Reinhart Biernatzki

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Reinhart Biernatzki (born April 10, 1884 in Bargum , † September 13, 1948 in Hamburg ) was a German philosopher and educator .

Live and act

Reinhart Biernatzki was born as the son of Bargum pastor and art historian Johannes Biernatzki in North Friesland . After attending an elementary school in his birthplace, he switched to an elementary school in Hamburg-Langenhorn . From 1899 his father was a pastor in Hamberge , and Reinhart Biernatzki attended the secondary school branch at the Katharineum in Lübeck until he graduated from high school in Easter 1904. He then studied mathematics and natural sciences as well as philosophy.

In 1926 he received his doctorate at the University of Königsberg on the epistemology of Immanuel Kant after Paul Deussen . From 1928 he taught biology and chemistry as a senior teacher at the girls' upper secondary school at Lerchenfeld (today Lerchenfeld high school ) in Hamburg. During Operation Gomorrah , his house and a large library were destroyed. Then he taught at the Walddörferschule . Biernatzki was considered a good ornithologist and often visited nature with his students. From 1929 to 1933 he was chairman of the Jordsand Association .

Biernatzki wrote about his experiences as a pioneer in France during the First World War in 1915. He also published on scientific and philosophical issues. As head of the Hamburger Volksbund for Kantian worldviews , which he founded in 1919 , he lectured at the Hamburg Adult Education Center in the 1940s . He also gave chemistry courses in which he carried out simple laboratory tests. Biernatzki was considered a Kant researcher who was convinced that philosophy and natural sciences are in a symbiotic relationship with one another. In doing so, he shaped students like Hartmut Wehrt (* 1927).

In 1928, Biernatzki called for theological professorships for prospective religion teachers to be abolished and for them to be replaced by professorships in religious studies. For the association of Protestant religion teachers at the higher state schools in Hamburg , he summarized his point of view in a report. In one of his writings after 1945 he criticized the regional bishop Simon Schöffel .

Fonts

  • As a pioneer in France: (August 1914 to February 1915); from the field post letters of the reserve lieutenant. Bielefeld [u. a.]: Velhagen & Klasing 1915
  • Fate and yourself. A contribution to the question of worldview as a gift from the field. Hamburg: Janssen 1919
  • What is the world 6 answers to this question. Hamburg: Kant-Volksbund-Verlag 1920
  • Kant's epistemology in its connection with the main values ​​of religion according to Paul Deussen: With a Deussen portrait and a lecture announcement from his pen. Hamburg: Boysen 1926, zugl. Königsberg, Phil. Diss., 1926 under the title: Kant and the highest goods of religion according to Paul Deussen
  • Alcohol facts. Bergedorf: German Confederation of abstinent educators 1933

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Hermann Genzken: The Abitur graduates of the Katharineum zu Lübeck (grammar school and secondary school) from Easter 1807 to 1907. Borchers, Lübeck 1907 ( digitized version ), no. 182