Joseph Redlhamer (20 October 1713 in Lower Austria – 9 July 1761 in Vienna) was a professor at the University of Vienna.[1]

He joined the Jesuits at age 18 and earned a doctorate in philosophy and theology, after which he taught ethics, philosophy and theology in Linz, Graz and Vienna. He was a contemporary of Johann Baptiste Horvath, Andreas Jaszlinszky and Leopold Biwald.

Among his published works is Philosophia naturalis seu physica generalis et particularis (Vienna, 1755), in two parts, for which a scanned copy of the first part (Physica Generalis) is available online.[2] Physica Generalis deals primarily with mechanics, including fluid mechanics and gravity.

He was also a noted Catholic theologian and philosopher who published several other books.[3][4]

References

  1. "Redlhamer, Joseph". Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie.
  2. Redlhamer, Joseph (1755). Philosophia Naturalis. Trattner.
  3. De Backer, Augustin (1858). Bibliothèque des écrivains de la Compagnie de Jésus ou Notices bibliographiques. L. Grandmont-Donders. p. 626.
  4. Gurr, John Edwin (1959). The principle of sufficient reason in some scholastic systems, 1750-1900. Marquette University Press. redlhamer.


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