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  • Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling ( January 27 , 1775 – August 20 , 1854 ), later von Schelling , was a German philosopher . Standard histories of philosophy make him the ...

  • Schelling - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Notable people with the last name of Schelling include: Ernest Schelling , American composer; Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling , German philosopher; Thomas Schelling , American ...

  • Schelling

    Section on Schelling from Alfred Weber's 1908 History of Philosophy. Brief biography, followed by a detailed examination of his relation to other thinkers in the Idealist tradition ...

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Friedrich Schelling

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Friedrich Schelling (1775-1854), German philosopher, one of the leading exponents of idealism and of the romantic tendency in German philosophy.

Friederich Wilhelm Joseph von Schelling was born in Leonberg, Württemberg, on January 27, 1775, and educated at the University of Tübingen. He served on the faculties of most of the leading universities in Germany and in 1841 was called to Berlin by Frederick William IV, king of Prussia. He died in Bad Ragaz, Switzerland, on August 20, 1854.

Schelling's philosophy continually evolved. His original thinking was based chiefly on a close study of the views of the German philosophers Immanuel Kant and Johann Gottlieb Fichte and the Dutch philosopher Baruch Spinoza. The distinguishing principle of this phase of his work is the identity of subject and object, which became the basis of an identity philosophy that was pantheistic in its general nature, equating God with the forces and laws of the universe. In the second period, rejecting pantheism as negative, he developed what he called a positive philosophy, in which he defined human existence as the mode of self-consciousness on the part of the Absolute. The essence of humanity is free creative activity.

Schelling's many works include The Philosophy of Art (1807; trans. 1845), Of Human Freedom (1809; trans. 1936), and fragments of a large, unpublished work that were translated into English as The Ages of the World (1942).



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