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Fichte
[ fikh-tuh ]
noun
- Jo·hann Gott·lieb [yoh, -hahn , gawt, -leep], 1762–1814, German philosopher.
Fichte
/ ˈfɪçtə /
noun
- FichteJohann Gottlieb17621814MGermanPHILOSOPHY: philosopher Johann Gottlieb (joˈhan ˈɡɔtliːp). 1762–1814, German philosopher: expounded ethical idealism
Example Sentences
She argues that the Romantics — including Goethe, Schiller and Hegel, as well as some lesser-known figures, such as the philosophers Fichte and Schelling, the critics Friedrich and August Wilhelm Schlegel, and the poet Novalis — handed down to us the modern notion of the self as essentially free.
The book’s title adapts a phrase from a contemporary of Fichte, the critic Friedrich Schlegel — “magnificent outlaws” or “exiles” more literally — to describe this group of poets and philosophers who lived together in the aftermath of the French Revolution and who asked in their own ways what it means to be free.
So began Fichte’s celebrated lectures on the meaning of freedom, drawing fascinated audiences that numbered in the hundreds.
Fichte’s onetime disciple and soon-to-be bitter rival, Schelling taught by the light of two candles.
Standing at the front of an overcrowded auditorium in the late 18th century, the Romantic philosopher Johann Gottlieb Fichte would tell his students to look within.
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