Early life Schelling was born in the town of
Leonberg in the
Duchy of Württemberg (now
Baden-Württemberg), the son of the
Lutheran pastor Joseph Friedrich Schelling and Gottliebin Marie Cleß. From 1783 to 1784, Schelling attended the Latin school in
Nürtingen and knew
Friedrich Hölderlin, who was five years his senior. Subsequently Schelling attended the
monastic school at
Bebenhausen, near
Tübingen, where his father was chaplain and an
Orientalist professor. On 18 October 1790, at the age of 15, he was granted permission to enroll at the
Tübinger Stift (seminary of the
Evangelical-Lutheran Church in Württemberg), despite not having yet reached the normal enrollment age of 20. At the Stift, he shared a room with
Hegel as well as Hölderlin, and the three became good friends. Schelling studied the
Church Fathers and
ancient Greek philosophers. His interest gradually shifted from
Lutheran theology to
philosophy. In 1792, he graduated with his
master's thesis, titled
Antiquissimi de prima malorum humanorum origine philosophematis Genes. III. explicandi tentamen criticum et philosophicum, and in 1795 he finished his
doctoral thesis, titled
De Marcione Paulinarum epistolarum emendatore (
On Marcion as emendator of the Pauline letters) under
Gottlob Christian Storr. Meanwhile, he had begun to study
Kant and
Fichte, who influenced him greatly. Representative of Schelling's early period is also a discourse between him and the philosophical writer , who was Fichte's housemate at that time, in letters and in Fichte's Journal (1796/97) on
interaction,
the pragmatic and
Leibniz. In 1797, while tutoring two youths of an aristocratic family, he visited
Leipzig as their escort and had a chance to attend lectures at
Leipzig University, where he was fascinated by contemporary physical studies including chemistry and biology. He also visited
Dresden, where he saw collections of the
Elector of Saxony, to which he referred later in his thinking on art. On a personal level, this Dresden visit of six weeks from August 1797 saw Schelling meet the brothers
August Wilhelm Schlegel and
Karl Friedrich Schlegel and his future wife Caroline (then married to August Wilhelm), and
Novalis.
Jena period After two years tutoring, in October 1798, at the age of 23, Schelling was called to
University of Jena as an
extraordinary professor of philosophy. His time at Jena (1798–1803) put Schelling at the centre of the intellectual ferment of
Romanticism. He was on close terms with
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, who appreciated the poetic quality of the
Naturphilosophie, reading
Von der Weltseele. As the prime minister of the
Duchy of Saxe-Weimar, Goethe invited Schelling to Jena. Schelling was nevertheless unsympathetic to the ethical idealism that animated the work of
Friedrich Schiller, the other pillar of
Weimar Classicism. Schelling's later
Vorlesung über die Philosophie der Kunst (
Lecture on the Philosophy of Art, 1802/03) closely reviewed Schiller's theory of the
sublime. In Jena, Schelling was on good terms with Fichte at first, but their different conceptions, about nature in particular, led to increasing divergence. Fichte advised him to focus on transcendental philosophy: specifically, Fichte's own
Wissenschaftlehre. But Schelling, who was becoming the acknowledged leader of the Romantic school, rejected Fichte's thought as cold and abstract. Schelling was especially close to August Wilhelm Schlegel and his wife,
Caroline. Schelling grew close to Caroline's young daughter, Auguste Böhmer. Caroline began considering abandoning Schlegel to marry Schelling. Auguste died of
dysentery in 1800; many blamed Schelling, who had overseen her treatment. Robert Richards, however, argues in his book
The Romantic Conception of Life that Schelling's interventions were most likely irrelevant, as the doctors called to the scene assured everyone involved that Auguste's disease was inevitably fatal. Auguste's death drew Schelling and Caroline closer. Schlegel moved to Berlin, and Goethe helped Schlegel pursue a divorce. Schelling's time at Jena came to an end, and on 2 June 1803 he and Caroline were married away from Jena. Their marriage ceremony was the last occasion Schelling met his school friend the poet
Friedrich Hölderlin, who was already mentally ill at that time. In his Jena period, Schelling resumed his close relationship with Hegel. With Schelling's help, Hegel became a private lecturer (
Privatdozent) at
Jena University. Hegel wrote a book titled ''Differenz des Fichte'schen und Schelling'schen Systems der Philosophie
(Difference between Fichte's and Schelling's Systems of Philosophy'', 1801), and supported Schelling's position against his idealistic predecessors, Fichte and
Karl Leonhard Reinhold. Beginning in January 1802, Hegel and Schelling published the
Kritisches Journal der Philosophie (
Critical Journal of Philosophy) as co-editors, publishing papers on the philosophy of nature, but Schelling was too busy to stay involved with the editing and the magazine was mainly Hegel's publication, espousing a thought different from Schelling's. The magazine ceased publication in the spring of 1803 when Schelling moved to
Bamberg.
Move to Würzburg and personal conflicts After Jena, Schelling went to
Bamberg for a time to study the
Brunonian system of medicine (the theory of
John Brown) with and
Andreas Röschlaub. From September 1803 until April 1806 Schelling was professor at the new
University of Würzburg. This period was marked by considerable flux in his views and by a final breach with Fichte and Hegel. In Würzburg, a conservative Catholic city, Schelling found many enemies among his colleagues and in the government. He moved then to
Munich in 1806, where he found a position as a state official, first as associate of the
Bavarian Academy of Sciences and Humanities and secretary of the
Royal Academy of Fine Arts, afterwards as secretary of the Philosophische Klasse (philosophical section) of the Academy of Sciences. 1806 was also the year Schelling published a book in which he criticized Fichte openly by name. In 1807 Schelling received the manuscript of Hegel's
Phaenomenologie des Geistes (
Phenomenology of the Spirit or
Mind), which Hegel had sent to him, asking Schelling to write the foreword. Surprised to find critical remarks directed at his own philosophical theory, Schelling wrote back, asking Hegel to clarify whether he had intended to mock Schelling's followers who lacked a true understanding of his thought, or Schelling himself. Hegel never replied. In the same year, Schelling gave a speech about the relation between the visual arts and nature at the Academy of Fine Arts; Hegel wrote a severe criticism of it to one of his friends. After that, they criticized each other in lecture rooms and in books publicly until the end of their lives.
Munich period Without resigning his official position in Munich, he lectured for a short time in
Stuttgart (
Stuttgarter Privatvorlesungen [Stuttgart private lectures], 1810), and seven years at the
University of Erlangen (1820–1827). In 1809 Caroline died, just before he published
Freiheitsschrift (
Freedom Essay), the last book published during his life. Three years later, Schelling married one of her closest friends,
Pauline Gotter, in whom he found a faithful companion. During the long stay in
Munich (1806–1841) Schelling's literary activity came gradually to a standstill. It is possible that it was the overpowering strength and influence of the Hegelian system that constrained Schelling, for it was only in 1834, after the death of Hegel, that, in a preface to a translation by
Hubert Beckers of a work by
Victor Cousin, he publicly expressed antagonism towards Hegelianism (and, by extension, his earlier thought). The antagonism certainly was not new; the 1822 Erlangen lectures on the history of philosophy expressed the same in a pointed fashion, and Schelling had already begun the treatment of
mythology and
religion which, in his view, constituted the true positive complements to the negative of logical or speculative philosophy.
Berlin period by
Hermann Biow (1804–1850) Public attention was powerfully attracted by hints of a new system which promised something more positive, especially in its treatment of religion, than the apparent results of Hegel's teaching. The appearance of critical writings by
David Friedrich Strauss,
Ludwig Feuerbach, and
Bruno Bauer, and the disunion in the Hegelian school itself, expressed a growing alienation from the then dominant philosophy. In Berlin, the headquarters of the Hegelians, this found expression in attempts to obtain officially from Schelling a treatment of the new system that he was understood to have in reserve. Its realization did not come about until 1841, when Schelling's appointment as Prussian privy councillor and member of the Berlin Academy, gave him the right, a right he was requested to exercise, to deliver lectures in the university. Among those in attendance at his Berlin lectures were
Søren Kierkegaard (who said Schelling talked "quite insufferable nonsense" and complained that he did not end his lectures on time),
Mikhail Bakunin (who called them "interesting but rather insignificant"),
Jacob Burckhardt,
Alexander von Humboldt (who never fully accepted Schelling's
natural philosophy, but admired his work), future church historian
Philip Schaff and
Friedrich Engels (who, as a partisan of Hegel, attended to "shield the great man's grave from abuse"). The opening lecture of his course was attended by a large and appreciative audience. The enmity of his old foe,
H. E. G. Paulus, sharpened by Schelling's success, led to surreptitious publication of a verbatim report of the lectures on the philosophy of revelation. Schelling did not succeed in obtaining legal condemnation and suppression of this piracy and he stopped delivering public lectures in 1845. ==Work==