On the Will in Nature
Schopenhauer's 1836 'Über den Willen in der Natur' — empirical confirmations of the World-as-Will
Tradition: Post-Kantian metaphysics / Schopenhauerian Wille-philosophy / philosophy of biology
Schopenhauer's 1836 'On the Will in Nature' — empirical-scientific corroborations of the World as Will
Published in 1836 (sixteen years after 'The World as Will and Representation' had been almost universally ignored), 'Über den Willen in der Natur' is Schopenhauer's most explicitly empirical-scientific defence of his metaphysics. The book draws on contemporary developments in physiology (esp. Marshall Hall's work on reflex action, Charles Bell's on the nerves), comparative anatomy (Cuvier, Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire), magnetism (Faraday), plant physiology (Goethe's morphology, the contemporary phyto-physiologists), astronomy (Herschel and the contemporary cosmogony), and Chinese philosophy (via Robert Morrison's Chinese Repository — Schopenhauer was an early European reader of Chinese sources). His argument: the empirical sciences themselves point toward Schopenhauer's metaphysics of Will. Every empirical phenomenon — from the unconscious vegetative functions of the body, to the goal-directed structure of organisms, to the goal-directed-seeming behaviour of plants and even of magnets, to the cosmic-scale order of the heavens — manifests an unconscious-purposive activity that, on Schopenhauerian analysis, is the noumenal Will appearing under empirical conditions. The book is the empirical companion to WWR; Schopenhauer's renewed reception after 1851 (when his 'Parerga und Paralipomena' finally found a wide readership) brought the Will in Nature into renewed attention as the scientific-philosophical companion to the metaphysical magnum opus.
Author
Editions cited
- Über den Willen in der Natur (Joh. Christ. Hermann, Frankfurt, 1836; 2nd ed. with substantial additions, 1854; 3rd ed. 1867)
- Sämtliche Werke, ed. A. Hübscher (Brockhaus, 1937-41, 7 vols), vol. 4
- English trans. K. Hillebrand, On the Will in Nature (Bohn's Philosophical Library, 1889)
- Modern English trans. E. F. J. Payne, On the Will in Nature (Berg Publishers, 1992)
- Critical commentary: David E. Cartwright, Schopenhauer: A Biography (Cambridge, 2010); Christopher Janaway, Self and World in Schopenhauer's Philosophy (Oxford, 1989)
School Embodiments
Empirical defence of Schopenhauerian metaphysics.
"The empirical sciences themselves point to the Will as the inner nature of the world." (On the Will in Nature, introduction)
Major philosophy-of-biology in the German tradition.
"Physiology and anatomy disclose the Will in the animal organism." (On the Will in Nature, physiology section)
Schopenhauerian-pessimist Will-philosophy.
"The blind striving of the Will appears throughout nature." (On the Will in Nature)
Vitalist-biological framework of the Will-in-nature thesis.
"The Will is the vital principle." (On the Will in Nature, on physiology)
Engagement with Chinese, Hindu, and other non-European philosophical sources.
"Confirmation from Sinology." (On the Will in Nature, on Chinese sources)
Internal Tensions
Schopenhauer's most explicitly empirical-scientific book; the empirical companion to The World as Will and Representation. The book's empirical claims have been variously assessed — most are no longer scientifically accepted in detail (the reflex-action argument and the plant-physiology argument especially) — but the philosophical thesis (that empirical science discloses what philosophy concludes about the underlying Will-character of reality) has remained influential, especially in the post-Bergsonian and post-Whiteheadian process traditions.
I. Time
1836 first edition; 1854 substantial second edition with chapters on physiology, comparative anatomy, plant physiology, the Yale 'Anglo-Saxon question' on linguistic-cultural diffusion, and Chinese philosophy.
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II. Space
Frankfurt — Schopenhauer's residence from 1833 until his 1860 death. The intellectual space is post-Hegelian Germany, in which Schopenhauer was a marginal figure but increasingly engaged with contemporary science.
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III. Matter
Single philosophical-scientific essay (~150 pages in first edition; ~250 in second). The book's distinctive force is its detailed engagement with contemporary scientific literature — Schopenhauer read the scientific journals carefully and cites them extensively.
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IV. Observer
Middle Schopenhauer. The observer-philosopher is positioned at the intersection of post-Kantian metaphysics and contemporary natural science, arguing that the two converge on the Will-doctrine.
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V. Energy
Empirical-philosophical energies. The book's distinctive character is the explicit attempt to bring empirical-scientific data into philosophical argument — uncommon in early-nineteenth-century post-Kantian writing.
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VI. Information
Single short volume in two-then-three editions. The 1854 second edition's added chapters substantially extended the engagement with comparative philology, Sinology, and physiology.
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How On the Will in Nature resolves each dilemma
51 resolved positions across 4 dimensions, including 32 distinctive where the majority of schools go the other way · 6 unaligned.
Each dimension is sorted so minority positions come first. Mainstream positions are folded into an expandable list.
Time · 9 dilemmas · 3 distinctive
Persistence, the future, and the direction of becoming.
6 mainstream positions
Matter · 7 dilemmas · 5 distinctive
What stuff is — fundamental, relational, or appearance.
Observer · 37 dilemmas · 5 distinctive
Mind, agency, and the knower's relation to the known.