Coat of ArmsMore about Karl Christian Friedrich Krause

Excerpts from Lenning's Encyclopädie der Freimaurerei

(Translated by Bro. Vincent Lombardo)

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From the Translator

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Life-long Persecution by his Masonic Brethren


Krause's life, in addition to, and perhaps precisely because of his Masonic brethren's close-minded and bigoted life-long persecution that hindered his carrier and prevented him from attaining that public recognition, and the benefits that would have certainly derived from the position he occupied among the thinkers of his day, was never free from the worry of maintaining his large family.   The defects of his temperament, noble but ill-suited to human conviviality, did not help either.


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Krause, Karl Christian Friedrich, bekannt als scharfsinniger Denker und eins der ausgezeichnetsten Mitglieder des Freimaurerbundes, geb. 6. Mai 1781 in Eisenberg im Altenburgschen, gest. 27. Sept. 1832 in München, studierte seit 1797 unter Schelling und Fichte in Jena Philosophie und liess sich dort im Frühjahr 1802 als Privatdozent nieder.

Coat of ArmsEr hielt unter reichlichem Zuspruch von Studierenden Vorlesungen über Mathematik, Logik und Naturphilosophie.   In demselben Jahre verheiratete er sich mit der Tochter eines Weinhändlers, Amalie Fuchs, ohne den Willen seiner Eltern.   Da beide Gatten des häuslichen Sinnes entbehrten, zog bald die Not ein, die auch die stete Begleiterin des Hauses blieb, zumal im Laufe der Zeit aus der Ehe 14 Kinder hervorgingen.   Entschädigt wurde er durch ein glückliches und inniges Familienleben.
Coat of ArmsIn Jena gab er seine ersten philosophischen Schriften heraus, eine Grundlage des Naturrechts (1803).   Als 1804 die Glanzperiode der Universität zu Ende ging und die Zahl der Zuhörer sich verringerte, zog er Anfang April 1805 nach Dresden, um Kunststudien zu betreiben.   Der Eintritt in den Freimaurerbund war für ihn folgenschwer.
Coat of ArmsEr hatte nämlich den Plan eines Menschheitsbundes gefasst, vermutete, dass im Freimaurerbund Anfänge zu jener rein menschlichen Vereinigung enthalten sein könnten.   Er liess sich daher in Altenburg in die Loge Archimedes zu den drei Reissbrettern (4. April 1805) aufnehmen und in demselben Jahre in Dresden von der Loge Zu den drei Schwertern und den wahren Freunden annehmen.   Er wurde bald Redner der Loge und legte den Mitgliedern seine Ansichten über das Wesen der Freimaurerei und über ihr Verhältnis zum allgemeinen Menschheitsbunde dar.

Coat of ArmsEs erschienen 1809 "Vier Freimaurerreden", 1811 "Höhere Vergeistigung der acht überlieferten Grundsymbole der Freimaurerei" (8. Aufl. 1820) und "Das Urbild der Menschheit, vorzüglich Freimaurern gewidmet" (2. Ausg., Göttingen 1851).   Zu gleicher Zeit beschäftigte er sich mit historischen Untersuchungen und veröffentlichte sein bekanntestes Werk: "Die drei ältesten Kunsturkunden der Freimaurerbrüderachaft" (Dresd. 1811 u. 1813, 2. Aufl. 1819 u. 1821), wenn auch in manchen Punkten veraltet, doch auch heute noch eine Fundgrube für jeden Forscher.



Coat of ArmsWeil er sich aber in diesem Werke ganz offen über Rituale und Symbolik geäussert hatte, regte sich beim Erscheinen des Werkes grosse Entrüstung in den Logen, und er wurde, obgleich seine Loge ihn zuerst zu halten versuchte, wegen Verrats von Geheimnissen aus dem Bund gestossen (1811). [Vgl.Mossdorf.]
Coat of Arms Er ging, um seine missliche Lage zu verbessern, nach Berlin, habilitierte sich hier als Privatdozent und hoffte Nachfolger Fichtes zu werden.   Doch es gelang ihm nicht, eine feste Stellung zu erhalten, und so musste er nach zwei Jahren nach Dresden zurückkehren.   Trotz seines Fleisses geriet er immer mehr in Not, so dass seine und seiner Familie Nahrung zeitweise nur aus trocknem Brot bestand.   Dabei arbeitete er unermüdlich an dem Ausbau seines philosophischen Systems.
Coat of ArmsNach verschiednen vergeblichen versuchen, eine Lebensstellung zu erhalten, zog er 1823 mit Frau und zwölf Kindern nach Göttingen und habilitierte sich hier nach Verteidigung von 25 philosophischen Thesen zum dritten Male als Privatdozent.   Er hoffte, Professor zu werden.   Doch scheint es, als wenn einflussreiche Freimaurer den Erfolg seiner Bewerbung zu verhindern wussten.
Coat of ArmsAllmählich wuchs die Zahl seiner Zuhörer; aber dadurch, dass er täglich fünf Stunden lang Vorlesungen hielt und zahlreiche Privatstunden in Musik gab, erschütterte er seine durch asthmatische Beschwerden angegriffne Gesundheit.   Dazu arbeitete er noch an der Herausgabe seiner philosophischen Werke.   Es erschienen in rascher Folge: Analytische Philosophie (1825), Vorlesungen über das System der Philosophie (1825), Darstellungen aus der Geschichte der Musik (1827), Abriss des Systems der Logik (1828), Abriss des Systems der Rechtsphilosophie (1828).




Coat of ArmsDa machte ein widriges Geschick seiner Thätigkeit an der Universität ein Ende.   1831 brachen Studentenunruhen in Göttingen aus, wobei auch einzelne seiner Zuhörer beteiligt waren, die Regierung fasste Argwohn gegen ihn, und obwohl ihm nicht das Geringste nachgewiesen werden konnte, versprach er dem Universitätsgericht die Stadt zu verlassen, wogegen ihm 200 Thl. als Reisegeld und ein Zeugnis über seine freiwillige Abreise zugesichert wurde.   Er wandte sich nach München.   Aber sowohl Schelling, der Präsident der Akademie, als auch die hannoversche Polizei verhinderten seine Aufnahme in den Univereitätsverband.
Coat of ArmsDieses gänzliche Fehlschlagen seiner Hoffnungen warf ihn aufs Krankenlager.   Ein Schlagfluss endete sein Leben.   "Es bricht mir das Herz ab, lebt wohl, ihr Kinder" waren seine letzten Worte.
Coat of ArmsBei seinem 100. Geburtstag 1881 wurde in Eisenberg, seinem Geburtsort, ein Denkmal für ihn errichtet.

 


Karl Christian Friedrich Krause, reputed as a sagacious thinker and one of the most distinguished members of the Masonic society, was born on May 6, 1781 in Eisenberg in the Altenburg district, died on 27 September 1832 in Munich, studied philosophy at Jena since 1797 under Schelling and Fichte, and established himself there in the spring of 1802 as associate professor.
Coat of ArmsHe held lectures on mathematics, logic, and natural philosophy, with plentiful popularity among the students.   In the same year he married the daughter of a wine merchant, Amalie Fuchs, without the consent of his parents. Since both spouses of the household lacked practical sense, soon hardship moved in, which also remained the constant companion of the house, especially since, with the passage of time, 14 children emerged from the marriage.   He was compensated by a happy and intimate family life.
Coat of ArmsHe published his first philosophical works, a foundation of natural law, in Jena (1803).   As by 1804 the heyday of the university came to an end and the number of his students decreased, in early April 1805 he moved to Dresden to pursue art studies.   The admission into the Masonic society was momentous for him.
Coat of ArmsHe had in fact designed the plan of a federation of the whole mankind, presuming that in the Masonic society might be contained the beginnings of that purely human unification.   He therefore sought and gained admission in Altenburg into the lodge Archimedes zu den drei Reissbrettern [Archimedes of the three drawing boards] (4 April 1805) and in the same year in Dresden into the lodge Zu den drei Schwertern und den wahren Freunden [Lodge of the three swords and true friends].   He soon became lodge Orator and posed to the members his views on the nature of Freemasonry, and its relation to the universal human federation.
Coat of ArmsHe published "Four Masonic speeches" in 1809, in 1811 "Höhere Vergeistigung der acht überlieferten Grundsymbole der Freimaurerei" [Higher spiritualization of genuine traditional basic symbols of Freemasonry] (8th ed. 1820), and "Das Urbild der Menschheit" [The Ideal of Mankind], dedicated especially to the Freemasons (2nd ed., Göttingen 1851).   At the same time he occupied himself with historical investigations and published his most famous work: "Die drei ältesten Kunsturkunden der Freimaurerbrüderachaft" [The three oldest Craft Documents of the Masonic Fraternity] (Dresden 1811 and 1813, 2nd ed. 1819 and 1821), even though outdated in some respects, but still a treasure trove for every researcher.
Coat of ArmsBut because in this work he had expressed himself openly about rituals and symbolism, by the publication of this book he stirred great indignation in the lodges, and, although his lodge had first tried to stop him, he was expelled from the Fraternity (1811) on charges of treason of secrets. [See Moßdorf.]

Coat of ArmsTo improve his predicament he went to Berlin, here he habilitated himself as an associate professor and hoped to become Fichte's successor.   But he did not succeed in obtaining a solid position, so after two years he had to return to Dresden.   Despite his industriousness, he became more and more in need, to the point that his and his family's food at times consisted only of stale bread.   He worked tirelessly towards the development of his philosophical system.

Coat of ArmsAfter several failed attempts to obtain a lifetime position, in 1823 he moved with his wife and twelve children to Göttingen and for the third time, after a defense of 25 philosophical theses, habilitated himself here as an associate professor.   He hoped to become a professor.   But it seems as if influential Freemasons knew how to prevent the success of its candidacy.
Coat of ArmsGradually the number of his students grew; but for the fact that he gave daily five-hours long lectures and numerous private lessons in music, he aggrieved his frail health due to asthmatic afflictions.   In addition to that, he was still working on the publication of his philosophical works.   In rapid succession were published: Analytische Philosophie [Analytic Philosophy] (1825), Vorlesungen über das System der Philosophie [Lectures on the system of Philosophy] (1825), Darstellungen aus der Geschichte der Musik [Illustrations of the History of Music] (1827), Abriss des Systems der Logik [Compendium of the System of Logic] (1828), Abriss des Systems der Rechtsphilosophie [Compendium of the system of the philosophy of law] (1828).
Coat of ArmsThen an adverse fate caused an end of his work at the university.   Student riots broke out in Göttingen in 1831, in which some of his students were involved, the Government expressed suspicion against him, and although there was not the slightest evidence against him, he promised to the university tribunal to leave the city, whereupon 200 Thalers as travel money and a certificate of his voluntary departure were assured to him.   He moved to Munich.   But both Schelling, the president of the Academy, as well as the Hanover police prevented his admission into the faculty of the university.

Coat of ArmsThis utter failure of his hopes threw him on his sickbed.   An apoplexy ended his life.   "It breaks my heart, farewell, my children" were his last words.

Coat of ArmsOn his 100th birthday in 1881 a monument was erected in his honor in Eisenberg, his birthplace. *


Persecution

Krause's Monument in EisenbergBrother Roscoe Pound writes (The builder Magazine, February 1915, Volume 1 - Number 2): This book [The three oldest Craft Documents of the Masonic Fraternity], one of the most learned ever issued from the Masonic press, immediately caused him great grief. The limits of permissible public discussion of Masonic symbols were then uncertain, and the liberty of the individual was not wholly conceded by the German Masons of that day.   The very rumor of Krause's book produced great agitation.   Extraordinary efforts were made to prevent its publication, and, when these failed, the mistaken zeal of his brethren was exerted toward expelling him from the Order.   Not only was he excommunicated by his lodge, but the persecution to which his Masonic publications gave rise followed him all his life and prevented him from receiving public recognition of the position he occupied among the thinkers of his day.


Bruder Roscoe Pound schreibt (The Builder Magazine, February 1915, Volume 1 - Number 2): Dieses Buch, eines der intellektuellsten, das jemals von der Freimaurer-Presse herausgegeben wurde, verursachte ihm sofort großen Kummer.   Die Grenzen der zulässigen öffentlichen Diskussionen über Freimaurer-Symbole waren damals nicht genau festgelegt, und die persönliche Freiheit wurde in dieser Zeit von den deutschen Freimaurern nicht vollumfönglich eingeräumt.  Allein die Gerüchte um Krauses Buch erregten schon große Aufregung.   Außerordentliche Anstrengungen wurden unternommen um die Veröffentlichung zu verhindern, und, als das nicht fruchtete, hat man das Unverständnis und den falschen Eifer seiner Brüder beenutzt um für seine Ausweisung aus dem Orden zu sorgen.   Nicht nur wurde er von seiner Loge exkommuniziert, er wurde außerdem für seine freimaurerischen Veröffentlichungen sein ganzes Leben lang verfolgt, was verhinderte, dass seine Position, die er unter den Denkern seiner Zeit einnahm, je anerkannt wurde.


K. war ein edler, von den höchsten Ideen erfüllter Mensch, offen und treu von Charakter, begeistert für alles Schöne und Gute.   Das Leben war für ihn eine Kette von Enttäuschungen und Entsagungen.   Wenn auch sein unpraktisches Wesen auf sein Schicksal nicht ohne Einfluss war, so ist doch der Freimaurerbund nicht von Schuld freizusprechen.   Was das äussere Leben ihm versagte, musste dass innere ihm ersetzen.
Coat of ArmsIn seiner philosophischen Anschauung kann er als der bedeutendste selbständige Schellingianer bezeichnet werden, obwohl er die Methode von Fichte entlehnte.   Sein System, auf das wir hier nicht eingehen können, gliederte sich nach allen Seiten.   Aber seine Sprachreinigung verhinderte, dass es in weitere Kreise drang; denn Ausdrücke wie Orwesen, Malwesen, Satzheit, Richtheit, Seinheitureinheit, Fassheit und viele andre erschwerten das Verständnis seiner Schriften.   Trotzdem sammelte er eine kleine Gemeinde um sich, die sich nach seinem Tode von Jahr zu Jahr vergrösserte.


Coat of ArmsEs erübrigt noch einige Worte über seinen Menschheitbund und dessen Verhältnis zur Freimaurerei.   K. geht von dem Gedanken aus, dass die Menschheit in Gott, im unendlichen Raum und in der unendlichen Zeit eine sei und in unendlich vielen Teilmenschheiten als ein Organismus (ein Gliederbauleben) sich selbst ewig gleich und mit Gott vereinlebend bestehe und dass insbesondere die Menschheit dieser Erde ein noch im Bilden begriffnes organisches Glied der einen Menscheit in Gott sei.   Sowie nun die ganze Menschheit ein organisches Ganze sei und als solches erkannt werde, so sei auch die Menschheit der Erde bestimmt und fähig, ihr gesamtes Leben in einer organischen Geselligkeit als ein organisches eigenlebliches (individuelles) und eigengutes und schönes Ganze zu entfalten und auszubilden.   Denn alles Menschliche gedeiht nur in Gesellschaft.
Coat of ArmsAlle bisherigen Bestrebungen der Menschheit erscheinen als an sich selbst wesenhafte und wertvolle Veranstalten, Vorübungen und Teilarbeiten zu dem einstigen, gottinnigen und gottvereinten organisch vollendeten Leben der Menschheit und sind als solche anzuerkennen, in den Menschheitbund aufzunehmen und zu verklären.   Das eigentümliche Wesen und Gebiet des Menschheitbundes giebt sich bestimmt und deutlich dadurch zu erkennen, dass er die ganze Menschennatur als ganze und die ganze Menschheit rein als Menschheit und als eine Person umfasst.   Sein Inneres ist nach den ewigen Ideen des organischen Lebens der Gerechtigkeit, Liebe, Güte und Schönheit gebildet; alle seine Teile sind dem Ganzen ähnlich und so unter sich, wie mit dem Ganzen in friedlicher, segenvoller Harmonie.
Coat of ArmsVermöge seines allumfassenden Wesens unterscheidet er sich wesentlich von allen andern geselligen Vereinen, wie Staat und Kirche, denn er bildet die ganze Menschennatur zu einem harmonischen Lebenganzen durch die in einen Bund vereinigte Menschheit der ganzen Erde.   Daher ist der Menschheitbund nicht etwa ein vorübergehendes Ersatzmittel dessen, was Staat und Kirche, was Wissenschaft und Kunst, was Familien und Freundschaften, was Stand-, Stamm- und Völkerverbindungen auf ihrem eigentümlichen Gebiete bis jetzt noch nicht leisten; er betreibt vielmehr sein eigentümliches Werk und überlässt es allen einzelnen Einrichtungen, ihre innern Mängel aus eignen Kräften und nach ihren eignen Gesetzen zu verbessern; er mischt sich nicht in die innern Angelegenheiten des Staats, der Kirche, der Wissenschaft und Kunstvereine, noch auch der Familien- und der Freundschaftverbindungen.
Coat of ArmsZwar kann er, als Ganzbund der Menschheit, nicht geben, was alle einzelnen Einrichtungen, als die einzelnen innern Teile des Menschheitslebens, jedes auf seinem Gebiete und in ihrer, wie wohl selbst nur durch den Menschheitbund zu bewirkenden Harmonie, zu geben bestimmt sind; aber sie alle vermögen es ohne ihn nicht, sich selbst, viel weniger die ganze Menschheit, zu vollenden. — Die Werkthätigkeit des Menschheitbundes erhält, reinigt, versammelt alles Menschliche und setzt es in harmonische Wechselwirkung.   Alles Gute und Schöne, was in Wissenschaft und Kunst, in Freundschaft und Familie, alles, was in Staat und Kirche auf dieser Erde schon wirklich war und ist und werden soll, — das Geringste, wie das Wichtigste, ist ihm teuer und heilig.   Durch den Menschheitbund wird das Leben der Menschheit erst ein wahres Ganze, worin ein jeder Teil seine wahre Stelle, seine harmonische Gemeinschaft und Wechselwirkung mit allen seinen Nebenteilen, in dem Ganzen und durch dasselbe erhält.   Näheres über den Menschheitbund im "Tagblatt des Menschheitlebens".
Coat of ArmsKeime dieses Menschheitbundes hoffte er in der Freimaurerei zu finden.   Er war der Ansicht, dass diese Gesellschaft zunächst berufen und fähig sei, die wissenschaftliche Lehre von der Menschheit, ihrem Leben und ihrem Bunde zu fassen, in sich aufzunehmen und dann vielleicht in einer Neubildung ein erneuter Anfang des kommenden Menschheitbundes zu werden.   Wenn die Freimaurerei nicht in dieser Idee lebe, hätte sie keinen Wert.

"Sofern die Freimaurerbrüderschaft ihrem in ihrer eignen Geschichte deutlich ausgesprochnen, wesentlichen Begriffe gemäss ist, erkenne ich sie ihrer Grundanlage und ihrem reinen Geiste nach für einen nach Zeiten und Orten beschränkten und bis jetzt bewusstlosen, dennoch aber für den bis jetzt einzig bestehenden geselligen Versuch an, die Ideen der Menschheit, des Menschheitlebens und des Menschheitbundes zur Anschauung zu bringen, in rein menschlichem Geiste zu leben und den einen Menschheitbund in abgesonderten Hallen, vom Vernunftinstinkt geleitet, vorzubereiten."

Von freimaurerischen Schriften sind von ihm ausser den oben genannten ferner erschienen:

Coat of ArmsIdee der Menschheit (Dresd. 1810), Tagblatt des Menschheitlebens (Dresd. 1811). [Vgl. Lindemann, Übersichtliche Darstellung des Lebens und der Wissenschaftslehre Krauses und dessen Standpunktes zur Freimaurerbundschaft (1839).   Hohlfeld, Die Krausesche Philosophie in ihrem geschichtlichen Zusammenhang und in ihrer Bedeutung für das Geistesleben der Gegenwart (Jena 1879).   Cless, Das Ideal der Menschheit (1881).   Martin, Leben, Lehre und Bedeutung von K. Chr. F. K. (Lpz. 1881).   Reis, K. Chr. K. als Philosoph und Freimaurer (Wien 1894).   Bh. 1861, S. 73; 1866, S. 105; 1873, S. 228; 1880, S.169; 1881, S. 146. L. 1879, Nr. l5; 1880, S. 104, 156. Z. 1881, S. 41.   Klötzer, Die Ausschliessung der Brüder Mossdorf und K. aus der Loge Zu den drei Schwertern und wahren Freunde in Dresden (Lpz. 1881).   Eucken, Zur Erinnerung an K. Chr. F. K. Festrede, gehalten in Eisenberg am 100. Geburtstag des Philosophen (Lpz. 1881).   Procksch, K. Chr. K., ein Lebensbild (Lpz. 1880).

 

Krause was a noble human being, copiously endowed with the highest human ideas, of open and loyal character, enthusiastic about everything beautiful and good.   Life was for him a string of disappointments and renunciations.   Although his impractical nature was not without influence on his fate, the Masonic fraternity is not to be acquitted of guilt.   What the outer life failed him, the inner one must have compensated him.

Coat of ArmsIn his philosophical view he can be described as the most prominent independent Schellingian, although he borrowed the method from Fichte.   His system, which we cannot go into here, was structured under all aspects.   But his language purification [word forms created by Krause to give his country a purely German philosophical language] prevented it from making advances into wider circles; because terms like Orwesen (original Essence, God), Malwesen (Essence-in-time), Satzheit (sentence-ness), Richtheit (straightness), Seinheitureinheit (original unity of the Being), Fassheit (expression-ness) and many others make the understanding of his writings difficult.   Nonetheless, he gathered around a small community, which grew after his death from year to year.
Coat of ArmsIt remains yet a few words about his Human Federation and its relationship to Freemasonry.   Krause starts from the thought that humanity is ONE in God, in infinite space and infinite time, and consists in infinitely many sub-humanities as an organism (a multi-member structured living entity) itself living eternal like and with God, and, in particular, that the mankind of this Earth is still a concept of the organic member of the ONE mankind in God in the making.   And as the whole of mankind is an organic whole and is to be recognized as such, so too the humankind of the Earth is to unfold and developed its whole existence, determined and capable, in an organic conviviality, as an organic and intrinsically good and beautiful whole of its own.   For all that is human grows only in association.


Coat of ArmsAll previous attempts of mankind appear essentially in themselves as exemplary and valuable manifestations, preliminary exercises and partial works for the erstwhile God-fervent and with-God-united organically accomplished life of humanity, and are to be recognized as such, and are to be incorporated and glorified into the federation of mankind.   Consequently, the peculiar nature and pertinence of the Federation of Mankind gives itself precisely and clearly to recognize, that it includes the whole human nature as a whole, and the whole of mankind purely as humanity and as one entity.
Coat of ArmsIts inner being is constituted according to the eternal ideas of the organic life of justice, of love, of goodness and beauty; all its parts are to the whole alike, and so among themselves, as in peaceful blessing harmony with the whole.

Coat of ArmsBy virtue of its all-encompassing nature, it [the Federation of Mankind] differs substantially from all other convivial associations such as church and state, because, through the mankind of the entire earth united into one federation, it forms the whole human nature into one harmonious whole life.   Therefore, the Federation of Mankind is not like a transient substitute for what church and state, what science and art, what families and friendships, what associations of class, of tribe and of nations do not yet afford in their peculiar areas of activities until now; but it rather pursues its peculiar work and leaves it to all individual institutions to improve their internal deficiencies by their own strength and according to their own laws; it does not interfere in the internal affairs of the state, of the church, of the associations of science and art, nor of the connections of family and of friendship.

Coat of ArmsAlthough it, as total federation of all mankind, cannot give that which all individual institutions, as individual inner parts of the human life, are intended to give each on its own field of activities and in their harmony, which is probably attainable only through the Federation of Mankind; but all of them, much less the whole of mankind, are incapable to achieve this harmony in themselves without it. — The workings of the human federation retain, cleanse, gather everything that is human, and put all into harmonious interaction.   Everything that is good and beautiful, what in science and art, in friendship and family, everything, that was already and is and will be true and real in state and church upon this earth, — be it the least, as well as the most important, is to it [Federation of Mankind] dear and sacred.   Through the Human Federation the life of mankind will be a true whole for the first time, wherein each part retains its true place, its harmonious community and interaction with all its adjacent parts within the whole, and through it.   More details about the Human Federation are found in the "Tagblatt des Menschheitlebens" [Journal of the Life of Mankind].

Coat of ArmsKrause hoped to find in Freemasonry the germinating seeds of this Human Alliance.   He was of the opinion that this society was primarily destined and capable of comprehending the scientific teachings of the human race, of absorbing in itself its life and its covenant, and then perhaps, in a new formation, to become a renewed beginning of the impending Human Federation.   Freemasonry would have no value, if it did not live in this idea.

"Provided the Masonic Fraternity is in accordance with its essential concepts clearly pronounced in its own history, I acknowledge it, by its fundamental principles and its free spirit, as a limited by time and place and so far unconscious, but nonetheless up until now the only one existing social experiment to bring into view the concepts of humanity, of the human existence and of the human Federation, to live in pure human spirit and, guided by the instinct of reason, to set up in the secreted halls the one Federation of Mankind."
Coat of Arms

Apart from the Masonic writings mentioned above, were also published by him (or by his disciples after his death):

Coat of ArmsIdee der Menschheit (Concept of Humanity) (Dresden 1810);   Tagblatt des Menschheitlebens (Journal of the Life of Mankind (Dresden 1811), [See Lindemann, Übersichtliche Darstellung des Lebens und der Wissenschaftslehre Krauses und dessen Standpunktes zur Freimaurerbundschaft (Clear presentation of Krause's life and Science of Knowledge and his Position in the Masonic Fraternity)] (1839);   Hohlfeld, Die Krausesche Philosophie in ihrem geschichtlichen Zusammenhang und in ihrer Bedeutung für das Geistesleben der Gegenwart Krause's philosophy in its historical context and in its importance for the current spiritual life (Jena 1879);   Cless, Das Ideal der Menschheit (The Ideal of Mankind) (1881);   Martin, Leben, Lehre und Bedeutung von K. Chr. F. K. (Life, teaching and significance of K. Chr. F. Krause (Leipzig 1881);   Reis, K. Chr. K. als Philosoph und Freimaurer (Krause, Chr. K. as philosopher and Freemason (Vienna 1894);   Klötzer, Die Ausschliessung der Brüder Moßdorf und Krause aus der Loge Zu den drei Schwertern und wahren Freunde in Dresden (The expulsion of the bros. Moßdorf and Krause from the lodge to the three swords and true friends in Dresden (Leipzig 1881);   Eucken, Zur Erinnerung an K. Chr. F. K. Festrede, gehalten in Eisenberg am 100. Geburtstag des Philosophen (Speech in memory of K. Chr. F. Krause, held in Eisenberg on the 100th anniversary of the philosopher. (Leipzig. 1881);   Procksch, K. Chr. Krause, ein Lebensbild (An Illustration of the Life of K. Chr. F. Krause) (Leipzig. 1880).

Brother Roscoe Pound (in the builder Magazine, February 1915, Volume 1 - Number 2) further writes:

"Karl Christian Friedrich Krause, one of the founders of a new Masonic literature, and the founder of a school of legal thought, was born at Eisenberg, not far from Leipzig, in 1781. He was educated at Jena, where he taught for some time, till, in 1805, he moved back to Dresden. In this same year, he became a Mason; and at once, with characteristic energy and enthusiasm, he entered upon a critical and philosophical study of the institution, reading every Masonic work accessible. As a result of his studies, he delivered twelve lectures before his lodge in Dresden, which were published in 1809, under the title: "Hoehere Vergeistung der echtuberlieferten Grundsymbole der Freirmaurerei," or "Higher Spiritualization of the True Symbols of Masonry." A year later, he published the first volume of his great work, "Die drei aeltesten Kunsturkunden del Freimaurerbruderschaft," or "The Three Oldest Professional Records of the Masonic Fraternity." This book, in the words of Dr. Mackey, "one of the most learned that ever issued from the Masonic press," unhappily fell upon evil days. The limits of permissible public discussion of Masonic symbols were then uncertain, and the liberty of the individual Mason to interpret them for himself, since expounded so eloquently by Albert Pike, was not wholly conceded by the German Masons of that day. In consequence he met the fate which has befallen so many of the great scholars of the Craft. His name, even more than those of Preston and Dalcho and Crucefix and Oliver, warns us that honest ignorance, zealous bigotry, and well-meaning intolerance are to be found even among sincere and fraternal seekers for the light. The very rumor of Krause's book produced great agitation. Extraordinary efforts were made to prevent its publication, and, when these failed, the mistaken zeal of his contemporaries was exerted toward expelling him from the order. Not only was he excommunicated by his lodge, but the persecution to which his Masonic publications gave rise clung to him all his life, and prevented him from receiving public recognition of the position he occupied among the thinkers of his day. It has been said, indeed, that he was too far in advance of the time to be understood fully beyond a small circle of friends and disciples. Yet there seems no doubt that the bitterness engendered by the Masonic controversies over his book was chiefly instrumental in preventing him from attaining a professorship. Happily, he was not a man to yield to persecution or misfortune. Like the poet, he might have said," *** I seek not good-fortune, I myself am good fortune."

 "Undaunted by miscomprehension of his teachings, unembittered by the seeming success of his energies, he labored steadily, as a lecturer at the University of Goettingen, in the development and dissemination of the system of legal and political philosophy from which his fame is derived. Roeder has recorded the deep impression which his lectures left upon the hearers, and the common opinion which placed him far above the respectable mediocrities who held professorships in the institution, where he was a simple docent. As we read the accounts of his work as a lecturer, and turn over the earnest, devout, and tolerant pages of his books, full of faith in the perfectibility of man, and of zeal in discovering and furthering the conditions of human progress, we must need feel that here was one prepared in his heart and made by nature, from whom no judgment of a lodge could permanently divide us. He died in 1832 at the relatively early age of 51."

 "Krause did not leave us a complete or systematic exposition of his general philosophical system. Nor can it be said that he achieved much of moment in the field of philosophy at large, though some historians of philosophy accord him a notable place. It is rather in the special fields of the philosophy of Masonry, to which he devoted the enthusiasm of youth, and of the philosophy of law, to which he turned his more mature energies, that he will be remembered. In the latter field, indeed, he is still a force. Two able and zealous disciples, Ahrens and Roeder, labored for more than a generation in expounding and spreading his doctrines. The great work of Ahrens, published five years after his master's death, has gone through twenty-four editions, in seven languages. Thus, Krause became recognized as the founder of a school of legal and political philosophers, and his followers, not merely by writings, but by meetings and congresses, developed and disseminated his ideas. Until the rise of the military spirit in Germany and the shifting of the growing point of German law to legislation, produced a new order of ideas, the influence of his doctrines was almost dominant. Outside of Germany, especially in lands where the philosophy of law is yet a virgin field, they still have a useful and fruitful future before them, and he has been pronounced the "leader of the latest and largest thought" in the sphere of legal philosophy. In view of the social-philosophical and sociological movements in the last generation, this characterization is no longer accurate. But it is true that until the rise of the great names of the social- philosophical school of legal thought in the past decade, Krause's was the greatest name in modern legal philosophy. His great Masonic work is disfigured by the uncritical voracity, characteristic of Masonic writers until a very recent period, which led him to give an unhesitating credence to tradition, and to accept, as genuine, documents of doubtful authenticity, or even down-right fabrications. Hence his historical and philological investigations, in which he minutely examines the so-called Leland MS., the Entered Apprentice Lecture, and the so-called York Constitutions, as well as his dissertation on the form of government and administration in the Masonic order, must be read with caution, and with many allowances for over-credulity. But in spite of these blemishes — and they unhappily disfigure too large a portion of the historical and critical literature of the Craft — his Masonic writings are invaluable."

 "In a time and among a people in which the nineteenth-century indifference to philosophy is exceptionally strong, and threatens to deprive Law and Government, Jurisprudence and Politics of all basis, other than popular caprice, a teaching which sets them on a surer and more enduring ground, which seeks to direct them to a definite place and to give them definite work in a general scheme of human progress, cannot fail to be tonic. For the Mason, however, Krause's system of legal philosophy has a further and higher value. It is not merely that his works on the philosophy of law, written, for the most part, after his period of Masonic research and Masonic authorship was at an end, afford us, at many points, memorable examples of the practical possibilities of Masonic studies. Nor is it merely that he enforces so strenuously the social, political, and legal applications of the principles of our lectures. His great achievement, his chiefest title to our enduring gratitude, is the organic theory of law and the state, in which he develops the seventeenth-century notion of a general organization of mankind into a practical doctrine, seeks to unite the state with all other groups and organizations — high or low, whatever their immediate scope or purpose — in a harmonious system of men's activities, and points out the station and the objective of our world-wide brotherhood in the line of battle of human progress. Let me indicate to you some of the leading points of his Masonic and of his legal philosophy, and the relation of the one to the other."

 "Law is but "the skeleton of social order, clothed upon by the flesh and blood of morality." Among primitive peoples, it is no more than a device to keep the peace, and to regulate, so far as may be, the archaic remedy of private war. In time it is taken over by the state, and it is able to put down violence, where originally it could go no farther than to limit it. This done, it may aspire to a better end, and seek not only to preserve order but to do justice. Thus far it has come at present. But beyond all this, says Krause, there is a higher and nobler goal, which is, he says, "The perfection of man and of society." The law, singly, is by no means adequate to this task. Rightly understood, it is one of many agencies which are to operate harmoniously, each in its own sphere, toward that great end. The state organizes and wields but one of these agencies. Morals, religion, science, the arts, industry, and commerce — all these, in his view, are co-workers, and must be organized also. But the state, or the political organization, being charged with the duty of maintaining the development of justice, has the special function of assuring to the other forms of organized human activity the means of perfecting themselves. It must "mediate between the individual and the social destiny." Thus, it is but an organ in the whole social organism. He looks upon human society as an organic whole, made up of many diverse institutions, each related to an important phase of human life, and all destined, at an epoch of maturity, to compose a superior unity. Relatively, they are independent. In a wider view and looked at with an eye to the ultimate result, they are parts of a single mechanism. All operate in one direction and to one end — the achievement of the destiny of humanity, which is perfection. Nor is this idle speculation. Krause seeks to animate these several phases of human activity, these varied institutions evolved as organs of the social body, with a new spirit. He impresses upon us that we are not on the decline but are rather in a period of youth. Humanity, he insists, is but beginning to acquire the consciousness of its social aim. Knowing its aim, conscious of the high perfection that awaits it, he calls upon mankind, by harmonious development of its institutions, to reach the ideal through conscious development of the real."

 "This insistence upon perfection as a social aim and upon conscious striving to that end is of capital importance in contrast with the ideas which prevailed so generally in the latter half of the nineteenth century. Under the influence of the positivists and of the mechanical sociologists for a time there was a condition of social, political, and juristic pessimism. Men thought of society as governed by the inflexible operation of fixed social laws, whose workings we might observe, as we may observe the workings of the law of gravitation in the motions of the heavenly bodies but might no more influence in the one case than in the other. Krause's social philosophy, on the other hand, to use a recent phrase, gives us faith in the efficacy of effort and thus accords with the best tendencies of social and political thought in the present."

 "Krause's philosophy of Masonry and his philosophy of law require us to distinguish the natural order, the social order, and the moral order. The distinction may be developed as follows."

 "Scientists tell us that nature exhibits a ceaseless and relentless strife — a struggle for existence, though this way of putting it had not been invented in Krause's day — in which all individuals, races, and species are inevitably involved. The very weeds by the roadside are not only at war with one another for room to grow, but must contend for their existence against the ravages of insects, the voracity of grazing animals, and the implements of men. Thus, the staple of life, under purely natural conditions, is conflict. If we turn to the artificial conditions of a garden, the contrast is extreme. Exotics, which could not maintain themselves a moment in an alien soil and an unwonted climate, against the competition of hardy native weeds, thrive luxuriantly. Planted carefully, so as not to interfere with each other, carefully tended, so as to eliminate the competition of native vegetation, supplied with the best of soil, watered whenever the natural supply is deficient, the individual plants, freed from the natural necessity of caring for themselves in the struggle for existence, turn their whole energies to more perfect development, and produce forms and varieties of which their rude, uncultivated originals scarcely convey a hint. All struggle for existence is not eliminated, indeed, in the garden. But the burden of it has shifted. Instead of each plant struggling with every other for a precarious existence the gardener contends with nature for the existence of his garden. He covers his plants to protect from frosts, he waters them to mitigate drought, he sprays them to prevent injury by insects, and he hoes it to keep down the competition of weeds. Instead of leaving each plant to propagate itself as it may, he gathers and selects the seed, prepares the ground, and sows so as to insure the best results. The whole proceeding is at variance with nature; and it is maintained only by continual strife with nature, and at the price of vigilance and diligence. If these are relaxed, insects, drought, and weeds soon gain the day, and the artificial order of the garden is at an end."

 "Society and civilization are, in like manner, an artificial order, maintained at the price of vigilance and diligence in opposition to natural forces. As in the garden, so in society, the characteristic feature is elimination of the struggle for existence, by removal or amelioration of the conditions which give rise to it. On the other hand, in savage or primitive society, as in the natural plant society of the wayside, the characteristic feature is the intense and unending competition of the struggle for existence. In the wayside weed patch, nature exerts herself to adjust the forms of life to the conditions of existence. In the garden, the gardener strives to adjust the conditions of existence to the forms of life he intends to cultivate. Similarly, among savage and uncivilized races, men adjust themselves as they may to a harsh environment. With the advent and development of society and civilization, men-create an artificial environment, adjusted to their needs and furthering their continued progress. Thus, the social and moral ordeal are, in a sense, artificial; they have been set up in opposition to the natural order, and they are maintained and maintainable only by strife with nature, and the repression of natural instincts and primitive desires. It has been said that nature is morally indifferent. Morality is a conception which belongs to the social, not to the natural existence. The course of conduct which the member of civilized society pursues would be fatal to the savage; and the course followed by the savage would be fatal to society. The savage, like any wild animal, fights out the struggle for existence relentlessly. The civilized man joins his best energies to those of his fellows, in the endeavor to limit and eliminate that struggle."

 "The social ordeal, then, is, as it were, an artificial order, set up and maintained by the co-operation of numbers of individuals through successive generations. Just as the garden demands vigilance and diligence on the part of the gardener, to prevent the encroachment and re-establishment of the natural order, so the social order requires continual struggle with natural surroundings, as well as with other societies and with individuals, wherewith its interests or necessities come in conflict. Consequently, in addition to the instincts of self and species preservation, there is required an instinct or intuition of preserving and maintaining the social order. Whether we regard this as acquired in an orderly process of evolution, or as implanted in man at creation, it stands as the basis of right and justice, bringing about as a moral habit, "that tendency of the will and mode of conduct which refrains from disturbing the lives and interests of others, and, as far as possible, hinders such interference on the part of others." The mere knowledge by individuals, however, that the welfare, and even the continuance, of society require each to limit his activities somewhat with reference to the activities of others, does not suffice to keep within the bounds required by-right and justice. The more primitive and powerful selfish instincts tend to prevail in action. Hence private war was an ordinary process of archaic society. The competing activities of individuals could not be brought into harmony and were left to adjust themselves. But peace, order, and security are essential to civilization. Every individual must be relieved from the necessity of guarding his interests against encroachment, and be set free to pursue some special end with his whole energies. As civilization advances, this is done by substituting the force of society for that of the individual, and thus putting an end to private war. Historically, law grew up to this demand."

 "The maintenance of society and the promotion of its welfare, however, as has been seen, depend upon much besides the law. Even in its original and more humble role of preserving the peace, the law was by no means the first in importance. The germs of legal institutions are to be seen in ancient religions, and religion and morals held men in check while law was yet in embryo. Beginning as one, religion, morals and law have slowly differentiated into the three regulating and controlling agencies by which right and justice are upheld, and society is made possible. In many respects their aim is common, in many respects they cover the same field, among some peoples they are still confused, in whole or in part. But today, among enlightened peoples, they stand as three great systems; with their own aims, their own fields, their own organization, and their own methods; each keeping down the atavistic tendencies toward wrong-doing and private war, and each bearing its share in the support of the artificial social order, by maintaining right and justice. Religion governs men, so far as it is a regulating agency, supernatural sanctions; morality by the sanction of private conscience, fortified by public opinion; law by the sanction of the force of organized society. Each, therefore, to be able to employ its sanctions systematically and effectively in maintaining society, must be directed, or wielded by an organization. Accordingly, we find the church giving regulative and coercive force to religion and the state taking over and putting itself behind the law. But what is behind the third of these great agencies? What and where is the organization that gives system and effectiveness to the regulative force of morality?"

 "Here, Krause tells us, is the post of the Masonic order. World-wide; respecting every honest creed, requiring adherence to none; teaching obedience to states, but confining itself to no one of them; it looks to religion on the one side and to law upon the other, and, standing upon the solid middle-ground of the universal moral sentiments of mankind, puts behind them the force of tradition and precept, and organizes the mighty sanction of human disapproval. Thus, he conceives that Masonry is working hand in hand with church and state, in organizing the conditions of social progress; and that all societies and organizations, local or cosmopolitan, which seek to unify men's energies in any sphere — whether science, or art, or labor, or commerce — have their part also; since each and all, held up by the three pillars of the social order — Religion, Law, and Morals; Wisdom, Strength, and Beauty — are making for human perfection."

 "But, in the attainment of human perfection, we must go beyond the strict limits of the social order. Morality, as we have seen, is an institution of social man. Nevertheless, it has possibilities of its own, surpassing the essential requirements of a society. There is a moral order, above and developed out of the social t order, as the social order is above the natural. The natural order is maintained by the instincts of self and species preservation. These instincts, unrestrained, take no account of other existences, and make struggle for existence the rule. In the social order, men have learned to adjust act to end in maintaining their own lives without hindering others from doing the like. In the moral order, men have learned not merely to live without hindering the lives of others, but to live so as to aid others in attaining a more complete and perfect life. When the life of every individual is full and complete, not merely without hindering other lives from like completeness, but while helping them to attain it, perfection will have been reached. Then will the individual, "In hand and foot and soul four-square, fashioned without fault," fit closely into the moral order, as the perfect ashlar. Instinct maintains the natural order. Law must stand chiefly behind the social order. Masonry will find its sphere, for the most part, in maintaining and developing the moral order. So that, while it reminds us of our natural duties to ourselves, and of the duties we owe our country, as the embodiment of the social order, it insists, above and beyond them all, upon our duties to our neighbor and to God, through which alone the perfection of the moral order may be attained."

 "Krause does not believe, however, that law and the state should limit their scope and purpose to keeping up the social order. They maintain rights and justice in order to uphold society. But they uphold society in order to liberate men's energies so that they may make for the moral order. Hence the ultimate aim is human perfection. If by any act intended to maintain the social order, they retard the moral order, they are going counter to their ends. Law and morals are distinct; but their aim is one, and the distinction is in the fields in which they may act effectively and in the means of action, rather than in the ideas themselves. The lawgiver must never forget the ultimate purpose, and must seek to advance rather than to hinder the organization and harmonious development of all human activities. "Law," he tells us, "is the sum of the external conditions of life measured by reason." So far as perfection may be reached by limitation of the external acts of men, whereby each may live a complete life, unhindered by his fellows, the law is effective. More than this, the external conditions of the life measured by reason are, indirectly, conditions of the fuller and completer life of the moral order; for men must be free to exercise their best energies without hindrance, before they can employ them to much purpose in aiding others to a larger life. Here, however, law exhausts its possibilities. It upholds the social order, whereon the moral order rests. The development and maintenance of the moral order depend on internal conditions. And these are without the domain of law. Nevertheless, as law prepares the way for the moral order, morals make the task of law easier. The more thoroughly each individual, of his own motion, measures his life by reason, the more completely does law cease to be merely regulative and restraining, and attains its higher role of an organized human freedom. Here is one of the prime functions of the symbols of the Craft. As one reflects upon these symbols, the idea of life measured by reason is borne everywhere upon him. The twenty-four-inch gauge, the plumb, the level, the square and compass, and the trestle board are eloquent of measurement and restraint."

 "There is nothing measured in the life of the savage. He may kill sufficient for his needs, or, from mere caprice or wanton love of slaughter, may kill beyond his needs at the risk of future want. His acts have little or no relation to one another. He does not sow at one season that he may reap at another, much less does he plant or build in one generation that another generation may be nourished or sheltered. The exigencies or the desires of the moment control his actions. On the other hand, the acts of civilized man are connected, related to one another, and, to a great extent, parts of a harmonious and intelligent scheme of activity. Even more is this true of conduct which is called moral. Its prime characteristic is certainty. We know today what it will be tomorrow. The unprincipled may or may not keep promises, may or may not pay debts, may or may not be constant in political or family relations. The man whose conduct is moral, we call trustworthy. We repose entire confidence in his steadfast adherence to a regular and orderly course of life. Hence, we speak of rectitude of conduct, under the figure of adjustment to a straight line; and our whole nomenclature of ethics is based upon such figures of speech. Excess, which is indefinite and unmeasured, is immoral; moderation, which implies adherence to a definite and ascertainable medium, we feel to be moral. The social man, as distinguished from the savage, and even more the moral man, as distinguished from him who merely takes care not to infringe the law, measures and lays out his life, and the symbols of the Craft serve as continual monitors to the weak or thoughtless of what must distinguish them from the savage and the unprincipled."

 "The allegory of the house not built with hands, into which we are to be fitted as living stones, suggests reflections still more inspiring. Here we see symbolized the organic conception of society and of human activities, upon which Krause insists so strongly. Social and individual progress, he says, are inseparable. Nothing is to be kept back or hindered in the march toward human perfection. The social order conserves the end of self and race maintenance more perfectly than the natural order, which aims at nothing higher; and the moral order accomplishes the end of maintaining society more fully than a system that attempts no more. The complete life is a complete life of the units, as well as of the whole, and the progress of humanity is a harmonizing of the interests of each with each other and with all. Nature is wasteful. Myriads of seeds are produced that a few plants may struggle to maturity. Multitudes of lives are lost in the struggle for existence, that a few may survive. As men advance in social and moral development, this sacrifice of individuals becomes continually less. The most perfect state, in consequence, is that in which the welfare of each citizen and that of all citizens have become identical, where the interests of state and subject are one, where the feelings of each accord with those of all. In this era of universal organization, when Krause's chapters seem almost prophetic, there is much to console us in his belief that the organic must prove harmonious, and that organizations which now conflict will in the end work consciously and unerringly, as they now work unconsciously and imperfectly, toward a common end. If, as his illustrious pupil tells us, "Human society is but a solid bundle of organic institutions, a federation of particular organizations, through which the fundamental aims of humanity are realized," we may confidently hope for unity where now is discord. And we may hope for most of all, in this work of unification, from that world-wide Brotherhood, which has for its mission to organize morals and to bring them home as realities to every man."


Coat of Arms

Further observations from the Translator:

Krause wrote many works (see full list here), but he was able to publish only a relatively small part of all his papers: the rest was gradually edited and published, in a long series of volumes, by his disciples (mainly H.K. von Leonhardi, K. Röder, P. Hohlfeld, A. Wünsche), and is not yet fully exhausted.   The two most important works of all, not mentioned above, are the Vorlesungen über das System der Philosophie (Lectures on the System of Philosophy) (Göttingen 1828; 2nd ed., in 2 parts, edited by H. von Leonhardi, P. Hohlfeld and A. Wünsche, Prague in 1869 and Leipzig 1889) and the Vorlesungen über die Grundwahrheiten der Wissenschaft (Lectures on the basic Truths of Science) (Leipzig 1829; 2nd ed., in two parts, Prague 1868-69).

Coat of ArmsKrause's philosophy is primarily a theory of the essence (Wesenlehre), that is the absolute and divine reality, conceived as knowable through two theoretical processes, one subjective and analytical, ascending to the absolute, the other objective and synthetic, descending from the absolute.  His Kantianism and Idealism found a home in these particular methodical doctrines, as well as in the individual philosophical sciences derived from that supreme theory (Wesenlehre), among which was especially prized his Philosophie des Rechtes (philosophy of law), closely related to an ethics of pure Kantian style, while going completely beyond the previous framework of the system marked by a metaphysical realism, almost medieval.

Coat of Arms The difficulty of Krause's language (see above), and his mentality, who adhered to the Masonic ideas and beliefs to the point of devoting many writings to it, was in many ways that of the Enlightenment.   This may explain the reasons Krause's thought has had relatively greater fortune abroad (for example in Spain), where the translations and cultural ambient eliminated those impediments.

I quote from Wikipedia:

"Krausism became particularly influential in Spain in the 19th century, where Krause's ideas were introduced by Julián Sanz del Rio, an academic based in Madrid.   Spanish Krausists combined an emphasis on scientific rationalism and a liberal commitment to individual freedom and opposition to privilege and arbitrary power with Christian spirituality.   Spanish intellectuals influenced by Krause included Francisco Giner de los Ríos and Gumersindo de Azcárate.   In addition Krause's influence extended to Latin America, where his work made an impact on Hipólito Yrigoyen, José Batlle y Ordóñez and Juan José Arévalo.   Richard Gott has argued that Krause influenced José Martí, Fidel Castro (through Martí and other Cuban thinkers), and Che Guevara (through the influence of Yrigoyen)." *


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Except for what has been recently published on this website, not much has been written about Kause's works in the past 50 years, but now — 109 years after Pound's high praise of Krause's works — reference is made in the August 2024 Newsletter of the Großloge der Alten Freien und Angenommenen Maurer von Deutschland (Grand Lodge of the Ancient Free and Accepted Masons of Germany) to a "rediscovery" titled: Wiederentdeckung eines unbekannten Klassikers (Rediscovery of an unknown classic), which I reprint here in full.



Wiederentdeckung eines unbekannten Klassikers
Neuauflage der Werke Karl Christian Friedrich Krauses
(1781-1832)
Ein Beitrag von Prof. Dr. Dr. Benedikt Paul Göcke

Karl Christian Friedrich Krause (1781-1832) ist einer der wirkmächtigsten deutschen Freimaurer gewesen. Durch ihn hat "die deutsche Freimaurerei […] den ethischen Humanitätsgedanken als Geschenk erhalten, der ohne religiöse oder politisch-soziale Ableitung zum kategorischen Bestandteil der freimaurerischen Lehre erhoben wurde."

Krause war Meisterschüler Johann Gottlieb Fichtes, debattierte mit Arthur Schopenhauer über indische Philosophie, initiierte die Jenaer logische Tradition, die in Gottlob Frege ihren Höhepunkt finden sollte, und noch Nicolai Hartmann bezeichnete ihn in einem Atemzug mit Fichte, Schelling, Hegel und Schleiermacher als einen der »führenden Köpfe« des Deutschen Idealismus.

Obwohl die Philosophie Karl Christian Friedrich Krauses vor allem für die spanische und lateinamerikanische Moderne von kaum zu überschätzender Bedeutung war, wird Krause in der gegenwärtigen Debatte selten rezipiert. Das ist erstaunlich, da das Werk Krauses unter anderen historischen Umständen heute zu den Klassikern der deutschen Freimaurerei und des Deutschen Idealismus zählen würde und in Bezug auf die gesellschaftlichen Herausforderungen unserer Zeit erstaunlich zeitgemäß ist:
 Basierend auf einer panentheistischen Rahmenontologie entwickelte Krause einen naturrechtlichen Befähigungsansatz und nahm diesen Ansatz als Grundlage für seine kosmopolitische Gesellschaftstheorie. Das Idealbild der menschlichen Gesellschaft ist dieser Theorie zufolge das Bild eines liberal-partizipativen Menschheitbundes — Krauses Name für die globale Zivilgesellschaft. Der Menschheitbund als alle Menschen umfassende Bruder- und Schwesternkette kann als politischer Kosmopolitismus angesehen werden, der aus einem moralischen Kosmopolitismus folgt, da die absolute Gleichwertigkeit aller Menschen naturrechtlich in dem durch das Absolute konstituierten Wesen des Menschen gründet. Sinn und Zweck des Menschheitbundes besteht darin, die Idee der Humanität geschichtlich zu verwirklichen und allen Menschen ein menschenwürdiges Leben in und aus Freiheit ermöglicht.

In der renommierten Philosophischen Bibliothek des Meiner-Verlags sind jüngst zwei Hauptwerke Krauses neu veröffentlicht worden: Zum einen "Das Urbild der Menschheit" und zu anderen "Das System der Rechtsphilosophie"

»Das Urbild der Menschheit« (1811, 1819, 1851): Dieser Text ist der Schlüssel zur Philosophie K. Chr. Fr. Krauses. Im »Urbild« entwickelt Krause die Grundlagen seiner kosmopolitisch und ökologisch verantworteten Sozial-, Gesellschafts- und Geschichtsphilosophie, welche die Menschheit panentheistisch im Zentrum des Absoluten als Synthese von Geist und Natur verortet und die Verwirklichung eines globalen »Menschheitbundes« als die historische Aufgabe der Menschheit versteht. Die Originalausgabe trug den Untertitel "Vorzüglich für Freimaurer" (Das Urbild der Menschheit)

"Das System der Rechtsphilosophie": Der Rechtsphilosophie K. C. F. Krauses (1781-1832) wurde bisher viel zu wenig Aufmerksamkeit geschenkt. Das muss verwundern, denn während die meisten deutschen Philosophen um 1800 Mensch über Natur, Mann über Frau, Eltern über Kinder und Deutschland über alles stellten, stritt der Freimaurer Krause für die Emanzipation und Gleichberechtigung der Frau, die Rechte insbesondere von Menschen mit Behinderungen, einen nachhaltigen Umgang mit der Natur, gerade auch im Hinblick auf zukünftige Generationen, für Tierrechte sogar, und trat für sozialpflichtiges Eigentum und dessen subsidiär-solidarischen Gebrauch zugunsten aller Bedürftigen ein. Krause forderte ferner ein Weltbürgerrecht und entwarf im Lichte dessen eine Musterverfassung sowohl für eine europäische Völkerunion als auch einen Weltbund der Nationen, um regionale und globale Governance voranzutreiben und Kolonialunrecht auszugleichen. Der rote Faden, der diese für seine Zeit außergewöhnlich progressiven Forderungen verband, ist die Theorie der Freiheit. Für Krause markiert die Idee der Freiheit nicht nur das Ziel der praktischen Philosophie, sie gibt ihr auch die Methode vor: Krause war einer der Ersten, die sich an einer dialogisch-partizipatorischen Neuausrichtung der Philosophie versuchten, mit dem Ziel, die von rechtlichen Regelungen Betroffenen zu Beteiligten im Prozess ihrer Entstehung zu machen. Daraus resultiert eine Rechtslehre, die auch und gerade für Fragen der Gegenwart erhebliches Anregungspotential bietet. (Das System der Rechtsphilosophie)

 


Rediscovery of an unknown classic author
New edition of the works of Karl Christian Friedrich Krause
(1781-1832)
An article by Prof. Dr. Dr. Benedikt Paul Göcke

Karl Christian Friedrich Krause (1781-1832) was one of the most influential German Freemasons. Through him, "German Freemasonry [...] received the ethical idea of humanity as a gift, which was elevated to the categorical component of Masonic doctrine without any religious or political-social derivation."

Krause was a master student of Johann Gottlieb Fichte, debated with Arthur Schopenhauer about Indian philosophy, initiated the Jena logical tradition, which was to reach its climax in Gottlob Frege, and even Nicolai Hartmann described him in the same breath as Fichte, Schelling, Hegel and Schleiermacher as one of the "leading minds" of German Idealism.

Although the philosophy of Karl Christian Friedrich Krause was of hardly over-estimable importance, especially for Spanish and Latin American modernism, Krause is rarely included in the current debate. This is surprising, since under different historical circumstances Krause's work would today be considered a classic of German Freemasonry and German Idealism and is surprisingly contemporary in relation to the social challenges of our time:

Based on a panentheistic framework ontology, Krause developed a natural law approach to empowerment and used this approach as the basis for his cosmopolitan social theory. According to this theory, the ideal model of the human society is the image of a liberal-participatory Human Federation (Menschheit-Bund) — Krause's name for the global civil society. The human federation as a chain of brothers and sisters encompassing all people can be seen as political cosmopolitanism that follows from a moral cosmopolitanism, since the absolute equality of all people is based on natural law in the essence of man constituted by the Absolute (Creator/Nature). The meaning and purpose of the human federation is to realize the idea of humanity historically, and to enable all people to live a life of dignity in and through freedom.

Two of Krause's main works have recently been republished in the renowned Philosophical Library of Meiner-Verlag: one, "The Archetype of Humanity" and the other, "The System of the Philosophy of law"

"The Archetype of Humanity" (1811, 1819, 1851): This text is the key to K. Chr. Fr. Krause's philosophy. In "The Archetype," Krause develops the foundations of his cosmopolitan and ecologically responsible social, societal and historical philosophy, which positions humanity panentheistically at the center of the Absolute as a synthesis of spirit and nature and understands the realization of a global "union of humanity" as the historical task of humanity. The original edition had the subtitle "Excellent for Freemasons" (The Archetype of Humanity).

"The system of Philosophy of Law": K. C. F. Krause's philosophy of law (Rechtsphilosophie 1781-1832) has received far too little attention to date. This is surprising, because while most German philosophers around 1800 placed man above nature, man above woman, parents above children and Germany above everything, the Freemason Krause fought for the emancipation and equality of women, the rights of people with disabilities in particular, a sustainable approach to nature, especially with regard to future generations, even for animal rights, and advocated socially obligatory property and its subsidiary and solidarity-based use for the benefit of all those in need. Krause also called for one world citizenship and, in light of this, drafted a model constitution for both a European Union of Nations (EU) and a World Federation of Nations (UN) in order to promote regional and global governance and to compensate for colonial injustice. The common thread that connected these demands, which were exceptionally progressive for his time, was the theory of freedom. For Krause, the idea of freedom not only marks the goal of practical philosophy, it also provides its method: Krause was one of the first to attempt a dialogic, participatory reorientation of philosophy, with the aim of making those affected by legal regulations participants in the process of their creation. This results in a legal theory that offers considerable potential for inspiration, especially for contemporary issues. (Das System der Rechtsphilosophie)


The story of Karl Christian Friedrich Krause (1781-1832) shows that the philosophical life's work of a Freemason can almost be forgotten despite his considerable influence on (at least) an entire society. The philosopher, theologian and university professor Benedikt Paul Göcke edited and republished Krause's work.


Coat of Arms

See also:

Encyclopædia Britannica/Krause, Karl Christian Friedrich, (1911)

Zur Sprachphilosophie (Philosophy of language)

Abriss des Systemes der Philosophie (Outline of the system of philosophy)

Vorlesungen über Psychische Anthropologie (Lectures on psychical Anthropology)

Abriss des Systemes der Logik als Philosophischer Wissenschaft (Outline of the system of logic as a philosophical
Coat of Armsscience)

Abriss des Systemes des Philosophie des Rechtes, Oder des Naturrechtes (Outline of the system of philosophy of law,
Coat of Arms or of the natural law).


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