Konrad Moll
(Esslingen am Neckar): Naturerkenntnis und Imitatio Dei als Norm der
HumanitŠt in der deutschen FrŸhaufklŠrung.
Ein Hinweis auf die Philosophia mathematica Erhard Weigels*
Professor
Erhard Weigel (1625-1699) made the University of Jena
a place of new scientific inspiration by reception of Western thought in German
Lutheranism (H. Schšffler). As the decisive academic
preceptor of Baron Samuel Pufendorf, Gottfried Wilhelm
Leibniz, and indirectly, Christian Wolff, he was one of the leading figures in
early German enlightenment. He claimed a respectful and mathematically
inquiring approach to nature (seen as divine creation representing God himself) which will give guidance on the way to real humanity. His
devotion to that ãMathesis divinaÒ
was just as much a pedagogical, as social, moral and political concept. Engaged
also in the defence against uprising atheism he showed in his Philosophia mathematica (1693),
based perhaps on cabbalistic traditions, that GodÕs
wisdom is playing with all creatures as partners in the universe. In a somewhat
antiaristotelic and vehement antischolastic
attitude the author strived for a rationality, spread
over all nations with respect to the divine transparency of this world. So
everyone would be able to find happiness in which the patterns of wisdom are
efficacious, and so becoming elevated to calculate and utilise this divine
harmony in a divinely guided common existence of man and nature (see esp. note 14).
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