Henrik Steffens
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Henrik Steffens (May 2 1773–February 13 1845), was a Norwegian-bornGerman philosopher, scientist, and poet.
He was born at Stavanger, Norway. At the age of fourteen he went with his parents to Copenhagen, where he studied theology and natural science. In 1796 he lectured at the University of Kiel, and a year later went to the University of Jena to study the natural philosophy of Friedrich Schelling. He went to Freiburg in 1800, and there came under the influence of Friedrich Werner.
After two years he returned to Copenhagen, and is said to have introduced German romanticism to Denmark in 1802 with nine lectures given at Valkendorffs Collegium, later published as Indledning til philosophiske Forelæsninger (An Introduction to Philosphical Lectures). These lectures were a great success and a source of inspiration in Danish romanticism. They were attended by many leading Danish thinkers, such as Adam Gottlob Oehlenschläger and Grundtvig. Friedrich Schleiermacher was so much struck by their excellence that he endeavoured, unsuccessfully, to obtain for Steffens a chair in the new Berlin University in 1804, in order that his own ethical teachings should be supported in the scientific department.
Despite – or perhaps because of – the deep impact made by his lectures, Steffens was not made welcome by the Danish authorities. He moved back to Germany and took up a professorship at the University of Halle in 1804, to return to Denmark only occasionally. During the War of Liberation he served as a volunteer in the cause of freedom, and was present at the capture of Paris. From 1811 he was professor of physics at Breslau until 1832, when he accepted an invitation to Berlin.
Steffens was one of the so-called "Philosophers of Nature", a friend and adherent of Schelling and of Schleiermacher. More than either of these two thinkers he was acquainted with the discoveries of modern science, and was thus able to correct or modify the highly imaginative speculations of Schelling. He held that, throughout the scheme of nature and intellectual life, the main principle is Individualisation. As organisms rise higher in the scale of development, the sharper and more distinct become their outlines, the more definite their individualities. This principle he endeavoured to deduce from his knowledge of geology, in contrast to Lorenz Oken, who developed the same theory on biological grounds. His influence was considerable, and both Schelling and Schleiermacher modified their theories in deference to his scientific deductions.
His chief scientific and philosophical works are:
- Beiträge zur inneren Naturgeschichte der Erde (1801)
- Grundzuge der philosophischen Naturwissenschaft (1806)
- Anthropologie (1824).
- Ueber die idee der Universitäten (1835)
- Ueber geheime Verbindungen auf Universitaten (1835)
- Karikaturen des Heiligsten (1819-1821)
- Wie ich wieder Lutheraner wurde and was mir das Luthertum ist (1831)
- Von tIer falschen Theolegie und dem wahren Glauben (new ed., 1831)
- Die Familien Walseth and Leith (1827)
- Die vier Norweger (1828)
- Malcolm (1831)
During the last five years of his life he wrote an autobiography, Was ich erlebte, and after his death his Nachgelassene Schriften (1846) was published. See Tietzen, Zur Erinnerung an Steffens; Petersen, Henrik Steffens (German translation, 1884); Dilthey, Leben Schleiermachers.
Reference
- This entry incorporates public domain text originally from the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica.da:Heinrich Steffens