Difference between revisions of "Max Scheler" - New World Encyclopedia

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'''Max Scheler''' ([[August 22]], [[1874]], [[Munich]] - [[May 19]], [[1928]], [[Frankfurt am Main]]) was a [[Germany|German]] [[philosopher]] known for his work in [[phenomenology]], [[ethics]], and [[philosophical anthropology]].  Scheler developed further the philosophical method of the founder of phenomenology, [[Edmund Husserl]], and was called by [[Jose Ortega y Gasset]] "the first man of the philosophical paradise."   In 1954 Karol Wojtyla, later [[Pope John Paul II]], defended his doctoral thesis on "An Evaluation of the Possibility of Constructing a Christian Ethics on the Basis of the System of Max Scheler."
+
'''Max Scheler''' (August 22, 1874, Munich - May 19, 1928, Frankfurt am Main) was a [[Germany|German]] [[philosopher]] known for his work in [[phenomenology]], [[ethics]], and [[philosophical anthropology]].  Scheler further developed the philosophical method of [[Edmund Husserl]], and was called by [[Jose Ortega y Gasset]] "the first man of the philosophical paradise." He argued that the human “heart,” or seat of love, accounted for the essence of human existence, rather than ego, reason, will or the ability to receive sensory data. Like [[Blaise Pascal]], Scheler declared that feelings and love have their own form of [[logic]], different from the logic of reason. The reality of values preceded knowing. Values could only be felt, just as color can only be seen, and not thought. Reason could only organize values in a hierarchy after they had been experienced. Scheler developed a [[value theory|theory of value]], in which values were ranked in a five-tier hierarchy. [[Ethics]] were based on a person’s pre-rational inclination towards certain values.  Whenever a person preferred a value of a lower rank to a higher rank, or a disvalue to a value, the result was a “disorder of the heart.
  
== Philosophical contributions ==
+
In 1954 Karol Wojtyla, later [[Pope John Paul II]], defended his doctoral thesis on "''An Evaluation of the Possibility of Constructing a Christian Ethics on the Basis of the system of Max Scheler''."
  
The heart of Scheler's thought was his [[value theory|theory of value]]. According to Scheler, the value-being of an object preceded perception. The [[axiology|axiological]] reality of values is prior to knowingValues and their corresponding disvalues exist in an objective ordering of ranks:
+
== Life ==
 +
Max Scheler was born in [[Munich]], [[Germany]], on August 22, 1874 to a [[Lutheranism|Lutheran]] father and an orthodox [[Judaism|Jewish]] mother. As an adolescent, he turned to [[Roman Catholicism|Catholicism]], probably because of its conception of love; during his forties he became increasingly non-committal.   
  
# Values of the holy vs. disvalues of the unholy
+
Scheler studied [[medicine]] in Munich and [[Berlin]], and [[philosophy]] and [[sociology]] under [[W. Dilthey]] and G. Simmel in 1895. He received his doctorate in 1897, and his associate professorship (habilitation-thesis) in 1899 at the University of Jena. His advisor was Rudolf Eucken, a 1908 Nobel Prize winner for Literature and a correspondent of [[William James]]. Throughout his life, Scheler retained a strong interest in the philosophy of American Pragmatism.
# Values of the mind (truth, beauty, justice vs. disvalues of their opposites)
 
# Values of vitality and of the noble vs. disvalues of the ignoble
 
# Values of pleasure vs. disvalues of displeasure
 
# Values of utility vs. disvalues of the useless
 
  
A disorder "of the heart" occurs whenever a person prefers a value of a lower rank to a higher rank, or a disvalue to a value.
+
From 1900 to 1906 Scheler taught at the University of Jena.  In 1902 he met the renowned phenomenologist E. [[Husserl]] for the first time in Halle. Scheler was never a student of Husserl's, and their relationship remained strained, but he was influenced by Husserl’s ideas.  Later Scheler was in contact with several of Husserl's disciples during his years (1907–10) as a professor at Munich. Scheler was somewhat critical of Husserl’s ''Logical Investigations'' (1900/01) and ''Ideas I'' (1913), and he also harbored reservations about ''Being and Time'', by [[Heidegger]], whom he also met at various times.
  
As Scheler explained in ''Formalism in Ethics and Non-Formal Ethics of Values'', there are also moral values that relate directly to the person, and never to objects: values of good and evil.  
+
From 1907-1910 Scheler taught at the University of Munich. There he joined the Phenomenological Circle which had formed around M. Beck, Th. Conrad, J. Daubert, M. Geiger, [[Dietrich von Hildebrand|D. v. Hildebrand]], Th. Lipps, and A. Pfaender. A personal matter put him in an unfair position between the predominantly Catholic university and the local socialist media, and resulted in the loss of his Munich teaching position in 1910.
  
The term ''Wertsein'' or value-being is used by Scheler in many contexts, but his untimely death prevented him from working out an axiological ontology. Another unique and controversial element of Scheler's axiology is the notion of the emotional a priori: values can only be felt, just as color can only be seen. Reason cannot think values; the mind can only
+
From 1910 to 1911 Scheler lectured at the Philosophical Society of Goettingen, and  made other and renewed acquaintances here with Th. Conrad, H. Conrad-Martius, M. Geiger, J. Hering, [[Roman Ingarden|R. Ingarden]], D. [[von Hildebrand]], E. Husserl, A. Koyre, and H. Reinach. [[Edith Stein]] was one of his students.  Scheler unwittingly influenced Catholic thinkers to this day, including Stein and [[Pope John Paul II]] who wrote his ''Habilitation'' and many articles on Scheler's philosophy.
order categories of value after lived experience has happened. For Scheler, the person is the locus of value-experience, a timeless act-being that acts into time. Scheler's appropriation of a value-based metaphysics renders his phenomenology quite different from the phenomenology
 
of consciousness (Husserl, [[Jean-Paul Sartre|Sartre]]) or the existential analysis of the being-in-the-world of ''Dasein'' ([[Martin Heidegger|Heidegger]]). Scheler's concept of the "lived body" was appropriated in the early work of [[Maurice Merleau-Ponty]].
 
  
Max Scheler extended the phenomenological method to include a reduction of the scientific method too, thus questioning the idea of Husserl that phenomenological philosophy should be pursued as a rigorous science. Natural and scientific attitudes (''Einstellung'') are both phenomenologically counterpositive and hence must be sublated in the advancement of the real phenomenological reduction which, in the eyes of Scheler, has more the shapes of an allround ascesis (''Askese'') rather than a mere logical procedure of suspending the existential judgments. The ''Wesenschau'', according to Scheler, is an act of blowing up the Sosein limits of Sein A into the essential-ontological domain of Sein B, in short, an ontological participation of ''Sosenheiten'', seeing the things as such (cf. the Buddhist concept of ''[[God in Buddhism|tathata]]'', and the Christian theological ''[[quidditas]]'').
+
After his first marriage had ended in divorce, in 1912 Scheler married Märit Furtwaengler, the sister of the noted conductor. During [[World War I]] (1914-1918) Scheler was drafted, but discharged because of astigmia of the eyes.  In 1919 he became professor of [[philosophy]] and sociology at the University of Cologne, where he stayed there until 1928. Early that year, he accepted a new position at the University of Frankfurt, and looked forward to meeting E. [[Cassirer]], K. [[Mannheim]], R. [[Otto]] and R. Wilhelm, to whom he sometimes referred in his writings.  In 1927, at a conference arranged by Graf Keyserling in Darmstadt, near Frankfurt,  Scheler delivered a lengthy lecture, entitled "''Man's Particular Place''" (''Die Sonderstellung des Menschen''), published later in a much abbreviated form as ''Die Stellung des Menschen im Kosmos'' ("''Man's Situation in the Cosmos''"). His well known oratory style and delivery captivated his audience for almost four hours. Toward the end of his life, many invitations were extended to him, including some from [[China]], [[India]], [[Japan]], [[Russia]], and the [[United States]]. On the advice of his physician, however, he had to cancel reservations he had already made for his journey on the Star Line.
  
== Biographical Data ==
+
At that time Scheler increasingly focused on political development. He had  met the Russian emigrant-philosopher N. Berdyaev in Berlin in 1923. Scheler was the only scholar of rank in the German intelligentsia who warned in public speeches, as early as 1927 about the dangers of the growing [[Nazi]]-movement and [[Marxism]]. "''Politics and Morals''" and "''The Idea of Eternal Peace and Pacifism''" were subjects of talks he delivered in Berlin 1927. His analysis of capitalism revealed it to be a calculating, globally expanding "mind-set," rather than an economic system. While economic capitalism may have had some roots in ascetic [[Calvinism]], Scheler detected its real motivation as a modern, sub-conscious insecurity expressed in an increasing need for financial and personal security, protection, safety and rational manageability of all entities. Max Scheler denounced the subordination of the value of the individual to this global tendency, and predicted a new era of culture and values, which he called "''The World-Era of Adjustment''."
  
Max Scheler was born in Munich, Germany, August 22, 1874. His father was Lutheran, his mother orthodox Jewish. As an adolescent, he turned to Catholicism, likely because of its conception of love. Around 1921 he became increasingly non-committal.
+
Scheler also advocated the establishment of an international university in [[Switzerland]]. He was supportive of programs such as "continuing education," and of what he seems to have first called a "United States of Europe." He deplored the gap existing in [[Germany]] between political power and mind, a gap which he considered to be the source of an impending dictatorship, and the greatest obstacle toward establishing a German democracy. Five years after his demise, the [[Nazi]] dictatorship (1933-1945) suppressed Scheler's work.
  
Scheler studied medicine in Munich and Berlin, philosophy and sociology under W. Dilthey and G. Simmel in 1895. He received his doctorate in 1897, and his associate professorship (habilitation-thesis) in 1899 at the University of Jena. His advisor was Rudolf Eucken, a 1908 Nobel Prize winner for Literature and a correspondent of William James. Throughout his life, Scheler entertained strong interest in the philosophy of American Pragmatism.
+
After Scheler's demise in 1928, Heidegger noted, as did Ortega y Gasset, that all philosophers of the century were indebted to Scheler. Many considered Scheler's sudden death to be an irreplaceable loss to European thought.
  
He taught at Jena University from 1900 to 1906. In 1902 he met the then renowned phenomenologist E. Husserl for the first time in Halle. Scheler was never a student of Husserl's. Overall, their relationship remained strained. Scheler was rather critical of the "master's" ''Logical Investigations'' (1900/01) and ''Ideas I'' (1913), and he also harbored reservations of Heidegger's ''Being and Time'' whom he also met various times. Nevertheless, after Scheler's demise in 1928, Heidegger noted, as Ortega y Gasset did, that all philosophers of the century were indebted to Scheler. Many others considered Scheler's sudden death to be an irreplaceable loss of European thought.
+
== Thought and Works ==
 +
Max Scheler’s thought is usually divided into two periods of development. The first period, covered by Volumes 1 through 7 of his ''Collected Works'', covers the years between his dissertation (1897) and the writing of ''On the Eternal in Man'' (1920 - 1922).  During this time, Scheler applied his understanding of [[phenomenology]] to value-ethics, feelings, religion, politics and related topics. During the second period, from 1920 through 1928, Scheler rejected the notion of a creator-God, and posited instead a process of a universal, cosmic becoming in absolute time, through increasingly interpenetrating  interaction between  an uncreated vital energy, or “Impulsion;” and “Spirit,” which formed impulse into existence.
  
From 1907-1910 he taught at the University of Munich. He joined the Phenomenological Circle in Munich around M. Beck, Th. Conrad, J. Daubert, M. Geiger, [[Dietrich von Hildebrand|D. v. Hildebrand]], Th. Lipps, and A. Pfaender. Due to personal matters he was unfairly caught between the predominantly Catholic University and the local socialist media, leading to the loss of his Munich teaching position in 1910.
+
===Value and Morality===
 +
Scheler’s first two major works, ''The Nature of Sympathy'' and ''Formalism in Ethics and Non-Formal Ethics of Values'', dealt with human feelings, love, and the nature of the person.   He demonstrated that the [[ego]], [[reason]] and consciousness were all attributes of the human person and that there could be no pure ego, pure reason or pure consciousness outside a human context. The human “heart”, or seat of love, accounted for the essence of human existence, rather than ego, reason, will or the ability to receive sensory data. The human being was essentially a loving being  (ens amans). Scheler described many types of feelings and showed that love was at their center.  Like Blaise Pascal, Scheler declared that feelings and love have their own form of logic, different from the logic of reason.
  
From 1910 to 1911 Scheler lectured at the Philosophical Society of Goettingen. He made other and renewed acquaintances here with Th. Conrad, H. Conrad-Martius, M. Geiger, J. Hering, R. Ingarden, D. von Hildebrand, E. Husserl, A. Koyre, and H. Reinach. [[Edith Stein]] was one of his students. She was impressed by him "way beyond philosophy." Scheler unwittingly influenced Catholic circles to this day, including his student Edith Stein and [[Pope John Paul II]] who wrote his ''Habilitation'' and many articles on Scheler's philosophy.
+
The center of Scheler's thought was his [[value theory|theory of value]]. According to Scheler, the value-being of an object preceded perception; the [[axiology|axiological]] reality of values was prior to knowing.  Values could only be felt, just as color can only be seen. Reason could not think values; the mind could only organize values in a hierarchy after they had been experienced. Values were independent of the things that caused them to be felt; a particular value could be experienced with a variety of objects. ''Formalism in Ethics and Non-Formal Ethics of Values'' contended that there were also moral values of good and evil that related directly to the person, and never to objects. The countless varieties of value experiences had a hidden order of their own, an order based on love ("''ordo amoris''"), quite different from an order created by reasoning. Scheler argued that values were objective, unchanging , a priori , and non-formal, and ranked them, and their opposites (“disvalues”), in a hierarchy of five levels:
 
+
# Values of pleasure vs. disvalues of displeasure
While his first marriage had ended in divorce, Scheler married Märit Furtwaengler in 1912, who was the sister of the noted conductor. During [[WW I]] (1914-1918) Scheler was drafted, but discharged because of astigmia of the eyes.
+
    namely pleasure – pain (values of sensible feeling),
 
+
# Values of vitality and of the noble vs. disvalues of the ignoble
In 1919 he became professor of philosophy and sociology at the University of Cologne. He stayed there until 1928. Early that year, he accepted a new position at the University of Frankfurt, a.M. He looked forward to meeting here E. Cassirer, K. Mannheim, R. Otto and R. Wilhelm, sometimes referred to in his writings. In 1927 at a Conference in Darmstadt, near Frankfurt, arranged by Graf Keyserling, Scheler delivered a lengthy lecture, entitled "Man's Particular Place" (''Die Sonderstellung des Menschen''), published later in much abbreviated form as ''Die Stellung des Menschen im Kosmos'' [literally: "Man's Situation in the Cosmos"]. His well known oratory style and delivery had captivated his audience — for about four hours!
+
    namely noble – vulgar ( values of vital feeling)
 
+
# Values of the mind (truth, beauty, justice vs. disvalues of their opposites)
Toward the end of his life, many invitations were extended to him, among them those from China, India, Japan, Russia, and the United States. However, on advice of his physician, he had to cancel reservations already made with Star Line.
+
    namely beautiful – ugly , just – unjust , pure knowledge of truth ( spiritual values)
 
+
# Values of the holy vs. disvalues of the unholy
At the time Scheler increasingly focused on political development. He met the Russian emigrant-philosopher N. Berdyaev in Berlin in 1923. Scheler was the only scholar of rank of the then German intelligentsia who warned as early as 1927 in public speeches of the dangers of the growing Nazi-movement and Marxism. "Politics and Morals," "The Idea of Eternal Peace and Pacifism" were subjects of talks he delivered in Berlin 1927. His analyses on Capitalism revealed it to be a calculating, globally growing "mind-set," rather than an economic system. While economic capitalism may have had some roots in ascetic Calvinism (M. Weber), its very mind-set, however, is shown to have its origin in modern, sub-conscious ''angst'' expressed in increasing needs for financial and other securities, for protection and  personal safeguards as well as for rational manageability of all entities. However, the subordination of the value of the indiviual person to this mind-set was reason enough for Max Scheler to denounce it and to outline and predict a whole new era of culture and values, which he called "The World-Era of Adjustment."
+
    namely holy – unholy (religious values)
 
+
# Values of utility vs. disvalues of the useless
Scheler also advocated an international university to be set up in Switzerland. Already at that time he was supportive of programs such as "continuing education," and of what he seems to have first called a "United States of Europe." He deplored the gap existing in Germany between power and mind, which gap he regarded to be the very source of an impending dictatorship and the greatest obstacle toward establishing a German democracy. Five years after his demise, the Nazi dictatorship (1933-1945) suppressed Scheler's work.
 
 
 
==Primary references (English translations)==
 
  
* {{cite book
+
Scheler’s ethics were based on what he called “pre-rational preferring,” or the person’s initial inclination towards certain values. A “disorder of the heart" occured whenever a person preferred a value of a lower rank to a higher rank, or a disvalue to a value.
  | last = Scheler | first = Max
 
  | editor = Translated by Oscar Haac.
 
  | title=Philosophical Perspectives
 
  | publisher= Beacon Press
 
  | location = Boston
 
  | year = 1958
 
}} 144 pages. (German title: ''Philosophische Weltanschauung'')
 
  
* {{cite book
+
Since emotions and feelings can sometimes be insincere, inconsistent or subject to deception, Scheler wrote a number of studies on value deceptions, including ''Ordo Amoris, The Idols of Self-Knowledge, Repentance and Re-Birth'', and ''Ressentiment''.
  | last = Scheler | first = Max
+
Every person was both and individual and a part of a community with which he shared a common experience of value.  Many people did not have to capacity to “feel” higher values and therefore could not participate in the types of community devoted to those values, but everyone should be allowed access to what they did value.  Scheler believed that values could be better advanced by an aristocracy rather than a democracy.
  | editor = Translated by Bernard Noble.
+
===Second Period===
  | title=On the Eternal in Man
+
''On the Eternal in Man'' marked the bridge to his second period, during which Scheler turned towards metaphysics and the philosophy of science.  Scheler defied the notion of a creator-God and instead suggested that Deity, Man, and World form one “becoming” process of unification, taking place in absolute time.  Absolute time was a function of self-generating life and was inherent in all processes of self-regeneration, aging, self-modification. The process of a universal, cosmic becoming took place through increasingly interpenetrating  interaction between  an uncreated vital energy, or “Impulsion,” and “Spirit,” which directed impulse into existence and ideas. Both God and humanity were continually evolving towards completion and total unity.
  | publisher= SCM Press
 
  | location = London
 
  | year = 1960
 
}} 480 pages.
 
  
* {{cite book
 
  | last = Scheler | first = Max
 
  | editor = Translated by Hans Meyerhoff.
 
  | title=Man's Place in Nature
 
  | publisher=The Noonday Press
 
  | location = New York
 
  | year = 1961
 
}} 105 pages. SBN 374-5-0252-8.
 
  
* {{cite book
 
  | last = Scheler | first = Max
 
  | editor = Translated by Peter Heath.
 
  | title=The Nature of Sympathy
 
  | publisher=Archon Books
 
  | location = New York
 
  | year = 1970
 
}} 274 pages. ISBN 0-208-01401-2.
 
  
* {{cite book
+
==Bibliography (English translations)==
  | last = Scheler | first = Max
 
  | editor = Edited by Lewis A. Cosner; translated by William W. Holdheim.
 
  | title=Ressentiment
 
  | publisher=Schocken
 
  | location = New York
 
  | year = 1972
 
}} 201 pages. ISBN 0-8052-0370-2.
 
  
* {{cite book
+
* Scheler, Max; Haac, Oscar (translator). ''Philosophical Perspectives''. Boston, Beacon Press, 1958.  (German  : ''Philosophische Weltanschauung'')
  | last = Scheler | first = Max
+
* Scheler, Max; Noble, Bernard (translator). ''On the Eternal in Man''. London, SCM Press, 1960.
  | editor = Translated by David R. Lachterman.
+
* Scheler, Max; Meyerhoff, Hans (translator). ''Man's Place in Nature''. New York, The Noonday Press, 1961    SBN 374-5-0252-8.  
  | title=Selected Philosophical Essays
 
  | publisher=Northwestern University Press
 
  | location = Evanston, Illinois
 
  | year = 1973
 
}} 359 pages. ISBN 0-8101-0379-6.  
 
  
* {{cite book
+
*Scheler, Max; Heath, Peter (translator). ''The Nature of Sympathy''. New York, Archion Books, 1970.  ISBN 0-208-01401-2.
  | last = Scheler | first = Max
+
* Scheler, Max; Cosner, Lewis A. (editor); Holdheim, William W. (translator). ''Ressentiment''. New York, Schocken, 1972.  ISBN 0-8052-0370-2.
  | editor = Translated by Manfred S. Frings and Roger L. Funk.
+
*Scheler, Max; Lachterman, David R. (translator). ''Selected Philosophical Essays.'' Evanston, IL, Northwestern University Press, 1973.  ISBN 0-8101-0379-6.
  | title=Formalism in Ethics and Non-Formal Ethics of Values: A new attempt toward the foundation of an ethical personalism
+
*Scheler, Max;  Frings, Manfred S. and Funk, Roger L. (editors and translators). ''Formalism in Ethics and Non-Formal Ethics of Values: A new attempt toward the foundation of an ethical personalism.'' Evanston, IL, Northwestern University Press, 1973 ISBN 0-8101-0415-6. (Original German edition: ''Der Formalismus in der Ethik und die materiale Wertethik'', 1913-16)
  | publisher=Northwestern University Press
+
*Scheler, Max;  Frings, Manfred S. (editor and translator).''Problems of a Sociology of Knowledge''. London, Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1980.  ISBN 0-7100-0302-1.
  | location = Evanston, Illinois
+
*Scheler, Max;  Frings, Manfred S. (editor and translator).''Person and Self-value: three essays''. Boston, Nijhoff, 1987. ISBN 9-0247-3380-4.
  | year = 1973
+
* Scheler, Max; Bershady, Harold J. (editor and translator). ''On Feeling, Knowing, and Valuing. Selected Writings''. Chicago, University of Chicago Press, 1992. ISBN 0-2267-3671-7.
}} 620 pages. ISBN 0-8101-0415-6. (Original German edition: ''Der Formalismus in der Ethik und die materiale Wertethik'', 1913-16)
 
  
* {{cite book
+
==References==
  | last = Scheler | first = Max
 
  | editor = Translated by Manfred S. Frings.
 
  | title=Problems of a Sociology of Knowledge
 
  | publisher=Routledge & Kegan Paul
 
  | location = London
 
  | year = 1980
 
}} 239 pages. ISBN 0-7100-0302-1.
 
  
* {{cite book
+
* Deeken, Alfons. ''Process and Permanence in Ethics: Max Scheler's Moral Philosophy''. New York, Paulist Press, 1974.  ISBN 0-8091-1800-9.
  | last = Scheler | first = Max
 
  | editor = Edited and partially translated by Manfred S. Frings.
 
  | title=Person and Self-value: three essays
 
  | publisher=Nijhoff
 
  | location = Boston
 
  | year = 1987
 
}} 201 pages. ISBN 9-0247-3380-4.
 
  
* {{cite book
+
*Frings, Manfred S..''Max Scheler: A concise introduction to the world of a great thinker.'' Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Duquesne University Press, 1965.  
  | last = Scheler | first = Max
 
  | editor = Edited and partially translated by Harold J. Bershady.
 
  | title=On Feeling, Knowing, and Valuing. Selected Writings
 
  | publisher=University of Chicago Press
 
  | location = Chicago
 
  | year = 1992
 
}} 267 pages. ISBN 0-2267-3671-7.
 
  
==Secondary references==
+
* Frings, Manfred S..''Max Scheler (1874-1928) : centennial essays''. The Hague, Nijhoff, 1974. 
  
* {{cite book
+
*Frings, Manfred S.. ''The Mind of Max Scheler: The  comprehensive guide based on the complete works.'' Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Marquette University Press, 1997. ISBN 0-8746-2613-7.  2nd ed., 2001.
  | last = Deeken | first = Alfons
 
  | title=Process and Permanence in Ethics: Max Scheler's Moral Philosophy
 
  | publisher=Paulist Press
 
  | location = New York
 
  | year = 1974
 
}} 282 pages. ISBN 0-8091-1800-9.
 
  
* {{cite book
+
* Kelly, Eugene. ''Max Scheler''. Chicago, Twaynes, 1977.  ISBN 0-8057-7707-5.
  | last = Frings | first = Manfred S.
 
  | title=Max Scheler: A concise introduction to the world of a great thinker
 
  | publisher= Duquesne University Press
 
  | location = Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
 
  | year = 1965
 
}} 223 pages.  
 
  
* {{cite book
+
* Nota, John H., S.J.; Plantinga, Theodore and Nota, John H. (translators). ''Max Scheler: The Man and His Work''. Chicago, Franciscan Herald Press, 1983.  ISBN 0-8199-0852-5.  (Original Dutch  : ''Max Scheler: De man en zijn werk'')
  | last = Frings | first = Manfred S., editor
 
  | title=Max Scheler (1874-1928) : centennial essays
 
  | publisher=Nijhoff
 
  | location = The Hague
 
  | year = 1974
 
}} 176 pages.  
 
  
* {{cite book
+
* Staude, John Raphael. ''Max Scheler: An intellectural portrait''. New York, The Free Press, 1967.
  | last = Frings | first = Manfred
 
  | title=The Mind of Max Scheler: The first comprehensive guide based on the complete works
 
  | publisher=Marquette University Press
 
  | location = Milwaukee, Wisconsin
 
  | year = 1997
 
}} 324 pages. ISBN 0-8746-2613-7.  2nd ed., 2001.
 
 
 
* {{cite book
 
  | last = Kelly | first = Eugene
 
  | title=Max Scheler
 
  | publisher=Twayne Publishers
 
  | location = Chicago
 
  | year = 1977
 
}} 203 pages. ISBN 0-8057-7707-5.
 
 
 
* {{cite book
 
  | last = Nota | first = John H., S.J.
 
  | editor=Translated by Theodore Plantinga and John H. Nota.
 
  | title=Max Scheler: The Man and His Work
 
  | publisher=Franciscan Herald Press
 
  | location = Chicago
 
  | year = 1983
 
}} 213 pages. ISBN 0-8199-0852-5.  (Original Dutch title: ''Max Scheler: De man en zijn werk'')
 
 
 
* {{cite book
 
  | last = Staude | first = John Raphael
 
  | title=Max Scheler: An intellectural portrait
 
  | publisher=The Free Press
 
  | location = New York
 
  | year = 1967
 
}} 298 pages.
 
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
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[[Category:German philosophers|Scheler, Max]]
 
[[Category:German philosophers|Scheler, Max]]
 
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Catholic converts|Scheler, Max]]
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Revision as of 21:55, 18 January 2007

Template:Cleanup-date Max Scheler (August 22, 1874, Munich - May 19, 1928, Frankfurt am Main) was a German philosopher known for his work in phenomenology, ethics, and philosophical anthropology. Scheler further developed the philosophical method of Edmund Husserl, and was called by Jose Ortega y Gasset "the first man of the philosophical paradise." He argued that the human “heart,” or seat of love, accounted for the essence of human existence, rather than ego, reason, will or the ability to receive sensory data. Like Blaise Pascal, Scheler declared that feelings and love have their own form of logic, different from the logic of reason. The reality of values preceded knowing. Values could only be felt, just as color can only be seen, and not thought. Reason could only organize values in a hierarchy after they had been experienced. Scheler developed a theory of value, in which values were ranked in a five-tier hierarchy. Ethics were based on a person’s pre-rational inclination towards certain values. Whenever a person preferred a value of a lower rank to a higher rank, or a disvalue to a value, the result was a “disorder of the heart.”

In 1954 Karol Wojtyla, later Pope John Paul II, defended his doctoral thesis on "An Evaluation of the Possibility of Constructing a Christian Ethics on the Basis of the system of Max Scheler."

Life

Max Scheler was born in Munich, Germany, on August 22, 1874 to a Lutheran father and an orthodox Jewish mother. As an adolescent, he turned to Catholicism, probably because of its conception of love; during his forties he became increasingly non-committal.

Scheler studied medicine in Munich and Berlin, and philosophy and sociology under W. Dilthey and G. Simmel in 1895. He received his doctorate in 1897, and his associate professorship (habilitation-thesis) in 1899 at the University of Jena. His advisor was Rudolf Eucken, a 1908 Nobel Prize winner for Literature and a correspondent of William James. Throughout his life, Scheler retained a strong interest in the philosophy of American Pragmatism.

From 1900 to 1906 Scheler taught at the University of Jena. In 1902 he met the renowned phenomenologist E. Husserl for the first time in Halle. Scheler was never a student of Husserl's, and their relationship remained strained, but he was influenced by Husserl’s ideas. Later Scheler was in contact with several of Husserl's disciples during his years (1907–10) as a professor at Munich. Scheler was somewhat critical of Husserl’s Logical Investigations (1900/01) and Ideas I (1913), and he also harbored reservations about Being and Time, by Heidegger, whom he also met at various times.

From 1907-1910 Scheler taught at the University of Munich. There he joined the Phenomenological Circle which had formed around M. Beck, Th. Conrad, J. Daubert, M. Geiger, D. v. Hildebrand, Th. Lipps, and A. Pfaender. A personal matter put him in an unfair position between the predominantly Catholic university and the local socialist media, and resulted in the loss of his Munich teaching position in 1910.

From 1910 to 1911 Scheler lectured at the Philosophical Society of Goettingen, and made other and renewed acquaintances here with Th. Conrad, H. Conrad-Martius, M. Geiger, J. Hering, R. Ingarden, D. von Hildebrand, E. Husserl, A. Koyre, and H. Reinach. Edith Stein was one of his students. Scheler unwittingly influenced Catholic thinkers to this day, including Stein and Pope John Paul II who wrote his Habilitation and many articles on Scheler's philosophy.

After his first marriage had ended in divorce, in 1912 Scheler married Märit Furtwaengler, the sister of the noted conductor. During World War I (1914-1918) Scheler was drafted, but discharged because of astigmia of the eyes. In 1919 he became professor of philosophy and sociology at the University of Cologne, where he stayed there until 1928. Early that year, he accepted a new position at the University of Frankfurt, and looked forward to meeting E. Cassirer, K. Mannheim, R. Otto and R. Wilhelm, to whom he sometimes referred in his writings. In 1927, at a conference arranged by Graf Keyserling in Darmstadt, near Frankfurt, Scheler delivered a lengthy lecture, entitled "Man's Particular Place" (Die Sonderstellung des Menschen), published later in a much abbreviated form as Die Stellung des Menschen im Kosmos ("Man's Situation in the Cosmos"). His well known oratory style and delivery captivated his audience for almost four hours. Toward the end of his life, many invitations were extended to him, including some from China, India, Japan, Russia, and the United States. On the advice of his physician, however, he had to cancel reservations he had already made for his journey on the Star Line.

At that time Scheler increasingly focused on political development. He had met the Russian emigrant-philosopher N. Berdyaev in Berlin in 1923. Scheler was the only scholar of rank in the German intelligentsia who warned in public speeches, as early as 1927 about the dangers of the growing Nazi-movement and Marxism. "Politics and Morals" and "The Idea of Eternal Peace and Pacifism" were subjects of talks he delivered in Berlin 1927. His analysis of capitalism revealed it to be a calculating, globally expanding "mind-set," rather than an economic system. While economic capitalism may have had some roots in ascetic Calvinism, Scheler detected its real motivation as a modern, sub-conscious insecurity expressed in an increasing need for financial and personal security, protection, safety and rational manageability of all entities. Max Scheler denounced the subordination of the value of the individual to this global tendency, and predicted a new era of culture and values, which he called "The World-Era of Adjustment."

Scheler also advocated the establishment of an international university in Switzerland. He was supportive of programs such as "continuing education," and of what he seems to have first called a "United States of Europe." He deplored the gap existing in Germany between political power and mind, a gap which he considered to be the source of an impending dictatorship, and the greatest obstacle toward establishing a German democracy. Five years after his demise, the Nazi dictatorship (1933-1945) suppressed Scheler's work.

After Scheler's demise in 1928, Heidegger noted, as did Ortega y Gasset, that all philosophers of the century were indebted to Scheler. Many considered Scheler's sudden death to be an irreplaceable loss to European thought.

Thought and Works

Max Scheler’s thought is usually divided into two periods of development. The first period, covered by Volumes 1 through 7 of his Collected Works, covers the years between his dissertation (1897) and the writing of On the Eternal in Man (1920 - 1922). During this time, Scheler applied his understanding of phenomenology to value-ethics, feelings, religion, politics and related topics. During the second period, from 1920 through 1928, Scheler rejected the notion of a creator-God, and posited instead a process of a universal, cosmic becoming in absolute time, through increasingly interpenetrating interaction between an uncreated vital energy, or “Impulsion;” and “Spirit,” which formed impulse into existence.

Value and Morality

Scheler’s first two major works, The Nature of Sympathy and Formalism in Ethics and Non-Formal Ethics of Values, dealt with human feelings, love, and the nature of the person. He demonstrated that the ego, reason and consciousness were all attributes of the human person and that there could be no pure ego, pure reason or pure consciousness outside a human context. The human “heart”, or seat of love, accounted for the essence of human existence, rather than ego, reason, will or the ability to receive sensory data. The human being was essentially a loving being (ens amans). Scheler described many types of feelings and showed that love was at their center. Like Blaise Pascal, Scheler declared that feelings and love have their own form of logic, different from the logic of reason.

The center of Scheler's thought was his theory of value. According to Scheler, the value-being of an object preceded perception; the axiological reality of values was prior to knowing. Values could only be felt, just as color can only be seen. Reason could not think values; the mind could only organize values in a hierarchy after they had been experienced. Values were independent of the things that caused them to be felt; a particular value could be experienced with a variety of objects. Formalism in Ethics and Non-Formal Ethics of Values contended that there were also moral values of good and evil that related directly to the person, and never to objects. The countless varieties of value experiences had a hidden order of their own, an order based on love ("ordo amoris"), quite different from an order created by reasoning. Scheler argued that values were objective, unchanging , a priori , and non-formal, and ranked them, and their opposites (“disvalues”), in a hierarchy of five levels:

  1. Values of pleasure vs. disvalues of displeasure
    namely pleasure – pain (values of sensible feeling),
  1. Values of vitality and of the noble vs. disvalues of the ignoble
   namely noble – vulgar ( values of vital feeling)
  1. Values of the mind (truth, beauty, justice vs. disvalues of their opposites)
   namely beautiful – ugly , just – unjust , pure knowledge of truth ( spiritual values)
  1. Values of the holy vs. disvalues of the unholy
   namely holy – unholy (religious values)
  1. Values of utility vs. disvalues of the useless

Scheler’s ethics were based on what he called “pre-rational preferring,” or the person’s initial inclination towards certain values. A “disorder of the heart" occured whenever a person preferred a value of a lower rank to a higher rank, or a disvalue to a value.

Since emotions and feelings can sometimes be insincere, inconsistent or subject to deception, Scheler wrote a number of studies on value deceptions, including Ordo Amoris, The Idols of Self-Knowledge, Repentance and Re-Birth, and Ressentiment. Every person was both and individual and a part of a community with which he shared a common experience of value. Many people did not have to capacity to “feel” higher values and therefore could not participate in the types of community devoted to those values, but everyone should be allowed access to what they did value. Scheler believed that values could be better advanced by an aristocracy rather than a democracy.

Second Period

On the Eternal in Man marked the bridge to his second period, during which Scheler turned towards metaphysics and the philosophy of science. Scheler defied the notion of a creator-God and instead suggested that Deity, Man, and World form one “becoming” process of unification, taking place in absolute time. Absolute time was a function of self-generating life and was inherent in all processes of self-regeneration, aging, self-modification. The process of a universal, cosmic becoming took place through increasingly interpenetrating interaction between an uncreated vital energy, or “Impulsion,” and “Spirit,” which directed impulse into existence and ideas. Both God and humanity were continually evolving towards completion and total unity.


Bibliography (English translations)

  • Scheler, Max; Haac, Oscar (translator). Philosophical Perspectives. Boston, Beacon Press, 1958. (German : Philosophische Weltanschauung)
  • Scheler, Max; Noble, Bernard (translator). On the Eternal in Man. London, SCM Press, 1960.
  • Scheler, Max; Meyerhoff, Hans (translator). Man's Place in Nature. New York, The Noonday Press, 1961 SBN 374-5-0252-8.
  • Scheler, Max; Heath, Peter (translator). The Nature of Sympathy. New York, Archion Books, 1970. ISBN 0-208-01401-2.
  • Scheler, Max; Cosner, Lewis A. (editor); Holdheim, William W. (translator). Ressentiment. New York, Schocken, 1972. ISBN 0-8052-0370-2.
  • Scheler, Max; Lachterman, David R. (translator). Selected Philosophical Essays. Evanston, IL, Northwestern University Press, 1973. ISBN 0-8101-0379-6.
  • Scheler, Max; Frings, Manfred S. and Funk, Roger L. (editors and translators). Formalism in Ethics and Non-Formal Ethics of Values: A new attempt toward the foundation of an ethical personalism. Evanston, IL, Northwestern University Press, 1973 ISBN 0-8101-0415-6. (Original German edition: Der Formalismus in der Ethik und die materiale Wertethik, 1913-16)
  • Scheler, Max; Frings, Manfred S. (editor and translator).Problems of a Sociology of Knowledge. London, Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1980. ISBN 0-7100-0302-1.
  • Scheler, Max; Frings, Manfred S. (editor and translator).Person and Self-value: three essays. Boston, Nijhoff, 1987. ISBN 9-0247-3380-4.
  • Scheler, Max; Bershady, Harold J. (editor and translator). On Feeling, Knowing, and Valuing. Selected Writings. Chicago, University of Chicago Press, 1992. ISBN 0-2267-3671-7.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Deeken, Alfons. Process and Permanence in Ethics: Max Scheler's Moral Philosophy. New York, Paulist Press, 1974. ISBN 0-8091-1800-9.
  • Frings, Manfred S..Max Scheler: A concise introduction to the world of a great thinker. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Duquesne University Press, 1965.
  • Frings, Manfred S..Max Scheler (1874-1928) : centennial essays. The Hague, Nijhoff, 1974.
  • Frings, Manfred S.. The Mind of Max Scheler: The comprehensive guide based on the complete works. Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Marquette University Press, 1997. ISBN 0-8746-2613-7. 2nd ed., 2001.
  • Nota, John H., S.J.; Plantinga, Theodore and Nota, John H. (translators). Max Scheler: The Man and His Work. Chicago, Franciscan Herald Press, 1983. ISBN 0-8199-0852-5. (Original Dutch : Max Scheler: De man en zijn werk)
  • Staude, John Raphael. Max Scheler: An intellectural portrait. New York, The Free Press, 1967.

External links

Catholic converts|Scheler, Max]]


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