- Götz Briefs
Götz Briefs (b.
January 1 ,1889 , inEschweiler d.May 16 ,1974 , inRome ) was aCatholic social theorist, social ethicist, social philosopher and political economist, who together withJesuit Gundlach, influenced the social teachings ofPope Pius XI .Biography
In 1908, Götz Briefs began to study history and philosophy at the University of
Munich . As it was customary in German academic circles at the time, he frequently switched universities, moving in 1909 toBonn , and later in 1911 toFreiburg . In Freiburg, he became a member of K.D.St. V. Wildenstein Freiburg im Breisgau, a Catholic student fraternity that belong to theCartellverband der katholischen deutschen Studentenverbindungen .In 1911 he completed his doctoral dissertation with an investigation of the impact of the alcoholic beverage industry on market price structures. He was awarded the highest honorSumma Cum Laude for hisdissertation and continued on the topic of profits with hisHabilitation on the impact of average profits on the economy in 1913.In 1919 he was named Professor for economics at the
Albert-Ludwigs-Universität in Freiburg. Two years later 1921 he accepted a professorship at the Julius-Maximilian-Universität inWürzburg . In 1923 he returned to Freiburg and in 1926 to Berlin at theTechnische Hochschule . In 1928, he founded an Institute forindustrial sociology inBerlin .After the
National Socialist s won the elections in Germany and took over the government, he, like many other outspoken Catholics, lost his career and was forced to leave his native country. Göetz Briefs emigrated to the USA, where he found a teaching position as guest professor at theCatholic University and later full professor at theJesuit Georgetown University in Washington, D.C.After being widowed during the war years, he maried Elinor Castendyk in 1946, who later became known for her work on and translations of
Romano Guardini . After his retirement, the couple lived in a mountain retreat near theTrappist monastery Holy Cross Abbey inBerryville inClark County , Virginia, which he frequented with his wife on a daily basis. Goetz Briefs had an impact on the social teachings of the Catholic Church and was considered a ghost writer of the encyclicalQuadragesimo Anno ofPope Pius XI with his friend, the Jesuit Gustav Gundlach, with whom he spent his annual Summer vacations together. Göetz Briefs died in Rome of internal complications from an accident in the Vatican. After visitingPope Paul VI he fell on the Vatican steps leading to Saint Peter's Plaza. He is buried in the Vatican'sCampo Santo .With Gustav Gundlach, Theodor Brauer, Paul Jostock, Franz H. Mueller, Heinrich Rommen and Oswald von Nell-Breuning he was a member of the "Königswinter Circle" at the
Königswinter "Institute for Society and Economy"." Briefs received multiple scholarships and six honorary doctorates.In addition:* 1959 The Distinguished Service Cross of the Federal Republic of Germany "Pour le merit"
* 1968 The Star to the Order of Merit.Göetz Briefs published approximately 350 scientific articles. The road "Götz-Briefs-Weg" in his hometown was named after him in 1989.
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References
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