Daniel Feuling

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Daniel Feuling OSB (born August 25, 1882 in Lobenfeld as Martin Feuling ; † November 17, 1947 in Tuttlingen ) was a German Benedictine and Catholic religious philosopher .

Daniel Feuling is one of the pioneers of the Newman reception in Germany. The monk of the Beuron Archabbey wrote an article on John Henry Newman in 1915. During Feuling's teaching activity in Salzburg, he and the Jesuit Erich Przywara and the Husserl student Dietrich von Hildebrand launched a complete German edition of Newman's works, which he, Erich Przywara and Paul Simon edited. Feuling thus implemented a suggestion that Max Scheler had presented to him in Beuron in 1916. In 1925 Przywara was looking for a translator of the letters and diaries for the Newman Complete Edition; von Hildebrand recommended him to Husserl's former assistant Edith Stein . Her translation was published in 1928. Feuling's astute criticism of National Socialist ideology is still worth reading today.

literature

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Historical-political papers for Catholic Germany 155 (1915), pp. 297–316.
  2. A well-read book. The myth of the 20th century , in: Hochland 31 (1933/34), pp. 457–463.