Adolf Hemberger

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Adolf Hemberger

Adolf Hemberger (born November 4, 1929 in Buchen (Odenwald) , † January 10, 1992 in Bad Homburg in front of the height ) was a German scientific theorist at the University of Giessen.

Life

Hemberger's parents are the forest officer Adolf Hemberger and his wife Ida nee. Mayer. In Buchen he went to school with his three brothers and later to high school. He graduated from high school in Tauberbischofsheim .

Studies

He studied economics at Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz and Philipps University Marburg . In 1955 he passed the diploma examination in Marburg . He married in 1956, but took up a second degree in philosophy and education at the Johann Wolfgang Goethe University in Frankfurt am Main . Also involved in the Frankfurt student body, he took over the social affairs department in the general student committee . 1958 renoncierte it in the Corps Franconia Jena . On December 13, 1958 recipiert , he held the charge of Subseniors . It remained a mystery to his brothers in the corps how he managed to tick off three non-specialist law certificates in one semester in addition to his family, job, corps and studies, including an exegesis of the Pandects and a BGB certificate. Inactivated in 1960 , he passed the first teaching examination at the Pedagogical Institute in Weilburg . During his legal clerkship , he switched to the Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg to study social science. The adults moved increasingly into the center of his interests. In the summer semester of 1962 he was awarded a Dr. phil. PhD.

University professor

After he had passed the second teacher training examination in 1963, he worked as a lecturer in teacher training . The Justus Liebig University in Giessen appointed him professor in 1972. In 1973/74 he was Vice Dean of the Philosophical Faculty. The subject he had to represent from then on suited his interests very well: philosophy of science and research methodology . Not bound by any examination regulations , he was able to use the free space of the subject for everything that fascinated him: For years his main interest was Freemasonry , especially the “ irregularFraternitas Saturni . With the approval of the University of Giessen, he offered seminars through student associations in the 1970s - with practical exercises in corporation houses . For the past two decades he has devoted himself to psychology , psychotherapy and parapsychology . At times when it was not in keeping with the times, he railed against the over-psychologization of all human behavior, which would become the theory of justification for everything and everyone and release people from personal responsibility .

Naturopaths and esotericists

Not at all filled out by the professorship, he went to non-university fields. The fact that he dealt intensively with experimental magic earned him a lot of criticism. In addition to his theoretically-oriented activities in research and teaching, he worked as a trained alternative practitioner . For over 15 years he was in charge of the psychosomatic Odenwald Clinic in Bad König . Hemberger saw himself as a magician and resuscitator of various magical systems.

Private

Hemberger played chess excellently and loved mountaineering . The rest of the free time he spent in corp houses somewhere in Germany, preferably in Heidelberg. When his corps established the Kösener suburb in 1981 , he gave the celebratory speech in the Würzburg residence . It was widely recognized. He also gave an “enjoyable and very unorthodox” speech in Regensburg at the first Donaukommers that Franconia had prepared. She dealt with the relationship with the Kösener Corps in Austria . Both of his marriages ended in divorce. He lived with his third partner near Bad Homburg. When he died at the age of 62, she managed to bring the large family together almost completely for the funeral.

Works

  • Organizational forms, rituals, teachings and magical topics of the Masonic and Masonic-like associations in the German-speaking area of ​​Central Europe . Self-published, casting.
  • Documenta et Ritualia Fraternitas Saturni , 18 vols. Self-published, Gießen 1970.
  • The mystical-magical order Fraternitas Saturni , part 1 & 2. Private printing.
  • Pansophie und Rosenkreuz Part II [in 3 volumes]; Organizational forms, rituals, teachings and magical themes of the Masonic and Masonic-like associations in the German-speaking area of ​​Central Europe. Self-published, Giessen 1974.
  • The essence, spirit and genesis of the Kösener Corps (lecture at the academic ceremony of the Kösener Congress on June 4, 1981). Deutsche Corps-Zeitung, 82nd volume, Kaiserslautern, July 1981, No. 3, pp. 97-104.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Kösener Corpslisten 1981, 26/818.
  2. Dissertation: The historical-sociological relationship between Western European anarcho-syndicalism and Marxism .
  3. a b c d Jörg Wiesner: In memory Adolf Hemberger I .
  4. Marco Frenschkowski: The secret societies. A cultural and historical analysis. Marixverlag, Wiesbaden 2007, ISBN 978-3-86539-926-7 , p. 175.