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[[Category:Writer|Carus, Paul]]
[[Category:Writers|Carus, Paul]]
[[Category:Editor|Carus, Paul]]
[[Category:Editors|Carus, Paul]]
[[Category:Nationality German|Carus, Paul]]
[[Category:Nationality German|Carus, Paul]]
[[Category:Nationality Naturalized American|Carus, Paul]]
[[Category:Nationality Naturalized American|Carus, Paul]]

Revision as of 22:10, 2 January 2016

Dr. Paul Carus was a German-American writer and editor based in Chicago and La Salle, Illinois.

Early life and education

Open Court Publishing Company

1893 World's Parliament of Religions

Dr. Carus attended the World's Parliament of Religions in Chicago in 1893. At that time he had the opportunity to meet many visiting representatives of Eastern religions.

He invited Dharmapala to give a lecture tour in the United States in 1896 and again in 1902-04. Carus also befriended the Japanese Zen master Soyen Shaku (1859-1919), whom he met at the Parliament. After attending the Parliament Soyen traveled to Sri Lanka to study Pali and Theravada Buddhism for three years. At Carus's request Shaku also sent one of his students, D. T. Suzuki, to the United States to translate Buddhist works for Carus's Open court Publishing Company. [1]

Work with D. T. Suzuki

Suzuki, D. t. Açvaghosha's Discourse on the Awakening of Faith in the Mahâyâna. 1900. Translation of the Chinese version of the Sanskrit manuscript: Mahayanasraddhotpadasastra by Asvaghosa.

Personal life

Dr. Carus and his wife Mary had six children.

Philosophy as a Science

Dr. Carus wrote of his intentions in research and science,

The aim of all my writings centers in the endeavor to build up a sound an tenable philosophy, one that would be as objective as any branch of the natural sciences. I do not want to propound a new philosophy of my own but to help in working out philosophy itself, fiz., philosophy as a science; and after many years of labor in this field I have coe to the conclusion, not only that it is possible, but also that such a conception of the world is actually preparing itself in the minds of men. [2]

Writings

Dr. Carus wrote hundreds of articles for The Open Court and The Monist, but none for Theosophical journals. Theosophists were keenly aware of his work however, and the Union Index of Theosophical Periodicals lists 24 articles that were reprints or reviews of Carus works.

Open Court Publishing Company in Chicago was responsible for issuing about 75 books by Dr. Carus, and has continued reprinting some of them since. A summary of his writings until 1909 is found in Philosophy as a Science: a Synopsis of Writings of Dr. Paul Carus, Containing an Introduction Written by Himself, Summaries of His Books, and a List of Articles to Date. The extent of his writing is evident to the reader who sees 64 pages of book synopses and 95 pages briefly summarizing each article.

The following sections exemplify the range of his books.

The Gospel of Buddhism

The Gospel of Buddha: According to Old Records was the most influential work of Carus. In addition to numerous English editions beginning with the 1894 edition from Open Court Publishing Co., the book was translated into Japanese, German, Chinese, French, Hebrew, Spanish, Polish, Telugu, and Hindi. These are some of the editions:

  • The Gospel of Buddha: According to Old Records. 1894. 308 pages. Available at Internet Archive.
  • The Gospel of Buddha. Open Court Publishing Co. 1895. 3rd revised edition. 275 pages.
  • The Gospel of Buddha. Open Court Publishing Co. 1915. 310 pages. "Compiled from ancient records by Paul Carus; illustrated by O. Kopetzky." Available at Hathitrust and Internet Archive.
  • The Gospel of Buddha: According to Old records. Open Court Publishing Co. 2004. Revised and enlarged edition. 522 pages." Paul Carus; introd. by Martin J. Verhoeven; foreword by Donald S. Lopez; pref. by Blouke Carus; illustrations by Keichu Yamada and Olga Kopetzky."
  • Hanna, Boyd. The Sayings of Buddha. 1957. Derived from the Carus work.

Fiction and poetry

  • Karma, a story of Buddhist ethics. 1903. Fiction. Illustrated by Kwason Suzuki.
  • Nirvâna, a story of Buddhist psychology. 1902. Fiction. Illustrations by Kwasong Suzuki. Available at Google Books.

Non-fiction

  • Açvaghosha's Discourse on the Awakening of Faith in the Mahâyâna. 1900. Translation with D. T. Suzuki of the Chinese version of the Sanskrit manuscript: Mahayanasraddhotpadasastra by Asvaghosa. Available at Hathitrust and Internet Archive.
  • Amitabha : a Story of Buddhist Theology. 1906. Available at Hathitrust and Internet Archive. Translated into German and Thai.
  • The Bride of Christ; a Study in Christian Legend Lore. 1908. Available at Hathitrust and other sources.
  • Chinese Thought; an Exposition of the Main Characteristic Features of the Chinese World-conception. 1907. 195 pages. Abridged version published as "Chinese Astrology in La Salle, 1974.
  • The Dharma, or, The Religion of Enlightenment: an Exposition of Buddhism. 1896. Available at Hathitrust and Internet Archive.
  • Eros and Psyche: a Fairy-tale of Ancient Greece, Retold after Apuleius. 1900. Illustrations by Paul Thumann. Available at Internet Archive and Hathitrust.
  • God; an Enquiry into the Nature of Man's Highest Ideal and a Solution of the Problem from the Standpoint of Science. 1908. Available at Hathitrust, Freading, and other sources.
  • Goethe, with Special Consideration of His Philosophy. 1915. 357 pages. Available at Hathitrust and Internet Archive.
  • The History of the Devil and the Idea of Evil, from the Earliest Times to the Present Day. 1900. Available at Hathitrust and other sources.
  • Kant and Spencer; a Study of the Fallacies of Agnosticism. 1899. Available at Hathitrust and Google Books.
  • K'ung Fu Tze; a Dramatic Poem. 1915. Available at Hathitrust and Internet Archive.
  • Philosophy as a Science: a Synopsis of Writings of Dr. Paul Carus, Containing an Introduction Written by Himself, Summaries of His Books, and a List of Articles to Date. 1909. 213 pages. Available at Internet Archive, Hathitrust, and other sources. Reprinted 1911, 1968.
  • Personality, with Special Reference to Superpersonalities and the Interpersonal Character of Ideas. 1911. Available at Internet Archive.
  • The Pleroma, an Essay on the Origin of Christianity. 1909. 163 pages. Available at Hathitrust, Internet Archive, and other sources.
  • The Point of View, an Anthology of Religion and Philosophy Selected from the Works of Paul Carus. 1927. Catherine E. Cook, editor.
  • Primer of philosophy. Chicago, 1893. Available at Hathitrust and Internet Archive.
  • The Rise of Man; a Sketch of the Origin of the Human Race. 1907. Available at Hathitrust and Internet Archive.
  • The Story of Samson and Its Place in the Religious Development of Mankind. 1907. Available at Hathitrust, Internet Archive, and other sources.]
  • Truth on Trial; an Exposition of the Nature of Truth, Preceded by a Critique of Pragmatism and an Appreciation of Its Leader. 1911.Available at Hathitrust, Internet Archive, and other sources. Reprinted by several publishers.

Notes

  1. Michael C. Howard. Transnationalism and Society: An Introduction. (Jefferson, NC: McFarland and Co., 2011). 199.
  2. Paul Carus, Philosophy as a science: a synopsis of writings of Dr. Paul Carus, containing an introduction written by himself, summaries of his books, and a list of articles to date. (Chicago, 1909), 2.