Abstract

From the first, philosophical anthropology has been linked with the modern human sciences.1 Wilhelm Dilthey (1976), a central figure in philosophical anthropology, was also a prominent historian. Georg Simmel (1918), a forceful spur to this philosophy, was, of course, one of the shapers of theoretical sociology. It is less widely known that Max Scheler (1961, 1980), the founding father of philosophical an? thropology, played a formative role in the birth of the sociology of knowledge. The tie between this philosophical discipline and the hu? man sciences was twofold. (1) The human sciences from the outset developed different and even incompatible conceptions of human

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