Online Encyclopedia

JOHANN CLAUBERG (1622-1665)

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Originally appearing in Volume V06, Page 462 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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JOHANN

CLAUBERG (1622-1665)  , German philosopher, was born at
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Solingen, in Westphalia, on the 24th of
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February 1622 . After travelling in France and England, he studied the Cartesian philosophy under John Raey at
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Leiden . He became (1649) professor of philosophy and
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theology at Herborn, but subsequently (1651), in consequence of the jealousy of his colleagues, accepted an invitation to a similar
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post at
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Duisburg, where he died on the 31st of
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January 1665 . Clauberg was one of the earliest teachers of the new doctrines in Germany and an exact and methodical commentator on his master's writings . His theory of the connexion between the soul and the
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body is in some respects analogous to that of Malebranche; but he is not therefore to be regarded as a true forerunner of Occasionalism, as he uses " Occasion " for the stimulus which directly produces a
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mental phenomenon, without postulating the intervention of
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God (H . Muller, J . Clauberg and seine Stellung im Cartesianismus) . His view of the relation of God to his creatures is held to foreshadow the pantheism of Spinoza . All creatures exist only through the continuous creative energy of the Divine Being, and are no more
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independent of his will than are our thoughts independent of us,—or rather less, for there are thoughts which force themselves upon us whether we will or not . For metaphysics Clauberg suggested the names ontosophy or ontology, the latter being afterwards adopted by Wolff . He also devoted considerable attention to the German
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languages, and his re-searches in this direction attracted the favourable
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notice of Leibnitz . His chief
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works are: De conjunctione animae et corporis humani; Exercitationes centum de cognitione Dei et nostri; Logica vetus et nova; Initiatio philosophi, seu Dubitatio Cartesiana; a commentary on Descartes' Meditations; and Ars etymologica Teutonum .

A collected edition of his philosophical works was published at

Amsterdam (1691), with
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life by H . C . Hennin; see also E . Zeller, Geschichte der deutschen Philosophic seit Leibnitz (1893) .

End of Article: JOHANN CLAUBERG (1622-1665)
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