Peter Trawny Explained

Peter Trawny (born December 17, 1964, in Gelsenkirchen) is a German philosopher and professor at the University of Wuppertal.[1] [2]

Life

Peter Trawny studied philosophy, musicology and art history at the Ruhr University Bochum, where he the Magisterium graduated in 1992, after a guest stay at the Albert Ludwigs University in Freiburg in Breisgau and at the University of Basel. In 1995, he received his doctorate under Klaus Held with a dissertation on Martin Heidegger's phenomenology of the world. With a doctoral scholarship from the Study Foundation of the German people, he was promoted and awarded in 1997 with the Second Prize of all faculties of the University of Wuppertal. This was followed by a two-month stay at the University of Kyoto in Japan with a grant from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science. Starting in 1997, Trawny was a research assistant at the University of Wuppertal in Klaus Held's department of phenomenology.[3]

In 2000 he completed his habilitation at the University of Wuppertal on "the Time of the Trinity: Investigations of the Trinity in Hegel and Schelling." After his habilitation, Trawny worked from 2001 to 2003 in the philosophy department of the Albert Ludwigs University in Freiburg, as part of a sponsorship from the Fritz Thyssen Foundation. In 2005, the German Literature Archive in Marbach on Neckar granted Trawny a full scholarship and honored him in 2006 with the Ernst Jünger grant from the State of Baden-Wuerttemberg. In the same year he was appointed associate professor of philosophy at the University of Wuppertal. In 2009 Trawny was awarded a W3 professorship at the University of Wuppertal for aesthetics and philosophy of culture. In 2011 he assumed a deputy professor position at the Södertörns Högskola in Stockholm at the Center for Baltic and East European Studies. In 2012 Trawny founded the Martin Heidegger Institut in German at the Bergische Universität in Wuppertal, for whose support he would win, among others, the legacy of Heidegger.[4] [5]

In addition to his international lecturing and research, Trawny taught as a visiting professor at several international universities such as the University of Vienna, the Tongji University in Shanghai or Södertörns Högskola in Stockholm at the Center for Baltic and East European Studies.

Scientific work

Trawny's approach to philosophical problems uses a phenomenological-hermeneutic method. The focus of his work are questions of political philosophy, ethics, art and media philosophy, as well as questions of art and literature.[6]

In his most recent works, Trawny focuses the elaboration of a philosophical understanding of globalization and cosmopolitanism, especially in his books Adyton and Medium and Revolution. Trawny tries to interpret the globalization of their strained relationship with the media and thus comes to a determination of the medium as "the immaterial unity of technology and capital". On the basis of Heidegger's event thinking, Trawny tries to map Marxist revolutionary discourse onto the historical-contextual conditions of the 21st Century, thus intertwining its designation of the medium, the questions of political philosophy and media art philosophy.[6]

In addition to his research and teaching, Trawny is consistently involved in the scholarly edition of Martin Heidegger's collected works.[6]

Selected works

Own publications

Editions in the context of Martin Heidegger Complete Edition

Articles (selection)

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Freedom to Fail: Heidegger's Anarchy . 24 September 2015 . timeshighereducation.com . November 16, 2017.
  2. Web site: Eine neue Dimension . November 27, 2013. zeit.de . November 16, 2017.
  3. Book: Heidegger and the Myth of a Jewish World Conspiracy . uchicago.edu . November 16, 2017.
  4. http://www.philosophie.uni-wuppertal.de/home/forschung/institute-und-zentren.html#c10940 (Stand: 24. Januar 2013)
  5. Web site: Einmalig: Neues Uni-Institut erforscht Heideggers Lehren. 20 January 2013.
  6. Web site: Is Heidegger Contaminated by Nazism? . April 28, 2014 . newyorker.com . November 16, 2017.