Frithjof Schuon: Difference between revisions
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*[http://www.frithjofschuon.info/public/home.aspx Frithjof Schuon Archive] |
*[http://www.frithjofschuon.info/public/home.aspx Frithjof Schuon Archive] |
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*[http://www.worldwisdom.com/public/home.aspx World Wisdom - Perennial Philosophy] |
*[http://www.worldwisdom.com/public/home.aspx World Wisdom - Perennial Philosophy] |
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*[http://traditioetrestauratio.blogspot.com/2012/03/martin-lings-frithjof-schuon-and-rene.html Martin Lings: Frithjof Schuon and René Guénon] |
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*[http://traditioetrestauratio.blogspot.com/2012/02/frithjof-schuon-tradition-and-modernity.html Frithjof Schuon: Tradition and Modernity] |
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*[http://traditioetrestauratio.blogspot.com/2012/02/form-and-substance-in-religions.html Frithjof Schuon: From and Substance in the Religions] |
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*[http://traditioetrestauratio.blogspot.com/2012/02/frithjof-schuon-primacy-of-intellection.html Frithjof Schuon: The Primacy of Intellection] |
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Revision as of 19:14, 24 March 2012
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Frithjof Schuon | |
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File:Essential Frithjof Schuon.jpg | |
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Died | May 5, 1998 | (aged 90)
Frithjof Schuon (June 18, 1907 – May 5, 1998) was a native of Switzerland born to German parents in Basel, Switzerland. He is known as a philosopher, metaphysician and author of numerous books on religion and spirituality.
Schuon is recognized as an authority on philosophy, spirituality and religion, an exponent of the Religio Perennis, and one of the chief representatives of the Perennialist School. Though he was not officially affiliated with the academic world, his writings have been noticed in scholarly and philosophical journals, and by scholars of comparative religion and spirituality. Criticism of the relativism of the modern academic world is one of the main aspects of Schuon's teachings. In his teachings, Schuon expresses his faith in an absolute principle, God, who governs the universe and to whom our souls would return after death. For Schuon the great revelations are the link between this absolute principle—God—and mankind. He wrote the main bulk of his metaphysical teachings in French. In the later years of his life Schuon composed some volumes of poetry in his mother tongue, German. His articles in French were collected in about twenty titles in French which were later translated into English as well as many other languages. The main subjects of his prose as well as his poetic compositions are spirituality and various essential realms of man's life journey from his Creator back to Him.
Biography
Schuon was born in Basel, Switzerland, on June 18, 1907. His father was a native of southern Germany, while his mother came from an Alsatian family. Schuon's father was a concert violinist and the household was one in which not only music but literary and spiritual culture were present. Schuon lived in Basel and attended school there until the untimely death of his father, after which his mother returned with her two young sons to her family in nearby Mulhouse, France, where Schuon was obliged to become a French citizen. Having received his earliest training in German, he received his later education in French and thus mastered both languages early in life.
From his youth, Schuon's search for metaphysical truth led him to read the Upanishads and the Bhagavad Gita. While still living in Mulhouse, he discovered the works of René Guénon, the French philosopher and Orientalist, which served to confirm his intellectual intuitions and which provided support for the metaphysical principles he had begun to discover.
Schuon journeyed to Paris after serving for a year and a half in the French army. There he worked as a textile designer and began to study Arabic in the local mosque school. Living in Paris also brought the opportunity to be exposed to various forms of traditional art to a much greater degree than before, especially the arts of Asia with which he had had a deep affinity since his youth. This period of growing intellectual and artistic familiarity with the traditional worlds was followed by Schuon's first visit to Algeria in 1932. It was then that he met the celebrated Shaykh Ahmad al-Alawi and was initiated into his order.[1] On a second trip to North Africa, in 1935, he visited Algeria and Morocco; and during 1938 and 1939 he traveled to Egypt where he met Guénon, with whom he had been in correspondence for 27 years. In 1939, shortly after his arrival in Pie,India, World War II broke out, forcing him to return to Europe. After having served in the French army, and having been made a prisoner by the Germans, he sought asylum in Switzerland, which gave him Swiss nationality and was to be his home for forty years. In 1949 he married, his wife being a German Swiss with a French education who, besides having interests in religion and metaphysics, is also a gifted painter.[2]
Following World War II, Schuon accepted an invitation to travel to the American West, where he lived for several months among the Plains Indians, in whom he always had a deep interest. Having received his education in France, Schuon has written all his major works in French, which began to appear in English translation in 1953. Of his first book, The Transcendent Unity of Religions (London, Faber & Faber) T. S. Eliot wrote: "I have met with no more impressive work in the comparative study of Oriental and Occidental religion." [2]
While always continuing to write, Schuon and his wife traveled widely. In 1959 and again in 1963, they journeyed to the American West at the invitation of friends among the Sioux and Crow American Indians. In the company of their Native American friends, they visited various Plains tribes and had the opportunity to witness many aspects of their sacred traditions. In 1959, Schuon and his wife were solemnly adopted into the Sioux family of James Red Cloud. Years later they were similarly adopted by the Crow medicine man and Sun Dance chief, Thomas Yellowtail. Schuon's writings on the central rites of Native American religion and his paintings of their ways of life attest to his particular affinity with the spiritual universe of the Plains Indians. Other travels have included journeys to Andalusia, Morocco, and a visit in 1968 to the home of the Holy Virgin in Ephesus. In 1980, Schuon and his wife emigrated to the United States, where he continued to write until his death in 1998.
Through his many books and articles, Schuon became known as a spiritual teacher and leader of the Traditionalist School. During his years in Switzerland he regularly received visits from well-known religious scholars and thinkers of East.
Transcendent unity of religions
The traditionalist or perennialist perspective began to be enunciated in the 1920s by the French philosopher René Guénon and, in the 1930s, by Schuon himself. The Harvard orientalist Ananda Coomaraswamy and the Swiss art historian Titus Burckhardt also became prominent advocates of this point of view. Fundamentally, this doctrine is the Sanatana Dharma – the "eternal religion" – of Hindu Neo-Vedantins. It was supposedly formulated in ancient Greece, in particular, by Plato and later Neoplatonists, and in Christendom by Meister Eckhart (in the West) and Gregory Palamas (in the East). Every religion has, besides its literal meaning, an esoteric dimension, which is essential, primordial and universal. This intellectual universality is one of the hallmarks of Schuon's works, and it gives rise to insights into not only the various spiritual traditions, but also history, science and art.
The dominant theme or principle of Schuon's writings was foreshadowed in his early encounter with a Black marabout who had accompanied some members of his Senegalese village to Switzerland in order to demonstrate their culture. When the young Schuon talked with him, the venerable old man drew a circle with radii on the ground and explained: God is in the center; all paths lead to Him.[3]
Metaphysics
For Schuon, the quintessence of pure metaphysics can be summarized by the following vedantic statement, although the Advaita Vedanta's perspective finds its equivalent in the teachings of Ibn Arabi, Meister Eckhart or Plotinus: Brahma satyam jagan mithya jivo brahmaiva na'parah (Brahman is real, the world is illusory, the self is not different from Brahman).[citation needed]
The metaphysics exposited by Schuon is based on the doctrine of the non-dual Absolute (Beyond-Being) and the degrees of reality. The distinction between the Absolute and the relative corresponds for Schuon to the couple Atma/Maya. Maya is not only the cosmic illusion: from a higher standpoint, Maya is also the Infinite, the Divine Relativity or else the feminine aspect (mahashakti) of the Supreme Principle.
Said differently, being the Absolute, Beyond-Being is also the Sovereign Good (Agathon), that by its nature desires to communicate itself through the projection of Maya. The whole manifestation from the first Being (Ishvara) to matter (Prakriti), the lower degree of reality, is indeed the projection of the Supreme Principle (Brahman). The personal God, considered as the creative cause of the world, is only relatively Absolute, a first determination of Beyond-Being, at the summit of Maya. The Supreme Principle is not only Beyond-Being. It is also the Supreme Self (Atman) and in its innermost essence, the Intellect (buddhi) that is the ray of Consciousness shining down, the axial refraction of Atma within Maya.[citation needed]
Religio perennis
Schuon, in more than twenty books written mainly in French, explains the metaphysical principles as well as the spiritual and moral aspects of human life. Schuon's religio perennis cannot be called a new religion with its own dogma and practices. For Schuon, the religio perennis is the underlying religion, the religion of the heart or the religio cordis. Esoterists in every orthodox tradition have a more or less direct access to it, but it cannot be a question of practicing the religio perennis independently.[citation needed] Religious forms can be more or less transparent but religious diversity is not denied for its raison d'être is metaphysically explained. On the one hand, formal religions are upaya (celestial strategy), superimpositions on the core-essence of the religio perennis. On the other hand, religious forms correspond to as many archetypes in the divine Word itself.[citation needed] Religious forms are willed by God and each religion corresponds to a particular and homogenous cosmos, characterized by its own perspective of the Absolute.[citation needed]
The Perennialist perspective itself can thus be characterized as essentially metaphysical, esoteric, primordial but also traditional. For Schuon, there is no spiritual path outside of a revealed religion, which provides spiritual seekers with a metaphysical doctrine and a spiritual method, but also with a spiritual environment of beauty and sacredness.
Spiritual path
According to Schuon the spiritual path is essentially based on the discernment between the "Real" and the "unreal" (Atma / Maya); concentration on the Real; and the practice of virtues. Human beings must know the "Truth". Knowing the Truth, they must then will the "Good" and concentrate on it. These two aspects correspond to the metaphysical doctrine and the spiritual method. Knowing the Truth and willing the Good, human beings must finally love "Beauty" in their own soul through virtue, but also in "Nature". In this respect Schuon has insisted on the importance for the authentic spiritual seeker to be aware of what he called the "metaphysical transparency of phenomena".[citation needed]
Schuon wrote about different aspects of spiritual life both on the doctrinal and on the practical levels. He explained the forms of the spiritual practices as they have been manifested in various traditional universes. In particular, he wrote on the Invocation of the Divine Name (dhikr, Japa-Yoga, the Prayer of the Heart), considered by Hindus as the best and most providential means of realization at the end of the Kali Yuga. As has been noted by the Hindu saint Ramakrishna, the secret of the invocatory path is that God and his Name are one.[citation needed]
Quintessential esoterism
Guénon had pointed out at the beginning of the twentieth century that every religion comprises two main aspects: "Esoterism" and "Exoterism". Schuon explained that the esoterism itself displays two aspects, one being an extension of exoterism and the other one independent of exoterism; for if it be true that the form "is" in a certain way the essence, the essence on the contrary is by no means totally expressed by a single form; the drop is water, but water is not the drop. This second aspect is called "quintessential esoterism" for it is not limited or expressed totally by one single form or theological school and, above all, by a particular religious form as such.[citation needed] e diuliu asta fratilor This "quintessential esoterism" and the religio perennis, in the universe of Semitic monotheism, is represented by the Virgin Mary, who according to the Persian Sufi Ruzbihan Baqli, is the "Mother of all the Prophets and the Prophecy and the Substance of the original Sainthood".[citation needed]
Beauty is the Splendor of the Truth
Schuon was also a painter and a poet. The subjects of his art were the Plains Indian world and the mystery of cosmic and human femininity. During the last three years of his life he wrote approximately 3,500 short didactic poems in his mother tongue of German.
Throughout his life Schuon has also written extensively on sacred art and the traditional doctrine of Beauty. For him, as for Plato, Beauty is the Splendor of the Truth.
Some passages from the writings of Frithjof Schuon
Spiritual Perspectives and Human Facts
It should be possible to restore to the word "philosophy" its original meaning: philosophy —the "love of wisdom" — is the science of all the fundamental principles; this science operates with intuition, which "perceives," and not with reason alone, which "concludes." Subjectively speaking, the essence of philosophy is certitude; for the moderns, on the contrary, the essence of philosophy is doubt: philosophy is supposed to reason without any premise (voraussetzungsloses Denken), as if this condition were not itself a preconceived idea; this is the classical contradiction of all relativism. Everything is doubted except for doubt.
Survey of Metaphysics and Esoterism
On the whole, modern philosophy is the codification of an acquired infirmity: the intellectual atrophy of man marked by the "fall" entails a hypertrophy of practical intelligence, whence in the final analysis the explosion of the physical sciences and the appearance of pseudo-sciences such as psychology and sociology.(1)
From the Divine to the Human
…our position is well known: it is fundamentally that of metaphysics, and the latter is by definition universalist, dogmatist in the philosophical sense of the term, and traditionalist; universalist because free of all denominational formalism; dogmatist because far from all subjectivist relativism, we believe that knowledge exists and that it is a real and efficacious adequation and traditionalist because the traditions are there to express, in diverse ways, but unanimously, this quintessential position -- at once intellectual and spiritual -- which in the final analysis is the reason for the existence of the human spirit.
Author's preface[4]
Esoterism As Principle and As Way
The prerogative of the human state is objectivity; the essential content of which is the Absolute. There is no knowledge without objectivity of the intelligence; there is no freedom without objectivity of the will; and there is no nobility without objectivity of the soul… Esoterism seeks to realize pure and direct objectvity; this is its raison d'être.
Author's preface[5]
Some of the features of Schuon's works
The writings of Schuon are characterized by essentiality, universality and comprehensiveness. They have the quality of essentiality because they always go to the heart and are concerned with the essence of what they deal with. Schuon possesses the gift of reaching the very core of the subject that he is treating, of going beyond forms to the essential formless Center of forms whether they be religious, artistic or related to certain features and traits of the Cosmic and human order. To read and understand his books means that one should go from the shell to the kernel, to be carried on a journey that is at once spiritual and intellectual from the circumference to the center.
Schuon's writings are universal, not only because the formless Essence is universal but also because on the level of forms he does not confine himself solely to a particular world, period and region. His perspective is truly universal in the sense of embracing all orders of reality from the Divine to the human and on the human level worlds as far apart as that of Abrahamic monotheism and the Shamanic heritage of Shintoism and the North American Indian religions.[6]
Criticism of modernity
Criticism of Relativism and Freudian Psychology
In his essay 'The Contradictions of Relativism' Schuon wrote that uncompromising relativism that underlies many modern philosophies had fallen into an intrinsic absurdity in declaring that there is no absolute truth and then attempting to put this forward as an absolute truth. Schuon notes that the essence of Relativism is found in the idea that we never escape from human subjectivity whilst its expounders seem to remain unaware of the fact that Relativism is therefore also deprived of any objectivity. Schuon further notes that the Freudian assertion that rationality is merely a hypocritical guise for a repressed animal drive results in the very assertion itself being devoid of worth as it is itself a rational judgment.[7]
See also
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References
- ^ Frithjof Schuon, Songs Without Names, Volumes VII-XII, (World Wisdom, 2007) p. 226.
- ^ a b Frithjof Schuon's life and work.
- ^ Verlag H.J. Maurer
- ^ Schuon, Frithjof (1982). From the Divine to the Human. USA: World Wisdom Books. p. 1. ISBN 0-941532-01-1.
- ^ Schuon, Frithjof (1990). Esoterism as Principle and as Way. Middlesex: Perennial Books LTD. p. 15. ISBN 0-900588-23-3.
{{cite book}}
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(help) - ^ The Essential Writings of Frithjof Schuon (S.H. Nasr, Ed.), 1986, Element, 1991
- ^ Logic and transcendence: a new translation with selected letters. World Wisdom, Inc, 2009.
Bibliography
- Adastra and Stella Maris: Poems by Frithjof Schuon, World Wisdom, 2003
- Art from the Sacred to the Profane: East and West, (A selection from his writings by Catherine Schuon), World Wisdom, Inc, 2007. ISBN 1933316357
- Castes and Races, Perennial Books, 1959, 1982
- Christianity/Islam, World Wisdom, 1985
- New translation, World Wisdom, 2008
- Echoes of Perennial Wisdom, World Wisdom, 1992
- Esoterism as Principle and as Way, Perennial Books, 1981, 1990
- The Essential Frithjof Schuon, World Wisdom, 2005
- The Essential Writings of Frithjof Schuon (S.H. Nasr, Ed.), 1986, Element, 1991
- The Eye of the Heart, World Wisdom, 1997
- The Feathered Sun: Plain Indians in Art & Philosophy, World Wisdom, 1990
- Form and Substance in the Religions, World Wisdom, 2002
- From the Divine to the Human, World Wisdom, 1982
- Gnosis: Divine Wisdom, 1959, 1978, Perennial Books 1990
- New translation, World Wisdom, 2006
- Images of Primordial & Mystic Beauty: Paintings by Frithjof Schuon, Abodes, 1992, World Wisdom
- In the Face of the Absolute, World Wisdom, 1989, 1994
- In the Tracks of Buddhism, 1968, 1989
- New translation, Treasures of Buddhism, World Wisdom, 1993
- Language of the Self, 1959
- Revised edition, World Wisdom, 1999
- Light on the Ancient Worlds, 1966, World Wisdom, 1984
- New translation, World Wisdom, 2006
- Logic and Transcendence, 1975, Perennial Books, 1984
- The Play of Masks, World Wisdom, 1992
- Prayer Fashions Man, World Wisdom, 2005
- Road to the Heart, World Wisdom, 1995
- Roots of the Human Condition, World Wisdom, 1991
- New translation, World Wisdom, 2002
- Songs for a Spiritual Traveler: Selected Poems, World Wisdom, 2002
- Songs Without Names Vol. I-VI, World Wisdom, 2007
- Songs Without Names VII-XII, World Wisdom, 2007
- Spiritual Perspectives and Human Facts, 1954, 1969
- New translation, Perennial Books, 1987, New Translation, World Wisdom, 2007
- Stations of Wisdom, 1961, 1980
- Revised translation, World Wisdom, 1995
- Sufism: Veil and Quintessence, World Wisdom, 1981
- New translation, World Wisdom, 2007
- Survey of Metaphysics and Esoterism, World Wisdom, 1986, 2000
- The Transcendent Unity of Religions, 1953
- Revised Edition, 1975, 1984, The Theosophical Publishing House, 1993
- The Transfiguration of Man, World Wisdom, 1995
- To Have a Center, World Wisdom, 1990
- Understanding Islam, 1963, 1965, 1972, 1976, 1979, 1981, 1986, 1989
- Revised translation, World Wisdom, 1994, 1998
- World Wheel Vol. I-III, World Wisdom, 2007
- World Wheel Vol. IV-VII, World Wisdom, 2007
Schuon was a frequent contributor to the quarterly journal Studies in Comparative Religion, (along with Guénon, Coomarswamy, and many others) which dealt with religious symbolism and the Traditionalist perspective.
External links
- Perennialist/Traditionalist School website
- Schuon website
- Fons Vitae books - Traditionalist School books
- Frithjof Schuon Archive
- World Wisdom - Perennial Philosophy
- Martin Lings: Frithjof Schuon and René Guénon
- Frithjof Schuon: Tradition and Modernity
- Frithjof Schuon: From and Substance in the Religions
- Frithjof Schuon: The Primacy of Intellection
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