German-born philosopher Hans Jonas (may 10 1903 - February 5 1993) studied under Martin Heidegger and Rudolf Bultmann in the 1920s. In 1933 he emigrated to England; in 1935 he went to Palestine, in 1949 to Canada. In 1955 he took up lecturing in New York.
He is best known for his influential work The Imperative of Responsibility (German 1979, English 1984). His work centers on social and ethical problems created by technology. Jonas insists that human survival depends on our efforts to care for our planet and its future. He formulated a new and distinctive supreme principle of morality, "Act so that the effects of your action are compatible with the permanence of genuine human life".
He also wrote extensively on Gnosticism, for which he is almost equally well known, interpreting the religion from an existentialist philosophical viewpoint.
Jonas' philosophy was influenced by the process philosophy and process theology of Alfred North Whitehead.
In 1933, Heidegger joined the German Nazi party, which Jonas took personally as he was of Jewish descent and active Zionist. The fact that the great philosopher was capable of such political folly made Jonas doubt the value of philosophy. He left Germany for England in the same year, and from England he moved to Palestine, 1934. There he met Lore Weiner, to whom he became betrothed. In 1940 he returned to Europe to join the British Army, who had been arranging a special brigade for German Jews wanting to fight against Hitler. He was sent to Italy, and in the last phase of the war moved into Germany. Thus, he kept his promise that he would return only as a soldier in the victorious army. In this time he wrote several letters to Lore about philosophy as well as love. They finally married in 1943.
Immediately after the war he returned to Mönchengladbach to search for his mother, but found that she had been sent to the gas chambers in Auschwitz concentration camp. Having heard this, he refused to live in Germany again. So he returned to Palestine and took part in Israel's war of independence in 1948. However, he felt that his destiny was not to live as a Zionist, but to teach philosophy, for which the best possibilities lay abroad. In 1950 he left for Canada and from there moved to New York City in 1955 where he was to live for the rest of his life. He worked for New School of Social Research 1955 to 1976 and died in New York City on February 5th, 1993.
1903 births | 1993 deaths | Continental philosophers | German philosophers
Hans Jonas | Hans Jonas | Hans Jonas | Hans Jonas | 汉斯·约纳斯
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