Jakob Bappert

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Jakob Joseph Bappert (born May 11, 1884 in Lay ; † April 21, 1954 in Langen (Hessen) ) was a German philosopher , natural scientist and psychologist .

Life

He was the son of the teacher Ferdinand Bappert († 1916) and was born on May 11, 1884 in Laya on the Moselle, not far from Koblenz . His mother Anna Maria Bappert, née Schuler, died in 1889 when Jakob was five years old. After attending elementary school, he went to high school and after graduating from high school, he first attended a theological college and then studied theology, philosophy and psychology at the University of Rome, among others . At the University of Frankfurt , he received his doctorate in 1923 for Dr. phil. nat. He then worked from 1910 to 1917 as a lecturer in philosophy and canon law at the Theological College in Limburg an der Lahn . Due to the First World War, he worked as a psychologist in the Sommerhoff hospital for brain injuries in Frankfurt am Main. After the end of the war he switched to the city health department in Frankfurt as a psychologist, where he worked specifically in the youth protection agency. After the end of the war he was involved in the introduction of school prayer in Hesse by Minister Erwin Stein .

Jakob Bappert was a member of the National Socialist Teachers' Association (NSLB) and the German Philosophical Society .

He was married to Gertrud Böhme from Berlin. The two sons Wolfram and Eberhard and their daughter Ursula emerged from their marriage.

Fonts

  • Critique of occultism from the standpoint of philosophy and religion , Frankfurt a. M .: Patmos-Verlag, 1921.
  • New studies on the problem of the relationship between accommodation and convergence and the perception of depth , Leipzig: JA Barth, 1922.
  • On the employability of auxiliary school students , Halle [Saale]: C. Marhold, 1927.
  • Thoughts on modern psychotherapy , in: German medical Wochenschrift 74 (1949), No. 44, pages 1330-1331.

literature

Individual evidence

  1. Focus on Hessen, page 4