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Lecture of the Winter Semester 1788-1789 [?] Based on the transcription Busolt

[Excerpts]

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 April 2013

Robert B. Louden
Affiliation:
University of Southern Maine
Allen W. Wood
Affiliation:
Indiana University
Robert R. Clewis
Affiliation:
Gwynedd-Mercy College, Pennsylvania
G. Felicitas Munzel
Affiliation:
University of Notre Dame, Indiana
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Summary

PROLEGOMENA

One makes a distinction among scholastic cognition and worldly cognition.

One has scholastic cognition if one can communicate one's information according to a certain system. One possesses worldly cognition, however, when one can teach another this information in conversations or in society in such a way that one leaves out what has little interest and yet is intelligible enough, and it is consequently agreeable. Whoever cannot do this is called a ‘pedant’. A pedant, apart from this, can be a skilled man, but is only lacking in the respect just mentioned --. What concerns us in the world for the most part, what sets in motion our inclinations, our desires, and our will, is the human being. Worldly cognition is thus just the same as cognition of the human being. When this observation of human beings (anthropography) is brought to a science, it is called ‘anthropology’, and one attains to this science:

(1) through long and manifold experiences and through travels.

Remarks: If one wants to collect anthropological information through travels, then one must previously have a sufficiently connected knowledge of human beings and with it a certain plan, so that one can arrange the observations of the differences among human beings that one sees in travels.

(2) If one makes attentive observations of oneself and with other human beings.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2012

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