Otto Liebmann
Otto Liebmann (Script error: No such module "IPA".; 25 February 1840 – 14 January 1912) was a German neo-Kantian philosopher.
Biography
He was born at Löwenberg, Silesia, into a Jewish family,[1] and educated at Leipzig and Halle. He was made professor at Strassburg (1872) and went to Jena in 1882. He died at Jena. The mathematician Heinrich Liebmann was his son and the physician Otto Liebmann is his eponymous great-grandson.
Philosophical work
A forerunner of neo-Kantianism, in his best-known book, Kant und die Epigonen, he deals with the philosophy after Kant, discussing Fichte, Schelling, Hegel, Fries, Herbart and Schopenhauer. Having credited Kant's philosophy (though criticizing it on the vital point of accepting a thing-in-itself), he focuses on what he sees as the shortcomings in the approaches of Kants successors. He frequently ends a section with the statement that one should return to Kant.
Liebmann's work also influenced his Jena colleague Gottlob Frege.[2]
Works
- Kant und die Epigonen, a critique of the followers of Kant urging a return to their master (1865) (Kant and his inferior successors)
- Ueber die Freiheit des Willens (1866) (On free will)
- Ueber den objektiven Anblick (1869) (On the objective point of view)
- Vier Monate vor Paris, a journal published anonymously (1871)
- Zur Analysis der Wirklichkeit (1876; 3rd ed. 1900) (About the analysis of actuality)
- Die Klimax der Theorien (1884) (The climax of theory)
- Geist der Transcendentalphilosophie (1901)
- Grundriss der kritischen Metaphysik (1901) (Outline of critical metaphysics)
- Gedanken und Tatsachen, 2 Bände (1882–1904) (Thoughts and facts)
References
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- ↑ Paul W. Franks, "Jewish Philosophy after Kant: the Legacy of Salomon Maimon" in Michael L. Morgan & Peter Eli Gordon (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Modern Jewish Philosophy, Cambridge University Press (2007), p. 53
- ↑ Gottfried Gabriel, "Frege, Lotze, and the Continental Roots of Early Analytic Philosophy," in: Erich H. Reck (ed.). From Frege to Wittgenstein: Perspectives on Early Analytic Philosophy, Oxford University Press, 2002, pp. 39–51, esp. 44–48.
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External links
- Pages with script errors
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- 1840 births
- 1912 deaths
- 19th-century German Jews
- Jewish philosophers
- 19th-century German philosophers
- University of Halle alumni
- Leipzig University alumni
- Academic staff of the University of Strasbourg
- Academic staff of the University of Jena
- German male writers