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Eucken, Rudolf Christoph (b. Jan. 5, 1846, Aurich, East Friesland
[now in Germany]--d. Sept. 14, 1926, Jena, Ger.), German Idealist philosopher,
winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature (1908), interpreter of Aristotle,
and author of works in ethics and religion. Distrusting abstract intellectualism and systematics, Eucken centred his philosophy upon actual human experience. He maintained that man is the meeting place of nature and spirit and that it is his duty and his privilege to overcome his nonspiritual nature by incessant active striving after the spiritual life. This pursuit, sometimes termed ethical activism, involves all of man's faculties but especially requires efforts of the will and intuition. A strident critic of naturalist philosophy, Eucken held that man's soul differentiated him from the rest of the natural world and that the soul could not be explained only by reference to natural processes. His criticisms are particularly evident in Individual and Society (1923) and Der Sozialismus und seine Lebensgestaltung (1920; Socialism: An Analysis, 1921). The second work attacked Socialism as a system that limits human freedom and denigrates spiritual and cultural aspects of life. 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The center also offers a shop and a wonderful cafe. In 1924 the Nobel Festivities were cancelled in Stockholm. Neither of the two Laureates could be present: the Laureate in Physiology or Medicine was traveling and the Literature Laureate was unwell. The Prizes in Physics and Chemistry were reserved that year. tax-exempt status, it would have been impossible for the Foundation to receive equivalent tax relief for its financial investments in the United States. In the event, a U.S. Treasury ruling granted the Foundation tax-exempt status in that country effective from 1953. Tax-exempt status created greater freedom of action, enabling the Foundation to pursue an investment policy not dominated by tax considerations that characterize the actions of many investors. with the subsequent Banquet at the Hasselbacken restaurant near the Skansen outdoor museum. This was not a success. No members of the Royal Family were present because of the death of Crown Princess Margaretha. The weather was gray, rainy and cold. As a result of disappointment at the absence of the King, the bad weather in Stockholm, while in Norway the Norwegian Nobel Committee is in charge of the corresponding arrangements. On December 10, 1901, the Nobel Prizes were awarded for the first time in Stockholm and in Christiania (now Oslo) respectively. During its first year, Nobel Media worked on the TV rights of already well known Nobel programmes such as the Nobel Prize Award Ceremony and Banquet, Nobel Minds, documentaries and portraits of the Nobel Laureates. Since 1995 the Trustees have appointed all members and deputies of the Board. The Board chooses a Chairman, Deputy Chairman and Executive Director from among its own members. Over the past 100 years, there have been a number of changes in the relationship between the Foundation's Board of Directors and the Swedish State. Their links have gradually been severed. After extensive negotiations with numerous TV producers, Nobel Media chose Sveriges Television (Swedish Television) as principal producer of the first series of Nobel programmes for 2004-2006, and to continue as one of its world distributors. To be held at the Stockholm Concert Hall, the event honors the year's Nobel Laureates, in the presence of the Laureates and their parties, Sweden's Royal Family and the Nobel Foundation's guests. The general public is also invited to attend. World-renowned cellist Yo-Yo Ma, charge of the Foundation's financial and administrative management. of that time as referring mainly to bonds or loans - Swedish as well as foreign - paying fixed interest and backed by solid underlying security (central or local government, property mortgages or the like). In those days, many bonds were sold with a so-called gold clause, stipulating that the holder was entitled In 1944 there were no Festivities in Stockholm, but a luncheon was held at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in New York organized by the American Scandinavian Foundation. Some 1943 and 1944 Laureates received their Prizes from the Swedish Minister (chief diplomat) in Washington, W. F. Bostr?m; two Physics Laureates - of the entire original fund, and higher than the real value of the original prizes. Since January 1, 2000, the Nobel Foundation has also been permitted to apply the capital gains from the sale of assets toward the prize amounts. According to Alfred Nobel's will, only direct return - interest and dividends - Then, in 1953, the Government approved a radical liberalization of the investment rules. The Foundation was granted a more extensive freedom to manage its capital independently, as well as the opportunity to invest in stocks and real estate. Freedom of investment, coupled with tax-exemption and the financial Nobel Media has also selected IMG (International Management Group) and TWI as its international partners, working primarily with sponsorships and distribution of the programmes to international channels. Until the early 1930s, the Nobel Banquet took place at the Hall of Mirrors in the Grand H?tel, Stockholm. In its very first years, 1901 and 1902, the banquet was an exclusive party for men only. Once the Stockholm City Hall had been built, in 1930 a decision was made to hold the Banquet in its fantastic Golden Hall on one side of the stage. The Laureates sat on the other side and members of the Prize-Awarding Institutions behind them. In 1973, Carl XVI Gustaf presented the Nobel Prizes for the first time as His Majesty the King of Sweden. Once before, in 1972, owing to the illness of his grandfather King Gustaf VI in Chemistry, George de Hevesy, received his Prize in Sweden without any ceremonies and the 1944 Literature Laureate, Johannes V. Jensen from Denmark, received his Prize in Stockholm in 1945. Eucken's Nobel Prize diploma referred
to the "warmth and strength in presentation with which in his numerous
works he has vindicated and developed an idealist philosophy of life."
His other works include Der Sinn und Wert des Lebens (1908; The Meaning
and Value of Life, 1909) and Konnen wir noch Christen sein? (1911; Can
We Still Be Christians?, 1914). |
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