Philosophical yearbook
The Philosophical Yearbookbrings together philosophers and scientists around a wide-ranging, ambitious research program. In strictly selected contributions, philosophical treatises from theoretical and practical areas are presented and historical analyzes and discoveries are communicated. Critical reports and discussions provide an overview of the tendencies in philosophical development. Important philosophical new publications are presented in book reviews; in addition, there is the detailed, critical review. The new format of the "Yearbook Controversies" has existed since I 2013. The aim of this format is a public discussion of new philosophical theses, which a distinguished person of academic philosophy puts forward and justifies in an initiative contribution, in order to be discussed and questioned afterwards through critical arguments and appreciation of guest authors. The author of the initiative article then has the opportunity to react to it in turn.
The Philosophical Yearbook is published on behalf of the Görres Society by Thomas Buchheim , Volker Gerhardt , Matthias Lutz-Bachmann , Isabelle Mandrella , Pirmin Stekeler-Weithofer , Wilhelm Vossenkuhl . Jörg Noller has headed the editorial team since 2012 . It has been published by Verlag Karl Alber , Freiburg / Munich , since his 62nd year (1953) .
history
The Philosophical Yearbook reflects the philosophical development from 1888 to the present day. Hardly any of the philosophical disputes of this time is not dealt with in it. In the first, still unsuccessful attempts of the Philosophical Section of the Görres Society in 1877, the reasoning stated that none of the then existing specialist journals for philosophy “is written in the spirit of which the Görres Society is a regeneration of science and especially of Philosophy expects. ” This spirit was then the spirit of the renaissance of Thomas's philosophy.
The Philosophical Yearbook was founded in Fulda in 1888 by Conststantin Gutberlet and Joseph Pohle , both of whom were also the editors for many years. The first contributions by the editors already show the range. Gutberlet wrote about “the task of Christian philosophy in the present”, Pohle “about the objective meaning of the infinitely small as the philosophical basis of differential calculus”.
The names of the editors who followed show how the span was maintained:
Adolf Dyroff's spiritual home was Augustinism. Georg Siegmund was close to the philosophy of life. Aloys Wenzl , dealt primarily with problems of natural philosophy and was close to Oswald Külpe's critical realism . Alois Dempf's philosophical research spanned the spectrum from patristics and the Middle Ages to contemporary philosophy .
Max Müller , editor of the Philosophical Yearbook from 1959 to 1969, linked classical metaphysics with Husserl's phenomenology and Heidegger's existential philosophy and developed a metahistory from it.
From 1970 the following were active as editors for the Philosophical Yearbook :
- Hermann Krings from 1970 to 1995 († 2004)
- Heinrich Rombach from 1970 to 1995 († 2004)
- Ludger Oeing-Hanhoff from 1970 to † 1986
- Alois Halder from 1975 to 1997, previously an editor
- Arno Baruzzi from 1975 to 1995, previously an editor
- Klaus Jacobi from 1988 to 2005
- Hans Michael Baumgartner from 1989 to † 1999
- Henning Ottmann from 1996 to 2009
- Wilhelm Vossenkuhl from 1996
- Christoph Horn from 2002 to 2005
- Thomas Buchheim from 2002, from 2005 managing editor and editor
- Volker Gerhardt from 2002
- Pirmin Stekeler-Weithofer from 2003
- Matthias Lutz-Bachmann from 2008
- Axel Hutter 2011
- Isabelle Mandrella from 2014
literature
Görres Society for the Care of Science in Catholic Germany (Hrsg.): Philosophisches Jahrbuch . Published on behalf of the Görres Society. tape 1-125 . Parzeller / Alber, ISSN 0031-8183 .
Web links
www.philosophisches-jahrbuch.de - All articles and reviews from 1888 to 2009 (with the exception of the ten most recent years).