Hermann Schweppenhäuser
Hermann Schweppenhäuser (12 March 1928 – 8 April 2015) was a German philosopher, publisher, and aphorist. He was a professor at the Institute for Social Research in Frankfurt am Main, Germany. Schweppenhäuser published over 100 books, and together with Rolf Tiedemann he edited Walter Benjamin's collected works.[1] He was born in Frankfurt am Main.
Since 2019, his collected works are being edited in six volumes by Thomas Friedrich, Sven Kramer, and Schweppenhäuser's son Gerhard.[1]
Heideggers Ontologie, die der Sprache alles gibt und den Menschen alles nimmt, verhält[2] diese zur Unmündigkeit. Mit der faktischen Stummheit der Menschen verklärt sie die Misere als Geschick, das erst das Sein werde.[3]
Hermann Schweppenhäuser died in Deutsch Evern, Germany at the age of 87.[4]
See also
References
- ^ a b "Gesammelte Schriften von Hermann Schweppenhäuser". SpringerLink, Springer Nature Limited, London N1 9XW, UK. Retrieved 2025-11-13. [He continued critical theory as dialectical philosophy and combined it with Walter Benjamin's style of thinking.]
- ^ "Th. W. Adorno: Soziologische Schriften 1". epdf.pub (in German). Retrieved 2025-11-13.
- ^ "Hermann Schweppenhäuser: Studien über die Heideggersche Sprachtheorie". www.etk-muenchen.de. Richard Boorberg Verlag GmbH & Co KG. Retrieved 2025-11-13. [Heidegger's ontology, which gives everything to language depriving human beings of everything, keeps them immature. With the factual muteness of humans, it transfigures misery as fate that is said to become being.]
- ^ Hermann Schweppenhäuser (in German)