Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Goethe's Reception of Ulrich von Hutten
- The School of Shipwrecks: Improvisation in Wilhelm Meisters theatralische Sendung and the Lehrjahre
- The Sublime,“Über den Granit,” and the Prehistory of Goethe's Science
- The Building in Bildung: Goethe, Palladio, and the Architectural Media
- Virgilian Retrospection in Goethe's Alexis und Dora
- Typologies of Repetition, Reflection, and Recurrence: Interpreting the Novella in Goethe's Wahlverwandtschaften
- Why Did Goethe Marry When He Did?
- Zum Verhältnis von Selbstsein und Miteinandersein in Goethes Urworte. Orphisch
- Schiller's Die Räuber: Revenge, Sacrifice, and the Terrible Price of Absolute Freedom
- Wallensteins Tod as a “Play of Mourning”: Death and Mourning in the Aesthetics of Schiller's Classicism
- The New Man:Theories of Masculinity around 1800
- BOOK REVIEWS
The Sublime,“Über den Granit,” and the Prehistory of Goethe's Science
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Goethe's Reception of Ulrich von Hutten
- The School of Shipwrecks: Improvisation in Wilhelm Meisters theatralische Sendung and the Lehrjahre
- The Sublime,“Über den Granit,” and the Prehistory of Goethe's Science
- The Building in Bildung: Goethe, Palladio, and the Architectural Media
- Virgilian Retrospection in Goethe's Alexis und Dora
- Typologies of Repetition, Reflection, and Recurrence: Interpreting the Novella in Goethe's Wahlverwandtschaften
- Why Did Goethe Marry When He Did?
- Zum Verhältnis von Selbstsein und Miteinandersein in Goethes Urworte. Orphisch
- Schiller's Die Räuber: Revenge, Sacrifice, and the Terrible Price of Absolute Freedom
- Wallensteins Tod as a “Play of Mourning”: Death and Mourning in the Aesthetics of Schiller's Classicism
- The New Man:Theories of Masculinity around 1800
- BOOK REVIEWS
Summary
His scientific pursuits and writings have merited Goethe a place in histories of science in the eighteenth century, and there is a great body of scholarship that documents his work in various scientific fields. Recent studies, part of a wider reevaluation of the development of science in Europe in the eighteenth century, have greatly assisted our understanding of the intellectual and sociological milieu in which Goethe's scientific pursuits took place and have largely erased the image of Goethe as a dilettante. Alongside studies of contemporary science in his various poetic works are those investigating the conceptual basis of Goethe's scientific thinking, thus amplifying “what connections he drew between art and the careful observation and assessment of the natural world.” Recent investigations have also focused on the interpenetration of philosophy, science, and art. A general consensus exists that the literary pursuits and the scientific ones cannot be separated, and few contemporary scholars would agree with Emil Du Bois-Reymond (1818–96), who argued that Goethe would have done better to follow the advice the mathematician Clairant gave to Voltaire, namely, to leave science to those who were not also great poets.
Nevertheless, largely absent in these studies is an investigation of what Hermann von Helmholtz, writing in 1853 in connection with Goethe's morphological works, characterized as the “dichterische Richtung geistiger Tätigkeit.” In considering what, exactly, is poetic about Goethe's science, I am interested in the specific influence of aesthetics, including literary conventions, on the shape or substance of the science.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Goethe Yearbook 15 , pp. 35 - 56Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2008