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Philipp Mainländer

Philipp Mainländer (5 October 1841 – 1 April 1876) was a German philosopher and poet. Born Philipp Batz, he later changed his name to "Mainländer" in homage to his hometown, Offenbach am Main.

Philipp Mainländer
Mainländer c. 1867
Born
Philipp Batz

(1841-10-05)5 October 1841
Died1 April 1876(1876-04-01) (aged 34)
Offenbach am Main, Grand Duchy of Hesse, German Empire
EducationCommercial school, Dresden
Notable workDie Philosophie der Erlösung
Era19th-century philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
School
Main interests
Notable ideas

In his central work Die Philosophie der Erlösung (The Philosophy of Redemption or The Philosophy of Salvation)[4] — according to Theodor Lessing, "perhaps the most radical system of pessimism known to philosophical literature"[Note 1] — Mainländer proclaims that life is worthless, and that "the will, ignited by the knowledge that non-being is better than being, is the supreme principle of morality."[Note 2]

Biography edit

Early life and career edit

 
Mainländer with his sister Minna in 1855

Born in Offenbach am Main, on October 5, 1841 "as a child of marital rape",[Note 3] Philipp Mainländer grew up the youngest of six siblings. One of his brothers was mentally ill, according to Cesare Lombroso in The Man of Genius, as had been one of his grandfathers who had died at the age of 33.[8]

Mainländer attended the Realschule in Offenbach from 1848 to 1856.[2]: 203  In 1856, at his father's instruction, he entered the commercial school of Dresden to become a merchant. Two years later, he was employed in a trading house in Naples, Italy, where he learned Italian and acquainted himself with the works of Dante, Petrarca, Boccaccio, and – most notably – Leopardi. Mainländer would later describe his five Neapolitan years as the happiest ones of his life.

During this critical period of his life, Mainländer discovered Arthur Schopenhauer's central work The World as Will and Representation. Nineteen years old at the time, he would later describe the event as a penetrating revelation, referring to February 1860 as the "most important of [his] life".[Note 4] Indeed, Schopenhauer would remain the most important influence on Mainländer's later philosophical work.

In 1863, Mainländer returned to Germany to work in his father's business. In the same year, he also penned the three-part poem Die letzten Hohenstaufen ("The Last Hohenstaufens"). Two years later, on 5 October, Mainländer's 24th birthday, his mother died. Deeply affected by this experience of loss, Mainländer began an ongoing turn away from poetry and towards philosophy. During the following years, he studied Schopenhauer, Kant – ("not poisoned through Fichte, Schelling and Hegel, but rather critically strengthened through Schopenhauer"),[Note 5] Eschenbach's Parzival, and the classics of philosophy from Heraclitus to Condillac.

In March 1869, Mainländer worked in the banking house J. Mart. Magnus in Berlin with the declared goal of amassing a small fortune within a few years and then leading a decent life from the interest earnings. However, the stock market crash at the Wiener Börse on 8 May 1873 (Wiener Krach), totally ruined Mainländer and caused a sudden end to these plans. In 1873, Mainländer resigned from his post at the bank without really knowing what he would do afterwards.

Development of Die Philosophie der Erlösung edit

 
Mainländer, in 1875, wearing his military uniform

Although his wealthy parents had bought off his military service in 1861, Mainländer – according to an autobiographic note – expressed the desire "to be absolutely in all things submitted to another one once, to do the lowermost work, to have to obey blindly"[Note 6] and sedulously undertook numerous attempts to serve with weapons. On 6 April 1874, Mainländer, already 32 years old, submitted a request directly to the emperor Wilhelm I of Germany which was granted; this resulted in his appointment to the Cuirassiers in Halberstadt, beginning 28 September. During the four months leading up to his conscription, Mainländer, obsessed with work, composed the first volume of his main work Die Philosophie der Erlösung. Describing this time, he later wrote:

And now an enchanting life began, a spiritual blossoming full of bliss and blissful shivers. […] This life lasted four full months; it filled June, July, August and September. Completely clear, consistent, and well-rounded was my system in my mind, and a creative frenzy revived me that did not need the whip of the thought that I must be finished by 28 September; for on 1 October I had to put on the king's coat - this date could not be postponed. If I hadn't finished by then, it would take three years for me to put the finishing touches on my work, i.e. I would have seen myself thrown into an abyss into which the furies of a broken existence would inevitably have thrown me.[9]

Mainländer handed the completed manuscript to his sister Minna, asking her to find a publisher while he completed his military service. The author composed a letter to the as yet unknown publisher, requesting the omission of his birth name and substitution of the pen name "Philipp Mainländer", and stating that he would abhor nothing more than "being exposed to the eyes of the world".[Note 7]

On 1 November 1875, Mainländer – originally committed for three years, but in the meantime, as he noted in a letter to Minna, "exhausted, worked-out, ... at completely ... healthy body ineffably tired"[Note 8] – was prematurely released from military service, and traveled back to his hometown of Offenbach, where he – again having become obsessed with work – within a mere two months, corrected the unbound sheets of Die Philosophie der Erlösung, composed his memoirs, wrote the novella Rupertine del Fino, and completed the 650-page second volume of his magnum opus.

Death edit

Around the beginning of 1876, Mainländer began to doubt whether his life still had value for humanity. He wondered whether he had already completed the duties of life, or whether he should employ it to strengthen the social democratic movement.[11]: 131  Despite writing down addresses to the German workers, these plans did not materialize. Very shortly after the publication of the first volume of his main work, he ended his life by hanging himself.[7]: 101  Mainländer was buried in Offenbach cemetery.[12]

Philosophy edit

 
Title page of the second volume of Die Philosophie der Erlösung

Working in the metaphysical framework of Schopenhauer, Mainländer sees the "will" as the innermost core of being, the ontological arche. However, he deviates from Schopenhauer in important respects. With Schopenhauer the will is singular, unified and beyond time and space. Schopenhauer's transcendental idealism leads him to conclude that we only have access to a certain aspect of the thing-in-itself by introspective observation of our own bodies. What we observe as will is all there is to observe, nothing more. There are no hidden aspects. Furthermore, via introspection we can only observe our individual will. This also leads Mainländer to the philosophical position of pluralism.[2]: 202  The goals he set for himself and for his system are reminiscent of ancient Greek philosophy: what is the relation between the undivided existence of the "One" and the everchanging world of becoming that we experience.

Additionally, Mainländer accentuates on the idea of salvation for all of creation. This is yet another respect in which he differentiates his philosophy from that of Schopenhauer. With Schopenhauer, the silencing of the will is a rare event. The artistic genius can achieve this state temporarily, while only a few saints have achieved total cessation throughout history. For Mainländer, the entirety of the cosmos is slowly but surely moving towards the silencing of the will to live and to (as he calls it) "redemption".

Mainländer theorized that an initial singularity dispersed and expanded into the known universe. This dispersion from a singular unity to a multitude of things offered a smooth transition between monism and pluralism. Mainländer thought that with the regression of time, all kinds of pluralism and multiplicity would revert to monism and he believed that, with his philosophy, he had managed to explain this transition from oneness to multiplicity and becoming.[13]

Death of God edit

Despite his scientific means of explanation, Mainländer was not afraid to philosophize in allegorical terms. Formulating his own "myth of creation", Mainländer equated this initial singularity with God.

Mainländer reinterprets Schopenhauer's metaphysics in two important aspects. Primarily, in Mainländer's system there is no "singular will". The basic unity has broken apart into individual wills and each subject in existence possesses an individual will of his own. Because of this, Mainländer can claim that once an "individual will" is silenced and dies, it achieves absolute nothingness and not the relative nothingness we find in Schopenhauer. By recognizing death as salvation and by giving nothingness an absolute quality, Mainländer's system manages to offer "wider" means for redemption. Secondarily, Mainländer reinterprets the Schopenhauerian will-to-live as an underlying will-to-die, i.e. the will-to-live is the means towards the will-to-die.[14]

Ethics edit

Mainländer's philosophy also carefully inverts other doctrines. For instance, Epicurus sees happiness only in pleasure and since there is nothing after death, there is nothing to fear and/or desire from death. Yet Mainländer, being a philosophical pessimist, sees no desirable pleasure in this life and praises the sublime nothingness of death, recognizing precisely this state of non-existence as desirable.

Mainländer espouses an ethics of egoism. That is to say that what is best for an individual is what makes one happiest. Yet all pursuits and cravings lead to pain. Thus, Mainländer concludes that a will-to-death is best for the happiness of all and knowledge of this transforms one's will-to-life (an illusory existence unable to attain happiness) into the proper (sought by God) will-to-death. Ultimately, the subject (individual will) is one with the universe, in harmony with it and with its originating will, if one wills nothingness. Based on these premises, Mainländer makes the distinction between the "ignorant" and the "enlightened" type of self-interest. Ignorant self-interest seeks to promote itself and capitalize on its will-to-live. In contrast, enlightened self-interest humbles the individual and leads him to asceticism, as that aligns him properly with the elevating will-towards-death.[15]

Personality edit

It was noted by critics that his work reveals a gentle and warmhearted personality.[16][17][18]: 121  Lucien Arréat expressed that many pages feel warm due to the "generosity of his soul", and as a more general characterization that "Mainländer had a delicate and sincere nature, a truly remarkable individuality."[16]

On every page of his work emerges such a gentle, human-friendly image, who can speak in such a gentle yet serious tone, can smile so sublimely, that – it sounds contradictory to his teachings, but it is true – express such a devout soul, that we, deeply moved, kindly nod to his work, making us confess: you may not convert us to your redemption, but we can and we have to understand you, you pure, noble heart![17]

— Fritz Sommerlad

Frederick C. Beiser also notes "Mainländer's humanity": "He had the deepest sympathy for the suffering of the common man and much of his thinking was preoccupied with the poverty of the mass of people and the workers. … It is not the least token of Mainländer's humanity that he was sympathetic to the Jews, whose charity and sagacity he much admired."[2]: 202–203 

Reception edit

 
Self-portrait of Alfred Kubin in Die Philosophie der Erlösung

Nietzsche immediately read Die Philosophie der Erlösung in the year it was published, before any review had appeared. The work contributed to his final separation from Schopenhauer's philosophy.[19] In his own works, Nietzsche gave no attention to Mainländer until a decade later, that is, in the second, expanded edition of The Gay Science, the same book in which he had introduced the phrase "God is dead" in the first edition five years prior: "Could one count such dilettantes and old maids as the sickeningly sentimental apostle of virginity, Mainländer, as a genuine German? After all he was probably a Jew – (all Jews become sentimental when they moralize)."[20] It has been suggested that Mainländer was more than a mere influence, and was instead plagiarized.[21][22]

Nietzsche also mentions in one of his letters that he met an adherent of Mainländer's philosophy, "a quiet and modest man, a Buddhist […], passionate vegetarian."[Note 9] The "modest man" told Nietzsche that Mainländer was, in fact, not a Jew.[24]

In the same period, Max Seiling wrote that he believed Mainländer to be one of the few wise heroes to have walked on this earth.[18]: 6 

Mainländer's work was not well received by authorities. In Imperial Russia, Mainländer's essay on the esoteric meaning of the Trinity was banned.[25] In the German Reichstag, Die Philosophie der Erlösung was brought up to the rostrum on occasion of the Anti-Socialist Laws.[25] Prominent socialists however took interest in his work. The socialist leader August Bebel refers to and uses the arguments of the pessimistic philosopher in his feminist work Woman and Socialism.[26] Bebel mentions Mainländer's sister in his autobiography.[27] Also Eduard Bernstein wrote that he was "very interested" in Mainländer.[28] Ferdinand Domela Nieuwenhuis (1846–1919), the first prominent Dutch socialist, considered Mainländer's work a "great contribution" for socialism.[29]

Alfred Kubin, one of the founders of Der Blaue Reiter, wrote about Die Philosophie der Erlösung, "this work – which expresses my actual thoughts and steels and strengthens me – this philosophy, forms the consolation of my life and death."[Note 10]

The Japanese writer Akutagawa wrote in A Note to a Certain Old Friend, "I read Mainländer, whose work has become deeply ingrained in my consciousness."[31] He also refers to Mainländer in his novel Kappa.[32]

Emil Cioran was very impressed by the work of Mainländer.[33]

Works edit

In English:

  • The Philosophy of Redemption (translation by Christian Romuss; Irukandji Press, 2024)

In German:

  • Die Philosophie der Erlösung (Vol. I: 1876; Vol. II: 1886)
  • Die Letzten Hohenstaufen. Ein dramatisches Gedicht in drei Theilen: Enzo – Manfred – Conradino (1876)
  • Die Macht der Motive. Literarischer Nachlaß von 1857 bis 1875 (1999)

In Spanish:

  • Filosofía de la redención (translation by Manuel Pérez Cornejo; Ediciones Xorki, 2014)

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "vielleicht das radikalste System des Pessimismus, das die philosophische Literatur kennt"[5]
  2. ^ "[der] von der Erkenntnis, daß Nichtsein besser ist als Sein, entzündete Wille [ist] das oberste Prinzip aller Moral."[6]
  3. ^ "als Kind ehelicher Notzucht"[7]: 95 
  4. ^ "[den] bedeutungsvollsten Tag [seines] Lebens"[7]: 98 
  5. ^ "nicht durch Fichte, Schelling und Hegel vergiftet, sondern vielmehr durch Schopenhauer kritisch gestählt"[7]: 102 
  6. ^ "einmal unbedingt einem anderen in allem unterworfen zu sein, die niedrigste Arbeit zu tun, blind gehorchen zu müssen"[7]: 88 
  7. ^ "als den Augen der Welt ausgesetzt zu sein"[10]
  8. ^ "verbraucht, worked out, … bei vollkommen … gesundem Körper unaussprechlich müde"[11]: 121 
  9. ^ "ein stiller bescheidener Mann, Buddhist, etwas Anhänger Mainländer's, begeisterter Vegetarianer."[23]
  10. ^ "dieses Werk– welches meine eigentlichen Gedanken ausspricht und mich stählt und festigt, – diese Philosophie bildet den Trost meines Lebens und Sterbens"[30]

References edit

  1. ^ Monika Langer, Nietzsche's Gay Science: Dancing Coherence, Palgrave Macmillan, 2010, p. 231.
  2. ^ a b c d e Beiser, Frederick C. (2016). "Mainländer's Philosophy of Redemption". Weltschmerz: Pessimism in German Philosophy, 1860–1900. Oxford: Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198768715.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-19-876871-5.
  3. ^ Mainländer, Philipp (2018). The Immanent Philosophy of Philipp Mainländer: Analytic of the Cognition, section 28 (PDF).
  4. ^ Windelband, W (1958). History of philosophy. New York: Harper & Row. In this respect he comes into contact with Mainländer, who with him and after him worked out Schopenhauer's theory to an ascetic "Philosophy of Salvation".
  5. ^ Theodor Lessing: Schopenhauer, Wagner, Nietzsche. Eine Einführung in die moderne Philosophie. Leipzig 1907.
  6. ^ Philipp Mainländer: Philosophie der Erlösung. Quoted after Ulrich Horstmann (Ed.): Vom Verwesen der Welt und anderen Restposten, Manuscriptum, Warendorf 2003, p. 85.
  7. ^ a b c d e Fritz Sommerlad: Aus dem Leben Philipp Mainländers. Mitteilungen aus der handschriftlichen Selbstbiographie des Philosophen. Printed in Winfried H. Müller Seyfarth (ed.): Die modernen Pessimisten als décadents. Texte zur Rezeptionsgeschichte von Philipp Mainländers‚ Philosophie der Erlösung.
  8. ^ Lombroso, Cesare (1889). "Chapter IV: Genius and Insanity". The Man of Genius. BoD – Books on Demand. ISBN 9783752434262.
  9. ^ Mainländer, Philipp (2003). Horstmann, Ulrich (ed.). Vom Verwesen der Welt und anderen Restposten eine Werkauswahl [A Selection of Works From the Decay of the World and Other Remaining Items] (in German). Warendorf. p. 207. ISBN 978-3-933497-74-1. OCLC 76487012.
  10. ^ Philipp Mainländer: Meine Soldatengeschichte. Tagebuchblätter. Quoted after Ulrich Horstmann (Ed.): Vom Verwesen der Welt und anderen Restposten. Manuscriptum, Warendorf 2003, p. 211
  11. ^ a b Walther Rauschenberger: "Aus der letzten Lebenszeit Philipp Mainländers. Nach ungedruckten Briefen und Aufzeichnungen des Philosophen." Süddeutsche Monatshefte 9.
  12. ^ Sommerlad, Fritz (1898). "Aus dem Leben Philipp Mainländers" [From the life of Philipp Mainländer]. Zeitschrift für Philosophie und philosophische Kritik (in German). 112: 74–101.
  13. ^ Mainländer, Philipp (2018). The Immanent Philosophy of Philipp Mainländer: Metaphysics, section 2 (PDF).
  14. ^ Beiser, Frederick (2016). Weltschmerz: Pessimism in German Philosophy, 1860-1900. Oxford University Press.
  15. ^ Beiser, Frederick. Weltschmerz: Pessimism in German Philosophy, 1860-1900. Oxford University Press, (2016), chapter on Ethics.
  16. ^ a b Arréat, Lucien (January 1885). "La philosophie de la rédemption d'après un pessimiste". Revue philosophique. 19: 632 – via BnF Gallica.
  17. ^ a b Sommerlad, Fritz (1899). . München: Morgenblatt der Allgemeinen Zeitung. p. 4. Archived from the original on 7 April 2016.
  18. ^ a b Seiling, Max (1888). Mainländer, ein neuer Messias: ein frohe Botschaft inmitten der herrschenden Geistesverwirrung. München.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  19. ^ Thomas H. Brobjer (2008). Nietzsche's Philosophical Context: An Intellectual Biography. University Of Illinois Press. p. 149. ISBN 9780252032455. Decher emphasizes the importance of the fact that Mainländer reinterpreted Schopenhauer's metaphysical and single will to a less metaphysical multiplicity of wills (always in struggle) and the importance of this for Nietzsche's will to power. It was in a letter to Cosima Wagner, December 19, 1876, that is, while reading Mainländer, that Nietzsche for the first time explicitly claimed to have parted ways with Schopenhauer. It may be relevant that Mainländer's book ends with a long section (more than 200 pages) consisting mainly of a critique of Schopenhauer's metaphysics.
  20. ^ Nietzsche, Friedrich. The Gay Science. § 357.
  21. ^ "SWR2 Wissen: Philipp Mainländers Anleitung zum glücklichen Nichtsein". Südwestrundfunk. 28 September 2008. Erzählerin: "Lust schafft Leid – das meinte schon Schopenhauer. Friedrich Nietzsche, ein anderer Schopenhauerschüler, studierte Mainländers Philosophie der Erlösung. Einige „Mainländerianer" haben ihn bezichtigt, von ihm abgeschrieben zu haben." O-Ton - Guido Rademacher: "Ob er jetzt tatsächlich ein Plagiator war, das kann ich nicht behaupten. Es gibt fantastische Parallelen."
  22. ^ Rademacher, Guido (2006). Der Zerfall der Welt: Philipp Mainländer ; kurz gelebt und lange vergessen. London. p. 160. ISBN 978-1-84790-006-7.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  23. ^ Friedrich Nietzsche: Letter to Heinrich Köselitz, 17/05/1888.
  24. ^ Friedrich Nietzsche: Letter to Heinrich Köselitz, 17/05/1888 — Er hat mir bewiesen, daß Mainländer kein Jude war. —"
  25. ^ a b Arrét, Jullien (January 1885). "La philosophie de la rédemption d'après un pessimiste". Revue philosophique. 19: 648 – via BnF Gallica.
  26. ^ Bebel, August (1879). Die Frau und Sozialismus. Zürich-Hottingen: Volksbuchhandlung. pp. 18, 90, 144.
  27. ^ Bebel, August (1914). Aus meinem Leben. Berlin.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  28. ^ Bernstein to Kautsky, 17.8.1984
  29. ^ Domela Nieuwenhuis, Ferdinand (1880). "De Wijsbegeerte der Verlossing". De Banier. 1: 247–287.
  30. ^ Winfried H. Müller-Seyfarth: Lichte Finsternis, Alfred Kubin und Ernst Barlach 2015.
  31. ^ Akutagawa, Ryūnosuke (8 June 2018). "Note to an Old Friend".
  32. ^ Akutagawa, Ryūnosuke (2000). Kappa. Translated by Bownas, Geoffery. Boston, Massachusetts: Tuttle Publishing. p. 129. ISBN 978-0-8048-3251-9.
  33. ^ Robert Wicks (26 May 2011). Schopenhauer's 'The World as Will and Representation': A Reader's Guide. Bloomsbury Academic. p. 156. ISBN 978-1441104342. "Cioran was impressed especially by Mainländer".

Further reading edit

  • Beiser, Frederick C., Weltschmerz: Pessimism in German Philosophy, 1860-1900, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016.

External links edit

  • Works by or about Philipp Mainländer at Internet Archive
  • The Riddles of Philosophy, Part II, Chapter VI: Modern Idealistic World Conceptions. An essay by Rudolph Steiner that mentions Mainländer.
  • Aleksander Samarin's entry on Mainländer in his Enigma of Immortality.
  • The rotting God - Mainländer's Metaphysics of Entropy.
  • Extracts from The Philosophy of Redemption translated by Christian Romuss

philipp, mainländer, october, 1841, april, 1876, german, philosopher, poet, born, philipp, batz, later, changed, name, mainländer, homage, hometown, offenbach, main, mainländer, 1867bornphilipp, batz, 1841, october, 1841offenbach, main, grand, duchy, hessedied. Philipp Mainlander 5 October 1841 1 April 1876 was a German philosopher and poet Born Philipp Batz he later changed his name to Mainlander in homage to his hometown Offenbach am Main Philipp MainlanderMainlander c 1867BornPhilipp Batz 1841 10 05 5 October 1841Offenbach am Main Grand Duchy of HesseDied1 April 1876 1876 04 01 aged 34 Offenbach am Main Grand Duchy of Hesse German EmpireEducationCommercial school DresdenNotable workDie Philosophie der ErlosungEra19th century philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolContinental philosophy Post Kantian philosophy Metaphysical voluntarism Post Schopenhauerian pessimism 1 PluralismMain interestsAesthetics epistemology metaphysics theodicy ethicsNotable ideasCritique of the Schopenhauerian philosophy The movement of the universe is towards nothingness God is dead 2 202 The will to death Wille zum Tode 2 218 Finitude of the universe 3 In his central work Die Philosophie der Erlosung The Philosophy of Redemption or The Philosophy of Salvation 4 according to Theodor Lessing perhaps the most radical system of pessimism known to philosophical literature Note 1 Mainlander proclaims that life is worthless and that the will ignited by the knowledge that non being is better than being is the supreme principle of morality Note 2 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life and career 1 2 Development of Die Philosophie der Erlosung 1 3 Death 2 Philosophy 2 1 Death of God 2 2 Ethics 3 Personality 4 Reception 5 Works 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksBiography editEarly life and career edit nbsp Mainlander with his sister Minna in 1855Born in Offenbach am Main on October 5 1841 as a child of marital rape Note 3 Philipp Mainlander grew up the youngest of six siblings One of his brothers was mentally ill according to Cesare Lombroso in The Man of Genius as had been one of his grandfathers who had died at the age of 33 8 Mainlander attended the Realschule in Offenbach from 1848 to 1856 2 203 In 1856 at his father s instruction he entered the commercial school of Dresden to become a merchant Two years later he was employed in a trading house in Naples Italy where he learned Italian and acquainted himself with the works of Dante Petrarca Boccaccio and most notably Leopardi Mainlander would later describe his five Neapolitan years as the happiest ones of his life During this critical period of his life Mainlander discovered Arthur Schopenhauer s central work The World as Will and Representation Nineteen years old at the time he would later describe the event as a penetrating revelation referring to February 1860 as the most important of his life Note 4 Indeed Schopenhauer would remain the most important influence on Mainlander s later philosophical work In 1863 Mainlander returned to Germany to work in his father s business In the same year he also penned the three part poem Die letzten Hohenstaufen The Last Hohenstaufens Two years later on 5 October Mainlander s 24th birthday his mother died Deeply affected by this experience of loss Mainlander began an ongoing turn away from poetry and towards philosophy During the following years he studied Schopenhauer Kant not poisoned through Fichte Schelling and Hegel but rather critically strengthened through Schopenhauer Note 5 Eschenbach s Parzival and the classics of philosophy from Heraclitus to Condillac In March 1869 Mainlander worked in the banking house J Mart Magnus in Berlin with the declared goal of amassing a small fortune within a few years and then leading a decent life from the interest earnings However the stock market crash at the Wiener Borse on 8 May 1873 Wiener Krach totally ruined Mainlander and caused a sudden end to these plans In 1873 Mainlander resigned from his post at the bank without really knowing what he would do afterwards Development of Die Philosophie der Erlosung edit nbsp Mainlander in 1875 wearing his military uniformAlthough his wealthy parents had bought off his military service in 1861 Mainlander according to an autobiographic note expressed the desire to be absolutely in all things submitted to another one once to do the lowermost work to have to obey blindly Note 6 and sedulously undertook numerous attempts to serve with weapons On 6 April 1874 Mainlander already 32 years old submitted a request directly to the emperor Wilhelm I of Germany which was granted this resulted in his appointment to the Cuirassiers in Halberstadt beginning 28 September During the four months leading up to his conscription Mainlander obsessed with work composed the first volume of his main work Die Philosophie der Erlosung Describing this time he later wrote And now an enchanting life began a spiritual blossoming full of bliss and blissful shivers This life lasted four full months it filled June July August and September Completely clear consistent and well rounded was my system in my mind and a creative frenzy revived me that did not need the whip of the thought that I must be finished by 28 September for on 1 October I had to put on the king s coat this date could not be postponed If I hadn t finished by then it would take three years for me to put the finishing touches on my work i e I would have seen myself thrown into an abyss into which the furies of a broken existence would inevitably have thrown me 9 Mainlander handed the completed manuscript to his sister Minna asking her to find a publisher while he completed his military service The author composed a letter to the as yet unknown publisher requesting the omission of his birth name and substitution of the pen name Philipp Mainlander and stating that he would abhor nothing more than being exposed to the eyes of the world Note 7 On 1 November 1875 Mainlander originally committed for three years but in the meantime as he noted in a letter to Minna exhausted worked out at completely healthy body ineffably tired Note 8 was prematurely released from military service and traveled back to his hometown of Offenbach where he again having become obsessed with work within a mere two months corrected the unbound sheets of Die Philosophie der Erlosung composed his memoirs wrote the novella Rupertine del Fino and completed the 650 page second volume of his magnum opus Death edit Around the beginning of 1876 Mainlander began to doubt whether his life still had value for humanity He wondered whether he had already completed the duties of life or whether he should employ it to strengthen the social democratic movement 11 131 Despite writing down addresses to the German workers these plans did not materialize Very shortly after the publication of the first volume of his main work he ended his life by hanging himself 7 101 Mainlander was buried in Offenbach cemetery 12 Philosophy editMain article Critique of the Schopenhauerian philosophy nbsp Title page of the second volume of Die Philosophie der ErlosungWorking in the metaphysical framework of Schopenhauer Mainlander sees the will as the innermost core of being the ontological arche However he deviates from Schopenhauer in important respects With Schopenhauer the will is singular unified and beyond time and space Schopenhauer s transcendental idealism leads him to conclude that we only have access to a certain aspect of the thing in itself by introspective observation of our own bodies What we observe as will is all there is to observe nothing more There are no hidden aspects Furthermore via introspection we can only observe our individual will This also leads Mainlander to the philosophical position of pluralism 2 202 The goals he set for himself and for his system are reminiscent of ancient Greek philosophy what is the relation between the undivided existence of the One and the everchanging world of becoming that we experience Additionally Mainlander accentuates on the idea of salvation for all of creation This is yet another respect in which he differentiates his philosophy from that of Schopenhauer With Schopenhauer the silencing of the will is a rare event The artistic genius can achieve this state temporarily while only a few saints have achieved total cessation throughout history For Mainlander the entirety of the cosmos is slowly but surely moving towards the silencing of the will to live and to as he calls it redemption Mainlander theorized that an initial singularity dispersed and expanded into the known universe This dispersion from a singular unity to a multitude of things offered a smooth transition between monism and pluralism Mainlander thought that with the regression of time all kinds of pluralism and multiplicity would revert to monism and he believed that with his philosophy he had managed to explain this transition from oneness to multiplicity and becoming 13 Death of God edit Main article God is dead Despite his scientific means of explanation Mainlander was not afraid to philosophize in allegorical terms Formulating his own myth of creation Mainlander equated this initial singularity with God Mainlander reinterprets Schopenhauer s metaphysics in two important aspects Primarily in Mainlander s system there is no singular will The basic unity has broken apart into individual wills and each subject in existence possesses an individual will of his own Because of this Mainlander can claim that once an individual will is silenced and dies it achieves absolute nothingness and not the relative nothingness we find in Schopenhauer By recognizing death as salvation and by giving nothingness an absolute quality Mainlander s system manages to offer wider means for redemption Secondarily Mainlander reinterprets the Schopenhauerian will to live as an underlying will to die i e the will to live is the means towards the will to die 14 Ethics edit Mainlander s philosophy also carefully inverts other doctrines For instance Epicurus sees happiness only in pleasure and since there is nothing after death there is nothing to fear and or desire from death Yet Mainlander being a philosophical pessimist sees no desirable pleasure in this life and praises the sublime nothingness of death recognizing precisely this state of non existence as desirable Mainlander espouses an ethics of egoism That is to say that what is best for an individual is what makes one happiest Yet all pursuits and cravings lead to pain Thus Mainlander concludes that a will to death is best for the happiness of all and knowledge of this transforms one s will to life an illusory existence unable to attain happiness into the proper sought by God will to death Ultimately the subject individual will is one with the universe in harmony with it and with its originating will if one wills nothingness Based on these premises Mainlander makes the distinction between the ignorant and the enlightened type of self interest Ignorant self interest seeks to promote itself and capitalize on its will to live In contrast enlightened self interest humbles the individual and leads him to asceticism as that aligns him properly with the elevating will towards death 15 Personality editIt was noted by critics that his work reveals a gentle and warmhearted personality 16 17 18 121 Lucien Arreat expressed that many pages feel warm due to the generosity of his soul and as a more general characterization that Mainlander had a delicate and sincere nature a truly remarkable individuality 16 On every page of his work emerges such a gentle human friendly image who can speak in such a gentle yet serious tone can smile so sublimely that it sounds contradictory to his teachings but it is true express such a devout soul that we deeply moved kindly nod to his work making us confess you may not convert us to your redemption but we can and we have to understand you you pure noble heart 17 Fritz Sommerlad Frederick C Beiser also notes Mainlander s humanity He had the deepest sympathy for the suffering of the common man and much of his thinking was preoccupied with the poverty of the mass of people and the workers It is not the least token of Mainlander s humanity that he was sympathetic to the Jews whose charity and sagacity he much admired 2 202 203 Reception edit nbsp Self portrait of Alfred Kubin in Die Philosophie der ErlosungNietzsche immediately read Die Philosophie der Erlosung in the year it was published before any review had appeared The work contributed to his final separation from Schopenhauer s philosophy 19 In his own works Nietzsche gave no attention to Mainlander until a decade later that is in the second expanded edition of The Gay Science the same book in which he had introduced the phrase God is dead in the first edition five years prior Could one count such dilettantes and old maids as the sickeningly sentimental apostle of virginity Mainlander as a genuine German After all he was probably a Jew all Jews become sentimental when they moralize 20 It has been suggested that Mainlander was more than a mere influence and was instead plagiarized 21 22 Nietzsche also mentions in one of his letters that he met an adherent of Mainlander s philosophy a quiet and modest man a Buddhist passionate vegetarian Note 9 The modest man told Nietzsche that Mainlander was in fact not a Jew 24 In the same period Max Seiling wrote that he believed Mainlander to be one of the few wise heroes to have walked on this earth 18 6 Mainlander s work was not well received by authorities In Imperial Russia Mainlander s essay on the esoteric meaning of the Trinity was banned 25 In the German Reichstag Die Philosophie der Erlosung was brought up to the rostrum on occasion of the Anti Socialist Laws 25 Prominent socialists however took interest in his work The socialist leader August Bebel refers to and uses the arguments of the pessimistic philosopher in his feminist work Woman and Socialism 26 Bebel mentions Mainlander s sister in his autobiography 27 Also Eduard Bernstein wrote that he was very interested in Mainlander 28 Ferdinand Domela Nieuwenhuis 1846 1919 the first prominent Dutch socialist considered Mainlander s work a great contribution for socialism 29 Alfred Kubin one of the founders of Der Blaue Reiter wrote about Die Philosophie der Erlosung this work which expresses my actual thoughts and steels and strengthens me this philosophy forms the consolation of my life and death Note 10 The Japanese writer Akutagawa wrote in A Note to a Certain Old Friend I read Mainlander whose work has become deeply ingrained in my consciousness 31 He also refers to Mainlander in his novel Kappa 32 Emil Cioran was very impressed by the work of Mainlander 33 Works editIn English The Philosophy of Redemption translation by Christian Romuss Irukandji Press 2024 In German Die Philosophie der Erlosung Vol I 1876 Vol II 1886 Die Letzten Hohenstaufen Ein dramatisches Gedicht in drei Theilen Enzo Manfred Conradino 1876 Die Macht der Motive Literarischer Nachlass von 1857 bis 1875 1999 In Spanish Filosofia de la redencion translation by Manuel Perez Cornejo Ediciones Xorki 2014 See also editBuddhist modernism Death of God theology God became the universe Apocatastasis Universal reconciliationNotes edit vielleicht das radikalste System des Pessimismus das die philosophische Literatur kennt 5 der von der Erkenntnis dass Nichtsein besser ist als Sein entzundete Wille ist das oberste Prinzip aller Moral 6 als Kind ehelicher Notzucht 7 95 den bedeutungsvollsten Tag seines Lebens 7 98 nicht durch Fichte Schelling und Hegel vergiftet sondern vielmehr durch Schopenhauer kritisch gestahlt 7 102 einmal unbedingt einem anderen in allem unterworfen zu sein die niedrigste Arbeit zu tun blind gehorchen zu mussen 7 88 als den Augen der Welt ausgesetzt zu sein 10 verbraucht worked out bei vollkommen gesundem Korper unaussprechlich mude 11 121 ein stiller bescheidener Mann Buddhist etwas Anhanger Mainlander s begeisterter Vegetarianer 23 dieses Werk welches meine eigentlichen Gedanken ausspricht und mich stahlt und festigt diese Philosophie bildet den Trost meines Lebens und Sterbens 30 References edit Monika Langer Nietzsche s Gay Science Dancing Coherence Palgrave Macmillan 2010 p 231 a b c d e Beiser Frederick C 2016 Mainlander s Philosophy of Redemption Weltschmerz Pessimism in German Philosophy 1860 1900 Oxford Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acprof oso 9780198768715 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 876871 5 Mainlander Philipp 2018 The Immanent Philosophy of Philipp Mainlander Analytic of the Cognition section 28 PDF Windelband W 1958 History of philosophy New York Harper amp Row In this respect he comes into contact with Mainlander who with him and after him worked out Schopenhauer s theory to an ascetic Philosophy of Salvation Theodor Lessing Schopenhauer Wagner Nietzsche Eine Einfuhrung in die moderne Philosophie Leipzig 1907 Philipp Mainlander Philosophie der Erlosung Quoted after Ulrich Horstmann Ed Vom Verwesen der Welt und anderen Restposten Manuscriptum Warendorf 2003 p 85 a b c d e Fritz Sommerlad Aus dem Leben Philipp Mainlanders Mitteilungen aus der handschriftlichen Selbstbiographie des Philosophen Printed in Winfried H Muller Seyfarth ed Die modernen Pessimisten als decadents Texte zur Rezeptionsgeschichte von Philipp Mainlanders Philosophie der Erlosung Lombroso Cesare 1889 Chapter IV Genius and Insanity The Man of Genius BoD Books on Demand ISBN 9783752434262 Mainlander Philipp 2003 Horstmann Ulrich ed Vom Verwesen der Welt und anderen Restposten eine Werkauswahl A Selection of Works From the Decay of the World and Other Remaining Items in German Warendorf p 207 ISBN 978 3 933497 74 1 OCLC 76487012 Philipp Mainlander Meine Soldatengeschichte Tagebuchblatter Quoted after Ulrich Horstmann Ed Vom Verwesen der Welt und anderen Restposten Manuscriptum Warendorf 2003 p 211 a b Walther Rauschenberger Aus der letzten Lebenszeit Philipp Mainlanders Nach ungedruckten Briefen und Aufzeichnungen des Philosophen Suddeutsche Monatshefte 9 Sommerlad Fritz 1898 Aus dem Leben Philipp Mainlanders From the life of Philipp Mainlander Zeitschrift fur Philosophie und philosophische Kritik in German 112 74 101 Mainlander Philipp 2018 The Immanent Philosophy of Philipp Mainlander Metaphysics section 2 PDF Beiser Frederick 2016 Weltschmerz Pessimism in German Philosophy 1860 1900 Oxford University Press Beiser Frederick Weltschmerz Pessimism in German Philosophy 1860 1900 Oxford University Press 2016 chapter on Ethics a b Arreat Lucien January 1885 La philosophie de la redemption d apres un pessimiste Revue philosophique 19 632 via BnF Gallica a b Sommerlad Fritz 1899 Rupertine del Fino Frei bearbeitet und mit einem Vorwort von Fritz Sommerlad Munchen Morgenblatt der Allgemeinen Zeitung p 4 Archived from the original on 7 April 2016 a b Seiling Max 1888 Mainlander ein neuer Messias ein frohe Botschaft inmitten der herrschenden Geistesverwirrung Munchen a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Thomas H Brobjer 2008 Nietzsche s Philosophical Context An Intellectual Biography University Of Illinois Press p 149 ISBN 9780252032455 Decher emphasizes the importance of the fact that Mainlander reinterpreted Schopenhauer s metaphysical and single will to a less metaphysical multiplicity of wills always in struggle and the importance of this for Nietzsche s will to power It was in a letter to Cosima Wagner December 19 1876 that is while reading Mainlander that Nietzsche for the first time explicitly claimed to have parted ways with Schopenhauer It may be relevant that Mainlander s book ends with a long section more than 200 pages consisting mainly of a critique of Schopenhauer s metaphysics Nietzsche Friedrich The Gay Science 357 SWR2 Wissen Philipp Mainlanders Anleitung zum glucklichen Nichtsein Sudwestrundfunk 28 September 2008 Erzahlerin Lust schafft Leid das meinte schon Schopenhauer Friedrich Nietzsche ein anderer Schopenhauerschuler studierte Mainlanders Philosophie der Erlosung Einige Mainlanderianer haben ihn bezichtigt von ihm abgeschrieben zu haben O Ton Guido Rademacher Ob er jetzt tatsachlich ein Plagiator war das kann ich nicht behaupten Es gibt fantastische Parallelen Rademacher Guido 2006 Der Zerfall der Welt Philipp Mainlander kurz gelebt und lange vergessen London p 160 ISBN 978 1 84790 006 7 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Friedrich Nietzsche Letter to Heinrich Koselitz 17 05 1888 Friedrich Nietzsche Letter to Heinrich Koselitz 17 05 1888 Er hat mir bewiesen dass MainlanderkeinJude war a b Arret Jullien January 1885 La philosophie de la redemption d apres un pessimiste Revue philosophique 19 648 via BnF Gallica Bebel August 1879 Die Frau und Sozialismus Zurich Hottingen Volksbuchhandlung pp 18 90 144 Bebel August 1914 Aus meinem Leben Berlin a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Bernstein to Kautsky 17 8 1984 Domela Nieuwenhuis Ferdinand 1880 De Wijsbegeerte der Verlossing De Banier 1 247 287 Winfried H Muller Seyfarth Lichte Finsternis Alfred Kubin und Ernst Barlach 2015 Akutagawa Ryunosuke 8 June 2018 Note to an Old Friend Akutagawa Ryunosuke 2000 Kappa Translated by Bownas Geoffery Boston Massachusetts Tuttle Publishing p 129 ISBN 978 0 8048 3251 9 Robert Wicks 26 May 2011 Schopenhauer s The World as Will and Representation A Reader s Guide Bloomsbury Academic p 156 ISBN 978 1441104342 Cioran was impressed especially by Mainlander Further reading editBeiser Frederick C Weltschmerz Pessimism in German Philosophy 1860 1900 Oxford Oxford University Press 2016 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Philipp Mainlander nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Philipp Mainlaender Works by or about Philipp Mainlander at Internet Archive The Riddles of Philosophy Part II Chapter VI Modern Idealistic World Conceptions An essay by Rudolph Steiner that mentions Mainlander Aleksander Samarin s entry on Mainlander in his Enigma of Immortality The rotting God Mainlander s Metaphysics of Entropy Fabio Ciraci La filosofia della redenzione di Philipp Mainlaender Pensa MultiMedia Lecce 2006 Extracts from The Philosophy of Redemption translated by Christian Romuss Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Philipp Mainlander amp oldid 1203156154, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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