Dagobert D. Runes
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Biography
Runes was born in Zastavna, Bukovina, Austro-Hungary (now in Ukraine). He received a doctorate in philosophy from the University of Vienna in 1924, under the direction of Moritz Schlick, one of the founders of the Vienna Circle of positivist philosophers.Template:Sfn
Inspired by youthful vigor and free-thinking ideas, Runes's first book entitled The True Jesus or the Fifth Gospel (1927), published in a Viennese publishing house with the financial support of the Social Democratic Party of Austria, created such a stir, says Professor of German literature Ulrich E. Bach, that its publisher, Rudolf Cerny, was sentenced to sixty days in prison.[1]Template:Rp Thus Runes - fearing a charge of blasphemy - was forced to emigrate to New York as early as 1928.[1]Template:Rp
In the U.S. he became editor of The Modern Thinker (Founded as The Thinker in 1929, acquired and renamed by Runes in 1932, closed in 1936.), The Modern Psychologist (1932-1938), and Current Digest (1933-1940).[2] From 1931 to 1934 he was Director of the Institute for Advanced Education in New York City. One of its earliest creations as a publisher was the scholarly Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism, which is still being published.Template:Sfn[3]Template:Rp In 1941 he founded the Philosophical Library,[4] a spiritual organization and publishing house. He wrote and edited numerous books on the subjects of philosophy, politics, education, Judaism and his own poetry.Template:Sfn His poem “Gottes Wiederkehr” was adapted for a four-part mixed choir as Op. 50a “Dreimal tausend Jahre” (“Three times a thousand Years”) by Arnold Schoenberg.[5] In New York, Runes socialized with many public figures and especially those driven into exile by Hitler. Alfred Adler, Albert Einstein and Emil Ludwig were among his illustrious acquaintances.Template:Sfn
Selected works
- Der wahre Jesus oder das fünfte Evangelium R. Cerny, 1927.
- Dictionary of Philosophy (editor), Philosophical Library, 1942.
- The Selected Writings of Benjamin Rush (editor) Philosophical Library, 1947.
- Jordan Lieder: Frühe Gedichte (in German) The Philosophical Library, 1948.
- Letters to My Son The Philosophical Library, 1949.
- The Hebrew Impact on Western Civilization The Philosophical Library, 1951.
- Spinoza Dictionary The Philosophical Library, 1951.
- Of God, the Devil and the Jews The Philosophical Library, 1952.
- The Soviet Impact on Society: A Recollection, 1953.
- Letters to My Daughter The Philosophical Library, 1954.
- Treasury of Philosophy (editor) The Philosophical Library, 1955.
- Treasury of World Literature (editor) The Philosophical Library, 1956.
- On the Nature of Man The Philosophical Library, 1956.
- Sartre, J.P., Being and Nothingness Translated by Hazel E. Barnes, The Philosophical Library, 1956.
- Pictorial History of Philosophy (editor) The Philosophical Library, 1959.
- A Dictionary of Thought (editor) Philosophical Library, 1959.
- A World without Jews (translator) The Philosophical Library, 1959.
- The Art of Thinking The Philosophical Library, 1961.
- A Treasury of World Science (editor) The Philosophical Library, 1962.
- Despotism: A Pictorial History of Tyranny (author) The Philosophical Library, 1963 Library of Congress Card catalog #62-22269
- The Disinterested and the Law The Philosophical Library, 1964.
- Philosophy for Everyman: From Socrates to Sartre, Philosophical Library, Library of Congress Card #68-22351, ©1968.
References
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Sources
- Pictorial History of Philosophy by Dagobert D. Runes, 1959.
- Karl Marx: Selected essays.” 1926
External links
- Pages with script errors
- 1902 births
- 1982 deaths
- 20th-century American Jews
- American male non-fiction writers
- American socialists
- People from Chernivtsi Oblast
- 20th-century American philosophers
- Yiddish-speaking people
- Jewish American non-fiction writers
- Jewish socialists
- Ukrainian Jews
- American people of Ukrainian-Jewish descent