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  1. Vor 3 Tagen · Facts & information about title «Johann Gottlieb Fichte» (Second, revised edition) by Peter Rohs from the series «Beck'sche Reihe: Denker» [with table of contents and availability check]

  2. Vor einem Tag · Instead, these terms were popularized by later interpreters, particularly Johann Gottlieb Fichte and Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling, who influenced the development of dialectical thinking and were instrumental in elaborating on Hegel's ideas. But arguably it’s still useful to use this framing.

  3. Vor einem Tag · It was during his time as a prisoner of war in Germany that Gueroult began drafting his first philosophical work on Johann Gottlieb Fichte, later to become L’Évolution et la structure de la doctrine de la science chez Fichte [The Evolution and Structure of Fichte’s Doctrine of Science].

  4. Vor 2 Tagen · 21 Johann Gottlieb Fichte, Reden an die deutsche Nation [1808], in : Johann Gottlieb Fichte’s sämmtliche Werke, édité par I[mmanuel] H[ermann] Fichte, Berlin, Veit, t. 7, 1846, p. 355. 22 Cet état de fait souligne encore, si besoin était, que Mme de Staël fonde ses affirmations sur des stéréotypes et des préjugés antérieurs à tout contact réel.

  5. Vor 5 Tagen · (1789) [Schiller 1956], a series of Johann Gottlieb Fichte’s texts, in particular Some Lectures Concerning the Scholar’s Vocation (1794) [Fichte 1995] and On the Nature of the Scholar and Its Manifes - tations (1805) [Fichte 1997], and Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling’s Lectures on the Method of University Studies (1803) [Schelling 2009].

  6. Vor 5 Tagen · A notable by-product of the Romantic interest in the emotional were works dealing with the supernatural, the weird, and the horrible, as in Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein and works by Charles Robert Maturin, the Marquis de Sade, and E.T.A. Hoffmann.

  7. Vor 2 Tagen · Under the hegemony of the First French Empire (1804–1814), popular German nationalism thrived in the reorganized German states. Due in part to the shared experience, albeit under French dominance, various justifications emerged to identify "Germany" as a potential future single state. For the German philosopher Johann Gottlieb Fichte,