SchoolContinental philosophy
German idealism
Krausism
Panentheism
Main interests
Mysticism
Notable ideas
Panentheism
Identitätsphilosophie [de]

Early life edit

Krause was born in Eisenberg, Thuringia, in the duchy of Saxe-Gotha-Altenburg, Germany. His parents were Johann Friedrich Gotthard Krause (1 January 1747 - 17 February 1825) and Christiana Friederica Böhme (1755 – 21 December 1784). Karl's father Johann was a teacher at the lyceum in Eisenberg, and in 1795 became a Lutheran pastor and hymn collector in Nobitz.

Studies at the University of Jena, 1797–1802 edit

Educated at first in Eisenberg, in 1797 Karl enrolled in the nearby University of Jena, where he studied philosophy under F. W. J. von Schelling,[1] J. G. Fichte,[2] C. G. Schütz,[3] H. K. A. Eichstädt,[4] and A. W. von Schlegel.[5] He also attended lectures by theologians Johann Jakob Griesbach (1745-1812), Heinrich Eberhard Gottlob Paulus (1761-1851), Karl David Ilgen (1763-1834), and Johann Adolf Jacobi (1769-1847), and lectures by professors in various departments of science and mathematics, including A. J. G. C. Batsch, F. F. Bretschneider, J. F. A. Göttling, J. C. F. Graumüller, J. G. Lenz, J. F. C. von Loder, K. D. M. Stahl, L. J. D. Suckow, and J. H. Voigt. Krause received the degree of Doctor of Philosophy from the University of Jena on 6 October 1801, and became a Privatdozent in 1802.

Marriage and children edit

With characteristic imprudence, on 19 July 1802 Krause married Sophie Amalie Concordia Fuchs (born 1780), without dowry. Amalie was a daughter of Augustin Christian Fuchs (1748-1812) and Christiane Friederike Herrmann. Karl and Amalie had 14 children in all, 12 of whom survived their parents. The children included: Sophie (Sophia) Christiane Friederike Krause[6] (1803 - December 1873), Karl Erasmus Friedrich Krause (20 September 1805 - 29 November 1861), August Julius Gotthard Krause (b. 1809), Maria Sidonia (Sidonie) Krause[7] (14 August 1810 - 26 August 1875), Otto Krause (1812-1872), Henriette Auguste Karoline Emma Krause (b. 1814), Heinrich Karl Gottlieb Krause (b. 1817), Wilhelm August Ernst Heinrich Krause, Friedrich, Ludwig, Hugo, and Maria Krause (b. 1823).

In 1804, lack of pupils compelled Krause to move to Rudolstadt, and later to Dresden, where he gave lessons in music. In 1805 his ideal of a universal world-society led him to join the Freemasons, whose principles seemed to tend in the direction he desired. In Dresden he published two books on Freemasonry, Höhere Vergeistigung der echt überlieferten Grundsymbole der Freimaurerei: in zwölf Logenvorträgen (1811) and Die drei ältesten Kunsterkunden der Freimaurerbrüderschaft (1819), but his opinions attracted opposition from the Masons.

Krause lived for a time in Berlin and became a privatdozent there, but was unable to obtain a professorship. He, therefore, proceeded to Dresden (where he taught Arthur Schopenhauer), and afterwards to Munich, where he died of apoplexy at the very moment when the influence of Franz von Baader had at last obtained a position for him.

Krause is buried in the Alter Südfriedhof (Old South Cemetery) (aka the Alter Südlicher Friedhof) in Munich, Germany.

Identitätsphilosophie, panentheism, and other aspects of Krausism edit

Krause's philosophy, as a whole, is an example of what historians of philosophy refer to as Identitätsphilosophie [de] (philosophy of identity).[8] An Identitätsphilosophie is a philosophical system that posits the fundamental identity of spirit and nature. In Krause's philosophical system, the parts of the system which, technically, constitute its "panentheism", are only parts of a much broader whole. Therefore, although Krause's philosophy is accurately described as being "panentheistic", Krausism as a whole is better categorized as an Identitätsphilosophie which features panentheism as one of its primary fundamental components.

Krause endeavoured to reconcile the ideas of a God known by faith or conscience and the world as known to sense. According to Krause, God - intuitively known by conscience - is not a personality (which implies limitations), but an all-inclusive essence (Wesen), which contains the universe within itself. Krause used the term panentheism (Panentheismus in German) in an attempt to accurately describe and encapsulate - in a single technical term - diverse aspects of his philosophical system which were cosmo-theological (simultaneously cosmological and theological) in nature. When considered from a theological perspective, panentheism can be viewed, broadly, as a synthesis of various elements derived from both monotheism and pantheism.

Etymology of "panentheism" edit

Historians of philosophy usually give Krause sole credit for coining the term "panentheism" in 1828. However, according to evidence provided by Philip Clayton,[9] the German idealist philosopher Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph von Schelling (1775-1854) had already used this term (albeit in a slightly different form - in the form of the phrase "pan + en + theism"), and also had discussed numerous concepts and issues related to it, in his Philosophische Untersuchungen über das Wesen der menschlichen Freiheit und die damit zusammenhängenden Gegenstände (1809) (Philosophical Investigations into the Essence of Human Freedom and Matters Connected Therewith).[10] Additionally, Krause and Schelling scholars now recognize that Krause's philosophy, as a whole, reflects, and partially incorporates, many of the themes, concepts and insights present in Schelling's Naturphilosophie (Philosophy of Nature), which itself is a form of panentheism. It now appears that Schelling's work may have provided much more of the framework of Krausean panentheism than historians of philosophy in the past had realized. Based on Clayton's evidence, it is quite possible that Krause, who was well-acquainted with Schelling and his works, adopted at least some of the initial basic concepts of his own panentheistic system from various works of Schelling (especially from Schelling's Philosophical Investigations into the Essence of Human Freedom), and then gradually developed these basic concepts into his own very elaborate version of panentheism. Looking forward, it might be more accurate for historians of philosophy to now say, that Schelling, in 1809, provided not only the terminological framework of Krausean panentheism, but also some of the basic concepts (at least), of what was to become Krausean panentheism, and that Krause not only adopted and greatly expanded upon these concepts and insights of Schelling's, but that he also adopted Schelling's phrase "pan + en + theism", and that in 1828 he merely reduced Schelling's phrase into a more concise and compact form (as the single term "panentheism"), in an attempt to succinctly and adequately describe - in a single term - the cosmo-theological aspects of his own philosophical system.

In his published works, Krause first used the term "panentheism" (in its German-language form "panentheismus") in Vorlesungen über das System der Philosophie (Göttingen: 1828).[11] The term "panentheismus" next appears in his Vorlesungen über die Grundwahrheiten der Wissenschaft, zugleich in ihrer Beziehung zu dem Leben. Nebst einer kurzen Darstellung und Würdigung der bisherigen Systeme der Philosophie, vornehmlich der neusten von Kant, Fichte, Schelling und Hegel, und der Lehre Jacobi's. (Göttingen: 1829).[12]

Krause argued that the world itself and mankind, its highest component, constitute an organism (Gliedbau), and the universe is therefore a divine organism (Wesengliedbau). The process of development is the formation of higher unities, and the last stage is the identification of the world with God. The form which this development takes, according to Krause, is Right or the Perfect Law.

Right is not the sum of the conditions of external liberty but of absolute liberty, and embraces all the existence of nature, reason and humanity. It is the mode, or rationale, of all progress from the lower to the highest unity or identification. By its operation, the reality of nature and reason rises into the reality of humanity. God is the reality which transcends and includes both nature and humanity. Right is, therefore, at once the dynamic and the safeguard of progress.

Ideal society results from the widening of the organic operation of this principle from the individual man to small groups of men, and finally to mankind as a whole. The differences disappear as the inherent identity of structure predominates in an ever-increasing degree, and in the final unity Man is merged in God. Krause's theory of the world and of humanity is therefore universal and idealistic.

Animal rights edit

Krause was an advocate of animal rights and has been cited as the first philosopher to argue for animal rights in the context of a philosophy of law. In his book Das System der Rechtsphilosophie (published posthumously in 1874), he argued that non-human animals should hold a right not to be subjected to pain as well as a right to general physical well-being.[13] Krause rejected the anthropocentric premises of Fichte. He held the view that animals are persons whose rights must be protected by law.[14]

Influence and works edit

The comparatively small area of Krause's influence was due partly to him being overshadowed by Schelling and Hegel, and partly to two difficulties present in his written works. The spirit of his thought is mystical and by no means easy to follow, and this problem is accentuated, even for German readers, by his use of artificial and/or invented terminology. He makes use of Germanized foreign terms which are unintelligible to the ordinary man.

His principal works are (beside those quoted above): Entwurf des Systems der Philosophie (1804), System der Sittenlehre (1810), and Das Urbild der Menschheit (1811). He left behind at his death a mass of unpublished notes, some of which have been collected and published by his disciples K. D. A. Röder,[15] J. H. Ahrens,[16] F. W. T. Schliephake,[17] H. K. von Leonhardi[18] (Krause's son-in-law), Guillaume Tiberghien,[19] and others.

Krausism became particularly influential in Spain in the 19th century, where Krause's ideas were introduced and promoted by Julián Sanz del Río[20] (1814-1869), an academic based in Madrid. Krause's philosophy flourished in Spain (where it was known as "Krausismo") because it contains elements which were very appealing - at the time - to a diverse class of people. Krausism in Spain was popular and successful, more as a broad cultural movement rather than as a specialised form of cosmo-theology. As a cultural movement, it emphasised scientific rationalism, combined with Christian spirituality, a liberal commitment to individual freedom, and opposition to privilege and arbitrary power.[21] Spanish intellectuals influenced by Krause include Francisco Giner de los Ríos (1839-1915) and Gumersindo de Azcárate (1840-1917). In addition, Krause's influence extended to Latin America, where his work made an impact on Hipólito Yrigoyen (1852-1933), José Batlle y Ordóñez (1856-1929) and Juan José Arévalo (1904-1990).[22] Richard Gott has argued that Krause influenced José Martí (1853-1895), Fidel Castro (1926-2016) (through Martí and other Cuban thinkers), and Che Guevara (1928-1967) (through the influence of Yrigoyen).[23]

Selected publications edit

  • Krause, Karl Christian Friedrich: Ausgewählte Schriften. Edited by Enrique M. Ureña and Erich Fuchs. Stuttgart: Frommann-Holzboog, ISBN 978-3-7728-2340-4.
    • Vol. 1: Entwurf des Systemes der Philosophie. Erste Abtheilung enthaltend die allgemeine Philosophie, nebst einer Anleitung zur Naturphilosophie. Ed. by Thomas Bach and Olaf Breidbach. 2007, ISBN 978-3-7728-2341-1.
    • Vol. 2: Philosophisch-freimaurerische Schriften (1808-1832). Ed. and introduced by Johannes Seidel, Enrique M. Ureña and Erich Fuchs. 2008, ISBN 978-3-7728-2342-8.
    • Vol. 3: Vermischte Schriften. 2014, ISBN 978-3-7728-2343-5.
    • Vol. 5: Das Urbild der Menschheit. Ein Versuch. Dresden 1811. 2017, ISBN 978-3-7728-2345-9.
  • Das System der Rechtsphilosophie (Leipzig: F. A. Brockhaus, 1874)

Notes edit

  1. ^ Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph von Schelling (1775-1854)
  2. ^ Johann Gottlieb Fichte (1762-1814)
  3. ^ Christian Gottfried Schütz (19 May 1747 - 7 May 1832)
  4. ^ Heinrich Karl Abraham Eichstädt (8 August 1772 - 4 March 1848)
  5. ^ August Wilhelm von Schlegel (8 September 1767 - 12 May 1845)
  6. ^ On 4 April 1825 Sophie (Sophia) Christiane Friederike Krause married Johann Heinrich Plath (25 August 1802 - 16 November 1874), who became a famous German Sinologist.
  7. ^ On 19 October 1841 Maria Sidonia (Sidonie) Krause married Hermann Karl von Leonhardi (1809-1875), a German philosopher and botanist who became one of Karl C. F. Krause's primary disciples. Sidonie von Leonhardi's date of death (26 August 1875) is given in an article on Hermann Karl von Leonhardi by Dr. Paul Hohlfeld which appeared in Österreichischer Schulbote (Austrian School Messenger), vol. 25 (1875), p. 518.
  8. ^ Some of Schelling's early philosophical works are often cited as being groundbreaking works in the field of Identitätsphilosophie. These works include Erster Entwurf eines Systems der Naturphilosophie (1799) (First Plan of a System of the Philosophy of Nature), System der transcendentalen Idealismus (1800) (System of Transcendental Idealism), and System der gesammten Philosophie und der Naturphilosophie insbesondere (1804) (System of the Whole of Philosophy and of the Philosophy of Nature in Particular).
  9. ^ Philip Clayton, "Panentheisms East and West", Sophia 49 (2) (June 2010), p. 183.
  10. ^ This work is also referred to, more briefly, as Freiheitsschrift (Freedom Text, Freedom Essay, Essay on Freedom, or Of Human Freedom).
  11. ^ Lectures on the System of Philosophy - In this work, the term "panentheismus" appears on page 256.
  12. ^ Lectures on the Basic Truths of Science and their Relationship to Life. In Addition to a Brief Presentation and Appreciation of the Previous Systems of Philosophy, especially the Most Recent Ones from Kant, Fichte, Schelling and Hegel, and Jacobi's Teaching. - In this work, the term "panentheismus" appears on page 484, and it also appears as a term listed in the book's Index (on page 573, referring to its appearance on page 484).
  13. ^ Birnbacher D. (1998) Legal Rights for Natural Objects a Philosophical Critique. In: Morscher E., Neumaier O., Simons P. (eds) Applied Ethics in a Troubled World. Philosophical Studies Series, volume 73. Springer, Dordrecht.
  14. ^ Dierksmeier, Clause (2020). "Krause on Animal Rights and Ecological Sustainability". Rechtsphilosophie. 1: 5–19. doi:10.5771/2364-1355-2020-1-5. S2CID 219039378.
  15. ^ Karl David August Röder (23 June 1806 - 20 December 1879)
  16. ^ Julius Heinrich Ahrens (14 July 1808 - 2 August 1874)
  17. ^ Friedrich Wilhelm Theodor Schliephake (28 April 1808 - 8 September 1871)
  18. ^ Hermann Karl von Leonhardi (12 March 1809 - 21 August 1875). His original full name was Peter Carl (Karl) Pius Gustav Hermann von Leonhardi. On 19 October 1841 he married Marie Sidonie Krause (aka Maria Sidonia Krause) (14 August 1810 - 1875), who was a daughter of K. C. F. Krause (1781-1832).
  19. ^ Guillaume Tiberghien (9 August 1819 - 28 November 1901)
  20. ^ Julián Sanz del Río (10 March 1814 - 12 October 1869)
  21. ^ Heywood, Paul (2003). Marxism and the Failure of Organised Socialism in Spain, 1879-1936. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 21–23. ISBN 9780521530569. Retrieved 8 May 2014.
  22. ^ Delaney, Jeane Hunter (February 2001). "Karl Christian Friedrich Krause and His Influence in the Hispanic World (review)". Hispanic American Historical Review. 81 (1). Duke University Press: 176–178. doi:10.1215/00182168-81-1-176. S2CID 144050389. Retrieved 7 May 2014.
  23. ^ Gott, Richard (2002). Karl Krause and the Ideological Origins of the Cuban Revolution (PDF). University of London Institute of Latin American Studies Occasional Papers. London: Institute of Latin American Studies. ISSN 0953-6825. Retrieved 8 May 2014.

References edit

  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Krause, Karl Christian Friedrich". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. This article in turn cites:
    • Heinrich Simon Lindemann (12 July 1807 - 27 January 1855) - Uebersichtliche Darstellung des Lebens und der Wissenschaftlehre Carl Chr. Fdr. Krause's, und dessen Standpunktes zur Freimaurerbrüderschaft (München: Ernst August Fleischmann, 1839)
    • Paul Theodor Hohlfeld (24 March 1840 - 21 July 1910) - Krause'sche Philosophie in ihrem geschichtlichen Zusammenhange und in ihrer Bedeutung für das Geistesleben der Gegenwart (Jena: Hermann Wilhelm Costenoble, 1879)
    • August Procksch (in full: Johann Friedrich August Procksch) (10 April 1841 - 4 August 1924) - Karl Christian Friedrich Krause: ein Lebensbild nach seinen Briefen dargestellt; mit Krauses Photographie nach Hänels Büste (Leipzig: Friedrich Wilhelm Grunow, 1880) (Karl Christian Friedrich Krause: A Biography based on his Letters; with Krause's Photograph after Hänel's Bust) [1]
    • Rudolf Christoph Eucken (5 January 1846 - 15 September 1926) - Zur Erinnerung an K. Ch. F. Krause: Festrede Gehalten zu Eisenberg am 100. Geburtstage des Philosophen von Rud. Eucken (Leipzig: Veit & Comp., 1881)
    • B. R. Martin (Bruno Richard Martin) (pen-name: Theodor Busch?) (born 13 July 1864 in Wurzen, Germany; attended Leipzig University in 1881-1883 as a student in theology, received a doctor of philosophy degree from the University of Erlangen about 1886, and was active as an evangelical Lutheran pastor from about 1889) - Karl Christian Friedrich Krause's Leben, Lehre und Bedeutung (Leipzig: Joseph Gabriel Findel, 1881) (new edition, Leipzig: Verlag von Otto Heinrichs, 1885)
    • Histories of Philosophy by Eduard Zeller, Wilhelm Windelband and Harald Høffding.

Further reading edit

  • Göcke, Benedikt Paul (born 1981): The Panentheism of Karl Christian Friedrich Krause (1781-1832). From Transcendental Philosophy to Metaphysics.Peter Lang, New York. ISBN 978-3-631-74689-9
  • Orden Jiménez, Rafael Valeriano (born 1965): (1998) El Sistema de la Filosofía de Krause. Génesis y desarrollo del panenteísmo. UPCo, Madrid (Spain). ISBN 84-89708-30-4.
  • Göcke, Benedikt Paul: "Alles in Gott? Zur Aktualität des Panentheismus Karl Christian Friedrich Krauses." Regensburg: Pustet Verlag, ISBN 978-3791724300
  • Göcke, Benedikt Paul: "Gott und die Welt? Bemerkungen zu Karl Christian Friedrich Krauses System der Philosophie" In: Theologie und Philosophie. Vol. 87 (1). 25-45. 2012
  • Göcke, Benedikt Paul. "On the Importance of Karl Christian Friedrich Krause's Panentheism." In: Zygon. Vol. 48 (2). 364-379. 2013
  • Ward, Thomas (born 1953): (2004) La teoría literaria. Romanticismo, krausismo y modernismo ante la globalización industrial University, Mississippi: Romance Monographs, No. 61. ISBN 1-889441-14-7.
  • Stoetzer, Otto Carlos (28 June 1921 - 25 March 2011): Karl Christian Friedrich Krause and his Influence in the Hispanic World (Köln: Böhlau, 1998) ISBN 3-412-13597-6

karl, christian, friedrich, krause, this, article, about, philosopher, other, uses, karl, kraus, disambiguation, german, ˈkʁaʊzə, 1781, september, 1832, german, philosopher, whose, doctrines, became, known, krausism, krausism, when, considered, totality, compl. This article is about the philosopher For other uses see Karl Kraus disambiguation Karl Christian Friedrich Krause German ˈkʁaʊze 6 May 1781 27 September 1832 was a German philosopher whose doctrines became known as Krausism Krausism when considered in its totality as a complete stand alone philosophical system had only a small following in Germany France and Belgium in contradistinction to certain other philosophical systems such as Hegelianism that had a much larger following in Europe at that time However Krausism became very popular and influential in Restoration Spain not as a complete comprehensive philosophical system per se but as a broad cultural movement In Spain Krausism was known as Krausismo and Krausists were known as Krausistas Outside of Spain the Spanish Krausist cultural movement was referred to as Spanish Krausism Karl Christian Friedrich KrauseKarl Christian Friedrich Krause lithograph by Heinrich Dragendorff published in Die reine d i allgemeine Lebenlehre und Philosophie der Geschichte Gottingen 1843 Born6 May 1781Eisenberg Saxe Gotha AltenburgDied27 September 1832 1832 09 28 aged 51 MunichAlma materUniversity of JenaEra19th century philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolContinental philosophyGerman idealismKrausismPanentheismMain interestsMysticismNotable ideasPanentheismIdentitatsphilosophie de Contents 1 Early life 1 1 Studies at the University of Jena 1797 1802 1 2 Marriage and children 2 Identitatsphilosophie panentheism and other aspects of Krausism 2 1 Etymology of panentheism 2 2 Animal rights 3 Influence and works 4 Selected publications 5 Notes 6 References 7 Further readingEarly life editKrause was born in Eisenberg Thuringia in the duchy of Saxe Gotha Altenburg Germany His parents were Johann Friedrich Gotthard Krause 1 January 1747 17 February 1825 and Christiana Friederica Bohme 1755 21 December 1784 Karl s father Johann was a teacher at the lyceum in Eisenberg and in 1795 became a Lutheran pastor and hymn collector in Nobitz Studies at the University of Jena 1797 1802 edit Educated at first in Eisenberg in 1797 Karl enrolled in the nearby University of Jena where he studied philosophy under F W J von Schelling 1 J G Fichte 2 C G Schutz 3 H K A Eichstadt 4 and A W von Schlegel 5 He also attended lectures by theologians Johann Jakob Griesbach 1745 1812 Heinrich Eberhard Gottlob Paulus 1761 1851 Karl David Ilgen 1763 1834 and Johann Adolf Jacobi 1769 1847 and lectures by professors in various departments of science and mathematics including A J G C Batsch F F Bretschneider J F A Gottling J C F Graumuller J G Lenz J F C von Loder K D M Stahl L J D Suckow and J H Voigt Krause received the degree of Doctor of Philosophy from the University of Jena on 6 October 1801 and became a Privatdozent in 1802 Marriage and children edit With characteristic imprudence on 19 July 1802 Krause married Sophie Amalie Concordia Fuchs born 1780 without dowry Amalie was a daughter of Augustin Christian Fuchs 1748 1812 and Christiane Friederike Herrmann Karl and Amalie had 14 children in all 12 of whom survived their parents The children included Sophie Sophia Christiane Friederike Krause 6 1803 December 1873 Karl Erasmus Friedrich Krause 20 September 1805 29 November 1861 August Julius Gotthard Krause b 1809 Maria Sidonia Sidonie Krause 7 14 August 1810 26 August 1875 Otto Krause 1812 1872 Henriette Auguste Karoline Emma Krause b 1814 Heinrich Karl Gottlieb Krause b 1817 Wilhelm August Ernst Heinrich Krause Friedrich Ludwig Hugo and Maria Krause b 1823 In 1804 lack of pupils compelled Krause to move to Rudolstadt and later to Dresden where he gave lessons in music In 1805 his ideal of a universal world society led him to join the Freemasons whose principles seemed to tend in the direction he desired In Dresden he published two books on Freemasonry Hohere Vergeistigung der echt uberlieferten Grundsymbole der Freimaurerei in zwolf Logenvortragen 1811 and Die drei altesten Kunsterkunden der Freimaurerbruderschaft 1819 but his opinions attracted opposition from the Masons Krause lived for a time in Berlin and became a privatdozent there but was unable to obtain a professorship He therefore proceeded to Dresden where he taught Arthur Schopenhauer and afterwards to Munich where he died of apoplexy at the very moment when the influence of Franz von Baader had at last obtained a position for him Krause is buried in the Alter Sudfriedhof Old South Cemetery aka the Alter Sudlicher Friedhof in Munich Germany Identitatsphilosophie panentheism and other aspects of Krausism editKrause s philosophy as a whole is an example of what historians of philosophy refer to as Identitatsphilosophie de philosophy of identity 8 An Identitatsphilosophie is a philosophical system that posits the fundamental identity of spirit and nature In Krause s philosophical system the parts of the system which technically constitute its panentheism are only parts of a much broader whole Therefore although Krause s philosophy is accurately described as being panentheistic Krausism as a whole is better categorized as an Identitatsphilosophie which features panentheism as one of its primary fundamental components Krause endeavoured to reconcile the ideas of a God known by faith or conscience and the world as known to sense According to Krause God intuitively known by conscience is not a personality which implies limitations but an all inclusive essence Wesen which contains the universe within itself Krause used the term panentheism Panentheismus in German in an attempt to accurately describe and encapsulate in a single technical term diverse aspects of his philosophical system which were cosmo theological simultaneously cosmological and theological in nature When considered from a theological perspective panentheism can be viewed broadly as a synthesis of various elements derived from both monotheism and pantheism Etymology of panentheism edit Historians of philosophy usually give Krause sole credit for coining the term panentheism in 1828 However according to evidence provided by Philip Clayton 9 the German idealist philosopher Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph von Schelling 1775 1854 had already used this term albeit in a slightly different form in the form of the phrase pan en theism and also had discussed numerous concepts and issues related to it in his Philosophische Untersuchungen uber das Wesen der menschlichen Freiheit und die damit zusammenhangenden Gegenstande 1809 Philosophical Investigations into the Essence of Human Freedom and Matters Connected Therewith 10 Additionally Krause and Schelling scholars now recognize that Krause s philosophy as a whole reflects and partially incorporates many of the themes concepts and insights present in Schelling s Naturphilosophie Philosophy of Nature which itself is a form of panentheism It now appears that Schelling s work may have provided much more of the framework of Krausean panentheism than historians of philosophy in the past had realized Based on Clayton s evidence it is quite possible that Krause who was well acquainted with Schelling and his works adopted at least some of the initial basic concepts of his own panentheistic system from various works of Schelling especially from Schelling s Philosophical Investigations into the Essence of Human Freedom and then gradually developed these basic concepts into his own very elaborate version of panentheism Looking forward it might be more accurate for historians of philosophy to now say that Schelling in 1809 provided not only the terminological framework of Krausean panentheism but also some of the basic concepts at least of what was to become Krausean panentheism and that Krause not only adopted and greatly expanded upon these concepts and insights of Schelling s but that he also adopted Schelling s phrase pan en theism and that in 1828 he merely reduced Schelling s phrase into a more concise and compact form as the single term panentheism in an attempt to succinctly and adequately describe in a single term the cosmo theological aspects of his own philosophical system In his published works Krause first used the term panentheism in its German language form panentheismus in Vorlesungen uber das System der Philosophie Gottingen 1828 11 The term panentheismus next appears in his Vorlesungen uber die Grundwahrheiten der Wissenschaft zugleich in ihrer Beziehung zu dem Leben Nebst einer kurzen Darstellung und Wurdigung der bisherigen Systeme der Philosophie vornehmlich der neusten von Kant Fichte Schelling und Hegel und der Lehre Jacobi s Gottingen 1829 12 Krause argued that the world itself and mankind its highest component constitute an organism Gliedbau and the universe is therefore a divine organism Wesengliedbau The process of development is the formation of higher unities and the last stage is the identification of the world with God The form which this development takes according to Krause is Right or the Perfect Law Right is not the sum of the conditions of external liberty but of absolute liberty and embraces all the existence of nature reason and humanity It is the mode or rationale of all progress from the lower to the highest unity or identification By its operation the reality of nature and reason rises into the reality of humanity God is the reality which transcends and includes both nature and humanity Right is therefore at once the dynamic and the safeguard of progress Ideal society results from the widening of the organic operation of this principle from the individual man to small groups of men and finally to mankind as a whole The differences disappear as the inherent identity of structure predominates in an ever increasing degree and in the final unity Man is merged in God Krause s theory of the world and of humanity is therefore universal and idealistic Animal rights edit Krause was an advocate of animal rights and has been cited as the first philosopher to argue for animal rights in the context of a philosophy of law In his book Das System der Rechtsphilosophie published posthumously in 1874 he argued that non human animals should hold a right not to be subjected to pain as well as a right to general physical well being 13 Krause rejected the anthropocentric premises of Fichte He held the view that animals are persons whose rights must be protected by law 14 Influence and works editThe comparatively small area of Krause s influence was due partly to him being overshadowed by Schelling and Hegel and partly to two difficulties present in his written works The spirit of his thought is mystical and by no means easy to follow and this problem is accentuated even for German readers by his use of artificial and or invented terminology He makes use of Germanized foreign terms which are unintelligible to the ordinary man His principal works are beside those quoted above Entwurf des Systems der Philosophie 1804 System der Sittenlehre 1810 and Das Urbild der Menschheit 1811 He left behind at his death a mass of unpublished notes some of which have been collected and published by his disciples K D A Roder 15 J H Ahrens 16 F W T Schliephake 17 H K von Leonhardi 18 Krause s son in law Guillaume Tiberghien 19 and others Krausism became particularly influential in Spain in the 19th century where Krause s ideas were introduced and promoted by Julian Sanz del Rio 20 1814 1869 an academic based in Madrid Krause s philosophy flourished in Spain where it was known as Krausismo because it contains elements which were very appealing at the time to a diverse class of people Krausism in Spain was popular and successful more as a broad cultural movement rather than as a specialised form of cosmo theology As a cultural movement it emphasised scientific rationalism combined with Christian spirituality a liberal commitment to individual freedom and opposition to privilege and arbitrary power 21 Spanish intellectuals influenced by Krause include Francisco Giner de los Rios 1839 1915 and Gumersindo de Azcarate 1840 1917 In addition Krause s influence extended to Latin America where his work made an impact on Hipolito Yrigoyen 1852 1933 Jose Batlle y Ordonez 1856 1929 and Juan Jose Arevalo 1904 1990 22 Richard Gott has argued that Krause influenced Jose Marti 1853 1895 Fidel Castro 1926 2016 through Marti and other Cuban thinkers and Che Guevara 1928 1967 through the influence of Yrigoyen 23 Selected publications editKrause Karl Christian Friedrich Ausgewahlte Schriften Edited by Enrique M Urena and Erich Fuchs Stuttgart Frommann Holzboog ISBN 978 3 7728 2340 4 Vol 1 Entwurf des Systemes der Philosophie Erste Abtheilung enthaltend die allgemeine Philosophie nebst einer Anleitung zur Naturphilosophie Ed by Thomas Bach and Olaf Breidbach 2007 ISBN 978 3 7728 2341 1 Vol 2 Philosophisch freimaurerische Schriften 1808 1832 Ed and introduced by Johannes Seidel Enrique M Urena and Erich Fuchs 2008 ISBN 978 3 7728 2342 8 Vol 3 Vermischte Schriften 2014 ISBN 978 3 7728 2343 5 Vol 5 Das Urbild der Menschheit Ein Versuch Dresden 1811 2017 ISBN 978 3 7728 2345 9 Das System der Rechtsphilosophie Leipzig F A Brockhaus 1874 Notes edit Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph von Schelling 1775 1854 Johann Gottlieb Fichte 1762 1814 Christian Gottfried Schutz 19 May 1747 7 May 1832 Heinrich Karl Abraham Eichstadt 8 August 1772 4 March 1848 August Wilhelm von Schlegel 8 September 1767 12 May 1845 On 4 April 1825 Sophie Sophia Christiane Friederike Krause married Johann Heinrich Plath 25 August 1802 16 November 1874 who became a famous German Sinologist On 19 October 1841 Maria Sidonia Sidonie Krause married Hermann Karl von Leonhardi 1809 1875 a German philosopher and botanist who became one of Karl C F Krause s primary disciples Sidonie von Leonhardi s date of death 26 August 1875 is given in an article on Hermann Karl von Leonhardi by Dr Paul Hohlfeld which appeared in Osterreichischer Schulbote Austrian School Messenger vol 25 1875 p 518 Some of Schelling s early philosophical works are often cited as being groundbreaking works in the field of Identitatsphilosophie These works include Erster Entwurf eines Systems der Naturphilosophie 1799 First Plan of a System of the Philosophy of Nature System der transcendentalen Idealismus 1800 System of Transcendental Idealism and System der gesammten Philosophie und der Naturphilosophie insbesondere 1804 System of the Whole of Philosophy and of the Philosophy of Nature in Particular Philip Clayton Panentheisms East and West Sophia 49 2 June 2010 p 183 This work is also referred to more briefly as Freiheitsschrift Freedom Text Freedom Essay Essay on Freedom or Of Human Freedom Lectures on the System of Philosophy In this work the term panentheismus appears on page 256 Lectures on the Basic Truths of Science and their Relationship to Life In Addition to a Brief Presentation and Appreciation of the Previous Systems of Philosophy especially the Most Recent Ones from Kant Fichte Schelling and Hegel and Jacobi s Teaching In this work the term panentheismus appears on page 484 and it also appears as a term listed in the book s Index on page 573 referring to its appearance on page 484 Birnbacher D 1998 Legal Rights for Natural Objects a Philosophical Critique In Morscher E Neumaier O Simons P eds Applied Ethics in a Troubled World Philosophical Studies Series volume 73 Springer Dordrecht Dierksmeier Clause 2020 Krause on Animal Rights and Ecological Sustainability Rechtsphilosophie 1 5 19 doi 10 5771 2364 1355 2020 1 5 S2CID 219039378 Karl David August Roder 23 June 1806 20 December 1879 Julius Heinrich Ahrens 14 July 1808 2 August 1874 Friedrich Wilhelm Theodor Schliephake 28 April 1808 8 September 1871 Hermann Karl von Leonhardi 12 March 1809 21 August 1875 His original full name was Peter Carl Karl Pius Gustav Hermann von Leonhardi On 19 October 1841 he married Marie Sidonie Krause aka Maria Sidonia Krause 14 August 1810 1875 who was a daughter of K C F Krause 1781 1832 Guillaume Tiberghien 9 August 1819 28 November 1901 Julian Sanz del Rio 10 March 1814 12 October 1869 Heywood Paul 2003 Marxism and the Failure of Organised Socialism in Spain 1879 1936 Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 21 23 ISBN 9780521530569 Retrieved 8 May 2014 Delaney Jeane Hunter February 2001 Karl Christian Friedrich Krause and His Influence in the Hispanic World review Hispanic American Historical Review 81 1 Duke University Press 176 178 doi 10 1215 00182168 81 1 176 S2CID 144050389 Retrieved 7 May 2014 Gott Richard 2002 Karl Krause and the Ideological Origins of the Cuban Revolution PDF University of London Institute of Latin American Studies Occasional Papers London Institute of Latin American Studies ISSN 0953 6825 Retrieved 8 May 2014 References edit nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Krause Karl Christian Friedrich Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press This article in turn cites Heinrich Simon Lindemann 12 July 1807 27 January 1855 Uebersichtliche Darstellung des Lebens und der Wissenschaftlehre Carl Chr Fdr Krause s und dessen Standpunktes zur Freimaurerbruderschaft Munchen Ernst August Fleischmann 1839 Paul Theodor Hohlfeld 24 March 1840 21 July 1910 Krause sche Philosophie in ihrem geschichtlichen Zusammenhange und in ihrer Bedeutung fur das Geistesleben der Gegenwart Jena Hermann Wilhelm Costenoble 1879 August Procksch in full Johann Friedrich August Procksch 10 April 1841 4 August 1924 Karl Christian Friedrich Krause ein Lebensbild nach seinen Briefen dargestellt mit Krauses Photographie nach Hanels Buste Leipzig Friedrich Wilhelm Grunow 1880 Karl Christian Friedrich Krause A Biography based on his Letters with Krause s Photograph after Hanel s Bust 1 Rudolf Christoph Eucken 5 January 1846 15 September 1926 Zur Erinnerung an K Ch F Krause Festrede Gehalten zu Eisenberg am 100 Geburtstage des Philosophen von Rud Eucken Leipzig Veit amp Comp 1881 B R Martin Bruno Richard Martin pen name Theodor Busch born 13 July 1864 in Wurzen Germany attended Leipzig University in 1881 1883 as a student in theology received a doctor of philosophy degree from the University of Erlangen about 1886 and was active as an evangelical Lutheran pastor from about 1889 Karl Christian Friedrich Krause s Leben Lehre und Bedeutung Leipzig Joseph Gabriel Findel 1881 new edition Leipzig Verlag von Otto Heinrichs 1885 Histories of Philosophy by Eduard Zeller Wilhelm Windelband and Harald Hoffding Further reading editGocke Benedikt Paul born 1981 The Panentheism of Karl Christian Friedrich Krause 1781 1832 From Transcendental Philosophy to Metaphysics Peter Lang New York ISBN 978 3 631 74689 9 Orden Jimenez Rafael Valeriano born 1965 1998 El Sistema de la Filosofia de Krause Genesis y desarrollo del panenteismo UPCo Madrid Spain ISBN 84 89708 30 4 Gocke Benedikt Paul Alles in Gott Zur Aktualitat des Panentheismus Karl Christian Friedrich Krauses Regensburg Pustet Verlag ISBN 978 3791724300 Gocke Benedikt Paul Gott und die Welt Bemerkungen zu Karl Christian Friedrich Krauses System der Philosophie In Theologie und Philosophie Vol 87 1 25 45 2012 Gocke Benedikt Paul On the Importance of Karl Christian Friedrich Krause s Panentheism In Zygon Vol 48 2 364 379 2013 Ward Thomas born 1953 2004 La teoria literaria Romanticismo krausismo y modernismo ante la globalizacion industrial University Mississippi Romance Monographs No 61 ISBN 1 889441 14 7 Stoetzer Otto Carlos 28 June 1921 25 March 2011 Karl Christian Friedrich Krause and his Influence in the Hispanic World Koln Bohlau 1998 ISBN 3 412 13597 6 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Karl Christian Friedrich Krause amp oldid 1220808331, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.