METODO

International Studies in Phenomenology and Philosophy

Book | Chapter

131125

(1996) The school of Franz Brentano, Dordrecht, Nijhoff.

Carl Stumpf (1848–1936)

Karl Schuhmann

pp. 109-129

Among Brentano's more important students Carl Stumpf was not only one of the longest-living, to be outlived for a year only by Masaryk and for two by Husserl. He could pride himself also on having been Brentano's "most ancient disciple".1 Brentano's teaching at the University of Würzburg almost coincided, in fact, with the beginning of Stumpf s study there. Carl Stumpf was in his second term when Brentano on 14 July 1866 defended a series of theses for the purpose of his habilitation and subsequently became a Privatdozent. From Winter 1866/67 onward Stumpf attended Brentano's lecture courses on the history of philosophy, metaphysics and logic,2 and it was "the rigorous exactness of their train of thought" that made him quickly turn to philosophy.3 Already around Christmas 1866 he was on close terms with Brentano. Since a Privatdozent could not supervise a doctoral dissertation, Brentano sent Stumpf for three semesters (Summer 1867 to Summer 1868) to Göttingen where he took his degree under Hermann Rudolph Lotze. In Winter 1868/69 he went back to Würzburg where he again attended Brentano's lectures up to Summer 1870.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-015-8676-4_4

Full citation:

Schuhmann, K. (1996)., Carl Stumpf (1848–1936), in L. Albertazzi & R. Poli (eds.), The school of Franz Brentano, Dordrecht, Nijhoff, pp. 109-129.

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