Christoph von Sigwart

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Western Philosophy
19th-century philosophy
Christoph von Sigwart
Name
Christoph von Sigwart
Birth 28 March 1830(1830-03-28)
Tübingen, Württemberg
Death 4 August 1904 (aged 74)
Tübingen, Württemberg
School/tradition Psychologism
Main interests Logic, Ethics
Influenced by John Stuart Mill, Schleiermacher, Spinoza
Influenced Bernard Bosanquet,
F. H. Bradley, William James, Bertrand Russell

Christoph von Sigwart (28 March 18304 August 1904) was a German philosopher and logician. He was the son of the philosopher Heinrich Christoph Wilhelm Sigwart.

Contents

[edit] Life

After a course of philosophy and theology, he became professor at Blaubeuren (1859), and eventually at Tübingen, in 1865. The first volume of his principal work, Logik, was published in 1873 and took an important place among contributions to logical theory in the late nineteenth century. In the preface to the first edition, Sigwart explains that he makes no attempt to appreciate the logical theories of his predecessors; he intended to construct a theory of logic, complete in itself.

The Logik represents the results of a long and careful study not only of German but also of English logicians. In 1895 an English translation by Helen Dendy was published in London. Chapter 5 of the second volume is especially interesting to English thinkers as it contains a profound examination of the Induction theories of Francis Bacon, John Stuart Mill and David Hume. His Kleine Schriften contains valuable criticisms on Paracelsus and Giordano Bruno.

Quotation:

No amount of failure in the attempt to subject the world of sensible experience to a thorough-going system of conceptions, and to bring all happenings back to cases of immutably valid law, is able to shake our faith in the rightness of our principles. We hold fast to our demand that even the greatest apparent confusion must sooner or later solve itself in transparent formulas.[1]

[edit] Works

[edit] Works in English

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ James, William. The Will to Believe. Reprint. New York: Longmans, Green, and Co., 1911. 120.

[edit] References