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Department of Philosophy – Universität Innsbruck

Welcome

Welcome to the Department of Philosophy at the University of Innsbruck!

We do philosophy in its entire thematic breadth and from a variety of different perspectives, such as analytic philosophy, phenomenology, and hermeneutics. Our research can be found in numerous journals and books. We take care to ensure that different traditions, approaches, and positions are not only represented within the Department but brought together in our research, projects, and teaching in a respectful, open, and free dialogue.

It is our goal to share this open and diverse atmosphere with our students. They can enrol in a Bachelor’s programme, a Master’s programme, and a PhD programme. In addition, our Department organizes and coordinates the new teacher training programme in ethics as Bachelor's programme and as Master's programme. We offer an exciting, varied and international study environment that familiarizes our students with research, teaching, and practice.

At our Department, philosophy is not only what we do; it is what we live.

During the Thun-Hohenstein university reform after the March Revolution of 1848, the subject of philosophy was represented at the Faculty of Philosophy of the University of Innsbruck by Georg Schenach. When he was appointed to the University of Vienna in 1857, the chair went to Tobias Wildauer, whose interest, at the latest after his election to the Imperial Council in 1873, was obviously more politics than philosophy.

In 1871, a second chair of philosophy was established and filled by the New Kantian Karl Sigmund Barach-Rappaport. He was succeeded in 1885 by Karl Überhorst, who taught philosophy and psychology. Under Überhorst's influence, Franz Hillebrand, a Brentano student and experimental psychologist, was appointed Wildauer's successor in 1896.

The Innsbruck Brentano School was consolidated when Emil Arleth was appointed to the second chair in 1905, but he died as early as 1909, whereupon the Brentano student and editor Alfred Kastil was appointed to Innsbruck. Kastil became known outside of academic philosophy, among other things, for taking the writer's side in the Innsbruck "Karl Kraus Affair" in 1920. At the end of the winter semester 1933/34, he prematurely retired from his post for political reasons.

Hillebrand was succeeded in 1926 by Theodor Erismann, who was mainly involved in experimental psychology (- the well-known "Innsbruck spectacle experiments"). After his retirement in 1956, the chair was divided. His successors were Ivo Kohler for psychology and Hans Windischer for history of philosophy and systematic philosophy. Windischer had been dismissed as a lecturer in 1938 and advocated a Catholic existential philosophy. He had already criticised Brentano's philosophy as unchristian in a study published by the Innsbruck Institute for Scholastic Philosophy in 1936.

In 1930, on Kastil's initiative, Richard Strohal had received an extraordinariate for philosophy with special consideration of pedagogy. Since he was also removed from office in 1938, he had to spend the period of National Socialist rule as a secondary school teacher in Vorarlberg. The National Socialist Walther Schulze-Soelde took his place. Philosophy was also taught during this time by the two lecturers Ernst Foradori and Walter Del-Negro, who had habilitated in Innsbruck. After 1945, Strohal was reactivated and appointed a full university professor in 1948. Along with Erismann, Strohal was the last representative of the subject of philosophy in the comprehensive sense, which also covered experimental psychology and pedagogy.

In 1968, Gerhard Frey from Stuttgart was appointed to the newly established chair of philosophy and philosophy of science. He made a significant contribution to the re-establishment of a scientifically oriented philosophy in Austria, which had almost disappeared from the universities due to the end of the "Vienna Circle", the National Socialist rule and the Catholic restoration after the war.

Windischer was succeeded in Innsbruck in 1977 by Wolfgang Röd from Munich - one of the most important historians of philosophy in the German-speaking world, whose philosophical standpoint was transcendental philosophy. After his retirement in 1996, the professorship remained vacant until 2009, when Paola-Ludovika Coriando from the University of Freiburg took over a professorship in metaphysics.

Hans Köchler (1982 to 2014) held an associate professorship in philosophy (with special emphasis on political philosophy and philosophical anthropology), as did the social philosopher Josef Zelger (1983 to 2005), who, among other things, co-founded the journal "Conceptus". Frey's successor in 1989 was the logician Reinhard Kleinknecht (previously of the TU Munich), who followed a call to Salzburg in 2002. This professorship also remained vacant for a long time. The Institute's increased focus on practical philosophy was finally reflected in the appointment of Anne Siegetsleitner to an ethics professorship in 2013.

The philosopher and psychologist Franziska Mayer-Hillebrand was the second woman to receive a doctorate from the University of Innsbruck, in 1919. In 1935, Simon Moser habilitated, who co-founded the European Forum Alpbach after the war and became a professor in Karlsruhe.

The philosophers who habilitated in Innsbruck after the war included Amadeo von Silva-Tarouca (later professor in Graz), Wolfgang Stegmüller (who was first in line for the Erismann succession but was passed over for ideological reasons; shortly afterwards he became professor in Munich and founded an important school of analytical philosophy), Bernulf Kanitscheider (Giessen), Reinhard Kamitz (Berlin and later Graz) and Rudolf Wohlgenannt (Linz).

(Peter Kügler)

Literature:

Peter Goller: Die Lehrkanzeln für Philosophie an der Philosophischen Fakultät der Universität Innsbruck 1848 bis 1945 (= Forschungen zur Innsbrucker Universitätsgeschichte 15), Innsbruck 1989.

Peter Goller & Pierre Sachse: Wolfgang Stegmüller im intellektuellen Umfeld der Universität Innsbruck (1941-1958), in: Journal Psychologie des Alltagshandelns, Jg. 16, Nr. 2, 1-15.  (Dokument hochladen)

Gerhard Benetka: Der "Fall" Stegmüller, in: Elemente moderner Wissenschaftstheorie, hg. v. Friedrich Stadler, Wien/New York 2000, 123-176.

Contact

Department of Philosophy
University of Innsbruck
Innrain 52d
A-6020 Innsbruck

Telephone: +43 512 507-40211
mail: philosophie@uibk.ac.at

Head of Department:
Univ.-Prof Dr. Annemarie Siegetsleitner

From March 1, 2025 until July 31, 2025, Assoc. Prof. Marie-Luisa Frick will take over the management of the department on an interim basis.

Secretariat Opening hours in July:

Regular opening hours:
Monday to Wednesday: 10:00 a.m.–12:00 a.m., Thursday: 9:00 a.m.–11:00 a.m.
July 7–11: Closed
Last week of July: Open only on Tuesday, July 29, and Thursday, July 31

The Department of Philosophy is located on the eighth floor of the building Innrain 52d („Geiwi-Turm“).

Seminar papers etc. can also be handed in at the letter box next to the entrance of the administrative office.

Current events

Doctoral Workshop of the Bavarian Graduate Program in Political Theory, September 25, 2025, 1:30-6:00 p.m., Seminar Room SR 14, Ágnes Heller Haus, Innrain 52a, Innsbruck

Symposium "Liberal Democracy? Inherent tensions, external pressure and institutional (re-)arrangements", September 26, 2025, 9:15 a.m., Claudiana, Herzog-Friedrich Street 3, University of Innsbruck

Courses in the winter semester 2025/2026 for BA and MA Philosophy

Recent publications

Huth, Martin (2025): Zwischen fremden und vertrauten Verletzlichkeiten. Über Begegnungen mit Tieren als vulnerablen Wesen. In: Martin Schnell (ed.): Vulnerabilität der Natur: Mensch – Tier – Erde. Weilerswist: Velbrück, 2025, pp. 212-230.

Coriando, Paola-Ludovica (2025): Von ihm selbst her. Anmerkungen zum Problem des kath’autò in der Fundamentalontologie. In: Martin Heidegger: Ontología Fundamental y Fenomenología Hermenéutica. Ed. V. C. Ivanoff-Sabogal. Universidad Central del Ecuador Editorial Universitaria, Quito-Ecuador 2025.

Frick, Marie-Luisa (2025): Breaking two myths at once? The advantages and limitations of critical historiographies of international law. Cambridge Review of International Affairs, pp. 1–6.

Frick, Marie-Luisa (2025): Werte der Aufklärung als ethische Quellen der Politischen Bildung fruchtbar machen. In: Sebastian Ihle & Ingo Juchler (eds.): Ethische Grundlagen politischer Bildung. Frankfurt a. M.: Wochenschau Verlag.

Huth, Martin (2025): Vulnerabilität, Solidarität und Gewalt. Zur Phänomenologie von Verletzlichkeit und Verantwortung. In: Michael Staudigl (ed.): Phänomenologien des Politischen: Konturen, Kostellationen, Kontexte. Wiesbaden: Springer, pp. 383-411.

Huth, Martin (2025): Zwischen Pathos und Spur. Phänomenologische Untersuchungen zur Erfahrung von Vulnerabilität. In: Claudia Peter, Marc Strotmann und Moritz von Stetten (eds.): Affektivität und Sozialität. Phänomenologie und Soziologie des Affektiven. Wiesbaden: Springer, pp. 101-128.

Huth, Martin (2025): Gefährdungspotential, Ressource, Patient:in: Über multiple Rollen von Tieren im Kontext von Gesundheit und ihre ethischen Implikationen. In: Monika Ankele, Maria Heidegger und Marina Hilber (eds.). Virus: Beiträge zur Sozialgeschichte der Medizin 23, Schwerpunkt Mensch-Tier-Gesundheit, pp. 15-32 (peer reviewed).

Siegetsleitner, Anne; Isbrandt, Cedric (eds.) unter Mitarbeit von Evelyn Sandri (2025): Liebe in Zeiten von Liberalisierung und Digitalisierung, Innsbruck: innsbruck university press.

Peter Kügler (2025): Čapek´s Argument for the Reality of Temporal Passage, in: Erkenntnis.

You may access the list of our Department's publications here.

Current media contributions

27.05.2025: Andreas Beinsteiner: Martin Heidegger – der „heimliche König der Philosophie“ (2) (Kultursendung Ö1, Gestaltung Johannes Kaup)

26.05.2025: Paola-Ludovica Coriando: Martin Heidegger – der „heimliche König der Philosophie“ (Kultursendung Ö1, Gestaltung Johannes Kaup)

20.03.2025: Marie-Luisa Frick (Interview): Debatte und Aufklärung: Was können wir der Anti-Aufklärung entgegensetzen? (Jugend debattiert)

Notes

The LFUI Guest Professorship of Erik Vogt from Trinity College, Hartford (USA), in the winter term focuses on a critical engagement with the myths of "great literature" at the intersection of philosophy, literature, and politics. In a seminar for master's students, reflections on key texts by Heidegger, Adorno, de Man, Badiou, Lacoue-Labarthe, Sartre, Rancière, as well as Elfriede Jelinek, are on the programme.

The FWF project „Law and Ethics of Innovation: Rethinking Progress in Crises” (Funding program 1000 Ideas), with the participation of Marie-Luisa Frick, has received approval.

Marie-Luisa Frick has contributed her reflections on the topic of artificial intelligence in the magazine Quart – Heft für Kultur Tirol.

The audio recording of the guest lecture on the topic "A monstrous unnatural intelligence". On the incommensurability between artificial intelligence and human cognition by Dieter Mersch, held on June 12, 2025, is available on the AI Media Lab website.

The current essay question for the GAP/GPS Essay Award 2025 has now been finalised:

How does hope matter for our actions?

The competition is aimed at students and graduates who have recently completed their studies in philosophy. Further details on eligibility can be found in the invitation to tender.

Essaypreis 2025
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