Richard Hönigswald

Richard Hönigswald (18 July 1875 in Magyar-Óvár in the Austro-Hungarian Empire (the present Mosonmagyaróvár in Hungary) – 11 June 1947 in New Haven, Connecticut) was a well-known philosopher belonging to the wider circle of neo-Kantianism.

Biography

Hönigswald studied medicine and philosophy under Alois Riehl and Alexius von Meinong and from 1916 was professor of philosophy, psychology and pedagogy in Breslau (now Wrocław). There he supervised Norbert Elias's doctorate up to its conclusion in 1924. From 1930 he was a professor at Munich. The emphasis of his work lay on the theory of cognition from the point of view of validation and the philosophy of language. Beyond that, Hönigswald tried to develop a method of teaching that would be applicable to the natural sciences and the humanities equally. He also dealt with questions of the psychology of thought and of pedagogy.

In 1933, as a Jew, he was compulsorily retired. At the time of the Kristallnacht (The Night of Broken Glass) in 1938, he spent three weeks in Dachau concentration camp. In 1939 he emigrated with his wife and daughter by way of Switzerland to the United States.

gollark: I personally support private system, but not through the US's horrible, horrible system, and UBI so people can reasonably pay for it.
gollark: What do you mean "sell it"?
gollark: The UK has the NHS, which at least mostly provides healthcare to people, but it has problems and burns vast amounts of money.
gollark: I'm not sure about the whole "government-paid healthcare thing", because the government is not very good at its job a lot of the time.
gollark: imagine not liking a reasonably good resource allocation system

References

  • Schmied-Kowarzik, Wolfdietrich (ed.), Erkennen - Monas - Sprache. Internationales Richard-Hönigswald-Symposion Kassel 1995 (Würzburg 1997).
  • Zeidler, Kurt Walter, Kritische Dialektik und Transzendentalontologie. Der Ausgang des Neukantianismus und die post-neukantianische Systematik R. Hönigswalds, W. Cramers, B. Bauchs, H. Wagners, R. Reinigers und E. Heintels (Bonn 1995).
  • This article is translated from that on the German Wikipedia
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.