Article
PIETISM AND EMPIRICISM IN SWEDENBORG
AS PARALLEL TO
SPIRITUALITY AND SCIENCE IN RUSSIAN THOUGHT
Friday, July 7, 1995
I am a newcomer to Russian studies, with a great deal to learn, still very largely
dependent on secondary sources.[1] What I have discovered that prompts me to make a
presentation is that when the Russian intelligentsia were exploring Western thought during
the nineteenth century, Swedenborg was one of the thinkers who attracted special
attention. To quote Anders Hallengren,
Toward the close of the eighteenth century, many translations came from the circle around
Nikolai Ivanovitch Novokov. These were works of the Bavarian mystic Friedrich Christoph
Oetinger (1702-1782), Emanuel Swedenborg's well-known friend by letter and translator, who
had a good deal to say about Swedenborg in his works. This was equally true of Heinrich
Jung-Stilling (1740-1817), in whom Tsar Alexander I came to be particularly interested,
and whose output was considerable. As the author of Scenes from the Spiritual World and
Spiritual Teachings, Jung-Stilling was known for his citation and documentation relating
to Swedenborg's paranormal abilities and his contacts with the other world. By these
routes, at first indirectly, Swedenborgian texts were introduced and found interested
individuals both in Moscow and St. Petersburg, but also outside Russia proper, in the
Ukraine.[2]
He found attentive readers. To quote Hallengren again,
Other cultural contributors who served as channels of Western impulses were Nikolai
Strakhov, the philosophical mentor of Dostoevsky and Tolstoi, the spiritualist Aleksandr
Aksakov, who translated Swedenborg into Russian, and the Ukraine's great philosopher, P.
D. Yurkevitch, who ranked Boehme, Leibniz, and Swedenborg as the West's last great
philosophers.[3]
Given these indications of Swedenborg's relevance, and given his relative obscurity in
academic circles, I hope I may be of service as one who has hold of the Swedenborgian end
of the string, so to speak. What was Swedenborg's relevance or appeal? Certainly some of
the individuals who became involved with him were also involved in spiritualism, as was A.
K. Aksakov, who translated Swedenborg's Heaven and Hell into Russian. Russian philosophy,
however, was wrestling with far deeper issues, to some extent stimulated by the challenge
of Western thought.
Specifically, the results of Western empiricism and rationalism were impressive; and yet
in Russia as in the West itself, they seemed to threaten dearly held religious and ethical
values. The centrality of this issue may be represented in Solovyov's insistence that the
whole truth could be attained only when empiricism, rationalism, and mysticism were
brought into complementary rather than competetive relationship.[4] I suspect that some of
the appeal Swedenborg held for Russians may be traced to the distinctive way in which
these three approaches came together for him.[5] The major purpose of this paper is to
sketch this "way."
The empiricism-spirituality issue is presented in striking, almost typological form in
Swedenborg's youth. His father, Jesper Swedberg, was a Lutheran clergyman of strong
Pietistic leanings. That is, he had little use for the exclusive stress on orthodoxy of
belief that characterized the main stream of post-Reformation Lutheranism,[6] but insisted
on what he regarded as Christ-like living. Perhaps as a legacy of Scandanavian folklore
and shamanism, there was an accompanying vivid belief in the presence of spiritual beings
and forces in the mundane world of everyday dealings. Jesper was by all accounts a
forceful individual, and Swedenborg reports his own childhood engagement in the
theological discussions that took place in their home.[7]
However, when Swedenborg was eleven and a student at Uppsala University, his father was
made bishop of Skara and moved to his new responsibility. He left Emanuel with his sister
Anna and her new husband, Erik Benzelius, then Uppsala's librarian. Benzelius was an avid
Cartesian,[8] and Swedenborg chose to study with the faculty of natural philosophy rather
than with the faculty of theology. He would later refer to his brother-in-law as his
"second father," as one who understood and appreciated his scientific interests in a way
in which Jesper apparently did not.[9]
Following his graduation, he followed a course of action which demonstrated his
entrancement with empirical science. As soon as the means were available, he travelled to
London, where he "read Newton daily," repeated Boyle's chemical experiments, made
astronomical observations at Flamsteed's observatory, and served as a kind of overseas
purchasing agent for his University's scientific library and laboratories. He followed
similar interests on the Continent; and when he finally returned to Sweden in 1714, he did
so with a portfolio of mechanical inventions as evidence of his learning.
His most earnest desire was to found a Swedish observatory, but Sweden was impoverished by
the imperial ambitions of Charles XII, and nothing so "impractical" had any chance of
funding.[10] He wound up working as a civil engineer for Sweden's most prominent inventor,
Christopher Polhem (also spelled Polhelm and Polhammar), and founding Sweden's first
technical journal, Daedalus Hyperboreus.
He was eventually appointed to the Bergskollegium, the Swedish federal department of
mines, and would serve it with distinction until 1746. One of his major contributions was
a definitive study of European smelting technology, parts of which were translated into
French.[11] His clear intent was to enable his resource-rich but technologically backward
country[12] to compete with the Continent. The volumes in fact established him as a
scientist of international repute.[13]
After his father's death in 1735, while he continued his government work, his private
investigations took a different turn. His desire to reconcile science and religion
surfaced in earnest, and in an explicit "search for the soul" he undertook an exhaustive
study of human anatomy. What better place to find the soul than in "her kingdom," the
body?[14] In the course of this work, he would make the fundamental discovery that the
blood was purified in the lungs by an interchange with air. He would identify the
functions of the ductless glands and locate some motor functions in the cortex of the
brain.[15]
His first published effort was favorably reviewed, but he himself regarded it as having
failed in its primary purpose.[16] He had not found the soul in her kingdom: the most that
could be said was that he had described a kingdom in which a soul could be at home. He
resolved to try again, this time looking at the data more closely, and published three
volumes out of a proposed series of eleven. He was in his early fifties by this time, and
there was little indication as yet of the spiritual contacts for which he was to become
famous. To all intents and purposes, he was a prominent government figure, with an
international reputation in empirical science.
However, he had begun to have and to trust occasional experiences of photism--seeing a
vivid mental "light" when he arrived at a valid insight. He now spoke of going a step
further: "The faculty of apprehending the goodness of all forms, consequently also the
secret delights of truth, is inherent and as it were connate in our senses . . . . the
rational mind . . . unhesitatingly distinguishes the truths of things . . . for they
sweetly soothe and please, and call forth deeply hidden affections."[17]
He was on the verge of a major transition. He began to record his dreams, and to interpret
them as offering guidance for his researches.[18] Again, it seems typological that he
recorded his dreams in the same little notebook he used for keeping a diary of his
travels--the empiricist is at work still, but in a different realm. During the Easter
weekend in 1744, he had a Christ-vision calling him to some unspecified new task, and a
year later, in London, he had a second vision which included a specific call to a new
career as expositor of spiritual meaning of Scripture and which marked the beginning of
some twenty-seven years of paranormal experience.
He proceeded cautiously. He went back to work at the Bergskollegium for more than a year,
kept a running record of his experiences of the spiritual world, reviewed his college
Greek and Hebrew, and compiled his own Bible index. He drafted the beginnings of a
substantial Bible commentary, which he left incomplete.[19] His "spiritual diary," the
record of his paranormal experiences, shows him reflecting on their meanings and
systematizing what he was learning from them.[20]
It was not until 1749, four years after the pivotal London vision, that the first of his
theological volumes was published.[21] This was the first of an eight-volume,
verse-by-verse, often word-by-word exegesis of Genesis and Exodus predicated on the
assumption that everything earthly has its spiritual counterpart, and that there is a
consistent "language" of interpretation.[22]
He had learned this language through his paranormal experiences, and would frequently
gloss his interpretation with remarks such as "When lambs appear in the World of Spirits,
they know that the [attendant but invisible] angels are talking about still deeper forms
of the good, and about innocence."[23]Equally significantly, he began using the chapter
breaks to present material in topical rather than Biblical sequence, and the first topic
he chose, which ran for twenty-two chapters, was the spiritual world. He was aware that
this would strain credulity, but in his view, this was his empirical base.[24]
It was also the point at which Kant attacked him. In his satirical Dreams of a
Spirit-Seer,[25] there is a great deal of name-calling, but little systematic critique.
He raises the fundamental empirical issue in his preface, as follows:
Shall he [the philosopher], on the other hand, admit even one of these stories [of
spiritual experience]? How important would be such an avowal, and what astonishing
consequences we should see before us, if we could suppose even one such occurrence to be
proved?[26]
In fact, he acknowledged a strong similarity between Swedenborg's metaphysical system and
his own:
Moreover, I undergo this misfortune, that the testimony which I have stumbled upon, and
which resembles so uncommonly the philosophical creation of my own brain, looks
desperately misshapen and foolish, so that I must rather expect the reader to consider my
reasons as absurd on account of their relation to such confirmations, than that he will
consider these latter reasonable on account of my reasons. I therefore declare without
more ado that in regard to the alleged examples I mean no joke, and I declare once for
all, that either one has to suppose more intelligence and truth to be in Swedenborg's
works than a first glance will reveal, or that it is only chance when he coincides with my
system; . . .[27]
In fact, the association of Swedenborg with spiritualism and clairvoyance all too readily
obscures his dedication to disciplined and critical thinking. It is worth noting that in
treating the "laws of divine providence," the first "law" listed is that we should act
"from freedom, according to reason," and freedom and rationality are described as gifts of
God, which providence guards as sacred.[28] We may see in this his rejection of
ecclesiastical superstition and obscurantism as well as his distaste for monarchical
absolutism. Free inquiry might threaten the church, but not the essence of Christianity as
Swedenborg saw it.
For Swedenborg's sense of the convergence of empiricism and theology, a comparison of two
of his late works is informative. In his Divine Love and Wisdom (1763) and True Christian
Religion (1771), he made very similar statements about the nature of the Divine. The
former work, however, begins with a disquisition on the nature of love--everyone knows
that it exists, but not what it is.[29] He argues from this experiential/empirical basis
to the spirituality and infinity of the Divine. In the opening chapter of the latter work,
he comes to the same conclusions, but does so on the basis of copious Biblical passages.
It seems clear that a) the one work is addressed to the empirical thinker, and the other
to the convinced Christian, and b) that in Swedenborg's view, empiricism and Scripture
yield the same message.
The last image I would present of the way in which the heritages of Swedenborg's "two
fathers" came together is one particularly dear to Swedenborgians. It is a from a vision
he reports in True Christian Religion, ¶ 508: He tells of seeing a temple in heaven, which
he describes in some detail. Then,
. . . when I came closer, I saw this inscription over the door--Now it is permitted; which
meant that now it is permitted to enter the mysteries of faith with one's intellect.[30]
*************
Thus far I proceed with some confidence, with a sense of having a firm grasp on my end of
the string. Nothing is further from my intent than to demonstrate Swedenborg's "influence"
on Russian thought. This tends to suggest that Russian thought is the passive element in
the relationship, which is surely not the case at all.[31] I suspect rather that there may
be that kind of consonance of minds which prompts clarification and discovery, which
challenges as much by provocative disagreement as by direct enlightenment because there is
a sense that "we are talking about the same thing, we are talking the same language."
I am struck, for example by Berdyaev's description of Solovyov's epistemology: "Thus, in
his theory of apprehension, empiricism, rationalism and mysticism are abstract principles
which are false in their exclusive self-assertion, but do contain partial truths which
enter into the integral apprehension of a free theosophy."[32] I hope I have managed to
indicate that empiricism, rationalism, and mysticism all made their contributions to
Swedenborg's thought. In reading Solovyov's treatment of Swedenborg in the
Brockhaus-Ephron Encyclopedia, I am intrigued by what information he had and did not have.
His comments on the theology are accurate and insightful, he is aware of some surprisingly
small details, and yet there are gaps in unexpected places. I hope to track down enough of
the nineteenth century sources he lists to see what may lie behind this combination. The
evidence of appreciation is there, and may well be worth exploring.[33] In specific regard
to the confluence of empiricism, mysticism, and rationalism, Solovyov's epithets for
Swedenborg suggest that he saw the Swede as just such a "triple threat": ******
***********; ************* ********** * ***** ************* (***** ***** ****) ******
****** *******--"learned naturalist, later spirit-seer, and (after Jakob Böhme) most
remarkable theosoph of the new era."
I suspect that in its own way, Russian spirituality felt itself threatened by Western
science. That threat had been felt in Sweden as well, and Swedenborg devoted his life to
bringing science and spirituality out of opposition and into alliance. The threat was
certainly felt in the nineteenth-century Europe that beckoned to the Russian
intelligentsia, and Swedenborg was mined especially by individuals with interests in
spirituality. Friedemann Horn has traced this process in regard to Schelling, and in so
doing illuminates a network that included Oetinger, Goethe, and Jung-Stilling as well.[34]
Swedenborg would have agreed wholeheartedly with Solovyov that if mysticism rejected
rationalism or empiricism, if rationalism or empiricism rejected mysticism, the search for
truth was hobbled. I doubt that this is any less true, or any less relevant, at the close
of this century than it was at the close of the last.
**FOOTNOTES**
I am grateful to Prof. Lawrence G. Jones for generous help with Russian texts.
Anders Hallengren, "Swedenborg i Östeuropa," in Väldarnas Möte No. 1,2, (1992), pp. 19f. (tr. GF Dole). Cf. also Hallengren's
"Russia, Swedenborg, and the Eastern Mind" in The New Philosophy Vol. XCIII No. 4 (Oct.-Dec. 1990), pp. 391-407.
ibid., p. 20.
Cf. Jonathan Sutton, The Religious Philosophy of Vladimir Solovyov: Towards a Reassessment (New York: St. Martin's Press,
1988), p. 49: "He did not consider it appropriate for the theologian to ignore the findings of the natural scientist or the
philosopher, nor that any of these three specialists should regard their own work as self-sufficient."
While Swedenborg did not see himself as a rationalist in the strictest sense of the term, he does make use of a priori
arguments on occasion. It may be noted that Solovyov characterized the cosmological schema of Swedenborg's (pre-theological)
Principia as following the rationalism of Leibnitz and Wolff. Cf. his article *********** in the Brockhaus-Ephron Encyclopedia
(1900), p. 75, col 2. I have only a photocopy of this, and therefore no bibliographical data. The relevant passage is cited in n.
13 infra.
Cf. Robert D. Preus, The Theology of Post Reformation Lutheranism (St. Louis: Concordia, 1970).
Cf. Cyriel Sigstedt, The Swedenborg Epic (New York: Bookman Associates, 1952), p. 5. Cited there from Rudolph L. Tafel,
Documents concerning the Life and Character of Emanuel Swedenborg (London: Swedenborg Society, 1875, 1877 [Vol II]); II, pp.
279f.
Descartes had visited Sweden in the previous century, and in fact had died there. Swedish excitement over his thought and
resistance to it may in some ways parallel Russian ambivalence about Western thought. In 1689, Charles XI had decreed that
scientific thought should be free of religious control on the one hand, but that it should not intrude itself into matters of
faith on the other. This left theology free to be dogmatic and irrational, and science free to be materialistic and amoral.
Whether or not they in fact were so, each has at times seen these characteristics in the other.
ibid., p. 16.
The turning point in Charles' career was, of course, the battle of Poltava in 1709. Swedenborg's attitude toward this
charismatic monarch is worthy of separate investigation. The reader is referred to two excellent studies of early (1714-15) works
of Swedenborg (or more properly at this point in his life, Swedberg: his name was changed when the family was ennobled in 1719)
recently published in Sweden, Festivus applausus in Caroli XII in Pomeraniam suam adventum. Ed., with introduction, translation,
and commentary by Hans Helander (Uppsala: Acta Universitatis Upsaliensis, 1985), and Emanuel Swedenborg: Camena Borea, Ed., with
introduction, translation, and commentary by Hans Helander (Uppsala: Acta Universitatis Upsaliensis, 1988). The former is a paean
of praise to the monarch after his escape from Turkish imprisonment, while the latter is a set of allegories clearly implying
that his militarism had proved ruinous.
This was a three-volume work. The first volume, Principia rerum naturalium sive novorum tentaminum phaenomena mundi
elementaris philosophice explicandi ("The principles of natural things, or of new efforts to explain the phenomena of the
material world philosophically"), presents a scientific cosmogony beginning at "the infinite," and includes a clear nebular
hypothesis as well as conjecture that matter is energy (conatus) in vortical motion. The second volume, Regnum subterraneum sive
minerale de ferro deque modis liquationum ferri per Europam passim in usum receptis; deque conversione ferri crudi in chalybem;
de vena ferri et probatione ejus; pariter de chymicis praeparatis et cum ferro et victriolo ejus factis experimentis, etc. ("The
subterranean or mineral kingdom in respect to iron and the methods of smelting it which are in use throughout Europe; further the
method of converting crude iron to steel; the various methods of assaying iron ore; likewise chemical preparations and
experiments made with iron and its vitriol, etc., etc."), deals with the technology of iron and steel processing, and the third,
Regnum subterraneum sive minerale de cupro et orichalco, deque modus liquationum cupri per Europam passim in usum receptis; de
secretione ejus ab argento; de conversione in orichalcum, inque metalla diversi generis; de lapide calaminari; de zinco; de vena
cupri et probatione ejus; pariter de chymicis praeparatis, et cum cupro factis experimentis, etc., etc. ("The subterranean or
mineral kingdom in respect to copper and brass, the method of smelting copper in use throughout Europe; its separation from
silver; the conversion of copper into brass and metals of various kinds; calamine stone; zinc; copper ore and how to assay it;
likewise various chemical preparations and experiments made with copper, etc., etc.") deals with copper in the same way. The
three volumes were published in 1734 by Friedrich Hekel of Leipzig and Dresden. Further details, including information on English
translations, may be found in William R. Woofenden, Swedenborg Researcher's Manual (Bryn Athyn, PA: Swedenborg Scientific
Association, 1988).
He was by this time an active member of the Riddarhus, the House of Nobles, and his efforts to advance Swedish technology are
quite evident in his memoranda to that body. Again, there may be parallels between this Swedish self-image and that of Russia in
the nineteenth century. If so, it would contribute to a subtle sense that this thought was congenial--"we folk who are trying to
catch up to Europe, we folk on the fringes, understand each other."
Solovyov took note of this in his article on Swedenborg in the 1900 edition of the Brockhaus Encyclopedia (I am not able to
reproduce completely the orthography): ** 1733-36 **. *** ***** ************** ** *****i* * ******i*; *** ****** **** <
philosophica et mineralia>>. ****** *** **** *********, ***** ************ ****** ************ ********** (*** **** *. **********
** ********-************ ***i********), *************** ******* ******** ********* ******* ********i*. ** **** ******* ***** *.
********** ****** ****** ******i* ** *****i* *****. ********** ****** ****, ** ****** ****i*** ** ********** *******i*, *********
*. ********** ******** *************i*. ****i* ****** ******** * *. *********i* ****i* ******** * ******i***. ****** ******* *.
******* ***** ***** ********* ******* ** ******** **** * ****** ******** ******** *** ********i* ********** ****** ******
******** ***** ************ ********** ******* ************ ** *****. *** ****i* **** ********* **** ****i******* ********** **
*********i*. *****i* <> ********* *. ******* ************ ** ******* *i**; *** **** ******* ** ******** *****
************* ******i* *****. ("In 1733-36 he again travelled in Bohemia and Germany, where he published his `Opera Philosophica
et Mineralia.' The first of these volumes included, after establishing general philosophical principles (for which Swedenborg
espoused the rationalism of Leibnitz and Wolff), independent decisions on special questions of scientific cosmology. In this
area, Swedenborg's work retains major importance to this day in the history of science. The famous chemist Dumas, in his lectures
on chemical philosophy, called Swedenborg the actual founder of crystallography. Other scientists have noted in Swedenborg
anticipations of the theories of Dalton and Berzelius. Before Herschel, Swedenborg identified the place of our solar system in
the Milky Way, and he showed before Lagrange that the deviation of the planetary orbits had a tendency to return to their norms
after stated intervals of time. The two other volumes contained a series of tracts on mineralogy. The publication of the "Opera"
gave Swedenborg widespread renown in the learned world; he was elected to honorary membership in the St. Petersburg Academy of
Science.") The New Jerusalem Magazine of November 1830 cites the "forty-fifth number of the Foreign Quarterly Review (London)" as
reporting Dumas' statement. I have not yet tracked it down.
On this matter, Solovyov seems to have missed the point. The Latin title of Swedenborg's work, Oeconomia regni animalis in
transactiones divisa: quarum haec prima, de sanguine, ejus arteriis, venis, et corde agit: anatomice, physice, et philosophice
perlustrata. Cui accedit Introductio ad psychologiam rationalem (The dynamics of the soul's domain, divided into transactions:
this first of which deals with the blood, its arteries, veins, and heart: explored anatomically, physically, and philosophically.
To which is added an Introduction to a rational psychology." The second volume was subtitled quarum haec secunda de cerebri motu
et cortice, et de anima humana agit: anatomice, physice, et philosophice perlustrata ["this second of which deals with the motion
of the brain and its cortex and the human soul: explored anatomically, physically, and philosophically"]), indicates clearly that
the regnum animale he is talking about is not "the animal kingdom" in the usual (English) sense of that phrase, but rather "the
kingdom of the soul"--drawing a meaning for animale directly from the cognate anima, "soul." Solovyov cites the title in Russian
(*** ******i* ********* *******), probably drawn from the English translation he mentions (The Economy of the Animal Kingdom, far
more misleading in English than is the Latin). He then feels it necessary to explain that the book is not about zoology: **
****** *i************ *******i*** *. ** ******** *********** * ******i* *********; ** ******i* ** ************* ****** *** *****
** *********: ("In these two biological studies, Swedenborg was not concerned with categorizing and describing animals--to
zoology in the usual sense they make absolutely no reference"). Brockhaus p. 76. col. 1.
Swedenborg commented that he had decided to lay aside the scalpel and rely on the discoveries [i.e., the empirical findings]
of others, since he had noticed a tendency to value the results of his own dissections more highly than those of others. This
self-evaluation probablly lies behind Solovyov's remark that the anatomical works contained no new discoveries--**** ******
******* **** ******** ***** **** *****************; ** ***** ******** ****** ******i*; *** ***** ******** ** ********* ** ****
******* ************ ("The author himself counted his comprehensive work only as preparatory: not making new discoveries in any
respects, he everywhere relied on the most recent scientific advances available to him."). Brockhaus p. 76, col. 1.
Cf. Emanuel Swedenborg, The Animal Kingdom, Considered Anatomically, Physically, and philosophically, tr. James John Garth
Wilkinson (London: W. Newbery, 1843), ¶ 19.
ibid., ¶ 2. In the prologue of this work, Swedenborg emphatically rejects a priori rationalism under the name of "synthesis"
and emphatically espouses empiricism under the name of "analysis." SYNTHESIS, quae a Causis & Principiis rationum suarum filum
auspicatur, & usque ad Causarum Effectus . . . [est] non nisi quam Analysis proletaria, praecox & vaga . . . ¶ 7. This is
because Sola mente divinare Principia, & exinde se per consequentia certo tramite deducere ad posteriora, est modo Entium &
Potentium Superiorum, Spirituum, Angelorum, Ipsiusque Omniscientis Numinis, qui scilicet summam incolunt lucem (¶ 10). In
contrast, ANALYSIS a Causatis, Effectibus, & Phoenomenis per viam sensuum Corporis ingressis telam suae ratiocinationis inchoat,
& usque ad Causas causarumque causas . . . procedit (¶ 11). Haec via sola ducit ad Principia atque Veritates, seu ad Superiora, &
fere ad Coelestia, nec alia nobis Terrigenis aperta esse videtur (¶ 12). "SYNTHESIS, which picks up its thread of reasoning from
causes and principles, and [proceeds] from there to the effects of the causes . . . ]is] nothing but lower-class, premature, and
rambling analysis;" because "To divine principles by means of the mind alone, and to travel down from there on a proven pathway
through corollaries to consequences, is a property of higher beings and spirits alone and and of the omniscient deity himself,
who of course dwell in the highest light." In contrast, "ANALYSIS picks up its thread from things caused, from effects and
phenomena that come into us through our physical senses, and proceeds . . . from there to causes and to the causes of causes."
"This way alone leads to principles and truths, or to the higher and almost heavenly things; nor does any other way seem to be
open to us earth-born creatures." The capacities of the mind to intuit truths must have solid data to work with. As is customary
in Swedenborgian studies, references are not to pages but to paragraph numbers, which Swedenborg used faithfully, and which are
uniform in all editions.
The dreams have recently been republished in English translation with a very thoughtful commentary by Wilson Van Dusen
(Swedenborg's Journal of Dreams, 1743-1744 [New York: Swedenborg Foundation, 1986]).
This has been published in Latin under the title Adversaria in libros veteris testamenti, 4 volumes, ed. J. F. I. Tafel
(Tubingen: 1847-54), and in English translation as The Word of the Old Testament Explained, nine volumes, tr. & ed. by A. Acton
(Bryn Athyn: Academy of the New Church, 1928-51).
J. F. I. Tafel, ed., Eman. Swedenborgii Diarii spiritualis, 5 parts (London: Wm. Newbery, 1843-47). For an English version,
cf. W. H. Acton, A. W. Acton, and F. Coulson, trs., The Spiritual Diary. Records and Notes made by Emanuel Swedenborg between
1746 and 1765 from his experiences in the spiritual world (London: Swedenborg Society, 1962, reprints). A new critical, Latin
text has been completed by J. Durban Odhner and is in process of publication in Bryn Athyn, PA, Tafel's edition being long out of
print. There are also plans for Dr. Odhner to make a new translation on the basis of the revised text.
Emanuel Swedenborg, Arcana Coelestia, quae in Scriptura Sacra seu Verbo Domini sunt, detecta ("Heavenly mysteries disclosed,
which are in Sacred Scripture or the Word of the Lord") 8 vol's. (London: 1749-56).
This is the language of "correspondences" treated in Appelgren's and Hjern's papers. It attracted the attention of Baudelaire,
and might be worthy of attention by someone familiar with the Russian symbolist poets.
Emanuel Swedenborg, Arcana Coelestia (New York: Swedenborg Foundation, frequent reprints), ¶ 2179:2.
Cf. op. cit., ¶ 68: Non me latet quod plures dicturi, quod nusquam aliquis loqui possit cum spiritibus et angelis quamdiu in
corpore vivit; et plures, quod phantasis sit; alii, quod talia tradidero ut fidem captem; alii aliter; sed haec nihil moror, nam
vidi, audivi, sensi. "I am not oblivious to the fact that many people will say that no one can talk with spirits and angels
during this physical life; and many will say that this is hallucination. Some will say that I relate these things to gain
credence, and others will have other explanations. But I am in no way deterred by this, for I have seen, I have heard, I have
felt."
The English translation used here is that of Emanuel F. Goerwitz, Dreams of a Spirit-seer, Illustrated by Dreams of
Metaphysics (London: New-Church Press, 1915).
Goerwitz, op. cit.,, p. 38. "Soll er auch nur eine einzige dieser Erzahlungen als warscheinlich einräumen? wie wichtig wäre
ein solches Geständnis, und in welche erstaunlichen Folgen sieht man hinaus, wenn auch nur e i n e solche Begebenheit als
bewiesen vorausgesetzt könnte?" The German is cited from Immanuel Kant, Träume eines Geistersehers, erläutert durch Träume der
Metaphysik, herausgegeben von Karl Kehrbach (Leipzig: Philipp Reclam jun., n.d.), p. 4.
Goerwitz, op. cit., pp. 100f. "Zudem habe ich das Unglück, dass das Zeugniss, worauf ich stosse und was meiner philosophischen
Hirngeburt so ungemein ähnlich ist, verzweifelt missgeschaffen und albern aussieht, so dass ich viel eher vermuthen muss, der
Leser werde, um der Verwandtschaft mit solchen Bestimmungen willen, meine Vernunftgründe für ungereimt, als jene um dieser willen
für vernünftig halten. Ich sage demnach ohne Umschweif, dass, was solche anzügliche Vergleichungen anlangt, ich keinen Spass
verstehe, und erkläre kurz und gut, dass man entweder in Swedenborgs Schriften, mehr Klugheit und Wahrheit vermuthen müsse, als
der erste Anschein blicken lässt, oder dass es nur so von ohngefähr komme, wenn er mit meinem System zusammentrifft . . . .",
Kant, op. cit.,, p. 51.
[27]: The issue of Swedenborg's "spiritual empiricism" and Kant's reaction to it has been ably explored by Robert H. Kirven,
"Swedenborg and Kant Revisited: The Long Shadow of Kant's Attack and a New Response," in Erland Brock et al., eds, Swedenborg and
His Influence (Bryn Athyn, PA: Academy of the New Church, 1988), pp. 103-120. A doctoral dissertation by Gottlieb Florschütz is,
I believe, in process of publication in Germany. This deals in considerable detail with the position taken by Kant later in his
life, as reconstructed from notes on his lectures. Two articles by Florschütz summarizing the main points have been published in
the Zürich Swedenborgian periodical Offene Tore, and the Swedenborg Foundation expects to publish an English translation in
monograph form during the present year.
Emanuel Swedenborg, Sapientia Angelica de Divina Providentia (Amsterdam, 1764), (____________, The Divine Providence [New York:
Swedenborg Foundation, frequent reprints]) ¶ 71: Quod lex divinae providentiae sit, ut homo ex libero secundum rationem agat,
"That it is a law of divine providence that a human being should act from freedom according to reason." Cf. ibid. ¶ 73: . . .
quod binae illae facultates sint a Domino apud hominem, "that these two abilities are from the Lord in/with the human being"; and
¶ 96, quod Dominus binas illas facultates apud hominem illibatas ac ut sanctas in omni Divinae suae Providentiae progressione
custodiat, "that the Lord keeps these two abilities in/with the human being unimpaired and guards them as sacred through the
whole course of his divine providence." The centrality of human freedom to issues of heaven and hell should be borne in mind in
connection with Alexander Mouravyov's efforts toward the abilition of serfdom. Cf. Hallengren, "Russia, Swedenborg, and the
Eastern Mind," p. 399.
"Homo novit quod amor sit, sed non novit quid amor est." Emanuel Swedenborg, Sapientia Angelica de Divino Amore et de Divina
Sapientia (Amsterdam: 1763) ¶ 1.
" Postea, cum propius accessi, vidi Scripturam super porta, hanc, Nunc licet; quod significabat, quod nunc liceat
intellectualiter intrare in arcana fidei." Emanuel Swedenborg, Vera Christiana Religio (Amsterdam: 1771), ¶ 508.
This thought struck me as particularly important in regard to the relationship between Swedenborg and Blake, where there is no
doubt that the latter engaged himself with the former. "It is demeaning to Blake to describe the relationship in terms of
`influence,' as though Swedenborg were the master and Blake the student, the one active and the other passive. It is truer to
human experience simply to say that Swedenborg's descriptions helped Blake to understand his own experience, that in a way, Blake
recognized himself in Divine Love and Wisdom. He would not have been Blake had he not also rebelled abainst Swedenborg, had he
allowed his own creative integrity to be violated by submission to authority" (George F. Dole, "Introduction," in Harvey F.
Bellin amd Darrell Ruhl, eds., Blake and Swedenborg: Opposition is True Friendship [New York: Swedenborg Foundation, 1985], p.
2).
Nikolai Berdyaev, The Russian Idea, R. M. French, tr., (Hudson, NY: Lindisfarne Press, 1992), p. 184.
I am grateful to Leonard Fox for a reference "from Dmitrij C*iz*evskij's article "Swedenborg bei den Slaven," in his book Aus
zwei Welten (`S-Gravenhage: Mouton & Co., 1956)," pp. 279f.: "1877 schreibt er [Solovyov] (am 27. April), dass er nach seinen
Studien der Boehmianer Gichtel, Gottfried Arnold, Poradge, doch nur Paracelsus, Boehme, und Svedenborg als `wirklich bedeutend'
(********* ****) ansehen könne." By personal letter, 24 November 1992.
Friedemann Horn, Schelling und Swedenborg: Ein Beitrag zur Problemgeschichte des deutschen Idealismus und zur Geschichte
Swedenborgs in Deutschland: nebst einem Anhang über K. C. F. Krause und Swedenborg sowie Ergänzungen zu R. Schneiders Forschungen
(Zürich: Swedenborg-Verlag, 1954). The epistemological issue was a live one, and Swedenborg's case was taken seriously. For
information about life after death, Schelling wrote in Clara, one must either have died and returned like the Armenier in Plato,
or else "like the Swedish spirit-seer, who ventures to speak about it in greater detail, have had one's internals opened in some
other way, so as to be able to look into that other world" [. . . oder wie der schwedische Geisterseher müsste ihm auf andere Art
sein Inneres geöffnet werden, üm in jene Welt hineinschauen zu können, der hiervon genauer zu reden sich unterstände." Cited from
Horn, op. cit., p. 13.