Anna catharina leibniz philosophy
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Hornidge, Anna-Katharina
Prof. Dr. Anna-Katharina Hornidge
Department
Directors
Function
Director
Specialization
Development and Knowledge Sociologist
Work areas
- natural resources governance and sense-making
- social construction of knowledges, social, political and ecological environments, risks and 'realities'
- cultures of knowledge production and sharing, innovation development processes and science policy
- mobilities, borders and boundaries
- transformative science, inter- and transdisciplinarity
Regional expertise
- Southeast Asia (Indonesia, Singapore, Philippines, Malaysia)
- East Africa (Ethiopia)
- Central Asia (Uzbekistan, Tajikistan)
Responsibilities in education and training
- Professor for Global Sustainable Development, University of Bonn
Vita
| Since 3/2020 | German Institute of Development and Sustainability (IDOS) (until 6/2022 German Development Institute / Deutsches Institut für Entwicklungspolitik (DIE)) Director | |
| Sinc • Friedrich LeibnizGerman philosopher (1597–1652) Friedrich Leibniz (or Leibnütz; 1597–1652)[1] was a Lutheran[1][2] lawyer and a notary, registrar and professor of moral philosophy within Leipzig University, where he also served as Dean of Philosophy.[1][3][4][5] He was the father of Gottfried Leibniz. Biography[edit]Leibniz was born in Altenberg, Saxony, the son of Ambrosious Leibniz, a civil servant, and a Leipzig noblewoman named Anna Deuerlin.[3] He completed his master's degree at the University of Leipzig during 1622 and became an actuary in administration at the university.[1] His first marriage in 1625 produced a son, Johann Friedrich, and a daughter, Anna Rosina. He was elected to the chair in moral philosophy at Leipzig in 1640. A childless marriage to a second wife ended with her death 1643.[3][6] A subsequent 1644 marriage to Catharina Schmuc • Gregory Brown
Friedrich Leibniz was the son of Ambrosious Leibniz and Anna Deuerlin, the daughter of a Leibzig nobleman. He was first married in 1625, and from that union there was produced a son, Johann Friedrich, and a daughter, Anna Rosina. Johann Friedrich, whom Gottfried Wilhelm described as good-natured and pious, became a schoolmaster, and into old age he stayed in touch with his famous half-brother. Friedrich's second wife died childless in 1643. In 1644 Friedrich married the daughter of a famous Leipzig Lawyer, Catharina Schmuck. Catharina, who became Gottfried Wilhelm's mother, was born in Leipzig in 1621. She was orphaned at the age of eleven and brought up in the home of Johann Hopner, Professor of Theology. Before her marriage to Friedrich, Catharina was living with her guardi |