Andrzej Przyłębski


Andrzej Przyłębski is a Polish philosopher, author of six books on neokantianism and on hermeneutics; since 2016 serving as an ambasador to Germany.

Life

Przyłębski finished high school in Koło. He has been attending piano and accordion classes as well. In 1978, he became student of philosophy and social sciences at the Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań. He graduated five years later. In October 1983, he began scientific carrier at the AMU Institute of Philosophy. In 1987, he defended his Ph.D. thesis on Emil Lask's Logic of Philosophy.
Thanks to scholarship from the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation, from 1991 to 1993 Przyłębski spent in Heidelberg, preparing his post-doctoral thesis on the Baden School of Neo-Kantianism, with advice of Hans-Georg Gadamer and Reiner Wiehl. In 1993, he returned from Germany and became the deputy director of the AMU Philosophical Institute. Between 1996 and 2001, he worked as a scientific representative at the Polish diplomatic missions in Cologne and Berlin. Since 2002, Przyłębski was AMU associate professor. In 2009, he became Full Professor.
Przyłębski has been guest lecturer at the Universities of Cologne, Erlangen, Freiburg, Siegen, Szczecin. Since 2003, he has been a member of the Committee for Philosophical Sciences of the Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw. Since 2004, he has been vicepresident of the International Hegel-Society, Berlin. In 2003, he became the editor-in-chief of "Fenomenologia" scientific journal. He is a member of the Advisory Boards of three another journals: "Principia", "Przegląd Filozoficzny" and "Analiza i Egzystencja", as well as the Co-Editor of Hegel-Forschungen and Hegel-Jahrbücher. Przyłębski has also been a member of the Council of the Edith-Stein Research Centre in Poznań, and the President Lech Kaczynski Civic Academic Club in Poznań. He was the director of the AMU Florian Znaniecki Centre.
In July 2016, he was nominated Polish ambassador to Germany, and presented his letter of credence to the President Joachim Gauck.
Besides Polish, Przyłebski speaks German, English, and Russian. He plays tennis on the level of a tennis teacher. He is married to Julia Przyłębska, President of the Constitutional Tribunal of Poland. They have two sons.

Works