Vorlage:1945 Sekundärbibliographie Jugendbewegung: Unterschied zwischen den Versionen

Aus Romano-Guardini-Handbuch
 
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* [1945-012] [Englisch] [[Alfred E. Apsler]]: The Youth Movement in the Weimar Republic, in: [[Social Science]], 20, 1945, 1 (Januar 1945), S. 31-43 [neu aufgenommen] - [Artikel] - https://books.google.de/books?id=PmRYAAAAYAAJ oder https://books.google.de/books?id=o9sjAQAAIAAJ; zu Romano Guardini:
* [1945-012] [Englisch] [[Alfred E. Apsler]]: The Youth Movement in the Weimar Republic, in: [[Social Science]], 20, 1945, 1 (Januar 1945), S. 31-43 [neu aufgenommen] - [Artikel] - https://books.google.de/books?id=PmRYAAAAYAAJ oder https://books.google.de/books?id=o9sjAQAAIAAJ; zu Romano Guardini:
** S. 34: „Pessimism , paired with mysticism , awakened a new interest in medieval philosophy and Catholic spirituality even among non-Catholic youth. They turned to Max Scheler who taught a revived scholasticism. He welcomed the youth movement as an " acapitalistic "movement capable of irrational, contem plative thinking and centripetal in its spiritual attitude. Romano Guardini, philosopher and leader of the Catholic youth movement, sought a new personal relation between man and God and represented absolute ethical principles. …“
** S. 34 f.: „Pessimism, paired with mysticism, awakened a new interest in medieval philosophy and Catholic spirituality even among non-Catholic youth. They turned to Max Scheler who taught a revived scholasticism. He welcomed the youth movement as an "acapitalistic" movement capable of irrational, contem plative thinking and centripetal in its spiritual attitude. Romano Guardini, philosopher and leader of the Catholic youth movement, sought a new personal relation between man and God and represented absolute ethical principles. …“

Aktuelle Version vom 11. Januar 2026, 12:47 Uhr

  • [1945-012] [Englisch] Alfred E. Apsler: The Youth Movement in the Weimar Republic, in: Social Science, 20, 1945, 1 (Januar 1945), S. 31-43 [neu aufgenommen] - [Artikel] - https://books.google.de/books?id=PmRYAAAAYAAJ oder https://books.google.de/books?id=o9sjAQAAIAAJ; zu Romano Guardini:
    • S. 34 f.: „Pessimism, paired with mysticism, awakened a new interest in medieval philosophy and Catholic spirituality even among non-Catholic youth. They turned to Max Scheler who taught a revived scholasticism. He welcomed the youth movement as an "acapitalistic" movement capable of irrational, contem plative thinking and centripetal in its spiritual attitude. Romano Guardini, philosopher and leader of the Catholic youth movement, sought a new personal relation between man and God and represented absolute ethical principles. …“