Robert von Zimmermann

Summary

Robert von Zimmermann or Robert Zimmermann (November 2, 1824, Prague – September 1, 1898, Prague) was a philosopher from the Austrian Empire and later Austria-Hungary.

The mathematician and philosopher, Bernard Bolzano, entrusted his unfinished work, Grössenlehre ("Theory of Quantity", a philosophical foundation for mathematics), which had not been completed at the time of his death in 1848, to von Zimmermann who was 24 years old. Zimmermann had been a student of Bolzano's. Since Zimmermann's interests were more in the area of philosophy as he had been appointed to the chair of philosophy at the University of Prague in 1852, he didn't do much with Bolzano's papers. Most of the remaining manuscripts stayed in Zimmermann's possession until 1882 when he gave them to the Austrian Academy of Sciences (Kaiserliche Akademie der Wissenschaften in Wien).[1]

Robert von Zimmermann (Nr. 22) - Bronze bust in the Arkadenhof, University of Vienna - 0324

Robert von Zimmermann taught at the University of Vienna from 1861.[2] One of his doctoral students was Kazimierz Twardowski.

Literary works edit

  • Philosophische Propädeutik, 1852
  • Geschichte der Ästhetik als philosophische Wissenschaft, 1858
  • Allgemeine Ästhetik als Formwissenschaft (General Aesthetics as a Science of Form), 1865
  • Studien und Kritiken zur Philosophie und Ästhetik, 2 vols., 1870
  • Anthroposophie, 1882

References edit

  1. ^ O'Connor, J.J.; Robertson E.F., "Bernard Bolzano's manuscripts", University of St. Andrews, The MacTutor History of Mathematics archive.
  2. ^ von Schlosser, Julius, "The Vienna school of the history of art". Cf. pp.27, 29. (translated into English and edited by Karl Johns from ‘Die Wiener Schule der Kunstgeschichte‘, Mitteilungen des österreichischen Institut für Geschichtsforschung Ergänzungs-Band 13, Heft 2, Innsbruck: Wagner 1934)
  • Payzant, Geoffrey, "Eduard Hanslick and Robert Zimmermann: A Biographical Sketch", University of Toronto, 28 January 2001. (an earlier version delivered October 14, 1995 at a symposium on music and philosophy held at the University of Toronto)

Further reading edit

  • Johnston, William M., "The Austrian mind: an intellectual and social history, 1848-1938", University of California Press, March 1983. Cf. pp. 80, 152, 269, 289, 406, 454–455, various.