scholarly journals Nicolai Hartmann und die Gestalttheorie. Ein Vergleich unter dem Aspekt “Kausalität”

2021 ◽  
Vol 43 (3) ◽  
pp. 347-374
Author(s):  
Hans-Jürgen P. Walter

Summary In 1919 Nicolai Hartmann (NH) convincingly justified that there cannot exist a “general law of causation” as A. Meinong had in mind. For him Meinong’s understanding of causation (linear, successive in time) was bound on the region of the physical layer of being, simultaneously postulating it as the only possible causation there. This is the starting point of the comparison between N. Hartmann‘s understanding of causation and that of the Gestalt Theory, for which neither in psychic nor in natural (physical) context linear-successive causality plays a part. Therefore NH’s conception of 1919 was still completely incompatible with that of the Gestalt Theory despite the fact that he was distancing himself from the “general law of causation” sensu Meinong. 20 years later he changed this by adding the “Wechselwirkung” (interaction) to the linear successive causation in the physical layer. In doing so he approached the Gestalt theoretical position but failed it insofar as for it his linear-successive understanding of causation generally has had its day with regard to natural processes, also consequently for the physical (instead interaction between system and border conditions applies, an interaction of field forces). Thus the term “causation“ had become free for a dynamic concept of causation which is equally appropriate for the physical and the psychic. NH makes this move not until 1949, shortly before his death, by writing: ... (see original quotation in the German summary above). It is the opinion of the author of this work that the ingenious systematics of NH‘s Critical Ontology (which is not a closed system) should make it possible to execute the necessary corrections in some details of his theory of layers without questioning the structure of his systematics, thus carrying out what NH was not able to do himself due to his death.

2018 ◽  
Vol 40 (3) ◽  
pp. 337-364
Author(s):  
Hans-Jürgen P. Walter

Abstract The author exemplifies the congruency of essential foundations between the critical realism of the Berlin School of Gestalt Psychology (Gestalt theory) and Nicolai Hartmann`s Critical Ontology. For instance, this congruency manifests in the importance given to critical-realistic epistemology - purified from idealistic prejudices, not least prejudices such as production-theoretical ones - connected with an unconditional phenomenology. Altogether, it results in a shared critical distance from scholars of Brentano, such as Husserl and Meinong, as well as from Neo-Kantianism.


Author(s):  
Dorota Maria Leszczyna

El objetivo del presente artículo consiste en presentar la evolución de los estudios orteguianos relativos a la filosofía de Immanuel Kant. El filósofo madrileño recorrió en ellos un camino desde el idealismo lógico, específico de la escuela de Marburgo, hasta el enfoque metafísico y ontológico presentado por los alumnos de los maestros neokantianos, tales como Nicolai Hartmann, Heinz Heimsoeth, Karl Jaspers y Martín Heidegger. Estos filósofos hicieron de la filosofía de Kant su punto de partida, puesto que en ella radicaban las cuestiones metafísicas y ontológicas olvidadas y omitidas por los representandes de las escuelas neokantianas. TITLE: Interpretation of Kant’s philosophy by Ort ega y Gasset: from marburguian idealism to the critical ontologyABSTRACT: The purpose of this article is to present the evolution of Orteguian studies on the philosophy of Immanuel Kant. The spanish philosopher went from the logical idealism of the Marburg School to the metaphysical and ontological interpretations presented by the students of neo-Kantian masters such as Nicolai Hartmann, Heinz Heimsoeth, Karl Jaspers y Martín Heidegger. Those philosophers made the starting point of their reflection the philosophy of Kant because they found there metaphysical and ontological problems which were forgotten and omitted by the representatives of Neo-Kantian schools. 


2021 ◽  
Vol 32 (2) ◽  
pp. 261-281
Author(s):  
Andrea Perunovic

This article approaches the notion of engagement from the perspective of critical ontology. With language as the starting point of its hermeneutic task, it commences with an etymological analyses of diverse Indo-European words gravitating around the semantic field of the notion of engagement. From these introductory insights obtained by an exercise in comparative linguistics, devotion and commitment are mapped as two opposite, yet inseparable, modes of being of engagement. Both of these modes seem to condition engagement in an ontologically disparate manner. While examining their fundamental structures, some of the canonical concepts of history of philosophy such as being, existence, subjectivity, or world - and also some of its constitutive binary oppositions such as body/mind, individual/collective, transcendence/immanence, light/darkness and sacred/secular - will be reconsidered through the prism of different ontological dispositions that devotion and commitment impose respectively on engagement. The overall aim of this investigation is to bring forth the main existential characteristics of being-engaged, by interpreting the roles of who, where, and what of engagement, and in order to provide a fundamental conceptual apparatus for a critical ontology of engagement.


Author(s):  
Colin Martin

The environmental settings within which shipwrecks occur are matters of chance rather than of choice. It is primarily the wreck and not its physical context that is of consequence to nautical archaeologists. No two wreck-site formations are the same, since the complex and interacting variables that constitute the environmental setting, the nature of the ship, and the circumstances of its loss combine to create a set of attributes unique to each site. The dynamic phase, which begins with the event of shipwreck, is characterized by the wreck's status as an environmental anomaly. It is unstable, lacks integration with its surroundings, and is prone to further disintegration and dispersal by external influences. The chemical and physical properties of water cause reactions with the metals. Understanding these natural processes in the context of the distinctively anthropogenic inputs, this article characterizes archaeology as an essential prerequisite to the interpretation of any shipwreck.


Nuncius ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 27 (2) ◽  
pp. 289-308
Author(s):  
Irina Podgorny

Taking the story of Efisio Marini as its starting point, this paper argues that embalming and photography are materially and historically connected due to their chemical nature. Photography and modern embalming both originated in the “chemical complex” of the nineteenth century, i.e., the idea that nature and natural processes could be synthesized in the laboratory. As Ursula Klein and Wolfgang Lefèvre have remarked, eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century chemists experimented with materials, studied the possibilities for improving their production, examined their properties, explored their reactions, and analyzed their composition. Eighteenth-century chemistry, in their words, could be seen as the most authoritative science of materials. Marini’s story relates to this ontology of materials in that it refers to experiments with chemical substances and subsequent changes in their materiality and meaning.


2019 ◽  
Vol 41 (1) ◽  
pp. 9-30
Author(s):  
Hans-Jürgen P. Walter

Summary The author exemplifies the congruency of essential foundations between the critical realism of the Berlin School of Gestalt Psychology (Gestalt theory) and Nicolai Hartmann’s Critical Ontology. For instance, this congruency manifests in the importance given to critical-realistic epistemology – purified from idealistic prejudices, not least prejudices such as production-theoretical ones – connected with an unconditional phenomenology. Altogether, it results in a shared critical distance from scholars of Brentano, such as Husserl and Meinong, as well as from Neo-Kantianism.


Neofilolog ◽  
2012 ◽  
pp. 81-93
Author(s):  
Agnieszka Kubiczek

In the article I am presenting the course of the process of learning vocabulary activated while teaching a foreign language. The paper takes the models of information processing and input processing as a starting point to describe the phases of vocabulary learning and to implicate the teaching procedures based on the insights in the natural processes of language acquisition. It provides theoretical background referring to the concept of instructed learning understood as the possibility of steering learners’ perception and processing of lexical structures by the teacher, and also examples on how to use this knowledge in the classroom.


2019 ◽  
Vol 18 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 8
Author(s):  
Béla Pokol

A tanulmány a robotvilág hatásaival átitatott társadalmi körülmények között felmerülő, új etikai dilemmákat igyekszik elemezni. Ehhez azt a valóságképet veszi alapul, mely Nicolai Hartmann ontológiája nyomán a valóság létrétegei között találja meg az egyre terjedő mesterséges intelligencia helyét. Ebből a kiindulópontból veszi górcső alá a különösen angol nyelven nagy létszámú robotetikai elemzés összegző tanulmányait, és azt vizsgálja, hogy az emberi lét négyrétegűségének elmélete milyen korrekciókat tesz szükségessé e téren az eddigi elemzésekhez képest. --- The layers of human existence and the questions of robot ethics The paper seeks to analyse the new ethical dilemmas that arise in the social contexts of the robot world. It is based on the theoretical foundation of the ontology of Nicolai Hartmann, which finds the place of ever-increasing artificial intelligence among the layers of being of reality. From this starting point, it examines the summative studies of the massive robotics analysis already developed in English and looks at their correction that needs to be made in the theory of four-layered human existence in comparison with the analyses so far. Keywords: artificial intelligence, ontology, evolution, Nicolai Hartmann


Author(s):  
Giorgio Moscato ◽  
Giovanni Paolo Romano

Plunging jets are used in many industrial and civil applications, as for example in sewage and water treatment plants, in order to enhance aeration and mass transfer of volatile gases. They are also observed in natural processes as rivers self-purification, waterfalls and weirs. Many investigations dealt with the plunging jets in different configurations, but the dependence on Reynolds number and jet geometry were still not sufficiently addressed. For example, Mishra et al. (2020) studied an oblique submerged water impinging jet at different nozzle-to-plate distances and impingement angles, but only at a rather small Reynolds numbers (2600). On the other hand, different jet geometries have been extensively considered, but not for the plunging jet configuration (Mi, 2000; Hashiehbaf &Romano, 2013). In this work, plunging water jets issuing in air from orifices of different shape are considered. The aim of the work is to detail and compare jet behaviors in terms of velocity fields generated after impacting the air-water interface, as a function of Reynolds number and orifice geometry. However, air bubbles entrainment is mainly avoided in order to study the jet characteristics in a simpler case and use it as a reference starting point for future works.


2018 ◽  
Vol 40 (3) ◽  
pp. 281-300 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gisela Kubon-Gilke

Abstract The current theory of social policy is characterized by considerable inconsistencies and analytical gaps. Disciplinary one-sidedness goes together with nontransparent and partially incompatible epistemological considerations. In this paper, it is shown that the Gestalt theory can be a sound starting point for the theory of social policy. Gestalt theory provides a groundwork for the selection of behavioral assumptions, the understanding of self-organization processes and the formulation of basic normative questions.


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