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Richard David Precht

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Richard David Precht
Richard David Precht in 2009
Born (1964-12-08) 8 December 1964 (age 60)
Era21st-century philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy

Richard David Precht (German: [ˈʁɪçaʁt ˈdaːvɪt pʁɛçt]; born 8 December 1964) is a German author of successful popular science books about philosophical issues.[1][2][3]

Life

Richard David Precht is a son of a married couple (Hans-Jürgen Precht, 30 April 1933 in Hannover; Mother 1 August 1938 in Neuhof bei Berlin). He grew up in an alternative and unconventional-bourgeois family with five children including two Vietnamese adoptees whom the parents adopted in 1969 and 1972 symbolically against the Vietnam War. His father, a formal industrial designer, dealt with literature and also the setup and care of a larger private library. His mother was a housewife and very involved in Terre des hommes. The children grew up in an intellectual and idealistic left wing milieu. After higher secondary schooling Abitur at the Gymnasium Schwertstraße in Solingen, Precht did his alternative service as a parish worker. Later he studied philosophy, German studies and history of art at the University of Cologne. In 1994, he obtained a doctorate (Dr. phil.) in German studies. From 1991 to 1995 he worked as a scientific assistant in a cognitive science research project.

In 1997, Precht was Arthur F. Burns Fellow at Chicago Tribune. Two years later Precht received the Heinz-Kühn-Scholarship. In 2000-01, he was Fellow at the European College of Journalism and in 2001 he was awarded for journalism in the field of biomedical studies.

As an essayist Precht has written for German newspaper and magazines. From 2002 to 2004 he was a columnist of Literaturen, a sophisticated intellectual literary magazine, and from 2005 to 2008 was freelance moderator of Tageszeichen, a broadcast program of WDR.

Precht today gives many lectures at universities and science congresses. In the 2008-09 Wintersemester, he gave a lecture series about the most important topics in philosophy at the University of Luxembourg.

Precht lives with his wife Caroline Mart, a television journalist and vice-chief editor of RTL Télé Lëtzebuerg, his son and three stepchildren in Luxembourg and Cologne.

Works

Precht is successful with literary works as well as non-fiction.

Dissertation

Precht's dissertation from 1994 has the title "Die gleitende Logik der Seele. Ästhetische Selbstreflexivität in Robert MusilsDer Mann ohne Eigenschaften", a phenomenological analysis which works out the effective structures of Musil's book.

Fiction books

In 1999, Precht together with his brother Georg Jonathan wrote the detective Bildungsroman Das Schiff im Noor. The novel opens in year 1985 and uses the Danish island Lilleö (in reality: Ærø) as a backdrop for a complicated web of analogies and motives, for example the relation between theology and policework. On the surface, the novel is a detective story about a sunken ship and a homicide from a long time ago. The novel deals in its more profound significance with the order of things. Even the philosopher Michel Foucault appears in the shape of the conservator Mikkel Folket. The novel was republished in 2009 with the original planned name Die Instrumente des Herrn Jörgensen.

The novel Die Kosmonauten from 2002 deals with the love story and finding of identity of Georg and Rosalie in their late twenties where they had got to know each other in Cologne and shortly afterwards moved together to Berlin in the post-reunification period 1990-91. They first live the life of Bohemians in Berlin-Mitte from which Rosalie increasingly distances herself over the course of the story. She changes her mindset, falls in love with another man and parts from Georg to have a bourgeois lifestyle. At the end of the novel their common friend Leonhard is killed in a tragic accident. Parallel to this story, Precht recounts in short the tragic destiny of Sergei Krikalev, the last cosmonaut of the Soviet Union.

In 2005, he published his autobiographical book Lenin kam nur bis zum Lüdenscheid - Meine kleine deutsche Revolution where he recalls from a child's perspective his childhood in the 1970s within a leftwing family who stands close to the party DCP. Simultaneously, he reviews the global political events in West Germany and East Germany in the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s and describes political attitudes, ideological mindsets as well as details of an everyday life in this era. The book received numerously positive critics and it was filmed with the support of WDR, SWR and the Filmstiftung Nordrhein-Westfalen. In 2008, the film came out in many German repertory cinemas and reached 20,000 viewers.

Philosophical books

In 1997, his book Noahs Erbe was published where Precht deals with the ethical question in relation between humans and animals as well as their social consequences. As a result, he pleads for a change in the treatment of animals on the basis of a "ethic of nescience".

Originally planned as an introduction to philosophy for young people, his most successful work, the non-fiction Wer bin ich – und wenn ja, wie viele? (English: "Who Am I – And If So, How Many?"; release of the English version in April 2011) was published in 2007. It is an introduction to philosophy linking the results of brain research, psychology, behaviour research and other sciences. The book is regarded as an introduction to the great matter of being human and mankind, structured in Kant's classification: What can I know? What ought I to do? What may I hope? After a recommendation by Elke Heidenreich, the book occupied first place in the Spiegel bestseller list. It sold yet over 1,000,000 copies and was translated into 32 languages. According to non-fiction bestseller list of Spiegel, it was the most successful hardcover non-fiction of the year 2008 and achieved third place in the bestseller of the decade.

In 2009, the non-fiction Liebe - ein unordentliches Gefühl links the scientific-biological view of sexuality and love with the psychological and social-cultural circumstances of our comprehension and behaviour in love. Precht's main thesis is that sexual love doesn't come from sexuality but from the parent-child relationship. The need for attachment and closeness comes from the childhood relationship to the parents and it later searches in the sexual partner an equivalent. Thus, love is a projection of (early-)childhood needs and experiences in love. From March 2009 to December 2009 it was on the Spiegel bestseller list.

The non-fiction Die Kunst kein Egoist zu sein was published in 2010. The book is structured in three parts: "good and evil", "willing and doing" and "moral and society". Precht deals with the question of moral at first (philosophical and evolutionary) and comes to the conclusion that humans have a relatively high need to be in tune with themselves and also to consider themselves well. In the second moral-psychological part however, he examines numerous strategies by which people trick themselves by repressing, replacing, comparing or feeling not to be responsible. In the third part, he reflects about consequences for our present society. He criticizes the renunciation of politics to the regulatory policy in the economy, pleads for more civic commitment and for a transformation of democracy by new forms of citizen participation and co-partnership.

Publishing

Precht has been co-publisher of the magazine agora42 since December 2010. It is a social fiasco that "economists are hardly interested in philosophy and philosophers are hardly interested in economics," Precht says .[4]

Awards

Position

Precht is an advocate of a new civil society. He stands philosophically close to the American Communitarianism, the idea to democratise the society with higher civic sense of community. He considers the obligation of economy and politics for constant economic growth as damaging.[5] In the debate about the thesis of Thilo Sarrazin Precht views the accusations toward the migrants as a diversion with regard to the more fundamentally question about the distribution, the growing gap between rich and poor and the establishment of moral-distant settings in the upper class as well as the under class.[6] Precht is a severe critic of the Bundeswehr mission in Afghanistan.[7]

References

  1. ^ "Reportage: Richard David Precht". Retrieved 2009-05-06.
  2. ^ "Richard David Precht". Goethe Institut. Retrieved 2009-05-06.
  3. ^ "Richard David Precht". Random House. Retrieved 2009-05-06.
  4. ^ "agora42. Startseite". Retrieved 2011-02-09.Template:De icon
  5. ^ Die entfremdete Republik, in: DER SPIEGEL, 28. Juni 2010, S.116-117.Template:De icon
  6. ^ Soziale Kriege, in: DER SPIEGEL, 27. September 2010, S. 176-177Template:De icon
  7. ^ Feigheit vor dem Volk, in: DER SPIEGEL, 3. August 2009, S. 118-119Template:De icon