Karl Bormann Explained

Region:Western philosophy
Era:20th-century philosophy
Karl Bormann
Birth Date:23 November 1928
Birth Place:Monheim am Rhein, Weimar Republic
Death Place:Langenfeld, Federal Republic of Germany
Education:Municipal Hölderlin-Gymnasium Cologne
Studies and doctorate of classical philology and philosophy at University of Cologne (1949-1954)
(PhD 1955; Dr. phil. hab. 1967)
Institutions:University of Cologne
Thomas-Institut
School Tradition:Continental philosophy
Hermeneutics
Neoplatonism[1]
Platonism[2]
Stoicism[3]
Christian humanism (Nicholas of Cusa)
Main Interests:Greek philosophy, Nicholas of Cusa, Pre-Socratic philosophy, Platon, Aristoteles, Stoa, Thomas Aquinas[4]

Karl Bormann (November 23, 1928 in Monheim, – August 17, 2015 in Langenfeld) was a German historian of philosophy. His area of research was ancient and medieval philosophy, in particular the work of Cardinal Nicholas of Cusa.[4]

Biography

Bormann spent his entire scientific career at the University of Cologne. After graduating from the state humanistic high school in Cologne-Mülheim in 1949, he studied classical philology and philosophy with the professors Josef Koch, Günther Jachmann and Josef Kroll and received his doctorate in 1955 with a dissertation on Philon's theory of ideas and logos, in which Bormann explained Philon's concept of the logos in critical examination of Harry Austryn Wolfson's interpretation.

From 1954 to 1959, Bormann was a research associate for Josef Koch at the Thomas-Institut of the University of Cologne, then until 1965 an assistant at Paul Wilpert's Philosophical Seminar. Funded by a habilitation grant from the German Research Foundation, he habilitated in 1967 with the work about the fragments of Parmenides. In 1970 he was first appointed adjunct professor and shortly thereafter appointed scientific advisor and professor. In 1980 he was appointed university professor of philosophy. Since 1985 he was a Member of International Center for Platonic and Aristotelian Studies. In 1994 he retired.

In 1967 Bormann became head of the Cologne office of the Cusanus Commission of the Heidelberg Academy of Sciences and Humanities, which oversees the edition and translation of the works of Nicholas of Kues. In 1970 he became a member of the Commission, in the same year a member of the Scientific Advisory Board of the Cusanus Society and in 1973 co-editor of the Cusanus Society's communications and research contributions. Since then, the Cusanus research and edition has been the focus of his scientific work. An introduction to Plato's life and work, which was published several times, was also widely distributed. Characteristic of Bormann's work is the sober and fact-oriented manner of presentation based on a thorough and precise, philologically sound text analysis, while avoiding extensive philosophical speculations.[5]

Bormann supported efforts to open a beatification process on diocesan level for the Monheim martyr priest Franz Boehm, who was deported to the Dachau concentration camp because of his resistance to the Nazi regime, where he died in February 1945.[6] As a former altar server for Boehm, Bormann was able to describe his personality from his own experience. He valued most about Boehm was that he was "helpful, deeply religious, conscientious, strict and uncompromising".[7]

Writings (selection) as author

Writings (selection) as editor and translator

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. [University of Cologne]
  2. [University of Cologne]
  3. [University of Cologne]
  4. https://www.degruyter.com/database/KDGO/entry/P2085/html Karl Bormann
  5. https://philtypo3.uni-koeln.de/sites/phil-fak/aktuelles/2015/Traueranzeige-Bormann.pdf Obituary of the Philosophical Faculty of the University of Cologne
  6. https://www.wz.de/nrw/kreis-mettmann/langenfeld-und-monheim/monheim-seligsprechung-fuer-boehm_aid-31119445 Monheim: Beatification for Boehm?
  7. https://rp-online.de/nrw/staedte/langenfeld/seligsprechung-angestrebt_aid-12623457 Monheim: beatification sought.
  8. https://books.google.com/books?id=fERawgEACAAJ Proclus (Diadochus.), Nicolaus (de Cusa.): Expositio in Parmenidem Platonis