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Hans Waldemar Ruin (18 June 1891 – 3 November 1980) was a Finnish philosopher and writer of Swedish-Finnish extraction.
Hans Ruin | |
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Born | Hans Waldemar Ruin 18 June 1891 Helsinki, Grand Duchy of Finland, Russian Empire (now Finland) |
Died | 3 November 1980 Stockholm, Sweden | (aged 89)
Alma mater | Helsinki University Lund University |
Period | 1919–1977 |
Spouses | Karin "Kaisi" Sievers |
Children |
Biography
editRuin was the son of Professor Waldemar Ruin and Flora Lindholm. He married Karin "Kaisi" Sievers (1894) in 1917, daughter of physician Klas Richard Sievers and Freifrau Karin von Bonsdorff. He had two children, Martina and Olof, and maternal grandfather to David and Marika Lagercrantz. His grandchild was also named Hans Ruin and became a philosopher.
Ruin was a varied writer, who authored works on topics ranging from continental philosophy to art and literature, as well as autobiographical pieces. Analytical philosophy, an increasingly dominating subject within philosophy at the time, felt foreign to him however. This was one of the reasons why he left Finland and moved to Sweden to pursue the study of aesthetics.
Svenska kulturfonden sponsored an award in 2003 called the Hans Ruin essay contest for essay writers. The contest is arranged every three years.
Awards
edit- Dobloug Prize, 1957
- Samfundet De Nio's grand prize, 1962
- Sydsvenska Dagbladet's cultural award, 1963
References
edit- Wrede, Johan. "Hans W Ruin". Svenskt biografiskt lexikon. Swedish National Archives. urn:sbl:7022. Retrieved 20 May 2023.