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HENRY MORE (1614-1687)

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Originally appearing in Volume V18, Page 822 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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HENRY MORE (1614-1687)  ,
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English philosopher of the Cambridge Platonist school, was born at Grantham in 1614 . Both his
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father and his
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mother, he tells us, were " earnest followers of Calvin," but he himself " could never swallow that hard
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doctrine." In 1631 he was admitted at Christ's College, Cambridge, about the time Milton was leaving it . He immersed himself " over head and ears in the study of philosophy," and fell for a time into a scepticism, from which he was delivered by a study of the " Platonic writers." He was fascinated especially by
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Neoplatonism, and this fascination never
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left him . The Theologia germanica also exerted a permanent influence over him . He took his bachelor's degree in 1635, his master's degree in 1639, and immediately afterwards was chosen
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fellow of his college . All other preferment he refused, with one exception . Fifteen years after the Restoration he accepted a prebend in Gloucester
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Cathedral, but only to resign it in favour of his friend Dr
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Edward Fowler, afterwards bishop of Gloucester . He would not accept the mastership of his college, to which, it is understood, he would have been preferred in 1654, when Cudworth was appointed . He drew around him many young men of a refined and thoughtful turn of mind, but among all his pupils the most interesting was a young lady of noble
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family . This lady, probably a
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sister of Lord Finch, subsequently
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earl of Nottingham, a well-known statesman of the Restoration, afterwards became Lady Conway, and at her country seat at Ragley in Warwick-
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shire More continued at intervals to spend " a considerable
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part of his time." She and her
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husband both appreciated him, and amidst the woods of this retreat he composed several of his books . The spiritual
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enthusiasm of Lady Conway was a considerable factor in some of More's speculations, none the less that she at length joined the
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Quakers . She became the friend not only of More and Penn, but of Baron
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van Helmont and Valentine Greatrakes, mystical thaumaturgists of the 17th century .

Ragley became a centre not only of devotion but of wonder-working

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spiritualism.' From this, his genius suffered, and the rationality which distinguishes his earlier is much less conspicuous in his later
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works . He was a voluminous writer both in verse and in
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prose, but his works, except the Divine Dialogues (1688), are now of little
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interest . This
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treatise, animated and sometimes brilliant, is valuable for
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modern readers in that it condenses his general view of philosophy and religion . Henry More represents the mystical and theosophic side of the Cambridge
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movement . The Neoplatonic extravagances which
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lay hidden in the school from the first came in his writings to a head, and merged in pure phantasy . He can never be spoken of, however, save as a spiritual genius and a significant figure in
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British philosophy, less robust and in some respects less learned than Cudworth, but more interesting and fertile in thought, and more genial in character . From youth to age he describes him-self as gifted with a buoyant temper . His own thoughts were to him a never-ending source of pleasurable excitement . This mystical
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elevation was the chief feature of his character, a certain ' The place and its religious marvels are glanced at in the
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romance of John Inglesant (ch. xv.).radiancy of thought which carried him beyond the
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common
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life without raising him to any artificial height, for his humility and charity were not less conspicuous than his piety . The last ten years of his life were uneventful . He died on the 1st of September 1687, and was buried in the
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chapel of the college he loved . Before his
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death More issued
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complete
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editions of his works, his Opera theologica in 1675, and his Opera philosophica in 1678 .

The chief authorities for his life are

Ward's Life (171o) ; the prefatio generalissima prefixed to his Opera omnia (1679) ; and also a general account of the manner and scope of his writings in an Apology published in 1664 . The collection of his Philosophical Poems (1647), in which he has " compared his chief speculations and experiences," should also be consulted . An elaborate analysis of his life and works is given in Tulloch's Rational
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Theology, vol. ii . (1874) ; see also R . Zimmermann, Henry More and die vierte Dimension
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des Raums (Vienna, 1881) .

End of Article: HENRY MORE (1614-1687)
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