Wolfgang von Leyden
Wolfgang Marius von Leyden was a German political philosopher who edited the letters of the 17th century empiricist, John Locke.[1]
He was born in Berlin on 28 December 1911, and was a grandson of Ernst Viktor von Leyden. He received a broad humanistic education,[2] studying at German (Berlin, Göttingen) and Italian (Florence) universities. When in Italy, he found himself stateless, possibly because of his Jewish descent, or possibly because of being confused with his brother, who was an alleged member of the communist party in Germany. Just before the second World War broke out he managed to come to England in 1939, where he was, as a German national and an Italian resident, interned on the Isle of Man, like most citizens of the Axis powers that came to the UK.
Throughout his career he studied the concepts of memory (Fernández 2006) and identity (McClure, 1996). From 1946 to 1977 he lectured at Durham University.[3] After retiring he continued part-time at the London School of Economics. At LSE Wolfgang's seminars on Ancient Greek thought were so popular that many of the attendees were not even officially taking the course, such was his standing. He died on 4 September 2004, kind and modest to the last.[4]
Notes
- ↑ John Locke Bibliography Home Page
- ↑ Obituary, David Scott, The Independent- 24 October 2004
- ↑ University of Durham, Senate: minutes of meeting held 26 October 2004- Vice Chancellor's Business Item 8(d)
- ↑ Locke Studies: vol 5,2005 biographical article by E.J Lowe
References
- John Locke: Essays on Nature (1954) OUP ISBN 0-19-925421-4
- McClure, KM Judging Rights: Lockean politics and the limits of consent (1996) Cornell University Press ISBN 0-8014-3111-5
- Fernández, J The intentionality of memory (2006) Australasian Journal of Philosophy Vol 85iii pp 1–28 ISSN 0004-8402
- Wolfgang von Leyden Growing up under the Weimar Republic, 1918-1933, Autobiography (1984) Vantage Press (New York) ISBN 0-533-05777-9
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