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・ Max Planck Institute for Chemistry
・ Max Planck Institute for Coal Research
・ Max Planck Institute for Comparative and International Private Law
・ Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International Law
・ Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research
・ Max Planck Institute for Developmental Biology
・ Max Muscle
・ Max Muspratt
・ Max Mutchnick
・ Max Myanmar
・ Max Méreaux
・ Max Möller
・ Max Möller (luthier)
・ Max Möller (SS officer)
・ Max Müller
Max Müller (Catholic intellectual)
・ Max Müller (cross-country skier)
・ Max Müller (disambiguation)
・ Max Müller Library
・ Max Nagl
・ Max Naumann
・ Max Neal
・ Max Nemetz
・ Max Nemni
・ Max Nettlau
・ Max Neufeld
・ Max Neuhaus
・ Max Neukirchner
・ Max Neumeister
・ Max Newcombe


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Max Müller (Catholic intellectual) : ウィキペディア英語版
Max Müller (Catholic intellectual)

Max Müller (6 September 1906 in Offenburg, Baden – 18 October 1994 in Freiburg im Breisgau) was a German philosopher and influential post-World War II Catholic intellectual. Müller was Professor at the University of Freiburg and the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich.
==Life==
Müller graduated in 1930 along with the philosopher Martin Honecker. He established himself in 1937 with a work on Thomas Aquinas ("Reality and Rationality"'). At this time he was active in the Catholic Youth Movement who were influenced by their study with Martin Heidegger, generating their own thinking in engagement with his philosophy. During the Third Reich they were opponents of Nazism. Falling foul of Nazi educational policies, Müller was dismissed by Heidegger from research positions.
He became active as a lecturer at the Catholic Collegium Borromaeum in Freiburg. After the war he succeeded the late Martin Honecker in his academic positions at the Albert-Ludwigs-Universität in Freiburg.
In addition to his activity at the university Müller was active in addressing social problems in Freiburg. In 1960 he moved to Ludwig Maximilians university in Munich. After his retirement he returned to Freiburg for research activity in philosophy and theology.
Müller's main influences were Honecker, Edmund Husserl and Heidegger. He was also influenced by the historian Friedrich Meinecke and the theologian Romano Guardini.

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