Friedrich Pilgram

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Friedrich Pilgram (born January 19, 1819 in Imbach near Solingen ; † November 21/30, 1890 in Monheim am Rhein ) was a German philosopher and theological writer.

Pilgram was the first editor-in-chief of the center newspaper Germania (1870/71).

During his studies in 1844 he became a member of the Fridericia Bonn fraternity .

After studying Hegel and Schelling , he converted to Catholicism in 1846. On the social issue , he advocated a state reform. Theologically he proceeded from a mutual reference of faith and knowledge and understood the church as “community of people with God and with one another”. With these views he paved the way for later theology.

Works

  • Selection of works in: Friedrich Pilgram . Graz-Vienna-Cologne: Styria 1970, 55–326.
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  • New foundations of the science of the state. Berlin: Stankiewicz 1869
  • Physiology of the Church: Research into the spiritual laws in which the Church consists according to her natural side. Mainz: Kirchheim 1860
  • Life and work of the most outstanding Protestants: viewed from Catholic principles of faith. Leipzig: Reclam 1857. ( Life and work of Count Nikolaus Ludwig von Zinzendorf. )
  • Controversy with the unbelievers: about the reality of knowledge and the logic of belief. Freiburg i. Br., 1855
  • Social questions, viewed from the principle of church community. Freiburg: Herder in Comm. 1855.

literature

  • Bernhard Casper: The unity of all reality: Friedrich Pilgram and his theological philosophy. Freiburg; Basel; Vienna: Herder 1961.
  • Bernhard Casper: Friedrich Pilgram . In: Emerich Coreth u. a. (Ed.): Christian Philosophy in Catholic Thought of the 19th and 20th Century. Vol. 1 Graz u. a. 1987, 319-328.
  • Bernhard Casper: Pilgram, Friedrich . In: LThK 3 8.302f.
  • Hansjürgen von Mallinckrodt: Sociality and Understanding: the Hermeneutic Function of the Church according to Friedrich Pilgram. Zurich [u. a.]: Benziger 1971 ISBN 3-545-22063-X
  • Heribert Becher: Pilgram, Friedrich . In: International Sociological Lexicon. Ed. V. Wilhelm Bernsdorf u. Horst bud. 2nd ed. 1980 vol. 1, p. 332. ISBN 3-432-82652-4 Google Books

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Kosch, The Catholic Germany, Vol. 2 1937, 484: 31. [sic!] November 1890; Kosch, Biographisches Staatshandbuch, Vol. 1 1963: November 30, 1890; Budde, Handbook of the Christian Social Movement, 1967: November 21, 1890; Internationales Soziologenlexikon, 2nd ed. Vol. I 1980: November 21, 1890; DBE Vol. 7 1998: November 30, 1890; LThK 3 8 (1999), 302: November 21, 1890.
  2. ^ Franz Richarz: List of members of the Fridericia fraternity in Bonn (February 18, 1843 to autumn 1847) as well as the Arminia fraternity in Bonn (1847 to 1849) and the fraternity association Germania in Bonn (1843 to 1849). Bonn 1894, p. 14.
  3. ^ Cf. Franz Josef Stegmann, Peter Langhorst: History of social ideas in Catholicism . In: Helga Grebing (ed.): History of social ideas in Germany: Socialism - Catholic social teaching - Protestant social ethics; a manual. Wiesbaden: VS 2 2005, 599-866; here: 627. [1]