Johann Heinrich Diemer

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Johann Heinrich (Harry) Diemer (7 November 1904- June 1945) was born in Dronrijp, the Netherlands. His father was Revd N. Diemer who served at the Reformed Church at Vijfhuizen. He studied biology at the University of Leiden. He studied the ideas of Abraham Kuyper, Herman Bavinck and Jan Woltjer, and soon became an adherent of Herman Dooyeweerd and D. H. Th. Vollenhoven's Reformational philosophy.

He gave much of his free time to the Association for Calvinistic Philosophy; he was secretary to the editorial board for its journal Philosophia Reformata from its inception in 1936.

In January 1945 Diemer was arrested by the Nazis and was sent to the concentration camp at Neuengamme. He died in 1945, shortly after having been liberated by the British.

[edit] References

  • Herman Dooyeweerd 'In memory of Johann "Harry" Heinrich Diemer' in Nature and Miracle (originally published in Philosophia Reformata in Dutch).
  • Chris Gousmett 'A latter day Augustinian: Diemer, creation and miracle' [1]

[edit] Publications

  • Nature and Miracle (Wedge: Toronto, 1977)