Joachim Hruschka

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Joachim Hruschka (born December 10, 1935 in Breslau , now Poland , † December 10, 2017 in Erlangen ) was a German legal scholar .

Joachim Hruschka received his doctorate from the Ludwig Maximilians University in Munich , and later completed his habilitation there. From 1971 he was a private lecturer in criminal law and criminal procedural law, legal philosophy at the University of Hamburg , where he became a full professor in 1972. From 1982 to 2004, Hruschka held the chair for criminal law , criminal procedure law and legal philosophy at the Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg . He was particularly known for his treatises on the philosophy of law, as well as on ethics and moral philosophy. In criminal law, Hruschka was a well-known representative of what is known as the doctrine of negative elements.

Fonts (selection)

  • The person as an end in itself - On the foundation of law and ethics in August Friedrich Müller (1733) and Immanuel Kant (1785). In: JuristenZeitung , 45th year, No. 1 (January 12, 1990), pp. 1–15.
  • Criminal law based on the logical-analytical method
  • The deontological hexagon by Gottfried Achenwall in 1767
  • Understanding legal texts: to the hermeneutic transpositivity of positive law to the hermeneutic transpositivity of positive law. Munich: Beck (1972)
  • Kant and the rule of law - and other essays on Kant's doctrine of law and ethics, 2015, Verlag Karl Alber , ISBN 978-3495487235 .
  • Yearbook of Law and Ethics / Annual Review of Law and Ethics (Associate Editor)

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ↑ Obituary notice