Philipp-Alexander Hirsch is a legal scholar and philosopher. He has been Leader of an Independent Research Group on criminal-law theory at the Max Planck Institute in Freiburg since 2022, having studied and obtained doctorates in law and philosophy before taking up this role. He has studied at the University of Göttingen, the University of Vienna, and the University of Toronto. In addition, he is completing his habilitation in criminal law at the University of Göttingen, where he is also a lecturer in the Department of Philosophy. His research focuses on criminal law and criminal procedure, legal philosophy and legal theory, and the history and philosophy of criminal law in the Age of Enlightenment.
Main Focus
In his research, Philipp-Alexander Hirsch is particularly interested in the foundations of criminal law. One focus is criminal-law theory, understood as an analysis of criminal law and its doctrine that centers on the underlying normative structures and principles in order to assess their coherence, justifiability , and persuasiveness. In addition, his research is concerned with doctrinal and methodological questions as well as the intellectual history and philosophical aspects of criminal law. Current topics of his research are:
- The status of the victim in substantive criminal law and criminal proceedings
- Theory of rights
- Questions of imputation
- Theories of criminalization
- Theories of punishment
- Development of criminal law in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries
- Comparison of legal theories (especially between German and Anglo-American legal systems)
Curriculum Vitae
- Since 2022: Leader of an Independent Research Group on criminal-law theory
Max Planck Institute for the Study of Crime, Security and Law, Freiburg i.Br.
- 2018–2022: Research Associate and, subsequently, Assistant Professor (akademischer Rat)
Institute of Criminal Law and Justice at the University of Göttingen (Prof. Dr. Uwe Murmann, Chair of Criminal Law and Criminal Procedure Law)
- 2017–2020: Doctor of Laws (Doktor der Rechte)
University of Göttingen
Supervisor: Prof. Dr. Uwe Murmann
Awarded the Appelhagen-Stifterpreis of the Faculty of Law of the University of Göttingen for the best dissertation of the year 2020
- 2015–2018: Legal clerkship (Referendariat)
Higher Regional Court of Braunschweig with internships at, inter alia, the Federal Ministry of Justice and Consumer Protection and the law firm Graf von Westphalen
- 2011–2016: Doctorate in Philosophy
University of Göttingen
Supervisor: Prof. Dr. Bernd Ludwig and – during a research stay – Prof. Dr. Arthur Ripstein (University of Toronto )
Funded by a doctoral scholarship from the German Academic Scholarship Foundation
- 2006–2011: M.A., Philosophy
University of Göttingen and University of Vienna
Funded by a scholarship from the German Academic Scholarship Foundation
- 2003–2010: Study of law (Studium der Rechtswissenschaften), First State Examination in Law
University of Göttingen and University of Vienna
Funded by a scholarship from the German Academic Scholarship Foundation
Awarded second place among examinees in calendar year 2010 for performance on the First State Examination in Law of the state of Lower Saxony
Projects
The project examines the human rights guarantees of the European Convention on Human Rights, the Inter-American Convention on Human Rights, and the fundamental rights of the German Grundgesetz as shaped by the respective case law to determine the extent to which they grant victims of crime subjective rights to punishment of the offender. The…
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Can a person be blamed for turning a blind eye to the circumstances of his or her conduct? From a criminal law perspective, the concept of “willful ignorance” (“willful blindness” or “conscious avoidance”) exists – in varying forms and terms – in different jurisdictions. It usually involves individuals deliberately ignoring or avoiding…
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Current Justification and Significance of the Postulate of Non-Judgmental Science
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Comparative and Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Criminal Liability for Inadvertent Negligence
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Ernst Ferdinand Klein is one of the most prominent figures of the late German Enlightenment. A philosopher, scholar of criminal law, and reformer of the judiciary, he not only played an influential role in shaping academic discourse in these fields at the end of the 18th century. He also had a lasting impact on forming public opinion on the…
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What is the relationship between law and morality? Does legal philosophy merely apply general moral principles to particular circumstances that give rise to the need for law and its institutions? Or does law have its own kind of normativity, which cannot be reduced to morality?
In current scholarship, Kant is often cited as holding the latter view…
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The aim of this interdisciplinary research project is to evaluate from today’s perspective the dispute regarding whether punishment ought to be justified on retributive or on preventive grounds – a dispute that has been ongoing in Germany since the end of the eighteenth century and whose most influential protagonists were Kant, Fichte, and…
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The rise of second-personal or relational conceptions of morality has been one of the most significant developments in contemporary ethics in the last 25 years. While many different theories are classified under this label, they generally agree that morality concerns ‘what we owe to each other’ (in Thomas Scanlon’s memorable phrase) and is…
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The aim of the project is to address the issue of rights in criminal law: Who holds and who should hold a right not to be wronged by others? And is it the violation of rights – rather than the causing of harm – that grounds a prima facie reason for criminalization? According to the standard view in criminal law, compliance with criminal-law duties…
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In German criminal-law doctrine, deliberate high-risk behavior is strictly dichotomized as either intentional or negligent behavior. The border line runs between dolus eventualis (“conditional intent”) and bewusste Fahrlässigkeit (“conscious negligence”), although this is accompanied by problems with regard to proving intent in the trial and…
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Both the legal and the everyday attribution of responsibility are based on a rationalist, naive psychology that interprets human action as behaviour caused by epistemic and optative states. The different degrees of legal and everyday attributions of responsibility correspond to the possible combinations of different epistemic states (such as…
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The treatment of infanticide in the Enlightenment discourse on criminal law policy and in the Prussian General Land Law
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Richard Martin Honig (1890–1981) is best known in German criminal law as one of the pioneers of the doctrine of objective imputation due to his ground-breaking contribution “Kausalität und objektive Zurechnung” (Causality and objective imputation) in the Festgabe für Frank (1930), which has since become commonplace in German criminal law doctrine…
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Publications
Hirsch, P.-A. (2021).
Das Verbrechen als Rechtsverletzung: subjektive Rechte im Strafrecht (Vol. Neue Folge, Band 299) Strafrechtliche Abhandlungen. Berlin: Duncker & Humblot.
Hirsch, P.-A. (2017).
Freiheit und Staatlichkeit bei Kant: die autonomietheoretische Begründung von Recht und Staat und das Widerstandsproblem (Vol. 194) Kant-Studien / Ergänzungshefte. Berlin: De Gruyter.
Hirsch, P.-A. (2012).
Kants Einleitung in die Rechtslehre von 1784. Immanuel Kants Rechtsbegriff in den Vorlesungen „Moral-Mrongovius II“ und „Naturrecht-Feyerabend“ von 1784 und in der „Metaphysik der Sitten“ von 1797. Göttingen: Universitätsverlag Göttingen. doi:10.17875/gup2012-459
Dölling, M.,
Hirsch, P.-A., &
Rennicke, J. (Eds.). (2024).
Richard Martin Honig: Prägender Göttinger (Straf-)Rechtswissenschaftler des 20. Jahrhunderts? (Vol. 45) Göttinger Studien zu den Kriminalwissenschaften. Göttingen: Universitätsverlag Göttingen. doi:10.17875/gup2024-2527
Hirsch, P.-A., &
Moser, E. (Eds.). (in press).
Rights in criminal law: studies on a new paradigm in criminal law and procedure. Oxford: Hart Publishing.
Hirsch, P.-A., &
Brecher, M. (Eds.). (in press).
Law and Morality in Kant. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
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Hirsch, P.-A. (2024). Eine relationale Theorie vom Verbrechen? Zur Bedeutung relationaler Theorien der Verpflichtung für das Strafrecht.
Goltdammer's Archiv für Strafrecht, (10), 544–562.
Hirsch, P.-A. (2024). Eine relationale Theorie vom Verbrechen! Erwiderung auf die Kommentare Abrahams und Stuckenbergs.
Goltdammer's Archiv für Strafrecht, (10), 584–587.
Hirsch, P.-A. (in press). Crimes as Status Violations.
Criminal Law and Philosophy.
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Hirsch, P.-A. (2024). Feministische Aufklärung im Strafrecht? – Die Behandlung des Kindsmords im strafrechtspolitischen Aufklärungsdiskurs sowie im Preußischen Allgemeinen Landrecht. In
I. Karremann &
G. Stiening (Eds.),
Vom Recht der Frauen zu den Frauenrechten (pp. 219–247). Stuttgart: J.B. Metzler.
Hirsch, P.-A. (2024). Sozial-ethische Pflichten und strafbares Unterlassen. Honig über Garantenpflichten und das Sittengesetz. In
M. Dölling,
P.-A. Hirsch, &
J. Rennicke (Eds.),
Richard Martin Honig: Prägender Göttinger (Straf-)Rechtswissenschaftler des 20. Jahrhunderts? (pp. 153–168). Göttingen: Universitätsverlag Göttingen. doi:10.17875/gup2024-2527
Hirsch, P.-A. (2024). Klimastrafrecht und materieller Verbrechensbegriff. Probleme einer liberalen Strafrechtsbegründung angesichts der Herausforderungen des Klimawandels. In
H. Satzger &
N. von Maltitz (Eds.),
Klimastrafrecht (pp. 111–136). Baden-Baden: Nomos.
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Hirsch, P.-A., &
Mayr, E. (Eds.). (in press).
Relational Morality and the Criminal Law.
Criminal Law and Philosophy.
Hirsch, P.-A. (Ed.). (2023).
Nationalsozialistisches Strafrecht.
Göttinger Rechtszeitschrift (Vol. 6).
Brecher, M.,
Hirsch, P.-A., &
Klingner, S. (Eds.). (2020).
Göttinger Naturrecht - 300 Jahre Gottfried Achenwall.
Rechtsphilosophie (Vol. 6). doi:10.5771/2364-1355-2020-4
Hirsch, P.-A. (2020). Rezension zu: Luna Rösinger, Die Freiheit des Beschuldigten vom Zwang zur Selbstbelastung.
Zeitschrift für Internationale Strafrechtsdogmatik.
Hirsch, P.-A. (2015). Rezension zu: B. Sharon Byrd und Joachim Hruschka, Kant’s Doctrine of Right. A Commentary.
Kant-Studien. doi:10.1515/kant-2015-0029