Richard von Schubert-Soldern

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Richard Ritter Schubert von Soldern (born December 14, 1852 in Prague , † October 19, 1924 in Zwettl ) was an Austrian philosopher and representative of Wilhelm Schuppe's philosophy of immanence .

Life

He received his doctorate in Prague in 1879 with a thesis on the coronation and election of Friedrich II and habilitated in 1882 with the work on Trancendenz des Objects and Subjects at the Philosophical Faculty of the University of Leipzig under Wilhelm Wundt , Moritz Wilhelm Drobisch and Max Heinze (1835-1909). In 1896 he became a. O. Professor appointed. In 1898 he was dismissed from this position due to illness and taught until 1915 as a high school professor at the German high school in Görz ( Friuli-Venezia Giulia ), where he influenced Carlo Michelstaedter .

Think

Schubert-Soldern formulated Schuppe's philosophy of immanence as solipsism in the epistemological, but not in the practical sense. He determined the ego as the overall context of all the contents of consciousness and asserted that one's own ego or other psychic can only be recognized as part of this context.

Most important works

  • Ueber Transcendence of Objects and Subjects , 1882
  • Foundations of a theory of knowledge , 1884
  • Foundations of an Ethics , 1887

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Rudolf Eisler : Philosophen-Lexikon , 1912: Schubert-Soldern, Richard von . Retrieved February 3, 2011.