Hans-Georg Gadamer

born , February 11, 1900, Marburg, Germany
died March 13, 2002, Heidelberg
German philosopher whose system of philosophical
hermeneutics, derived in part from concepts of Wilhelm
Dilthey, Edmund Husserl, and Martin Heidegger, was
influential in 20th-century philosophy, aesthetics,
theology, and criticism.
The son of a chemistry professor, Gadamer studied the
humanities at the universities of Breslau, Marburg,
Freiburg, and Munich, earning his doctorate in philosophy
under Heidegger at Freiburg in 1922. He lectured in
aesthetics and ethics at Marburg in 1933, at Kiel in
1934–35, and again at Marburg, where he was named
extraordinary professor in 1937. In 1939 he was made full
professor at the University of Leipzig. He later taught at
the universities of Frankfurt am Main (1947–49) and
Heidelberg (from 1949). He became professor emeritus in
1968.
Gadamer’s most important work, Wahrheit und Methode
(1960; Truth and Method), is considered by some to be the
major 20th-century philosophical statement on hermeneutical
theory. His other works include Kleine Schriften, 4 vol.
(1967–77; Philosophical Hermeneutics, selected essays from
vol. 1–3); Dialogue and Dialectic (1980), comprising eight
essays on Plato; and Reason in the Age of Science (1982), a
translation of essays drawn from several German editions.