Ernst Platner

For other uses, see Ernst Zacharias Platner.
Ernst Platner (1744-1818)

Ernst Platner (German: [ˈplatnɐ]; June 11, 1744 December 27, 1818) was a German anthropologist, physician and philosopher born in Leipzig. He was father to painter Ernst Zacharias Platner (1773–1855).

He received his education at the University of Leipzig, where in 1770 he became an associate professor of medicine. Later at Leipzig, he was appointed a full professor of physiology (1780) and philosophy (1811).

Platner was a follower of the teachings of Leibniz. He was the author of Anthropologie für Aerzte und Weltweise, one of the more important anthropological works of the Spätaufklärung (an epoch of German literature). This work was influential to scholars that included Johann Gottfried Herder, Friedrich Schiller and Karl Philipp Moritz. He believed in treating modern anthropology as a medico-philosophical science of the whole individual a viewpoint that can be considered as a precursor of psychosomatic medicine.[1]

Platner is credited with originally coining the term Unbewußtseyn (unconscious).[2][3]

Selected publications

Notes

  1. Plat(t)ner, Ernst at NDB/ADB Deutsche Biographie
  2. Ernst Platner, Philosophische Aphorismen nebst einigen Anleitungen zur philosophischen Geschichte, Vol. 1 (Leipzig: Schwickertscher Verlag, 1793 [1776]), p. 86.
  3. Angus Nicholls and Martin Liebscher, Thinking the Unconscious: Nineteenth-Century German Thought (2010), Cambridge University Press, 2010, p. 9.

References


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