Leopold Flam
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Leopold Flam (16 March 1912–29 September 1995) was a Belgian philosopher. Together with Alphonse Dewaelhens, Chaïm Perelman and Rudolf Boehm, he was one of leading philosophers of Belgium from the sixties until the eighties.
Born in Antwerp, Flam studied social sciences, political history, philosophy and physics at the University of Ghent and obtained a PhD in history. During World War II he was imprisoned in the Dossin station in Mechelen and in the Buchenwald concentration camp. After the war he became a professor at the Universite Libre de Bruxelles.
He founded the Vlaamse vereniging voor Wijsbegeerte (1959) (E: Flemish League for Philosophy), later of Aurora. He became director of the magazine Geschiedenis in het onderwijs (E: History of education).
Flam died in Brussels on 29 September 1995.
[edit] Bibliography
- Gestalten van de Westerse subjectiviteit, Wereldbibliotheek
- Naar de Dageraad, Kroniek en getuigenis van de oorlogsjaren 1943-1945, VUBpress, 1996