- For the journalist, see Karl Kraus.
Karl Christian Friedrich Krause (May 6, 1781 –
September 27, 1832), was a German philosopher, born at Eisenberg, Thuringia.
Karl Christian Friedrich Krause
Educated at first at Eisenberg, he proceeded to the nearby Jena, where he studied philosophy under Professor Friedrich W. Schelling, Hegel
and Fichte and became privatdozent
in 1802. In the same year, with characteristic imprudence, he married a wife without dowry. Two
years after, lack of pupils compelled him to move to Rudolstadt and later to Dresden, where he gave lessons in music. In 1805 his ideal of a universal
world-society led him to join the Freemasons, whose principles seemed to tend in the
direction he desired.
He published two books on Freemasonry, Die drei ältesten Kunsturkunden der Freimaurerbrüderschaft and Höhere
Vergeistigung der echt überlieferten Grundsymbole der Freimaurerei in zwölf Logenvorträgen, but his opinions drew upon him
the opposition of the Masons. He lived for a time in Berlin and became a privatdozent, but
was unable to obtain a professorship. He therefore proceeded to Göttingen where he taught Arthur
Schopenhauer and afterwards to Munich, where he died of apoplexy at the very moment when the influence of Franz von
Baader had at last obtained a position for him.
One of the so-called philosophers of identity, Krause endeavoured to reconcile the ideas of a
God known by faith or conscience and the world as
known to sense. God, intuitively known by conscience, is not a personality (which implies limitations), but an all-inclusive
essence (Wesen), which contains the universe within itself. This system he called
panentheism, a combination of theism and pantheism. His theory of the world and of humanity is universal and idealistic. In many ways following the
general outline of Schelling's Philosophy of Nature, he argued that the world itself and mankind, its highest component,
constitute an organism (Gliedbau), and the universe is therefore a divine organism (Wesengliedbau). The process of
development is the formation of higher unities, and the last stage is the identification of the world with God. The form which
this development takes, according to Krause, is Right or the Perfect Law. Right is not the sum of the conditions of external
liberty but of absolute liberty, and embraces all the existence of nature, reason and humanity. It is the mode, or rationale, of
all progress from the lower to the highest unity or identification. By its operation the reality of nature and reason rises into
the reality of humanity. God is the reality which transcends and includes both nature and humanity. Right is, therefore, at once
the dynamic and the safeguard of progress. Ideal society results from the widening of the organic operation of this principle
from the individual man to small groups of men, and finally to mankind as a whole. The differences disappear as the inherent
identity of structure predominates in an ever-increasing degree, and in the final unity Man is merged in God.
The comparatively small area of Krause's influence was due partly to him being overshadowed by Schelling and Hegel, and partly
to two intrinsic defects. The spirit of his thought is mystical and by no means easy to follow, and this difficulty is
accentuated, even to German readers, by the use of artificial terminology. He makes use of germanized foreign terms which are
unintelligible to the ordinary man. His principal works are (beside those quoted above): Entwurf des Systems der
Philosophie (1804); System der Sittenlehre (1810); Das Urbild der Menschheit (1811); and Vorlesungen über
das System der Philosophie (1828). He left behind him at his death a mass of unpublished notes, part of which has been
collected and published by his disciples, H Ahrens (1808-1874), Leonhardi, Tiberghien and others.
See H. S. Lindemann, Uebersichtliche Darstellung des Lebens Krauses (1839); P. Hohlfeld, Die Krausesche
Philosophie (1879); A. Procksch, Krause, ein Lebensbild nach seinen Briefen (1880); Rudolf Eucken, Zur Erinnerung an Krause (1881); B. Martin, Krauses Leben und
Bedeutung (1881), and Histories of Philosophy by Zeller, Windelband and Høffding.
References
Secondary literature
- Rafael V. Orden, 1998. El Sistema de la Filosofía de Krause. Génesis y desarrollo del
panenteísmo. UPCo, Madrid (Spain). ISBN 84-89708-30-4.
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