Adolf Lasson

Adolf Lasson ( born March 12, 1832 in Strelitz, † December 19, 1917 in Berlin) was a German philosopher.

Adolf Lasson was born into a Jewish family. He studied from 1848 to 1852 at the University of Berlin philology and jurisprudence. In 1853 he was converted to Christianity. From 1859 he was a teacher at the Luisenstädtischer secondary school in Berlin. In 1861 he earned his doctorate at the University of Leipzig. From 1874 he worked as a professor of literature and aesthetics on the Victoria Lyceum and since 1877 as a lecturer in philosophy at the University of Berlin. He was the father of the Protestant theologian Georg Lasson.

In his writings, he represents one influenced by the views of the historical school of law, and by the more recent scientific training views of Hegel's doctrine.

Lasson was not a pacifist. In Scripture, the cultural ideal and the war in 1868 he formulated, for example:

Works

  • Johann Gottlieb Fichte in relation to Church and State (Berlin 1863)
  • Meister Eckhart the mystic ( Berlin. 1878)
  • The cultural ideal and the war (Berlin 1868)
  • Principle and the future of international law (ibid., 1871)
  • System of the philosophy of law (ibid. 1881)
  • The development of the religious consciousness of mankind by E. von Hartmann ', 1883
  • Temporal and Timeless, 1890
  • Sint ut sunt: For the old school against the innovators; Five Theses. Berlin: Walther & Apolant, 1890
  • The infinitely small in economic life wirth, lecture, 1891
  • Lottery and Economics, 1894
  • Memory, 1894
  • Commercial interests and property interests, 1896
  • The Body 1898
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