Wincenty Lutosławski

Wincenty Lutosławski ( born June 6 1863 in Warsaw, † December 28, 1954 in Kraków ) was a Polish philosopher.

Lutosławski, who had studied in Dorpat, Rome, Paris and London, taught from 1890 at the University of Kazan. In 1895 he went to Spain, and later taught at the Jagiellonian University in Krakow, Lausanne, Geneva, London and Paris from 1920 to 1929 at the University of Vilnius.

He became known for his writings on Plato ( preservation and destruction of the State constitutions according to Plato, 1887; ​​The Origin and Growth of Plato 's Logic). In his own philosophical writings ( The Ethical Consequences of the Doctrine og Immortality, 1895; Preexistence and Reincarnation, 1928) he studied with metaphysical and spiritualistischem ideas.

In The Polish Nation ( 1908) he set the tolerance, love of freedom and Catholicism is as properties that have shaped the Polish nation and made ​​it the starting point of a future European society. Even before 1900 Lutosławski coined in the field of philology, the concept of stylometry ( Principes de stylométrie, 1890).

Lutosławski was married to the writer Sofia Casanova. He was an uncle of the composer Witold Lutoslawski.

Swell

  • Halina Lerski: Historical Dictionary of Poland, 966-1945, ABC -CLIO, 1996, ISBN 9780313034565, p 318
  • Stanislaw Jedynak: Polish Axiology of the 20th Century: Polish Philosophical Studies, IV, CRVP, 2002, ISBN 9781565181410, pp. 42-43
  • Philosopher (19th Century )
  • Philosopher ( 20th century)
  • Philologist
  • University teachers ( Jagiellonian University )
  • University teachers ( Vilnius University )
  • Pole
  • Man
  • Born in 1863
  • Died in 1954
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