German Culture: German Philosophers
Robert Easton
German and German speaking philosophers have made vast contributions
to philosophy, and through philosophy, to the course of world history.
Perhaps the most influential were the 'great triumvirate'
of Kant, Hegel and Marx. Other noteworthy philosophers include Schopenhauer,
Nietzsche, Heidegger and the Nobel prize-winner Hermann Hesse.
One of the greatest characters of German philosophy was Friedrich
Nietzsche, who professed himself to be “a follower of Dionysus,
the god of life's exuberance”, and declared that he
hoped Dionysus would replace Jesus as the primary cultural standard
for future millennia.
Nietzsche showed his academic talents early on. As a child he didn't
like playing, and the neighbour's children called him 'the little
minister'. He died in 1900 after 11 years of madness. He went insane
one morning after seeing a horse being whipped by a coachman. Historians
argue whether his insanity was caused by syphilis, drug abuse, or
a disease inherited from his father.
Nietzsche was heavily influenced by the work of Schopenhauer,
a man so unpleasant, negative and pessimistic that even his own
mother eventually banned him from her house.
Schopenhauer's philosophy was based on that of Kant, but he did
not believe in individual free will, he believed that we are all
part of a vast single will which is the entire universe, and any
sense of individuality is pure illusion.
Schopenhauer never married, perhaps not surprisingly considering
his view of women, he once declared that women “are directly
fitted for acting as the nurses and teachers of our childhood by
the fact that they are themselves childish, frivolous and short-sighted;
in a word, they are big children all their life long.” Instead,
he shared his lonely existence with a poodle.
The first of the 'great triumvirate', Kant, was born
in 1724 in Königsberg, (now part of Russia, and called Kaliningrad).
He was one of the fathers of 'critical philosophy',
and divided modes of thinking into two kinds, analytic and synthetic.
Analytical propositions are those which can be proven to be true
by analysis, for example 'pink boots1 are boots2'. This
statement must be true, because the predicate is contained in the
subject. (If pink boots1 weren't boots2, then they wouldn't
be boots1!)
Synthetic propositions are those that cannot be contrived purely
from analysis, for example, 'the boot is pink', this
relates to something in the real world and cannot be shown to be
true or untrue purely by analysis of the statement, you need to
see the boot. His most famous works include his 'Critique
of Pure Reason' and 'The Metaphysics of Ethics',
in which he discussed his views on ethics.
Kant died in 1804, when Hegel was 33. Hegel was born in Stuttgart
and his philosophy was greatly influenced by that of Kant. After
an inheritance he was able to devote his entire life to academic
works.
He believed that dialectical reasoning (debate by question and
answer to resolve two differing points of view) was the only way
for progress in human thought. He believed that all men were fundamentally
free, and that our task is to find a state or a set of laws under
which we can all live freely.
Hegel did not advocate anarchy, rather he thought that we could
make ourselves free by choosing to obey laws we knew to be rational.
Hegel died in 1831 of cholera, after one day's illness. He
was buried next to another German philosopher, Fichte, and near
another, Karl Solger, in a plot he had chosen himself.
The last of these three, with perhaps the biggest influence on
recent history, born in 1818, was Karl Marx. He is in fact best
known for his economic theories, especially one seminal work he
produced together with Engels, 'The Communist Manifesto'.
In fact this only represents only a tiny fraction of his thought.
Overall, his writing on Communism represents only an aside, he wrote
much more simply in criticism of capitalism, or on analysis of concrete
political events.
An even more contemporary philosopher was Martin Heidegger, who
died only in 1976. He was strongly influenced by Nietzsche, and
in turn his work influenced the French existentialist Jean Paul
Sartre, although Heidegger himself disagreed with existentialist
interpretations of his work. His work has had a great influence
on Western philosophy, but he has received little public recognition
because of his refusal to apologise for his involvement with the
National Socialist Party. To what degree he was involved is still
unclear.
Standing like a giant over modern German literary philosophy is
the Nobel prize-winner, Hermann Hesse. At the age of 13 he was told
he would be 'a poet or nothing', so he started off by
writing unimpressive romantic novels. His first successful work
was the more philosophical 'Peter Camenzind', which
positively burned with anger at his repressed and traditional childhood.
His most widely read work is 'Siddhartha', which was
published in 1922, it is based on the idea that man's true
nature has been lost and can only be found through self expression.
Hesse was at one point accused of supporting the Nazis, whom he
did not openly criticize, but while based in Switzerland he did
a lot to help political refugees from Germany, and refused to leave
out sections of his works which dealt with pogroms and anti-Semitism.
His publisher Peter Suhrkamp, was arrested by the Nazis in 1944.
Hesse received the Nobel Prize in 1946, and thereafter did not
produce further major works. He died in 1962.
Popularly regarded
as a nation of practical people, it should come as no surprise
that Germany has produced a number of thinkers who have contributed
significantly to the history of western thought. For visitors
interested in the philosophers mentioned in the article there
are a number of museums and momuments dedicated to them located
throughout the country.
The Hegelhaus in Stuttgart is the house where the
philosopher was born and is now a museum dedicated to Hegel's
life and work.
Chemnitz, formerly Karl-Marx-Stadt, has a giant two-storey
bronze head of Marx created by the Soviet artist Lew Kerbel
in 1971. In Trier, Marx's birthplace, the philosopher's
house is preserved with exhibitions dedicated to his work.
In Messkirch, south of Stuttgart, there is a
small museum dedicated to Martin Heidigger containing a library
and some of his original works.
The Nietzsche Archiv, now a memorial and study center,
is the house where the philosopher spent his final years in
Weimar. Nietzsche's sister commissioned the Belgian
arciitect Henry van de Velde to remodel the ground floor after
her brother's death.
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