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=== Political attitude === At the start of the First World War, Wundt, like [[Edmund Husserl]] and [[Max Planck]], signed the patriotic call to arms as did about 4,000 professors and lecturers in Germany, and during the following years he wrote several political speeches and essays that were also characterized by the feeling of a superiority of German science and culture. During Wundt's early Heidelberg time he espoused liberal views. He co-founded the Association of German Workers' Associations. He was a member of the liberal Progressive Party of Baden. From 1866 to 1869 he represented Heidelberg in the Baden States Assembly.<ref name="Fahrenberg2019">{{cite book |last1=Fahrenberg |first1=Jochen |title=Wilhelm Wundt (1832–1920) |date=2019 |publisher=PsychArchives|url=https://jochen-fahrenberg.de/fileadmin/pdf2019/WUNDT__1832-1920_._Complete_Work__Fahrenberg_5.10.2019_.pdf |access-date=28 November 2022}}</ref> In old age Wundt appeared to become more conservative (see Wundt, 1920; Wundt's correspondence), then – also in response to World War I, the subsequent social unrest and the severe revolutionary events of the post-war period – adopted an attitude that was patriotic and lent towards nationalism. Wilhelm Wundt's son, philosopher Max Wundt, had an even more clearly intense, somewhat nationalist, stance. Although not a member of the [[Nazi party]] (NSDAP), Max Wundt wrote about national traditions and race in philosophical thinking.<ref>Mark Michalski: Der Gang des deutschen Denkens. Königshausen & Neumann, Würzburg 2010.</ref>
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