Frithjof Schuon Archive
A Resource on Frithjof Schuon’s Life and Teachings
This site is the most comprehensive repository of information pertaining to the life and work of Frithjof Schuon (1907-1998); materials include published articles, personal correspondence, private papers, poems, photographs, and works of art.
Frithjof Schuon is the preeminent spokesman of a school of thought that focuses on the expression and explanation of the Perennial Philosophy. This philosophy expresses the timeless metaphysical truths underlying the diverse religions; its written sources include the revealed Scriptures as well as the writings of the great spiritual masters. Because these truths are permanent and universal, the point of view may thus be called “Perennialist.” The Perennial Philosophy is an important perspective that can inform the study of Comparative Religion, Anthropology, Art, Literature, and many related areas.
Schuon was a philosopher in the tradition of Plato, Shankara, and Eckhart, and he wrote over two dozen books on religion, metaphysics, sacred art, and the spiritual path. Describing Schuon’s first book, The Transcendent Unity of Religions, Nobel laureate T. S. Eliot wrote, “I have met with no more impressive work in the comparative study of Oriental and Occidental religion”, and world-renowned religion scholar Huston Smith said of Schuon, “The man is a living wonder; intellectually apropos religion, equally in depth and breadth, the paragon of our time”. Schuon’s books have been translated into over a dozen languages and are respected by academic and religious authorities alike. Schuon’s writings remain unequaled in setting forth the principles of perennialist thought as well as their applications on the spiritual, aesthetic, and other related levels.
Besides his accomplishments as an author, Frithjof Schuon was also a gifted artist and poet. His art and his poetry flowed naturally from his awareness of God’s Presence in creation. Catalogue notes from a museum display of Schuon’s art explain that “springing as they do from his rich and unique personality, Schuon’s paintings…have a rare value, not only as regards artistic merit but above all because of their gift for manifesting the human soul at its noblest and most beautiful—hence, as a vehicle for Truth.” The sense of the sacred figures as much in Schuon’s art and poetry as in his philosophical writings.
The story of Schuon’s life presented in these pages demonstrates how his own intellect, personality, and actions reflected the elevated metaphysics, spiritual insights, and artistic creations that comprised his body of work.
This online resource brings together, through a survey of his many-faceted dimensions, Frithjof Schuon’s important contributions to the manifestations of the timeless Truth.
Featured Books
Esoterik als Grundsatz und als Weg
The content includes a profound metaphysical reflection on the double face of the world based on the concept of the veil, insights into cosmology faithful to tradition based on a doctrine of numbers, and fundamental and practical essays on anthropology: virtues, sexuality, love of God and love of neighbor.
Featured Poems
Adastra and Stella Maris: Poems by Frithjof Schuon-Outlook
You think you own your earthly life;
Adastra and Stella Maris: Poems by Frithjof Schuon-Virtue
Morality can be of different kinds:
Adastra and Stella Maris: Poems by Frithjof Schuon-Strange
During the Middle Ages, stories about saints
Featured Articles
Frithjof Schuon and Our Times
Swedish philosopher Tage Lindbom surveys some central concepts of the thought of Frithjof Schuon regarding: the modern world, ontology, the “pure Absolute” and the “relative Absolute,” secular man’s illusory view of existence, the “hierarchical order of creation,” the Sovereign Good, and man’s place in the universe. Lindbom states, “The unique position of Frithjof Schuon’s message is especially characterized by the fact that he provides an answer to the spiritual misery of our times,” and “Looking back in time, we like to pause before historical figures who have produced a legacy of spiritual work that is characterized by timelessness, the Eternal. We pause before three names: Plato, Shankara, Frithjof Schuon.”
Book Review of “Sufism, Veil and Quintessence”
Frithjof Schuon on the Spiritual Life (a review of “Prayer Fashions Man”)
The late Christian traditionalist, Alvin Moore, Jr., highlights the remarkable character of Schuon’s writings in general, noting, in Christian terms, that Schuon “wrote with the inspiration of the Holy Spirit.” Moore finds that “there is much in this volume that sheds precious light on Christianity,” despite the non-sectarian approach always adopted by Schuon. The reviewer goes into some detail on Schuon’s teachings on non-dualism, particularly how these relate to Christian doctrine.
