Tuism

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Tuism (nlt., Derived from tu = you) is an ethical term that was introduced by Friedrich Albert Lange (1828–1875) to describe the ethical direction that Ludwig Feuerbach (1804–1872) in particular derived from Ich-Du Relationship was developed. Tuism is also referred to as the ethical "you point of view" .

literature

  • Robert Reininger: Metaphysics of Reality , W. Braumüller, 1951
  • Erich Satter: Feuerbach's anthropological sensualism in divergence from Kant and Hegel . In: Volker Mueller (Ed.): Ludwig Feuerbach. Criticism of religion and freedom of the spirit , Angelika Lenz Verlag, Neustadt am Rübenberge 2004, p. 125.
  • Erich Satter: Value consciousness in the mirror of religion and postmodernism, On the development of moral science and the relationship between aesthetics and ethics in the religious and ideological field of tension between modernity and postmodernism. Angelika Lenz Verlag, Neustadt am Rübenberge 2009, p. 374.

proof

  1. Cf. Friedrich Albert Lange, History of Materialism and Critique of Its Significance in the Present , Reclam, Leipzig 1866 or reprint in 2 volumes by Suhrkamp, ​​stw. 70, Frankfurt am Main 1974, ISBN 3-518-07670-1 .
  2. Cf. Erich Satter, Feuerbach's anthropological sensualism in divergence from Kant and Hegel , in: Volker Mueller (ed.), Ludwig Feuerbach. Criticism of religion and freedom of the spirit , Angelika Lenz Verlag, Neustadt am Rübenberge 2004, p. 125.
  3. See Ludwig Feuerbach Collected Works , ed. by Werner Schuffenhauer, Akademie Verlag, Berlin, 1967–2007, Vol. 9, p. 339.
  4. See Rudolf Eisler, Dictionary of Philosophical Terms , Volume Two, Ernst Siegfried Mittler and Son, Königliche Hofbuchhandlung, Berlin 1904, p. 533.