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Max Müller

Friedrich Max Müller (German: [ˈfʁiːdʁɪç ˈmaks ˈmʏlɐ];[1][2] 6 December 1823 – 28 October 1900) was a German-born philologist and Orientalist, who lived and studied in Britain for most of his life. He was one of the founders of the western academic disciplines of Indian studies and religious studies ('science of religion', German: Religionswissenschaft).[3] Müller wrote both scholarly and popular works on the subject of Indology. The Sacred Books of the East, a 50-volume set of English translations, was prepared under his direction. He also promoted the idea of a Turanian family of languages.

Max Müller
Müller in 1883
BornFriedrich Max Müller
(1823-12-06)6 December 1823
Dessau, Duchy of Anhalt, German Confederation
Died28 October 1900(1900-10-28) (aged 76)
Oxford, Oxfordshire, England
OccupationWriter, scholar
NationalityBritish
EducationUniversity of Leipzig
Notable worksThe Sacred Books of the East, Chips from a German Workshop
SpouseGeorgina Adelaide Grenfell
Children4, including Wilhelm Grenfell Max Müller
Signature

Early life and education

Max Müller was born into a cultured family on 6 December 1823 in Dessau, the son of Wilhelm Müller, a lyric poet whose verse Franz Schubert had set to music in his song-cycles Die schöne Müllerin, and Winterreise. His mother, Adelheid Müller (née von Basedow), was the eldest daughter of a prime minister of Anhalt-Dessau. Carl Maria von Weber was a godfather.[4]

Müller was named after his mother's elder brother, Friedrich, and after the central character, Max, in Weber's opera Der Freischütz. Later in life, he adopted Max as a part of his surname, believing that the prevalence of Müller as a name made it too common.[4] His name was also recorded as "Maximilian" on several official documents (e.g. university register, marriage certificate),[citation needed] on some of his honours[5] and in some other publications.[6]

Müller entered the gymnasium (grammar school) at Dessau when he was six years old. In 1835, at the age of twelve, he was sent to live in the house of Professor Carus and attend the Nicolai School at Leipzig, where he continued his studies of music and classics.[7] It was during his time in Leipzig that he frequently met Felix Mendelssohn.[4]

In need of a scholarship to attend Leipzig University, Müller successfully sat his abitur examination at Zerbst. While preparing, he found that the syllabus differed from what he had been taught, necessitating that he rapidly learn mathematics, modern languages and science.[4] He entered Leipzig University in 1841 to study philology, leaving behind his early interest in music and poetry. Müller received his Ph.D. degree in Sep 1843.[8] His final dissertation was on Spinoza's Ethics.[3] He also displayed an aptitude for classical languages, learning Greek, Latin, Arabic, Persian and Sanskrit.

Academic career

In 1850 Müller was appointed deputy Taylorian professor of modern European languages at Oxford University. In the following year, at the suggestion of Thomas Gaisford, he was made an honorary M.A. and a member of the college of Christ Church, Oxford. On succeeding to the full professorship in 1854, he received the full degree of M.A. by Decree of Convocation. In 1858 he was elected to a life fellowship at All Souls' College.[9]

He was defeated in the 1860 election for the position of Boden Professor of Sanskrit, which was a "keen disappointment" to him.[10] Müller was far better qualified for the post than the other candidate (Monier Monier-Williams), but Müller's broad[clarification needed] theological views, Lutheranism, German birth, and lack of practical first-hand knowledge of India spoke against him. After the election he wrote to his mother, "all the best people voted for me, the Professors almost unanimously, but the vulgus profanum made the majority".[11]

Later in 1868, Müller became Oxford's first professor of comparative philology, a position founded on his behalf. He held this chair until his death, although he retired from its active duties in 1875.[12]

Scholarly and literary works

Sanskrit studies

In 1844, prior to commencing his academic career at Oxford, Müller studied in Berlin with Friedrich Schelling. He began to translate the Upanishads for Schelling, and continued to research Sanskrit under Franz Bopp, the first systematic scholar of the Indo-European languages (IE). Schelling led Müller to relate the history of language to the history of religion. At this time, Müller published his first book, a German translation of the Hitopadesa, a collection of Indian fables.[13]

In 1845, Müller moved to Paris to study Sanskrit under Eugène Burnouf. Burnouf encouraged him to publish the complete Rigveda, making use of the manuscripts available in England. He moved to England in 1846 to study Sanskrit texts in the collection of the East India Company. He supported himself at first with creative writing, his novel German Love being popular in its day.

Müller's connections with the East India Company and with Sanskritists based at Oxford University led to a career in Britain, where he eventually became the leading intellectual commentator on the culture of India. At the time, Britain controlled this territory as part of its Empire. This led to complex exchanges between Indian and British intellectual culture, especially through Müller's links with the Brahmo Samaj.

Müller's Sanskrit studies came at a time when scholars had started to see language development in relation to cultural development. The recent discovery of the Indo-European language group had started to lead to much speculation about the relationship between Greco-Roman cultures and those of more ancient peoples. In particular the Vedic culture of India was thought to have been the ancestor of European Classical cultures. Scholars sought to compare the genetically related European and Asian languages to reconstruct the earliest form of the root-language. The Vedic language, Sanskrit, was thought to be the oldest of the IE languages.

Müller devoted himself to the study of this language, becoming one of the major Sanskrit scholars of his day. He believed that the earliest documents of Vedic culture should be studied to provide the key to the development of pagan European religions, and of religious belief in general. To this end, Müller sought to understand the most ancient of Vedic scriptures, the Rig-Veda. Müller translated the Rigveda Samhita book written by the 14th century Sanskrit scholar Sayanacharya from Sanskrit to English. Müller was greatly impressed by Ramakrishna Paramhansa, his contemporary and proponent of Vedantic philosophy, and wrote several essays and books about him.[14]

 
Portrait of the elderly Max Muller by George Frederic Watts, 1894–1895

For Müller, the study of the language had to relate to the study of the culture in which it had been used. He came to the view that the development of languages should be tied to that of belief-systems. At that time the Vedic scriptures were little-known in the West, though there was increasing interest in the philosophy of the Upanishads. Müller believed that the sophisticated Upanishadic philosophy could be linked to the primitive henotheism of early Vedic Brahmanism from which it evolved. He had to travel to London to look at documents held in the collection of the British East India Company. While there he persuaded the company to allow him to undertake a critical edition of the Rig-Veda, a task he pursued over many years (1849–1874).[15] He completed the critical edition for which he is most remembered.[citation needed]

For Müller, the culture of the Vedic peoples represented a form of nature worship, an idea clearly influenced by Romanticism. Müller shared many of the ideas associated with Romanticism, which coloured his account of ancient religions, in particular his emphasis on the formative influence on early religion of emotional communion with natural forces.[16] He saw the gods of the Rig-Veda as active forces of nature, only partly personified as imagined supernatural persons. From this claim Müller derived his theory that mythology is "a disease of language". By this he meant that myth transforms concepts into beings and stories. In Müller's view, "gods" began as words constructed to express abstract ideas, but were transformed into imagined personalities. Thus the Indo-European father-god appears under various names: Zeus, Jupiter, Dyaus Pita. For Müller all these names can be traced to the word "Dyaus", which he understood to imply "shining" or "radiance". This leads to the terms "deva", "deus", "theos" as generic terms for a god, and to the names "Zeus" and "Jupiter" (derived from deus-pater). In this way a metaphor becomes personified and ossified. This aspect of Müller's thinking was later explored similarly by Nietzsche.[citation needed]

Gifford Lectures

 
1875 Vanity Fair caricature of Müller confirming that, at the age of fifty-one, with numerous honours, he was one of the truly notable "Men of the Day".

In 1888, Müller was appointed Gifford Lecturer at the University of Glasgow. These Gifford Lectures were the first in an annual series, given at several Scottish universities, that has continued to the present day. Over the next four years, Müller gave four series of lectures.[3] The titles and order of the lectures were as follows:[17]

  1. Natural Religion. This first course of lectures was intended as purely introductory, and had for its object a definition of Natural Religion in its widest sense.
  2. Physical Religion. This second course of lectures was intended to show how different nations had arrived at a belief in something infinite behind the finite, in something invisible behind the visible, in many unseen agents or gods of nature, until they reached a belief in one god above all those gods. In short, a history of the discovery of the infinite in nature.
  3. Anthropological Religion. This third course was intended to show how different nations arrived at a belief in a soul, how they named its various faculties, and what they imagined about its fate after death.
  4. Theosophy or Psychological Religion. The fourth and last course of lectures was intended to examine the relation between God and the soul ("these two Infinites"), including the ideas that some of the principal nations of the world have formed concerning this relation. Real religion, Müller asserted, is founded on a true perception of the relation of the soul to God and of God to the soul; Müller wanted to prove that this was true, not only as a postulate, but as an historical fact. The original title of the lectures was 'Psychological Religion' but Müller felt compelled to add 'Theosophy' to it. Müller's final Gifford Lecture is significant in interpreting his work broadly, as he situates his philological and historical research within a Hermetic and mystical theological project.[18]: 108–110 

As translator

In 1881, he published a translation of the first edition of Kant's Critique of Pure Reason. He agreed with Schopenhauer that this edition was the most direct and honest expression of Kant's thought. His translation corrected several errors that were committed by previous translators.[19] In his Translator's Preface, Müller wrote

The bridge of thoughts and sighs that spans the whole history of the Aryan world has its first arch in the Veda, its last in Kant's Critique. ... While in the Veda we may study the childhood, we may study in Kant's Critique of Pure Reason the perfect manhood of the Aryan mind. ... The materials are now accessible, and the English-speaking race, the race of the future, will have in Kant's Critique another Aryan heirloom, as precious as the Veda—a work that may be criticised, but can never be ignored.

Müller continued to be influenced by the Kantian Transcendentalist model of spirituality,[20] and was opposed to Darwinian ideas of human development.[21] He argued that "language forms an impassable barrier between man and beast."[22]

Views on India

Early career

On 25 August 1866, Müller wrote to Chevalier Bunsen:

India is much riper for Christianity than Rome or Greece were at the time of St. Paul. The rotten tree has for some time had artificial supports, because its fall would have been inconvenient for the government. But if the Englishman comes to see that the tree must fall, sooner or later, then the thing is done... I should like to lay down my life, or at least to lend my hand to bring about this struggle... I do not at all like to go to India as a missionary, that makes one dependent on the parsons... I should like to live for ten years quite quietly and learn the language, try to make friends, and see whether I was fit to take part in a work, by means of which the old mischief of Indian priestcraft could be overthrown and the way opened for the entrance of simple Christian teaching...

— The Life And Letters Of The Right Honourable Friedrich Max Müller Vol.i, Chapter X[23]

In his career, Müller several times expressed the view that a "reformation" within Hinduism needed to occur, comparable to the Christian Reformation.[24] In his view, "if there is one thing which a comparative study of religions places in the clearest light, it is the inevitable decay to which every religion is exposed... Whenever we can trace back a religion to its first beginnings, we find it free from many blemishes that affected it in its later states".[25]

He used his links with the Brahmo Samaj to encourage such a reformation on the lines pioneered by Ram Mohan Roy. Müller believed that the Brahmos would engender an Indian form of Christianity and that they were in practice "Christians, without being Roman Catholics, Anglicans or Lutherans". In the Lutheran tradition, he hoped that the "superstition" and idolatry, which he considered to be characteristic of modern popular Hinduism, would disappear.[26]

Müller wrote:

The translation of the Veda will hereafter tell to a great extent on the fate of India, and on the growth of millions of souls in that country. It is the root of their religion, and to show them what the root is, I feel sure, is the only way of uprooting all that has sprung from it during the last 3,000 years... one ought to be up and doing what may be God's work.[27][28]

Müller hoped that increased funding for education in India would promote a new form of literature combining Western and Indian traditions. In 1868 he wrote to George Campbell, the newly appointed Secretary of State for India:

India has been conquered once, but India must be conquered again, and that second conquest should be a conquest by education. Much has been done for education of late, but if the funds were tripled and quadrupled, that would hardly be enough (...) By encouraging a study of their own ancient literature, as part of their education, a national feeling of pride and self-respect will be reawakened among those who influence the large masses of the people. A new national literature may spring up, impregnated with Western ideas, yet retaining its native spirit and character (...) A new national literature will bring with it a new national life, and new moral vigour. As to religion, that will take care of itself. The missionaries have done far more than they themselves seem to be aware of, nay, much of the work which is theirs they would probably disclaim. The Christianity of our nineteenth century will hardly be the Christianity of India. But the ancient religion of India is doomed—and if Christianity does not step in, whose fault will it be?

— Max Müller, (1868)[29]

Late career

 
In uniform, 1890s

In his sixties and seventies, Müller gave a series of lectures, which reflected a more nuanced view in favour of Hinduism and the ancient literature from India. In his "What can India teach us?" lecture at University of Cambridge, he championed ancient Sanskrit literature and India as follows:

If I were to look over the whole world to find out the country most richly endowed with all the wealth, power, and beauty that nature can bestow—in some parts a very paradise on earth—I should point to India. If I were asked under what sky the human mind has most full developed some of its choicest gifts, has most deeply pondered on the greatest problems of life, and has found solutions of some of them which well deserve the attention even of those who have studied Plato and Kant—I should point to India. And if I were to ask myself from what literature we, here in Europe, we who have been nurtured almost exclusively on the thoughts of Greeks and Romans, and of one Semitic race, the Jewish, may draw that corrective which is most wanted in order to make our inner life more perfect, more comprehensive, more universal, in fact more truly human, a life, not for this life only, but a transfigured and eternal life—again I should point to India.

— Max Müller, (1883)[30]

He also conjectured that the introduction of Islam in India in the 11th century had a deep effect on the psyche and behaviour of Hindus in another lecture, "Truthful Character of the Hindus":

The other epic poem too, the Mahabharata, is full of episodes showing a profound regard for truth. (...) Were I to quote from all the law-books, and from still later works, everywhere you would hear the same key-note of truthfulness vibrating through them all. (...) I say once more that I do not wish to represent the people of India as two hundred and fifty-three millions of angels, but I do wish it to be understood and to be accepted as a fact, that the damaging charge of untruthfulness brought against that people is utterly unfounded with regard to ancient times. It is not only not true, but the very opposite of the truth. As to modern times, and I date them from about 1000 after Christ (AD), I can only say that, after reading the accounts of the terrors and horrors of Mohammedan rule, my wonder is that so much of native virtue and truthfulness should have survived. You might as well expect a mouse to speak the truth before a cat, as a Hindu before a Mohammedan judge.

— Max Müller, (1884)[31]

Swami Vivekananda, who was the foremost disciple of Ramakrishna Paramahamsa, met Müller over a lunch on 28 May 1896. Regarding Müller and his wife, the Swami later wrote:[32]

The visit was really a revelation to me. That little white house, its setting in a beautiful garden, the silver-haired sage, with a face calm and benign, and forehead smooth as a child's in spite of seventy winters, and every line in that face speaking of a deep-seated mine of spirituality somewhere behind; that noble wife, the helpmate of his life through his long and arduous task of exciting interest, overriding opposition and contempt, and at last creating a respect for the thoughts of the sages of ancient India—the trees, the flowers, the calmness, and the clear sky—all these sent me back in imagination to the glorious days of ancient India, the days of our brahmarshis and rajarshis, the days of the great vanaprasthas, the days of Arundhatis and Vasishthas. It was neither the philologist nor the scholar that I saw, but a soul that is every day realizing its oneness with the universe.

Controversies

 
Studio Portrait of Professor Max Müller, c. 1880

Anti-Christian

During the course of his Gifford Lectures on the subject of "natural religion", Müller was severely criticised for being anti-Christian. In 1891, at a meeting of the Established Presbytery of Glasgow, Mr. Thomson (Minister of Ladywell) moved a motion that Müller's teaching was "subversive of the Christian faith, and fitted to spread pantheistic and infidel views amongst the students and others" and questioned Müller's appointment as lecturer.[33] An even stronger attack on Müller was made by Monsignor Alexander Munro in St Andrew's Cathedral. Munro, an officer of the Roman Catholic Church in Scotland (and Provost of the Catholic Cathedral of Glasgow from 1884 to 1892), declared that Müller's lectures "were nothing less than a crusade against Divine revelation, against Jesus Christ, and against Christianity". The blasphemous lectures were, he continued, "the proclamation of atheism under the guise of pantheism" and "uprooted our idea of God, for it repudiated the idea of a personal God".[34]

Similar accusations had already led to Müller's exclusion from the Boden chair in Sanskrit in favour of the conservative Monier Monier-Williams. By the 1880s Müller was being courted by Charles Godfrey Leland, medium Helena Blavatsky, and other writers who were seeking to assert the merits of "pagan" religious traditions over Christianity. The designer Mary Fraser Tytler stated that Müller's book Chips from a German Workshop (a collection of his essays) was her "Bible", which helped her to create a multi-cultural sacred imagery.[citation needed]

Müller distanced himself from these developments, and remained within the Lutheran faith in which he had been brought up. According to G. Beckerlegge, "Müller's background as a Lutheran German and his identification with the Broad Church party" led to "suspicion by those opposed to the political and religious positions that they felt Müller represented", particularly his latitudinarianism.[35]

Although Müller took a strong religious and academic interest in Hinduism and other non-Christian religions, and often compared Christianity to religions that many traditional Protestants would have regarded as primitive or false, he grounded his Perennialism in a belief that Christianity possessed the fullest truth of all living religions.[18]: 109–10  Twenty-first century scholars of religion, far from accusing Müller of being anti-Christian, have critically examined Müller's theological project as evidence for a bias towards Christian conceptions of God in early academic religious studies.[18]: 120–2 [36]

Darwin disagreement

Müller attempted to formulate a philosophy of religion that addressed the crisis of faith engendered by the historical and critical study of religion by German scholars on the one hand, and by the Darwinian revolution on the other. He was wary of Darwin's work on human evolution, and attacked his view of the development of human faculties. His work was taken up by cultural commentators such as his friend John Ruskin, who saw it as a productive response to the crisis of the age (compare Matthew Arnold's "Dover Beach"). He analyzed mythologies as rationalisations of natural phenomena, primitive beginnings that we might denominate "protoscience" within a cultural evolution.[citation needed] Müller also proposed an early, mystical interpretation of theistic evolution, using Darwinism as a critique of mechanical philosophy.[18]: 113 

In 1870 Müller gave a short course of three lectures for the British Institution on language as the barrier between man and beast, which he called "On Darwin's Philosophy of Language". Müller specifically disagreed with Darwin's theories on the origin of language and that the language of man could have developed from the language of animals. In 1873, he sent a copy of his lectures to Darwin reassuring him that, though he differed from some of Darwin's conclusions, he was one of his "diligent readers and sincere admirers".[37]

Aryanism

Müller's work contributed to the developing interest in Aryan culture, which often set Indo-European ("Aryan") traditions in opposition to Semitic religions. He was "deeply saddened by the fact that these classifications later came to be expressed in racist terms", as this was far from his intention.[38] For Müller, the discovery of common Indian and European ancestry was a powerful argument against racism, arguing that "an ethnologist who speaks of Aryan race, Aryan blood, Aryan eyes and hair, is as great a sinner as a linguist who speaks of a dolichocephalic dictionary or a brachycephalic grammar" and that "the blackest Hindus represent an earlier stage of Aryan speech and thought than the fairest Scandinavians".[39][40]

Turanian

Müller put forward and promoted the theory of a "Turanian" family of languages or speech, comprising the Finnic, Samoyedic, "Tataric" (Turkic), Mongolic, and Tungusic languages.[41] According to Müller, these five languages were those "spoken in Asia or Europe not included under the Arian [sic] and Semitic families, with the exception perhaps of the Chinese and its dialects". In addition, they were "nomadic languages," in contrast to the other two families (Aryan and Semitic), which he called State or political languages.[42]

The idea of a Turanian family of languages was not accepted by everyone at the time.[43] Although the term "Turanian" quickly became an archaism[44] (unlike "Aryan"), it did not disappear completely. The idea was absorbed later into nationalist ideologies in Hungary and Turkey.[45]

Honours

 
Müller on a 1974 stamp of India
 
Müller c. 1898, wearing his Habit vert costume with the insignia of the order Pour le Mérite and the Bavarian Maximilian Order for Science and Art

In 1869, Müller was elected to the French Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres as a foreign correspondent (associé étranger).[5]

In June 1874, Müller was awarded the Pour le Mérite (civil class), much to his surprise. Soon after, when he was commanded to dine at Windsor, he wrote to Prince Leopold to ask if he might wear his Order, and the wire came back, "Not may, but must."[46]

In 1875, Müller was awarded the Bavarian Maximilian Order for Science and Art. The award is given to acknowledge excellent and outstanding achievements in the field of science and art. In a letter to his mother dated 19 December, Müller wrote that the award was more showy than the Pour le Mérite, "but that is the best".[47]

In 1896, Müller was appointed a member of the Privy Council.[48]

Personal life

Müller became a naturalized British citizen in 1855, at the age of 32.

He married Georgina Adelaide Grenfell on 3 August 1859 after overcoming the opposition from her family. The couple had four children – Ada, Mary, Beatrice and William Grenfell – of whom two predeceased them.[4]

Georgina (died 1919) had his papers and correspondence bound; they are at the Bodleian Library, Oxford.[49]

Death and legacy

Müller's health began deteriorating in 1898 and he died at his home in Oxford on 28 October 1900. He was interred at Holywell Cemetery on 1 November 1900.[3]

After his death a memorial fund, the Max Müller Memorial Fund, was opened at Oxford for "the promotion of learning and research in all matters relating to the history and archaeology, the languages, literatures, and religions of ancient India".[50]

Harry Smith stated of his film Heaven and Earth Magic: "The first part depicts the heroine's toothache consequent to the loss of a valuable watermelon, her dentistry and transportation to heaven. Next follows an elaborate exposition of the heavenly land in terms of Israel, Montreal and the second part depicts the return to earth from being eaten by Max Müller on the day Edward the Seventh dedicated the Great Sewer of London."[51]

The Goethe Institutes in India are named Max Müller Bhavan in his honour, as is a street (Max Mueller Marg) in New Delhi.[52]

Müller's biographies include those by Lourens van den Bosch (2002), Jon R. Stone (2002) and Scholar Extraordinary (1974) by Nirad C. Chaudhuri, the last of which was awarded the Sahitya Akademi Award for English by Sahitya Akademi, India's National Academy of Letters. Stephen G. Alter's (2005) work contains a chapter on Müller's rivalry with the American linguist William Dwight Whitney.

Publications

Müller's scholarly works, published separately as well as an 18-volume Collected Works, include:

  • Nārāyana; Friedrich Max Müller (1844). Hitopadesa: eine alte indische Fabelsammlung. Brockhaus.
  • Friedrich Max Müller (1859). A History of Ancient Sanskrit Literature So Far as it Illustrates the Primitive Religion of the Brahmans. Williams and Norgate.
  • Friedrich Max Müller (1866). Lectures on the Science of Language: Delivered at the Royal Institution of Great Britain in April, May, & June 1861. Longmans, Green.
  • Lectures on the Science of Language were translated into Russian in 1866 and published at the first Russian scientific linguistic magazine "Filologicheskie Zapiski".
  • Chips from a German Workshop (1867–1875, 5 vols.)
  • Introduction to the Science of Religion (1873)
  • Max Muller (1878). Lectures on the origin and growth of religion as illustrated by the religions of India. Longmans, Green, and Company.
  • Friedrich Max Müller (1881). Critique of Pure Reason (German: Kritik der reinen Vernunft, KrV), by Immanuel Kant, translated by Friedrich Max Müller.
  • Friedrich Max Müller (1883). India: what Can it Teach Us?: A Course of Lectures Delivered Before the University of Cambridge. Longmans, Green.
  • Biographical Essays (1884)
  • Upanishads. Wordsworth Editions. 1 January 2000. ISBN 978-1-84022-102-2.
  • The German classics from the fourth to the nineteenth century. Scribners. 1886.
  • Müller, F. Max; Macdonell, Arthur Anthony (1886). A Sanskrit grammar for beginners. archive.org (in English and Slovak). London: Longman, Green and Co. p. 208. Archived from the original on 20 October 2018. Retrieved 20 October 2018.
  • The Science of Thought (1887, 2 vols.)
  • Studies in Buddhism. Asian Educational Services. 1999. ISBN 978-81-206-1226-6.
  • F. Max Müller (1888) Biographies of Words and the Home of the Aryas
  • Six Systems of Hindu Philosophy (1899)
  • Gifford Lectures of 1888–1892 (Collected Works, vols. 1–4)
    • Natural Religion (1889)
    • Physical Religion (1891)
    • Anthropological Religion (1892)
    • Theosophy, or Psychological Religion (1893)
  • Auld Lang Syne (1898, 2 vols.), a memoir
  • My Autobiography: A Fragment (1901) [53]

References

  1. ^ John C. Wells (2008), Longman Pronunciation Dictionary (3rd ed.), Longman, ISBN 978-1-4058-8118-0
  2. ^ "Duden | Max | Rechtschreibung, Bedeutung, Definition". Duden (in German). Retrieved 20 October 2018. Mạx
  3. ^ a b c d Sara Abraham and Brannon Hancock, doctoral students of theology in University of Glasgow Friedrich Max Müller. Gifford Lectures.
  4. ^ a b c d e R. C. C. Fynes (May 2007), Müller, Friedrich Max (1823–1900), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, [1], accessed 17 March 2013] (subscription or UK public library membership required)
  5. ^ a b Académiciens depuis 1663. Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres.
  6. ^ Charles Johnston (1900) An Estimate of Max Müller (1823–1900). The American Monthly Review of Reviews, Vol XXII, July–December. The Review of Reviews Company: New York, pp.703–706.
  7. ^ Müller, F. Max (Friedrich Max) (16 October 2009). My Autobiography: A Fragment. p. 97. Retrieved 19 September 2022 – via Project Gutenberg.
  8. ^ Macdonell, A. A. "Dictionary of National Biography, 1901 supplement/Max Müller, Friedrich - Wikisource, the free online library". en.wikisource.org. Retrieved 26 August 2022.
  9. ^ Dictionary of National Biography, 1901 supplement.
  10. ^ Muller (1902), pp. 241–242
  11. ^ Muller (1902), p. 244
  12. ^ George Sandeman (1907). The Harmsworth Encyclopaedia: Everybody's Book of Reference : containing 50,000 articles, profusely illustrated, Volume 6. The Amalgamated Press. p. 4042.
  13. ^ Margaret Thomas (2011). Fifty Key Thinkers on Language and Linguistics. Routledge. p. 109. ISBN 978-0-415-37302-9.
  14. ^ . Archived from the original on 16 September 2016. Retrieved 25 August 2016.
  15. ^ B. R. Modak (1995). Sayana, Volume 203. Sahitya Akademi. p. 33. ISBN 978-81-7201-940-2.
  16. ^ Mittal, Sushil; Thursby, Gene (10 September 2007). Studying Hinduism: Key Concepts and Methods. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-0-203-93973-4. Retrieved 25 August 2016 – via Google Books.
  17. ^ Müller, F. Max (1895), Theosophy or Psychological Religion. London: Longmans, Green and Co., pp.89–90.
  18. ^ a b c d Josephson-Storm, Jason (2017). The Myth of Disenchantment: Magic, Modernity, and the Birth of the Human Sciences. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-40336-6.
  19. ^ J.Lection (1882). The Athenaeum. p. 629. At times Prof. Müller has succeeded in correcting an error and in coming closer to his original or has modified the harshness of Mr. Meiklejohn's style; but in other passages we prefer the latter, and of certain general changes made by Prof. Max Müller. Original from Princeton University
  20. ^ Kant's Critique of Pure Reason, Last Essays by the Right Hon. Professor F. Max Müller ... First Series: Essays on Language, Folklore and Other Subjects; pub. by Longmans, Green and Company, 1901.
  21. ^ The Twentieth Century, Volume 23. p. 745. according to Mr. Max Müller, Kant established against Darwin by proving that there is transcendentalist side to human knowledge which affords. Original from Cornell University
  22. ^ Müller, F. Max. (1899) Three Lectures on the Science of Language, etc., with a Supplement, My Predecessors. 3rd ed. Chicago. p. 9.
  23. ^ Friedrich Max Müller (1902). The Life And Letters Of The Right Honourable Friedrich Max Müller Vol.i. pp. 191–192.
  24. ^ Menant, M. D. (1907). "Influence of Max Müller's Hibbert Lectures in India". The American Journal of Theology. 11 (2): 293–307. doi:10.1086/478685. JSTOR 3153715.
  25. ^ Jacques Waardenburg (1999). Classical Approaches to the Study of Religion: Aims, Methods, and Theories of Research, Volume 1. Walter de Gruyter. p. 87. ISBN 978-3-11-016328-5.
  26. ^ Sharada Sugirtharajah (2003) Imagining hinduism: a postcolonial perspective. Routledge. pp. 60–61. ISBN 81-208-4091-7
  27. ^ Edwin Bryant (2001). The Quest for the Origins of Vedic Culture: The Indo-Aryan Migration Debate. Oxford University Press. p. 289. ISBN 978-0-19-513777-4.
  28. ^ Eliot Weinberger (2000). Karmic Traces, 1993–1999. New Directions Publishing. p. 174. ISBN 978-0-8112-1456-8.
  29. ^ Müller (1902), pp. 357–358
  30. ^ Max Müller, INDIA – LECTURE I. WHAT CAN INDIA TEACH US?, A Course of Lectures Delivered before the University of Cambridge, Project Gutenberg
  31. ^ Max Müller, INDIA – LECTURE II. Truthful Character of the Hindus, A Course of Lectures Delivered before the University of Cambridge, Project Gutenberg
  32. ^ Swami Nikhilananda (1953), (PDF), New York: Ramakrishna-Vivekananda Center, p. 106, ISBN 978-0-911206-25-8, archived from the original (PDF) on 25 January 2012, retrieved 19 March 2012
  33. ^ Müller (1902), p. 262
  34. ^ Müller (1902), p. 263
  35. ^ Beckerlegge, G. (1997) "Professor Friedrich Max Müller and the Missionary Cause". In, John Wolffe (Ed) Religion in Victorian Britain V Culture and Empire. Manchester University Press, p.189.
  36. ^ Russell T. McCutcheon (1997). Manufacturing Religion: The Discourse on Sui Generis Religion and the Politics of Nostalgia. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 58–61. ISBN 978-0-19-535568-0.
  37. ^ Charles Darwin. More Letters of Charles Darwin – Volume 2. p. 397
  38. ^ Jorg Esleben; Jörg Esleben; Christina Kraenzle; Sukanya Kulkarni (2008). Mapping channels between Ganges and Rhein: German-Indian cross-cultural relations. Cambridge Scholars publication. p. 62. ISBN 978-1-84718-587-7. In later years, especially before his death, he was deeply saddened by the fact that these classifications later came to be expressed in racist terms.
  39. ^ F. Max Müller (1888) Biographies of Words and the Home of the Aryas. Kessinger Publishing reprint, 2004, p.120
  40. ^ Dorothy Matilda Figueira (2002) Aryans, Jews, Brahmins: Theorizing Authority Through Myths of Identity, SUNY Press. p. 45. ISBN 0-7914-5532-7
  41. ^ Müller, M. (1854) The last results of the researches respecting the non-Iranian and non-Semitic languages of Asia or Europe, or the Turanian family of language. (Letter of Professor Max Müller to Chevalier Bunsen; Oxford August 1853; on the classification of the Turanian languages). In, Christian Bunsen (1854) Outlines of the Philosophy of Universal History, Applied to Language and Religion. In Two Volumes. Vol. 1. London: Brown, Green, and Longmans.
  42. ^ M. Müller (1855) The languages of the seat of war in the East. With a survey of the three families of language, Semitic, Arian, and Turanian. London: Williams and Norgate, p. 86.
  43. ^ David Waterhouse (2002). The Origins of Himalayan Studies: Brian Houghton Hodgson in Nepal and Darjeeling. p. 20/232. ISBN 978-0-203-48035-9. In 1910, a full decade after Müller's death, the Turan Tarsasag 'Turanian Society' was founded in order to study the history and culture of the Hungarians and other 'Turanian' peoples.
  44. ^ T. Masuza (2005) The Invention of World Religions, Or, How European Universalism was Preserved in the Language of Pluralism. The University of Chicago Press, p. 229. ISBN 0-226-50989-3
  45. ^ Günay Göksu Özdoğan: The case of racism-Turanism: Turkism during single-party period, 1931–1944: a radical variant of Turkish nationalism
  46. ^ Müller (1902), p. 462
  47. ^ Müller (1902), p. 503
  48. ^ "No. 26754". The London Gazette. 30 June 1896. p. 3767.
  49. ^ "Max Muller Papers". Retrieved 25 August 2016.
  50. ^ Max Müller Memorial Fund 3 January 2011 at the Wayback Machine. Faculty of Oriental Studies, University of Oxford.
  51. ^ . Archived from the original on 12 June 2010.
  52. ^ About Max Mueller. Goethe-Institut / Max Mueller Bhavan.
  53. ^ Müller, F. Max (Friedrich Max) (16 October 2009). My Autobiography: A Fragment. Retrieved 25 August 2016 – via Project Gutenberg.

Cited sources

  • Müller, Georgina (1902). The Life and Letters of Right Honorable Friedrich Max Müller. Vol. 1. London: Longman.

Further reading

  • Lourens van den Bosch (2002). Friedrich Max Müller: A Life Devoted to Humanities. E. J. Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-12505-6.
  • Jon R. Stone (6 December 2002). The Essential Max Müller: On Language, Mythology, and Religion. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-312-29309-3.
  • Nirad C. Chaudhuri (1974). Scholar Extraordinary: The Life of Professor the Rt. Hon. Friedrich Max Müller. Chatto & Windus. ISBN 978-0-7011-1944-7.
  • Stephen G. Alter (9 March 2005). "The Battle with Max Müller". William Dwight Whitney and the Science of Language. Johns Hopkins University Press. pp. 174–207. ISBN 978-0-8018-8020-9.
  • Stefan Arvidsson (2006). . University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-02860-6. Archived from the original on 21 December 2016.
  • John R. Davis and Angus Nicholls, eds. (2017) Friedrich Max Müller and the Role of Philology in Victorian Thought. Routledge
  • John R. Davis and Angus Nicholls (2016), "Friedrich Max Müller: The Career and Intellectual Trajectory of a German Philologist in Victorian Britain". Publications of the English Goethe Society 85, no. 2-3 (2016): 67–97
  • Arie Molendijk (2016). Friedrich Max Müller and the Sacred Books of the East. Oxford University Press.
  • Joan Leopold, "Steinthal and Max Müller: Comparative Lives", Chajim H. Steinthal, Sprachwissenschaflter und Philosoph im 19. Jahrhundert. Linguist and Philosopher in the 19th Century, eds. Hartwig Wiedebach and Annette Winkelmann. Leiden, Boston, Köln: Brill, 2002 (= Studies in European Judaism, IV), pp. 31–49.
  • Joan Leopold,"Max Müller and the Linguistic Study of Civilization“ and Editor. Friedrich Max Müller, "Comparative Philology of the Indo-european languages in its bearing on the early civilisation of Mankind" (1849), in Contributions to Comparative Indo-European, African and Chinese Linguistics: Max Müller and Steinthal. Dordrecht and Boston: Springer, 1999, pp. 1–206. [= Prix Volney Essay Series, III] With full bibliography of works.
  • Joan Leopold, "Ethnic Stereotypes in Linguistics: The Case of Friedrich Max Müller (1847–1851)", Papers in the History of Linguistics [delivered at Princeton, 1984] eds. H. Aarsleff, L. G. Kelly and H.-J. Niederehe. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: J. Benjamins, 1987, pp. 501–12.
  • Joan Leopold, "Friedrich Max Müller and the question of the early Indo Europeans (1847–1851)", Etudes inter-ethniques, Annales du Centre d'études supérieures et de recherches sur les relations ethniques et le racisme (Paris), VII (1984), 21–32.
  • Joan Leopold, "Britische Anwendungen der arischen Rassentheorie auf Indien 1850 70", Saeculum, XXV (1974), 386–411. (trans. of following item)
  • Joan Leopold, "British Applications of the Aryan Theory of Race to India 1850 70", The English Historical Review, LXXXIX (1974), 578–603. (Winner of Universities Essay Prize, Royal Asiatic Society, London)
  • Joan Leopold, "The Aryan Theory of Race in India 1870–1920", The Indian Economic and Social History Review, VII (1970), 271–97.
  • Subin, Anna Della. Accidental Gods, Metropolitan Books, 2021.

External links

  • Max Müller. (2011). In Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved from https://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/396833/Max-Muller
  • Works by Max Müller at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Max Müller at Internet Archive
  • Works by Max Müller at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Deutsche Liebe, Novel by F. Max Müller 1857, E-Book Edition 2011 (German), Philipp Grieb IT-Redaktion
  • Online Library of Liberty – Friedrich Max Müller
  • Gifford Lecture Series – Biography – Friedrich Max Müller by Dr Brannon Hancock
  • Lourens P. van den Bosch,"Theosophy or Pantheism?: Friedrich Max Müller's Gifford Lectures on Natural Religion": full text of the article
  • Vedas and Upanishads
  • Vivekananda on Max Müller
  • Friedrich Max Müller, The Hymns of the Rigveda, with Sayana's commentary London, 1849–74, 2nd ed. 4 vols., Oxford, 1890–92. PDF format.

müller, other, people, named, disambiguation, friedrich, german, ˈfʁiːdʁɪç, ˈmaks, ˈmʏlɐ, december, 1823, october, 1900, german, born, philologist, orientalist, lived, studied, britain, most, life, founders, western, academic, disciplines, indian, studies, rel. For other people named Max Muller see Max Muller disambiguation Friedrich Max Muller German ˈfʁiːdʁɪc ˈmaks ˈmʏlɐ 1 2 6 December 1823 28 October 1900 was a German born philologist and Orientalist who lived and studied in Britain for most of his life He was one of the founders of the western academic disciplines of Indian studies and religious studies science of religion German Religionswissenschaft 3 Muller wrote both scholarly and popular works on the subject of Indology The Sacred Books of the East a 50 volume set of English translations was prepared under his direction He also promoted the idea of a Turanian family of languages Max MullerMuller in 1883BornFriedrich Max Muller 1823 12 06 6 December 1823Dessau Duchy of Anhalt German ConfederationDied28 October 1900 1900 10 28 aged 76 Oxford Oxfordshire EnglandOccupationWriter scholarNationalityBritishEducationUniversity of LeipzigNotable worksThe Sacred Books of the East Chips from a German WorkshopSpouseGeorgina Adelaide GrenfellChildren4 including Wilhelm Grenfell Max MullerSignature Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Academic career 3 Scholarly and literary works 3 1 Sanskrit studies 3 2 Gifford Lectures 3 3 As translator 4 Views on India 4 1 Early career 4 2 Late career 5 Controversies 5 1 Anti Christian 5 2 Darwin disagreement 5 3 Aryanism 5 4 Turanian 6 Honours 7 Personal life 8 Death and legacy 9 Publications 10 References 11 Cited sources 12 Further reading 13 External linksEarly life and education EditMax Muller was born into a cultured family on 6 December 1823 in Dessau the son of Wilhelm Muller a lyric poet whose verse Franz Schubert had set to music in his song cycles Die schone Mullerin and Winterreise His mother Adelheid Muller nee von Basedow was the eldest daughter of a prime minister of Anhalt Dessau Carl Maria von Weber was a godfather 4 Muller was named after his mother s elder brother Friedrich and after the central character Max in Weber s opera Der Freischutz Later in life he adopted Max as a part of his surname believing that the prevalence of Muller as a name made it too common 4 His name was also recorded as Maximilian on several official documents e g university register marriage certificate citation needed on some of his honours 5 and in some other publications 6 Muller entered the gymnasium grammar school at Dessau when he was six years old In 1835 at the age of twelve he was sent to live in the house of Professor Carus and attend the Nicolai School at Leipzig where he continued his studies of music and classics 7 It was during his time in Leipzig that he frequently met Felix Mendelssohn 4 In need of a scholarship to attend Leipzig University Muller successfully sat his abitur examination at Zerbst While preparing he found that the syllabus differed from what he had been taught necessitating that he rapidly learn mathematics modern languages and science 4 He entered Leipzig University in 1841 to study philology leaving behind his early interest in music and poetry Muller received his Ph D degree in Sep 1843 8 His final dissertation was on Spinoza s Ethics 3 He also displayed an aptitude for classical languages learning Greek Latin Arabic Persian and Sanskrit Academic career Edit Wikisource has original text related to this article Max Muller s submission for the Boden Professorship election In 1850 Muller was appointed deputy Taylorian professor of modern European languages at Oxford University In the following year at the suggestion of Thomas Gaisford he was made an honorary M A and a member of the college of Christ Church Oxford On succeeding to the full professorship in 1854 he received the full degree of M A by Decree of Convocation In 1858 he was elected to a life fellowship at All Souls College 9 He was defeated in the 1860 election for the position of Boden Professor of Sanskrit which was a keen disappointment to him 10 Muller was far better qualified for the post than the other candidate Monier Monier Williams but Muller s broad clarification needed theological views Lutheranism German birth and lack of practical first hand knowledge of India spoke against him After the election he wrote to his mother all the best people voted for me the Professors almost unanimously but the vulgus profanum made the majority 11 Later in 1868 Muller became Oxford s first professor of comparative philology a position founded on his behalf He held this chair until his death although he retired from its active duties in 1875 12 Scholarly and literary works EditSanskrit studies Edit In 1844 prior to commencing his academic career at Oxford Muller studied in Berlin with Friedrich Schelling He began to translate the Upanishads for Schelling and continued to research Sanskrit under Franz Bopp the first systematic scholar of the Indo European languages IE Schelling led Muller to relate the history of language to the history of religion At this time Muller published his first book a German translation of the Hitopadesa a collection of Indian fables 13 In 1845 Muller moved to Paris to study Sanskrit under Eugene Burnouf Burnouf encouraged him to publish the complete Rigveda making use of the manuscripts available in England He moved to England in 1846 to study Sanskrit texts in the collection of the East India Company He supported himself at first with creative writing his novel German Love being popular in its day Muller s connections with the East India Company and with Sanskritists based at Oxford University led to a career in Britain where he eventually became the leading intellectual commentator on the culture of India At the time Britain controlled this territory as part of its Empire This led to complex exchanges between Indian and British intellectual culture especially through Muller s links with the Brahmo Samaj Muller s Sanskrit studies came at a time when scholars had started to see language development in relation to cultural development The recent discovery of the Indo European language group had started to lead to much speculation about the relationship between Greco Roman cultures and those of more ancient peoples In particular the Vedic culture of India was thought to have been the ancestor of European Classical cultures Scholars sought to compare the genetically related European and Asian languages to reconstruct the earliest form of the root language The Vedic language Sanskrit was thought to be the oldest of the IE languages Muller devoted himself to the study of this language becoming one of the major Sanskrit scholars of his day He believed that the earliest documents of Vedic culture should be studied to provide the key to the development of pagan European religions and of religious belief in general To this end Muller sought to understand the most ancient of Vedic scriptures the Rig Veda Muller translated the Rigveda Samhita book written by the 14th century Sanskrit scholar Sayanacharya from Sanskrit to English Muller was greatly impressed by Ramakrishna Paramhansa his contemporary and proponent of Vedantic philosophy and wrote several essays and books about him 14 Portrait of the elderly Max Muller by George Frederic Watts 1894 1895 For Muller the study of the language had to relate to the study of the culture in which it had been used He came to the view that the development of languages should be tied to that of belief systems At that time the Vedic scriptures were little known in the West though there was increasing interest in the philosophy of the Upanishads Muller believed that the sophisticated Upanishadic philosophy could be linked to the primitive henotheism of early Vedic Brahmanism from which it evolved He had to travel to London to look at documents held in the collection of the British East India Company While there he persuaded the company to allow him to undertake a critical edition of the Rig Veda a task he pursued over many years 1849 1874 15 He completed the critical edition for which he is most remembered citation needed For Muller the culture of the Vedic peoples represented a form of nature worship an idea clearly influenced by Romanticism Muller shared many of the ideas associated with Romanticism which coloured his account of ancient religions in particular his emphasis on the formative influence on early religion of emotional communion with natural forces 16 He saw the gods of the Rig Veda as active forces of nature only partly personified as imagined supernatural persons From this claim Muller derived his theory that mythology is a disease of language By this he meant that myth transforms concepts into beings and stories In Muller s view gods began as words constructed to express abstract ideas but were transformed into imagined personalities Thus the Indo European father god appears under various names Zeus Jupiter Dyaus Pita For Muller all these names can be traced to the word Dyaus which he understood to imply shining or radiance This leads to the terms deva deus theos as generic terms for a god and to the names Zeus and Jupiter derived from deus pater In this way a metaphor becomes personified and ossified This aspect of Muller s thinking was later explored similarly by Nietzsche citation needed Gifford Lectures Edit 1875 Vanity Fair caricature of Muller confirming that at the age of fifty one with numerous honours he was one of the truly notable Men of the Day In 1888 Muller was appointed Gifford Lecturer at the University of Glasgow These Gifford Lectures were the first in an annual series given at several Scottish universities that has continued to the present day Over the next four years Muller gave four series of lectures 3 The titles and order of the lectures were as follows 17 Natural Religion This first course of lectures was intended as purely introductory and had for its object a definition of Natural Religion in its widest sense Physical Religion This second course of lectures was intended to show how different nations had arrived at a belief in something infinite behind the finite in something invisible behind the visible in many unseen agents or gods of nature until they reached a belief in one god above all those gods In short a history of the discovery of the infinite in nature Anthropological Religion This third course was intended to show how different nations arrived at a belief in a soul how they named its various faculties and what they imagined about its fate after death Theosophy or Psychological Religion The fourth and last course of lectures was intended to examine the relation between God and the soul these two Infinites including the ideas that some of the principal nations of the world have formed concerning this relation Real religion Muller asserted is founded on a true perception of the relation of the soul to God and of God to the soul Muller wanted to prove that this was true not only as a postulate but as an historical fact The original title of the lectures was Psychological Religion but Muller felt compelled to add Theosophy to it Muller s final Gifford Lecture is significant in interpreting his work broadly as he situates his philological and historical research within a Hermetic and mystical theological project 18 108 110 As translator Edit In 1881 he published a translation of the first edition of Kant s Critique of Pure Reason He agreed with Schopenhauer that this edition was the most direct and honest expression of Kant s thought His translation corrected several errors that were committed by previous translators 19 In his Translator s Preface Muller wrote The bridge of thoughts and sighs that spans the whole history of the Aryan world has its first arch in the Veda its last in Kant s Critique While in the Veda we may study the childhood we may study in Kant s Critique of Pure Reason the perfect manhood of the Aryan mind The materials are now accessible and the English speaking race the race of the future will have in Kant s Critique another Aryan heirloom as precious as the Veda a work that may be criticised but can never be ignored Muller continued to be influenced by the Kantian Transcendentalist model of spirituality 20 and was opposed to Darwinian ideas of human development 21 He argued that language forms an impassable barrier between man and beast 22 Views on India EditEarly career Edit On 25 August 1866 Muller wrote to Chevalier Bunsen India is much riper for Christianity than Rome or Greece were at the time of St Paul The rotten tree has for some time had artificial supports because its fall would have been inconvenient for the government But if the Englishman comes to see that the tree must fall sooner or later then the thing is done I should like to lay down my life or at least to lend my hand to bring about this struggle I do not at all like to go to India as a missionary that makes one dependent on the parsons I should like to live for ten years quite quietly and learn the language try to make friends and see whether I was fit to take part in a work by means of which the old mischief of Indian priestcraft could be overthrown and the way opened for the entrance of simple Christian teaching The Life And Letters Of The Right Honourable Friedrich Max Muller Vol i Chapter X 23 In his career Muller several times expressed the view that a reformation within Hinduism needed to occur comparable to the Christian Reformation 24 In his view if there is one thing which a comparative study of religions places in the clearest light it is the inevitable decay to which every religion is exposed Whenever we can trace back a religion to its first beginnings we find it free from many blemishes that affected it in its later states 25 He used his links with the Brahmo Samaj to encourage such a reformation on the lines pioneered by Ram Mohan Roy Muller believed that the Brahmos would engender an Indian form of Christianity and that they were in practice Christians without being Roman Catholics Anglicans or Lutherans In the Lutheran tradition he hoped that the superstition and idolatry which he considered to be characteristic of modern popular Hinduism would disappear 26 Muller wrote The translation of the Veda will hereafter tell to a great extent on the fate of India and on the growth of millions of souls in that country It is the root of their religion and to show them what the root is I feel sure is the only way of uprooting all that has sprung from it during the last 3 000 years one ought to be up and doing what may be God s work 27 28 Muller hoped that increased funding for education in India would promote a new form of literature combining Western and Indian traditions In 1868 he wrote to George Campbell the newly appointed Secretary of State for India India has been conquered once but India must be conquered again and that second conquest should be a conquest by education Much has been done for education of late but if the funds were tripled and quadrupled that would hardly be enough By encouraging a study of their own ancient literature as part of their education a national feeling of pride and self respect will be reawakened among those who influence the large masses of the people A new national literature may spring up impregnated with Western ideas yet retaining its native spirit and character A new national literature will bring with it a new national life and new moral vigour As to religion that will take care of itself The missionaries have done far more than they themselves seem to be aware of nay much of the work which is theirs they would probably disclaim The Christianity of our nineteenth century will hardly be the Christianity of India But the ancient religion of India is doomed and if Christianity does not step in whose fault will it be Max Muller 1868 29 Late career Edit In uniform 1890s In his sixties and seventies Muller gave a series of lectures which reflected a more nuanced view in favour of Hinduism and the ancient literature from India In his What can India teach us lecture at University of Cambridge he championed ancient Sanskrit literature and India as follows If I were to look over the whole world to find out the country most richly endowed with all the wealth power and beauty that nature can bestow in some parts a very paradise on earth I should point to India If I were asked under what sky the human mind has most full developed some of its choicest gifts has most deeply pondered on the greatest problems of life and has found solutions of some of them which well deserve the attention even of those who have studied Plato and Kant I should point to India And if I were to ask myself from what literature we here in Europe we who have been nurtured almost exclusively on the thoughts of Greeks and Romans and of one Semitic race the Jewish may draw that corrective which is most wanted in order to make our inner life more perfect more comprehensive more universal in fact more truly human a life not for this life only but a transfigured and eternal life again I should point to India Max Muller 1883 30 He also conjectured that the introduction of Islam in India in the 11th century had a deep effect on the psyche and behaviour of Hindus in another lecture Truthful Character of the Hindus The other epic poem too the Mahabharata is full of episodes showing a profound regard for truth Were I to quote from all the law books and from still later works everywhere you would hear the same key note of truthfulness vibrating through them all I say once more that I do not wish to represent the people of India as two hundred and fifty three millions of angels but I do wish it to be understood and to be accepted as a fact that the damaging charge of untruthfulness brought against that people is utterly unfounded with regard to ancient times It is not only not true but the very opposite of the truth As to modern times and I date them from about 1000 after Christ AD I can only say that after reading the accounts of the terrors and horrors of Mohammedan rule my wonder is that so much of native virtue and truthfulness should have survived You might as well expect a mouse to speak the truth before a cat as a Hindu before a Mohammedan judge Max Muller 1884 31 Swami Vivekananda who was the foremost disciple of Ramakrishna Paramahamsa met Muller over a lunch on 28 May 1896 Regarding Muller and his wife the Swami later wrote 32 The visit was really a revelation to me That little white house its setting in a beautiful garden the silver haired sage with a face calm and benign and forehead smooth as a child s in spite of seventy winters and every line in that face speaking of a deep seated mine of spirituality somewhere behind that noble wife the helpmate of his life through his long and arduous task of exciting interest overriding opposition and contempt and at last creating a respect for the thoughts of the sages of ancient India the trees the flowers the calmness and the clear sky all these sent me back in imagination to the glorious days of ancient India the days of our brahmarshis and rajarshis the days of the great vanaprasthas the days of Arundhatis and Vasishthas It was neither the philologist nor the scholar that I saw but a soul that is every day realizing its oneness with the universe Controversies Edit Studio Portrait of Professor Max Muller c 1880 Anti Christian Edit During the course of his Gifford Lectures on the subject of natural religion Muller was severely criticised for being anti Christian In 1891 at a meeting of the Established Presbytery of Glasgow Mr Thomson Minister of Ladywell moved a motion that Muller s teaching was subversive of the Christian faith and fitted to spread pantheistic and infidel views amongst the students and others and questioned Muller s appointment as lecturer 33 An even stronger attack on Muller was made by Monsignor Alexander Munro in St Andrew s Cathedral Munro an officer of the Roman Catholic Church in Scotland and Provost of the Catholic Cathedral of Glasgow from 1884 to 1892 declared that Muller s lectures were nothing less than a crusade against Divine revelation against Jesus Christ and against Christianity The blasphemous lectures were he continued the proclamation of atheism under the guise of pantheism and uprooted our idea of God for it repudiated the idea of a personal God 34 Similar accusations had already led to Muller s exclusion from the Boden chair in Sanskrit in favour of the conservative Monier Monier Williams By the 1880s Muller was being courted by Charles Godfrey Leland medium Helena Blavatsky and other writers who were seeking to assert the merits of pagan religious traditions over Christianity The designer Mary Fraser Tytler stated that Muller s book Chips from a German Workshop a collection of his essays was her Bible which helped her to create a multi cultural sacred imagery citation needed Muller distanced himself from these developments and remained within the Lutheran faith in which he had been brought up According to G Beckerlegge Muller s background as a Lutheran German and his identification with the Broad Church party led to suspicion by those opposed to the political and religious positions that they felt Muller represented particularly his latitudinarianism 35 Although Muller took a strong religious and academic interest in Hinduism and other non Christian religions and often compared Christianity to religions that many traditional Protestants would have regarded as primitive or false he grounded his Perennialism in a belief that Christianity possessed the fullest truth of all living religions 18 109 10 Twenty first century scholars of religion far from accusing Muller of being anti Christian have critically examined Muller s theological project as evidence for a bias towards Christian conceptions of God in early academic religious studies 18 120 2 36 Darwin disagreement Edit Muller attempted to formulate a philosophy of religion that addressed the crisis of faith engendered by the historical and critical study of religion by German scholars on the one hand and by the Darwinian revolution on the other He was wary of Darwin s work on human evolution and attacked his view of the development of human faculties His work was taken up by cultural commentators such as his friend John Ruskin who saw it as a productive response to the crisis of the age compare Matthew Arnold s Dover Beach He analyzed mythologies as rationalisations of natural phenomena primitive beginnings that we might denominate protoscience within a cultural evolution citation needed Muller also proposed an early mystical interpretation of theistic evolution using Darwinism as a critique of mechanical philosophy 18 113 In 1870 Muller gave a short course of three lectures for the British Institution on language as the barrier between man and beast which he called On Darwin s Philosophy of Language Muller specifically disagreed with Darwin s theories on the origin of language and that the language of man could have developed from the language of animals In 1873 he sent a copy of his lectures to Darwin reassuring him that though he differed from some of Darwin s conclusions he was one of his diligent readers and sincere admirers 37 Aryanism Edit Muller s work contributed to the developing interest in Aryan culture which often set Indo European Aryan traditions in opposition to Semitic religions He was deeply saddened by the fact that these classifications later came to be expressed in racist terms as this was far from his intention 38 For Muller the discovery of common Indian and European ancestry was a powerful argument against racism arguing that an ethnologist who speaks of Aryan race Aryan blood Aryan eyes and hair is as great a sinner as a linguist who speaks of a dolichocephalic dictionary or a brachycephalic grammar and that the blackest Hindus represent an earlier stage of Aryan speech and thought than the fairest Scandinavians 39 40 Turanian Edit Muller put forward and promoted the theory of a Turanian family of languages or speech comprising the Finnic Samoyedic Tataric Turkic Mongolic and Tungusic languages 41 According to Muller these five languages were those spoken in Asia or Europe not included under the Arian sic and Semitic families with the exception perhaps of the Chinese and its dialects In addition they were nomadic languages in contrast to the other two families Aryan and Semitic which he called State or political languages 42 The idea of a Turanian family of languages was not accepted by everyone at the time 43 Although the term Turanian quickly became an archaism 44 unlike Aryan it did not disappear completely The idea was absorbed later into nationalist ideologies in Hungary and Turkey 45 Honours Edit Muller on a 1974 stamp of India Muller c 1898 wearing his Habit vert costume with the insignia of the order Pour le Merite and the Bavarian Maximilian Order for Science and Art In 1869 Muller was elected to the French Academie des Inscriptions et Belles Lettres as a foreign correspondent associe etranger 5 In June 1874 Muller was awarded the Pour le Merite civil class much to his surprise Soon after when he was commanded to dine at Windsor he wrote to Prince Leopold to ask if he might wear his Order and the wire came back Not may but must 46 In 1875 Muller was awarded the Bavarian Maximilian Order for Science and Art The award is given to acknowledge excellent and outstanding achievements in the field of science and art In a letter to his mother dated 19 December Muller wrote that the award was more showy than the Pour le Merite but that is the best 47 In 1896 Muller was appointed a member of the Privy Council 48 Personal life EditMuller became a naturalized British citizen in 1855 at the age of 32 He married Georgina Adelaide Grenfell on 3 August 1859 after overcoming the opposition from her family The couple had four children Ada Mary Beatrice and William Grenfell of whom two predeceased them 4 Georgina died 1919 had his papers and correspondence bound they are at the Bodleian Library Oxford 49 Death and legacy EditMuller s health began deteriorating in 1898 and he died at his home in Oxford on 28 October 1900 He was interred at Holywell Cemetery on 1 November 1900 3 After his death a memorial fund the Max Muller Memorial Fund was opened at Oxford for the promotion of learning and research in all matters relating to the history and archaeology the languages literatures and religions of ancient India 50 Harry Smith stated of his film Heaven and Earth Magic The first part depicts the heroine s toothache consequent to the loss of a valuable watermelon her dentistry and transportation to heaven Next follows an elaborate exposition of the heavenly land in terms of Israel Montreal and the second part depicts the return to earth from being eaten by Max Muller on the day Edward the Seventh dedicated the Great Sewer of London 51 The Goethe Institutes in India are named Max Muller Bhavan in his honour as is a street Max Mueller Marg in New Delhi 52 Muller s biographies include those by Lourens van den Bosch 2002 Jon R Stone 2002 and Scholar Extraordinary 1974 by Nirad C Chaudhuri the last of which was awarded the Sahitya Akademi Award for English by Sahitya Akademi India s National Academy of Letters Stephen G Alter s 2005 work contains a chapter on Muller s rivalry with the American linguist William Dwight Whitney Publications EditMuller s scholarly works published separately as well as an 18 volume Collected Works include Narayana Friedrich Max Muller 1844 Hitopadesa eine alte indische Fabelsammlung Brockhaus Friedrich Max Muller 1859 A History of Ancient Sanskrit Literature So Far as it Illustrates the Primitive Religion of the Brahmans Williams and Norgate Friedrich Max Muller 1866 Lectures on the Science of Language Delivered at the Royal Institution of Great Britain in April May amp June 1861 Longmans Green Lectures on the Science of Language were translated into Russian in 1866 and published at the first Russian scientific linguistic magazine Filologicheskie Zapiski Chips from a German Workshop 1867 1875 5 vols Introduction to the Science of Religion 1873 Max Muller 1878 Lectures on the origin and growth of religion as illustrated by the religions of India Longmans Green and Company Friedrich Max Muller 1881 Critique of Pure Reason German Kritik der reinen Vernunft KrV by Immanuel Kant translated by Friedrich Max Muller Friedrich Max Muller 1883 India what Can it Teach Us A Course of Lectures Delivered Before the University of Cambridge Longmans Green Biographical Essays 1884 Upanishads Wordsworth Editions 1 January 2000 ISBN 978 1 84022 102 2 The German classics from the fourth to the nineteenth century Scribners 1886 Muller F Max Macdonell Arthur Anthony 1886 A Sanskrit grammar for beginners archive org in English and Slovak London Longman Green and Co p 208 Archived from the original on 20 October 2018 Retrieved 20 October 2018 The Science of Thought 1887 2 vols Studies in Buddhism Asian Educational Services 1999 ISBN 978 81 206 1226 6 F Max Muller 1888 Biographies of Words and the Home of the Aryas Six Systems of Hindu Philosophy 1899 Gifford Lectures of 1888 1892 Collected Works vols 1 4 Natural Religion 1889 Physical Religion 1891 Anthropological Religion 1892 Theosophy or Psychological Religion 1893 Auld Lang Syne 1898 2 vols a memoir My Autobiography A Fragment 1901 53 References Edit John C Wells 2008 Longman Pronunciation Dictionary 3rd ed Longman ISBN 978 1 4058 8118 0 Duden Max Rechtschreibung Bedeutung Definition Duden in German Retrieved 20 October 2018 Mạx a b c d Sara Abraham and Brannon Hancock doctoral students of theology in University of Glasgow Friedrich Max Muller Gifford Lectures a b c d e R C C Fynes May 2007 Muller Friedrich Max 1823 1900 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 online edn 1 accessed 17 March 2013 subscription or UK public library membership required a b Academiciens depuis 1663 Academie des Inscriptions et Belles Lettres Charles Johnston 1900 An Estimate of Max Muller 1823 1900 The American Monthly Review of Reviews Vol XXII July December The Review of Reviews Company New York pp 703 706 Muller F Max Friedrich Max 16 October 2009 My Autobiography A Fragment p 97 Retrieved 19 September 2022 via Project Gutenberg Macdonell A A Dictionary of National Biography 1901 supplement Max Muller Friedrich Wikisource the free online library en wikisource org Retrieved 26 August 2022 Dictionary of National Biography 1901 supplement Muller 1902 pp 241 242 Muller 1902 p 244 George Sandeman 1907 The Harmsworth Encyclopaedia Everybody s Book of Reference containing 50 000 articles profusely illustrated Volume 6 The Amalgamated Press p 4042 Margaret Thomas 2011 Fifty Key Thinkers on Language and Linguistics Routledge p 109 ISBN 978 0 415 37302 9 Vedanta Society of New York Ramakrishna Archived from the original on 16 September 2016 Retrieved 25 August 2016 B R Modak 1995 Sayana Volume 203 Sahitya Akademi p 33 ISBN 978 81 7201 940 2 Mittal Sushil Thursby Gene 10 September 2007 Studying Hinduism Key Concepts and Methods Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 0 203 93973 4 Retrieved 25 August 2016 via Google Books Muller F Max 1895 Theosophy or Psychological Religion London Longmans Green and Co pp 89 90 a b c d Josephson Storm Jason 2017 The Myth of Disenchantment Magic Modernity and the Birth of the Human Sciences Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 40336 6 J Lection 1882 The Athenaeum p 629 At times Prof Muller has succeeded in correcting an error and in coming closer to his original or has modified the harshness of Mr Meiklejohn s style but in other passages we prefer the latter and of certain general changes made by Prof Max Muller Original from Princeton University Kant s Critique of Pure Reason Last Essays by the Right Hon Professor F Max Muller First Series Essays on Language Folklore and Other Subjects pub by Longmans Green and Company 1901 The Twentieth Century Volume 23 p 745 according to Mr Max Muller Kant established against Darwin by proving that there is transcendentalist side to human knowledge which affords Original from Cornell University Muller F Max 1899 Three Lectures on the Science of Language etc with a Supplement My Predecessors 3rd ed Chicago p 9 Friedrich Max Muller 1902 The Life And Letters Of The Right Honourable Friedrich Max Muller Vol i pp 191 192 Menant M D 1907 Influence of Max Muller s Hibbert Lectures in India The American Journal of Theology 11 2 293 307 doi 10 1086 478685 JSTOR 3153715 Jacques Waardenburg 1999 Classical Approaches to the Study of Religion Aims Methods and Theories of Research Volume 1 Walter de Gruyter p 87 ISBN 978 3 11 016328 5 Sharada Sugirtharajah 2003 Imagining hinduism a postcolonial perspective Routledge pp 60 61 ISBN 81 208 4091 7 Edwin Bryant 2001 The Quest for the Origins of Vedic Culture The Indo Aryan Migration Debate Oxford University Press p 289 ISBN 978 0 19 513777 4 Eliot Weinberger 2000 Karmic Traces 1993 1999 New Directions Publishing p 174 ISBN 978 0 8112 1456 8 Muller 1902 pp 357 358 Max Muller INDIA LECTURE I WHAT CAN INDIA TEACH US A Course of Lectures Delivered before the University of Cambridge Project Gutenberg Max Muller INDIA LECTURE II Truthful Character of the Hindus A Course of Lectures Delivered before the University of Cambridge Project Gutenberg Swami Nikhilananda 1953 Vivekananda A Biography PDF New York Ramakrishna Vivekananda Center p 106 ISBN 978 0 911206 25 8 archived from the original PDF on 25 January 2012 retrieved 19 March 2012 Muller 1902 p 262 Muller 1902 p 263 Beckerlegge G 1997 Professor Friedrich Max Muller and the Missionary Cause In John Wolffe Ed Religion in Victorian Britain V Culture and Empire Manchester University Press p 189 Russell T McCutcheon 1997 Manufacturing Religion The Discourse on Sui Generis Religion and the Politics of Nostalgia New York Oxford University Press pp 58 61 ISBN 978 0 19 535568 0 Charles Darwin More Letters of Charles Darwin Volume 2 p 397 Jorg Esleben Jorg Esleben Christina Kraenzle Sukanya Kulkarni 2008 Mapping channels between Ganges and Rhein German Indian cross cultural relations Cambridge Scholars publication p 62 ISBN 978 1 84718 587 7 In later years especially before his death he was deeply saddened by the fact that these classifications later came to be expressed in racist terms F Max Muller 1888 Biographies of Words and the Home of the Aryas Kessinger Publishing reprint 2004 p 120 Dorothy Matilda Figueira 2002 Aryans Jews Brahmins Theorizing Authority Through Myths of Identity SUNY Press p 45 ISBN 0 7914 5532 7 Muller M 1854 The last results of the researches respecting the non Iranian and non Semitic languages of Asia or Europe or the Turanian family of language Letter of Professor Max Muller to Chevalier Bunsen Oxford August 1853 on the classification of the Turanian languages In Christian Bunsen 1854 Outlines of the Philosophy of Universal History Applied to Language and Religion In Two Volumes Vol 1 London Brown Green and Longmans M Muller 1855 The languages of the seat of war in the East With a survey of the three families of language Semitic Arian and Turanian London Williams and Norgate p 86 David Waterhouse 2002 The Origins of Himalayan Studies Brian Houghton Hodgson in Nepal and Darjeeling p 20 232 ISBN 978 0 203 48035 9 In 1910 a full decade after Muller s death the Turan Tarsasag Turanian Society was founded in order to study the history and culture of the Hungarians and other Turanian peoples T Masuza 2005 The Invention of World Religions Or How European Universalism was Preserved in the Language of Pluralism The University of Chicago Press p 229 ISBN 0 226 50989 3 Gunay Goksu Ozdogan The case of racism Turanism Turkism during single party period 1931 1944 a radical variant of Turkish nationalism Muller 1902 p 462 Muller 1902 p 503 No 26754 The London Gazette 30 June 1896 p 3767 Max Muller Papers Retrieved 25 August 2016 Max Muller Memorial Fund Archived 3 January 2011 at the Wayback Machine Faculty of Oriental Studies University of Oxford No 12 Heaven and Earth Magic Film Studies Center University of Chicago Archived from the original on 12 June 2010 About Max Mueller Goethe Institut Max Mueller Bhavan Muller F Max Friedrich Max 16 October 2009 My Autobiography A Fragment Retrieved 25 August 2016 via Project Gutenberg Cited sources EditMuller Georgina 1902 The Life and Letters of Right Honorable Friedrich Max Muller Vol 1 London Longman Further reading EditLourens van den Bosch 2002 Friedrich Max Muller A Life Devoted to Humanities E J Brill ISBN 978 90 04 12505 6 Jon R Stone 6 December 2002 The Essential Max Muller On Language Mythology and Religion Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0 312 29309 3 Nirad C Chaudhuri 1974 Scholar Extraordinary The Life of Professor the Rt Hon Friedrich Max Muller Chatto amp Windus ISBN 978 0 7011 1944 7 Stephen G Alter 9 March 2005 The Battle with Max Muller William Dwight Whitney and the Science of Language Johns Hopkins University Press pp 174 207 ISBN 978 0 8018 8020 9 Stefan Arvidsson 2006 Indo European Mythology as Ideology and Science University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 02860 6 Archived from the original on 21 December 2016 John R Davis and Angus Nicholls eds 2017 Friedrich Max Muller and the Role of Philology in Victorian Thought Routledge John R Davis and Angus Nicholls 2016 Friedrich Max Muller The Career and Intellectual Trajectory of a German Philologist in Victorian Britain Publications of the English Goethe Society 85 no 2 3 2016 67 97 Arie Molendijk 2016 Friedrich Max Muller and the Sacred Books of the East Oxford University Press Joan Leopold Steinthal and Max Muller Comparative Lives Chajim H Steinthal Sprachwissenschaflter und Philosoph im 19 Jahrhundert Linguist and Philosopher in the 19th Century eds Hartwig Wiedebach and Annette Winkelmann Leiden Boston Koln Brill 2002 Studies in European Judaism IV pp 31 49 Joan Leopold Max Muller and the Linguistic Study of Civilization and Editor Friedrich Max Muller Comparative Philology of the Indo european languages in its bearing on the early civilisation of Mankind 1849 in Contributions to Comparative Indo European African and Chinese Linguistics Max Muller and Steinthal Dordrecht and Boston Springer 1999 pp 1 206 Prix Volney Essay Series III With full bibliography of works Joan Leopold Ethnic Stereotypes in Linguistics The Case of Friedrich Max Muller 1847 1851 Papers in the History of Linguistics delivered at Princeton 1984 eds H Aarsleff L G Kelly and H J Niederehe Amsterdam and Philadelphia J Benjamins 1987 pp 501 12 Joan Leopold Friedrich Max Muller and the question of the early Indo Europeans 1847 1851 Etudes inter ethniques Annales du Centre d etudes superieures et de recherches sur les relations ethniques et le racisme Paris VII 1984 21 32 Joan Leopold Britische Anwendungen der arischen Rassentheorie auf Indien 1850 70 Saeculum XXV 1974 386 411 trans of following item Joan Leopold British Applications of the Aryan Theory of Race to India 1850 70 The English Historical Review LXXXIX 1974 578 603 Winner of Universities Essay Prize Royal Asiatic Society London Joan Leopold The Aryan Theory of Race in India 1870 1920 The Indian Economic and Social History Review VII 1970 271 97 Subin Anna Della Accidental Gods Metropolitan Books 2021 External links EditMax Muller at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Data from Wikidata Max Muller 2011 In Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved from https www britannica com EBchecked topic 396833 Max Muller Works by Max Muller at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Max Muller at Internet Archive Works by Max Muller at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Deutsche Liebe Novel by F Max Muller 1857 E Book Edition 2011 German Philipp Grieb IT Redaktion Online Library of Liberty Friedrich Max Muller Gifford Lecture Series Biography Friedrich Max Muller by Dr Brannon Hancock Lourens P van den Bosch Theosophy or Pantheism Friedrich Max Muller s Gifford Lectures on Natural Religion full text of the article Vedas and Upanishads Vivekananda on Max Muller Friedrich Max Muller The Hymns of the Rigveda with Sayana s commentary London 1849 74 2nd ed 4 vols Oxford 1890 92 PDF format Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Max Muller amp oldid 1126119919, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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