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  2. On May 30th, 1527, Landgrave Philipp the Magnanimous of Hesse founded the Universität Marburg after introducing the Reformation in his territory; the University has also borne his name since the early 20th century.

  3. It was founded in 1527 by Philip I, Landgrave of Hesse, which makes it one of Germany's oldest universities and the oldest still operating Protestant university in the world. It is now a public university of the state of Hesse, without religious affiliation.

  4. Hermann Cohen (born July 4, 1842, Coswig, Anhalt—died April 4, 1918, Berlin) was a German - Jewish philosopher and founder of the Marburg school of neo- Kantian philosophy, which emphasized “pure” thought and ethics rather than metaphysics. (Read Peter Singer’s Britannica entry on ethics.)

  5. Sep 10, 2020 · Yet just as influential, at least within the German-speaking world, was the ‘Marburg School’, which emerged in the early 1960s around the Marxist political scientist Wolfgang Abendroth at the University of Marburg.

  6. Philosophy of Mathematics in the Marburg School. The distinctive Marburg philosophy of mathematics has its origins in Cohen’s Kants Theory of Experience (1885, esp. Ch.5 and Ch.12, §I), where Cohen gives a response to Helmholtz’s philosophy of geometry.

  7. Alongside the ‘critical theory’ of the Frankfurt School, West Germany was also home to another influential Marxist current known as the Marburg School. In this volume, Marburg disciple Lothar Peter traces the school’s history and situates it in the political discourse and developments of its time.

  8. The Marburg School is a term used to describe a group of Neo-Kantian philosophers at the University of Marburg in the second half of the 19th century and early part of the 20th century. The New Criticism, as neo-Kantianism was also called, was sceptical of 19th-century materialism and naturalism.

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