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Kazimierz Twardowski

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Nationality
  
Polish

Name
  
Kazimierz Twardowski

Fields
  
Philosophy, Logic

Alma mater
  
Education
  
University of Vienna

Institutions
  
Lwow University

Role
  
Philosopher


Kazimierz Twardowski Kazimierz Twardowski Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Born
  
20 October 1866Vienna, Austrian Empire (
1866-10-20
)

Doctoral students
  
Kazimierz AjdukiewiczStefan BanachTadeusz KotarbinskiStanislaw LesniewskiJan Lukasiewicz

Died
  
February 11, 1938, Lviv, Ukraine

Books
  
On the Content and Object of Presentations

Similar People
  
Stanislaw Lesniewski, Kazimierz Ajdukiewicz, Stefan Banach, Hugo Steinhaus

Other academic advisors
  
Doctoral advisor
  

Kazimierz twardowski w oczach wnukow 2


Kazimierz Jerzy Skrzypna-Twardowski (20 October 1866 – 11 February 1938) was a Polish philosopher, logician, and rector of the Lviv University.

Contents

Kazimierz Twardowski Zbiory NAC online prototyp

Robin Rollinger on Twardowski


Life

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Twardowski's family belonged to the Ogończyk coat of arms.

Kazimierz Twardowski Kazimierz Twardowski Wikipedia

Twardowski studied philosophy in Vienna with Franz Brentano and Robert Zimmermann. In 1892 he received his doctorate with his dissertation, Idee und Perzeption (Idea and Perception), and in 1894 he presented his habilitation thesis, Zur Lehre vom Inhalt und Gegenstand der Vorstellungen (On the Doctrine of the Content and Object of Presentations). He originated many novel ideas related to metaphilosophy.

He lectured in Vienna in the years 1894–95, then was appointed professor at Lwów (Lemberg in Austrian Galicia, now Lviv in the Ukraine). An outstanding lecturer, he was also a rector of the Lwów University during World War I.

There Twardowski established the Lwów–Warsaw school of logic and also became the "father of Polish logic", beginning the tradition of scientific philosophy in Poland. Among his students were the logicians Stanisław Leśniewski, Jan Łukasiewicz and Tadeusz Czeżowski, the historian of philosophy Władysław Tatarkiewicz, the phenomenologist and aesthetician Roman Ingarden, as well as philosophers close to the Vienna Circle such as Tadeusz Kotarbiński and Kazimierz Ajdukiewicz.

Work

In his On the Content and Object of Presentations, Twardowski argues for a distinction between content and object in the frame of the theory of intentionality of his teacher Franz Brentano. According to him the mind is divided in two main areas: acts or mental phenomena, and a physical phenomenon. For example, an act of presentation is aimed at a presentation. This is what he called ‘intentionality’, aboutness. Every act is about something, but also every presentation goes together with an act of presentation.

This theory suffers from the problem that it is not clear what the presentation exactly is. Is the presentation something only in the mind, or is it also in the world as object? Twardowski says that sometimes presentation is used for the object in the world and sometimes for the immanent content of a mental phenomena.

Twardowski offers a solution for this problem and proposes to make a distinction between the content of a presentation and the object of a presentation.

In his book Twardowski offers an analogy to clarify this distinction. He uses the example of a painting. People say of a landscape that it is painted, but also of a painting that it is painted. In the first case the word ‘painting’ is used in a modifying way (a painted landscape is not a landscape at all), while in the latter case the word painting is used in a qualitative or attributive way. Twardowski argues that presentations are similar. The content is the painted painting and the object is the painted landscape. The content resembles the present ‘picture’ in one's mind, and the object the landscape.

References

Kazimierz Twardowski Wikipedia


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