Schopenhauer is remembered as a gloomy man, and in fairness, he clearly was. However, a closer look at what has survived paints a man who was not simply “doom and gloom” every minute. Overall, he was a deeply pessimistic man with a temperament and philosophy both drawn toward suffering, conflict, restraint, and tranquility, rather than joy, celebration, or optimism. History records him not exactly happy, but also not just theatrically miserable. History paints a picture of someone who sought pockets of peace in a world he thought was fundamentally painful.
His pessimistic worldview was deeply influenced by Kant’s work. He extended Kant’s distinction between phenomena and noumena by introducing his concept of the Will. While Kant viewed the noumenal world as unknowable, Schopenhauer identified it as a blind Will driving all living beings. This Will propels existence, but for humans it also deepens suffering, because our heightened self-awareness makes us conscious of frustration, longing, and especially death. In that sense, Schopenhauer stands within a long philosophical thread: the effort by many to reckon with the burden that we too, someday, will die.
Schopenhauer believed that desire is the engine of suffering. We want, we strive, we briefly satisfy a craving, and then new cravings appear. For that reason, he thought peace comes not from feeding desire but from reducing it. He saw art and compassion as temporary relief, but his deepest answer was ascetic renunciation: the denial of the will-to-live through detachment, restraint, and the quieting of desire. In this, he is often compared to Buddhist themes, though his view is darker and more pessimistic than the Buddhist Middle Way.
Relation to the Idea of Ideas: The Idea of Ideas is closer to Kant than to Schopenhauer in one key respect: it keeps the split neutral. It distinguishes the material world from our ideas about it without interpreting reality itself as a cosmic struggle of blind desire. TST does not deny suffering, but it also does not make suffering the essence of existence. Instead, it focuses on how empirical, rational, and irrational ideas relate to reality, and on how moderation and applied philosophy can help us live well.
Schopenhauer also sits in an older area of philosophy: the long effort to name what animates life from within. Philosophers have called it soul, spirit, entelechy, will, and more. These are not the same idea, but they all circle a similar human intuition: that living beings seem to have an inner principle, not just an outer form. In that sense, Schopenhauer’s Will belongs to a broad and ancient conversation about what drives life itself.
I frequently quote the translated Aristotle line,
“The whole is greater than the sum of its parts.”
Aristotle’s entelechy gives this same impulse to name the “greater” a more teleological shape, as something that emerges through form, development, and fulfillment. Later traditions spiritualize it, but Schopenhauer darkens it into restless striving. He gives that larger conversation one of its darkest expressions.