Background
Ludwig Landgrebe was born on March 9, 1900, in Vienna, Austria. He was a son of Karl Ludwig Heinrich and Rosa Anna Landgrebe.
(Ludwig Landgrebe, Edmund Husserl's close associate and co...)
Ludwig Landgrebe, Edmund Husserl's close associate and collaborator, knows Husserl's work from the inside. His writings on Husserl are both lucid explications of Husserl's thought and original contributions to phenomenology in their own right. In this volume of essays, Landgrebe traces the development of two concepts central to Husserl's philosophy: world and consciousness.
https://www.amazon.com/phenomenology-Edmund-Husserl-Six-essays/dp/0801411777/?tag=2022091-20
1981
Ludwig Landgrebe was born on March 9, 1900, in Vienna, Austria. He was a son of Karl Ludwig Heinrich and Rosa Anna Landgrebe.
Ludwig Landgrebe studied philosophy, history and geography in Vienna. He continued his studies in Freiburg and in 1923 became an assistant to Edmund Husserl. In 1927, Landgrebe received a Doctor of Philosophy degree. Later he went to Prague in order to receive a postdoctoral qualification.
Ludwig Landgrebe started his career as a philosopher in 1935 when he became an associate professor. Since 1939, he worked with Husserl’s last assistant, Eugen Fink, at the Husserl-Archives in Leuven. In 1940 Landgrebe was deported to Belgium. He worked part-time as a merchant assistant in Hamburg. In 1945, he took up a post of a professor in Hamburg and was made an ordinary professor in 1947 in Kiel. Landgrebe transferred to Cologne where he became director of the Husserl-Archives.
Ludwig Landgrebe wrote his first book Wilhelm Dilthey's Theorie der Geisteswissenschaften in 1928. Later he wrote such books as Phänomenologie und Metaphysik, Philosophie der Gegenwart and Über einige Grundfragen der Philosophie der Politik.
(Ludwig Landgrebe, Edmund Husserl's close associate and co...)
1981Ludwig Landgrebe was one of the most faithful followers of Edmund Husserl's phenomenology and phenomenological philosophy. He was also engaged in the controversies surrounding the issue of whether there is one lifeworld that is presumed as a ground of various societies and cultures, or whether such societies and cultures comprise distinct and, at times, incompatible lifeworlds. For Landgrebe this controversy reveals the most fundamental issue of awareness.
Ludwig Landgrebe married Ilse Maria Goldschmidt. The marriage produced four children.