Max Scheler
Max Ferdinand Scheler (22 August 1874 – 19 May 1928) was a German philosopher and sociologist renowned for his foundational contributions to phenomenology, particularly in developing a material theory of ethics centered on objective values and emotional intuition, as well as advancing philosophical anthropology through inquiries into human uniqueness and the sociology of knowledge.[1][2] Born in Munich to a devout Jewish mother and Lutheran father, Scheler initially pursued natural sciences before turning to philosophy under influences like Kant and Simmel, eventually engaging deeply with Edmund Husserl's phenomenological method while forging his own path.[3] His seminal work, Formalism in Ethics and Non-Formal Ethics of Values (1913–1916), critiqued Kantian deontology by positing a hierarchy of values—ranging from sensory pleasures to the sacred—apprehended directly through Wertfühlen (value-feeling) rather than rational deduction, establishing ethics as an a priori science independent of empirical contingencies.[1] Scheler's broader oeuvre encompassed phenomenology of sympathy and intersubjectivity in The Nature and Forms of Sympathy (1913), where he delineated levels of emotional participation enabling understanding of others' experiences, influencing later existential and social phenomenologies.[1] In his later phase, he shifted toward philosophical anthropology, most notably in The Human Place in the Cosmos (1928), arguing for humanity's open-ended spirit transcending biological drives, a view that anticipated existentialist themes while engaging contemporary scientific debates on evolution and culture.[4] Despite personal upheavals—including academic dismissals amid marital scandals and a fluctuating religious trajectory from Catholicism to metaphysical humanism—Scheler's ideas profoundly shaped 20th-century thought, bridging phenomenology with Catholic personalism and inspiring figures like Karol Wojtyła (Pope John Paul II), though his eclectic style and premature death limited systematic consolidation.[2][3]Early Life and Education
Family Background and Childhood
Max Scheler was born on August 22, 1874, in Munich, Germany, into a family marked by religious divergence and social standing. His father, Gottlieb Scheler (1831–1900), originally a Lutheran estate manager, converted to Judaism to marry Scheler's mother, Sophie Meyer, who came from a well-respected Orthodox Jewish family.[1][5][6] The household adhered to Orthodox Jewish practices, reflecting the mother's influence, though underlying domestic tensions arose from the parents' differing backgrounds and the father's conversion.[1][7] Scheler's early years were shaped by this religiously observant environment in Munich, where his family maintained a position of relative prominence within Jewish circles.[1] Gottlieb Scheler died when Max was still a child, prior to his entry into high school, leaving the family under his mother's guidance.[7] Scheler completed his primary and secondary education in Munich, culminating in graduation from the humanistic Gymnasium in 1894, after which he pursued university studies.[2]University Studies and Influences
Max Scheler began his university studies in the autumn of 1894 at the University of Munich, initially focusing on medicine.[1] By the autumn of 1895, he transferred to the University of Berlin, where he continued medical coursework but shifted emphasis toward philosophy and psychology.[1] There, he attended lectures by Wilhelm Dilthey, whose hermeneutic approach to the human sciences left a profound and enduring impact on Scheler's developing thought, and by Georg Simmel, whose work in philosophy of culture and sociology introduced formal analytical methods that resonated with Scheler's later interests in value and social phenomena.[1][5] After one semester in Berlin, Scheler enrolled at the University of Jena in 1896, pursuing philosophy under Rudolf Eucken, a prominent idealist thinker and Nobel laureate in literature for his ethical philosophy.[1] At Jena, Scheler completed his doctoral dissertation in 1897, titled a critique of Immanuel Kant's theory of value, which examined the foundations of ethical judgments beyond Kantian formalism.[1] Eucken's emphasis on spiritual life and vital values as central to human existence influenced Scheler's early rejection of positivism and naturalism, fostering his orientation toward a value-realist metaphysics that prioritized intuitive apprehension over abstract reasoning.[1] These university experiences, combining empirical sciences with philosophical depth, equipped Scheler with a broad intellectual toolkit, blending phenomenological description, historical insight, and ethical idealism that would underpin his mature phenomenology of values.[2]