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14 Facts About Paul-Louis Landsberg

1.

Paul-Louis Landsberg was a twentieth century Existentialist philosopher who is known for his works The Experience of Death and The Moral Problem of Suicide.

2.

Paul-Louis Landsberg was a pupil of Martin Heidegger, Edmund Husserl and Max Scheler, continuing their work in Phenomenology to tackle several vital subjects, including personal identity, death and suicide.

3.

Paul-Louis Landsberg was a close friend of the Christian Existentialist Emmanuel Mounier and a key contributor to the philosophical journal Esprit.

4.

Paul-Louis Landsberg was hounded by the Gestapo for most of his life, both because of his Jewish family background and due to his expression of Anti-Nazi sentiments.

5.

Paul-Louis Landsberg was captured by the Gestapo and deported to Oranienburg Concentration Camp towards the end of the war and died there of physical and mental exhaustion in April 1944.

6.

Paul-Louis Landsberg was born in 1901 at Bonn into a large, wealthy Jewish family, the son of the prominent German Jurist Ernst Landsberg and his wife Anna.

7.

Paul-Louis Landsberg's parents had him baptized as a Protestant but later on he turned towards Catholicism and allied himself with the benedictine liturgical movement centered around Maria Laach.

8.

Paul-Louis Landsberg was a pupil of the phenomenological philosophers Edmund Husserl, Martin Heidegger and Max Scheler.

9.

Paul-Louis Landsberg became close friends with the Personalist philosopher Emmanuel Mounier, whose themes bore a similarity to those explored in his own works.

10.

Unfortunately, Paul-Louis Landsberg was for a long time persecuted by the Gestapo and it was clear that they were intent on having him put away, if not least for his Anti-Nazist views but for his essentially Jewish parentage.

11.

Paul-Louis Landsberg succeeded in joining an Anti-Nazi military group which provided him with official papers, enabling him to take shelter at several locations yet always without any news of his wife.

12.

Paul-Louis Landsberg was deported to the concentration camp at Oranienburg, outside Berlin and is recorded as having died of exhaustion on 2 April 1944 while still incarcerated.

13.

Paul-Louis Landsberg's work is, like Mounier's and the other Existentialists, personal in tone.

14.

Paul-Louis Landsberg is not interested in philosophy as a theoretical discipline but as an exploration of Conscience and the individual's personal confrontation with their own life and death.