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・ Friedrich Blond
・ Friedrich Blume
・ Friedrich Blümke
・ Friedrich Boerner
・ Friedrich Bogislav von Tauentzien
・ Friedrich Bohl
・ Friedrich Bohndorff
・ Friedrich Bohry
・ Friedrich Boie
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Friedrich Bouterwek
・ Friedrich Brauner
・ Friedrich Breitfuss
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・ Friedrich Brodersen
・ Friedrich Brunstäd
・ Friedrich Brüggemann
・ Friedrich Buchardt
・ Friedrich Buck
・ Friedrich Burmeister
・ Friedrich Burmeister (politician)
・ Friedrich Bury
・ Friedrich Buxbaum
・ Friedrich Bödeker
・ Friedrich Bödicker


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Friedrich Bouterwek : ウィキペディア英語版
Friedrich Bouterwek

Friedrich Ludewig Bouterwek (15 April 1766 – 9 August 1828), German philosopher and critic, was born to a mining director at Oker, Electorate of Saxony; today a district of Goslar in Lower Saxony. He studied law and philology under Christian Gottlob Heyne and Johann Georg Heinrich Feder at the University of Göttingen.
After he had finished his studies he was appointed to the Hanover Appellate Court, whilst, backed by Johann Wilhelm Ludwig Gleim, he also gave his debut as an author under the pen name ''Ferdinand Adrianow'' in the ''Göttinger Musenalmanach'' published by Gottfried August Bürger. He returned to Göttingen as a lecturer in history, from 1790, however, he became a disciple of Immanuel Kant and published ''Aphorismen nach Kants Lehre vorgelegt'' (1793). In 1802 he became professor ordinarius of philosophy at Göttingen, where he remained till his death.
As a philosopher, he is interesting for his criticism of the theory of the "thing-in-itself" (''Ding-an-sich'', noumenon). For the pure reason, as described in the ''Kritik'', the "thing-in-itself" can be only an inconceivable "something-in-general"; any statement about it involves the predication of Reality, Unity and Plurality, which belong not to the absolute thing but to phenomena. On the other hand, the subject is known by the fact of will, and the object by that of resistance; the cognizance of willing is the assertion of absolute reality in the domain of relative knowledge. This doctrine has since been described as absolute Virtualism.
Following this train of thought, Bouterwek left the Kantian position through his opposition to its formalism. In later life he inclined to the views of Friedrich Heinrich Jacobi, whose letters to him (published at Göttingen, 1868) shed much light on the development of his thought.
Bouterwek died in Göttingen, Kingdom of Saxony.
His chief philosophical works are:
*''Ideen zu einer allgemeinen Apodiktik'' (Göttingen and Halle, 1799)
*''Aesthetik'' (Leipzig, 1806; Göttingen, 1815 and 1824)
*''Lehrbuch des philos. Vorkenntnisse'' (Göttingen, 1810 and 1820)
*''Lehrbuch der philos Wissenschaften'' (Göttingen, 1813 and 1820).
In these works he dissociated himself from the Kantian school. His chief critical work was the ''Geschichte der neuern Poesie und Beredsamkeit'' (Göttingen, 12 vols., 1801-1819), of which the history of Spanish literature has been published separately in French, Spanish and English. The ''Geschichte'' is a work of wide learning and generally sound criticism, but it is not of equal merit throughout. He also wrote three novels, ''Paulus Septimus'' (Halle, 1795), ''Graf Donamar'' (Göttingen, 1791) and ''Ramiro'' (Leipzig, 1804), and published a collection of poems (Göttingen, 1802).
== External links ==

* Obituary in ''The Foreign Review and Continental Miscellany'' (1828), (vol. 2, pp. 536-537 ).
* Biography in Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie, (vol. 3, pp. 213-216 ), by Ernst Henke.

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