Name Angelika Krebs | ||
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Books Arbeit und Liebe, Ethics of Nature |
Lunchtime colloquium angelika krebs
Angelika Krebs (born August 12, 1961 in Mannheim) is a German philosopher.
Contents
- Lunchtime colloquium angelika krebs
- Roger scruton on oikos and attachment with an introduction by angelika krebs long version
- Education and career
- Work
- References
Roger scruton on oikos and attachment with an introduction by angelika krebs long version
Education and career
Angelika Krebs studied philosophy, German literature and musicology in Freiburg, Oxford, Konstanz and Berkeley. She did her PhD with Friedrich Kambartel, Bernard Williams and Jürgen Habermas in Frankfurt in 1993. Her dissertation thesis on environmental ethics won the Wolfgang Stegmüller award of the German Society for Analytical Philosophy. From 1993 to 2001 she was assistant professor in Frankfurt, writing her habilitation thesis on work, justice and love. In 2001, she was appointed to the chair for practical philosophy at the University of Basel. She was Rockefeller visiting fellow at the Center for Human Values in Princeton and Rachel Carson fellow at LMU in Munich. She served as member of the advisory board of both the German and the Swiss Society for Philosophy. Since 2013 she has been a fellow of the European Academy of Sciences and Arts. In 2013 she co-founded the European Society for the Philosophical Study of Emotions together with Aaron Ben-Ze’ev (Haifa) and Anthony Hatzimoysis (Athens).
Work
Her main research areas are environmental ethics, political philosophy, theories of emotion and aesthetics. In environmental ethics she argues for the intrinsic value of beautiful nature and of nature as "Heimat" [home]. In political philosophy she propagates a humanistic alternative to standard egalitarian approaches to justice and shows why family work should be fully recognized as economic work. In emotion theory she develops a dialogical model of romantic love following Martin Buber and Max Scheler. Her most recent work is in aesthetics and explores why the beauty of landscape matters.