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  1. Herman Cohen
    American film producer

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  1. Jul 15, 2010 · Hermann Cohen (b. 1842, d. 1918), more than any other single figure, is responsible for founding the orthodox neo-Kantianism that dominated academic philosophy in Germany from the 1870s until the end of the First World War.

  2. Jan 16, 2024 · One of the most experienced Africa-focused diplomats alive, Cohena former presidential advisor and DC resident—has roughly 110,000+ followers on X, formerly Twitter. Over a 38-year career, Cohen forged personal relationships with people from Nelson Mandela to Muhammad Ali.

  3. Main interests. Ethics. Lithograph by Karl Doerbecker. Hermann Cohen (4 July 1842 – 4 April 1918) was a German Jewish philosopher, one of the founders of the Marburg school of neo-Kantianism, and he is often held to be "probably the most important Jewish philosopher of the nineteenth century".

  4. Herman Jay "Hank" Cohen (born February 10, 1932) is an American diplomat who served as United States Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs from 1989 to 1993. Career. Herman Jay Cohen, born in New York City on February 10, 1932, received a BA in political science from the City College of New York in 1953.

  5. Hermann Cohen was the last great thinker in the German idealist tradition. He was the final spokesman for the chief intellectual value of this tradition: the sovereignty of reason, the preeminence of reason not only in the spheres of epistemology and metaphysics, but also in those of ethics, politics, and religion.

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  7. (1842 - 1918) Hermann Cohen, Systematizer of Ethical Monotheism Hermann Cohen was probably the most important Jewish philosopher of the nineteenth century. His major works, ironically, were purely secular, as he advanced the basic ideas of Immanuel Kant.

  8. Hermann Cohen: Judaism and Critical Idealism; By Andrea Poma; Edited by Michael L. Morgan, Indiana University, Bloomington, Peter Eli Gordon, Harvard University, Massachusetts; Book: The Cambridge Companion to Modern Jewish Philosophy; Online publication: 28 September 2007; Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CCOL0521813123.005

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