Abstract
The renowned playwright and philosopher Gotthold Ephraim Lessing
(1729-81) was one of the leading figures of the German Enlightenment.
His philosophical writings shifted German intellectual life away from
the optimistic (and frequently abstract and deductivist) rationalism of
his predecessors Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz and Christian Wolff. Though
embedded in the Christian theological tradition, Lessing embraced
Enlightenment Deism. He criticized religious prejudice and advocated
freedom of thought and expression, a cosmopolitan view of humanity, and
a rational, philosophical approach to religion. In his dramatic poem
Nathan the Wise (1779), Lessing
presented his vision of a religious truth based on justice, reason, and
charity. Lessing modeled the title character on his lifelong friend
Moses Mendelssohn, the preeminent German Jewish philosopher of the
Enlightenment. Lessing’s plays – which include the comedy
Minna von Barnhelm (1767) and the
“bourgeois tragedy” Emilia Gallotti
(1772) – are still part of the standard repertoire of German-speaking
theater companies today. His philosophical and theatrical works exerted
a major influence on Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832), Friedrich
Schiller (1759-1805), and other writers of that generation. Oil on
canvas by Heinrich Lessing (1856-1911) after a painting by Anton Graff
(1736-1813), 1771.