Rudolf Otto (25 September 1869 – 7 March 1937) was a German Lutheranism theologian, philosopher, and comparative religionist. He is regarded as one of the most influential scholars of religion in the early twentieth century and is best known for his concept of the numinous, a profound emotional experience he argued was at the heart of the world's religions. While his work started in the domain of liberal Christian theology, its main thrust was always apologetics, seeking to defend religion against naturalist critiques, making him a more conservative figure. Otto eventually came to conceive of his work as part of a science of religion, which was divided into the philosophy of religion, the history of religion, and the psychology of religion.
Life
Born in
Peine near
Hanover, Otto was raised in a pious Christian family.
He attended the Gymnasium Andreanum in
Hildesheim and studied at the universities of Erlangen and Göttingen, where he wrote his
dissertation on
Martin Luther's understanding of the
Holy Spirit (
Die Anschauung von heiligen Geiste bei Luther: Eine historisch-dogmatische Untersuchung), and his
habilitation on
Immanuel Kant (
Naturalistische und religiöse Weltansicht). By 1906, he held a position as
professor, and in 1910 he received an honorary doctorate from the University of Giessen.
Otto's fascination with non-Christian religions was awakened during an extended trip from 1911 to 1912 through North Africa, Palestine, British India, China, Japan, and the United States. He cited a 1911 visit to a Morocco synagogue as a key inspiration for the theme of the Holy he would later develop. Otto became a member of the Prussian parliament in 1913 and retained this position through the First World War. In 1917, he spearheaded an effort to simplify the system of weighting votes in elections. He then served in the post-war constituent assembly in 1918, and remained involved in the politics of the Weimar Republic.
Meanwhile, in 1915, he became ordinary professor at the University of Breslau, and in 1917, at the University of Marburg's Divinity School, then one of the most famous Protestant seminary in the world. Although he received several other calls, he remained in Marburg for the rest of his life. He retired in 1929 but continued writing afterward. On 6 March 1937, he died of pneumonia, after suffering serious injuries falling about twenty meters from a tower in October 1936. There were lasting rumors that the fall was a suicide attempt but this has never been confirmed. He is buried in the Marburg cemetery.
Thought
Influences
In his early years Otto was most influenced by the
German idealist theologian and philosopher Friedrich Schleiermacher and his conceptualization of the category of the religious as a type of emotion or consciousness irreducible to ethical or rational
epistemology.
In this, Otto saw Schleiermacher as having recaptured a sense of holiness lost in the Age of Enlightenment. Schleiermacher described this religious feeling as one of absolute dependence; Otto eventually rejected this characterization as too closely analogous to earthly dependence and emphasized the complete otherness of the religious feeling from the mundane world (see below).
In 1904, while a student at the University of Göttingen, Otto became a proponent of the philosophy of
Jakob Fries along with two fellow students.
Early works
Otto's first book,
Naturalism and Religion (1904) divides the world
ontology into the mental and the physical, a position reflecting Cartesian dualism. Otto argues
consciousness cannot be explained in terms of physical or neural processes, and also accords it epistemological primacy by arguing all knowledge of the physical world is mediated by personal experience. On the other hand, he disagrees with
Descartes' characterization of the mental as a rational realm, positing instead that rationality is built upon a nonrational intuitive realm.
In 1909, he published his next book, The Philosophy of Religion Based on Kant and Fries, in which he examines the thought of Kant and Fries and from there attempts to build a philosophical framework within which religious experience can take place. While Kant's philosophy said thought occurred in a rational domain, Fries diverged and said it also occurred in practical and aesthetic domains; Otto pursued Fries' line of thinking further and suggested another nonrational domain of the thought, the religious. He felt intuition was valuable in rational domains like mathematics, but subject to the corrective of reason, whereas religious intuitions might not be subject to that corrective.
These two early works were influenced by the rationalism approaches of Immanuel Kant and Jakob Fries. Otto stated that they focused on the rational aspects of the divine (the "Ratio aeterna") whereas his next (and most influential) book focused on the nonrational aspects of the divine.
The Idea of the Holy
Otto's most famous work,
The Idea of the Holy was one of the most successful German theological books of the 20th century, has never gone out of print, and is available in about 20 languages. The central argument of the book concerns the term
numinous, which Otto coined. He explains the numinous as a "non-rational, non-sensory experience or feeling whose primary and immediate object is outside the self". This mental state "presents itself as
ganz Andere,
wholly other, a condition absolutely
sui generis and incomparable whereby the human being finds himself utterly abashed."
[ Cited by: ] According to
Mark Wynn in the
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy,
The Idea of the Holy falls within a paradigm in the philosophy of emotion in which emotions are seen as including an element of
perception with intrinsic epistemic value that is neither mediated by thoughts nor simply a response to
physiology factors. Otto therefore understands religious experience as having mind-independent phenomenological content rather than being an internal response to belief in a divine reality. Otto applied this model specifically to religious experiences, which he felt were qualitatively different from other emotions.
Otto felt people should first do serious rational study of God, before turning to the non-rational element of God as he did in this book.
Later works
In
Mysticism East and West, published in German in 1926 and English in 1932, Otto compares and contrasts the views of the medieval German Christian mystic
Meister Eckhart with those of the influential
Hindu philosophy Adi Shankara, the key figure of the
Advaita Vedanta school.
Influence
Otto left a broad influence on theology, religious studies, and philosophy of religion, which continues into the 21st century.
Christian theology
Karl Barth, an influential Protestant theologian contemporary to Otto, acknowledged Otto's influence and approved a similar conception of God as
ganz Andere or
totaliter aliter,
thus falling within the tradition of apophatic theology.
Otto was also one of the very few modern theologians to whom C. S. Lewis indicates a debt, particularly to the idea of the
numinous in
The Problem of Pain. In that book Lewis offers his own description of the numinous:
German-American theologian Paul Tillich acknowledged Otto's influence on him, as did Otto's most famous German pupil, Gustav Mensching (1901–1978) from Bonn University. Otto's views can be seen in the noted Catholic Church theologian Karl Rahner's presentation of man as a being of transcendence. More recently, Otto has also influenced the American Franciscan friar and inspirational speaker Richard Rohr.
Non-Christian theology and spirituality
Otto's ideas have also exerted an influence on non-Christian theology and spirituality. They have been discussed by
Orthodox Judaism theologians including Joseph Soloveitchik
and Eliezer Berkovits.
[Berkovits, Eliezer, God, Man and History, 2004, pp. 166, 170.] The Iranian-American
Sufi religious studies scholar and public intellectual
Reza Aslan understands religion as "an institutionalized system of symbols and metaphors ... with which a community of faith can share with each other their numinous encounter with the Divine Presence."
Further afield, Otto's work received words of appreciation from Indian independence leader
Mohandas Gandhi.
Aldous Huxley, a major proponent of perennialism, was influenced by Otto; in
The Doors of Perception he writes:
Religious studies
In
The Idea of the Holy and other works, Otto set out a paradigm for the study of religion that focused on the need to realize the religious as a non-reducible, original category in its own right. The eminent Romanian-American historian of religion and philosopher
Mircea Eliade used the concepts from
The Idea of the Holy as the starting point for his own 1954 book,
The Sacred and the Profane.
The paradigm represented by Otto and Eliade was then heavily criticized for viewing religion as a
sui generis category,
until around 1990, when it began to see a resurgence as a result of its phenomenological aspects becoming more apparent.
Ninian Smart, who was a formative influence on religious studies as a secular discipline, was influenced by Otto in his understanding of religious experience and his approach to understanding religion cross-culturally.
Psychology
Carl Gustav Jung, the founder of analytic psychology, applied the concept of the
numinous to
psychology and
psychotherapy, arguing it was therapeutic and brought greater self-understanding, and stating that to him religion was about a "careful and scrupulous observation… of the
numinosum".
The American
Episcopalianism priest John A. Sanford applied the ideas of both Otto and Jung in his writings on religious psychotherapy.
Philosophy
The philosopher and sociologist
Max Horkheimer, a member of the
Frankfurt School, has taken the concept of "wholly other" in his 1970 book
Die Sehnsucht nach dem ganz Anderen ("longing for the entirely Other").
Walter Terence Stace wrote in his book
Time and Eternity that "After Kant, I owe more to Rudolph Otto's
The Idea of the Holy than to any other book."
Other philosophers influenced by Otto included
Martin Heidegger,
Leo Strauss,
Hans-Georg Gadamer (who was critical when younger but respectful in his old age),
Max Scheler,
Edmund Husserl,
Joachim Wach,
and
Hans Jonas.
Other
The war veteran and writer Ernst Jünger and the historian and scientist
Joseph Needham also cited Otto's influence.
Ecumenical activities
Otto was heavily involved in
ecumenical activities between Christian denominations and between Christianity and other religions.
He experimented with adding a time similar to a
Quaker moment of silence to the Lutheran
liturgy as an opportunity for worshipers to experience the numinous.
Works
A full bibliography of Otto's works is given in Robert F. Davidson,
Rudolf Otto's Interpretation of Religion (Princeton, 1947), pp. 207–9
In German
-
Naturalistische und religiöse Weltansicht (1904)
-
Die Kant-Friesische Religions-Philosophie (1909)
-
Das Heilige – Über das Irrationale in der Idee des Göttlichen und sein Verhältnis zum Rationalen (Breslau, 1917)
-
West-östliche Mystik (1926)
-
Die Gnadenreligion Indiens und das Christentum (1930)
-
Reich Gottes und Menschensohn (1934)
English translations
-
Naturalism and Religion, trans J. Arthur Thomson & Margaret Thomson (London: Williams and Norgate, 1907) originally
-
The Life and Ministry of Jesus, According to the Critical Method (Chicago: Open Court, 1908), .
-
The Idea of the Holy, trans JW Harvey (New York: OUP, 1923; 2nd edn, 1950; reprint, New York, 1970), originally
-
Christianity and the Indian Religion of Grace (Madras, 1928)
-
India's Religion of Grace and Christianity Compared and Contrasted, trans FH Foster (New York; London, 1930)
-
'The Sensus Numinis as the Historical Basis of Religion', Hibbert Journal 29, (1930), 1–8
-
The Philosophy of Religion Based on Kant and Fries, trans EB Dicker (London, 1931) originally
-
Religious essays: A supplement to 'The Idea of the Holy', trans B Lunn, (London, 1931)
-
Mysticism East and West: A Comparative Analysis of the Nature of Mysticism, trans BL Bracey and RC Payne (New York, 1932) originally
-
'In the sphere of the holy', Hibbert Journal 31 (1932–3), 413–6
-
The original Gita: The song of the Supreme Exalted One (London, 1939)
-
The Kingdom of God and the Son of Man: A Study in the History of Religion, trans FV Filson and BL Wolff (Boston, 1943)
-
Autobiographical and Social Essays (Berlin: Walter de Gruyter, 1996),
See also
Further reading
-
Almond, Philip C., 1984, 'Rudolf Otto: An Introduction to his Philosophical Theology', Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.
-
Davidson, Robert F, 1947, Rudolf Otto's Interpretation of Religion, Princeton
-
Gooch, Todd A, 2000, The Numinous and Modernity: An Interpretation of Rudolf Otto's Philosophy of Religion. Preface by Otto Kaiser and Wolfgang Drechsler, Berlin and New York: Walter de Gruyter. .
-
Ludwig, Theodore M (1987), 'Otto, Rudolf' in Encyclopedia of Religion, vol 11, pp. 139–41
-
Raphael, Melissa, 1997, Rudolf Otto and the concept of holiness, Oxford: Clarendon Press
-
Mok, Daniël (2012). Rudolf Otto: Een kleine biografie. Preface by Gerardus van der Leeuw. Amsterdam: Uitgeverij Abraxas. .
-
Mok, Daniël et al. (2002). Een wijze uit het westen: Beschouwingen over Rudolf Otto. Preface by Rudolph Boeke. Amsterdam: De Appelbloesem Pers (i.e. Uitgeverij Abraxas). (print), 978-90-79133-00-0 (ebook).
-
Moore, John Morrison, 1938, Theories of Religious Experience, with special reference to James, Otto and Bergson, New York
External links