About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 90. Chapters: David Ricardo, Edmund Husserl, Lise Meitner, Heinrich Heine, Paul Reuter, Fritz Haber, Eugen Rosenstock-Huessy, Hans Rothfels, Morris Cerullo, Hans Ehrenberg, Tony Alamo, Jay Alan Sekulow, Otto Weininger, Robert Mosbacher, Paul Schenck, Bernard Jean Bettelheim, Jan Gotlib Bloch, Kurt Hahn, Oszkar Jaszi, Paulus Stephanus Cassel, Marvin Olasky, Helen Shapiro, Egon Friedell, Fanny Mendelssohn, Victor Klemperer, Gustav Christian Schwabe, Ridley Haim Herschell, Ludwig Borne, August Neander, Eduard von Simson, Judah Monis, Clifford Goldstein, Alice Salomon, Moritz Gottlieb Saphir, Carl Paul Caspari, Jakob Christmann, Karl Wittgenstein, Abraham Mendelssohn Bartholdy, Yakov Yurovsky, Isaac da Costa, Lon Solomon, Friedrich Julius Stahl, Yitzhak Salkinsohn, Abraham Capadose, Lovisa Augusti, Alma Gluck, Oskar Kraus, Moishe Rosen, Ilse Maria Aschner, Anton Margaritha, Alfred Edersheim, Johan Kemper, Maximilian Harden, Franz Kaufmann, Paul S. L. Johnson, Karl Rudolf Friedenthal, Heinrich Marx, Elisabeth Cassutto, Henriette Herz, Moritz Wilhelm August Breidenbach, Ernest Cassutto, Heinrich von Friedberg, Jakob Salomon Bartholdy, Mathilda Berwald, Theodor Goldschmidt. Excerpt: Edmund Gustav Albrecht Husserl (German pronunciation: April 8, 1859, Pronitz, Moravia, Austrian Empire - April 26, 1938, Freiburg, Germany) was a philosopher and mathematician and the founder of the 20th century philosophical school of phenomenology. He broke with the positivist orientation of the science and philosophy of his day, yet he elaborated critiques of historicism and of psychologism in logic. Not limited to empiricism, but believing that experience is the source of all knowledge, he worked on a method of phenomenological reduction by which a subject may come to know directly an essence. Although born into a Jewish family, Husserl was...