Alfred Brunswig

Alfred Brunswig (born 13 June 1877 in Plau am See; died 22 June 1927 in Münster) was a German philosopher. He taught at Westphalian Wilhelms-University in Münster (Westphalia).

After graduation in Munich 1896 he studied there and in Berlin to promotion in 1904 with Theodor Lipps and initially took its psychologism. After private studies with Edmund Husserl in Göttingen and Carl Stumpf in Berlin followed in 1910 in Munich, the Habilitation. He criticized Husserl evidence concept in the essences. From 1914 to 1918 he served in World War I and received the Iron Cross second class. In the winter semester 1916/17 he was appointed to Munster. He had the "courage to metaphysics" found through his front experience and returned hereinafter apparent faith. He was Protestant, probably with some Jewish roots. His Leibniz interpretation 1925 came the "Germanic thinkers" out.

Literary works

  • Das Vergleichen und die Relationserkenntnis, Leipzig/Berlin: B. G. Teubner, 1910
  • Das Grundproblem Kants, 1914
  • Hegel, 1922
  • Leibniz, 1922
gollark: I have ads blocked on all my stuff until companies are nice and start switching to non-tracking (e.g. adverts only based on contents of page, search queries, etc.) non-intrusive (static pictures, text) adverts, which will never happen.
gollark: And quite often you don't really get to opt out of that service, e.g. Facebook. Because network effects, etc.
gollark: They're normally less than transparent about the "data" bit.
gollark: Yes, though rather small-scale spying.
gollark: Well, it is. It's just spying which happens to collect somewhat useful data.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.