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Topic: Adolf Reinach


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  Reference.com/Encyclopedia/Adolf Reinach
Adolf Bernhard Philipp Reinach (December 23 1883, Mainz, Germany – November 16, 1917, Diksmuide, Belgium), German philosopher, phenomenologist (from the Munich phenomenology perspective) and law theorist.
Adolf Reinach studied at the Ostergymnasium in Mainz (where he became at first interested in Plato) and later entered the University of Munich in 1901 where he studied mainly psychology and philosophy under Theodor Lipps.
Adolf Reinach and the Theory of Negative Judgement
www.reference.com /browse/wiki/Adolf_Reinach   (815 words)

  
  Adolf Reinach - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Adolf Bernhard Philipp Reinach (December 23, 1883, Mainz, Germany - November 16, 1917, Diksmuide, Belgium), German philosopher, phenomenologist (from the Munich phenomenology current) and law theorist.
Adolf Reinach studied at the Ostergymnasium in Mainz (where he became at first interested in Plato) and later entered the University of Munich in 1901 where he studied mainly psychology and philosophy under Theodor Lipps.
Besides his work in the area of phenomenology and philosophy in general, Reinach is mostly famous for his development of a theory of speech acts long before John Austin.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Adolf_Reinach   (835 words)

  
 [No title]
When Reinach says that the necessity of a state of affairs arises from the fact that the predicate is grounded in the nature of the subject, he is not referring to any sort of definitional or conceptual containment of the predicate in the subject.
Reinach suggests that it is "either the equality (in which case 7 + 5 and 12 are the subject) or the equality with 12 (in which case 7 + 5 is the subject)" (ibid).
Reinach challenges this theory and shows that in many cases it is untenable, and in those cases where it is tenable it is because the relation in question is in fact a state of affairs.
www.iap.li /oldversion/site/research/Aletheia/Aletheia_VI/Reinach.doc   (8810 words)

  
 Modal ontology of television: how to create social objects. - HighBeam Encyclopedia
Reinach was particularly interested in revealing the necessary laws governing all different kinds of states of affairs (cf.
Reinach was not mainly concerned with philosophy of language.
Reinach states that the counterpart's contribution to a social act is a necessary condition of success.
www.encyclopedia.com /doc/1G1-55084087.html   (7409 words)

  
 Reinach
Adolf Reinach, the founder of phenomenological philosophy of law, trained in both philosophy and law.
Reinach was one of the original coeditors of the Jahrbuch für Philosophie und phänomenologische Forschung, and his most important work, "The Apriori Foundations of Civil Law," appeared in the first volume of that journal.
Reinach claims that his phenomenological method of analysis of the a priori should be generalized and applied to other areas, such as criminal, constitutional, and administrative law.
www.mta.ca /~rhudson/papers/reinach.htm   (910 words)

  
 Logic and States of Affairs
Reinach, in contrast, looked neither to ideal meanings nor to their expressions in language, but (as he saw it) out into the world, to the objectual correlates of judging acts.
Reinach, in contrast, because his Sachverhalte may involve ordinary objects of experience, is able to show how our mental acts and states may relate, in different ways, to Sachverhalte as their objects, and how they may therefore stand in relations parallel to the logical relations which obtain (according to Reinach) among these Sachverhalte themselves.
Both Reinach and the situation semanticists suggest that we should shake ourselves free from the one-sided textbook conception of logic as a science of propositions conceived in abstraction from their realisations in the minds of thinking subjects and from their objectual correlates in the world.
cogprints.org /299/00/logic_and_the_Sachverhalt.htm   (6519 words)

  
 Adolf Reinach - Encyclopedia, History, Geography and Biography
At the outbreak of the first world war Reinach volunteerd to join the army.
After many battles and having received the Iron Cross, Reinach fell outside Diksmuide in Flanders on the 16th of November 1917.
Adolf Reinach, Life and Works, List of main works and Bibliography.
www.arikah.com /encyclopedia/Adolf_Reinach   (860 words)

  
 Adolf Reinach and the Theory of Negative Judgment
"Reinach's importance for the development of early phenomenology is particularly remarkable considering the brief life span of 34 years granted him for the development of his ideas and his influence.
To begin with, Reinach's a priori was not a property of propositions or acts of judging or knowing, but of states of affairs (Sachverhalte) judged or recognized.
Dubois James, "An introduction to Adolf Reinach's 'The supreme rules of rational inference according to Kant'," Aletheia 6: 70-80 (1994).
www.formalontology.it /reinacha.htm   (993 words)

  
 Libertas: June 2005
Reinach's essay is of great importance for a number of reasons, not the least of which is the clarity that he brings to phenomena dealing with the civil law and the concept of right.
For Reinach, then, although the obligation arising from the act of promising is extra-moral, this extra-moral obligation provides the foundation for and generally necessitates a moral obligation (or duty) to fulfill the extra-moral obligation to fulfill the promise.
Reinach claims that the “obligation is grounded in the nature of promising as an act and not in its content; the immorality of the content can, therefore, in no way touch this essential law” (45).
veritasnoctis.blogspot.com /2005_06_01_veritasnoctis_archive.html   (5017 words)

  
 Reinach, Searle, Hume: An Essay on Material Necessity
One aspect of Reinach's work to which we shall return is the way in which his account of social acts is complemented by a theory of legal formations and of the ways in which the universal categories of promise, obligation, etc.
Reinach, as we have seen, adopts a Platonistic answer to this question, an answer according to which there obtain necessary and intelligible relations between categories of certain sorts (for example promises, claims and obligations) as these are realized in the world.
Reinach's theory was in part inspired by the work on logic and ontology of his teacher Edmund Husserl.
wings.buffalo.edu /philosophy/faculty/smith/articles/reinach.html   (6770 words)

  
 Reinach and Searle:
Reinach writes that a verdict may introduce a new social entity dependent on the mental acts of the judge and the people affected by that verdict note 10.
Reinach's claim on the modality of states of affairs suffers from similar problems with regard to the distinction between epistemic and ontological distinctions.
As far as I understand Reinach correctly, the social component consists in the reciprocal consciousness of the physical expression as a reference to the topic and to the state of affairs that two the conscious parties are involved in a relationship of this kind.
www.sit.fi /~lars/papers/socialit.html   (11851 words)

  
 Lars Lundsten: PAPERS
Reinach 1989) was originally founded upon Edmund Husserl's early phenomenology as presented in The Logical Investigations (cf.
Reinach was dedicated to a realist approach, and, eventually, he even discouraged Husserl from making the transcendental turn (cf.
My point and Reinach's as well, is that there is a considerably wider variety of interesting and relevant modalities than these two standard examples.
www.sit.fi /~lars/papers/witt99.html   (2068 words)

  
 The Contributions of Reinach and Rothbard: Proceedings
Adolf Reinach defends a new type of aprioristic legal ontology which represents an alternative both to natural law theory and also to standard positivistic views in the philosophy of law.
I shall discuss Reinach' s views on the problem of the relation between law and ethics, and show how his theory deals with the problem of the compatibility between a priori legal principles and the various conventional stipulations of the positive law.
Reinach shows that there are synthetic a priori principles upon which every major science depends, so that the range of the synthetic a priori is much broader than is commonly supposed.
mises.org /upcomingstory.asp?control=27&...   (1017 words)

  
 Encyclopedia: Adolf Reinach
Munich Phenomenology refers to the group of philosophers, psychologists and phenomenologists that studied and worked in Munich at the beginning of the twentieth century, when Edmund Husserl published his masterwork, the Logical Investigations and began the phenomenological movement.
His tomb and its pillared enclosure outside the cathedral in Königsberg are some of the few artifacts of German times preserved by the Soviets after they conquered East Prussia in 1945.
A speech act is best described as in saying something, we do something, such as when a minister says, I now pronounce you husband and wife, or an action performed by means of language, such as describing something (), asking a question (Is it snowing?), making a request or order (Could...
www.nationmaster.com /encyclopedia/Adolf-Reinach   (1766 words)

  
 Welcome to the Irish Province of the Order of Carmelites
When Adolf Reinach died at the front in 1917, Edith went to his funeral at Gottingen and meeting her friend, his widow Anna, was surprised at her obvious peace.
Anna Reinach’s confidence in the power and mystery of the Cross in the death of her husband was decisive in moving Edith closer to Christianity.
Edith wished to become a contemplative religious and despite the satisfaction of her study and lecturing she was suffering from the attraction of the interior life, particularly in its urgency.
www.carmelites.ie /Spirituality/saintofourtime.htm   (2170 words)

  
 windsor
Reinach’s theory of communicative acts is very much the same as J. Austin’s and J. Searle’s version of speech act theory.
Reinach discusses only linguistic communication, but his analysis applies very well to television.
Reinach, Adolf (1913), ‘Die apriorischen Grundlagen des bürgerlichen Recthes’ [The A Priori Foundations of Civil Law], Jahrbuch för Philosophie und phänomenologische Forschung, 1, 685—847, reprinted in Reinach 1989.
www.mv.helsinki.fi /home/wadenstr/mediafilosofi/windsor.htm   (5241 words)

  
 Untitled Document
The work of Adolf Reinach (1883–1917) on states of affairs, judgment, and speech acts bears striking similarities to Bernard Bolzano’s (1781–1848) work in the area of general logic.
Third, Reinach did not openly criticize Bolzano in the manner he did the Austrians of the Brentano school, suggesting that Bolzano’s logic was more complementary with his own.
This conception of the nature and goal of phenomenology allowed Reinach and other phenomenologists a manner in which to analyze experience with its essential connections without either falling prey to psychologism or resorting to Platonism: phenomenology for them was truly a realist alternative.
www.symposium.fsj.ualberta.ca /issues/Vol10no2/jaray.htm   (253 words)

  
 Amazon.com: Judgment and Sachverhalt: An Introduction to Adolf Reinach's Phenomenological Realism (Phaenomenologica): ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-14)
Adolf Reinach was one of the leading figures of the Munich and Göttingen circles of phenomenology, and Husserl's first real co-worker.
Although his writings are highly original and remarkably clear, Reinach's tragic death in the First World War prevented him from formulating a definitive statement of his phenomenology, leaving his name virtually unknown to all but a small circle.
Confrontations of Reinach's theories of states of affairs, concepts and speech acts with the work of contemporary authors like Chisholm and Searle allow readers to evaluate Reinach's philosophy, not only in the light of the later developments of Husserl, but also in the light of certain Anglo-American developments.
www.amazon.com /Judgment-Sachverhalt-Introduction-Phenomenological-Phaenomenologica/dp/0792335198   (770 words)

  
 EDITH STEIN e A. REINACH (Beate Beckmann) - CARMELITANI SCALZI
Adolf Reinach (1885-1917), che a Gottinga era assistente di Husserl.
Ma, secondo l'analisi di Reinach, prima viene conosciuto in maniera immediata l'essercustoditi, e solo poi, in maniera mediatamente immanente, viene conosciuta l'esistenza di Dio.
A mio parere, il contributo filosofico di Reinach e della Stein sta in questo, nel non relegare le esperienze religiose in un'ambito precluso all'intelligibilità.
www.ocd.pcn.net /edsi_bec.htm   (5617 words)

  
 RCCS: View Book Info
Reinach is able to discern when a claim arises (in the moral/legal sense) by examining and developing "categories of legal objects without reference to existing legal categories, but rather [doing] so from first principles" (34).
This is not a fair criticism of Reinach, because Koepsell really is asking Reinach to create both an ontology and a system of justice (the First Problem).
The a priori method (Reinach's method) is inapplicable in certain cases because some objects have "no a priori elements or features" (40).
rccs.usfca.edu /bookinfo.asp?ReviewID=148&BookID=128   (2789 words)

  
 Judgment and Sachverhalt : An Introduction to Adolf Reinach's Phenomenological Realism (Phaenomenologica)
Adolf Reinach was one of the leading figures of the Munich and Göttingen circles of phenomenology, and Husserl's first real co-worker.
Although his writings are highly original and remarkably clear, Reinach's tragic death in the First World War prevented him from formulating a definitive statement of his phenomenology, leaving his name virtually unknown to all but a small circle.
Confrontations of Reinach's theories of states of affairs, concepts and speech acts with the work of contemporary authors like Chisholm and Searle allow readers to evaluate Reinach's philosophy, not only in the light of the later developments of Husserl, but also in the light of certain Anglo-American developments.
www.literacyconnections.com /0_0792335198.html   (221 words)

  
 Edith Stein
An especially important influence was Adolf Reinach, whom Husserl considered his favourite interpreter.
Reinach and his young wife, Anne (later to play a pivotal role in Edith’s life) often entertained students in their home, and Edith was a frequent visitor.
Anne Reinach seemed to have an inner certainty that transcended intellectual awareness–a knowledge that came not from reasoning but from the depths of faith.
judicial-inc.biz /edith_stein_supplement.htm   (12091 words)

  
 EDITH STEIN - Phänomenologie des religiösen Erlebnisses im Anschluss an
Reinach und Stein gehen wie Husserl von der transzendental-phänomenologischen Voraussetzung aus, bleiben aber nicht bei der Fragestellung nach dem "reinen Bewußtsein" stehen.
Reinach spricht von einem "inneren Riegel", der gelöst werden muß hin zur "reinen Geöffnetheit".
In einer Zeit, in der das ehemals christliche Gottesbild zur Karrikatur eines "extraterristrischen Störers" verzerrt ist, der gespenstisch in den zivilisatorischen Betrieb des sich-selbst-absolut-setzenden Menschen eingreift, wirkt der phänomenologische Bestand von Adolf Reinachs und Edith Steins Geborgenheitserlebnissen wohltuend.
www.ocd.pcn.net /edsi_db.htm   (4533 words)

  
 St.Edith Stein
Her inclination to Catholicism was probably influenced in part by the conversion of Max Scheler, one of several leading phenomenonologists who became Catholics.
But what first attracted her attention to Christianity was the inspiration of Frau Adolf Reinach, a devout Protestant woman.
Her husband, Adolf Reisach, one of Edith's university friends, was killed in action in1917.
www.stthomasirondequoit.com /SaintsAlive/id235.htm   (904 words)

  
 Edith Stein and the cross - The Catholic Moment   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-14)
Even more important was her friendship with Adolf Reinach and his wife.
When Reinach was killed in battle toward the end of 1917, Edith was devastated, but Frau Reinach’s resignation and hope proved to be a turning point for Edith, who later said, “It was my first encounter with the cross and the divine power it bestows on those who carry it.
That was the moment my unbelief collapsed and Christ shone forth in the mystery of the cross.” A second turning point occurred in 1921 when she read the life of St. Teresa of Avila, where she found a loving God and the importance of the cross for spiritual life.
www.thecatholicmoment.org /articles/091706a.html   (478 words)

  
 Dietrich von Hildebrand - CatholicAuthors.com
I was born in Florence on October 12, 1889, the son of the famous German sculptor Adolf von Hildebrand, and his wife, Irene Schaueffelen.
From 1909 to 1911 I studied at Goettingen with Edmund Husserl and Adolf Reinach.
It is especially to Reinach - a man of extraordinary philosophical power-- (unfortunately killed during World War I in 1917), that I am most indebted for my philosophical formation.
www.catholicauthors.com /vonhildebrand.html   (1914 words)

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