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Max Scheler

Max Ferdinand Scheler (German: [ˈʃeːlɐ]; 22 August 1874 – 19 May 1928) was a German philosopher known for his work in phenomenology, ethics, and philosophical anthropology. Considered in his lifetime one of the most prominent German philosophers,[1] Scheler developed the philosophical method of Edmund Husserl, the founder of phenomenology. Given that school's utopian ambitions of re-founding all of human knowledge, Scheler was nicknamed the "Adam of the philosophical paradise" by José Ortega y Gasset. After Scheler's death in 1928, Martin Heidegger affirmed, with Ortega y Gasset, that all philosophers of the century were indebted to Scheler and praised him as "the strongest philosophical force in modern Germany, nay, in contemporary Europe and in contemporary philosophy as such."[2] Scheler was an important influence on the theology of Pope John Paul II, who wrote his 1954 doctoral thesis on "An Evaluation of the Possibility of Constructing a Christian Ethics on the Basis of the System of Max Scheler", and later wrote many articles on Scheler's philosophy. Thanks to John Paul II as well as to Scheler's influence on his student Edith Stein, Scheler has exercised a notable influence on Catholic thought to this day.

Max Scheler
Born
Max Ferdinand Scheler

(1874-08-22)22 August 1874
Died19 May 1928(1928-05-19) (aged 53)
Era20th-century philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
SchoolPhenomenology
Munich phenomenology
Ethical personalism
Doctoral studentsHendrik G. Stoker
Main interests
History of ideas, value theory, ethics, philosophical anthropology, consciousness studies, sociology of knowledge, philosophy of religion
Notable ideas
Value-ethics, stratification of emotional life, ressentiment, ethical personalism

Life and career

Childhood

Max Scheler was born in Munich, Germany, on 22 August 1874, to a well-respected orthodox Jewish family.[1] He had "a rather typical late nineteenth century upbringing in a Jewish household bent on assimilation and agnosticism."[3] As an adolescent he turned to Catholicism, and Catholic thinkers such as St. Augustine and Pascal would significantly influence his philosophical positions.

Student years

Scheler began his university studies as a medical student at the University of Munich; he then transferred to the University of Berlin where he abandoned medicine in favor of philosophy and sociology, studying under Wilhelm Dilthey, Carl Stumpf and Georg Simmel. He moved to the University of Jena in 1896 where he studied under Rudolf Eucken, at that time a very popular philosopher who went on to win the Nobel Prize for literature in 1908. (Eucken corresponded with William James, a noted proponent of philosophical pragmatism, and throughout his life, Scheler entertained a strong interest in pragmatism.) It was at Jena that Scheler completed his doctorate and his habilitation and began his professional life as a teacher. His doctoral thesis, completed in 1897, was entitled Beiträge zur Feststellung der Beziehungen zwischen den logischen und ethischen Prinzipien (Contribution to establishing the relationships between logical and ethical principles). In 1898 he made a trip to Heidelberg and met Max Weber, who also had a significant impact on his thought. He earned his habilitation in 1899 with a thesis entitled Die transzendentale und die psychologische Methode (The transcendental and the psychological method) directed by Eucken. He became a lecturer (Privatdozent) at the University of Jena in 1901.[1]

First period (Jena, Munich, Gottingen and World War I)

Scheler taught at Jena from 1901 until 1906, then returned to the University of Munich where he taught from 1907 to 1910. At this time his study of Edmund Husserl's phenomenology deepened. Scheler had first met Husserl at Halle in 1901. At Munich, Husserl's own teacher Franz Brentano was still lecturing, and Scheler joined the Phenomenological Circle in Munich, centred around M. Beck, Th. Conrad, J. Daubert, M. Geiger, Dietrich von Hildebrand, Theodor Lipps, and Alexander Pfänder. Scheler was never a direct student of Husserl's, and in fact, their relationship was somewhat strained. In later years Scheler was rather critical of Husserl's Logical Investigations (1900/01) and Ideas I (1913), and he also was to harbor reservations about Being and Time by Martin Heidegger.

At Munich Scheler was caught up in the conflict between the predominantly Catholic university and the local Socialist media, which led to the loss of his Munich teaching position in 1910. He then briefly lectured at the Philosophical Society of Göttingen, where he made and renewed acquaintances with Theodore Conrad, Hedwig Conrad-Martius (an ontologist and Conrad's wife), Moritz Geiger, Jean Hering, Roman Ingarden, Dietrich von Hildebrand, Husserl, Alexandre Koyré, and Adolf Reinach. Edith Stein was one of his students, impressed by him "way beyond philosophy". In 1911, he moved to Berlin as an unattached writer and grew close to Walther Rathenau and Werner Sombart.

When his first marriage, to Amalie von Dewitz,[4][5] ended in divorce, Scheler married Märit Furtwängler in 1912, who was the sister of the noted conductor Wilhelm Furtwängler. Scheler's son by his first wife, Wolf Scheler, became troublesome after the divorce, often stealing from his father, and in 1923, after Wolf had tried to force him to pay for a prostitute, Scheler sent him to his former student Kurt Schneider, a psychiatrist, for diagnosis. Schneider diagnosed Wolf as not being mentally ill, but a psychopath, using two diagnostic categories (Gemütlos and Haltlos) essentially equivalent to today's "antisocial personality disorder".[6]

Along with other Munich phenomenologists such as Reinach, Pfänder and Geiger, Scheler co-founded in 1912 the famous Jahrbuch für Philosophie und phänomenologische Forschung, with Husserl as main editor. Scheler's first major work, published in 1913, was strongly influenced by phenomenology: Zur Phänomenologie und Theorie der Sympathiegefühle und von Liebe und Hass (English translation: The Nature of Sympathy, 1954).

During World War I (1914–1918), Scheler was initially drafted, but later discharged because of astigmia of the eyes. He was passionately devoted to the defence of both the war and Germany's cause during the conflict.

Second period (Cologne)

In 1919 Scheler became professor of philosophy and sociology at the University of Cologne. He stayed there until 1928.

After 1921 he disassociated himself in public from Catholic teaching and even from the Judeo-Christian God,[7][8] committing himself to pantheism and philosophical anthropology.[9]

His thinking increasingly took on a political character, and he became the only scholar of rank in the Weimar Republic to warn in public speeches against the dangers both of National Socialism and Communism. He met the Russian existentialist philosopher Nikolai Berdyaev in Berlin in 1923. In 1927 he delivered talks in Berlin on 'Politics and Morals' and 'The Idea of Eternal Peace and Pacifism'. He argued that capitalism is not so much an economic system as a calculating, globally growing 'mind-set'. While economic capitalism may have had some roots in ascetic Calvinism (as argued by Max Weber), its mind-set, however, has its origin in modern, subconscious angst as expressed in increasing needs for financial and other securities, for protection and personal safeguards as well as for rational manageability of all things, which ultimately subordinates the value of the individual person. Scheler called instead for a new era of culture and values, which he called 'The World-Era of Adjustment'.

Scheler also advocated an international university to be set up in Switzerland and was at that time supportive of programs such as 'continuing education' and of what he seems to have been the first to call a 'United States of Europe'. He deplored the gap existing in Germany between power and mind, a gap which he regarded as the very source of an impending dictatorship and the greatest obstacle to the establishment of German democracy. Five years after his death, the Nazi dictatorship (1933–1945) suppressed Scheler's work.

Towards the end of his life many invitations were extended to him from China, India, Japan, and Russia. On the advice of his physician, he cancelled reservations on the Star Line to the United States.

In 1927 at a conference in Darmstadt, near Frankfurt, arranged by the new-age philosopher Hermann Keyserling, Scheler delivered a lengthy lecture entitled 'Man's Particular Place' (Die Sonderstellung des Menschen), published later in much abbreviated form as Die Stellung des Menschen im Kosmos [literally: 'Man's Position in the Cosmos']. His well-known oratorical style and delivery captivated his audience for about four hours.

Early in 1928, he accepted a new position at the University of Frankfurt. There he looked forward to conversing with Ernst Cassirer, Karl Mannheim, Rudolph Otto and Richard Wilhelm, all of whom are occasionally referred to in his writings.

Scheler had developed the habit of smoking between sixty and eighty cigarettes a day which contributed to a series of heart attacks throughout 1928, forcing him to cancel any travel plans. On May 19, 1928, he died in a Frankfurt hospital due to complications from a severe heart attack.[10] His plans to publish a major work in Anthropology in 1929 were curtailed by his premature death.

Philosophical contributions

Love and the "phenomenological attitude"

When the editors of Geisteswissenschaften invited Scheler (about 1913/14) to write on the then developing philosophical method of phenomenology, Scheler indicated that the phenomenological movement was not defined by universally accepted theses but by a "common bearing and attitude toward philosophical problems."[11] Scheler disagrees with Husserl that phenomenology is a method of strict phenomenological reduction, but rather "an attitude of spiritual seeing...something which otherwise remains hidden...."[11] Calling phenomenology a method fails to take seriously the phenomenological domain of original experience: the givenness of phenomenological facts (essences or values as a priori) "before they have been fixed by logic,"[11] and prior to assuming a set of criteria or symbols, as is the case in the natural and human sciences as well as other (modern) philosophies which tailor their methods to those of the sciences.

Rather, that which is given in phenomenology "is given only in the seeing and experiencing act itself." The essences are never given to an 'outside' observer without direct contact with a specific domain of experience. Phenomenology is an engagement of phenomena, while simultaneously a waiting for its self-givenness; it is not a methodical procedure of observation as if its object is stationary. Thus, the particular attitude (Geisteshaltung, lit. "disposition of the spirit" or "spiritual posture") of the philosopher is crucial for the disclosure, or seeing, of phenomenological facts. This attitude is fundamentally a moral one, where the strength of philosophical inquiry rests upon the basis of love. Scheler describes the essence of philosophical thinking as "a love-determined movement of the inmost personal self of a finite being toward participation in the essential reality of all possibles."[12]

The movement and act of love is important for philosophy for two reasons: (1) If philosophy, as Scheler describes it, hearkening back to the Platonic tradition, is a participation in a "primal essence of all essences" (Urwesen), it follows that for this participation to be achieved one must incorporate within oneself the content or essential characteristic of the primal essence.[13] For Scheler, such a primal essence is most characterized according to love, thus the way to achieve the most direct and intimate participation is precisely to share in the movement of love. It is important to mention, however, that this primal essence is not an objectifiable entity whose possible correlate is knowledge; thus, even if philosophy is always concerned with knowing, as Scheler would concur, nevertheless, reason itself is not the proper participative faculty by which the greatest level of knowing is achieved. Only when reason and logic have behind them the movement of love and the proper moral preconditions can one achieve philosophical knowledge.[14] (2) Love is likewise important insofar as its essence is the condition for the possibility of the givenness of value-objects and especially the givenness of an object in terms of its highest possible value. Love is the movement which "brings about the continuous emergence of ever-higher value in the object--just as if it was streaming out from the object of its own accord, without any sort of exertion...on the part of the lover. ...true love opens our spiritual eyes to ever-higher values in the object loved."[15] Hatred, on the other hand, is the closing off of oneself or closing one's eyes to the world of values. It is in the latter context that value-inversions or devaluations become prevalent, and are sometimes solidified as proper in societies. Furthermore, by calling love a movement, Scheler hopes to dispel the interpretation that love and hate are only reactions to felt values rather than the very ground for the possibility of value-givenness (or value-concealment). Scheler writes, "Love and hate are acts in which the value-realm accessible to the feelings of a being...is either extended or narrowed."[16] Love and hate are to be distinguished from sensible and even psychical feelings; they are, instead, characterized by an intentional function (one always loves or hates something) and therefore must belong to the same anthropological sphere as theoretical consciousness and the acts of willing and thinking. Scheler, therefore calls love and hate, "spiritual feelings," and are the basis for an "emotive a priori" insofar as values, through love, are given in the same manner as are essences, through cognition. In short, love is a value-cognition, and insofar as it is determinative of the way in which a philosopher approaches the world, it is also indicative of a phenomenological attitude.

Material value-ethics

A fundamental aspect of Scheler's phenomenology is the extension of the realm of the a priori to include not only formal propositions, but material ones as well. Kant's identification of the a priori with the formal was a "fundamental error" which is the basis of his ethical formalism. Furthermore, Kant erroneously identified the realm of the non-formal (material) with sensible or empirical content. The heart of Scheler's criticism of Kant is within his theory of values. Values are given a priori, and are "feelable" phenomena. The intentional feeling of love discloses values insofar as love opens a person evermore to beings-of-value (Wertsein).

Additionally, values are not formal realities; they do not exist somewhere apart from the world and their bearers, and they only exist with a value-bearer, as a value-being. They are, therefore, part of the realm of a material a priori. Nevertheless, values can vary with respect to their bearers without there ever occurring an alteration in the object as bearer. E.g., the value of a specific work of art or specific religious articles may vary according to differences of culture and religion. However, this variation of values with respect to their bearers by no means amounts to the relativity of values as such, but only with respect to the particular value-bearer. As such, the values of culture are always spiritual irrespective of the objects that may bear this value, and values of the holy still remain the highest values regardless of their bearers. According to Scheler, the disclosure of the value-being of an object precedes representation. The axiological reality of values is given prior to knowing, but, upon being felt through value-feeling, can be known (as to their essential interconnections).

Values and their corresponding disvalues are ranked according to their essential interconnections as follows:

  1. Religiously-relevant values (holy/unholy)
  2. Spiritual values (beauty/ugliness, knowledge/ignorance, right/wrong)
  3. Vital values (health/unhealthiness, strength/weakness)
  4. Sensible values (agreeable/disagreeable, comfort/discomfort)[17]

Further essential interconnections apply with respect to a value's (disvalue's) existence or non-existence:

  • The existence of a positive value is itself a positive value.
  • The existence of a negative value (disvalue) is itself a negative value.
  • The non-existence of a positive value is itself a negative value.
  • The non-existence of a negative value is itself a positive value.[18]

And with respect to values of good and evil:

  • Good is the value that is attached to the realization of a positive value in the sphere of willing.
  • Evil is the value that is attached to the realization of a negative value in the sphere of willing.
  • Good is the value that is attached to the realization of a higher value in the sphere of willing.
  • Evil is the value that is attached to the realization of a lower value [at the expense of a higher one] in the sphere of willing.[18]

Goodness, however, is not simply "attached" to an act of willing, but originates ultimately within the disposition (Gesinnung) or "basic moral tenor" of the acting person. Accordingly:

  • The criterion of 'good' consists in the agreement of a value intended, in the realization, with the value preferred, or in its disagreement with the value rejected.
  • The criterion of 'evil' consists in the disagreement of a value intended, in the realization, with the value preferred, or in its agreement with the value rejected.[18]

Scheler argued that most of the older ethical systems (Kantian formalism, theonomic ethics, nietzscheanism, hedonism, consequentialism, and platonism, for example) fall into axiological error by emphasizing one value-rank to the exclusion of the others. A novel aspect of Scheler's ethics is the importance of the "kairos" or call of the hour. Moral rules cannot guide the person to make ethical choices in difficult, existential life-choices. For Scheler, the very capacity to obey rules is rooted in the basic moral tenor of the person.

A disorder "of the heart" occurs whenever a person prefers a value of a lower rank to a higher rank, or a disvalue to a value.

The term Wertsein or value-being is used by Scheler in many contexts, but his untimely death prevented him from working out an axiological ontology. Another unique and controversial element of Scheler's axiology is the notion of the emotive a priori: values can only be felt, just as color can only be seen. Reason cannot think values; the mind can only order categories of value after lived experience has happened. For Scheler, the person is the locus of value-experience, a timeless act-being that acts into time. Scheler's appropriation of a value-based metaphysics renders his phenomenology quite different from the phenomenology of consciousness (Husserl, Sartre) or the existential analysis of the being-in-the-world of Dasein (Heidegger). Scheler's concept of the "lived body" was appropriated in the early work of Maurice Merleau-Ponty.

Max Scheler extended the phenomenological method to include a reduction of the scientific method too, thus questioning the idea of Husserl that phenomenological philosophy should be pursued as a rigorous science. Natural and scientific attitudes (Einstellung) are both phenomenologically counterpositive and hence must be sublated in the advancement of the real phenomenological reduction which, in the eyes of Scheler, has more the shapes of an allround ascesis (Askese) rather than a mere logical procedure of suspending the existential judgments. The Wesenschau, according to Scheler, is an act of breaking down the Sosein limits of Sein A into the essential-ontological domain of Sein B, in short, an ontological participation of Sosenheiten, seeing the things as such (cf. the Buddhist concept of tathata, and the Christian theological quidditas[original research?]).

Man and History (1924)

Scheler planned to publish his major work in Anthropology in 1929, but the completion of such a project was curtailed by his premature death in 1928. Some fragments of such work have been published in Nachlass.[19] In 1924, Man and History (Mensch und Geschichte), Scheler gave some preliminary statements on the range and goal of philosophical anthropology.[20]

In this book, Scheler argues for a tabula rasa of all the inherited prejudices from the three main traditions that have formulated an idea of man: religion, philosophy and science.[21][22] Scheler argues that it is not enough just to reject such traditions, as did Nietzsche with the Judeo-Christian religion by saying that "God is dead"; these traditions have impregnated all parts of our culture, and therefore still determine a great deal of the way of thinking even of those that don't believe in the Christian God.[23] To really get freedom from such traditions it is necessary to study and deconstruct them (Husserl's term Abbau).

Scheler says that philosophical anthropology must address the totality of man, while it must be informed by the specialized sciences like biology, psychology, sociology, etc.

Works

  • Zur Phänomenologie und Theorie der Sympathiegefühle und von Liebe und Hass, 1913
  • Der Genius des Kriegs und der Deutsche Krieg, 1915
  • Der Formalismus in der Ethik und die materiale Wertethik, 1913 - 1916
  • Krieg und Aufbau, 1916
  • Die Ursachen des Deutschenhasses, 1917
  • Vom Umsturz der Werte, 1919
  • Neuer Versuch der Grundlegung eines ethischen Personalismus, 1921
  • Vom Ewigen im Menschen, 1921
  • Probleme der Religion. Zur religiösen Erneuerung, 1921
  • Wesen und Formen der Sympathie, 1923 (neu aufgelegt als Titel von 1913: Zur Phänomenologie ...)
  • Schriften zur Soziologie und Weltanschauungslehre, 3 Bände, 1923/1924
  • Die Wissensformen und die Gesellschaft, 1926
  • Der Mensch im Zeitalter des Ausgleichs, 1927
  • Die Stellung des Menschen im Kosmos, 1928
  • Philosophische Weltanschauung, 1929
  • Logik I. (Fragment, Korrekturbögen). Amsterdam 1975

English translations

  • The Nature of Sympathy, New Haven: Yale University Press, 1954.
  • Philosophical Perspectives. translated by Oscar Haac. Boston: Beacon Press. 1958.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link) 144 pages. (German title: Philosophische Weltanschauung.)
  • Person and Self-value: three essays. edited and partially translated by Manfred S. Frings. Boston: Nijhoff. 1987.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link) 201 pages. ISBN 90-247-3380-4.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Davis, Zachary and Anthony Steinbock, "Max Scheler", The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Spring 2019 Edition), Edward N. Zalta (ed.), URL = <https://plato.stanford.edu/archives/spr2019/entries/scheler/>.
  2. ^ Heidegger, The Metaphysical Foundations of Logic, “In memoriam Max Scheler,” trans. Michael Heim (Indiana University Press, 1984), pp. 50-52.
  3. ^ Graham McAleer, "Introduction to the Transaction edition", in Max Scheler, The Nature of Sympathy, London: Routledge, 2017, p. lxiii.
  4. ^ "Max Scheler Biography - eNotes.com".
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on 23 July 2012.
  6. ^ J. Cutting, M. Mouratidou, T. Fuchs and G. Owen, "Max Scheler’s influence on Kurt Schneider", History of Psychiatry v. 27, n. 3, p. 336-44 (here p. 340-41); citing A. Krahl and M. Schifferdecker, "Max Scheler und Kurt Schneider: wissenschaftlicher Einfluss und persönliche Begegnung", Fortschritte der Neurologie und Psychiatrie v. 66, p. 94-100 (1998).
  7. ^ Schneck, Stephen Frederick (2002) Max Scheler's acting persons: new perspectives p.6
  8. ^ Frings, Manfred S. (1997) The mind of Max Scheler: the first comprehensive guide based on the complete works p.9
  9. ^ McAleer, op. cit., p. lxiii.
  10. ^ Zachary Davis and Anthony Steinbock (2018). "Max Scheler". Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  11. ^ a b c Max Scheler, Selected Philosophical Essays, "Phenomenology and the Theory of Cognition," trans. David Lachterman (Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 1973), 137.
  12. ^ Max Scheler, On the Eternal in Man, "The Essence of Philosophy and the Moral Preconditions of Philosophical Knowledge" trans. Bernard Noble (New York: Harper & Brothers, 1960), 74.
  13. ^ Max Scheler, On the Eternal in Man, "The Essence of Philosophy and the Moral Preconditions of Philosophical Knowledge" trans. Bernard Noble (New York: Harper & Brothers, 1960), 75.
  14. ^ Max Scheler, On the Eternal in Man, "The Essence of Philosophy and the Moral Preconditions of Philosophical Knowledge" trans. Bernard Noble (New York: Harper & Brothers, 1960), 77. Scheler criticizes Plato and Aristotle on precisely this point. He writes, "Since...their philosophy defined the primal essence as an objectifiable entity and therefore a possible correlate of knowledge, they had also to regard knowledge as the definitive, ultimate participation in reality which man might attain.... Accordingly they could not but see the highest and most perfect form of human being in the philosophos, the 'wise one'." On the Eternal in Man, 77.
  15. ^ Max Scheler, The Nature of Sympathy, trans. Peter Heath (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1954), 57.
  16. ^ Max Scheler, Formalism in Ethics and Non-Formal Ethics of Values, trans. Manfred Frings and Robert Funk (Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 1973), 261.
  17. ^ Max Scheler, Formalism in Ethics and Non-Formal Ethics of Values, trans. M. Frings and R. Funk (Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 1973), 104-110. Concerning the status of values of utility, Manfred Frings lists utility as higher in value than sensible values. (Cf. Frings, The Mind of Max Scheler, 29-30.) However, Scheler's list of the rank of values in the Formalism does not list values of utility as an independent self-value, but as "consecutive values" of sensible values (104). In Ressentiment, Scheler writes, "It is true that enjoyment can and should be subordinated to higher values, such as vital values, spiritual values of culture, 'sacredness.' But subordinating it to utility is an absurdity, for this is a subordination of the end to the means. Cf. Scheler, Ressentiment, trans. Lewis Coser et al. (Milwaukee: Marquette University Press, 2003), 108.
  18. ^ a b c Max Scheler, Formalism in Ethics and Non-Formal Ethics of Values, trans. M. Frings and R. Funk (Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 1973), 26.
  19. ^ Six volumes of his posthumous works (Nachlass), so far not translated from German, make up volumes 10-15 of the 15 volume Collected Works (Gesammelte Werke) edited by Maria Scheler and Manfred S. Frings as listed in http://www.maxscheler.com/scheler4.shtml#4-CollectedWorks
  20. ^ Cook, Sybol (2003) Race and racism in continental philosophy
  21. ^ Martin Buber (1945) The Philosophical Anthropology of Max Scheler Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, Vol. 6, No. 2 (Dec. 1945), pp. 307-321
  22. ^ Martin Buber Between man and man p.216
  23. ^ chapter 1

Sources

  • Frings, Manfred S. (1965). Max Scheler: A concise introduction to the world of a great thinker. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: Duquesne University Press. 223 pages.
  • Frings, Manfred S. (1969). Person und Dasein: Zur Frage der Ontologie des Wertseins. Den Haag: Martinus Nijhoff. 118 pages.
  • Frings, Manfred S., ed. (1974). Max Scheler (1874-1928): centennial essays. The Hague: Nijhoff. 176 pages.
  • Kelly, Eugene (1997). Structure and Diversity: Studies in the Phenomenological Philosophy of Max Scheler. Boston: Kluwer. 247 pages. ISBN 0-7923-4492-8.
  • Nota, John H., S.J. (1983). Max Scheler: The Man and His Work. translated by Theodore Plantinga and John H. Nota. Chicago: Franciscan Herald Press. 213 pages. ISBN 0-8199-0852-5. (Original Dutch title: Max Scheler: De man en zijn werk)
  • Ranly, Ernest W. (1966). Scheler's Phenomenology of Community. The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff. 130 pages.

External links

  • Max-Scheler-Gesellschaft (Max Scheler Society) - German-language website
  • Works by Max Scheler at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Max Scheler at Internet Archive
  • Nature, Vol. 63. March 7, 1901, Book review of: Die Transcendentale Und Die Psychologische Methode, Method in Philosophy, Dr. Max F. Scheler, 1900
  • The Monist, Vol 12, 1902 Book review of: Die Transcendentale Und Die Psychologische Methode, by Dr. Max F. Scheler 1900 in English
  • Prof. Frings' Max Scheler Website (www.maxscheler.com)
  • Deutsches Leben der Gegenwart at Project Gutenberg (German)
  • Newspaper clippings about Max Scheler in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW

scheler, ferdinand, scheler, german, ˈʃeːlɐ, august, 1874, 1928, german, philosopher, known, work, phenomenology, ethics, philosophical, anthropology, considered, lifetime, most, prominent, german, philosophers, scheler, developed, philosophical, method, edmun. Max Ferdinand Scheler German ˈʃeːlɐ 22 August 1874 19 May 1928 was a German philosopher known for his work in phenomenology ethics and philosophical anthropology Considered in his lifetime one of the most prominent German philosophers 1 Scheler developed the philosophical method of Edmund Husserl the founder of phenomenology Given that school s utopian ambitions of re founding all of human knowledge Scheler was nicknamed the Adam of the philosophical paradise by Jose Ortega y Gasset After Scheler s death in 1928 Martin Heidegger affirmed with Ortega y Gasset that all philosophers of the century were indebted to Scheler and praised him as the strongest philosophical force in modern Germany nay in contemporary Europe and in contemporary philosophy as such 2 Scheler was an important influence on the theology of Pope John Paul II who wrote his 1954 doctoral thesis on An Evaluation of the Possibility of Constructing a Christian Ethics on the Basis of the System of Max Scheler and later wrote many articles on Scheler s philosophy Thanks to John Paul II as well as to Scheler s influence on his student Edith Stein Scheler has exercised a notable influence on Catholic thought to this day Max SchelerBornMax Ferdinand Scheler 1874 08 22 22 August 1874Munich German EmpireDied19 May 1928 1928 05 19 aged 53 Frankfurt am Main GermanyEra20th century philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolPhenomenologyMunich phenomenologyEthical personalismDoctoral studentsHendrik G StokerMain interestsHistory of ideas value theory ethics philosophical anthropology consciousness studies sociology of knowledge philosophy of religionNotable ideasValue ethics stratification of emotional life ressentiment ethical personalismInfluences Blaise Pascal Franz Brentano Wilhelm Dilthey Rudolf Eucken Edmund Husserl Theodor Lipps Georg Simmel Henri Bergson Carl Stumpf Friedrich NietzscheInfluenced Martin Heidegger Nicolai Hartmann Ortega y Gasset Martin Buber Karol Wojtyla Edith Stein Dietrich von Hildebrand Viktor Frankl Maurice Merleau Ponty Alicja Gescinska Contents 1 Life and career 1 1 Childhood 1 2 Student years 1 3 First period Jena Munich Gottingen and World War I 1 4 Second period Cologne 2 Philosophical contributions 2 1 Love and the phenomenological attitude 2 2 Material value ethics 2 3 Man and History 1924 3 Works 3 1 English translations 4 See also 5 References 6 Sources 7 External linksLife and career EditChildhood Edit Max Scheler was born in Munich Germany on 22 August 1874 to a well respected orthodox Jewish family 1 He had a rather typical late nineteenth century upbringing in a Jewish household bent on assimilation and agnosticism 3 As an adolescent he turned to Catholicism and Catholic thinkers such as St Augustine and Pascal would significantly influence his philosophical positions Student years Edit Scheler began his university studies as a medical student at the University of Munich he then transferred to the University of Berlin where he abandoned medicine in favor of philosophy and sociology studying under Wilhelm Dilthey Carl Stumpf and Georg Simmel He moved to the University of Jena in 1896 where he studied under Rudolf Eucken at that time a very popular philosopher who went on to win the Nobel Prize for literature in 1908 Eucken corresponded with William James a noted proponent of philosophical pragmatism and throughout his life Scheler entertained a strong interest in pragmatism It was at Jena that Scheler completed his doctorate and his habilitation and began his professional life as a teacher His doctoral thesis completed in 1897 was entitled Beitrage zur Feststellung der Beziehungen zwischen den logischen und ethischen Prinzipien Contribution to establishing the relationships between logical and ethical principles In 1898 he made a trip to Heidelberg and met Max Weber who also had a significant impact on his thought He earned his habilitation in 1899 with a thesis entitled Die transzendentale und die psychologische Methode The transcendental and the psychological method directed by Eucken He became a lecturer Privatdozent at the University of Jena in 1901 1 First period Jena Munich Gottingen and World War I Edit Scheler taught at Jena from 1901 until 1906 then returned to the University of Munich where he taught from 1907 to 1910 At this time his study of Edmund Husserl s phenomenology deepened Scheler had first met Husserl at Halle in 1901 At Munich Husserl s own teacher Franz Brentano was still lecturing and Scheler joined the Phenomenological Circle in Munich centred around M Beck Th Conrad J Daubert M Geiger Dietrich von Hildebrand Theodor Lipps and Alexander Pfander Scheler was never a direct student of Husserl s and in fact their relationship was somewhat strained In later years Scheler was rather critical of Husserl s Logical Investigations 1900 01 and Ideas I 1913 and he also was to harbor reservations about Being and Time by Martin Heidegger At Munich Scheler was caught up in the conflict between the predominantly Catholic university and the local Socialist media which led to the loss of his Munich teaching position in 1910 He then briefly lectured at the Philosophical Society of Gottingen where he made and renewed acquaintances with Theodore Conrad Hedwig Conrad Martius an ontologist and Conrad s wife Moritz Geiger Jean Hering Roman Ingarden Dietrich von Hildebrand Husserl Alexandre Koyre and Adolf Reinach Edith Stein was one of his students impressed by him way beyond philosophy In 1911 he moved to Berlin as an unattached writer and grew close to Walther Rathenau and Werner Sombart When his first marriage to Amalie von Dewitz 4 5 ended in divorce Scheler married Marit Furtwangler in 1912 who was the sister of the noted conductor Wilhelm Furtwangler Scheler s son by his first wife Wolf Scheler became troublesome after the divorce often stealing from his father and in 1923 after Wolf had tried to force him to pay for a prostitute Scheler sent him to his former student Kurt Schneider a psychiatrist for diagnosis Schneider diagnosed Wolf as not being mentally ill but a psychopath using two diagnostic categories Gemutlos and Haltlos essentially equivalent to today s antisocial personality disorder 6 Along with other Munich phenomenologists such as Reinach Pfander and Geiger Scheler co founded in 1912 the famous Jahrbuch fur Philosophie und phanomenologische Forschung with Husserl as main editor Scheler s first major work published in 1913 was strongly influenced by phenomenology Zur Phanomenologie und Theorie der Sympathiegefuhle und von Liebe und Hass English translation The Nature of Sympathy 1954 During World War I 1914 1918 Scheler was initially drafted but later discharged because of astigmia of the eyes He was passionately devoted to the defence of both the war and Germany s cause during the conflict Second period Cologne Edit In 1919 Scheler became professor of philosophy and sociology at the University of Cologne He stayed there until 1928 After 1921 he disassociated himself in public from Catholic teaching and even from the Judeo Christian God 7 8 committing himself to pantheism and philosophical anthropology 9 His thinking increasingly took on a political character and he became the only scholar of rank in the Weimar Republic to warn in public speeches against the dangers both of National Socialism and Communism He met the Russian existentialist philosopher Nikolai Berdyaev in Berlin in 1923 In 1927 he delivered talks in Berlin on Politics and Morals and The Idea of Eternal Peace and Pacifism He argued that capitalism is not so much an economic system as a calculating globally growing mind set While economic capitalism may have had some roots in ascetic Calvinism as argued by Max Weber its mind set however has its origin in modern subconscious angst as expressed in increasing needs for financial and other securities for protection and personal safeguards as well as for rational manageability of all things which ultimately subordinates the value of the individual person Scheler called instead for a new era of culture and values which he called The World Era of Adjustment Scheler also advocated an international university to be set up in Switzerland and was at that time supportive of programs such as continuing education and of what he seems to have been the first to call a United States of Europe He deplored the gap existing in Germany between power and mind a gap which he regarded as the very source of an impending dictatorship and the greatest obstacle to the establishment of German democracy Five years after his death the Nazi dictatorship 1933 1945 suppressed Scheler s work Towards the end of his life many invitations were extended to him from China India Japan and Russia On the advice of his physician he cancelled reservations on the Star Line to the United States In 1927 at a conference in Darmstadt near Frankfurt arranged by the new age philosopher Hermann Keyserling Scheler delivered a lengthy lecture entitled Man s Particular Place Die Sonderstellung des Menschen published later in much abbreviated form as Die Stellung des Menschen im Kosmos literally Man s Position in the Cosmos His well known oratorical style and delivery captivated his audience for about four hours Early in 1928 he accepted a new position at the University of Frankfurt There he looked forward to conversing with Ernst Cassirer Karl Mannheim Rudolph Otto and Richard Wilhelm all of whom are occasionally referred to in his writings Scheler had developed the habit of smoking between sixty and eighty cigarettes a day which contributed to a series of heart attacks throughout 1928 forcing him to cancel any travel plans On May 19 1928 he died in a Frankfurt hospital due to complications from a severe heart attack 10 His plans to publish a major work in Anthropology in 1929 were curtailed by his premature death Philosophical contributions EditLove and the phenomenological attitude Edit When the editors of Geisteswissenschaften invited Scheler about 1913 14 to write on the then developing philosophical method of phenomenology Scheler indicated that the phenomenological movement was not defined by universally accepted theses but by a common bearing and attitude toward philosophical problems 11 Scheler disagrees with Husserl that phenomenology is a method of strict phenomenological reduction but rather an attitude of spiritual seeing something which otherwise remains hidden 11 Calling phenomenology a method fails to take seriously the phenomenological domain of original experience the givenness of phenomenological facts essences or values as a priori before they have been fixed by logic 11 and prior to assuming a set of criteria or symbols as is the case in the natural and human sciences as well as other modern philosophies which tailor their methods to those of the sciences Rather that which is given in phenomenology is given only in the seeing and experiencing act itself The essences are never given to an outside observer without direct contact with a specific domain of experience Phenomenology is an engagement of phenomena while simultaneously a waiting for its self givenness it is not a methodical procedure of observation as if its object is stationary Thus the particular attitude Geisteshaltung lit disposition of the spirit or spiritual posture of the philosopher is crucial for the disclosure or seeing of phenomenological facts This attitude is fundamentally a moral one where the strength of philosophical inquiry rests upon the basis of love Scheler describes the essence of philosophical thinking as a love determined movement of the inmost personal self of a finite being toward participation in the essential reality of all possibles 12 The movement and act of love is important for philosophy for two reasons 1 If philosophy as Scheler describes it hearkening back to the Platonic tradition is a participation in a primal essence of all essences Urwesen it follows that for this participation to be achieved one must incorporate within oneself the content or essential characteristic of the primal essence 13 For Scheler such a primal essence is most characterized according to love thus the way to achieve the most direct and intimate participation is precisely to share in the movement of love It is important to mention however that this primal essence is not an objectifiable entity whose possible correlate is knowledge thus even if philosophy is always concerned with knowing as Scheler would concur nevertheless reason itself is not the proper participative faculty by which the greatest level of knowing is achieved Only when reason and logic have behind them the movement of love and the proper moral preconditions can one achieve philosophical knowledge 14 2 Love is likewise important insofar as its essence is the condition for the possibility of the givenness of value objects and especially the givenness of an object in terms of its highest possible value Love is the movement which brings about the continuous emergence of ever higher value in the object just as if it was streaming out from the object of its own accord without any sort of exertion on the part of the lover true love opens our spiritual eyes to ever higher values in the object loved 15 Hatred on the other hand is the closing off of oneself or closing one s eyes to the world of values It is in the latter context that value inversions or devaluations become prevalent and are sometimes solidified as proper in societies Furthermore by calling love a movement Scheler hopes to dispel the interpretation that love and hate are only reactions to felt values rather than the very ground for the possibility of value givenness or value concealment Scheler writes Love and hate are acts in which the value realm accessible to the feelings of a being is either extended or narrowed 16 Love and hate are to be distinguished from sensible and even psychical feelings they are instead characterized by an intentional function one always loves or hates something and therefore must belong to the same anthropological sphere as theoretical consciousness and the acts of willing and thinking Scheler therefore calls love and hate spiritual feelings and are the basis for an emotive a priori insofar as values through love are given in the same manner as are essences through cognition In short love is a value cognition and insofar as it is determinative of the way in which a philosopher approaches the world it is also indicative of a phenomenological attitude Material value ethics Edit A fundamental aspect of Scheler s phenomenology is the extension of the realm of the a priori to include not only formal propositions but material ones as well Kant s identification of the a priori with the formal was a fundamental error which is the basis of his ethical formalism Furthermore Kant erroneously identified the realm of the non formal material with sensible or empirical content The heart of Scheler s criticism of Kant is within his theory of values Values are given a priori and are feelable phenomena The intentional feeling of love discloses values insofar as love opens a person evermore to beings of value Wertsein Additionally values are not formal realities they do not exist somewhere apart from the world and their bearers and they only exist with a value bearer as a value being They are therefore part of the realm of a material a priori Nevertheless values can vary with respect to their bearers without there ever occurring an alteration in the object as bearer E g the value of a specific work of art or specific religious articles may vary according to differences of culture and religion However this variation of values with respect to their bearers by no means amounts to the relativity of values as such but only with respect to the particular value bearer As such the values of culture are always spiritual irrespective of the objects that may bear this value and values of the holy still remain the highest values regardless of their bearers According to Scheler the disclosure of the value being of an object precedes representation The axiological reality of values is given prior to knowing but upon being felt through value feeling can be known as to their essential interconnections Values and their corresponding disvalues are ranked according to their essential interconnections as follows Religiously relevant values holy unholy Spiritual values beauty ugliness knowledge ignorance right wrong Vital values health unhealthiness strength weakness Sensible values agreeable disagreeable comfort discomfort 17 Further essential interconnections apply with respect to a value s disvalue s existence or non existence The existence of a positive value is itself a positive value The existence of a negative value disvalue is itself a negative value The non existence of a positive value is itself a negative value The non existence of a negative value is itself a positive value 18 And with respect to values of good and evil Good is the value that is attached to the realization of a positive value in the sphere of willing Evil is the value that is attached to the realization of a negative value in the sphere of willing Good is the value that is attached to the realization of a higher value in the sphere of willing Evil is the value that is attached to the realization of a lower value at the expense of a higher one in the sphere of willing 18 Goodness however is not simply attached to an act of willing but originates ultimately within the disposition Gesinnung or basic moral tenor of the acting person Accordingly The criterion of good consists in the agreement of a value intended in the realization with the value preferred or in its disagreement with the value rejected The criterion of evil consists in the disagreement of a value intended in the realization with the value preferred or in its agreement with the value rejected 18 Scheler argued that most of the older ethical systems Kantian formalism theonomic ethics nietzscheanism hedonism consequentialism and platonism for example fall into axiological error by emphasizing one value rank to the exclusion of the others A novel aspect of Scheler s ethics is the importance of the kairos or call of the hour Moral rules cannot guide the person to make ethical choices in difficult existential life choices For Scheler the very capacity to obey rules is rooted in the basic moral tenor of the person A disorder of the heart occurs whenever a person prefers a value of a lower rank to a higher rank or a disvalue to a value The term Wertsein or value being is used by Scheler in many contexts but his untimely death prevented him from working out an axiological ontology Another unique and controversial element of Scheler s axiology is the notion of the emotive a priori values can only be felt just as color can only be seen Reason cannot think values the mind can only order categories of value after lived experience has happened For Scheler the person is the locus of value experience a timeless act being that acts into time Scheler s appropriation of a value based metaphysics renders his phenomenology quite different from the phenomenology of consciousness Husserl Sartre or the existential analysis of the being in the world of Dasein Heidegger Scheler s concept of the lived body was appropriated in the early work of Maurice Merleau Ponty Max Scheler extended the phenomenological method to include a reduction of the scientific method too thus questioning the idea of Husserl that phenomenological philosophy should be pursued as a rigorous science Natural and scientific attitudes Einstellung are both phenomenologically counterpositive and hence must be sublated in the advancement of the real phenomenological reduction which in the eyes of Scheler has more the shapes of an allround ascesis Askese rather than a mere logical procedure of suspending the existential judgments The Wesenschau according to Scheler is an act of breaking down the Sosein limits of Sein A into the essential ontological domain of Sein B in short an ontological participation of Sosenheiten seeing the things as such cf the Buddhist concept of tathata and the Christian theological quidditas original research Man and History 1924 Edit Scheler planned to publish his major work in Anthropology in 1929 but the completion of such a project was curtailed by his premature death in 1928 Some fragments of such work have been published in Nachlass 19 In 1924 Man and History Mensch und Geschichte Scheler gave some preliminary statements on the range and goal of philosophical anthropology 20 In this book Scheler argues for a tabula rasa of all the inherited prejudices from the three main traditions that have formulated an idea of man religion philosophy and science 21 22 Scheler argues that it is not enough just to reject such traditions as did Nietzsche with the Judeo Christian religion by saying that God is dead these traditions have impregnated all parts of our culture and therefore still determine a great deal of the way of thinking even of those that don t believe in the Christian God 23 To really get freedom from such traditions it is necessary to study and deconstruct them Husserl s term Abbau Scheler says that philosophical anthropology must address the totality of man while it must be informed by the specialized sciences like biology psychology sociology etc Works EditZur Phanomenologie und Theorie der Sympathiegefuhle und von Liebe und Hass 1913 Der Genius des Kriegs und der Deutsche Krieg 1915 Der Formalismus in der Ethik und die materiale Wertethik 1913 1916 Krieg und Aufbau 1916 Die Ursachen des Deutschenhasses 1917 Vom Umsturz der Werte 1919 Neuer Versuch der Grundlegung eines ethischen Personalismus 1921 Vom Ewigen im Menschen 1921 Probleme der Religion Zur religiosen Erneuerung 1921 Wesen und Formen der Sympathie 1923 neu aufgelegt als Titel von 1913 Zur Phanomenologie Schriften zur Soziologie und Weltanschauungslehre 3 Bande 1923 1924 Die Wissensformen und die Gesellschaft 1926 Der Mensch im Zeitalter des Ausgleichs 1927 Die Stellung des Menschen im Kosmos 1928 Philosophische Weltanschauung 1929 Logik I Fragment Korrekturbogen Amsterdam 1975English translations Edit The Nature of Sympathy New Haven Yale University Press 1954 Philosophical Perspectives translated by Oscar Haac Boston Beacon Press 1958 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link 144 pages German title Philosophische Weltanschauung On the Eternal in Man translated by Bernard Noble London SCM Press 1960 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link 480 pages Ressentiment edited by Lewis A Coser translated by William W Holdheim New York Schocken 1972 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link 201 pages ISBN 0 8052 0370 2 Selected Philosophical Essays translated by David R Lachterman Evanston Illinois Northwestern University Press 1973 ISBN 9780810103795 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link 359 pages ISBN 0 8101 0379 6 Formalism in Ethics and Non Formal Ethics of Values A new attempt toward the foundation of an ethical personalism translated by Manfred S Frings and Roger L Funk Evanston Illinois Northwestern University Press 1973 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link 620 pages ISBN 0 8101 0415 6 Original German edition Der Formalismus in der Ethik und die materiale Wertethik 1913 16 Problems of a Sociology of Knowledge translated by Manfred S Frings London Routledge amp Kegan Paul 1980 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link 239 pages ISBN 0 7100 0302 1 Person and Self value three essays edited and partially translated by Manfred S Frings Boston Nijhoff 1987 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link 201 pages ISBN 90 247 3380 4 On Feeling Knowing and Valuing Selected Writings edited and partially translated by Harold J Bershady Chicago University of Chicago Press 1992 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link 267 pages ISBN 0 226 73671 7 The Human Place in the Cosmos translated by Manfred Frings Evanston Northwestern University Press 2009 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link 79 pages ISBN 978 0 8101 2529 2 See also EditAxiological ethics Ressentiment Scheler MimpathyReferences Edit a b c Davis Zachary and Anthony Steinbock Max Scheler The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Spring 2019 Edition Edward N Zalta ed URL lt https plato stanford edu archives spr2019 entries scheler gt Heidegger The Metaphysical Foundations of Logic In memoriam Max Scheler trans Michael Heim Indiana University Press 1984 pp 50 52 Graham McAleer Introduction to the Transaction edition in Max Scheler The Nature of Sympathy London Routledge 2017 p lxiii Max Scheler Biography eNotes com MAX SCHELERS VALUE ETHICS Archived from the original on 23 July 2012 J Cutting M Mouratidou T Fuchs and G Owen Max Scheler s influence on Kurt Schneider History of Psychiatry v 27 n 3 p 336 44 here p 340 41 citing A Krahl and M Schifferdecker Max Scheler und Kurt Schneider wissenschaftlicher Einfluss und personliche Begegnung Fortschritte der Neurologie und Psychiatrie v 66 p 94 100 1998 Schneck Stephen Frederick 2002 Max Scheler s acting persons new perspectives p 6 Frings Manfred S 1997 The mind of Max Scheler the first comprehensive guide based on the complete works p 9 McAleer op cit p lxiii Zachary Davis and Anthony Steinbock 2018 Max Scheler Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy a b c Max Scheler Selected Philosophical Essays Phenomenology and the Theory of Cognition trans David Lachterman Evanston Northwestern University Press 1973 137 Max Scheler On the Eternal in Man The Essence of Philosophy and the Moral Preconditions of Philosophical Knowledge trans Bernard Noble New York Harper amp Brothers 1960 74 Max Scheler On the Eternal in Man The Essence of Philosophy and the Moral Preconditions of Philosophical Knowledge trans Bernard Noble New York Harper amp Brothers 1960 75 Max Scheler On the Eternal in Man The Essence of Philosophy and the Moral Preconditions of Philosophical Knowledge trans Bernard Noble New York Harper amp Brothers 1960 77 Scheler criticizes Plato and Aristotle on precisely this point He writes Since their philosophy defined the primal essence as an objectifiable entity and therefore a possible correlate of knowledge they had also to regard knowledge as the definitive ultimate participation in reality which man might attain Accordingly they could not but see the highest and most perfect form of human being in the philosophos the wise one On the Eternal in Man 77 Max Scheler The Nature of Sympathy trans Peter Heath New Haven Yale University Press 1954 57 Max Scheler Formalism in Ethics and Non Formal Ethics of Values trans Manfred Frings and Robert Funk Evanston Northwestern University Press 1973 261 Max Scheler Formalism in Ethics and Non Formal Ethics of Values trans M Frings and R Funk Evanston Northwestern University Press 1973 104 110 Concerning the status of values of utility Manfred Frings lists utility as higher in value than sensible values Cf Frings The Mind of Max Scheler 29 30 However Scheler s list of the rank of values in the Formalism does not list values of utility as an independent self value but as consecutive values of sensible values 104 In Ressentiment Scheler writes It is true that enjoyment can and should be subordinated to higher values such as vital values spiritual values of culture sacredness But subordinating it to utility is an absurdity for this is a subordination of the end to the means Cf Scheler Ressentiment trans Lewis Coser et al Milwaukee Marquette University Press 2003 108 a b c Max Scheler Formalism in Ethics and Non Formal Ethics of Values trans M Frings and R Funk Evanston Northwestern University Press 1973 26 Six volumes of his posthumous works Nachlass so far not translated from German make up volumes 10 15 of the 15 volume Collected Works Gesammelte Werke edited by Maria Scheler and Manfred S Frings as listed in http www maxscheler com scheler4 shtml 4 CollectedWorks Cook Sybol 2003 Race and racism in continental philosophy Martin Buber 1945 The Philosophical Anthropology of Max Scheler Philosophy and Phenomenological Research Vol 6 No 2 Dec 1945 pp 307 321 Martin Buber Between man and man p 216 chapter 1Sources EditBarber Michael 1993 Guardian of Dialogue Max Scheler s Phenomenology Sociology of Knowledge and Philosophy of Love Lewisburg Bucknell University Press 205 pages ISBN 0 8387 5228 4 Blosser Philip 1995 Scheler s Critique of Kant s Ethics Athens Ohio Ohio University Press ISBN 9780821411087 221 pages ISBN 0 8214 1108 X Deeken Alfons 1974 Process and Permanence in Ethics Max Scheler s Moral Philosophy New York Paulist Press 282 pages ISBN 0 8091 1800 9 Frings Manfred S 1965 Max Scheler A concise introduction to the world of a great thinker Pittsburgh Pennsylvania Duquesne University Press 223 pages Frings Manfred S 1969 Person und Dasein Zur Frage der Ontologie des Wertseins Den Haag Martinus Nijhoff 118 pages Frings Manfred S ed 1974 Max Scheler 1874 1928 centennial essays The Hague Nijhoff 176 pages Frings Manfred 1997 The Mind of Max Scheler The first comprehensive guide based on the complete works Milwaukee Wisconsin Marquette University Press 324 pages ISBN 0 87462 613 7 2nd ed 2001 Frings Manfred 2003 Life Time Springer 260 pages ISBN 1 4020 1333 7 2nd ed 2001 Kelly Eugene 1977 Max Scheler Chicago Twayne Publishers ISBN 9780805777079 203 pages ISBN 0 8057 7707 5 Kelly Eugene 1997 Structure and Diversity Studies in the Phenomenological Philosophy of Max Scheler Boston Kluwer 247 pages ISBN 0 7923 4492 8 Nota John H S J 1983 Max Scheler The Man and His Work translated by Theodore Plantinga and John H Nota Chicago Franciscan Herald Press 213 pages ISBN 0 8199 0852 5 Original Dutch title Max Scheler De man en zijn werk Ranly Ernest W 1966 Scheler s Phenomenology of Community The Hague Martinus Nijhoff 130 pages Schneck Stephen F 1987 Person and Polis Max Scheler s Personalism and Political Theory Albany State University of New York Press 188 pages ISBN 0 88706 340 3 Spader Peter 2002 Scheler s Ethical Personalism Its logic Development and Promise New York Fordham University Press 327 pages ISBN 0 8232 2178 4 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Max Scheler Max Scheler Gesellschaft Max Scheler Society German language website Works by Max Scheler at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Max Scheler at Internet Archive Nature Vol 63 March 7 1901 Book review of Die Transcendentale Und Die Psychologische Methode Method in Philosophy Dr Max F Scheler 1900 The Monist Vol 12 1902 Book review of Die Transcendentale Und Die Psychologische Methode by Dr Max F Scheler 1900 in English Prof Frings Max Scheler Website www maxscheler com Photos of Max Scheler at web site of Center for Advanced Research in Phenomenology A Filosofia de Max Scheler Portuguese language website Deutsches Leben der Gegenwart at Project Gutenberg German Newspaper clippings about Max Scheler in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Max Scheler amp oldid 1127807047, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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