Значение слова "CASSIRER, ERNST" найдено в 4 источниках

CASSIRER, ERNST

найдено в "Historical dictionary of Weimar Republik"
Cassirer, Ernst: translation

(1874-1945)
   philosopher; with Heinrich Rickert,* Ger-many's leading neo-Kantian between 1900 and 1930. Born in Breslau of German-Jewish parentage, he studied philosophy and German literature, coming into contact with Hermann Cohen (1842-1918) while at Berlin*; in 1896 he transferred to Marburg to continue studies with Cohen. On his own, Cassirer identified both his method and his philosophy as an example of Cohen's Mar-burg School of neo-Kantianism (the Baden School, embracing Freiburg, Strass-burg, and Heidelberg, was distinct from the Marburg School). In 1899 he took a doctorate with a thesis on Leibniz's theory of knowledge. His appointment as Privatdozent at Berlin was owed largely to Wilhelm Dilthey, who appreciated his genius.Despite barriers in Germany owing to his Jewish heritage, Cassirer rejected a 1914 offer to teach at Harvard.
   In 1919 Cassirer joined Hamburg's new university. While he was evolving his concept of symbolic forms, he earned a reputation as a brilliant teacher. His life, marked by broad intellectual interests, was an exemplar of the German tradition of Bildung. In 1930 he was promoted to university rector. It was his good fortune to form rich friendships at Hamburg with Erwin Panofsky* and Aby Warburg,* and he later assisted with the transfer of Warburg's library to London.
   When Hitler* came to power in 1933, Cassirer resigned his positions and taught successively at Oxford (1933-1935), Goteborg (1935-1941), Yale (1941-1944), and Columbia (1944-1945). Always a neo-Kantian, he was broadly at-tracted to the formation and interrelationship of scientific and cultural concepts. His publications included Philosophie der Symbolischen Formen (Philosophy of symbolic forms, 1923) and Sprache und Mythos (Languages and myth, 1925).
   REFERENCES:Benz and Graml, Biographisches Lexikon; Cambridge Biographical Dictionary; Ferretti, Cassirer, Panofsky, and Warburg; Peter Gay, "Social History of Ideas"; NDB, vol. 3.


найдено в "Англо-русском экономическом словаре"
фил. Кассирер, Эрнст (1874-1945; немецкий философ, представитель Марбургской традиции неокантианства; как и Кант, считал, что реальный мир не может быть познан, а человек изучает только свое собственное восприятие этого мира; занимался разработкой философии культы как теории символов, обнаруживаемых феноменологией знания; основная работа "Philosophy of Symbolic Forms", три тома, 1923–1929; считал человека "символическим животным"; был хорошим историком философии)
See:
symbolic animal, curse of mediacy


найдено в "Dictionary of Jewish Biography"
Cassirer, Ernst: translation

(1874-1945)
   Philosoher of Polish origin. Born in Breslau, he studied under Hermann Cohen at the University of Marburg. In 1903 he began teaching at the University of Berlin. He published studies of Leibniz, as well as a four-volume treatment of the problem of knowledge. Later he was offered chairs at the universities of Frankfurt and Hamburg where he developed theories of symbolic form and myth. In 1929 he was elected rector of the University of Hamburg. With Hitler's rise to power, he left Germany and subsequently settled in the US.


найдено в "Philosophy dictionary"
Cassirer, Ernst: translation

(1874–1945)
German neo-Kantian, who resigned as Rector of Hamburg in 1933, and subsequently taught at various universities in England and the United States. His main ambition was to develop Kant's work into a general theory of culture. This involved a general theory of symbolization, and Cassirer, although influential in his time in many areas, is best remembered for his work on varieties of ‘symbolic forms’, presented in his major work Die Philosophie der symbolischen Formen (1923–9, trs. as The Philosophy of Symbolic Forms, 1953–7).


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