NICOLAI HARTMANN’S PHILOSOPHY OF OBJECTIVE SPIRIT AS
SEEN THROUGH HIS COLLEAGUES’ REVIEWS Cover Image

NICOLAI HARTMANNS PHILOSOPHIE DES GEISTES IM SPIEGEL DER REZENSIONEN
NICOLAI HARTMANN’S PHILOSOPHY OF OBJECTIVE SPIRIT AS SEEN THROUGH HIS COLLEAGUES’ REVIEWS

Author(s): Steffen Kluck
Subject(s): Anthropology, Social Philosophy, Ontology
Published by: Издательство Санкт-Петербургского государственного университета
Keywords: Phenomenology; objective spirit; philosophical anthropology; layered ontology; Hartmann; Gehlen; Plessner; Heidegger; philosophy of 20th century;

Summary/Abstract: This essay traces the reception of Nicolai Hartmann’s philosophy of objective spirit based on his colleagues’ reviews of his works. By examining this reception, important aspects of Hartmann’s work can be elucidated, for example, in the context of phenomenology (Martin Heidegger) and philosophical anthropology (Helmuth Plessner, Arnold Gehlen). In addition, any new ideas in the philosophy of the objectivespirit will be likely to face objections analogous to those Hartmann’s theory encountered, which is whythis analysis can probably have a systematic significance. In this connection, the article describes and analyzessome contemporary reviews and highlights principle arguments pro et contra Hartmann’s philosophy.It aims to show which authors criticized Hartmann with which frameworks to point out the positionof his theory in the philosophy of the early 20th century. Furthermore, striking features and missing topicswithin the reviews are discussed. The conclusion of the article is that the reviewers praise Hartmann’swork for its phenomenological-empirical approach with rich, insightful descriptions and emphasize itsontologically founded middle position between Hegel and Marx, but at the same time characterize thebook as theoretically weak and ambiguous. This finding can help to understand the work’s marginalreception and at the same time provides hints in which way it seems to be still up-to-date and relevant.

  • Issue Year: 8/2019
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 160-181
  • Page Count: 22
  • Language: German