He read philosophy at Berlin, Halle and Heidelberg, devoting himself mainly to the doctrines of Hegel and Schleiermacher. After holding the chair of philosophy at Halle for two years, he became, in 1833, professor at the university of Königsberg[?], where he remained till his death. In his last years he was quite blind.
Throughout his long professorial career, and in all his numerous publications he remained, in spite of occasional deviations on particular points, loyal to the Hegelian tradition as a whole. In the great division of the Hegelian school, he, in company with Michelet and others, formed the "centre," midway between Erdmann and Gabler on the one hand, and the "extreme left" represented by Strauss, Feuerbach and Bruno Bauer.
Of his numerous writings, the following may be mentioned:
Two other of his works on Hegel are important, the Leben Hegels (1844) and the Hegel als deutscher Nationalphilosoph (1870). Between 1838 and 1840 in conjunction with FW Schubert, he published an edition of the works of Kant, to which he appended a history of the Kantian doctrine.
He published also an autobiography entitled Von Magdeburg nach Königsberg (1873), which deals with his life up to the time of his settlement at Königsberg.
See Quabicker, Karl Rosenkranz (1899), and J Hutchison Stirling, The Secret of Hegel, part 6.
This entry was originally from the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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