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Ralph Cudworth

Ralph Cudworth FRS (/rf ˈkʊdɜːrθ/ rayf KUUD-urth; 1617 – 26 June 1688) was an English Anglican clergyman, Christian Hebraist, classicist, theologian and philosopher, and a leading figure among the Cambridge Platonists who became 11th Regius Professor of Hebrew (1645–88), 26th Master of Clare Hall (1645–54), and 14th Master of Christ's College (1654–88).[1] A leading opponent of Hobbes's political and philosophical views, his magnum opus was his The True Intellectual System of the Universe (1678).[2]

Ralph Cudworth
11th Regius Professor of Hebrew, University of Cambridge
In office
1645–1688
Preceded byRobert Metcalfe
Succeeded byWolfram Stubbe
14th Master of Christ’s College, Cambridge
In office
1654–1688
Preceded bySamuel Bolton
Succeeded byJohn Covel
26th Master of Clare Hall, Cambridge
In office
1645 (1650) – 1654
Preceded byThomas Paske
Succeeded byTheophilus Dillingham
Personal details
Born1617 (1617)
Aller, Somerset, England
Died26 June 1688(1688-06-26) (aged 70–71)
Spouse
Damaris Cradock Andrewes
(m. 1654)
Children4, including Damaris Cudworth Masham
Parents
RelativesJames Cudworth (brother)
Alma materUniversity of Cambridge:
Ecclesiastical career
ReligionChristianity (Anglican)
ChurchChurch of England
Ordained
  • 1650 (Priest)
Offices held
Vicar, Gt Wilbraham (1656)
Rector, N. Cadbury (1650–6)
Rector, Toft (1656–62)
Rector, Ashwell (1662–88)
Prebendary, Gloucester (1678)

Family background edit

Ancestry edit

Cudworth's family reputedly originated in Cudworth (near Barnsley), Yorkshire, moving to Lancashire with the marriage (c.1377) of John de Cudworth (died 1384) and Margery (died 1384), daughter of Richard de Oldham (living 1354), lord of the manor of Werneth, Oldham. The Cudworths of Werneth Hall, Oldham, were lords of the manor of Werneth/Oldham, until 1683. Ralph Cudworth (the philosopher)'s father, Ralph Cudworth (Snr), was the posthumous-born second son of Ralph Cudworth (d.1572) of Werneth Hall, Oldham.[3][4][5][6][7]

The Rev. Dr Ralph Cudworth Snr (1572/3–1624) edit

The philosopher's father, The Rev. Dr Ralph Cudworth (1572/3–1624), was educated at Emmanuel College, Cambridge, where he graduated BA (1592/93, MA (1596). Emmanuel College (founded by Sir Walter Mildmay (1584), and under the direction of its first Master, Laurence Chaderton) was, from its inception, a stronghold of Reformist, Puritan and Calvinist teaching, which shaped the development of puritan ministry, and contributed largely to the emigrant ministry in America.[8]

Ordained in 1599[9] and elected to a college fellowship by 1600,[10] Cudworth Snr was much influenced by William Perkins, whom he succeeded, in 1602, as Lecturer of the Parish Church of St Andrew the Great, Cambridge.[11] He was awarded the degree of Bachelor of Divinity in 1603.[12] He edited Perkins's Commentary on St Paul's Epistle to the Galatians (1604),[13] with a dedication to Robert, 3rd Lord Rich (later 1st Earl of Warwick), adding a commentary of his own with dedication to Sir Bassingbourn Gawdy.[14] Lord Rich presented him to the Vicariate of Coggeshall, Essex (1606)[15] to replace the deprived minister Thomas Stoughton, but he resigned this position (March 1608), and was licensed to preach from the pulpit by the Chancellor and Scholars of the University of Cambridge (November 1609).[16] He then applied for the rectorate of Aller, Somerset (an Emmanuel College living)[17] and, resigning his fellowship, was appointed to it in 1610.[18]

His marriage (1611) to Mary Machell (c.1582–1634), (who had been "nutrix" – nurse, or preceptor – to Henry Frederick, Prince of Wales)[19] brought important connections. Cudworth Snr was appointed as one of James I's chaplains.[20] Mary's mother (or aunt) was the sister of Sir Edward Lewknor, a central figure (with the Jermyn and Heigham families) among the puritan East Anglian gentry, whose children had attended Emmanuel College.[21] Mary's Lewknor and Machell connections with the Rich family included her first cousins Sir Nathaniel Rich and his sister Dame Margaret Wroth, wife of Sir Thomas Wroth of Petherton Park near Bridgwater, Somerset, influential promoters of colonial enterprise (and later of nonconformist emigration) in New England. Aller was immediately within their sphere.

Ralph Snr and Mary settled at Aller, where their children (listed below) were christened during the following decade.[22] Cudworth continued to study, working on a complete survey of Case-Divinity, The Cases of Conscience in Family, Church and Commonwealth while suffering from the agueish climate at Aller.[23] He was awarded the degree of Doctor of Divinity (1619),[24] and was among the dedicatees of Richard Bernard's 1621 edition of The Faithfull Shepherd.[25] Ralph Snr died at Aller declaring a nuncupative will (7 August 1624) before Anthony Earbury and Dame Margaret Wroth.[26]

Children edit

 
Parish Church of St Andrew, Aller, Somerset: where John Stoughton succeeded Ralph Cudworth Snr (1624)

The children of Ralph Cudworth Snr and Mary (née Machell) Cudworth (c.1582–1634) were:

  • General James Cudworth (1612–82) was Assistant Governor (1756–8, 1674–80) and Deputy Governor (1681–2) of Plymouth Colony, Massachusetts, and four-times Commissioner of the United Colonies (1657–81),[27] whose descendants form an extensive family of American Cudworths.
  • Elizabeth Cudworth (1615–54) married (1636) Josias Beacham of Broughton, Northamptonshire (Rector of Seaton, Rutland (1627–76)), by whom she had several children. Beacham was ejected from his living by the Puritans (1653), but reinstated (by 1662).[28]
  • Ralph Cudworth (Jnr)
  • Mary Cudworth
  • John Cudworth (1622–75) of London and Bentley, Suffolk, Alderman of London, and Master of the Worshipful Company of Girdlers (1667–68).[29] On his death, John left four orphans of whom both Thomas Cudworth (1661–1726)[30] and Benjamin Cudworth (1670–15 Sept. 1725) attended Christ's College, Cambridge.[31] Benjamin Cudworth's black memorial slab is in St. Margaret's parish church, Southolt, Suffolk.
  • Jane/Joan(?) Cudworth (born c.1624; fl. unmarried, 1647) may have been Ralph's sister.[32]

Career edit

Education edit

The second son, and third of five (probably six) children, Ralph Cudworth (Jnr) was born at Aller, Somerset, where he was baptised (13 July 1617). Following the death of his father, Ralph Cudworth Snr (1624), The Rev. Dr John Stoughton (1593–1639), (son of Thomas Stoughton of Coggeshall; also a Fellow of Emmanuel College), succeeded as Rector of Aller, and married the widow Mary (née Machell) Cudworth (c.1582–1634).[33] Dr Stoughton paid careful attention to his stepchildren's education, which Ralph later described as a "diet of Calvinism".[34] Letters, to Stoughton, by both brothers James and Ralph Cudworth make this plain; and, when Ralph matriculated at Emmanuel College, Cambridge (1632),[35] Stoughton thought him "as wel grounded in Scho[o]l-Learning as any Boy of his Age that went to the University".[36] Stoughton was appointed Curate and Preacher at St Mary Aldermanbury, London (1632),[37] and the family left Aller. Ralph's elder brother, James Cudworth, married and emigrated to Scituate, Plymouth Colony, New England (1634).[38] Mary Machell Cudworth Stoughton died during summer 1634,[39] and Dr Stoughton married a daughter of John Browne of Frampton and Dorchester.[40]

Pensioner, Student and Fellow of Emmanuel College (1630–45) edit

 
Emmanuel College, Cambridge

From a family background embedded in the early nonconformity and a diligent student, Cudworth was admitted (as a pensioner) to his father's old college, Emmanuel College, Cambridge (1630), matriculated (1632), and graduated (BA (1635/6); MA (1639)). After some misgivings (which he confided in his stepfather),[41] he was elected a Fellow of Emmanuel (1639), and became a successful tutor, delivering the Rede Lecture (1641). He published a tract entitled The Union of Christ and the Church, in a Shadow (1642),[42] and another, A Discourse concerning the True Notion of the Lord's Supper (1642),[43] in which his readings of Karaite manuscripts (stimulated by meetings with Johann Stephan Rittangel) were influential.[44]

11th Regius Professor of Hebrew (1645) and 26th Master of Clare Hall (1645–54) edit

 
Old Court, Clare College, Cambridge

Following sustained correspondence with John Selden[45] (to whom he supplied Karaite literature), he was elected (aged 28) as 11th Regius Professor of Hebrew (1645).[24] In 1645, Thomas Paske had been ejected as Master of Clare Hall for his Anglican allegiances, and Cudworth (despite his immaturity) was selected as his successor, as 26th Master (but not admitted until 1650).[46] Similarly, his fellow-theologian Benjamin Whichcote was installed as 19th Provost of King's College.[47] Cudworth attained the degree of Bachelor of Divinity (1646), and preached a sermon before the House of Commons of England (on 1 John 2, 3–4),[48] which was later published with a Letter of Dedication to the House (1647).[49] Despite these distinctions and his presentation, by Emmanuel College, to the rectorate of North Cadbury, Somerset (3 October 1650), he remained comparatively impoverished. He was awarded the degree of Doctor of Divinity (1651),[24] and, in January 1651/2, his friend Dr John Worthington wrote of him, "If through want of maintenance he should be forced to leave Cambridge, for which place he is so eminently accomplished with what is noble and Exemplarily Academical, it would be an ill omen."[50]

Marriage (1654) and 14th Master of Christ's College (1654–88) edit

 
First Court, Christ's College, Cambridge

Despite his worsening sight, Cudworth was elected (29 October 1654) and admitted (2 November 1654), as 14th Master of Christ's College.[51] His appointment coincided with his marriage to Damaris (died 1695), daughter (by his first wife, Damaris) of Matthew Cradock (died 1641), first Governor of the Massachusetts Bay Company. Hence Worthington commented "After many tossings Dr Cudworth is through God's good Providence returned to Cambridge and settled in Christ's College, and by his marriage more settled and fixed."[52]

In his Will (1641), Matthew Cradock had divided his estate beside the Mystic River at Medford, Massachusetts (which he had never visited, and was managed on his behalf)[53] into two moieties: one was bequeathed to his daughter Damaris Cradock (died 1695), (later wife of Ralph Cudworth Jnr); and one was to be enjoyed by his widow Rebecca (during her lifetime), and afterwards to be inherited by his brother, Samuel Cradock (1583–1653), and his heirs male.[54] Samuel Cradock's son, Samuel Cradock Jnr (1621–1706), was admitted to Emmanuel (1637), graduated (BA (1640–1); MA (1644); BD (1651)), was later a Fellow (1645–56), and pupil of Benjamin Whichcote's.[55] After part of the Medford estate was rented to Edward Collins (1642), it was placed in the hands of an attorney; the widow Rebecca Cradock (whose second and third husbands were Richard Glover and Benjamin Whichcote, respectively), petitioned the General Court of Massachusetts, and the legatees later sold the estate to Collins (1652).[56][57]

The marriage of the widow Rebecca Cradock to Cudworth's colleague Benjamin Whichcote laid the way for the union between Cudworth and her stepdaughter Damaris (died 1695), which reinforced the connections between the two scholars through a familial bond. Damaris had first married (1642)[58] Thomas Andrewes Jnr (died 1653) of London and Feltham, son of Sir Thomas Andrewes (died 1659), (Lord Mayor of London, 1649, 1651–2), which union had produced several children. The Andrewes family were also engaged in the Massachusetts project, and strongly supported puritan causes.[59]

Commonwealth and Restoration edit

Cudworth emerged as a central figure among that circle of theologians and philosophers known as the Cambridge Platonists, who were (more or less) in sympathy with the Commonwealth: during the later 1650s, Cudworth was consulted by John Thurloe, Oliver Cromwell's Secretary to the Council of State, with regard to certain university and government appointments and various other matters.[60][61] During 1657, Cudworth advised Bulstrode Whitelocke's sub-committee of the Parliamentary "Grand Committee for Religion" on the accuracy of editions of the English Bible.[62] Cudworth was appointed Vicar of Great Wilbraham, and Rector of Toft, Cambridgeshire Ely diocese (1656), but surrendered these livings (1661 and 1662, respectively) when he was presented, by Dr Gilbert Sheldon, Bishop of London, to the Hertfordshire Rectory of Ashwell (1 December 1662).[63]

 
The mid-seventeenth century Fellows' Swimming Pool, Christ's College, Cambridge

Given Cudworth's close cooperation with prominent figures in Oliver Cromwell's regime (such as John Thurloe), Cudworth's continuance as Master of Christ's was challenged at the Restoration but, ultimately, he retained this post until his death.[64] He and his family are believed to have resided in private lodgings at the "Old Lodge" (which stood between Hobson Street and the College Chapel), and various improvements were made to the college rooms in his time.[65] He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1662.

Later life edit

In 1665, Cudworth almost quarrelled with his fellow-Platonist, Henry More, because of the latter's composition of an ethical work which Cudworth feared would interfere with his own long-contemplated treatise on the same subject.[66] To avoid any difficulties, More published his Enchiridion ethicum (1666–69), in Latin;[67] However, Cudworth's planned treatise was never published. His own majestic work, The True Intellectual System of the Universe (1678),[68] was conceived in three parts of which only the first was completed; he wrote: "there is no reason why this volume should therefore be thought imperfect and incomplete, because it hath not all the Three Things at first Designed by us: it containing all that belongeth to its own particular Title and Subject, and being in that respect no Piece, but a Whole."[69]

 
Memorial to Damaris Cudworth

Cudworth was installed as Prebendary of Gloucester (1678).[63] His colleague, Benjamin Whichcote, died at Cudworth's house in Cambridge (1683),[70] and Cudworth himself died (26 June 1688), and was buried in the Chapel of Christ's College.[71] An oil portrait of Cudworth (from life) hangs in the Hall of Christ's College.[72] During Cudworth's time an outdoor Swimming Pool was created at Christ's College (which still exists), and a carved bust of Cudworth there accompanies those of John Milton and Nicholas Saunderson.[73]

Cudworth's widow, Damaris (née Cradock) Andrewes Cudworth (died 1695), maintained close connections with her daughter, Damaris Cudworth Masham, at High Laver, Essex, which was where she died, and was commemorated in the church with a carved epitaph reputedly composed by the philosopher John Locke.[74]

Children edit

The children of Ralph Cudworth and Damaris (née Cradock) Andrewes Cudworth (died 1695) were:

  • John Cudworth (c.1656–1726) was admitted to Christ's College, Cambridge (1672), graduated (BA (1676–7); MA (1680)), and was a pupil of Mr Andrewes. He was a Fellow (1678–98), was ordained a priest (1684), and later became Lecturer in Greek (1687/8) and Senior Dean (1690).[75]
  • Charles Cudworth (died 1684) was admitted to Trinity College, Cambridge (1674–6), but may have not graduated, instead, making a career in the factories of Kasimbazar, West Bengal, India, which was where John Locke (friend of his sister Damaris Cudworth), corresponded with him (27 April 1683).[76] He married (February 1683/84), Mary Cole, widow of Jonathan Prickman, Second for the English East India Company at Malda.[77] Charles Cudworth died in March 1684.[78]
  • Thomas Cudworth graduated at Christ's College, Cambridge (MA (1682)).[79][80]
  • Damaris Cudworth (1659–1708), a devout and talented woman, became the second wife (1685) of Sir Francis Masham, 3rd Baronet (c.1646–1723) of High Laver, Essex.[81] Lady Masham was a friend of the philosopher John Locke, and also a correspondent of Gottfried Leibniz. Her son, Francis Cudworth Masham (died 1731), became Accountant-General to the Court of Chancery.

The stepchildren of Ralph Cudworth (children of Damaris (née Cradock) Andrewes (died 1695) and Thomas Andrewes (died 1653)) were:

  • Richard Andrewes (living 1688) who, according to Peile, is not the Richard Andrewes who attended Christ's College, Cambridge during this period.[82]
  • John Andrewes (died after 1688?) matriculated at Christ's College, Cambridge (1664), graduated (BA (1668/9); MA (1672)), was ordained deacon and priest (1669–70), and was a Fellow (1669–75).[83] Peile suggests he died c.1675, but he was a legatee in the will of his brother Thomas (1688). John Covel attended a "Pastoral" performed by Cudworth's children contrived by John Andrewes.[84]
  • Thomas Andrewes (died 1688), Citizen and Dyer of London, was a linen draper. He married (August 1681), Anna, daughter of Samuel Shute, of St Peter's, Cornhill.[85][86]
  • Mathew Andrewes (died 1674) was admitted to Queens' College, Cambridge (1663/4), and later elected a Fellow.[87]
  • Damaris Andrewes (died 1687) married (1661), (as his first wife) Sir Edward Abney (1631–1728), (a student at Christ's College, Cambridge (BA 1649–52/53); Fellow (1655–61); and Doctor of both laws (1661)).[88][89]


Philosophy edit

Cudworth was a member of the Cambridge Platonists, a group of English seventeenth-century thinkers associated with the University of Cambridge who were stimulated by Plato's teachings but also were aware of and influenced by Descartes, Hobbes, Bacon, Boyle and Spinoza. The other important philosopher of this group was Henry More (1614–1687). More held that spiritual substance or mind controlled inert matter. Out of his correspondence with Descartes, he developed the idea that everything, whether material or non, had extension, an example of the latter being space, which is infinite (Newton) and which then is correlative to the idea of God (set out in his Enchiridion metaphysicum 1667). In developing this idea, More also introduced a causal agent between God and substance, or Nature, in his Hylarchic Principle, derived from Plato's anima mundi or world soul, and the Stoic's pneuma, which encapsulates the laws of nature, both for inert and vital nature, and involves a sympathetic resonance between soul (psyche) and body (soma).[90]

Plastic principle edit

The role of nature was one faced by philosophers in the Age of Reason or Enlightenment. The prevailing view was either that of the Church of a personal deity intervening in his creation, producing miracles, or an ancient pantheism (atheism relative to theism) – deity pervading all things and existing in all things. However, the "ideas of an all-embracing providential care of the world and of one universal vital force capable of organizing the world from within."[91] presented difficulties for philosophers of a spiritual as well as materialistic bent.

Cudworth countered these mechanical, materialistic views of nature in his True intellectual system of the universe (1678), with the idea of 'the Plastick Life of Nature', a formative principle that contains both substance and the laws of motion, as well as a nisus or direction that accounts for design and goal in the natural world. He was stimulated by the Cartesian idea of the mind as self-consciousness to see God as consciousness. He first analysed four forms of atheism from ancient times to present, and showed that all misunderstood the principle of life and knowledge, which involved unsentient activity and self-consciousness, addressing the tension between theism and atheism, took both the Stoic idea of Divine Reason poured into the world, and the Platonic idea of the world soul (anima mundi) to posit a power that was polaric – "either as a ruling but separate mind or as an informing vital principle – either nous hypercosmios or nous enkosmios.[91]

It is in connection with the refutation of hylozoic atheism that he brings forward the celebrated hypothesis, which he held in common with More, of a plastic nature,—a substance intermediate between matter and spirit,—a power which prosecutes certain ends but not freely or intelligently,—an instrument by which laws are able to act without the immediate agency of God...[92]

All of the atheistic approaches posted nature as unconscious, which for Cudworth was ontologically unsupportable, as a principle that was supposed to be the ultimate source of life and meaning could only be itself self-conscious and knowledgeable, that is, rational, otherwise creation or nature degenerates into inert matter set in motion by random external forces (Coleridge's 'chance whirlings of unproductive particles'). Cudworth saw nature as a vegetative power endowed with plastic (forming) and spermatic (generative) forces, but one with Mind, or a self-conscious knowledge. This idea would later emerge in the Romantic period in German science as Blumenbach's Bildungstreib (generative power) and the Lebenskraft (or Bildungskraft).

...the life of the universe splits into two principles – the one transcendent and intellectual (« an animalish, sentient and intellectual nature, or a conscious soul and mind, that presided over the whole world »), the other immanent and devoid of perception (« a certain plastic nature, or spermatic principle which was properly the fate of all things »)[91]

The essence of atheism for Cudworth was the view that matter was self-active and self-sufficient, whereas for Cudworth the plastic power was unsentient and under the direct control of the universal Mind or Logos. For him atheism, whether mechanical or material could not solve the "phenomenon of nature." Henry More argued that atheism made each substance independent and self-acting such that it 'deified' matter. Cudworth argued that materialism/mechanism reduced "substance to a corporeal entity, its activity to causal determinism, and each single thing to fleeting appearances in a system dominated by material necessity."[91]

Cudworth had the idea of a general plastic nature of the world, containing natural laws to keep all of nature, inert and vital in orderly motion, and particular plastic natures in particular entities, which serve as 'Inward Principles' of growth and motion, but ascribes it to the Platonic tradition:

The Platonists seem to affirm both these together, namely that there is a Plastick Nature lodged in all particular Souls of Animals, Brutes, and Men, and also that there is a Plastick or Spermatick Principle of the whole Universe distinct from the Higher Mundane Soul, though subordinate to it.(Cudworth, TIS, p. 165)[93]

Further, Cudsworth's plastic principle was also a functional polarity. As he wrote:

The Seminary Reason or Plastick Nature of the Universe opposing the Parts to one another and making them severally Indigent, produces by that means War and Contention. And therefore though it be One, yet notwithstanding it consists of Different and Contrary things. For there being Hostility in its Parts, it is nevertheless Friendly and Agreeable in the Whole; after the same manner as in a Dramatick Poem, Clashings and Contentions are reconciled into one Harmony. And therefore the Seminary or Plastick Nature of the World, may fitly be resembled to the Harmony of Disagreeing things.[94]

As another historian notes in conclusion, "Cudworth’s theory of plastic natures is offered as an alternative to the interpretation of all of nature as either governed by blind chance, or, on his understanding of the Malebranchean view, as micro-managed by God."[93]

Plastic Principle and mind edit

Cudworth's plastic principle also involves a theory of mind that is active, that is, God or the Supreme Mind is "the spermatic reason" which gives rise to individual mind and reason. Human mind can also create, and has access to spiritual or super-sensible 'Ideas' in the Platonic sense.[90] Cudworth challenged Hobbesian determinism in arguing that will is not distinct from reason, but a power to act that is internal, and therefore, the voluntary will function involves self-determination, not external compulsion, though we have the power to act either in accordance with God's will or not. Cudworth's 'hegemonikon' (taken from Stoicism) is a function within the soul that combines the higher functions of the soul (voluntary will and reason) on the one hand with the lower animal functions (instinct), and also constitutes the whole person, thus bridging the Cartesian dualism of body and soul or psyche and soma. This idea provided the basis for a concept of self-awareness and identity of an individual that is self-directed and autonomous, an idea that anticipates John Locke.

Legacy edit

Locke examined how man came to knowledge via stimulus (rather than seeing ideas as inherent), which approach led to his idea of the 'thinking' mind, which is both receptive and pro-active. The first involves receiving sensations ('simple ideas') and the second by reflection – "observation of its own inner operations" (inner sense which leads to complex ideas), with the second activity acting upon the first. Thought is set in motion by outer stimuli which 'simple ideas' are taken up by the mind's self-activity, an "active power" such that the outer world can only be real-ized as action (natural cause) by the activity of consciousness. Locke also took the issue of life as lying not in substance but in the capacity of the self for consciousness, to be able to organize (associate) disparate events, that is to participate life by means of the sense experiences, which have the capacity to produce every kind of experience in consciousness. These ideas of Locke were taken over by Fichte and influenced German Romantic science and medicine. (See Romantic medicine and Brunonian system of medicine). Thomas Reid and his "Common Sense" philosophy, was also influenced by Cudworth, taking his influence into the Scottish Enlightenment.[90]

George Berkeley later developed the idea of a plastic life principle with his idea of an 'aether' or 'aetherial medium' that causes 'vibrations' that animate all living beings. For Berkeley, it is the very nature of this medium that generates the 'attractions' of entities to each other.

The refraction of light is also thought to proceed from the different density and elastic force of this æthereal medium in different places. The vibrations of this medium, alternately concurring with or obstructing the motions of the rays of light, are supposed to produce the fits of easy reflection and transmission. Light by the vibrations of this medium is thought to communicate heat to bodies. Animal motion and sensation are also accounted for by the vibrating motions of this æthereal medium, propagated through the solid capillaments of the nerves. In a word, all the phenomena and properties of bodies that were before attributed to attraction, upon later thoughts seem ascribed to this æther, together with the various attractions themselves. (Berkeley V 107–8)[94]

Berkeley meant this 'aether' to supplant Newton's gravity as the cause of motion (neither seeing the polarity involved between two forces, as Cudworth had in his plastic principle). However, in Berkeley's conception, aether is both the movement of spirit and the motion of nature.

Both Cudworth's views and those of Berkeley were taken up by Coleridge in his metaphor of the eolian harp in his 'Effusion XXXV' as one commentator noted: "what we see in the first manuscript is the articulation of Cudworth’s principle of plastic nature, which is then transformed in the published version into a Berkeleyan expression of the causal agency of motion performed by God’s immanent activity."[94]

Works edit

Sermons and Treatises edit

Cudworth's works included The Union of Christ and the Church, in a Shadow (1642); A Sermon preached before the House of Commons (1647); and A Discourse concerning the True Notion of the Lord's Supper (1670). Much of Cudworth's work remains in manuscript. However, certain surviving works have been published posthumously, such as A Treatise concerning eternal and immutable Morality, and A Treatise of Freewill.

A Treatise concerning eternal and immutable Morality (posth.) edit

Cudworth's Treatise on eternal and immutable Morality, published with a preface by Edward Chandler (1731),[95] is about the historical development of British moral philosophy. It answers, from the standpoint of Platonism, Hobbes's famous doctrine that moral distinctions are created by the state. It argues that just as knowledge contains a permanent intelligible element over and above the flux of sense-impressions, so there exist eternal and immutable ideas of morality.[96]

A Treatise of Freewill (posth.) edit

Another posthumous publication was Cudworth's A Treatise of Freewill, edited by John Allen (1838). Both this and the Treatise on eternal and immutable Morality are connected with the design of his magnum opus, The True Intellectual System of the Universe.[97]

The True Intellectual System of the Universe (1678) edit

In 1678, Cudworth published The True Intellectual System of the Universe: the first part, wherein all the reason and philosophy of atheism is confuted and its impossibility demonstrated, which had been given an Imprimatur for publication (29 May 1671).

 
A finely-bound first edition of the True Intellectual System (1678) in the British Library (shelfmark: Davis 187).

The Intellectual System arose, according to Cudworth, from a discourse refuting "fatal necessity", or determinism.[96] Enlarging his plan, he proposed to prove three matters:

(a) the existence of God;
(b) the naturalness of moral distinctions; and
(c) the reality of human freedom.

These three comprise, collectively, the intellectual (as opposed to the physical) system of the universe; and they are opposed, respectively, by three false principles: atheism, religious fatalism (which refers all moral distinctions to the will of God), and the fatalism of the ancient Stoics (who recognized God and yet identified him with nature). Only the first part, dealing with atheism, was ever published.

Cudworth criticizes two main forms of materialistic atheism: the atomic (adopted by Democritus, Epicurus and Thomas Hobbes); and the hylozoic (attributed to Strato of Lampsacus, which explains everything by the supposition of an inward self-organizing life in matter). Atomic atheism, to which Cudworth devotes the larger part of the work, is described as arising from the combination of two principles, neither of which is, individually, atheistic (namely atomism and corporealism, or the doctrine that nothing exists but body). The example of Stoicism, Cudworth suggests, shows that corporealism may be theistic.

Cudworth discusses the history of atomism at length. It is, in its purely physical application, a theory that he fully accepts. He holds that theistic atomism was taught by Pythagoras, Empedocles and many other ancient philosophers, and was only perverted to atheism by Democritus. Cudworth believes that atomism was first invented before the Trojan war by a Sidonian thinker named Moschus or Mochus (whom he identifies with Moses in the Old Testament).

Cudworth's method in arranging his work was to marshal the atheistic arguments elaborately before refuting them in his final chapter. This led many readers to accuse Cudworth himself of atheism – as John Dryden remarked, "he has raised such objections against the being of a God and Providence that many think he has not answered them".[98] Much attention was also attached to a subordinate matter in the book, the conception of the "Plastic Medium" (a revival of Plato's "World-Soul") which was intended to explain the existence and laws of nature without referring to the direct operation of God. This theory occasioned a long-drawn controversy between Pierre Bayle and Georges-Louis Leclerc, with the former maintaining, and the latter denying, that the Plastic Medium is favourable to atheism.

Summing up the work, Andrew Dickson White wrote in 1896:

To this day he [Cudworth] remains, in breadth of scholarship, in strength of thought, in tolerance, and in honesty, one of the greatest glories of the English Church ... He purposed to build a fortress which should protect Christianity against all dangerous theories of the universe, ancient or modern ... While genius marked every part of it, features appeared which gave the rigidly orthodox serious misgivings. From the old theories of direct personal action on the universe by the Almighty he broke utterly. He dwelt on the action of law, rejected the continuous exercise of miraculous intervention, pointed out the fact that in the natural world there are "errors" and "bungles" and argued vigorously in favor of the origin and maintenance of the universe as a slow and gradual development of Nature in obedience to an inward principle.[99]

Arms edit

Coat of arms of Ralph Cudworth
Notes
The arms of the Cudworths of Werneth, Oldham, Lancashire (with a crescent charged upon a crescent for the second son of a second son).
Escutcheon
Azure, a fess Erminois between three demi-lions Or, with a crescent Argent charged with a crescent Sable for difference.[100][6]

Ancestry edit

References edit

  1. ^ J.A. Passmore, Ralph Cudworth: An Interpretation (Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, 1951)
  2. ^ D.A. Pailin, 'Cudworth, Ralph (1617–88)', Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (2004).
  3. ^ Edwin Butterworth, Historical Sketches of Oldham (John Hirst: Oldham, 1856), pp. 22–23 (Google)
  4. ^ Butterworth, James (1826). History and Description of the Parochial Chapelry of Oldham. Oldham: J. Dodge, etc. pp. 52ff ('Pedigree of the Families of Oldhams and Cudworths').
  5. ^ Fuller, Thomas (1811). Nuttall, T.A. (ed.). History of the Worthies of England. Vol. ii. London: Thomas Tegg. p. 208.
  6. ^ a b c "The parish of Prestwich with Oldham: Oldham | British History Online". www.british-history.ac.uk. Retrieved 25 June 2021.
  7. ^ a b Stansfield-Cudworth, R. E. (2019). "Gentry, Gentility, and Genealogy in Lancashire: The Cudworths of Werneth Hall, Oldham, c.1377–1683". Transactions of the Lancashire and Cheshire Antiquarian Society. 111: 48–80.
  8. ^ 'History of the College' Emmanuel College website; S. Bendell, C. Brooke, and P. Collinson, A History of Emmanuel College (Boydell Press: Woodbridge 1999).
  9. ^ Church of England clergy database, Ordination record: ID 123517. Person Record CCEd ID 89100.
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  16. ^ Church of England clergy database, CCEd Records ID: 193711 (Vacancy), and 178652 (Appointment).
  17. ^ R.W. Dunning (ed.), 'Parishes: Aller ', A History of the County of Somerset, iii (1974), pp. 61–71 (British History Online).
  18. ^ CCEd Appointment Evidence Record ID: 178651, as 30 August 1610.
  19. ^ J.L. v. Mosheim, Radulphi Cudworthi Systema intellectuale hujus universi (sumtu viduae Meyer: Jena, 1733), i, 'Praefatio Moshemii' (34 sides, unpaginated), side 19. The information was from Edward Chandler.
  20. ^ Mosheim, as cited above.
  21. ^ P. Collinson, '17: Magistracy and Ministry – A Suffolk Miniature', in Godly People. Essays on English Protestantism and Puritanism (Hambledon Press: London, 1983), pp. 445–66.
  22. ^ D. Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, ed. K.J. Everingham, 2nd Edn (2011), ii, p. 10, items 15–16)
  23. ^ Letter of Ralph Cudworth (Snr) to James Ussher, Bodleian Library, Oxford, MS Rawlinson Letters 89, fol. 25 r–v: Early modern letters online.
  24. ^ a b c Venn, Alumni Cantabrigienses.
  25. ^ R. Bernard, The Faithfull Shepherd, wholy in a manner transposed, 3rd Edn, Thomas Pavier: London, 1621), dedication in front matter (Internet Archive). (1st Edition, 1607, 2nd 1609).
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  27. ^ Samuel Deane, 'Gen. James Cudworth' in History of Scituate, Massachusetts, from its first settlement to 1831 (James Loring: Boston, 1831), pp. 245–51; also Scituate Historical Society 24 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  28. ^ Josias Beacham’s first wife was Maria Sheffield (died 1634): S.H.C., 'Extracts from the Parish register of Seton, Co. Rutland, relative to the family of Sheffield', Collectanea Topographica et Genealogica I (J.B. Nichols & Son: London, 1834), pp. 171–73.; Will of Josias Beacham, Rector of Seaton (Rutland) (P.C.C. 1675/76). London Marriage Allegations, 28 April 1636 (St Mary Aldermanbury). Foster, Index Ecclesiasticus. Beacham was a graduate of Brasenose College, Oxford
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  30. ^ J. Peile, Biographical Register of Christ's College, 1505–1905: II: 1666–1905 (Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, 1913), p. 64 (Internet Archive).
  31. ^ J. Peile, Biographical Register, ii, p. 111.
  32. ^ D. Richardson, Jewels of the Crown, 4 (2009), citing references to Jane Cudworth in the Will of John Machell of Wonersh (P.C.C. 1647).
  33. ^ J.C. Whitebrook, 'Dr. John Stoughton the Elder', Transactions of the Congregational Historical Society, 6(2), (1913), pp. 89–107; and 6(3), (1914), pp. 177–87 (Internet Archive).
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  39. ^ Whitebrook, 'Dr John Stoughton the Elder', p. 94 (Internet Archive).
  40. ^ Marriage at St Mary Aldermanbury, 18 January 1635/6; J.P. Ferris, Browne, John II (1580–1659), of Dorchester and Frampton, Dorset, History of Parliament online, 1604–29.
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  42. ^ R. Cudworth, The Union of Christ and the Church, in a Shadow (Richard Bishop: London, 1642) (Umich/eebo).
  43. ^ R. Cudworth, A Discourse concerning the True Notion of the Lord's Supper (2nd edn, J. Flesher for R. Royston: London, 1670) (Google).
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  48. ^ New King James Version at Bible Gateway
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  50. ^ Letter of John Worthington (6 January 1651/2), quoted in Mosheim's Preface to Systema Intellectuale (1733), i, p. xxviii (1773 edn).
  51. ^ '1654, Oct. 29. Dr Cudworth was chosen Master of Christ's College, admitted Nov. 2.': J. Crossley, Diary and Correspondence of Dr John Worthington (Chetham Society, O.S., 13 (1847), i, p. 52.
  52. ^ Letter of John Worthington (30 January 1654/5) quoted in Mosheim's Preface (1733), i, p. xxviii (1773 edn)
  53. ^ C. Seaburg and A. Seaburg, Medford on the Mystic (Medford Historical Society, 1980).
  54. ^ Will of Mathew Cradock of London, Merchant (P.C.C. 1641); C. Brooks, The History of the Town of Medford (J.M. Usher: Boston, 1855), pp. 90–92 (Internet Archive).
  55. ^ Venn, Alumni Cantabrigienses, i(1), p. 411; J.C. Whitebrook, 'Samuel Cradock, cleric and pietist (1620–1706): and Matthew Cradock, first governor of Massachusetts', Congregational History Society, 5(3), (1911), pp. 183–90; S. Handley, 'Cradock, Samuel (1620/21–1706), nonconformist minister', Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.
  56. ^ Brooks, The History of the Town of Medford, pp 41–43, and p. 93 (Internet Archive).
  57. ^ 'Cradock, Craddock', in C.H. Pope, The Pioneers of Massachusetts: A Descriptive List (Boston 1900), pp. 121–22 (Internet Archive).
  58. ^ R. Brenner, Merchants and Revolution: Commercial Change, Political Conflict, and London's Overseas Traders, 1550–1663 (Verso: London, 2003), p. 139 (Google).
  59. ^ Will of Thomas Andrewes, Leather seller of London (P.C.C. 1653). These relationships are confirmed by these wills and the Chancery case Andrewes v Glover (National Archives, London); W.G. Watkins, 'Notes from English Records', New England Historical and Genealogical Register, 64 (1910), pp. 84–87.
  60. ^ T. Birch, Account of the Life and Writings (1743), pp. viii–x (pp. 16–18 in pdf).
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  62. ^ C. Anderson, The Annals of the English Bible (William Pickering: London, 1845), ii, Book 3, p. 394 (Google).
  63. ^ a b Clergy of the Church of England database.
  64. ^ Letter (6 August 1660), in J. Crossley, Diary and Correspondence of Dr John Worthington (Chetham Society, O.S., 13 (1847)), i, p. 203; and Christ's College website, List of Masters of Christ's College.
  65. ^ J. Covell, 'An Account of the Master's Lodgings in ye College', in R. Willis and J.W. Clarke, The Architectural History of the University of Cambridge, and of the Colleges of Cambridge and Eton, (Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, 1886), ii, pp. 212–19 (Internet Archive).
  66. ^ 'Life of Cudworth, Appendix B: Letters of Cudworth and More', in Scott, An Introduction to Cudworth's Treatise, pp. 24–28 (Hathi Trust).
  67. ^ An Account of Virtue; or, Dr. Henry More's Abridgement of Morals, put into English (transl. Edward Southwell), (facsimile of Benjamin Tooke's London (1690) English edn; Facsimile Text Society, New York, 1930), Internet Archive.
  68. ^ R. Cudworth, The True Intellectual System of the Universe: The First Part; Wherein, All the Reason and Philosophy of Atheism is Confuted, and its Impossibility Demonstrated (Richard Royston: London, 1678)
  69. ^ R. Cudworth, 'Preface to the Reader', True Intellectual System (1678).
  70. ^ G. Dyer, History of the University and Colleges of Cambridge, (Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme and Brown: London, 1814), ii, p. 355 (Google).
  71. ^ Epitaph in Mosheim's Preface (1733), i, p. xxix (1773 edn); for his monumental inscription [1].
  72. ^ Oil portrait of Ralph Cudworth, image (copyright Christ's College) viewable here.
  73. ^ 'Splashing out for a piece of history', News, 23 July 2010 (University of Cambridge website). Listing by Historic England.
  74. ^ Will of Damaris Cudworth (P.C.C. 1695); H.R. Fox Bourne, The Life of John Locke, (Harper & Brothers: New York, 1876), ii, pp. 306–07 (Internet Archive).
  75. ^ J. Peile, Biographical Register of Christ's College 1505–1905: II: 1666–1905 (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1913), ii, p. 46.
  76. ^ Locke's letter, in Lord King, The Life of John Locke: With Extracts from His Correspondence (New Edn, Henry Colburn and Richard Bentley: London, 1830), ii, pp. 16–21 (Google).
  77. ^ R.C. Temple, The Diaries of Streynsham Master, 1675–80, and other contemporary papers relating thereto II: The First and Second "Memorialls, 1679–80, Indian Records Series (John Murray: London, 1911), p. 343 and note 2 (Internet Archive); W.K. Firminger (ed.), 'The Malda Diary and Consultations (1680–82)', Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal, N.S., 14 (1918), pp. 1–241 (Internet Archive).
  78. ^ J. Peile, Biographical Register, ii, pp. 49–50, citing Journal entries from Factory Records, Kasinbazar III.
  79. ^ J. Peile, Biographical Register, ii, p. 70.
  80. ^ Locke's letter supposedly addressed to Thomas, in H.R. Fox Bourne, The Life of John Locke (Harper and Brothers: New York, 1876), i, pp. 473–76 (Internet Archive).
  81. ^ M. Knights, 'Masham, Sir Francis, 3rd Bt. (c. 1646–1723), of Otes, High Laver, Essex', in D. Hayton, E. Cruickshanks, and S. Handley (eds), The History of Parliament: the House of Commons, 1690–1715 (Boydell & Brewer,Woodbridge, 2002), History of Parliament Online.
  82. ^ J. Peile, Biographical Register, I: 1448–1665 (Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, 1910), i,p. 601 (Internet Archive).
  83. ^ Venn, Alumni Cantabrigienses, i(1), p. 30; J. Peile, Biographical Register, i, p. 612 (Internet Archive).
  84. ^ Covell, 'An Account of the Master's Lodgings'.
  85. ^ G.J. Armytage, Allegations for Marriage-Licences Issued by the Vicar-General of the Archbishop of Canterbury, July 1679 to June 1687, Harleian Society, 30 (1890), p. 70 (Internet Archive).
  86. ^ Will of Thomas Andrewes, Citizen and Dyer of London (P.C.C. 1688, Foot quire); H.F. Waters, Genealogical Gleanings in England, with the addition of New Series, A-Anyon (Genealogical Publishing Company: Baltimore, 1969), ii, pp. 1738–39 (Internet Archive).
  87. ^ Venn, Alumni Cantabrigienses, i(1), p. 30. Will of Mathew Andrewes, Fellow of Queen's College, Cambridge (P.C.C. 1674, Bunce quire); H.F. Waters, Genealogical Gleanings in England, with the addition of New Series, A-Anyon (Genealogical Publishing Company: Baltimore, 1969), ii, p. 1738.
  88. ^ Venn, Alumni Cantabrigienses, i(1), p. 2; A.A. Hanham, 'Abney, Sir Edward (1631–1728), of Willesley Hall, Leics. and Portugal Row, Lincoln’s Inn Fields', in D. Hayton, E. Cruickshanks, and S. Handley (eds), The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1690–1715 ( Boydell and Brewer: Woodbridge, 2002), History of Parliament Online.
  89. ^ For correspondence between Cudworth and Edward's father, James Abney: E. Randall (ed.), C. Melinsky (ill.), Letters to my Father: Edward Abney, 1660–63 (Simon Randall: Sevenoaks, 2005).
  90. ^ a b c Stanford U. Encyc. of Philosophy. "The Cambridge Platonists". Retrieved 1 August 2012.
  91. ^ a b c d Giglioni, Guido (2008). "The cosmoplastic system of the universe: Ralph Cudworth on Stoic naturalism". Revue d'histoire des sciences. Tome 61/2 (2): 313–331. doi:10.3917/rhs.612.0313.
  92. ^ "Ralph Cudworth". Encyclopædia Britannica. 1902. Retrieved 1 August 2012.
  93. ^ a b Smith, Justin E. H. "The Leibnizian Organism Between Cudworth's Plastic Natures and Locke's Thinking Matter" (PDF). Concordia University, Montreal. Retrieved 1 August 2012.
  94. ^ a b c Raiger, Michael (Winter 2002). "The Intellectual Breeze, the Corporeality of Thought, and the Eolian Harp". Coleridge Bulletin. New Series (20): 76–84. Retrieved 1 August 2012.
  95. ^ R. Cudworth, Treatise Concerning Eternal and Immutable Morality... with a Preface by... Edward Lord Bishop of Durham (1st edn, James and John Knapton: London, 1731)
  96. ^ a b Sturt, Henry (1911). "Cudworth, Ralph" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 7 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 612–613.
  97. ^ Ralph Cudworth (1996). S. Hutton (ed.). Ralph Cudworth: A Treatise Concerning Eternal and Immutable Morality: With A Treatise of Freewill. Cambridge University Press. p. 219. ISBN 978-0-521-47918-9.
  98. ^ Scott, W. R. (1891). "The Life of Ralph Cudworth". An Introduction to Cudworth's Treatise. London: Longmans, Green and Co. pp. 15–17.
  99. ^ White, Andrew Dickson (1901). A History of the Warfare of Science with Theology in Christendom. Vol. 1. New York: D. Appleton and Company. p. 16.
  100. ^ Saint-George, Richard; Raines, F. R. (1871). The visitation of the county palatine of Lancaster, made in the year 1613. Vol. Old Series, 82. Manchester: Chetham Society. p. 80.

Sources edit

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • Cambridge Platonists’ Research Group: Research Portal: Ralph Cudworth Bibliography
  • "Cudworth, Ralph" . Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
  • Sturt, Henry (1911). "Cudworth, Ralph" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 07 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 612–613.
  • Article on Cudworth in Treasures in Focus Blog, Christ's College, Cambridge No. 8, July 2013.
  • "Cudworth, Ralph". Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  • Klaus-Gunther Wesseling (1999). "Cudworth {der Jüngere}, Ralph". In Bautz, Traugott (ed.). Biographisch-Bibliographisches Kirchenlexikon (BBKL) (in German). Vol. 16. Herzberg: Bautz. cols. 352–362. ISBN 3-88309-079-4.
  • R. Cudworth, The True Intellectual System of the Universe (1678) on Google Books
  • R. Cudworth, The True Intellectual System of the Universe (1678; 3-volume edn: Tegg, 1845) on Internet Archive: Volume 1, Volume 2, and Volume 3.
  • R. Cudworth, Sermon before the Commons, at Westminster, 31 March 1647 (1647; repr. 1852)
  • R. Cudworth, A Treatise concerning Eternal and Immutable Morality (1731)
  • R. Cudworth, They know Christ who keep his Commandments (repr. 1858)
Academic offices
Preceded by 11th Regius Professor of Hebrew, University of Cambridge
1645–1688
Succeeded by
Wolfram Stubbe
Preceded by
Thomas Paske
vacancy from 1645
26th Master of Clare Hall, Cambridge
1650–1654
Succeeded by
Preceded by 14th Master of Christ's College, Cambridge
1654–1688
Succeeded by

ralph, cudworth, died, 1624, ɜːr, rayf, kuud, urth, 1617, june, 1688, english, anglican, clergyman, christian, hebraist, classicist, theologian, philosopher, leading, figure, among, cambridge, platonists, became, 11th, regius, professor, hebrew, 1645, 26th, ma. For Ralph Cudworth Snr see Ralph Cudworth died 1624 Ralph Cudworth FRS r eɪ f ˈ k ʊ d ɜːr 8 rayf KUUD urth 1617 26 June 1688 was an English Anglican clergyman Christian Hebraist classicist theologian and philosopher and a leading figure among the Cambridge Platonists who became 11th Regius Professor of Hebrew 1645 88 26th Master of Clare Hall 1645 54 and 14th Master of Christ s College 1654 88 1 A leading opponent of Hobbes s political and philosophical views his magnum opus was his The True Intellectual System of the Universe 1678 2 The Reverend ProfessorRalph CudworthFRS11th Regius Professor of Hebrew University of CambridgeIn office 1645 1688Preceded byRobert MetcalfeSucceeded byWolfram Stubbe14th Master of Christ s College CambridgeIn office 1654 1688Preceded bySamuel BoltonSucceeded byJohn Covel26th Master of Clare Hall CambridgeIn office 1645 1650 1654Preceded byThomas PaskeSucceeded byTheophilus DillinghamPersonal detailsBorn1617 1617 Aller Somerset EnglandDied26 June 1688 1688 06 26 aged 70 71 SpouseDamaris Cradock Andrewes m 1654 wbr Children4 including Damaris Cudworth MashamParentsRalph Cudworth Snr Mary MachellRelativesJames Cudworth brother Alma materUniversity of Cambridge Emmanuel College BA MA Clare Hall BD DD Ecclesiastical careerReligionChristianity Anglican ChurchChurch of EnglandOrdained1650 Priest Offices heldVicar Gt Wilbraham 1656 Rector N Cadbury 1650 6 Rector Toft 1656 62 Rector Ashwell 1662 88 Prebendary Gloucester 1678 Contents 1 Family background 1 1 Ancestry 1 2 The Rev Dr Ralph Cudworth Snr 1572 3 1624 1 2 1 Children 2 Career 2 1 Education 2 2 Pensioner Student and Fellow of Emmanuel College 1630 45 2 3 11th Regius Professor of Hebrew 1645 and 26th Master of Clare Hall 1645 54 2 4 Marriage 1654 and 14th Master of Christ s College 1654 88 2 5 Commonwealth and Restoration 2 6 Later life 2 7 Children 3 Philosophy 3 1 Plastic principle 3 1 1 Plastic Principle and mind 4 Legacy 5 Works 5 1 Sermons and Treatises 5 1 1 A Treatise concerning eternal and immutable Morality posth 5 1 2 A Treatise of Freewill posth 5 2 The True Intellectual System of the Universe 1678 6 Arms 7 Ancestry 8 References 9 Sources 10 Further reading 11 External linksFamily background editAncestry edit Cudworth s family reputedly originated in Cudworth near Barnsley Yorkshire moving to Lancashire with the marriage c 1377 of John de Cudworth died 1384 and Margery died 1384 daughter of Richard de Oldham living 1354 lord of the manor of Werneth Oldham The Cudworths of Werneth Hall Oldham were lords of the manor of Werneth Oldham until 1683 Ralph Cudworth the philosopher s father Ralph Cudworth Snr was the posthumous born second son of Ralph Cudworth d 1572 of Werneth Hall Oldham 3 4 5 6 7 The Rev Dr Ralph Cudworth Snr 1572 3 1624 edit The philosopher s father The Rev Dr Ralph Cudworth 1572 3 1624 was educated at Emmanuel College Cambridge where he graduated BA 1592 93 MA 1596 Emmanuel College founded by Sir Walter Mildmay 1584 and under the direction of its first Master Laurence Chaderton was from its inception a stronghold of Reformist Puritan and Calvinist teaching which shaped the development of puritan ministry and contributed largely to the emigrant ministry in America 8 Ordained in 1599 9 and elected to a college fellowship by 1600 10 Cudworth Snr was much influenced by William Perkins whom he succeeded in 1602 as Lecturer of the Parish Church of St Andrew the Great Cambridge 11 He was awarded the degree of Bachelor of Divinity in 1603 12 He edited Perkins s Commentary on St Paul s Epistle to the Galatians 1604 13 with a dedication to Robert 3rd Lord Rich later 1st Earl of Warwick adding a commentary of his own with dedication to Sir Bassingbourn Gawdy 14 Lord Rich presented him to the Vicariate of Coggeshall Essex 1606 15 to replace the deprived minister Thomas Stoughton but he resigned this position March 1608 and was licensed to preach from the pulpit by the Chancellor and Scholars of the University of Cambridge November 1609 16 He then applied for the rectorate of Aller Somerset an Emmanuel College living 17 and resigning his fellowship was appointed to it in 1610 18 His marriage 1611 to Mary Machell c 1582 1634 who had been nutrix nurse or preceptor to Henry Frederick Prince of Wales 19 brought important connections Cudworth Snr was appointed as one of James I s chaplains 20 Mary s mother or aunt was the sister of Sir Edward Lewknor a central figure with the Jermyn and Heigham families among the puritan East Anglian gentry whose children had attended Emmanuel College 21 Mary s Lewknor and Machell connections with the Rich family included her first cousins Sir Nathaniel Rich and his sister Dame Margaret Wroth wife of Sir Thomas Wroth of Petherton Park near Bridgwater Somerset influential promoters of colonial enterprise and later of nonconformist emigration in New England Aller was immediately within their sphere Ralph Snr and Mary settled at Aller where their children listed below were christened during the following decade 22 Cudworth continued to study working on a complete survey of Case Divinity The Cases of Conscience in Family Church and Commonwealth while suffering from the agueish climate at Aller 23 He was awarded the degree of Doctor of Divinity 1619 24 and was among the dedicatees of Richard Bernard s 1621 edition of The Faithfull Shepherd 25 Ralph Snr died at Aller declaring a nuncupative will 7 August 1624 before Anthony Earbury and Dame Margaret Wroth 26 Children edit nbsp Parish Church of St Andrew Aller Somerset where John Stoughton succeeded Ralph Cudworth Snr 1624 The children of Ralph Cudworth Snr and Mary nee Machell Cudworth c 1582 1634 were General James Cudworth 1612 82 was Assistant Governor 1756 8 1674 80 and Deputy Governor 1681 2 of Plymouth Colony Massachusetts and four times Commissioner of the United Colonies 1657 81 27 whose descendants form an extensive family of American Cudworths Elizabeth Cudworth 1615 54 married 1636 Josias Beacham of Broughton Northamptonshire Rector of Seaton Rutland 1627 76 by whom she had several children Beacham was ejected from his living by the Puritans 1653 but reinstated by 1662 28 Ralph Cudworth Jnr Mary Cudworth John Cudworth 1622 75 of London and Bentley Suffolk Alderman of London and Master of the Worshipful Company of Girdlers 1667 68 29 On his death John left four orphans of whom both Thomas Cudworth 1661 1726 30 and Benjamin Cudworth 1670 15 Sept 1725 attended Christ s College Cambridge 31 Benjamin Cudworth s black memorial slab is in St Margaret s parish church Southolt Suffolk Jane Joan Cudworth born c 1624 fl unmarried 1647 may have been Ralph s sister 32 Career editEducation edit The second son and third of five probably six children Ralph Cudworth Jnr was born at Aller Somerset where he was baptised 13 July 1617 Following the death of his father Ralph Cudworth Snr 1624 The Rev Dr John Stoughton 1593 1639 son of Thomas Stoughton of Coggeshall also a Fellow of Emmanuel College succeeded as Rector of Aller and married the widow Mary nee Machell Cudworth c 1582 1634 33 Dr Stoughton paid careful attention to his stepchildren s education which Ralph later described as a diet of Calvinism 34 Letters to Stoughton by both brothers James and Ralph Cudworth make this plain and when Ralph matriculated at Emmanuel College Cambridge 1632 35 Stoughton thought him as wel grounded in Scho o l Learning as any Boy of his Age that went to the University 36 Stoughton was appointed Curate and Preacher at St Mary Aldermanbury London 1632 37 and the family left Aller Ralph s elder brother James Cudworth married and emigrated to Scituate Plymouth Colony New England 1634 38 Mary Machell Cudworth Stoughton died during summer 1634 39 and Dr Stoughton married a daughter of John Browne of Frampton and Dorchester 40 Pensioner Student and Fellow of Emmanuel College 1630 45 edit nbsp Emmanuel College CambridgeFrom a family background embedded in the early nonconformity and a diligent student Cudworth was admitted as a pensioner to his father s old college Emmanuel College Cambridge 1630 matriculated 1632 and graduated BA 1635 6 MA 1639 After some misgivings which he confided in his stepfather 41 he was elected a Fellow of Emmanuel 1639 and became a successful tutor delivering the Rede Lecture 1641 He published a tract entitled The Union of Christ and the Church in a Shadow 1642 42 and another A Discourse concerning the True Notion of the Lord s Supper 1642 43 in which his readings of Karaite manuscripts stimulated by meetings with Johann Stephan Rittangel were influential 44 11th Regius Professor of Hebrew 1645 and 26th Master of Clare Hall 1645 54 edit nbsp Old Court Clare College CambridgeFollowing sustained correspondence with John Selden 45 to whom he supplied Karaite literature he was elected aged 28 as 11th Regius Professor of Hebrew 1645 24 In 1645 Thomas Paske had been ejected as Master of Clare Hall for his Anglican allegiances and Cudworth despite his immaturity was selected as his successor as 26th Master but not admitted until 1650 46 Similarly his fellow theologian Benjamin Whichcote was installed as 19th Provost of King s College 47 Cudworth attained the degree of Bachelor of Divinity 1646 and preached a sermon before the House of Commons of England on 1 John 2 3 4 48 which was later published with a Letter of Dedication to the House 1647 49 Despite these distinctions and his presentation by Emmanuel College to the rectorate of North Cadbury Somerset 3 October 1650 he remained comparatively impoverished He was awarded the degree of Doctor of Divinity 1651 24 and in January 1651 2 his friend Dr John Worthington wrote of him If through want of maintenance he should be forced to leave Cambridge for which place he is so eminently accomplished with what is noble and Exemplarily Academical it would be an ill omen 50 Marriage 1654 and 14th Master of Christ s College 1654 88 edit nbsp First Court Christ s College CambridgeDespite his worsening sight Cudworth was elected 29 October 1654 and admitted 2 November 1654 as 14th Master of Christ s College 51 His appointment coincided with his marriage to Damaris died 1695 daughter by his first wife Damaris of Matthew Cradock died 1641 first Governor of the Massachusetts Bay Company Hence Worthington commented After many tossings Dr Cudworth is through God s good Providence returned to Cambridge and settled in Christ s College and by his marriage more settled and fixed 52 In his Will 1641 Matthew Cradock had divided his estate beside the Mystic River at Medford Massachusetts which he had never visited and was managed on his behalf 53 into two moieties one was bequeathed to his daughter Damaris Cradock died 1695 later wife of Ralph Cudworth Jnr and one was to be enjoyed by his widow Rebecca during her lifetime and afterwards to be inherited by his brother Samuel Cradock 1583 1653 and his heirs male 54 Samuel Cradock s son Samuel Cradock Jnr 1621 1706 was admitted to Emmanuel 1637 graduated BA 1640 1 MA 1644 BD 1651 was later a Fellow 1645 56 and pupil of Benjamin Whichcote s 55 After part of the Medford estate was rented to Edward Collins 1642 it was placed in the hands of an attorney the widow Rebecca Cradock whose second and third husbands were Richard Glover and Benjamin Whichcote respectively petitioned the General Court of Massachusetts and the legatees later sold the estate to Collins 1652 56 57 The marriage of the widow Rebecca Cradock to Cudworth s colleague Benjamin Whichcote laid the way for the union between Cudworth and her stepdaughter Damaris died 1695 which reinforced the connections between the two scholars through a familial bond Damaris had first married 1642 58 Thomas Andrewes Jnr died 1653 of London and Feltham son of Sir Thomas Andrewes died 1659 Lord Mayor of London 1649 1651 2 which union had produced several children The Andrewes family were also engaged in the Massachusetts project and strongly supported puritan causes 59 Commonwealth and Restoration edit Cudworth emerged as a central figure among that circle of theologians and philosophers known as the Cambridge Platonists who were more or less in sympathy with the Commonwealth during the later 1650s Cudworth was consulted by John Thurloe Oliver Cromwell s Secretary to the Council of State with regard to certain university and government appointments and various other matters 60 61 During 1657 Cudworth advised Bulstrode Whitelocke s sub committee of the Parliamentary Grand Committee for Religion on the accuracy of editions of the English Bible 62 Cudworth was appointed Vicar of Great Wilbraham and Rector of Toft Cambridgeshire Ely diocese 1656 but surrendered these livings 1661 and 1662 respectively when he was presented by Dr Gilbert Sheldon Bishop of London to the Hertfordshire Rectory of Ashwell 1 December 1662 63 nbsp The mid seventeenth century Fellows Swimming Pool Christ s College CambridgeGiven Cudworth s close cooperation with prominent figures in Oliver Cromwell s regime such as John Thurloe Cudworth s continuance as Master of Christ s was challenged at the Restoration but ultimately he retained this post until his death 64 He and his family are believed to have resided in private lodgings at the Old Lodge which stood between Hobson Street and the College Chapel and various improvements were made to the college rooms in his time 65 He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1662 Later life edit In 1665 Cudworth almost quarrelled with his fellow Platonist Henry More because of the latter s composition of an ethical work which Cudworth feared would interfere with his own long contemplated treatise on the same subject 66 To avoid any difficulties More published his Enchiridion ethicum 1666 69 in Latin 67 However Cudworth s planned treatise was never published His own majestic work The True Intellectual System of the Universe 1678 68 was conceived in three parts of which only the first was completed he wrote there is no reason why this volume should therefore be thought imperfect and incomplete because it hath not all the Three Things at first Designed by us it containing all that belongeth to its own particular Title and Subject and being in that respect no Piece but a Whole 69 nbsp Memorial to Damaris CudworthCudworth was installed as Prebendary of Gloucester 1678 63 His colleague Benjamin Whichcote died at Cudworth s house in Cambridge 1683 70 and Cudworth himself died 26 June 1688 and was buried in the Chapel of Christ s College 71 An oil portrait of Cudworth from life hangs in the Hall of Christ s College 72 During Cudworth s time an outdoor Swimming Pool was created at Christ s College which still exists and a carved bust of Cudworth there accompanies those of John Milton and Nicholas Saunderson 73 Cudworth s widow Damaris nee Cradock Andrewes Cudworth died 1695 maintained close connections with her daughter Damaris Cudworth Masham at High Laver Essex which was where she died and was commemorated in the church with a carved epitaph reputedly composed by the philosopher John Locke 74 Children edit The children of Ralph Cudworth and Damaris nee Cradock Andrewes Cudworth died 1695 were John Cudworth c 1656 1726 was admitted to Christ s College Cambridge 1672 graduated BA 1676 7 MA 1680 and was a pupil of Mr Andrewes He was a Fellow 1678 98 was ordained a priest 1684 and later became Lecturer in Greek 1687 8 and Senior Dean 1690 75 Charles Cudworth died 1684 was admitted to Trinity College Cambridge 1674 6 but may have not graduated instead making a career in the factories of Kasimbazar West Bengal India which was where John Locke friend of his sister Damaris Cudworth corresponded with him 27 April 1683 76 He married February 1683 84 Mary Cole widow of Jonathan Prickman Second for the English East India Company at Malda 77 Charles Cudworth died in March 1684 78 Thomas Cudworth graduated at Christ s College Cambridge MA 1682 79 80 Damaris Cudworth 1659 1708 a devout and talented woman became the second wife 1685 of Sir Francis Masham 3rd Baronet c 1646 1723 of High Laver Essex 81 Lady Masham was a friend of the philosopher John Locke and also a correspondent of Gottfried Leibniz Her son Francis Cudworth Masham died 1731 became Accountant General to the Court of Chancery The stepchildren of Ralph Cudworth children of Damaris nee Cradock Andrewes died 1695 and Thomas Andrewes died 1653 were Richard Andrewes living 1688 who according to Peile is not the Richard Andrewes who attended Christ s College Cambridge during this period 82 John Andrewes died after 1688 matriculated at Christ s College Cambridge 1664 graduated BA 1668 9 MA 1672 was ordained deacon and priest 1669 70 and was a Fellow 1669 75 83 Peile suggests he died c 1675 but he was a legatee in the will of his brother Thomas 1688 John Covel attended a Pastoral performed by Cudworth s children contrived by John Andrewes 84 Thomas Andrewes died 1688 Citizen and Dyer of London was a linen draper He married August 1681 Anna daughter of Samuel Shute of St Peter s Cornhill 85 86 Mathew Andrewes died 1674 was admitted to Queens College Cambridge 1663 4 and later elected a Fellow 87 Damaris Andrewes died 1687 married 1661 as his first wife Sir Edward Abney 1631 1728 a student at Christ s College Cambridge BA 1649 52 53 Fellow 1655 61 and Doctor of both laws 1661 88 89 Philosophy editCudworth was a member of the Cambridge Platonists a group of English seventeenth century thinkers associated with the University of Cambridge who were stimulated by Plato s teachings but also were aware of and influenced by Descartes Hobbes Bacon Boyle and Spinoza The other important philosopher of this group was Henry More 1614 1687 More held that spiritual substance or mind controlled inert matter Out of his correspondence with Descartes he developed the idea that everything whether material or non had extension an example of the latter being space which is infinite Newton and which then is correlative to the idea of God set out in his Enchiridion metaphysicum 1667 In developing this idea More also introduced a causal agent between God and substance or Nature in his Hylarchic Principle derived from Plato s anima mundi or world soul and the Stoic s pneuma which encapsulates the laws of nature both for inert and vital nature and involves a sympathetic resonance between soul psyche and body soma 90 Plastic principle edit The role of nature was one faced by philosophers in the Age of Reason or Enlightenment The prevailing view was either that of the Church of a personal deity intervening in his creation producing miracles or an ancient pantheism atheism relative to theism deity pervading all things and existing in all things However the ideas of an all embracing providential care of the world and of one universal vital force capable of organizing the world from within 91 presented difficulties for philosophers of a spiritual as well as materialistic bent Cudworth countered these mechanical materialistic views of nature in his True intellectual system of the universe 1678 with the idea of the Plastick Life of Nature a formative principle that contains both substance and the laws of motion as well as a nisus or direction that accounts for design and goal in the natural world He was stimulated by the Cartesian idea of the mind as self consciousness to see God as consciousness He first analysed four forms of atheism from ancient times to present and showed that all misunderstood the principle of life and knowledge which involved unsentient activity and self consciousness addressing the tension between theism and atheism took both the Stoic idea of Divine Reason poured into the world and the Platonic idea of the world soul anima mundi to posit a power that was polaric either as a ruling but separate mind or as an informing vital principle either nous hypercosmios or nous enkosmios 91 It is in connection with the refutation of hylozoic atheism that he brings forward the celebrated hypothesis which he held in common with More of a plastic nature a substance intermediate between matter and spirit a power which prosecutes certain ends but not freely or intelligently an instrument by which laws are able to act without the immediate agency of God 92 All of the atheistic approaches posted nature as unconscious which for Cudworth was ontologically unsupportable as a principle that was supposed to be the ultimate source of life and meaning could only be itself self conscious and knowledgeable that is rational otherwise creation or nature degenerates into inert matter set in motion by random external forces Coleridge s chance whirlings of unproductive particles Cudworth saw nature as a vegetative power endowed with plastic forming and spermatic generative forces but one with Mind or a self conscious knowledge This idea would later emerge in the Romantic period in German science as Blumenbach s Bildungstreib generative power and the Lebenskraft or Bildungskraft the life of the universe splits into two principles the one transcendent and intellectual an animalish sentient and intellectual nature or a conscious soul and mind that presided over the whole world the other immanent and devoid of perception a certain plastic nature or spermatic principle which was properly the fate of all things 91 The essence of atheism for Cudworth was the view that matter was self active and self sufficient whereas for Cudworth the plastic power was unsentient and under the direct control of the universal Mind or Logos For him atheism whether mechanical or material could not solve the phenomenon of nature Henry More argued that atheism made each substance independent and self acting such that it deified matter Cudworth argued that materialism mechanism reduced substance to a corporeal entity its activity to causal determinism and each single thing to fleeting appearances in a system dominated by material necessity 91 Cudworth had the idea of a general plastic nature of the world containing natural laws to keep all of nature inert and vital in orderly motion and particular plastic natures in particular entities which serve as Inward Principles of growth and motion but ascribes it to the Platonic tradition The Platonists seem to affirm both these together namely that there is a Plastick Nature lodged in all particular Souls of Animals Brutes and Men and also that there is a Plastick or Spermatick Principle of the whole Universe distinct from the Higher Mundane Soul though subordinate to it Cudworth TIS p 165 93 Further Cudsworth s plastic principle was also a functional polarity As he wrote The Seminary Reason or Plastick Nature of the Universe opposing the Parts to one another and making them severally Indigent produces by that means War and Contention And therefore though it be One yet notwithstanding it consists of Different and Contrary things For there being Hostility in its Parts it is nevertheless Friendly and Agreeable in the Whole after the same manner as in a Dramatick Poem Clashings and Contentions are reconciled into one Harmony And therefore the Seminary or Plastick Nature of the World may fitly be resembled to the Harmony of Disagreeing things 94 As another historian notes in conclusion Cudworth s theory of plastic natures is offered as an alternative to the interpretation of all of nature as either governed by blind chance or on his understanding of the Malebranchean view as micro managed by God 93 Plastic Principle and mind edit Cudworth s plastic principle also involves a theory of mind that is active that is God or the Supreme Mind is the spermatic reason which gives rise to individual mind and reason Human mind can also create and has access to spiritual or super sensible Ideas in the Platonic sense 90 Cudworth challenged Hobbesian determinism in arguing that will is not distinct from reason but a power to act that is internal and therefore the voluntary will function involves self determination not external compulsion though we have the power to act either in accordance with God s will or not Cudworth s hegemonikon taken from Stoicism is a function within the soul that combines the higher functions of the soul voluntary will and reason on the one hand with the lower animal functions instinct and also constitutes the whole person thus bridging the Cartesian dualism of body and soul or psyche and soma This idea provided the basis for a concept of self awareness and identity of an individual that is self directed and autonomous an idea that anticipates John Locke Legacy editLocke examined how man came to knowledge via stimulus rather than seeing ideas as inherent which approach led to his idea of the thinking mind which is both receptive and pro active The first involves receiving sensations simple ideas and the second by reflection observation of its own inner operations inner sense which leads to complex ideas with the second activity acting upon the first Thought is set in motion by outer stimuli which simple ideas are taken up by the mind s self activity an active power such that the outer world can only be real ized as action natural cause by the activity of consciousness Locke also took the issue of life as lying not in substance but in the capacity of the self for consciousness to be able to organize associate disparate events that is to participate life by means of the sense experiences which have the capacity to produce every kind of experience in consciousness These ideas of Locke were taken over by Fichte and influenced German Romantic science and medicine See Romantic medicine and Brunonian system of medicine Thomas Reid and his Common Sense philosophy was also influenced by Cudworth taking his influence into the Scottish Enlightenment 90 George Berkeley later developed the idea of a plastic life principle with his idea of an aether or aetherial medium that causes vibrations that animate all living beings For Berkeley it is the very nature of this medium that generates the attractions of entities to each other The refraction of light is also thought to proceed from the different density and elastic force of this aethereal medium in different places The vibrations of this medium alternately concurring with or obstructing the motions of the rays of light are supposed to produce the fits of easy reflection and transmission Light by the vibrations of this medium is thought to communicate heat to bodies Animal motion and sensation are also accounted for by the vibrating motions of this aethereal medium propagated through the solid capillaments of the nerves In a word all the phenomena and properties of bodies that were before attributed to attraction upon later thoughts seem ascribed to this aether together with the various attractions themselves Berkeley V 107 8 94 Berkeley meant this aether to supplant Newton s gravity as the cause of motion neither seeing the polarity involved between two forces as Cudworth had in his plastic principle However in Berkeley s conception aether is both the movement of spirit and the motion of nature Both Cudworth s views and those of Berkeley were taken up by Coleridge in his metaphor of the eolian harp in his Effusion XXXV as one commentator noted what we see in the first manuscript is the articulation of Cudworth s principle of plastic nature which is then transformed in the published version into a Berkeleyan expression of the causal agency of motion performed by God s immanent activity 94 Works edit nbsp Christianity portalSermons and Treatises edit Cudworth s works included The Union of Christ and the Church in a Shadow 1642 A Sermon preached before the House of Commons 1647 and A Discourse concerning the True Notion of the Lord s Supper 1670 Much of Cudworth s work remains in manuscript However certain surviving works have been published posthumously such as A Treatise concerning eternal and immutable Morality and A Treatise of Freewill A Treatise concerning eternal and immutable Morality posth edit Cudworth s Treatise on eternal and immutable Morality published with a preface by Edward Chandler 1731 95 is about the historical development of British moral philosophy It answers from the standpoint of Platonism Hobbes s famous doctrine that moral distinctions are created by the state It argues that just as knowledge contains a permanent intelligible element over and above the flux of sense impressions so there exist eternal and immutable ideas of morality 96 A Treatise of Freewill posth edit Another posthumous publication was Cudworth s A Treatise of Freewill edited by John Allen 1838 Both this and the Treatise on eternal and immutable Morality are connected with the design of his magnum opus The True Intellectual System of the Universe 97 The True Intellectual System of the Universe 1678 edit In 1678 Cudworth published The True Intellectual System of the Universe the first part wherein all the reason and philosophy of atheism is confuted and its impossibility demonstrated which had been given an Imprimatur for publication 29 May 1671 nbsp A finely bound first edition of the True Intellectual System 1678 in the British Library shelfmark Davis 187 The Intellectual System arose according to Cudworth from a discourse refuting fatal necessity or determinism 96 Enlarging his plan he proposed to prove three matters a the existence of God b the naturalness of moral distinctions and c the reality of human freedom These three comprise collectively the intellectual as opposed to the physical system of the universe and they are opposed respectively by three false principles atheism religious fatalism which refers all moral distinctions to the will of God and the fatalism of the ancient Stoics who recognized God and yet identified him with nature Only the first part dealing with atheism was ever published Cudworth criticizes two main forms of materialistic atheism the atomic adopted by Democritus Epicurus and Thomas Hobbes and the hylozoic attributed to Strato of Lampsacus which explains everything by the supposition of an inward self organizing life in matter Atomic atheism to which Cudworth devotes the larger part of the work is described as arising from the combination of two principles neither of which is individually atheistic namely atomism and corporealism or the doctrine that nothing exists but body The example of Stoicism Cudworth suggests shows that corporealism may be theistic Cudworth discusses the history of atomism at length It is in its purely physical application a theory that he fully accepts He holds that theistic atomism was taught by Pythagoras Empedocles and many other ancient philosophers and was only perverted to atheism by Democritus Cudworth believes that atomism was first invented before the Trojan war by a Sidonian thinker named Moschus or Mochus whom he identifies with Moses in the Old Testament Cudworth s method in arranging his work was to marshal the atheistic arguments elaborately before refuting them in his final chapter This led many readers to accuse Cudworth himself of atheism as John Dryden remarked he has raised such objections against the being of a God and Providence that many think he has not answered them 98 Much attention was also attached to a subordinate matter in the book the conception of the Plastic Medium a revival of Plato s World Soul which was intended to explain the existence and laws of nature without referring to the direct operation of God This theory occasioned a long drawn controversy between Pierre Bayle and Georges Louis Leclerc with the former maintaining and the latter denying that the Plastic Medium is favourable to atheism Summing up the work Andrew Dickson White wrote in 1896 To this day he Cudworth remains in breadth of scholarship in strength of thought in tolerance and in honesty one of the greatest glories of the English Church He purposed to build a fortress which should protect Christianity against all dangerous theories of the universe ancient or modern While genius marked every part of it features appeared which gave the rigidly orthodox serious misgivings From the old theories of direct personal action on the universe by the Almighty he broke utterly He dwelt on the action of law rejected the continuous exercise of miraculous intervention pointed out the fact that in the natural world there are errors and bungles and argued vigorously in favor of the origin and maintenance of the universe as a slow and gradual development of Nature in obedience to an inward principle 99 Arms editCoat of arms of Ralph Cudworth Notes The arms of the Cudworths of Werneth Oldham Lancashire with a crescent charged upon a crescent for the second son of a second son Escutcheon Azure a fess Erminois between three demi lions Or with a crescent Argent charged with a crescent Sable for difference 100 6 Ancestry editAncestors of Ralph Cudworth 6 7 8 Ralph Cudworth d 1558 of Werneth Oldham4 Ralph Cudworth d 1572 of Werneth Oldham9 Agnes Lees2 Ralph Cudworth 1572 3 1624 10 Arthur Assheton d 1591 of Clegg Littleborough5 Jane Assheton1 Ralph Cudworth12 John Machell of London6 Matthew Machell c 1549 93 of London13 Jane Loddington3 Mary Machell c 1582 1634 14 Edward Lewkenor c 1517 56 of Kingston Buci Sussex7 Mary Lewkenor15 Dorothy WrothReferences edit J A Passmore Ralph Cudworth An Interpretation Cambridge University Press Cambridge 1951 D A Pailin Cudworth Ralph 1617 88 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography 2004 Edwin Butterworth Historical Sketches of Oldham John Hirst Oldham 1856 pp 22 23 Google Butterworth James 1826 History and Description of the Parochial Chapelry of Oldham Oldham J Dodge etc pp 52ff Pedigree of the Families of Oldhams and Cudworths Fuller Thomas 1811 Nuttall T A ed History of the Worthies of England Vol ii London Thomas Tegg p 208 a b c The parish of Prestwich with Oldham Oldham British History Online www british history ac uk Retrieved 25 June 2021 a b Stansfield Cudworth R E 2019 Gentry Gentility and Genealogy in Lancashire The Cudworths of Werneth Hall Oldham c 1377 1683 Transactions of the Lancashire and Cheshire Antiquarian Society 111 48 80 History of the College Emmanuel College website S Bendell C Brooke and P Collinson A History of Emmanuel College Boydell Press Woodbridge 1999 Church of England clergy database Ordination record ID 123517 Person Record CCEd ID 89100 S Bush Jnr and C J Rasmussen The Library of Emmanuel College Cambridge 1584 1637 Cambridge University Press 2005 pp 77 79 and p 210 Google B Carter The standing of Ralph Cudworth as a Philosopher in G A J Rogers T Sorell and J Kraye eds Insiders and Outsiders in Seventeenth Century Philosophy Routledge London 2009 at p 100 see note 4 Venn Alumni Cantabrigienses i 1 p 431 H C Porter Reformation and Reaction in Tudor Cambridge Cambridge University Press Cambridge 1958 pp 264 66 Google A Commentarie or Exposition upon the Five First Chapters of the Epistle to the Galatians penned by the godly learned and iudiciall divine Mr W Perkins Now published for the benefit of the Church and continued with a supplement upon the sixt chapter by Rafe Cudworth Bachelour of Divinitie John Legat London 1604 Clergy of the Church of England database CCEd Appointment Record ID 193664 Church of England clergy database CCEd Records ID 193711 Vacancy and 178652 Appointment R W Dunning ed Parishes Aller A History of the County of Somerset iii 1974 pp 61 71 British History Online CCEd Appointment Evidence Record ID 178651 as 30 August 1610 J L v Mosheim Radulphi Cudworthi Systema intellectuale hujus universi sumtu viduae Meyer Jena 1733 i Praefatio Moshemii 34 sides unpaginated side 19 The information was from Edward Chandler Mosheim as cited above P Collinson 17 Magistracy and Ministry A Suffolk Miniature in Godly People Essays on English Protestantism and Puritanism Hambledon Press London 1983 pp 445 66 D Richardson Magna Carta Ancestry ed K J Everingham 2nd Edn 2011 ii p 10 items 15 16 Letter of Ralph Cudworth Snr to James Ussher Bodleian Library Oxford MS Rawlinson Letters 89 fol 25 r v Early modern letters online a b c Venn Alumni Cantabrigienses R Bernard The Faithfull Shepherd wholy in a manner transposed 3rd Edn Thomas Pavier London 1621 dedication in front matter Internet Archive 1st Edition 1607 2nd 1609 Will of Raphe Cudworthe Doctor of Divinity Parson of Aller Somerset P C C 1624 Byrde quire Samuel Deane Gen James Cudworth in History of Scituate Massachusetts from its first settlement to 1831 James Loring Boston 1831 pp 245 51 also Scituate Historical Society Archived 24 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine Josias Beacham s first wife was Maria Sheffield died 1634 S H C Extracts from the Parish register of Seton Co Rutland relative to the family of Sheffield Collectanea Topographica et Genealogica I J B Nichols amp Son London 1834 pp 171 73 Will of Josias Beacham Rector of Seaton Rutland P C C 1675 76 London Marriage Allegations 28 April 1636 St Mary Aldermanbury Foster Index Ecclesiasticus Beacham was a graduate of Brasenose College Oxford W Dumville Smythe An Historical Account of the Worshipful Company of Girdlers London Chiswick Press London 1905 pp 109 10 Will of John Cudworth Girdler of London P C C 1675 J Peile Biographical Register of Christ s College 1505 1905 II 1666 1905 Cambridge University Press Cambridge 1913 p 64 Internet Archive J Peile Biographical Register ii p 111 D Richardson Jewels of the Crown 4 2009 citing references to Jane Cudworth in the Will of John Machell of Wonersh P C C 1647 J C Whitebrook Dr John Stoughton the Elder Transactions of the Congregational Historical Society 6 2 1913 pp 89 107 and 6 3 1914 pp 177 87 Internet Archive F J Powicke The Cambridge Platonists A Study J M Dent amp Co London 1926 p 111 Cudworth Ralph CDWT632R A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge See Venn Alumni Cantabrigienses i 1 p 431 Mosheim Radulphi Cudworthi Systema Intellectuale 1733 i Praefatio Moshemii 34 sides unpaginated 19th side note Venn Alumni Cantabrigienses i 4 p 171 Letter of James Cudworth of Scituate 1634 to Stoughton in New England Historical and Genealogical Register 14 1860 pp 101 04 Whitebrook Dr John Stoughton the Elder p 94 Internet Archive Marriage at St Mary Aldermanbury 18 January 1635 6 J P Ferris Browne John II 1580 1659 of Dorchester and Frampton Dorset History of Parliament online 1604 29 T Solly The Will Divine and Human Deighton Bell amp Co Cambridge Bell amp Daldy London 1856 pp 287 91 R Cudworth The Union of Christ and the Church in a Shadow Richard Bishop London 1642 Umich eebo R Cudworth A Discourse concerning the True Notion of the Lord s Supper 2nd edn J Flesher for R Royston London 1670 Google D J Lasker Karaism and Christian Hebraism a New Document Renaissance Quarterly 59 4 2006 pp 1089 1116 D Levitin Ancient Wisdom in the Age of the New Science Histories of Philosophy in England c 1640 1700 Cambridge University Press Cambridge 2015 p 171 and note 300 with itemized citations Google D Neal ed J O Choules The History of the Puritans or Protestant Nonconformists Harper amp Brothers New York 1844 p 481 Google See J Barwick Querela Cantabrigiensis Oxford 1647 A Catalogue Umich eebo S Hutton Whichcote Benjamin 1609 83 theologian and moral philosopher in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography New King James Version at Bible Gateway R Cudworth A sermon preached before the Honourable House of Commons at Westminster March 31 1647 Roger Daniel Cambridge 1647 Letter of Dedication Umich eebo Letter of John Worthington 6 January 1651 2 quoted in Mosheim s Preface to Systema Intellectuale 1733 i p xxviii 1773 edn 1654 Oct 29 Dr Cudworth was chosen Master of Christ s College admitted Nov 2 J Crossley Diary and Correspondence of Dr John Worthington Chetham Society O S 13 1847 i p 52 Letter of John Worthington 30 January 1654 5 quoted in Mosheim s Preface 1733 i p xxviii 1773 edn C Seaburg and A Seaburg Medford on the Mystic Medford Historical Society 1980 Will of Mathew Cradock of London Merchant P C C 1641 C Brooks The History of the Town of Medford J M Usher Boston 1855 pp 90 92 Internet Archive Venn Alumni Cantabrigienses i 1 p 411 J C Whitebrook Samuel Cradock cleric and pietist 1620 1706 and Matthew Cradock first governor of Massachusetts Congregational History Society 5 3 1911 pp 183 90 S Handley Cradock Samuel 1620 21 1706 nonconformist minister Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Brooks The History of the Town of Medford pp 41 43 and p 93 Internet Archive Cradock Craddock in C H Pope The Pioneers of Massachusetts A Descriptive List Boston 1900 pp 121 22 Internet Archive R Brenner Merchants and Revolution Commercial Change Political Conflict and London s Overseas Traders 1550 1663 Verso London 2003 p 139 Google Will of Thomas Andrewes Leather seller of London P C C 1653 These relationships are confirmed by these wills and the Chancery case Andrewes v Glover National Archives London W G Watkins Notes from English Records New England Historical and Genealogical Register 64 1910 pp 84 87 T Birch Account of the Life and Writings 1743 pp viii x pp 16 18 in pdf Life of Cudworth Appendix A Letters to Thurloe in W R Scott An Introduction to Cudworth s Treatise concerning Eternal and Immutable Morality Longmans Green amp Co London 1891 pp 19 23 Hathi Trust C Anderson The Annals of the English Bible William Pickering London 1845 ii Book 3 p 394 Google a b Clergy of the Church of England database Letter 6 August 1660 in J Crossley Diary and Correspondence of Dr John Worthington Chetham Society O S 13 1847 i p 203 and Christ s College website List of Masters of Christ s College J Covell An Account of the Master s Lodgings in ye College in R Willis and J W Clarke The Architectural History of the University of Cambridge and of the Colleges of Cambridge and Eton Cambridge University Press Cambridge 1886 ii pp 212 19 Internet Archive Life of Cudworth Appendix B Letters of Cudworth and More in Scott An Introduction to Cudworth s Treatise pp 24 28 Hathi Trust An Account of Virtue or Dr Henry More s Abridgement of Morals put into English transl Edward Southwell facsimile of Benjamin Tooke s London 1690 English edn Facsimile Text Society New York 1930 Internet Archive R Cudworth The True Intellectual System of the Universe The First Part Wherein All the Reason and Philosophy of Atheism is Confuted and its Impossibility Demonstrated Richard Royston London 1678 R Cudworth Preface to the Reader True Intellectual System 1678 G Dyer History of the University and Colleges of Cambridge Longman Hurst Rees Orme and Brown London 1814 ii p 355 Google Epitaph in Mosheim s Preface 1733 i p xxix 1773 edn for his monumental inscription 1 Oil portrait of Ralph Cudworth image copyright Christ s College viewable here Splashing out for a piece of history News 23 July 2010 University of Cambridge website Listing by Historic England Will of Damaris Cudworth P C C 1695 H R Fox Bourne The Life of John Locke Harper amp Brothers New York 1876 ii pp 306 07 Internet Archive J Peile Biographical Register of Christ s College 1505 1905 II 1666 1905 Cambridge University Press Cambridge 1913 ii p 46 Locke s letter in Lord King The Life of John Locke With Extracts from His Correspondence New Edn Henry Colburn and Richard Bentley London 1830 ii pp 16 21 Google R C Temple The Diaries of Streynsham Master 1675 80 and other contemporary papers relating thereto II The First and Second Memorialls 1679 80 Indian Records Series John Murray London 1911 p 343 and note 2 Internet Archive W K Firminger ed The Malda Diary and Consultations 1680 82 Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal N S 14 1918 pp 1 241 Internet Archive J Peile Biographical Register ii pp 49 50 citing Journal entries from Factory Records Kasinbazar III J Peile Biographical Register ii p 70 Locke s letter supposedly addressed to Thomas in H R Fox Bourne The Life of John Locke Harper and Brothers New York 1876 i pp 473 76 Internet Archive M Knights Masham Sir Francis 3rd Bt c 1646 1723 of Otes High Laver Essex in D Hayton E Cruickshanks and S Handley eds The History of Parliament the House of Commons 1690 1715 Boydell amp Brewer Woodbridge 2002 History of Parliament Online J Peile Biographical Register I 1448 1665 Cambridge University Press Cambridge 1910 i p 601 Internet Archive Venn Alumni Cantabrigienses i 1 p 30 J Peile Biographical Register i p 612 Internet Archive Covell An Account of the Master s Lodgings G J Armytage Allegations for Marriage Licences Issued by the Vicar General of the Archbishop of Canterbury July 1679 to June 1687 Harleian Society 30 1890 p 70 Internet Archive Will of Thomas Andrewes Citizen and Dyer of London P C C 1688 Foot quire H F Waters Genealogical Gleanings in England with the addition of New Series A Anyon Genealogical Publishing Company Baltimore 1969 ii pp 1738 39 Internet Archive Venn Alumni Cantabrigienses i 1 p 30 Will of Mathew Andrewes Fellow of Queen s College Cambridge P C C 1674 Bunce quire H F Waters Genealogical Gleanings in England with the addition of New Series A Anyon Genealogical Publishing Company Baltimore 1969 ii p 1738 Venn Alumni Cantabrigienses i 1 p 2 A A Hanham Abney Sir Edward 1631 1728 of Willesley Hall Leics and Portugal Row Lincoln s Inn Fields in D Hayton E Cruickshanks and S Handley eds The History of Parliament the House of Commons 1690 1715 Boydell and Brewer Woodbridge 2002 History of Parliament Online For correspondence between Cudworth and Edward s father James Abney E Randall ed C Melinsky ill Letters to my Father Edward Abney 1660 63 Simon Randall Sevenoaks 2005 a b c Stanford U Encyc of Philosophy The Cambridge Platonists Retrieved 1 August 2012 a b c d Giglioni Guido 2008 The cosmoplastic system of the universe Ralph Cudworth on Stoic naturalism Revue d histoire des sciences Tome 61 2 2 313 331 doi 10 3917 rhs 612 0313 Ralph Cudworth Encyclopaedia Britannica 1902 Retrieved 1 August 2012 a b Smith Justin E H The Leibnizian Organism Between Cudworth s Plastic Natures and Locke s Thinking Matter PDF Concordia University Montreal Retrieved 1 August 2012 a b c Raiger Michael Winter 2002 The Intellectual Breeze the Corporeality of Thought and the Eolian Harp Coleridge Bulletin New Series 20 76 84 Retrieved 1 August 2012 R Cudworth Treatise Concerning Eternal and Immutable Morality with a Preface by Edward Lord Bishop of Durham 1st edn James and John Knapton London 1731 a b Sturt Henry 1911 Cudworth Ralph In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 7 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 612 613 Ralph Cudworth 1996 S Hutton ed Ralph Cudworth A Treatise Concerning Eternal and Immutable Morality With A Treatise of Freewill Cambridge University Press p 219 ISBN 978 0 521 47918 9 Scott W R 1891 The Life of Ralph Cudworth An Introduction to Cudworth s Treatise London Longmans Green and Co pp 15 17 White Andrew Dickson 1901 A History of the Warfare of Science with Theology in Christendom Vol 1 New York D Appleton and Company p 16 Saint George Richard Raines F R 1871 The visitation of the county palatine of Lancaster made in the year 1613 Vol Old Series 82 Manchester Chetham Society p 80 Sources edit nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Cudworth Ralph Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 7 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 612 613 Further reading editCudworth s The True Intellectual System of the Universe 1678 was translated into Latin by Johann Lorenz von Mosheim and furnished with notes and dissertations translated into English in John J Harrison s edition 1845 The first Latin edition Johann Lorenz von Mosheim Radulphi Cudworthi Systema intellectuale hujus universi 2 Vols sumtu viduae Meyer Jena 1733 the second Latin edition with paginated Mosheimii Praefatio Samuel and John Luchtmans Lugduni Batavorum 1773 Thomas Birch s Account biography first published 1743 in the Second Edition London and reprinted in subsequent editions Birch supplied notes and references to Cudworth s text after Mosheim Paul Alexandre Rene Janet Essai sur le mediateur plastique de Cudworth Ladrange Paris 1860 John Tulloch Rational theology and Christian Philosophy in England in the seventeenth century William Blackwood and Sons Edinburgh and London 1874 ii pp 193 302 C E Lowrey The Philosophy of Ralph Cudworth a study of the True Intellectual System of the Universe Phillips amp Hunt New York 1884 James Martineau Types of Ethical Theory Clarendon Press Oxford 1885 ii pp 396 424 William Richard Scott An Introduction to Cudworth s Treatise Longmans Green amp Co London 1891 Geoffrey Philip Henry The Cambridge Platonists and Their Place in Religious Thought Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge London 1930 pp 70 81 J H Muirhead The Platonic Tradition in Anglo Saxon Philosophy Studies in the History of Idealism in England and America London George Allen amp Unwin LTD New York The MacMillan Company 1931 i pp 25 71 Arthur Prior Logic and the Basis of Ethics Oxford University Press 1949 pp 13 25 Rosalie Littell Colie Light and Enlightenment A Study of the Cambridge Platonists and the Dutch Arminians Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1957 pp 117 145 Lydia Gysi Platonism and Cartesianism in the Philosophy of Ralph Cudworth Verlag Herbert Lang amp Cie Bern 1962 Ian P McGreal Great Thinkers of the Western World New York HarperCollins Publishers 1992 pp 205 208 Slawomir Raube Deus explicatus Stworzenie i Bog w mysli Ralpha Cudwortha Creation and God in Ralph Cudworth s Thought Bialystok Poland 2000 Benjamin Carter The Little Commonwealth of Man The Trinitarian Origins of the Ethical and Political Philosophy of Ralph Cudworth Leuven Peeters Belgium Isd 2011 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Ralph Cudworth Cambridge Platonists Research Group Research Portal Ralph Cudworth Bibliography Cudworth Ralph Dictionary of National Biography London Smith Elder amp Co 1885 1900 Sturt Henry 1911 Cudworth Ralph In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 07 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 612 613 Article on Cudworth in Treasures in Focus Blog Christ s College Cambridge No 8 July 2013 Cudworth Ralph Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Klaus Gunther Wesseling 1999 Cudworth der Jungere Ralph In Bautz Traugott ed Biographisch Bibliographisches Kirchenlexikon BBKL in German Vol 16 Herzberg Bautz cols 352 362 ISBN 3 88309 079 4 R Cudworth The True Intellectual System of the Universe 1678 on Google Books R Cudworth The True Intellectual System of the Universe 1678 3 volume edn Tegg 1845 on Internet Archive Volume 1 Volume 2 and Volume 3 R Cudworth Sermon before the Commons at Westminster 31 March 1647 1647 repr 1852 R Cudworth A Treatise concerning Eternal and Immutable Morality 1731 R Cudworth They know Christ who keep his Commandments repr 1858 Academic officesPreceded byRobert Metcalfe 11th Regius Professor of Hebrew University of Cambridge1645 1688 Succeeded byWolfram StubbePreceded byThomas Paskevacancy from 1645 26th Master of Clare Hall Cambridge1650 1654 Succeeded byTheophilus DillinghamPreceded bySamuel Bolton 14th Master of Christ s College Cambridge1654 1688 Succeeded byJohn Covel Portals nbsp Great Britain nbsp Biography nbsp Philosophy nbsp Christianity Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ralph Cudworth amp oldid 1201302919 Plastic principle, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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