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Bohme

life, writings, ideas and name

BOHME, betne, or BOHM, Jakob, one of the most renowned mystics of modern times: b. 1575, Altseidenberg, a village in upper Lusatia; d. Gorlitz, November 1624. 136hme, being the son of poor peasants, re mained to his 10th year without instruction, and employed in tending cattle. Raised by con templation above his circumstances, and undis turbed by exterior influences, a strong sense of the spiritual, particularly of the mysterious, was awakened in him, and he saw in all the work ings of nature upon his mind a revelation of God, and even imagined himself favored by di vine inspirations. He became afterward a shoe maker; and this sedentary life seems to have strengthened his contemplative habits. In 1594 Bohme became a master shoemaker in Gorlitz, married, and continued a shoemaker during his life, but withdrew himself more and more from the world. If we take into view his retirement, his piety, his rich and lively imagination, his imperfect education, his philosophical desire for truth, together with his abundance of ideas, and his delusion in considering many of those ideas as immediate communications of the Deity, we have the sources of his doctrine and his works. His first work, 'Aurora, oder die Mor genrote,' was written in 1616, and contains his revelations on God, man and nature. This gave rise to a prosecution against him; but he was acquitted, and called upon from all sides to con tinue writing. One of his most important

works is 'Description of the Three Pnnciples of the Divine Being.) His works contain pro found and lofty ideas, mingled with many absurd and confused notions, but the basis of his thought is the theory that everything exists and becomes intelligible only through its op posite. The first collection of his writings was made in Holland in 1675 by Henry Betke; a more complete one in 1682 by Gichtel (10 vols., Amsterdam), from whom the followers of Bohme, a religious sect highly valued for their silent, virtuous and benevolent life, have re ceived the name Gichtelians. Another edition appeared in Amsterdam in 1730 under the title 'Theosophia Revelate (2 vols.) ; the most complete in six volumes. In England, also, 13ohme's writings have found many admirers. William Law published an English translation of them, two volumes. A sect, taking their name from Bohme, was likewise formed in England, and in 1697 Jane Lead, an enthusiastic admirer of his, established a particular society for the explanation of his writings, under the name of the Philadelphists. In very recent years his views have taken on fresh importance, his fundamental principle having been perceived as akin to that underlying the philosophical systems of Spinoza, Schelling and Hegel. Consult Hartmann, 'Life and Doctrines of Bohme' (1893).