fbpx
Wikipedia

Stephan Körner

Stephan Körner, FBA (26 September 1913 – 17 August 2000[a]) was a British philosopher, who specialised in the work of Kant, the study of concepts, and in the philosophy of mathematics.

Stephan Körner

JurDr, PhD, FBA
Born(1913-09-26)26 September 1913
Died17 August 2000(2000-08-17) (aged 86)
Bristol, England, UK
EducationCharles University, Prague; Trinity Hall, Cambridge
OccupationPhilosopher
EmployerUniversity of Bristol 1952–1979, Yale University 1970–1984.[1]
Spouse
(m. 1944)
ChildrenThomas Körner, Ann M. Körner

Born to a Jewish family in what would soon become Czechoslovakia, Körner left that country to avoid certain death at the hands of the Nazis after the German occupation in 1939, and came to the United Kingdom as a refugee, where he began his study of philosophy; by 1952 he was a professor of philosophy at the University of Bristol, taking up a second professorship at Yale in 1970. He was married to Edith Körner, and was the father of the mathematician Thomas Körner and the biochemist, writer and translator Ann M. Körner.

Early life edit

Körner was born in Ostrava, then part of Austria-Hungary, on 26 September 1913.[2][3][4] He was the only son of a teacher of classics and his wife. His father had studied classics in Vienna, while at the same time, winning prizes in mathematics to supplement his meagre income (a fellow student was a certain Leon Trotsky, who was frequently asked, "When is that great revolution that you are always talking about going to happen?"). Despite an early wish to study philosophy, Stephan was dissuaded by his father, who feared that his son would become a penniless academic; he was persuaded to study something more practical, and took his degree in law at Charles University in Prague, completing it in 1935. (He practised law only briefly but retained a strong interest, attending seminars at Yale Law School after his appointment as a visiting professor at Yale in the 1970s.) From 1936 to 1939 he carried out his military service, serving as an officer in the cavalry.

After German troops moved into the country in March 1939, a schoolmate of his, an officer in the SS, warned the Jewish family that life in German-occupied Moravia was no longer safe. His parents refused to leave, believing that they had nothing to fear since they were not communists. His father died in 1939, most likely by his own hand, during deportation to Nisko and his mother was murdered in 1941 after deportation to Minsk Ghetto, Belarus, on Transport F. His first cousin Ruth Maier was one of many other family members who was murdered at Auschwitz, after her arrest in and deportation from Norway in 1944. She is remembered as "Norway's Anne Frank". Stephan travelled with two friends, Otto Eisner and Willi Haas, through Poland to the United Kingdom, arriving a refugee just as the Second World War began. In Britain, he rejoined the army of the émigré Czechoslovak government; he saw service with them during the Battle of France in 1940 before returning to Britain.

He received a small grant to continue his education at the University of Cambridge, where he studied philosophy under R. B. Braithwaite at Trinity Hall; among others, he was taught by Ludwig Wittgenstein. Professor Braithwaite was exceedingly kind to his refugee student. On one occasion, Braithwaite invited him to his home saying, "Someone has given me a Hungarian salami; would you come to my house and show me how to eat it?" Such invitations were welcome since Stephan made little money as a waiter in a Greek restaurant and survived on "one fourpenny meat pie per day." In 1943 he was recalled to the Czechoslovak army, serving as a sergeant in the infantry during the push through France and into Germany. He would later say that he survived the fighting outside Dunkirk due to Dickens; recuperating in hospital from a minor wound, a doctor refused to discharge him until he had had another day to finish his novel. As a result, he missed the heavy fighting the next day, when many of his close friends were killed.

 
Stephan and Edith Körner on their wedding day in 1944.

He was awarded his PhD in 1944; shortly afterwards, he married Edith Laner ("Diti"; born Edita Leah Löwy; in 1938/39, her father changed the family name to Laner in a vain attempt to deceive the Nazis into thinking that he and his family were not Jewish), a fellow Czech refugee, whom he had met in London in 1941. He remained in the Czechoslovak army until 1946.

Academic career edit

After his army service, he worked at Cardiff University, tutoring students in German. He took up his first academic post in 1947, lecturing in philosophy at the University of Bristol. In 1952, he was appointed to the sole professorship and chairmanship of his department, which he would hold until 1979. In 1965 and 1966 he was Dean of the Faculty of Arts, and from 1968 to 1971 a Pro-Vice-Chancellor.

During this time he worked as a visiting professor of philosophy at Brown University in 1957, Yale University in 1960, the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill in 1963, University of Texas at Austin in 1964 and Indiana University in 1967. In 1970 he returned to Yale with a tenured visiting professorship in philosophy, holding it jointly with the Bristol post for nine years, and then as his sole post from 1979 to 1984.[3] Bristol appointed him a professor emeritus on his retirement, and he subsequently held a visiting professorship at the University of Graz from 1980 to 1989.

He received honorary doctorates from the Queen's University Belfast in 1981, and Graz in 1984, where he was appointed to an honorary professorship in 1986. Bristol appointed him an honorary fellow in 1987.[5] Trinity Hall bestowed upon him the same honour in 1991.

He was President of the British Society for the Philosophy of Science in 1965, the Aristotelian Society in 1967, the International Union of History and Philosophy of Science in 1969, and the Mind Association in 1973. He edited the journal Ratio from 1961 to 1980. He also served on the editorial board of Erkenntnis from 1974 to 1999. In 1967 he was elected a Fellow of the British Academy.

Philosophical work edit

In 1955 he published his first two major works. Kant, an introduction for non-specialists to Immanuel Kant's work, went through several impressions over the next three decades and is still regarded as a minor classic in the field; it was one of the first post-war books to reintroduce Kant to the English-speaking world. The fact that in this and later works Korner put forward a controversial view that Kant's categories apply directly to ordinary empirical science, was little noticed by a public grateful for any short work covering all of Kant's philosophy.[6]

The second, Conceptual Thinking, was a more specialised study, studying the way in which people deal with "exact" and "inexact" concepts – exact concepts, like logical constructs or mathematical ideas, could be clearly defined, whilst inexact concepts, like 'colour', would always have unclear boundaries. In 1957 he expanded on this, editing Observation and Interpretation, a collection of papers arising from a seminar which brought together both philosophers and physicists to discuss these questions.

His work led him into the philosophy of mathematics, on which he would publish a textbook in 1960; Philosophy of Mathematics, which took as its central theme the question of how applied mathematics can be metaphysically possible.

He also wrote on the philosophy of science in Experience and Theory (1966), including work on theoretical incommensurability, the concept that two directly contradictory theories – such as classical mechanics and relativity – can coexist, without either being specifically "wrong".

In 1969 he published What is Philosophy?, and in 1970 Categorial Frameworks, attempts to put forward his views to a general audience. Experience and Conduct, published in 1979, discussed how we evaluate and develop our own preferences and value systems; his final work, Metaphysics: Its Structure and Function (1984) was a wide-ranging study of metaphysics.

Personal life edit

Körner was remembered by colleagues and pupils as "extraordinarily handsome with an astonishing Czech accent ... [with] a certain sense of grandeur about him".[7] He retained an old-fashioned sense of manners, formal but courteous, as well as a formal appearance. Even on the hottest days, he was never seen without a tie and jacket.

He lived a happy and contented home life; he and Edith were remembered by friends as exceptionally close and devoted to one another. In their early married life they fitted the conventional academic mould – whilst he worked incessantly at his studies, she raised the family, looked after the house, managed the finances – but after the children had grown and left she worked at her own career, eventually becoming the chairman of the magistrates' court in Bristol and overseeing the redevelopment of the National Health Service's information-management system. Edith managed their lives, as with everything else, in a practical, organised and forceful way, ensuring that he could work as freely as possible; he was fond of saying that "Diti does everything, but leaves the philosophy to me".[2]

The couple had two children – Thomas, a professor of mathematics, and Ann, a biochemist, writer and translator,[8] who married Sidney Altman (a joint winner of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1989).

Following Edith's diagnosis with advanced cancer in the summer of 2000, they chose to die together in August of that year, on the 17th.[9][10][11][12]

They were survived by both children and by four grandchildren.[13]

Publications edit

Books/monographs authored

  • (1955) Kant.
  • (1955) Conceptual Thinking (corrected republication, 1959)
  • (1960) The Philosophy of Mathematics. Dover Publications, ISBN 0-486-25048-2
  • (1966) Experience and Theory - An Essay in the Philosophy of Science
  • (1967) Oxford University Press.
  • (1969) What is Philosophy? - One Philosopher's Answer. (later published as Fundamental Questions in Philosophy)
  • (1970) Categorical Frameworks.
  • (1971) Abstraction in Science and Morals, 24th Eddington Memorial Lecture (Cambridge University Press)
  • (1976) Experience and Conduct..
  • (1984) Metaphysics: Its Structure and Function.[14][15]

Books edited

Select papers/chapters

For more complete publication details see Körner's PhilPapers entry or 1987 bibliography.

Festschrift

  • (1987) Stephan Körner — Philosophical Analysis and Reconstruction, Jan T. J. Srzednicki (ed.) ISBN 978-94-009-3639-3

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ several contemporary news reports (and sources dependent on them) give 18 August, apparently in error. The date (and cause) of death was concluded by a Coroner (Paul Forrest, Coroner's Court, Bristol, UK, 18 October 2000).

References edit

  1. ^ Pyle, Andrew (1999). Key philosophers in conversation : the Cogito interviews. London: Routledge. ISBN 0-203-01680-7. OCLC 51721217. Stephan Körner, JurDr, PhD, FBA was born in Czechoslovakia and was educated at Charles' University, Prague and Trinity Hall, Cambridge. He was Professor of Philosophy at Bristol University 1952–79 and at Yale University 1970–84. His interests in, and contributions to, philosophy are wideranging. Few students of philosophy will have missed his celebrated study of Kant (Penguin Books, 1955). Amongst his many other distinguished writings are The Philosophy of Mathematics, Experience and Theory, Experience and Conduct, Metaphysics: Its Structure and Function
  2. ^ a b Shepherdson, John (16 January 2003). "Stephan Körner 1913–2000" (PDF). Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 115 Biographical Memoirs of Fellows, I. British Academy. doi:10.5871/bacad/9780197262788.003.0014. ISBN 9780197262788.
  3. ^ a b "Körner, Prof. Stephan, (26 Sept. 1913–18 Aug. 2000), Professor of Philosophy, Bristol University, 1952–79, and Yale University, 1970–84", Who Was Who, Oxford University Press, 1 December 2007, doi:10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.u179805, ISBN 978-0-19-954089-1, retrieved 11 September 2019 "Jur Dr, PhD; FBA 1967, Born 26 Sept. 1913; os of Emil Körner and Erna (née Maier); m 1944, Edith Laner, CBE, BSc, LLD, JP.."
  4. ^ Piercey, Robert (2005). "Körner, Stephan (1913–2000)". In Brown, John (ed.). Dictionary of Twentieth-Century British Philosophers. A&C Black. ISBN 9781843710967.[also at Oxford Reference Online here (requires login) having been republished in The Continuum Encyclopedia of British Philosophy (2010) ISBN 9780199754694]
  5. ^ "Tribute to Professor Stephan Körner". University of Bristol Communications Office. 19 September 2000. Retrieved 14 September 2019.
  6. ^ S. Korner, Experience and Theory, New York: The Humanities Press, 1966, pp. 176–178
  7. ^ Dr. Andrew Harrison, quoted in: Ahuja, Anjana. Times [London, England], 4 Sept. 2000, p. 3
  8. ^ "Easter Island and Its Mysteries (Chauvet) - in English". www.chauvet-translation.com. Retrieved 11 September 2019.
  9. ^ Harrison, Andrew. “In Memoriam: Stephan Körner (1913-2000).” Erkenntnis (1975-), vol. 55, no. 1, 2001, pp. 1–5. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/20013067.
  10. ^ Johnson, Daniel (23 August 2000). "Whose life is it, anyway?". The Daily Telegraph. ISSN 0307-1235. Retrieved 12 September 2019.
  11. ^ Harrison, Andrew (30 August 2000). "Obituary: Stephan Körner". The Guardian. Retrieved 11 September 2019.
  12. ^ Ahuja, Anjana. . The Times, 4 September 2000. - [Archived by Wayback Machine].
  13. ^ "Yale Bulletin and Calendar". archives.news.yale.edu. 15 September 2000. Retrieved 14 September 2019.
  14. ^ White, Alan R. (1985). . Philosophical Books. 26 (4): 255–256. doi:10.1111/j.1468-0149.1985.tb01964.x. ISSN 1468-0149. Archived from the original on 1 June 2021.
  15. ^ Stephan Körner, Metaphysics: Its Structure and Function Reviewed by Panayot Butchvarov, Philosophy in Review 6 (6):288-289 (1986)
  16. ^ Which includes Korner's symposium paper "On philosophical arguments in physics." [reprinted in: The Structure of Scientific Thought, ed. Madden, Edward H., (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1960)]

General References edit

  • "Professor Stephan Korner". The Times, 23 August 2000 (obituary).

External links edit

  • Interview with Stephan Körner (1990)
  • E-books by Stephan Körner available for loan at Open Library
  • "Wittgenstein and the problem of universals" (video) - Korner and Renford Bambrough discuss 'the traditional problem of universals and Wittgenstein's contribution, in his later philosophy, towards solving the problem'. (Open University, 1972)

stephan, körner, september, 1913, august, 2000, british, philosopher, specialised, work, kant, study, concepts, philosophy, mathematics, jurdr, fbaborn, 1913, september, 1913ostrava, austria, hungarydied17, august, 2000, 2000, aged, bristol, england, ukeducati. Stephan Korner FBA 26 September 1913 17 August 2000 a was a British philosopher who specialised in the work of Kant the study of concepts and in the philosophy of mathematics Stephan KornerJurDr PhD FBABorn 1913 09 26 26 September 1913Ostrava Austria HungaryDied17 August 2000 2000 08 17 aged 86 Bristol England UKEducationCharles University Prague Trinity Hall CambridgeOccupationPhilosopherEmployerUniversity of Bristol 1952 1979 Yale University 1970 1984 1 SpouseEdith Laner m 1944 wbr ChildrenThomas Korner Ann M KornerBorn to a Jewish family in what would soon become Czechoslovakia Korner left that country to avoid certain death at the hands of the Nazis after the German occupation in 1939 and came to the United Kingdom as a refugee where he began his study of philosophy by 1952 he was a professor of philosophy at the University of Bristol taking up a second professorship at Yale in 1970 He was married to Edith Korner and was the father of the mathematician Thomas Korner and the biochemist writer and translator Ann M Korner Contents 1 Early life 2 Academic career 3 Philosophical work 4 Personal life 5 Publications 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 General References 10 External linksEarly life editKorner was born in Ostrava then part of Austria Hungary on 26 September 1913 2 3 4 He was the only son of a teacher of classics and his wife His father had studied classics in Vienna while at the same time winning prizes in mathematics to supplement his meagre income a fellow student was a certain Leon Trotsky who was frequently asked When is that great revolution that you are always talking about going to happen Despite an early wish to study philosophy Stephan was dissuaded by his father who feared that his son would become a penniless academic he was persuaded to study something more practical and took his degree in law at Charles University in Prague completing it in 1935 He practised law only briefly but retained a strong interest attending seminars at Yale Law School after his appointment as a visiting professor at Yale in the 1970s From 1936 to 1939 he carried out his military service serving as an officer in the cavalry After German troops moved into the country in March 1939 a schoolmate of his an officer in the SS warned the Jewish family that life in German occupied Moravia was no longer safe His parents refused to leave believing that they had nothing to fear since they were not communists His father died in 1939 most likely by his own hand during deportation to Nisko and his mother was murdered in 1941 after deportation to Minsk Ghetto Belarus on Transport F His first cousin Ruth Maier was one of many other family members who was murdered at Auschwitz after her arrest in and deportation from Norway in 1944 She is remembered as Norway s Anne Frank Stephan travelled with two friends Otto Eisner and Willi Haas through Poland to the United Kingdom arriving a refugee just as the Second World War began In Britain he rejoined the army of the emigre Czechoslovak government he saw service with them during the Battle of France in 1940 before returning to Britain He received a small grant to continue his education at the University of Cambridge where he studied philosophy under R B Braithwaite at Trinity Hall among others he was taught by Ludwig Wittgenstein Professor Braithwaite was exceedingly kind to his refugee student On one occasion Braithwaite invited him to his home saying Someone has given me a Hungarian salami would you come to my house and show me how to eat it Such invitations were welcome since Stephan made little money as a waiter in a Greek restaurant and survived on one fourpenny meat pie per day In 1943 he was recalled to the Czechoslovak army serving as a sergeant in the infantry during the push through France and into Germany He would later say that he survived the fighting outside Dunkirk due to Dickens recuperating in hospital from a minor wound a doctor refused to discharge him until he had had another day to finish his novel As a result he missed the heavy fighting the next day when many of his close friends were killed nbsp Stephan and Edith Korner on their wedding day in 1944 He was awarded his PhD in 1944 shortly afterwards he married Edith Laner Diti born Edita Leah Lowy in 1938 39 her father changed the family name to Laner in a vain attempt to deceive the Nazis into thinking that he and his family were not Jewish a fellow Czech refugee whom he had met in London in 1941 He remained in the Czechoslovak army until 1946 Academic career editAfter his army service he worked at Cardiff University tutoring students in German He took up his first academic post in 1947 lecturing in philosophy at the University of Bristol In 1952 he was appointed to the sole professorship and chairmanship of his department which he would hold until 1979 In 1965 and 1966 he was Dean of the Faculty of Arts and from 1968 to 1971 a Pro Vice Chancellor During this time he worked as a visiting professor of philosophy at Brown University in 1957 Yale University in 1960 the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill in 1963 University of Texas at Austin in 1964 and Indiana University in 1967 In 1970 he returned to Yale with a tenured visiting professorship in philosophy holding it jointly with the Bristol post for nine years and then as his sole post from 1979 to 1984 3 Bristol appointed him a professor emeritus on his retirement and he subsequently held a visiting professorship at the University of Graz from 1980 to 1989 He received honorary doctorates from the Queen s University Belfast in 1981 and Graz in 1984 where he was appointed to an honorary professorship in 1986 Bristol appointed him an honorary fellow in 1987 5 Trinity Hall bestowed upon him the same honour in 1991 He was President of the British Society for the Philosophy of Science in 1965 the Aristotelian Society in 1967 the International Union of History and Philosophy of Science in 1969 and the Mind Association in 1973 He edited the journal Ratio from 1961 to 1980 He also served on the editorial board of Erkenntnis from 1974 to 1999 In 1967 he was elected a Fellow of the British Academy Philosophical work editIn 1955 he published his first two major works Kant an introduction for non specialists to Immanuel Kant s work went through several impressions over the next three decades and is still regarded as a minor classic in the field it was one of the first post war books to reintroduce Kant to the English speaking world The fact that in this and later works Korner put forward a controversial view that Kant s categories apply directly to ordinary empirical science was little noticed by a public grateful for any short work covering all of Kant s philosophy 6 The second Conceptual Thinking was a more specialised study studying the way in which people deal with exact and inexact concepts exact concepts like logical constructs or mathematical ideas could be clearly defined whilst inexact concepts like colour would always have unclear boundaries In 1957 he expanded on this editing Observation and Interpretation a collection of papers arising from a seminar which brought together both philosophers and physicists to discuss these questions His work led him into the philosophy of mathematics on which he would publish a textbook in 1960 Philosophy of Mathematics which took as its central theme the question of how applied mathematics can be metaphysically possible He also wrote on the philosophy of science in Experience and Theory 1966 including work on theoretical incommensurability the concept that two directly contradictory theories such as classical mechanics and relativity can coexist without either being specifically wrong In 1969 he published What is Philosophy and in 1970 Categorial Frameworks attempts to put forward his views to a general audience Experience and Conduct published in 1979 discussed how we evaluate and develop our own preferences and value systems his final work Metaphysics Its Structure and Function 1984 was a wide ranging study of metaphysics Personal life editKorner was remembered by colleagues and pupils as extraordinarily handsome with an astonishing Czech accent with a certain sense of grandeur about him 7 He retained an old fashioned sense of manners formal but courteous as well as a formal appearance Even on the hottest days he was never seen without a tie and jacket He lived a happy and contented home life he and Edith were remembered by friends as exceptionally close and devoted to one another In their early married life they fitted the conventional academic mould whilst he worked incessantly at his studies she raised the family looked after the house managed the finances but after the children had grown and left she worked at her own career eventually becoming the chairman of the magistrates court in Bristol and overseeing the redevelopment of the National Health Service s information management system Edith managed their lives as with everything else in a practical organised and forceful way ensuring that he could work as freely as possible he was fond of saying that Diti does everything but leaves the philosophy to me 2 The couple had two children Thomas a professor of mathematics and Ann a biochemist writer and translator 8 who married Sidney Altman a joint winner of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1989 Following Edith s diagnosis with advanced cancer in the summer of 2000 they chose to die together in August of that year on the 17th 9 10 11 12 They were survived by both children and by four grandchildren 13 Publications editBooks monographs authored 1955 Kant 1955 Conceptual Thinking corrected republication 1959 1960 The Philosophy of Mathematics Dover Publications ISBN 0 486 25048 2 1966 Experience and Theory An Essay in the Philosophy of Science 1967 Kant s Conception of Freedom Oxford University Press 1969 What is Philosophy One Philosopher s Answer later published as Fundamental Questions in Philosophy 1970 Categorical Frameworks 1971 Abstraction in Science and Morals 24th Eddington Memorial Lecture Cambridge University Press 1976 Experience and Conduct 1984 Metaphysics Its Structure and Function 14 15 Books edited 1957 Observation and Interpretation a Symposium of Philosophers and Physicists 16 1971 Practical Reason Papers and Discussions 1976 Explanation Papers and Discussions 1976 Philosophy of Logic Papers And Discussions Oxford Blackwell and California University Press Select papers chapters 1970 Description Analysis and Metaphysics in Joseph Bobik ed The Nature of Philosophical Inquiry South Bend Indiana Notre Dame University Press 1975 On Some Relations Between Logic and Metaphysics in The Logical Enterprise ed Alan R Anderson et al New Haven Yale University Press 1976 On the Subject Matter of Philosophy in H D Lewis ed Contemporary British Philosophy London Allen amp Unwin 1980 Science and the Organization of Belief in Mellor D H ed Science Belief and Behaviour Essays in Honour of R B Braithwaite Cambridge Eng New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 22960 9 1991 On the relation between Common Sense Science and Metaphysics in A Phillips Griffiths ed A J Ayer Memorial Essays Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplements pp 89 104 Cambridge Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 CBO9780511628740 008 1991 On the Logic of Practical Evaluation in Peter Geach ed Logic and Ethics Nijhoff International Philosophy Series vol 41 Springer Dordrecht doi 10 1007 978 94 011 3352 4 10For more complete publication details see Korner s PhilPapers entry or 1987 bibliography Festschrift 1987 Stephan Korner Philosophical Analysis and Reconstruction Jan T J Srzednicki ed ISBN 978 94 009 3639 3See also editSchema Kant Notes edit several contemporary news reports and sources dependent on them give 18 August apparently in error The date and cause of death was concluded by a Coroner Paul Forrest Coroner s Court Bristol UK 18 October 2000 References edit Pyle Andrew 1999 Key philosophers in conversation the Cogito interviews London Routledge ISBN 0 203 01680 7 OCLC 51721217 Stephan Korner JurDr PhD FBA was born in Czechoslovakia and was educated at Charles University Prague and Trinity Hall Cambridge He was Professor of Philosophy at Bristol University 1952 79 and at Yale University 1970 84 His interests in and contributions to philosophy are wideranging Few students of philosophy will have missed his celebrated study of Kant Penguin Books 1955 Amongst his many other distinguished writings are The Philosophy of Mathematics Experience and Theory Experience and Conduct Metaphysics Its Structure and Function a b Shepherdson John 16 January 2003 Stephan Korner 1913 2000 PDF Proceedings of the British Academy Volume 115 Biographical Memoirs of Fellows I British Academy doi 10 5871 bacad 9780197262788 003 0014 ISBN 9780197262788 a b Korner Prof Stephan 26 Sept 1913 18 Aug 2000 Professor of Philosophy Bristol University 1952 79 and Yale University 1970 84 Who Was Who Oxford University Press 1 December 2007 doi 10 1093 ww 9780199540884 013 u179805 ISBN 978 0 19 954089 1 retrieved 11 September 2019 Jur Dr PhD FBA 1967 Born 26 Sept 1913 os of Emil Korner and Erna nee Maier m 1944 Edith Laner CBE BSc LLD JP Piercey Robert 2005 Korner Stephan 1913 2000 In Brown John ed Dictionary of Twentieth Century British Philosophers A amp C Black ISBN 9781843710967 also at Oxford Reference Online here requires login having been republished in The Continuum Encyclopedia of British Philosophy 2010 ISBN 9780199754694 Tribute to Professor Stephan Korner University of Bristol Communications Office 19 September 2000 Retrieved 14 September 2019 S Korner Experience and Theory New York The Humanities Press 1966 pp 176 178 Dr Andrew Harrison quoted in Ahuja Anjana An organised death Stephan and Edith Korner Times London England 4 Sept 2000 p 3 Easter Island and Its Mysteries Chauvet in English www chauvet translation com Retrieved 11 September 2019 Harrison Andrew In Memoriam Stephan Korner 1913 2000 Erkenntnis 1975 vol 55 no 1 2001 pp 1 5 JSTOR www jstor org stable 20013067 Johnson Daniel 23 August 2000 Whose life is it anyway The Daily Telegraph ISSN 0307 1235 Retrieved 12 September 2019 Harrison Andrew 30 August 2000 Obituary Stephan Korner The Guardian Retrieved 11 September 2019 Ahuja Anjana An organised death The Times 4 September 2000 Archived by Wayback Machine Yale Bulletin and Calendar archives news yale edu 15 September 2000 Retrieved 14 September 2019 White Alan R 1985 Metaphysics Its Structure and Function Philosophical Books 26 4 255 256 doi 10 1111 j 1468 0149 1985 tb01964 x ISSN 1468 0149 Archived from the original on 1 June 2021 Stephan Korner Metaphysics Its Structure and Function Reviewed by Panayot Butchvarov Philosophy in Review 6 6 288 289 1986 Which includes Korner s symposium paper On philosophical arguments in physics reprinted in The Structure of Scientific Thought ed Madden Edward H Boston Houghton Mifflin Company 1960 General References edit Professor Stephan Korner The Times 23 August 2000 obituary External links editInterview with Stephan Korner 1990 E books by Stephan Korner available for loan at Open Library Wittgenstein and the problem of universals video Korner and Renford Bambrough discuss the traditional problem of universals and Wittgenstein s contribution in his later philosophy towards solving the problem Open University 1972 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Stephan Korner amp oldid 1173151414, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.