Region: | Western philosophy |
Era: | 20th-century philosophy |
Emil Lask | |
Birth Date: | 25 September 1875 |
Birth Place: | Wadowitz, Austrian Galicia, Austria-Hungary (now Wadowice, Poland) |
Death Place: | Turza Mała, Austrian Galicia, Austria-Hungary |
School Tradition: | Neo-Kantianism |
Influences: | Immanuel Kant, Heinrich Rickert, Wilhelm Windelband |
Influenced: | Martin Heidegger, Georg Lukács, Eugen Herrigel, Lucien Goldmann |
Emil Lask (25 September 1875 - 26 May 1915) was a German philosopher. A student of Heinrich Rickert at Freiburg University, he was a member of the Southwestern school of neo-Kantianism.
Lask was born in Austrian Galicia, as a son of Jewish parents. After completing his philosophical education at Freiburg, he was made lecturer at Heidelberg in 1905, and he was elected professor there just before the outbreak of World War I. When war began in 1914 Lask immediately volunteered. Since, as a Heidelberg professor, he would have been regarded as indispensable on the home front, he did not have to enlist. But, conscientious and idealistic, Lask believed that he had an obligation to serve his country. Lask was made a sergeant and sent to Galicia on the Eastern front, despite a frail constitution and severe myopia—which also meant that he could not shoot, but he still felt obliged to remain at the front.[1] Lask died during the war, not far from the city of his birth, in the Galician Campaign. Wilhelm Windelband refused to request his return to Heidelberg as indispensable to philosophy.[2]
Lask was an important and original thinker whose rewarding work is little known, due to his early death, but also because of the decline of neo-Kantianism. His published and some unpublished writings were collected in a three volume edition by his pupil Eugen Herrigel with a notice by Lask's former teacher Rickert in 1923 and 1924. Lask is of interest to philosophers because of his uncompromising attitude and to historians of philosophy because of his influence on György Lukács and the young Martin Heidegger. In Being and Time (1927), Heidegger credited Lask with being the only person to have taken up Edmund Husserl's investigations "positively from outside the main stream of phenomenological research", pointing to Husserl's Logical Investigations (1900–1901) as an influence on Lask's Die Logik der Philosophie und die Kategorienlehre (1911) and Die Lehre vom Urteil (1912).[3] Lask's ideas were also influential in Japan, due to Herrigel, who lived and taught there for several years.
His sister was the poet Berta Lask.