Ludwig : (1) Ludwig I, King of Bavaria (1825-48), patron of the arts, who transformed Munich into the artistic centre of Germany. (2) Ludwig II, (1864-86), a patron of Wagner, was talented, liberal, romantic, & eccentric. He died insane.
... the whole organism is not a mere aggregate but an architecture, the vital function of growth, adaptation, reproduction - the final function of death - are not merely cellular but organic phenomena." Ludwig von Bertalanffy, perhaps the greatest Austrian biologist of our day, avers: "The fact that the processes in an organism are regulated according to the needs of the whole is the most striking characteristic... organism constitutes by integrative co-organization. A similar misunderstanding - curious in one with a greater philosophical acumen - leads also the most prominent name in non- mechanistic biology, Ludwig von Bertalanffy, not only to criticise defects in prevalent vitalistic theories but to repudiate the very essence of vitalism which posits a purposive more-than-material life-force utilising physi ...
... and exhortations, all of them beginning with “the Spirit of your God speaks as follows”, and whose new religion would contain the knowledge and love of all past and present religions. And there was Ludwig Derleth, “the Prophet of Schwabing”, who wanted to clean up and reform the Church, and found a new theocracy in which he himself would hold the highest office. He wanted to reactivate a militant and... Schuler was a propagator of Nietzschean ideas, flavoured according to his own recipe, and an habitué at the Bruckmann salon, frequented by Rilke and other celebrities (and soon by Adolf Hitler); and Ludwig Klages would write The Mind as the Opponent of the Soul, a book of lasting interest (and he would join the Nazis). And for a while, during his stay in Munich, there was Stefan George, whose contact ...
... generally advanced against the notion of the ineffability of mystic-spiritual knowledge. The 'Myth' of Ineffability "The limits of my language are the limits of my world." (Ludwig Wittgenstein, Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus. ) "Il n'y pas d'exp é rience sans paroles." ("There is no experience without speech.") Quoted by Yvon Bellaval in Les Philosophes et... lyrics and music, expressive." 24 18. Ibid., pp. 347-48. 19.See Yvon Bellaval, Les Philosophes et leur Langage, p. 178. 20.Sri Aurobindo, The Synthesis of Yoga, p. 801. 21.Ludwig Wittgenstein, Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus, p. 116. 22.Susanne K. Langer, op. cit., p. 70. 23. Ibid., p. 67. 24.Rudolf Carnap, Philosophy and Logical Syntax (London, 1935) ...
... rationalist tradition. Generations of philosophers, historians, sociologists and psychologists had a hand in bringing the ‘mind as the adversary of the soul’ [this is the title of an influential book by Ludwig Klages] into disrepute and replacing it by intuition, blood, instinct, to which it gave a status that inevitably raised stupidity to the level of an authority and produced a moral indigence, a ‘defeatism ...
... end of October and in the beginning of November 1918. Then came the coup in Munich: Kurt Eisner, a Jewish journalist, proclaimed Bavaria a Socialist Republic on 7 November. The Wittelsbach king, Ludwig III, abdicated that very day, the first of all eighteen still ruling German princes to do so. (Kaiser Wilhelm II would follow suit on 9 November. It had been one of the peace conditions formulated ...
... Lal, B.B., 8, 49fn., 50, 101-2 Langdon, 73 Langhnaj, 22, 23 Linear B script, 49, 92 Lithuanian, 84, 91, 93 Lothal, 20, 24, 46, 52, 53 Loralai, 61 Ludwig, 110 Lundholm, 69, 71 Macdonell, A.A., 26, 37-8, 55, 103, 109, 110, 112, 113, 114, 119, 127, 133 Mackay, E.J.H., 6, 9, 49fn. Madhyadesa, 126 Maghavan, 131, 132 ...
... with little success for several decades. “Not until 1894 [i.e. after Gobineau’s death] was there a concerted attempt to introduce Gobineau’s ideas into Germany”, writes George Mosse. “In that year, Ludwig Schemann founded the Gobineau Society to honour his name and revive his theories both in Germany and France. The French branch received little support and never really flourished. It was not really ...
... access. The historian Karl Lamprecht, advisor to Chancellor Bethmann Hollweg, was a Pan-German, as were the sociologist Max Weber, still studied to today, Gustav Stresemann, the future foreign minister, Ludwig Schemann, publisher of Chamberlain’s works, and many politicians, industrialists and bankers. Sebottendorff called the Pan-Germans “the most important völkisch association of the pre-war period” ...
... Already he is being hailed as greater than Napoleon. . SRI AUROBINDO: That he is not. Napoleon did not have Hitler's resources. If he had had them, he would have conquered England. SATYENDRA: Ludwig writes in his biography of Napoleon that Napoleon was the first to conceive of a federation of Europe under France. SRI AUROBINDO: No, Henry IV and his minister were the first to conceive of federated ...
... between 250th and 750th Century B.C. According to Lokamanya Tilak, the estimated period would be any time between 45th and 30th Century B.C. This coincides with the view of Professor Haug, Professor Ludwig and Professor Jacobi Professor Whitney places the period any time between 15th and 20th Century B.C. Professor Max Muller believes that the Veda was composed during the 13th Century B.C. 3. RV ...
... the prison, suicide, exile or the dagger of the assassin. It must be admitted that this dramatic picture largely reflects the facts of history. We know some instances of poet-kings in history, Nero & Ludwig of Bavaria were extreme instances; but we have a far more interesting because typical series in the history of the British isles. The Stuarts were a race of born poets whom the irony of their fate ...
... stanza as smooth-gliding (rays). Their offspring is, he says, the light, and the Father is the cherishing and protecting Sun. All explanations of these three stanzas can only be conjectural. Ludwig is of opinion that they are originally unconnected fragments and that they have been inserted together in this hymn Page 151 merely because the word suparnā (used ...
... as possessing forts, he is called a Dāsa as well as an Asura... It is uncertain whether he was a demon, according to Roth's view, which is favoured by the use of the word Asura, or a human foe, as Ludwig, Oldenberg and Hille-brandt believe." 13 On the word "Asura" we may quote Pusalker: "It is indeed difficult to identify the Asuras with any of the ancient peoples. Sten Konow thinks them to be ...
... historians, Shri Avinash Chandra Das, Vedas could have been composed any time between 250 th and 750 th Century B.C. According to Lokmanya Tilak, the estimated period would view of Prof. Han, Prof. Ludwig and Prof. Jacobi. Prof. Whitney places this period any time between 15 th and 20 th Century B.C., while Prof. Weber places it any time between 12 th and 15 th Century B.C. Prof. Max Muller believes ...
... between 250th and 750th century B.C. According to Lokamanya Tilak, the estimated period would be any time between 45th and 50th century B.C. This coincides with the view of Professor Haug, Professor Ludwig and Professor Jacobi. Professor Whitney places this period any time between 15th and 20th century B.C., while Professor Weber places it any time between 12th and 15th century B.C. Professor Max Muller ...
... of the Schuman Declaration, and no arbitrary or dictatorial intent could be read into the notion of the High Authority. If Hallstein sometimes warned us against dirigisme, this was mainly to appease Ludwig Erhard, the German Minister of Economic Affairs, a dogmatic 'liberal' economist, who kept a close watch on our work. Hallstein had understood, as had several others, that we were not planning to ...
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