Rudolf Hirzel

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Rudolf Hirzel (20 March 1846, Leipzig - 30 December 1917, Jena) was a German classical scholar, and author of a number of major books on Greek law, oaths, dialogues and names. He was the second son of Solomon Hirzel, the owner of a publishing house in Leipzig. He was educated at the Thomasschule in Leipzig and went to study Classics in Heidelberg, Göttingen (with Hermann Sauppe) and, lastly, Berlin, where he graduated in 1868 (with Moriz Haupt).

Hirzel married Dorothea Hirzel, née Springer, on 14 March 1887. They had no children. In Jena Rudolf Hirzel lived in the same house as Gottlob Frege and it has been conjectured that his studies in ancient logic may have influenced him. [1] [2]

Hirzel's house at Forstweg 29 in Jena, shared with his neighbor Gottlob Frege Frege Haus Forstweg 29 Jena.jpg
Hirzel's house at Forstweg 29 in Jena, shared with his neighbor Gottlob Frege

Works

References

  1. Gabriel G., Huemllser K., Schlotter S., Zur Miete bei Frege - Rudolf Hirzel und die Rezeption der stoischen Logik und Semantik in Jena, Journal for History and Philosophy of Logic, Vol. 30, (Nov. 2009), p 369-88
  2. Susanne Bobzien (2024) Frege, Hirzel, and Stoic logic, History and Philosophy of Logic, 45:4, 394-413, DOI: 10.1080/01445340.2024.2333141