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KARL CHRISTIAN FRIEDRICH KRAUSE (1781...

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Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 924 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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KARL

CHRISTIAN FRIEDRICH KRAUSE (1781—1832)  , German philosopher, was born at Eisenberg on the 4th of May 1781, and died at Munich on the 27th of September 1832 . Educated at first at Eisenberg, he proceeded to
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Jena, where he studied philosophy under Hegel and Fichte and became privatdozent in 1802 . In the same
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year, with characteristic imprudence, he married a wife without dowry . Two years after,lack of pupils compelled him to move to
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Rudolstadt and later to
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Dresden, where he gave lessons in
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music . In 18o5 his ideal of a universal
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world-society led him to join the Freemasons, whose principles seemed to tend in the direction he desired . He published two books on
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Freemasonry, Die drei altesten Kunsturkunden der Freimaurerbriuderschafl and Hohere Vergeistigung der echt uberlieferten Grundsymbole der Freimaurerei, but his opinions drew upon him the opposition of the Masons . He lived for a time in Berlin and became a iirivatdozent, but was unable to obtain a professorship . He therefore proceeded to
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Gottingen 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
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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
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system he called
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Panentheism, a combination of Theism and Pantheism . His tfleory of the world and of humanity is universal and idealistic .

The world itself and

man-kind, its highest component, constitute an organism (Gliedbau), and the universe is therefore a divine organism (Wesengliedbau) . The
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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
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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
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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
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area of Krause's influence was due partly to the overshadowing brilliance of 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

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foreign terms which are unintelligible to the ordinary man . His
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principal
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works are (beside those quoted above): Entwurf
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des Systems der Philosophie (1804); System der Sittenlehre (181o) ; Das Urhild der Menschheit (1811) ; and Vorlesungen ilber das System der Philosophie (1828) . He
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left behind him at his
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death a mass of unpublished notes,
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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 (188o); R . Eucken, Zur Erinnerun an Krause (1881) ; B . Martin, Krauses Leben and Bedeutung (1881), and Histories of Philosophy by Zeller, Windelband and Hoffding .

End of Article: KARL CHRISTIAN FRIEDRICH KRAUSE (1781—1832)
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