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For the economist, see Walter Eucken.
Rudolf Christoph Eucken (January 5, 1846 – September 15, 1926) was a German philosopher, and the winner of the 1908 Nobel Prize for Literature. BiographyHe was born in Aurich, Hanover (now Germany), and studied at Göttingen University and Berlin University. In 1871, after five years working as a school teacher, he was appointed Professor of Philosophy at the University of Basel, Switzerland. He stayed there until 1874 when he took up a similar position at the University of Jena, Germany in 1874. He stayed there until he retired in 1920. From 1913-1914 he served as guest lecturer at New York University. He married in 1882 and had a daughter and two sons. His son Walter Eucken became a famous founder of neoliberal thought in economics. Eucken died in Jena at the age of 80. His philosophy was based around human experience, maintaining that humans have souls, and that they are therefore at the junction between nature and spirit. He believed that people should overcome their non-spiritual nature by continuous efforts to achieve a spiritual life. He called this Ethical activism.
Major worksHe was a prolific writer; his best-known works are:
He delivered lectures in England in 1911 and spent six months lecturing at Harvard University and elsewhere in the United States in 1912–1913. External linksWikimedia Commons has media related to:
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