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| | Rudolf Hermann Lotze |
 | | Lotze's first essay was his dissertation De futurae biologiae principibus philosophicis, with which he gained (1838) the degree of doctor of medicine, only four months after obtaining the degree of doctor of philosophy. |
 | | These doctrines of Lotze, though pronounced with the distinct and reiterated reserve that they did not contain a solution of the philosophical question regarding the nature of mechanism, were nevertheless by many considered to be the last word of the philosopher, denouncing the reveries of Schelling or the idealistic theories of Hegel. |
 | | D., 2001, "Lotze on the Sensory Representation of Space" in L. "Hermann Lotze on Abstraction and Platonic Ideas", Idealization XI: Historical Studies on Abstraction and Idealization, edited by Francesco Coniglione, Roberto Poli, and Robin Rollinger, in Poznan Studies in the Philosophy of the Sciences and Humanities, Vol. |
| encyclopedia.stateuniversity.com /pages/19212/Rudolf-Hermann-Lotze.html (1242 words) |
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