Arendt,
Hannah (1906-1975)
Hannah Arendt was born on October 14, 1906, in Hanover, in Wilhelmine
Germany. After graduating from high school in Koenigsberg in 1924,
Arendt began to study theology that fall at the University of
Marburg. where she met the young philosopher Martin Heidegger. Her
brief but passionate affair with Heidegger, began in 1925 but ended
when she went on to study at the University of Heidelberg with Karl
Jaspers. Because of the Nazi persecution in late nineteen thirties,
she fled first to France, and then to the United States, where she
obtained her citizenship and spent her rest of her life.
Arendt is a well-known German-American philosopher and political
theorist. Some of her best known books are The Origins of
Totalitarianism (1951,The Human Condition (1958), Between Past and
Future (1961), and On Revolution (1968). Her books could be
characterized by a yearning to reconstruct political philosophy
rather than to explore the devolution of political history.
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Aristotle
(384-322 B.C)
Aristotle was born in Stagira in northern Greece in 384 B.C. His father
was a notable physician, under whose influence Aristotle developed
his great observational talents. At the age of 17 Aristotle went to
Athen to study at Plato's Academy. There Aristotle stayed for 20
years and became Plato's most famous pupil, and indeed turned out to
become one of the greatest philosophers of all time. Aristotle
himself had a famous pupil, Alexander the Great. Aristotle died at
his mothers family's estate in Chalcis, on the island of Euboea in
the year of 322BC.
Aristotle was very gifted and talented in various areas. The most
central theoretical theme in his philosophy is metaphysics, the
study of beings qua being. This involved logic, semantics and
metaphysics. In his practical philosphy ethics and philosophy of
politics is the main themes. In addition Aristotle were concerned
with, and wrote on, epistemology, physics, biology, meteorology,
dynamics, mathematics, psychology, rhetoric, dialectic and
aesthetics. Aristotle by some ridiculed for his view and works and
on physics and highly celebrated for his works on biology. Others
defend his views on physics, since they are meant to be concerned
with possibility of the science, not the actual observations in
physics. In the 20th century a new appreciation has developed of
Aristotle's method and its relevance to education, literary
criticism, the analysis of human action, and political analysis.
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Barthes,
Roland (1915-1980)
Barthes, Roland was born in Cherbourg, France on November 12, 1915. His
father was a naval lieutenant and died in a sea battle one year
after Barthes was born. In 1924, the family moved to Paris, where
Barthes received his most of his education. From 1962 until his
death in 1980, he was the Director of the Institute in the Sciology
of 'Signs, Symbols and Representations' at the école des Hautes
études, where he conducted seminars on the sociologies of signs and
collective representations. In 1976, Barthes was elected to a Chair
in Literary Semiology at the Collége de France, France's most
prestigious acadmic institution. He is a frequent visitor to the
United States, where he taught in many universities.
Barthes is generally recognized as an influential poststructural
social, literary, linguistic critic. Some of his works are Critical
Essays, Criticisim and Truth, Elements of Semiology, Camera Lucida:
Reflections on Photography, New Critical Essays, The Rustle of
Language, Sollers Writer.
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Bergson, Henri Louis (1959-1941)
Bergson, Henri (1859-1941) is a French philosopher and Nobel Prize
winner of literature.Bergson was born in Paris, October 18, 1859,
and received his education at the École Normale Supérieure and the
University of Paris. He taught in various secondary schools from
1881 until 1898, when he accepted a professorship at the École
Normale Supérieure. Two years later he was appointed to the chair of
philosophy at the Collège de France. In 1914 Bergson was elected to
the French Academy. In 1927 he was awarded the Nobel Prize in
literature. He died January 4, 1941.
The influence of Bergson's earlier books, as well as his many
papers and lectures, on the philosophers, artists, and writers of
the 20th century is extensive. He was a master prose stylist and a
brilliant lecturer.Although often associated with the intuitionalist
school of philosophy, Bergsonism is too original and eclectic a
philosophy to be thus categorized. Bergson did, however, emphasize
the importance of intuition over intellect, as he promoted the idea
of two opposing currents: inert matter in conflict with organic life
as the vital urge strives toward free creative action.
Some of Bergson's works are Time and Free Will (1889; trans.
1910), Matter and Memory (1896; trans. 1911), Laughter (1900; trans.
1901), Creative Evolution (1907; trans. 1911), The Two Sources of
Morality and Religion (1932; trans. 1935).
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Binswanger, Ludwig (1881-1966)
Ludwig Binswanger was born April 13, 1881, in Kreuzlingen,
Switzerland, into a family already well established in a medical and
psychiatric tradition. He received his M.D. degree from the
University of Zurich in 1907. In 1911, Binswanger became the chief
medical director at Bellevue Sanatorium in Kreuzlingen, a position
held previously by his father and grandfather. He had a lasting
friendship with Freud, though they had their fundamental
disagreements over theory. In the early 1920's, Binswanger
cultivated an interest in Edmund Husserl, Martin Heidegger, and
Martin Buber, and turned increasingly towards an existential rather
than Freudian perspective. He is best known as an existential
therapist.
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http://www.ship.edu/ ~cgboeree/binswanger.html
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Blanchot ,
Maurice(1907-
Maurice Blanchot was born in France in 1907. He is considered one of
the key figures of postwar European thought; he has radically
transformed the understanding of the relations between philosophy
and literature. His strikingly original fiction and his penetrating
critical studies of other writers, such as Kafka, Beckett and
Mallarme, have long been recongized as influential. His oeuvre as a
whole, with its connections to the thought of Hegel and Heidegger,
Derrida, Levinas, Bataille and Foucult, places him at the forefront
of contemporary debates on philosophical and literary culture.
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Bollnow, Otto
Friedrich
Otto Friedrich Bollnow first began his career as doctor of physics
in 1925 but soon turned his interest toward philosophy and pedagogy.
Professor Bollnow is the author of 38 books and over 400 articles
and reviews in the area of education and philosophy. He has been an
influential figure of the Geisteswissenschftliche (human science)
movement in education in Germany. His pedagogical anthropology
reflects intensive studeis of Dilthey, Misch, Husserl, Lipps, and
Heidegger. Recent translated works are contained in Otto Fredrich
Bollnow, Crisis and New Beginning: Contributions to a Pedagogical
Anthropology (translated by Donald and Nancy Moss), Duquesne
University Press (1987) and a complete bibiography up to 1983 is
included in O.F. Bollnow im Gesprach, (Herausgegeben von H.-P.
Gobbeler and H.-U. Lessing) Freiburg: Karl Alber Verlag (1963).
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Buytendijk, F.J.J. (1887-1974)
The psychologist Buytendijk completed his medical studies in 1909
and was promoted in 1918 on a dissertation entitled Proeven over
Gewoontevorming in Dieren (Experiments of Habit Formation in
Animals). In 1991, he assumed the Chair in Physiology at the
University of Amsterdam, and in 1929, he was appointed at Groningen.
In 1946, he received the assignment of Chair in Theoretical
Psychology at the University of Utrecht, as well as appointments in
Nijmegen and Leuven. After 1957, he remained as emiritus at Utrecht
and returned for two more years as Chair after the death in 1964 of
one of his students and successor, Jan Linschoten. Professor
Buytendijk enjoyed an international reputation as a phenomenological
scholar. During his lifetime he published over 50 books and
monographs and over 200 articles in Dutch, German, French, Spanish,
and Japanese. His book On Pain was translated into German, English,
French, and Italian. Buytendijk's phenomenological program required
that knowledge of human existence be gathered by observations of
everyday life situations and events. He argued that the obvious
features of a lifeworld that we interpret linguistically must become
questionable and enigmatic. The book Persoon en Wereld (Person and
World) (1953) is a collection of now classic phenomenological
lifeworld studies from which Kockelmans made a selection for his
Phenomenological Psychology: The Dutch School. According to
Buytendijk, to understand human existence one does not start from
the simple or from the bottom but from the complex and from the top.
That approach is characteristic of all his work, from his Psychology
of Animals (1920) to Prolegomena of an Anthropological Physiology
(1965). For example, in the latter book, he employs considerations
about the idea of an anthropological physiology and aspects of human
embodiment and psycho-physical problems to introduce a comprehensive
study of exemplary modes of human existence and physiological
regulatory systems. He describes in detail modes of being such as
being-awake and asleep, being-tired, being-hungry, being-emotional,
as well as regulatory aspects such as posture, respiration and
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Beauvoir, Simone (1908-1986)
Simone de Beauvoir was born on Boulevard Raspail, Paris, in 1908. Her
father was a lawyer and her mother was a strict Catholic from a
bourgeois family. It is said that de Beauvoir was inspired to become
an intellectual because she was caught between her father's pagan
morals and her mother's rigid religious standards. She came to the
realization that earthly joys are not to be given up (as her
religion dictated) but instead, to be appreciated. This way of
thinking changed her for life. She lived passionately and for the
moment. In "giving up" religion she developed a deep sense of
aloneness.
When Simone was 21 she lived with her grandmother and studied
philosophy at the Sorbonne in Paris. There she met other students
and Jean-Paul Sartre. Sartre became her best friend and intellectual
equal for life. "He would prove that he was the right one to spend
time with, and he was," she said. He was "the double in whom I found
all my burning aspiration raised to the pitch of incandescence."
Simone de Beauvoir taught at the Lycee and she became a regular
amongst friends who would frequent the cafes to write and discuss.
Sartre was one of her favorite companions and they seemed to always
be interested in each other. Their relationship became famous for
the two commitments that they made to each other and the public. The
first, was a promise to remain free to love other people. The second
was to preserve their unity by practicing perfect honesty and total
openness about everything. Together, they decided that nothing would
ever be covert between them. It is said that one time, Sartre
proposed to her, and even though she was scared of a possible
separation she declined. She felt strongly that her relationship not
be institutionalized. She may have had too high of expectations, but
she maintained the courage to break concrete patterns and social
conventions and taboos.
De Beauvoir went to study German philosophy in Berlin and
remained in touch with Sartre. By 1943 Simone had completed several
works, including: The Blood of Others, and All Men are
Mortal. Simultaneously, Sartre had been writing No Exit
from his jail cell during the war. The success of their work moved
them into circles with Camus, Picasso, Bataille and other artists
and intellectuals. In Le Deuxième Sexe (The Second Sex)
(1949), de Beauvoir traced the development of male oppression
through historical, literary, and mythical sources. It shows
especially the influence of the philosopher Henri Bergson. De
Beauvoir provides a metaphysical context for the experience of
choice and freedom: "It's very complicated. These possibles which
are in me, it's necessary that little by little I kill off all but
one; it's thus that I see life: a thousand possibles in childhood,
which fall little by little until on the last day there is no longer
more than one reality, one has lived one life; but it is the élan
vital of Bergson that I'm thinking of here, which divides, allowing
tendency after tendency to fall away until only one is realized."
Simone de Beauvoir attributes the oppression of women to a
systematic objectification of the male as "normal" and the female as
"Other," leading to the loss of social and personal identity. Her
works of fiction focus on women who take responsibility for
themselves by making life-altering decisions, and the many volumes
of her own autobiography exhibit the application of similar
principles in reflection on her own experiences. She explains that,
"far from suffering from being a woman, I have on the contrary, from
the age 21, accumulated the advantages of both sexes." The Second
Sex caused outrage across the world and launched feminism as a
serious force. But shortly before writing it she met and fell in
love with an American writer, Nelson Algren who was on the brink of
success with his two most famous works, The Man with a Golden Arm
and Walk on the Wild Side. He was to become one of America's
toughest realist writers of the 20th century, and both his best
sellers were made into movies, launching the careers of Frank
Sinatra and Jane Fonda.
Their influence on each other's work was huge; Nelson Algren
repeatedly rewrote his work until Simone de Beauvoir was satisfied,
And The Second Sex would have been a very different book had de
Beauvoir not met Algren. But de Beauvoir apparantly went too far
when she wrote The Mandarins, a thinly-masked account of
their relationship. Even to the end of his life Algren savagely
attacked her in interviews for what he saw as an unforgivable
betrayal. Throughout all these upheavals Simone de Beauvoir
maintained her close friendship with Jean Paul Sartre. She traveled
and stayed with Sartre until he died in 1980. Their relationship has
gone down in history, not only for being the unity of two brilliant
thinkers, but also for its equal and genuine qualities, so uncommon
for the day. Simone de Beauvoir wrote about her life with Sartre in
Adieux: a Farewell to Sartre.
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Derrida,
Jacques (1930-)
Derrida, Jacques (1930-). Algerian born French philosopher of
deconstruction, Derrida founded the International College of
Philosophy in Paris and the International Group for Research into
the Teaching of Philosophy in 1975. He is currently attached to the
Etudes des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, Paris. Author of
Speech and Phenomena (1973), Of Grammatology (1977), Writing and
Difference (1978), Positions (1981), Spurs (1981), Dissemination
(1983), Margins of Philosophy (1983), Signeponge-signsponge (1984),
The Archaeology of the Frivolous (1987), The Ear of the Other
(1988), Of Spirit (1987) The Other Heading (1991) and Spectres of
Marx (1994) Post-structuralists and postmodernists .
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Descartes,
Rene (1596-1650)
Rene Descartes (1596-1650), French mathematician, philosopher, and
physiologist, developed first systematic account of the mind/body
relationship. Descartes was born in Touraine, in the small town of
La Haye and educated from the age of eight at the Jesuit college of
La Fléche. At La Fléche, Descartes formed the habit of spending the
morning in bed, engaged in systematic meditation. During his
meditations, he was struck by the sharp contrast between the
certainty of mathematics and the controversial nature of philosophy,
and came to believe that the sciences could be made to yield results
as certain as those of mathematics. From 1612 Descartes spent much
of his time in travel, contemplation, and correspondence before he
settled in Holland in 1628. It was during this period that he
composed a series of works that set the agenda for all later
students of mind and body. By focusing on the problem of true and
certain knowledge, Descartes had made epistemology, the question of
the relationship between mind and world, the starting point of
philosophy. By localizing the soul's contact with body in the pineal
gland, Descartes had raised the question of the relationship of mind
to the brain and nervous system.
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The Concise Encyclopedia of Western Philosophy and
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Dewey, John
(1859-1952)
John Dewey (1859-1952), born in Burlington, VT, was a well-known
American philosopher of pragmaticism, educator and psychologist.
Dewey was Professor at Minnesota (1888-89), Michigan (1889-94),
Chicago (1894-1904) and Columbia (from 1904). With C. S. Peirce and
William James, Dewey developed the philosophy of Pragmatism as well
as being a leading theorist of progressive education movement. Dewey
was a founder of the American Association of University Professors
(1915), and of the New School for Social Research(1919). John
Dewey's writings and teachings have had profound influences on
education in the United States. Dewey's philosophy of education,
pragmatism(also called instrumentalism), focused on
learning-by-doing rather than rote learning and dogmatic
instruction, the current practice of his day. Dewey was a very
prolific writer. Some of his most popular works are: My Pedagogic
Creed (1897), The School and Society (1900) Child and the Curriculum
(1902), Democracy and Education: An Introduction to the Philosophy
of Education (1916), Reconstruction in Philosophy (1920), Human
Nature and Conduct (1922), Experience and Nature (1925), The Quest
for Certainty (1929), How We Think: A Restatement of the Relation of
Reflective Thinking to the Educative Process (1933), Art as
Experience (1934), Liberalism and Social Action (1935), Logic: The
Theory of Inquiry (1938), Experience and Education (1938), Freedom
and Culture (1939).
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The Concise Encyclopedia of Western Philosophy and
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1965 |
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Dilthey,
Wilhelm(1833-1911)
Dlthey, Wilhelm (1833-1911), German philosopher of history and
culture, whose theories have especially influenced theology and
sociology. Born in Biebrich on the Rhine, he studied at Heidelberg
and Berlin. As professor of philosophy at the universities of Basle,
Kiel, Breslau, and Berlin, he fought the domination of learning by
the "objective" natural sciences; he sought to establish a
"subjective" science of the humanities (Geisteswissenschaften).
According to Dilthey, these subjective human studies (including law,
religion, art, and history) should concentrate on a
"human-social-historical reality." He held that the study of the
human sciences involves the interaction of personal experience; the
reflective understanding of experience; and an expression of the
spirit in gesture, words, and art. Dilthey argued that all learning
must be seen in the light of history; without this perspective,
knowledge and understanding can be only partial.
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Diogenes
(413B.C-323B.C)
Dogenes was born around 413 B.C in Sinope, an Ionian colony on the
Black Sea. He was once caught in counterfeiting the currency with
his father and was banished from the city. So, he went to Athens,
where he sought Antisthenes, the founder of cynicism, as his mentor.
He pursued the Cynic ideal of self-sufficiency, a life that was
natural and not dependent upon the nonessential luxuries of
civilization. Because Diogenes believed that virtue was better
revealed in action than in theory, he made his life a protest
against what he thought of as a corrupt society. He is said to have
lived in a large tub, rather than in a house, and to have gone about
Athens with a lantern in the daytime, claiming to be looking for an
honest man--but never finding one. He said Plato's lectures were a
waste of time. Alexander is reported to have said, "Had I not been
Alexander, I should have liked to be Diogenes." As it turned out,
both Diogenes and Alexander died on the same day in 323 B.C.
Alexander was 33 and Diogenes was 90.
Diogenes is generally referred to as "Diogenes the Cynic". He is
one of the most striking figures in Greek history; and the most
noted of the CYNICS. "Cynicism" derives its name from the Greek word
for "Dog". Aristotle refers to Diogenes as "The Dog" and Diogenes
seems to have accepted the nickname. Cynicism was not a "school of
philosophy", but rather an "erratic succession of individuals" which
can be said to have started with the philosopher Antisthenes.
Diogenes left behind him no system of philosophy.
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Foucault, Michel Paul, (1926-1984)
Foucault, Michel Paul, (1926-1984), French philosopher and
sexologist. Professor of the history of systems of thought, College
de France (from 1970); a leading French intellectual. Works included
Madness and Civilization (1961), a study of madness and its
treatment in the 17th century; Discipline and Punish (1975), on the
modern penal system; and a three-volume history of sextuality
(1976-1984).
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Freud,
Sigmund (1856-1939)
Freud, Sigmund (1856-1939) was born on May 6,1856 in Freiberg, Moravia
(today Czech Republic). He studied in Vienna under Ernst Brucke, and
then in Paris under Charcot; between 1882 and 1885 he worked in the
Vienna General Hospital; Later he was worked as professor of
neuropathology (1902-1938)in University of Vienna. Freud was forced
to leave Vienna by Nazi regime in 1938 and lived in London from then
on. Among his works are Studies on Hysteria (with Josef Breuer,
1985), The Interpretaion of Dreams (1900). The Psychopathology of
Everyday Life (1904) and Three Contributions to the Sextual Theory
(1905), Totem and Taboo (1913), Ego and the Id (1923), New
Introductory Lectures on Psychoanalysis (1933), and Moses and
Monotheism (1939).
Freud is considered generally as the founder of psychoanalysis.
Freud was both a medical doctor and a philosopher. As a doctor, he
was interested in charting how the human mind affected the body,
particularly in forms of mental illness, such as neurosis and
hysteria, and in finding ways to cure those mental illnesses. As a
philosopher, Freud was interested in looking at the relationship
between mental functioning and certain basic structures of
civilization, such as religious beliefs. Freud believed, and many
people after him believe, that his theories about how the mind
worked uncovered some basic truths about how an individual self is
formed, and how culture and civilization operate.
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Gadamer, H-G.
(1900-2002)
Hans-Georg Gadamer, born Feb. 11, 1900 in Marburg, Germany, is best
known for his important contribution to hermeneutics through his
major work, Wahrheit und Methode (Truth and Method). His system of
philosophical hermeneutics is a response, through an exploration of
historicity, language, and art, to Wilhelm Dilthey, Edmund Husserl,
and Martin Heidegger.
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Garfinkel, Harold
Harold Garfinkel is a well known contemporary scholar in the United
States on the studies of ethnomethodology. He invented the term
ethnomethodology and was considered the cofounder of this school of
thought. Ethnomethodology looks at how individuals communicate while
interacting. One of its key points is that ethnomethods are
reflexive accounts. These accounts are the ways in which actors do
such things as describe, criticize, and idealize specific situations
to make sense of their social world. "Studies in Ethnomethodology is
Garfinkel's best known book.
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Habermas,
Jürgen (1922-)
Jurgen Habermas is widely considered as the most influential thinker
in Germany over the past decade [1970-80]. As a philosopher and
sociologist he has mastered and creatively articulated an
extraordinary range of specialized literature in the social
sciences, social theory and the history of ideas in the provocative
critical theory of knowledge and human interests. His roots are in
the tradition of German thought from Kant to Marx, and he has been
associated with the Frankfurt School of critical theorists which
pioneered in the study of the relationship of the ideas of Marx and
Freud.'
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Hegel, Georg
Wilhelm Friedrich (1770-1831)
G. W. F. Hegel (1770-1831) was born in Stuttgart, Germany in 1770. He
studied theology at the University of Tubingen. After serving as a
tutor at Bern and Frankfurt, he was a lecturer and then a professor
at the University of Jena (1801-06), headmaster of a school in
Nuremberg (1808-16), and professor at Heidelberg (1816-18) and
Berlin (1818-31). He died in Berlin, during a cholera epidemic, on
Nov. 14, 1831.
Hegel was an idealist philosopher who has influenced many areas
of modern philosophy; his strongest influence was on Karl Marx, and
he had a negative influence on Søren Kierkegaard, whose rebellion
against his objective systematizing originated the school of
existentialism.
Hegel wrote books on philosophy, religion, and history. His most
important works include the Phenomenology of Spirit (1807), the
Science of Logic (1816), the Encyclopedia of the Philosophical
Sciences (1817), the Philosophy of Right (1821), and the Philosophy
of History (from lectures in 1822), all of which has been translated
in many languages.
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The Concise Encyclopedia of Western Philosophy and
Philosophers, Edited by J.O. Urmson, New YorK: Hawthorn Books Inc.
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Heidegger, Martin (1889-1976)
Martin Heidegger was born in the German village of Messkirch in a Roman
Catholic family. His father worked part time as a sexton at the
Sankt Martin and he wished for Martin to enter theology. After
completing a Jesuit Grammar School, Heidegger enrolls at the
University of Freiburg where he studies theology as well as
philosophy, classic Latin and Greek, history and mathematics.
Because of health problems, Martin Heidegger decides to forego a
career in theology and concentrate his studies in philosophy. When
in 1916 Husserl moves from Göttingen to Freiburg, Martin Heidegger
soon develops a close interest in phenomenology. Initially, Husserl
expected Heidegger to carry his torch, but gradually it becomes
clear that Heidegger chooses a path that takes him further and
further away from Husserl’s transcendental philosophy. This was a
great disappointment for the master. In addition to studying
Husserl’s work, Heidegger reads St. Augustine and existentialists
such as Kierkegaard. In 1923 Heidegger goes to Marburg, where he
collaborates with the theologian Bultmann. In Marburg he also writes
Being and Time, that was printed in 1927 in Husserl’s Yearbook of
Philosophical and Phenomenological Research. In 1928 Heidegger
returns to Freiburg where he is offered the chair of the retiring
Husserl who is now 70 years old. Heidegger starts his new position
with an inaugural lecture entitled “What is Metaphysics?”
In 1933 Adolph Hitler comes to power and this causes great tumult
and has dire consequences for Heidegger’s later career. In order to
prevent difficulties and on the request of his colleagues Heidegger
assumes the rectorship at the university. He also becomes a member
of the NSDAP and on May 27, 1933 Heidegger delivers his rectoral
lecture in which he makes some unfortunate statements expressing
sympathy for the party ideals and the fate of the German people. In
February 1934, within ten months already, Heidegger withdraws from
his rectorship position and he cuts his membership in the party. But
despite his distantiation from the Hitler regime Heidegger has never
been forgiven by his critics for his short nazi period. Under
post-war French occupation of Germany Heidegger is banned from a
university position. But in 1951 Heidegger is offered a honorary
professorship at the University of Freiburg. He gives lectures until
his retirement in 1959 and continues to write and publish until his
death on May 26, 1976 in Freiburg.
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Husserl,
Edmund (1859-1938)
Edmund Husserl (1859-1938) was born in a Jewish family on April 8,
1859, in Prostejov, a small town in Tsjechoslovakia between Prague
and Vienna. His favorite subject was mathematics but he also studied
literature, theology, law, philosophy and astronomy. As a student at
the University of Leipzig, he followed lectures in mathematics,
physics, and astronomy. He graduated from the University of Vienna
with a doctoral dissertation in theoretical mathematics on the
calculus of variation.
In 1887 Edmund Husserl married Malvine Steinschneider and he is
baptized in the Luthern Church. In 1888 he met the philosopher and
psychologist, Franz Brentano, under whose influence he chose an
academic career in philosophy. In the next phase of his intellectual
thought Husserl developed a descriptive psychology as an early form
of phenomenology. In 1911 he published his article "Philosophy as
Rigorous Science," in which he criticizes forms of naturalism,
historicism and psychologism. In his subsequent publications Husserl
announces the birth of the new science of phenomenology and
elaborates on the distinction between phenomenological psychology as
the foundational science for all psychological disciplines, and
transcendental phenomenology as first philosophy. After 1916 Husserl
taught at the University of Freiburg where he acquired a great
following. In 1937 he was ordered by the German authorities to leave
his Freiburg residence because of his Jewish background. By this
time, Husserl had lost most of his German students owing to the Nazi
threat. He became quite lonely and died the following year on April
28.
Even after his death, the threat continued, posing a serious
danger to the survival of his unpublished writings. The Belgian
scholar Herman van Breda, who visited Freiburg, assisted Husserl's
widow to find safe refuge in Belgium until she emigrated to the
United States. And with the help of Belgium External Affairs, van
Breda succeeded in smuggling more than 45,000 pages written in
shorthand into Belgium. In addition to Husserl's library, van Breda
also managed to save some of Husserl's furnishings, such as his desk
now on display in the Husserl Archives at the University of Louvain.
Edmund Husserl became the founder of the modern phenomenological
movement that inspired many influential scholars such as Heidegger,
Gadamer, Arendt, Levinas, Merleau-Ponty, Ricoeur, and Derrida.
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Irigaray, Luce
(1930-)
Luce Irigaray was born in Belguim in 1930. She received a Master's
Degree from the University of Louvain in 1955. Soon after that, she
taught high school in Brussells. In the early 1960s, Irigaray moved
to France and received a Master's Degree in psychology and a Diploma
in Psychopathology and a Doctorate of Letters from the University of
Paris in the subsequent years. In 1982, Irigaray held the chair in
Philosophy at the Erasmus University in Rotterdam. After working for
a short period for the Fondation Nationale de la Recherche
Scientifique in Belgium, she began to work at the National Center
for Scientific Research in Paris where she is currently Director of
Research in Philosophy.
IRIGARAY is well recognized as a French feminist philosopher.
Early receptions of Irigaray in the English-speaking world often
mistakenly labeled her an 'essentialist.' This view is now generally
considered not accurate, as a better understanding has been gained
of the complex linguistic, philosophical and psychoanalytic ideas
she wrote. Irigaray is the author of Speculum of the Other Woman
(1974) This Sex Which is Not One (1977), Amante Marine: de Friedrich
Nietzsche (1983), L'Oubli de l'Air: Chez Martin Heidegger (1983),
Ethique de la Difference Sexuelle (1984), Parler n'est jamais neutre
(1985) and Sexes et Parentes (1987).
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James,
William(1842-1910)
William James (1842--1910) was born in New York City on January 11,
1842. His father, Henry James was a Swedenborgian theologian.
William James received very good education when he was young and
travelled a lot. After graduationg from school, he worked at Havard
University, first as an instructor of anatomy and physiology, then
professor of philosophy and psychology.
In psychology James is best known for the "stream of
consciousness" approach to mental phenomena which he held in
opposition to the then dominant structuralism. James believed that
mental processes ought to be studied as processes and not as static
bits of consciousness as the structuralists had suggested. In
philosophy, he is best known for his pragmatistic philosphy.
Some of William James's works are The Principles of Psychology
(1890). A Textbook of Psychology (1892), The Will to Believe (1897),
The Varieties of Religious Experience (1902), Pragmatism, A New Name
for Some Old Ways of Thinking (1907), A Pluralistic Universe (1909),
Some Problems of Philosophy (1911), Memories and Studies (1911),
Essays in Radical Empiricism (1912).
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Jaspers,
Karl (1883- 1969)
Karl Jaspers was born 23 February 1883 in Oldenberg in Germany and
began his career first as a medical doctor. From 1921 to 1937 he was
professor of philosophy at Heidelberg, but was removed by the Nazis,
and although reinstated in 1945, he eventually settled in Basel.
Karl Jaspers was generally recognized as a existentialist
philosopher, a psychologist and theologian. In many ways, Jaspers
linked the philosophical movements of the nineteenth and twentieth
centuries. Jaspers' role in existentialism is very significant. He
coinded the term "Existenzphilosophie"-- a forerunner of the term
existentialism. He derived from Kierkegaard and Nietzche a sense of
philosophy not as a rational inverstigation of the world, but as an
individual, private and lived-out struggle. He viewed his philosophy
as active, forever changing. This approach compelled Jaspers to
protest any attempt to group him with other philosophers.
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The Concise Encyclopedia of Western Philosophy and
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Kant,
Immanuel (1724-1804)
Kant, Immanuel (1724-1804), German philosopher, considered by many
the most influential thinker of modern times. Born in Kšnigsberg
(now Kaliningrad, Russia), April 22, 1724, Kant received his
education at the Collegium Fredericianum and the University of
Königsberg. At the college he studied chiefly the classics, and at
the university he studied physics and mathematics. In 1755, he
obtained his doctorate. Thereafter, for 15 years he taught at the
university, lecturing first on science and mathematics, but
gradually enlarging his field of concentration to cover almost all
branches of philosophy.
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Kierkegaard, Soren (1813-1855)
S¿ren Kierkegaard was a Danish philosopher and religious thinker who
wrote literary and philosophical essays that reacted against
Hegelian philosophy and the state church in Denmark, setting the
stage for modern existentialism. Kierkegaard was born in Copenhagen,
the youngest of seven children. He spent his formative years under
the influence of his melancholic and devoutly religious father whose
teachings stressed the suffering of Christ. Kierkegaard went to
study philosophy and theology at the University of Copenhagen, where
his personal despair grew, leading him to the therapeutic decision
to become a cleric and marry his fiancŽe Regine Olsen, the daughter
of a treasury official. Shortly after completing his doctoral
dissertation, The Concept of Irony (1841), he broke the engagement,
partly for fear that he and his fiancŽe might lack common
philosophic interests, but he gave the impression of acting out of a
brutal and indifferent selfishness in order to make the breach
definitive. Thereafter he embarked on a life of seclusion and a
writer's career that produced a constant flow of books over the next
ten years with at least twelve major philosophical essays. Few
19th-century thinkers have surpassed Kierkegaard's influence on
20th-century thought, yet there is no "Kierkegaardian school" of
philosophy or theology, largely due to the fact that he did not
develop an all-embracing system. He has had a strong influence on
philosophers Martin Heidegger and Jean-Paul Sartre and on theologian
Karl Barth, and has also been admired as a literary stylist and
innovator.
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Kristeva, Julia
Julia Kristeva's name is widely recognised in Europe and America. In
France, where Kristeva is a practising psychoanalyst and a professor
in linguistics, she is regarded as an outstanding critic who has
popular appeal as well, and her latest book which is an extensive
study of Proust, has been highly praised by Le Monde. Julia Kristeva
arrived in Paris from Bulgaria in 1964 and has made France her home
ever since, apart from regular lecture commitments to New York's
Columbia University. Beginning as a linguist and working alongside
French semiotician Roland Barthes, Kristeva assimilated the work of
Freud and Lacan, and became an analyst as well as an academic. Her
published work is a daunting list of texts ranging from semiotics,
literary criticism, psychoanalysis, philosophy, politics, theology,
through to two semi-autobiographical novels. In recognition of her
contribution to French intellectual culture, in 1990 she was
honoured by the French government and made a "chevalier de l'ordre
des arts et des lettres."
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Lacan,
Jacques-Marie Emile, (1901-1981)
Lacan, Jacques-Marie Emile, (1901-1981), French psychoanalyst. Lacan
qualified as a Doctor of Medicine before studying psychiatry under
Henri Claude and Gatian de Clerambaut and worked at a special clinic
attached to the Prefecture of Police. Lacan was not made a full
member of the Societe Psychoanalytique de Paris until 1938 and after
disputes with the Societe, led a breakaway faction that eventually
became the Ecole Freudienne de Paris in 1964. LacanÕs seminars at
the Ecole Normale Superieure which began in 1953 were a focal point
for the French intelligentia and are published as Ecrits. The
seminars for 1964 were published in English as The Four Fundemental
Concepts of Psychoanalysis (1977).
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Langeveld, Jan Martinus (1905-1989)
Martinus J. Langeveld obtained his doctorate with a dissertation
entitled Taal en Denken in 12 tot 14 Jarige Leerlingen (Language and
Thinking in 12 to 14 Year Old Students) (1934). In 1939, he received
the Chair in Pedagogy at the University of Utrecht. Until World War
II, pedagogy was largely connected with the preparation of teachers.
In 1946, pedagogy became an independent discipline at the University
of Utrecht. Langeveld employed phenomenology at several levels. One
of Langeveld's most influential texts was Beknopte Theoretische
Pedagogiek (Concise Theoretical Pedagogy), in which he elaborated a
phenomenological pedagogy. This work was published in 15 editions
between 1946 and 1979. Langeveld analyzed the phenomena of child
rearing and educational experiences by paying close attention to
concrete and common situations and events in the lives of children
and adults. This led to remarkable results. For example, he rejected
that pedagogical authority should be related to general theory of
authority. Authority is not just a question of moral choice; rather,
authority is necessary because children require pedagogy for their
very existence and in order to be able to grow up. Langeveld then
linked this existential phenomenological starting point for the
determination of authority to his philosophical anthropology,
wherein self-responsible self-determination assumed a central value.
The phenomenological studies of the Utrecht School are now less
valid for their methodological aspirations, but they retain a high
level of validity for their practical engagement. It is remarkable
that many of Langeveld's studies—such as "De verborgen plaats in het
leven van het kind" (The Secret Place in the Life of the Child)
(1953), "Das Ding in die Welt des Kindes" (1956) (The Thing in the
World of the Child), and the "Phaenomenologie van het Leren" (1952)
(Phenomenology of Learning)—are still very readable and formative
for understanding the pedagogical lifeworld. Langeveld was quite
clear about his relation to the work of Husserl. He did not
acknowledge the scientific validity of a transcendental
subjectivity, and he replaced the transcendental reduction with the
method of immanent reduction, which stresses the situatedness and
concrete particularity of human experience. He said "yes" to
Husserl's method but "no" to his philosophical pretensions.
Phenomenology had to remain focused on the everyday concerns of the
concrete lifeworld. Within the domain of pedagogy, and at the
international level, Langeveld exercised a tremendous influence,. He
published numerous studies in the German language, some of which
were never translated into Dutch. Indeed, in Germany he had been
long recognized as a prominent "German" phenomenologist and
pedagogue.
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Levinas,
Emmanuel (1905-)
Levinas, Emmanuel (1905-), French existentialist philosopher.
Levinas was born in Lithuania, studied in Strasbourg and then
Freiburg, where he was taught by both Husserl and Heidegger in 1928.
After the war, Levinas was Professor of Philosophy at the Sorbonne
until his retirement. Levinas, an important link between German and
French existentialsim wrote The Theory of Intuition in HusserlÕs
Phenomenology (1930), Existence and Existents (1947), En Decouvrant
lÕexistence avec Husserl et Heidegger (1949), Totality and Infinity
(1969), Difficile Liberte (1963), Quatres Lectures Talmudiques
(1968), Other than Being, or, Beyond Essence (1981), Du Sacre an
Saint (1977), De Dieu qui Vient a lÕIdee (1982) and Outside the
Subject (1993).
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Marcel,
Gabriel (1889-1973)
Gabriel Marcel (1889-1973) was born in Paris, France. He is a world
renown French existentialist dramatist, philosopher and drama
critic. He was a visiting scholar at the University of Aberdeen in
Scotland 1951-1952, and at Harvard University in the United States
1961-62. In 1952 he was elected a member of the Institute of France,
to serve in its Academy of Social and Political Sciences.
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Merleau-Ponty, Maurice (1908-1961)
Maurice Merleau-Ponty was born on March 14, 1908, in
Rochefort-sur-Mer, France. As with many of his generation,
Merleau-Ponty lost his father to the war. Merleau-Ponty first
studies philosophy at the École Normale Supérieure and then becomes
a high school philosophy teacher at grammar schools in Beauvais,
Chartres, and Paris. In 1945 he is granted a Docteur ès Lettres on
the basis of two dissertations: La Structure du Comportement
(1942) and his Phénoménology de la Perception (1945) (the
Structure of Behavior and the Phenomenology of Perception)
Maurice Merleau-Ponty first receives an appointment as professor
at Lyons. Next he is appointed to teach psychology and pedagogy at
the Sorbonne in Paris, and finally at the Collège de France until
his sudden death on May 3, 1961. Merleau-Ponty developed his
existential phenomenology by drawing heavily upon the works of
Edmund Husserl, although he interprets Husserl’s transcendental
phenomenology in an existential direction. In his early years he
studied Husserl’s unpublished works at the Husserl archives in
Louvain and he read Heidegger’s Being and Time. He believed
that philosophy must also be concerned with economics, social and
political life. Together with Jean Paul Sartre he founds the journal
Les Temps Modernes His other works include Humanism and
Terror, Sense and Non-Sense, Adventures of the
Dialectic, Signs, and The Visible and the Invisible.
In the Preface to the Phenomenology of Perception
Merleau-Ponty provides an eloquent and often quoted exposition of
phenomenological inquiry. In almost all his work his writing style
is closely interrelated with his phenomenological reflections. His
texts often have a tentative character as if to emphasize that
phenomenological knowledge is always incomplete and provisional.
Merleau-Ponty is especially known for his phenomenology of the lived
body. While most of his work is written in the 1940s and 50s when
there was very little literature on embodiment available, his texts
are still extremely original, inspiring and insightful. Contemporary
authors who now have a wealth of material on which to build their
own understandings still feel the need to reckon with
Merleau-Pointy’s thinking, as if he could have foreseen all the
views that have been developed since his death in 1961.
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Nietzsche, Friederich (1844-1900)
Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche, was born on Oct. 15, 1844, and died on
Aug. 25, 1900. He was a German philosopher who, together with Soren
Kierkegaard, shares the distinction of being a precursor of
Existentialism. He studied classics at the universities of Bonn and
Leipzig, receiving his doctorate from the latter in 1869. Because he
had already published some philological articles, he was offered the
chair of classical philology at the University of Basel in
Switzerland before the doctorate was officially conferred on him. In
his first book, The Birth of Tragedy (1872; Eng. trans., 1968),
Nietzsche presented a theory of Greek drama and of the foundations
of art that has had profound effects on both literary theory and
philosophy. In this book he introduced his famous distinction
between the Apollonian, or rational, element in human nature and the
Dionysian, or passionate, element, as exemplified in the Greek gods
Apollo and Dionysus. When the two principles are blended, either in
art or in life, humanity achieves a momentary harmony with the
Primordial Mystery. This work, like his later ones, shows the strong
influence of the German philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer, as well as
Nietzsche's affinity for the music of his close friend Richard
Wagner. What Nietzsche presented in this work was a pagan mythology
for those who could accept neither the traditional values of
Christianity nor those of Social Darwinism. After resigning (1879)
from his teaching position because of ill health, Nietzsche lived in
Switzerland, Italy, and Germany for the next two decades, writing
extensively. In Thus Spake Zarathustra (1883-85; Eng. trans., 1954),
his most celebrated book, he introduced in eloquent poetic prose the
concepts of the death of God, the superman, and the will to power.
Vigorously attacking Christianity and democracy as moralities for
the "weak herd," he argued for the "natural aristocracy" of the
superman who, driven by the "will to power," celebrates life on
earth rather than sanctifying it for some heavenly reward. Such a
heroic man of merit has the courage to "live dangerously" and thus
rise above the masses, developing his natural capacity for the
creative use of passion.
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Plato (427-347
B.C)
Plato was born to an aristocratic family in Athens. His father,
Ariston, was believed to have descended from the early kings of
Athens. Perictione, his mother, was distantly related to the
6th-century B.C. lawmaker Solon. When Plato was a child, his father
died, and his mother married Pyrilampes, who was an associate of the
statesman Pericles. As a young man Plato had political ambitions,
but he became disillusioned by the political leadership in Athens.
He eventually became a disciple of Socrates, accepting his basic
philosophy and dialectical style of debate: the pursuit of truth
through questions, answers, and additional questions. Plato
witnessed the death of Socrates at the hands of the Athenian
democracy in 399 B.C. Perhaps fearing for his own safety, he left
Athens temporarily and traveled to Italy, Sicily, and Egypt. In 389
B.C. he founded the "Academy" in Athens, the institution often
described as the first European university. It provided a
comprehensive curriculum, including such subjects as astronomy,
biology, mathematics, political theory, and philosophy. The main
purpose of the Academy was to cultivate thought to lead to a
restoration of decent government in the cities of Greece. Pursuing
an opportunity to combine philosophy and practical politics, Plato
went to Sicily in 367 to tutor the new ruler of Syracuse, Dionysius
the Younger, in the art of philosophical rule. The experiment
failed. Plato made another trip to Syracuse in 361, but again his
engagement in Sicilian affairs met with little success. The
concluding years of his life were spent lecturing at the Academy and
writing. He died at about the age of 80 in Athens in 347 B.C. Plato
wrote 26 dialogues on various philosophical themes, with Socrates as
the main character in most of them. The exact ordering of the
dialogues is not known, but they can be roughly assigned to three
periods, the early, middle, and late. During the Renaissance, the
primary focus of Platonic influence was the Florentine Academy,
founded in the 15th century near Florence. Under the leadership of
Marsilio Ficino, members of the Academy studied Plato in the
original Greek. In England, Platonism was revived in the 17th
century by Ralph Cudworth and others who became known as the
Cambridge Platonists. Plato's influence has been extended into the
20th century by such thinkers as Alfred North Whitehead, who once
paid him tribute by describing the history of philosophy as simply
"a series of footnotes to Plato."
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Ricoeur, Paul
(1913-)
Paul Ricoeur (1913-). was born and raised in the west of France. He
has occupied the position of professor of philosophy at the
Universities of Strasbourg and Paris (the Sorbonne, Nanterre) and
has been a visiting professor at numerous other universities, the
University of Chicago in particular. He is the recipient of over
thirty honorary degrees from universities throughout the world. A
younger contemporary of Jean-Paul Sartre and Maurice Merleau-Ponty,
Ricoeur is the best known French representative of phenomenological
hermeneutics. A French Protestant, Ricoeur has written extensively
on religious and theological issues, although he is best known to
the general public for his work in philosophy. The three principal
sources of influence on his philosophical thinking in the 1930s and
1940s were existential philosophy (Gabriel Marcel, Karl Jaspers),
the tradition of French reflective philosophy, and German
phenomenology (Edmund Husserl, Martin Heidegger). Ricoeur is widely
regarded as the foremost living phenomenologist. His work has helped
make the term hermeneutics a household word. He has been a very
prolific writer and his writings cover a wide range of topics, from
the history of philosophy, literary criticism, and aesthetics to
metaphysics, ethics, religion, semiotics, linguistic structuralism,
the humanistic sciences, psychoanalysis, Marxism, guilt and evil,
and conflicts of interpretation.
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Rorty, Richard
Rorty, Richard, post-analytic philosophy. Rorty has been professor
of Humanities at the University of Virginia and professor at
Princeton. His books include Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature
(1980), The Consequences of Pragmatism (1982), Contingency Irony and
Solidarity (1989), Philosophical Papers vol 1: Objectivity,
Relativism and Truth, and vol 2 Essays on Heidegger and Others (both
1991). He is one of the most famous living philosophers in the
United States, Rorty's Objectivity, Relativism, and Truth and Essays
on Heidegger and Others, vol. 1 and 2 of Philosophical Papers.
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Sartre, Jean-Paul
Sartre, Jean-Paul (1905-1980). French existentialst philospher and
author. Taught (1931-1945) in Le Havre, Laon, and Paris lycees,
Satre was a served in the resistance and continued to fight
injustice throught his life - most notably campaigning for a free
Algeria. He was awarded but refused 1964 Nobel Prize for literature.
Expounded his philosophy of Existentialism in novels La Nausee
(1938) and Les Chemmins de la liberte (trilogy, 1945-49); plays as
Les Mouches (1943), Huis-clos (1944), Les Mains sales (1948), Le
diable et le bon dieu (1951), Les Sequestres dÕ Altona (1959); and
philosophical works as LÕImagination (1936), LÕ Imaginaire (1940),
LÕEtre et le neant (1943), LÕExistentialisme est un humanisme
(1946); also wrote Les Mots (1963, autobiography) and Flaubert
(1971, literary study). With Simone de Beauvoir founded and edited
review Les Temps Modernes (1946).
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Scheler, Max
(1874-1928)
Max Scheler was born in Munich on August 22, 1874; and brought up in
the Jewish faith by his mother. However, at age 11 Max Scheler turns
catholic by doing communion in the Roman Catholic church. As a young
man he studies philosophy and natural science at several German
universities. At the University of Berlin he follows lectures by
Wilhelm Dlithey, Carl Stumpf, and George Simmel. Dilthey gives him a
sense of the history of philosophy and introduces him to the
philosophy of vitalism. Stumpf contributes to his interest in
descriptive psychology, and Simmel introduces Scheler to the study
of cultural forms. Scheler receives his doctorate in 1897 at the age
of twenty-five. He teaches at Jena, Munich and Berlin.
Scheler meets Husserl in 1901 and this encounter makes a great
impression on him. Upon reading Husserl’s Logical Investigations,
which appears also in 1901 Scheler becomes a phenomenologist.
However, by applying phenomenology to ethics, culture, and religion
he takes a very different direction from Husserl. Scheler seeks to
understand the essence of human nature not in reason or thinking but
in love and sympathy. The human being is a homo amans, a
being who loves. He elaborates the Ordo Amoris of Augustine;
for a child to become a human person, in the full sense of the word,
the parents must develop a sensitivity to values. One of Scheler’s
great phenomenological works is The nature of Sympathy.
In the spring of 1928 Max Scheler accepts a position at the
University of Frankfurt am Main. He dies suddenly of a coronary
thrombosis on May 19, 1928, at the age of fifty-four.
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Schleiermacher,
Friedrich E.D. (1768-1834)
Schleiermacher is born on November 21, 1768, in Breslau, Lower Silesia.
His father is a Prussian army chaplain. Friedrich Schleiermacher
attends Moravian boarding schools and later becomes a student at the
University of Halle from 1787-1790, until he passes theological
examinations in Berlin. He works first as a house tutor (1790-93),
then as a pastor in Landsberg (1793-96), and next as a university
preacher at Halle (1803-06). In 1799 he publishes On Religion:
Speeches to its Cultural Despisers and in he begins publishing a
German translation of Plato. In 1809 he associates with Wilhelm von
Humboldt and he becomes a professor of theology at the newly founded
University of Berlin. He coninues to write on hermeneutics and
publishes the Soliloquies. It was especially Wilhelm Dilthey
who made Schleiermacher's work known in his essay "The Origins of
Hermeneutics" published in 1900.
Schleiermacher defined hermeneutics as "the art of understanding
the discourse of another person correctly." He is often
misinterpreted as a Romantic theorist who considers the process of
interpretation to consist of an "intuitive" and "empathetic"
identification with the thoughts and feelings of the author of a
text. But this psychological hermeneutics does not adequately
represent Schleiermacher's view. He sees "intuition" to be linked to
a world which transcends both the cognitive and the practical life
of the individual. The individual is organically connected to this
world. There must be a method which gives access to the meaning of
texts across generations. Schleiermacher distinguishes between
"grammatical" (focus on language) and "technical" (focus on the
person) interpretations. Successful interpretation requires an
(ultimately impossible) integration of both dimensions but this is
inherently an infinite task.
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Schutz,
Alfred (1899-1959)
Schutz, Alfred (1899-1959) was born in Vienna. Alfred Schutz studied
law and social science under Hans Kelsen and Ludwig von Mises. He
published Phenomenology of the Social World in 1932 which combined
Weber's sociology with Husserl's phenomenological method. Schutz
went to Freiburg, briefly, to work with Husserl. He left Vienna in
1939 for the US where he was first lecturer, and then professor at
the Graduate Faculty of Poilitical and Social Sciences at the New
School, New York. He also wrote Structure of the Life World (two
vols.) with Thomas Luckmann and a posthumous edition of Collected
Papers edited by Maurice Natanson (1962). It is generally considered
that he developed phenomenology as a sociological science.
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Spiegelberg, Herbert
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Strasser, Stephan. (1905-1991)
Stephan Strasser escaped with his wife from Austria to Belgium after
the Anschluss in 1938 by the Nazis. Even in Belgium he had to go
into hiding during the war. Van Breda offered him work at the
Husserl Archives, where, in the space of 25 months, Stephan Strasser,
his wife and mother-in-law transcribed 20,000 pages of Husserl's
shorthand into ordinary text. These experiences and his studies with
de Waelhens in 1944 were formative for Strasser's philosophical
career. In 1949, Strasser received an appointment in Philosophical
Psychology and Anthropology at the Universtity of Nijmegen, and he
was also given the Chair in Normative and Historical Pedagogy. He
kept the Chair in Pedagogy until 1970. He retired in 1975.
After an initial interest in neo-Thomistic thought, Strasser
became closely acquainted with the work of Husserl. He rejected the
philosophy of Sartre and also showed no sympathy for humanistic
psychology, structuralism and Marxist thought. For a time, he became
intensely interested in Heidegger, but eventually he moved closer to
Merleau-Ponty and in his later years especially to the work of
Levinas. Strasser exercised significant international influence. In
North America, his writings provided access to continental thought;
in Germany, he helped introduce the French Levinas; in France, he
helped introduce the German Husserl; and in Japan, he helped
introduce the human science approach.
Throughout his career, it was Strasser's ambition to practise
human science without doing violence to what is human. His 1947
inaugural lecture was on the theme "Objectiviteit en Objectivisme"
(Objectivity and Objectivism). In 1950, he introduced the
Husserliana series by publishing the first volume: Cartesianische
Medita-tionen und die Pariser Vorträge (Cartesian Meditations and
the Paris Lectures). Strasser published Fenomenologie en Empirische
Menskunde, published in English as Phenomenology and the Human
Sciences (1963). He had close connections with Duquesne University
in Pittsburg, where in 1984 a special alcove was dedicated to his
work and correspondence. Duquesne University Press also published
The Idea of Dialogical Phenomenology (1969) and Understanding and
Expla-nati-on (1985).
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Straus, E.W.
Erwin W. Straus is a contemprary phenomenologist.
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Van Den
Berg, J. H. (1914- )
After completing a primary and secondary teacher education program, Jan
Hendrik van den Berg entered medical school. In 1946, he completed
his doctoral work with a dissertation on schizophrenic psychosis.
Van den Berg studied in France and Switzerland and received a
lectorate in psychopathology in 1948. In 1951, he was appointed to
the Chair of Pastoral Psychology at the University of Utrecht. Van
den Berg's writings were an important contribution to the reputation
of the Utrecht School. His publications have been widely translated
into many languages. His book Het Ziekbed (1952) was published in
English as The Psychology of the Sickbed (1966); but the French
title says most about its content: Conseils au Visiteur d'une Malade
Alité (Advice for Visitors of Bedridden Patients) (1969). The
Phenomenological Approach to Psychiatry (1955) was reissued as A
Different Existence (1974), which still is an excellent introduction
to the phenomenological approach. In addition to many
phenomenological studies in psychology and psychiatry, he also wrote
several lucid methodological introductions, such as Zien: Verstaan
en Verklaring in de Visuele Waarneming (Seeing: Understanding and
Interpretation in Visual Perception) (1972).
Jan Hendrik van den Berg has been especially conscious of the
historical and cultural embeddedness of phenomenological psychology.
In fact, he was far ahead of the later postmodern critique of the
dangers of foundationalism, essentialism, and historical and
cultural universalism. He argues that the very project of all
phenomenology is contextualized by limits of language, culture,
time, and place. According to van den Berg, phenomenological
psychology does not claim to have found a universally valid approach
to human phenomena; rather, it is always self-conscious of its
anthropological starting point. Van den Berg became especially known
for the development and application of a historical phenomenological
approach that he termed the metabletical method. Metabletica is a
word derived from the Greek meaning "to change." His book
Metabletica: Principles of a Historical Psychology (published in
English in 1961 as The Changing Nature of Man) describes the
changing relation between adults and children many years before a
similar work by the French historian Philipe Ariès. For example, Van
den Berg describes the process of the infantilization of adulthood
and the appearance of puberty as a historial and cultural
phenomenon. The special feature of the metabletical method is that
it approaches its object of study not diachronically, as development
through time, but synchronically, from within a meaningful
constitution of relations among different events during the same
shared period. For example, in Leven en Meervoud (1963) (published
in English in 1974 as Divided Existence), he provides a concrete
portrayal and a surprisingly early postmodern interpretation of the
development of the human psyche by connecting it with a variety of
simultaneous developments in the surrounding culture, showing how
the sense of self-identity is increasingly fragmented, divided, and
determined by externals.
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Wittgenstein, Ludwig Josef Johann
Wittgenstein, Ludwig Josef Johann (1889-1951), Austrian-British
philosopher, who was one of the most influential thinkers of the
20th century, particularly noted for his contribution to the
movement known as analytic and linguistic philosophy. Wittgenstein
was raised in a wealthy and cultured family. After attending schools
in Linz and Berlin, he went to England to study engineering at the
University of Manchester. His interest in pure mathematics led him
to Trinity college, University of Cambridge, to study with Bertrand
Russel. There he turned his attention to philosophy. By 1918
Wittgenstein had completed his Tractatus and to develop the position
reflected in his Philosophical Investigations (published
posthumously 1953; trans.1953). Wittgenstein retired in 1947.
Additional works of Wittgenstein, all posthumously published,
include Remarks on the Foundations of Mathematics (1956), The Blue
and Brouwn Books (1958), and Notebooks (1914-1916).
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