Johannes Rehmke
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| This article is orphaned as few or no other articles link to it. Please help introduce links in articles on related topics. (November 2006) |
Johannes Rehmke (1848-1930) was a German philosopher who offered sharp criticisms of Kant's approach to epistomology[1]. In his article The Conquest of Subjectivism, Paul Linke pointed out that it was Rehmke who first banned the words, 'subjective,' 'objective,' 'immanent,' and 'transcendent,' from his philosophical vocabulary.[2] He made a courageous break from subjectivism, which was the pervasive philosophical paradigm of the times, and also criticized phenomenalism.
[edit] Works
- Logik oder Philosophie als Wissenslehre (Logic or Philosophy as Theory of Knowledge)
- Die Welt als Wahrnehmung und Begriff (The World as Percept and Concept), Berlin, 1880.
[edit] References
- ^ Truth and Knowledge, Rudolf Steiner
- ^ Philosophy in Germany, Helen Knight

