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Foundations of the Science of Knowledge : ウィキペディア英語版 | Foundations of the Science of Knowledge
''Foundations of the Science of Knowledge'' ((ドイツ語:Grundlage der gesammten Wissenschaftslehre)) is a 1794 book by the German philosopher Johann Gottlieb Fichte. Based on lectures Fichte had delivered as a Professor of Philosophy in Jena, it was later reworked in various versions. The standard ''Wissenschaftslehre'' was published in 1804, but other versions appeared posthumously.〔Scruton 2000. p. 208.〕 ==Scholarly reception== In 1798, the German romantic Friedrich Schlegel identified the ''Wissenschaftslehre'', together with the French revolution and Johann Wolfgang von Goethe's ''Wilhelm Meister'', as "the most important trend-setting events (''Tendenzen'') of the age."〔Seidel 1993. p. 1.〕 Michael Inwood believes that the work is close in spirit to the early works of Edmund Husserl, including the ''Ideas'' (1913) and the ''Cartesian Meditations'' (1931).〔Inwood 2005. p. 410.〕 The ''Wissenschaftslehre'' has been described by Roger Scruton as being both "immensely difficult" and "rough-hewn and uncouth".〔
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