Karl Jaspers,
Arnold Toynbee,
Eric Voegelin on the
Axis of Time
xial Age or Axial
Period (Ger. Achsenzeit, "axis time") is a term coined by
German philosopher Karl Jaspers to describe the period from 800 to
200 BC, during which, according to Jaspers, similar revolutionary thinking appeared in
Persia,
India,
China and the
Occident. The period is also sometimes referred to as the
Axis Age.
Jaspers, in his Vom Ursprung und
Ziel der Geschichte (
The Origin and
Goal of
History), identified a number of key Axial Age thinkers as having had a profound influence on future philosophies and religions, and identified characteristics common to each area from which those thinkers emerged. Jaspers saw in these developments in religion and philosophy a striking parallel without any obvious direct transmission of ideas from one region to the other, having found no recorded proof of any extensive intercommunication between
Ancient Greece, the
Middle East,
India, and China. Jaspers held up this age as unique, and one to which the rest of the history
of human thought might be compared. Jaspers' approach to the culture of the middle of the first millennium BC has been adopted by other scholars and academics, and has become a
point of discussion in the history of religion.
Jaspers argued that during the Axial Age "the spiritual foundations of humanity were laid simultaneously and independently in China, India, Persia,
Judea, and
Greece. And these are the foundations upon which humanity still subsists today."[2] These foundations were laid by individual thinkers within a framework of a changing social environment.
aspers' axial shifts included the rise of Platonism, which would later become a major influence on the
Western world through both
Christianity and secular thought throughout the
Middle Ages and into the
Renaissance.
Parsva[
3][4] (
23rd Tirthankara in
9th century BCE) and
Mahavira, (
24th Tirthankara in
6th century BCE), known as the fordmakers of Jainism lived during this age.[5] They propagated the religion of sramanas (previous Tirthankaras) and influenced
Indian philosophy by propounding the principles of ahimsa (non-violence), karma, samsara and asceticism.[6] Buddhism, also of the sramana tradition of India, was another of the world's most influential philosophies, founded by
Siddhartha Gautama, or the
Buddha, who lived during this period; its spread was aided by
Ashoka, who lived late in the period. In China, Confucianism arose during this era, where it remains a profound influence on social and religious life. Zoroastrianism, another of Jaspers' examples, is crucial to the development of monotheism[7] -- although Jaspers uses the Seleucid-era estimate for the founding of Zoroastrianism, which is actually the date of
Cyrus' unification of Persia. The exact date of
Zarathustra's life is debated by scholars with some, such as
Mary Boyce, arguing that Zoroastrianism itself is significantly older.[7]
Others, such as
William W. Malandra and
R.C. Zaehner suggest that he may indeed have been an early contemporary of Cyrus living around 600 BC.
Jaspers also included the authors of the Upanishads,
Lao Tzu,
Homer,
Socrates,
Parmenides,
Heraclitus,
Thucydides,
Archimedes,
Elijah,
Isaiah,
Jeremiah, and Deutero-Isaiah as axial figures. Jaspers held Socrates,
Confucius and Siddhartha Gautama in especially high regard, describing each of them as an exemplary human being and paradigmatic personality.
In addition to Jaspers, the philosopher Eric Voegelin referred to this age as
The Great Leap of Being, constituting a new spiritual awakening and a shift of perception from societal to individual values.Thinkers and teachers like the Buddha,
Pythagoras, Heraclitus, Parmenides, and
Anaxagoras contributed to such awakenings which
Plato would later call anamnesis, or a remembering of things forgotten.
Jaspers described the Axial Age as "an interregnum between two ages of great empire, a pause for liberty, a deep breath bringing the most lucid consciousness".To the extent that the Axial Age represents an in-between period, a period where old certainties had lost their validity and where new ones were still not ready, it has also been suggested that the Axial Age can be considered a historically liminal period.Jaspers was particularly interested in the similarities in circumstance and thought of the Age's figures. These similarities included an engagement in the quest for human meaning and the rise of a new elite class of religious leaders and thinkers in China, India and the Occident.The three regions all gave birth to, and then institutionalised, a tradition of travelling scholars, who roamed from city to city to exchange ideas. These scholars were largely from extant religious traditions; in China, Confucianism and Taoism; in India, Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism; in Persia, the religion of
Zoroaster; in
Canaan, Judaism; and in Greece, sophism and other classical philosophy
- published: 18 Sep 2012
- views: 4500