Wilhelm Dilthey photo

Wilhelm Dilthey

Wilhelm Dilthey (German: [ˈdɪltaɪ]) was a German historian, psychologist, sociologist, and hermeneutic philosopher, who held G. W. F. Hegel's Chair in Philosophy at the University of Berlin. As a polymathic philosopher, working in a modern research university, Dilthey's research interests revolved around questions of scientific methodology, historical evidence and history's status as a science. He could be considered an empiricist, in contrast to the idealism prevalent in Germany at the time, but his account of what constitutes the empirical and experiential differs from British empiricism and positivism in its central epistemological and ontological assumptions, which are drawn from German literary and philosophical traditions.


“In the case of lived experience, there is no difference between an object that is perceived and the eye that perceives it.”
Wilhelm Dilthey
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“What is experienced from within cannot be categorized in concepts that have been developed for the external world of the senses.”
Wilhelm Dilthey
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