Kurt Sternberg
Kurt Sternberg (June 19, 1885 - September 21, 1942) was a German philosopher and author.
Sternberg, who was Jewish, fled to the Netherlands in 1939 to escape the National Socialists. He was nonetheless detained and sent to the Westerbork concentration camp and from there, to Auschwitz, where he perished in September 1942.[1]
There is a stolperstein in memory of Sternberg at Uhlandstraße 175 in the Charlottenburg neighborhood of Berlin.[2]
Selected literary works[]
- Versuch einer Entwicklungsgeschichte des kantischen Denkens bis zur Grundlegung des Kritizismus (1909) (in German)
- Neukantische Aufgaben (1931) (in German)
- Die Geburt des Etwas aus dem Nichts, Pan-Verlagsgesellschaft, Berlin (1933) (in German)
- Philosophische Probleme im biblischen und apokryphen Schrifttum der Juden, Berlin, Goldstein (1938) (in German)
References[]
- ^ Entry for Curt Max Julius Sternberg in the Digital Monument to the Jewish Community in the Netherlands
- ^ "Stolperstein for Kurt Sternberg". Archived from the original on 2008-06-08. Retrieved 2006-06-12.
External links[]
- Kurt Sternberg in the German National Library catalogue
Categories:
- 20th-century German philosophers
- 1885 births
- 1942 deaths
- Jewish philosophers
- German people who died in Auschwitz concentration camp
- German civilians killed in World War II
- Writers from Berlin
- German male writers
- German Jews who died in the Holocaust
- Lists of stolpersteine in Germany
- German philosopher stubs