Hans Vaihinger
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Western Philosophy 20th-century philosophy |
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Name: | Hans Vaihinger |
Birth: | September 25, 1852 (Nehren, Württemberg) |
Death: | December 18, 1933 (Halle, Saxony-Anhalt) |
School/tradition: | Neo-Kantianism |
Main interests: | idealism, positivism |
Notable ideas: | fictionalism, instrumentalism, nominalism |
Influences: | Immanuel Kant, Friedrich Nietzsche |
Influenced: | Alfred Adler |
Hans Vaihinger (September 25, 1852 – December 18, 1933) was a German philosopher, best known as a Kant scholar and for his Philosophie des Als Ob (Philosophy of As If), published in 1911, but written more than thirty years earlier.[1]
Vaihinger was born in Nehren, Württemberg, Germany, near Tübingen, and raised in what he himself described as a "very religious milieu". He was educated at Tübingen, Leipzig, and Berlin, became a tutor and later a philosophy professor at Strasbourg before moving to the university at Halle in 1884. From 1892, he was a full professor.
In Philosophie des Als Ob, he argued that human beings can never really know the underlying reality of the world, and that as a result we construct systems of thought and then assume that these match reality: we behave "as if" the world matches our models. In particular, he used examples from the physical sciences, such as protons, electrons, and electromagnetic waves. None of these phenomena have been observed directly, but science pretends that they exist, and uses observations made on these assumptions to create new and better constructs.
This philosophy, though, is wider than just science. One can never be sure that the world will still exist tomorrow, but we usually assume that it does. Alfred Adler, the founder of Individual Psychology, was profoundly influenced by Vaihinger's theory of fictions, incorporating the idea of psychological fictions into his personality construct of a fictional final goal.
Later, James Hillman developed both Vaihinger and Adler's work with psychological fictions into a core theme of his work Healing Fiction in which he makes one of his more accessible cases for identifying the tendency to literalize, rather than "see through our meanings," (HF 110) with neurosis and madness.
[edit] Works
- 1876 Hartmann, Dühring und Lange (Hartmann, Dühring and Lange)
- 1897-1922 Kant-Studien, founder and chief editor
- 1899 Kant — ein Metaphysiker? (Kant — a Metaphysician?)
- 1902 Nietzsche Als Philosoph (Nietzsche as Philosopher)
- 1906 Philosophie in der Staatsprüfung. Winke für Examinatoren und Examinanden. (Philosophy in the Degree. Cues for teachers and students.)
- 1911 Philosophie des Als Ob (Philosophy of "As If", translated by C. K. Ogden, 1924)
- 1922 Commentar zu Kants Kritik der reinen Vernunft (Commentary on Kant's Critique of Pure Reason), edited by Raymund Schmidt
[edit] References
- ^ Loewenberg, J. Untitled Review. The Journal of Philosophy, Psychology and Scientific Methods, Vol. 9, No. 26. (Dec. 19, 1912), pp. 717-719.