1911 Encyclopædia Britannica/Zeller, Eduard

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17811031911 Encyclopædia Britannica, Volume 28 — Zeller, Eduard

ZELLER, EDUARD (1814-1908), German philosopher, was born at Kleinbottwar in Württemberg on the 22nd of January 1814, and educated at the university of Tübingen and under the influence of Hegel. In 1840 he was Privatdozent of theology at Tübingen, in 1847 professor of theology at Bern, in 1849 professor of theology at Marburg, migrating soon afterwards to the faculty of philosophy as the result of disputes with the Clerical party. He became professor of philosophy at Heidelberg in 1862, removed to Berlin in 1872, and retired in 1895. His great work is his Philosophie der Griechen (1844-52). This book he continued to amplify and improve in the light of further research; the last edition appeared in 1902. It has been translated into most of the European languages and became the recognized text-book of Greek philosophy. He wrote also on theology, and published three volumes of philosophical essays. He was also one of the founders of the Theologische Jahrbücher, a periodical which acquired great importance as the exponent of the historical method of David Strauss and Christian Baur. Like most of his contemporaries he began with Hegelianism, but subsequently he developed a system on his own lines. He saw the necessity of going back to Kant in the sense of demanding a critical reconsideration of the epistemological problems which Kant had made but a partially successful attempt to solve. None the less his merits as an original thinker are far outshone by his splendid services to the history of philosophy. It is true that his view of Greek thought is somewhat warped by Hegelian formalism. He is not alive enough to the very intimate relation which thought holds to national life and to the idiosyncrasy of the thinker. He lays too much stress upon the “concept,” and explains too much by the Hegelian antithesis of subjective and objective. Nevertheless his history of Greek philosophy remains a noble monument of solid learning informed with natural sagacity. He received the highest recognition, not only from philosophers and learned societies all over the world, but also from the emperor and the German people. In 1894 the Emperor William II made him a “Wirklicher Geheimrat” with the title of “Excellenz,” and his bust, with that of Helmholtz, was set up at the Brandenburg Gate near the statues erected to the Emperor and Empress Frederick. He died on the 19th of March 1908.

The Philosophie der Griechen has been translated into English by S. F. Alleyne (2 vols., 1881) in sections: S. F. Alleyne, Hist. of Gk. Phil. to the time of Socrates (1881); O. J. Reichel, Socrates and the Socratic Schools (1868; 2nd ed. 1877); S. F. Alleyne and A. Goodwin, Plato and the Older Academy (1876); Costelloe and Muirhead, Aristotle and the Earlier Peripatetics (1897); O. J . Reichel, Stoics, Epicureans and Sceptics (1870 and 1880); S. F. Alleyne, Hist. of Eclecticism in Gk. Phil. (1883). The Philosophie appeared in an abbreviated form as Grundriss d. Gesch. d. Griech. Philos. (1883, 5th ed. 1898); Eng. trans, by Alleyne and Evelyn Abbott (1866), under the title, Outlines of the Hist. of Gk. Philos. Among his other works are:—Platonische Studien (1839); Die Apostelgeschichte krit. untersucht (1854; Eng. trans, J. Dare, 1875-76); Entwickelung d. Monotheismus bei d. Griech. (1862); Gesch. d. christlich. Kirche (1898); Gesch. d. deutsch Philos. seit Leibniz (1873, ed. 1875); Staat und Kirche (1873); Strauss in seinen Leben und Schriften (1874; Eng. trans. 1874); Über Bedeutung und Aufgabe d. Erkenntniss-Theorie (1862); Über teleolog. und mechan. Naturerklärung (1876); Vorträge und Abhandlungen (1865-84); Religion und Philosophie bei den Römern (1866, ed. 1871); Philosoph. Aufsätze (1887).