right|thumb|Paul Carus

Paul Carus (; 18 July 1852 – 11 February 1919) was a German-American author, editor, a student of comparative religion and philosopher.

Life and education

Carus was born in Ilsenburg, Germany, and educated at the universities of Strassburg (then Germany, now France) and Tübingen, Germany. After obtaining his PhD from Tübingen in 1876 he served in the army and then taught school. He had been raised in a pious and orthodox Protestant home, but gradually moved away from this tradition.

He left Bismarck's Imperial Germany for the United States, "because of his liberal views". After he emigrated to the United States (in 1884) he lived in Chicago, and in LaSalle, Illinois. Paul Carus married Edward C. Hegeler's daughter, engineer Mary Hegeler (Marie) and the couple later moved into the Hegeler Carus Mansion, built by her father. They had seven children, the firstborn, Robert died at birth, but Edward (b. 1890), Gustave (b. 1892), Paula (b. 1894), Elisabeth or "Libby" (b. 1896), Herman (b. 1899), and Alwin (b. 1901) all lived long lives. Mary ran the family business, Matthiessen-Hegeler Zinc Company and the Open Court business and later took on the editorial role after Carus's death, alongside their daughter Elizabeth.

Career

In the United States, Carus briefly edited a German-language journal and wrote several articles for the Index, the Free Religious Association organ.

He was introduced to Charles Sanders Peirce, the founder of American Pragmatism, by Judge Francis C. Russell of Chicago. Carus stayed abreast of Peirce's work and would eventually publish a number of his articles.

During his lifetime, Carus published 75 books and 1500 articles, mostly through Open Court Publishing Company. He wrote books and articles on history, politics, philosophy, religion, logic, mathematics, anthropology, science, and social issues of his day. In addition, Carus corresponded with many of the greatest minds of the late 19th and early 20th century, sending and receiving letters from Leo Tolstoy, Thomas Edison, Nikola Tesla, Booker T. Washington, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Ernst Mach, Ernst Haeckel, John Dewey, and many more.

Carus's world view and philosophy

Carus considered himself a theologian rather than philosopher. He referred to himself as "an atheist who loved God".

Carus is proposed to be a pioneer in the promotion of interfaith dialogue. He explored the relationship of science and religion, and was instrumental in introducing Eastern traditions and ideas to the West.

Religion of Science

Carus was a follower of Benedictus de Spinoza; he was of the opinion that Western thought had fallen into error early in its development in accepting the distinctions between body and mind and the material and the spiritual. (Kant's phenomenal and noumenal realms of knowledge; Christianity's views of the soul and the body, and the natural and the supernatural). Carus rejected such dualisms, and wanted science to reestablish the unity of knowledge. The philosophical result he labeled Monism.

Legacy

The legacy of Paul Carus is honored through the efforts of the Hegeler Carus Foundation, the Carus Lectures at the American Philosophical Association (APA), and the Paul Carus Award for Interreligious Understanding by the Council for a Parliament of the World's Religions (CPWR). Mary Hegeler Carus and their daughter Elizabeth Carus took on the editorial role after Carus's death.

  • Eros and Psyche: A Fairy-Tale of Ancient Greece, Retold After Apuleius (1900)
  • Fundamental Problems; The Method of Philosophy as a Systematic Arrangement of Knowledge (1903)
  • The Surd of Metaphysics (1903)
  • The Nature of the State (1904)
  • Kant and Spencer; A Study of the Fallacies of Agnosticism (1904)
  • Karma: A Story of Buddhist Ethics (1903, republished 2004)
  • Primer of Philosophy (1906)
  • Story of Samson and Its Place in the Religious Development of Mankind (1907, republished 2003)
  • The Rise of Man: A Sketch of the Origin of the Human Race (1907, republished 2004)
  • The Bride of Christ: A Study In Christian Legend Lore (1908)
  • The Foundations of Mathematics (1908, republished 2004)
  • GOD: An Enquiry into the Nature of Man's Highest Ideal and a Solution of the Problem from the Standpoint of Science (1908, republished 2007)
  • The Philosopher's Martyrdom; A Satire (1908)
  • Godward; a Record of Religious Progress (1908)
  • The Pleroma: An Essay on the Origin of Christianity (1909)
  • Philosophy as a Science: A Synopsis of the Writings of Paul Carus (1909)
  • Buddhist Hymns: Versified Translations from the Dhammapada and Various Other Sources (1911)
  • The Philosophy of Form (1911, republished 2007)
  • The Mechanistic Principle and the Non-Mechanical: An Inquiry into Fundamentals With Extracts from Representatives of Either Side (1913)
  • The Principle of Relativity in the Light of the Philosophy of Science (1913, republished 2004)
  • Nietzsche and Other Exponents of Individualism (1914, republished 2007)
  • Goethe, with Special Consideration of His Philosophy (1915)

See also

  • American philosophy
  • List of American philosophers
  • Necessitarianism
  • Pleroma

Further reading

References

  • The Monist
  • Hegeler Carus Foundation
  • Carus Lectures
  • Council for a Parliament of the World's Religions (CPWR)
  • Paul Carus Award for Interreligious Understanding