Ferdinand Röse

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Johann Anton Ferdinand Röse (born September 27, 1815 in Lübeck , † November 27, 1859 in Kruft ) was a German poet and philosopher.

Life

Röse was the son of a Lübeck grain broker. He visited the Katharineum in Lübeck and was a schoolmate of the later poet Emanuel Geibel and in 1835/36 also a classmate of Theodor Storm , whom he introduced to modern German literature. A lifelong friendship developed to both of them during their school days in Lübeck. For this time he is assigned to the environment of the renewal movement called Jung-Lübeck . Röse studied philosophy and art history from 1836 to 1840 at the universities in Berlin, Basel and Munich. He then tried, first as a lecturer in Basel and from 1847 to 1849 at the University of Tübingen, to enter a philosophical teaching position as a university professor in vain. This recognition was denied to him, and he devoted himself to a productive, but less than happy, life as a private scholar and folk writer in Stuttgart, Augsburg and Berlin. He spent the last few years living in poor conditions on the Rhine, marked by illness, where he died of the consequences of a hemorrhage .

Fonts

  • The way of knowing the absolute. 1841
  • Luebische Chronik. 1842
  • Ideas of the divine things. 1847
  • Psychology as an introduction to the philosophy of individuality. 1856

literature

Web links

Wikisource: Ferdinand Röse  - Sources and full texts