Emerich Coreth | |
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Born | Raabs an der Thaya, Austria | 10 August 1919
Died | 1 September 2006 | (aged 87)
Occupation(s) | Philosopher, Jesuit priest |
Emerich Coreth (10 August 1919 – 1 September 2006) was an Austrian Philosopher, Jesuit and Catholic Priest. He is well known for his works on metaphysics and philosophical anthropology. A close associate of Karl Rahner, Coreth is a renowned neo-Thomist of 20th century. He was the Rector of the University of Innsbruck and the Provincial of the Austrian Province of the Society of Jesus.
Born into an aristocratic family at Raabs an der Thaya, a small village in Lower Austria, near the border to the Czech Republic, he grew up in Vienna and joined the Jesuits in 1937. His sister Anna Coreth (1915–2008) was the director of the Austrian National Archives. Emerich's studies of philosophy in Pullach were interrupted by military service during the war. He completed his theological doctorate in Innsbruck and his philosophical doctorate in Rome, where he also worked as a tutor at the Germanicum. He then began teaching at the Faculty of Theology at the University of Innsbruck in 1950. Since 1955 he was Professor of Philosophy, and President, at the church-established Institutum Philosophicum Oenipontanum, and Head of the Institute for Christian Philosophy at the Faculty of Theology. In addition, he fulfilled leadership tasks in the Jesuit Order's administration of Innsbruck University: as Dean of the Faculty of Theology in 1957/58 and 1968/69, as Rector of the University of Innsbruck 1969-1971, and 1972-1977 as Provincial of the Austrian Province.[1]