Agnes Marie Constanze von Hartmann[1] (néeTaubert; 7 January 1844 – 8 May 1877), who wrote under the name A. Taubert, was a German philosopher and writer. She was known for her 1873 book Pessimism and Its Opponents and its contribution to the pessimism controversy in Germany.
Biography
Taubert was born on 7 January 1844, in Stralsund.[2] She was the daughter of an artillery colonel,[3] who was friends with the father of the philosopher Eduard von Hartmann.[4] In 1872, Taubert married Von Hartmann in Berlin-Charlottenburg and had a child with him.[5]
Taubert was a staunch supporter of her husband's work Philosophy of the Unconscious (1869) and wrote two books which both critiqued and defended his ideas,[6] under the pen name A. Taubert.[7] Her work Pessimism and Its Opponents (1873) was a major influence on the pessimism controversy in Germany.[6] In the text, she defined the problem that philosophical pessimism engages with as "a matter of measuring the eudaimonological value of life in order to determine whether existence is preferable to non-existence or not"; like her husband, Taubert argued that the answer to this problem is "empirically ascertainable".[8]
Taubert died in Berlin, on 8 May 1877,[2] of "an attack of a rheumatism of the joints",[9] which was described as "extremely painful".[10]
Legacy
Taubert has been described as "one of the first women to have a prominent role in a public intellectual debate in Germany"[6] and has been compared to Olga Plümacher, a contemporary woman philosopher, who also had a significant role in the pessimism controversy,[11] as well as the German-American philosopher Amalie J. Hathaway.[12]
^Tsanoff, Radoslav A. (1931). The Nature of Evil. New York: The Macmillan Company. p. 344.
^Gothaisches genealogisches Taschenbuch der briefadeligen Häuser [Gothaisches genealogical pocket book of the post-aristocratic houses] (in German). Gotha: J. Perthes. 1907. p. 270.