english
Research group on private modern philosophy collections
Home » Index » Max Heinze
linea divisoria
Max Heinze

Max Heinze

Priessnitz 1839 - Leipzig 1904


Max Heinze, student of Trendelenburg, studied philosophy, theology and the history of philosophy; professor in Leipzig, Basel and Königsberg. Editor of Kant’s lectures on metaphysics, he studied primarily Greek philosophy.

Main works: Die Lehre vom Logos in der griechischen Philosophie (Oldenbourg, F. Schmidt 1872); Der Eudämonismus in der griechischen Philosophie («Abhandlungen der Königlich Sächsischen Gesellschaft der Wissenschaftlichen Philologischen historischen Klasse», VIII, 1883, 6, pp. 645-757); Über Prodikos aus Keos («Abhandlungen der Königlich Sächsischen Gesellschaft der Wissenschaftlichen Philologischen historischen Klasse», XXXVI, 1884, pp. 315-335); Über den Nous des Anaxagoras («Abhandlungen der Königlich Sächsischen Gesellschaft der Wissenschaftlichen Philologischen historischen Klasse», XLII, 1890, pp. 1-45); Vorlesungen Kants uber Metaphysik aus drei Semestern (Leipzig, Hirzel 1894); Ethische Werte bei Aristoteles (Leipzig, Teubner 1909).

Bibliography: Max Heinze zum 70. Geburtstage, gewidmet von Freunden und Schùˆlern, Berlin, E.S. Mittler 1906; C.F.G. Heinrici, Nekrolog auf Max Heinze, «Abhandlungen der Königlich Sächsischen Gesellschaft der Wissenschaftlichen Philologischen historischen Klasse», LXI, 1909, 3, pp. 207-234; E. Arnold, Heinze, Max, in Neue Deutsche Biographie, vol. VIII, Berlin, Duncker & Humblot 1969, p. 447.



Vademecum Philosophicum, darin die kürzlich erworbenen Bibliotheken: W. Diltheys, Otto Liebmann, W. Münch, K. Lasswitz, G. Thiele, und Bücher aus den früher erworbenen Bibliotheken: Max Heinze, Eduard Zeller, H. Ebbinghaus, Jac. Freudenthal, Ed. von Hartmann, Th. Vogt, G. und O. Frick, Leipzig, Lorentz 1913, 168 p.

The catalogue groups together the libraries of Dilthey, Liebmann, Münch, Lasswitz and Thiele, adding works from the libraries of Heinze, Zeller, Ebbinghaus, Freudenthal, Hartmann, Vogt, G. and O. Frick. The origin of each volume is not indicated.
The organization of the second part of the catalogue is particularly interesting. It is by far the longest (pp. 16-168), so that it represents a sophisticated bibliographic repertory. The authors are placed in alphabetical order (A. v. Helmersen, H. v. Helmholtz, H. F. Helmolt, Helvétius, etc.) and their works are marked by progressive numbers (12,566 bibliographic descriptions). Critical studies are often associated to single authors (for example, the forty titles of works by Spinoza are immediately followed by 97 texts of secondary literature). The list also contains some key words which refer back to authors of works connected to that topic: after A. Spir, there are therefore the key words "Spiritismus" and "Spiritualismus", after R. Sporbert there is the key word ‘Sprachphilosophie’. Some works are marked with an indication to consult a certain key word as well (the work of Agrippa von Nettesheim is marked with the indication to consult the key word "Geheimwissenschaften"). The repertory is divided into two different sections.


icona toc Table of contents    icona scarica Download (pdf 35.5 MB)    icona sfoglia Browse




last modify: 2010-03-31 16:23:33