Alois Riehl
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Alois Adolf Riehl (Austrian German: [riːl]; 27 April 1844 – 21 November 1924) was an Austrian neo-Kantian philosopher. He was a proponent of anti-psychologism and critical perceptual realism.
Alois (also Aloys) Riehl was born in Bozen (Bolzano) in the Austrian Empire (now in Italy). He was the brother of the Austrian engineer and building contractor Josef Riehl.
He studied at Vienna, Munich, Innsbruck and Graz. At Vienna, he attended classes taught by Robert von Zimmermann.[1] He earned his PhD from Innsbruck in 1868. He habilitated at Graz at 1870.
He worked as a full professor of philosophy at Graz from 1878, then at Freiburg (from 1882 as a replacement for Wilhelm Windelband),[2] Kiel and Halle, and finally at Berlin, where he commissioned Mies van der Rohe to design his house in Neubabelsberg.
For Riehl, philosophy was not the teaching of Weltanschauung, but principally a criticism of perception.
He was the doctoral advisor of Paul Hensel and Oswald Spengler. Heinrich Scholz studied philosophy at Berlin under Riehl, who remained an important influence on his early thought.
Riehl died in Neubabelsberg, near Potsdam,[2] and was buried in the Alter Friedhof in Klein Glienicke.
His wife Sofie, was the aunt of Frieda Gross, the wife of the psychoanalyst and revolutionary Otto Gross.