The Philosophy of Values in Contemporary Western Philosophical Thought Max Schiller and Nevulay Hartmann as a model
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.36317/kaj/2022/v53.i1.10259Keywords:
Max Schiller, Nevolai Hartmann, Value, Husserl, Phenomenology, Vital Values, Sacred Values, Empathy, LoveAbstract
In particular, the philosophy of values in Germany is closely related to phenomenological philosophy “phenomenology.” Max Schiller and Nevolai Hartmann were influenced by Husserl’s philosophical philosophy, as well as that “Husserl” philosophers limited to studying the phenomena that this little room means these data. Or facts that appear to be consciousness or feeling. Phenomenology wants to revert to the world of data or the world of things in order to know this that we perceive, feel, rationalize, or think about. In the Phenomenological approach to other fields, Max Schiller applied it in physiology (the science of values), and also Nivolai Hartmann used it in his study of ethics. “Schiller” sees in the Phenomenology of Values a broad field that Husserl neglected, and it is necessary to mean basic care.
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Copyright (c) 2022 Sami Shahid Mashkour
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.