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Georg Christoph Lichtenberg

Georg Christoph Lichtenberg (1 July 1742 – 24 February 1799) was a German physicist, satirist, and Anglophile. As a scientist, he was the first to hold a professorship explicitly dedicated to experimental physics in Germany. He is remembered for his posthumously published notebooks, which he himself called Sudelbücher [de], a description modelled on the English bookkeeping term "waste books" or "scrapbooks",[2] and for his discovery of tree-like electrical discharge patterns now called Lichtenberg figures.

Georg Christoph Lichtenberg
Georg Christoph Lichtenberg
Born(1742-07-01)1 July 1742
Died24 February 1799(1799-02-24) (aged 56)
NationalityGerman
Alma materUniversity of Göttingen
(1763–67)[1]
Scientific career
FieldsScientist, satirist and aphorist
Doctoral advisorAbraham Gotthelf Kästner
Doctoral studentsHeinrich Wilhelm Brandes
Johann Tobias Mayer
Ernst Chladni

Life edit

Georg Christoph Lichtenberg was born in Ober-Ramstadt near Darmstadt, Landgraviate of Hesse-Darmstadt, the youngest of 17 children. His father, Johann Conrad Lichtenberg (1689–1751), was a pastor ascending through the ranks of the church hierarchy, who eventually became superintendent for Darmstadt. Unusually for a clergyman in those times, he seems to have possessed a fair amount of scientific knowledge. Lichtenberg was educated at his parents' house until 10 years old, when he joined the Lateinschule in Darmstadt. His intelligence became obvious at a very early age. He wanted to study mathematics, but his family could not afford to pay for lessons. In 1762, his mother applied to Ludwig VIII, Landgrave of Hesse-Darmstadt, who granted sufficient funds. In 1763, Lichtenberg entered the University of Göttingen.

In 1769 he became extraordinary professor of physics, and six years later ordinary professor. He held this post till his death. Invited by his students, he visited England twice, from Easter to early Summer 1770 and from August 1774 to Christmas 1775, where he was received cordially by George III and Queen Charlotte. He led the King through the royal observatory in Richmond, upon which the king proposed that he become professor of philosophy. He also met with participants of Cook's voyages. Great Britain impressed him, and he subsequently became a well-known Anglophile.

One of the first scientists to introduce experiments with apparatus in their lectures, Lichtenberg was a popular and respected figure in contemporary European intellectual circles. He was one of the first to introduce Benjamin Franklin's lightning rod to Germany by installing such devices in his house and garden sheds. He maintained relations with most of the great figures of that era, including Goethe and Kant. In 1784, Alessandro Volta visited Göttingen especially to see him and his experiments. Mathematician Karl Friedrich Gauss sat in on his lectures. In 1793, he was elected a member of the Royal Society.

Lichtenberg was prone to procrastination. He failed to launch the first hydrogen balloon. He always dreamed of writing a novel à la Fielding's Tom Jones, but never finished more than a few pages.

Lichtenberg became a hunchback as a child owing to a malformation of his spine suffered from a fall. This left him unusually short, even by 18th-century standards. Over time, this malformation grew worse, ultimately affecting his breathing.

Personal life edit

In 1777, he met Maria Stechard, then aged 13, who lived with the professor permanently after 1780. She died in 1782. Their relationship was made into a novel by Gert Hofmann, which was translated by his son Michael Hofmann into English with the title Lichtenberg and the Little Flower Girl.

In 1783, the following year, Lichtenberg met Margarethe Kellner (1768–1848). He married her in 1789, to give her a pension, as he thought he was to die soon. They had six children and she outlived him by 49 years.

In 1799, Lichtenberg died in Göttingen after a short illness at the age of 56.

 
Lichtenberg's monument at the marketplace in Göttingen

Brothers and sisters edit

At Georg Christoph Lichtenberg was 17 brothers and sisters, most of whom died in infancy.

  • Klara Sophie Lichtenberg (1718–1780)
  • Gottlieb Christoph Lichtenberg (1724–1756)
  • Christian Friedrich Lichtenberg (1734–1790)
  • Ludwig Christian Lichtenberg [de] (1737–1812)

Scrap books edit

The "scrapbooks" (Sudelbücher in German) are notebooks, in the tradition of commonplace books or waste books,[3] which Lichtenberg kept from his student days until the end of his life. Each volume was accorded a letter of the alphabet from A, which began in 1765, to L, which broke off at Lichtenberg's death in 1799.

These notebooks first became known to the world after the man's death, when the first and second editions of Lichtenbergs Vermischte Schriften (1800–06 and 1844–53) were published by his sons and brothers. After the initial publications, however, notebooks G and H, and most of notebook K, were destroyed or disappeared. Those missing parts are believed to have contained sensitive materials. The manuscripts of the remaining notebooks are preserved in Göttingen University.

The notebooks contain quotations of passages that struck Lichtenberg, titles of books to read, autobiographical sketches, and short or long reflections, including keen observations on human nature, in the manner of the 17th-century French moralists. Those reflections helped him earn his posthumous fame as one of the best aphorists in Western intellectual history. Some scholars have attempted to distill a system of thought of Lichtenberg's scattered musings, but he was not a professional philosopher, and had no need to present, or to conceive, a consistent philosophy.

The scrapbooks reveal a critical and analytical way of thinking and emphasis on experimental evidence in physics, through which he became one of the early founders and advocates of modern scientific methodology.

The more experience and experiments are accumulated during the exploration of nature, the more faltering its theories become. It is always good though not to abandon them instantly. For every hypothesis which used to be good at least serves the purpose of duly summarizing and keeping all phenomena until its own time. One should lay down the conflicting experience separately, until it has accumulated sufficiently to justify the efforts necessary to edifice a new theory. (Lichtenberg: scrapbook JII/1602)

Lichtenberg, an atheist, satirized religion saying "I thank the Lord a thousand times for having made me become an atheist."[4]

Arthur Schopenhauer admired Lichtenberg greatly for what he had written in his notebooks. He called him one of those who "think ... for their own instruction", who are "genuine 'thinkers for themselves' in both senses of the words".[5] Other admirers of Lichtenberg's notebooks include Friedrich Nietzsche, Sigmund Freud, Ludwig Wittgenstein and Jacques Barzun.[6]

Sigmund Freud (in his "Why War?” letter to Albert Einstein) mentioned Lichtenberg's invention of a "Compass of Motives" in a discussion on the combination of human compounded motives and quoted him as saying, "The motives that lead us to do anything might be arranged like the thirty-two winds and might be given names on the same pattern: for instance, 'food-food-fame' or 'fame-fame-food'.”

Lichtenberg is not read by many outside Germany. Leo Tolstoy held Lichtenberg's writings in high esteem, expressing his perplexity of "why the Germans of the present day neglect this writer so much."[7] The Chinese scholar and wit Qian Zhongshu quotes the Scrapbooks in his works several times.[8]

Other works edit

As a satirist, Lichtenberg takes high rank among the German writers of the 18th century. His biting wit involved him in many controversies with well-known contemporaries, such as the Swiss physiognomist Johann Kaspar Lavater whose science of physiognomy he ridiculed, and Johann Heinrich Voss, whose views on Greek pronunciation called forth a powerful satire, Über die Pronunciation der Schöpse des alten Griechenlandes.[9] For Laurence Sterne's wit on the bigotry of the clergy, in his novel Tristram Shandy, Lichtenberg condemned him as a scandalum ecclesiae (a scandal for the Church).[10]

In 1777, Lichtenberg opposed the apparent misrepresentation of science by Jacob Philadelphia. Lichtenberg considered him to be a magician, not a physicist, and created a satirical poster that was intended to prevent Philadelphia from performing his exhibition in Göttingen. The placard, called “Lichtenberg's Avertissement,” described extravagant and miraculous tricks that were to be performed. As a result, Philadelphia left the city without a performance.

Based on his visits to England, his Briefe aus England, with admirable descriptions of David Garrick's acting, are the most attractive of his writings published during his lifetime.

From 1778 onward, Lichtenberg published the Göttinger Taschen Calender and contributed to the Göttingisches Magazin der Wissenschaften und Literatur, which he edited for three years (1780–1782) with J. G. A. Forster. The Göttinger Taschen Calender, beside being a usual Calendar for everyday usage, contained not only short writings on natural phenomena and new scientific discoveries (which would be termed popular science today), but also essays in which he contested quackery and superstition. It also contained attacks on the “Sturm und Drang” writers. In the spirit of the Age of Enlightenment, he strove to educate the common people to use logic, wit and the power of their own senses.[11]

In 1784 he took over the publication of the textbook Anfangsgründe der Naturlehre ("Foundations of the Natural Sciences") from his friend and colleague Johann Christian Erxleben upon his premature death in 1777. Until 1794, three further editions followed, which for many years, remained the standard textbook for physics in German.

From 1794 to 1799 he published an Ausführliche Erklärung der Hogarthischen Kupferstiche, in which he described the satirical details in William Hogarth's prints.

Legacy edit

As a physicist, Lichtenberg is remembered for his investigations in electricity, for discovering branching discharge patterns on dielectrics, now called Lichtenberg figures. In 1777, he built a large electrophorus to generate static electricity through induction.[12] One of the largest made, it was 2 metres (6 ft 7 in) in diameter and could produce 38-centimetre (15 in) sparks. With it, he discovered the basic principle of modern xerography copy machine technology. By discharging a high voltage point near an insulator, he was able to record strange, tree-like patterns in fixed dust. These Lichtenberg figures are considered today to be examples of fractals. A crater on the Moon is named Lichtenberg in his honour. His life and works are fictionalized in French novelist Pierre Senges's Fragments de Lichtenberg (2008; English translation, 2017).

He proposed the standardized paper size system used globally today except in Canada and the US defined by ISO 216, which has A4 as the most commonly used size.[13]

Robert Wichard Pohl, a 20th-century successor of Lichtenberg in Göttingen and one of the founders of solid state physics used a similar research programme, in which the experiment was an essential part of narrating scientific knowledge.[14]

Selected bibliography edit

Works published during his lifetime

  • Briefe aus England, 1776–78
  • Über Physiognomik, wider die Physiognomen, 1778
  • Göttingisches Magazin der Wissenschaften und Litteratur, 1780–85 (ed. by Georg Christoph Lichtenberg and Georg Forster)
  • Über die Pronunciation der Schöpse des alten Griechenlandes, 1782
  • Ausführliche Erklärung der Hogarthischen Kupferstiche, 1794–1799

Complete works in German

  • Schriften und Briefe, 1968–72 (4 vols., ed. by Wolfgang Promies)

English translations

  • The Reflections of Lichtenberg, Swan Sonnenschein, 1908 (selected and translated by Norman Alliston).
  • Lichtenberg's Visits to England, as Described in his Letters and Diaries, Oxford, The Clarendon Press, 1938 (trans. and ed., by Margaret L. Mare and W. H. Quarrell)
  • The Lichtenberg Reader, Beacon Press, 1959 (trans. and ed. by Franz H. Mautner and Henry Hatfield)
  • The World of Hogarth. Lichtenberg's Commentaries on Hogarth's Engravings, Houghton Mifflin Company, 1966 (trans. by Innes and Gustav Herdan)
  • Hogarth on High Life. The Marriage à la Mode Series, from Georg Christoph Lichtenberg's Commentaries, 1970 (trans. and ed. by Arthur S. Wensinger and W. B. Coley)
  • Aphorisms, Penguin, 1990 (trans. with an introduction and notes by R. J. Hollingdale), ISBN 0-14-044519-6, reprinted as The Waste Books, 2000, ISBN 978-0-940322-50-9
  • Lichtenberg: Aphorisms & Letters, Johnathan Cape, 1969 (trans. and ed. by Franz H. Mautner and Henry Hatfield), SBN 224-61286-7
  • G.C. Lichtenberg: Philosophical Writings, (trans. and ed. by Steven Tester), Albany: State University of New York Press, 2012.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Øksenholt (1963), ch. 1.
  2. ^ Lichtenberg explained the purpose of his "scrapbook" in his notebook E: Die Kaufleute haben ihr Waste book (Sudelbuch, Klitterbuch glaube ich im deutschen), darin tragen sie von Tag zu Tag alles ein was sie verkaufen und kaufen, alles durch einander ohne Ordnung, aus diesem wird es in das Journal getragen, wo alles mehr systematisch steht ... Dieses verdient von den Gelehrten nachgeahmt zu werden. Erst ein Buch worin ich alles einschreibe, so wie ich es sehe oder wie es mir meine Gedancken eingeben, alsdann kan dieses wieder in ein anderes getragen werden, wo die Materien mehr abgesondert und geordnet sind. "Tradesmen have their 'scrapbook' (scrawl-book, composition book I think in German), in which they enter from day to day everything they buy and sell, everything all mixed up without any order to it, from there it is transferred to the day-book, where everything appears in more systematic fashion ... This deserves to be imitated by scholars. First a book where I write down everything as I see it or as my thoughts put it before me, later this can be transcribed into another, where the materials are more distinguished and ordered."
  3. ^ Lichtenberg, Georg Christoph. Sudelbücher Volume 1. p. 352.
  4. ^ Waste Books E 252, 1765-1770
  5. ^ Arthur Schopenhauer, trans. R.J. Hollingdale, Essays and Arphorisms, Harmondsworth: Penguin Books, 1970, p. 93.
  6. ^ Barzun dedicated a chapter to the "Forgotten Troop" of intellectuals who reoriented the world in 1775-1815, among whom Lichtenberg was "the most grievous" omission from modern memory: From Dawn to Decadence: 500 Years of Western Cultural Life" (Harper Collins, 2000) p. 439. For Lichtenberg's influences on German writers, see Dieter Lamping, Lichtenbergs literarisches Nachleben, Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1992.
  7. ^ Carl Brinitzer, trans. Bernard Smith, A Reasonable Rebel, New York: Macmillan, 1960, p. 194.
  8. ^ For example, in his essay Zhongguo Shi Yu Zhongguo Hua 28 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine (中国诗与中国画 "Chinese poetry and Chinese paintings").
  9. ^   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Lichtenberg, Georg Christoph". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  10. ^ Bridgwater, Patrick (1988) Arthur Schopenhauer's English schooling, pp. 352–3:

    Not only are the two longest chapters in the novel (Trim's sermon and Slawkenbergius's tale) concerned with the bigotry of the orthodox clergy, but, even more significantly, the whole novel, which breathes tolerance, is implicitly concerned with the same thing. And the bigotry of the orthodox (Anglican) clergy was as much Schopenhauer's hobby-horse as the arts of fortification were Uncle Toby's. He was obsessed by it, as his vitriolic comments on Samuel Johnson – and on the Anglican clergy – show. Lichtenberg condemned Sterne as a 'scandalum ecclesiae'; no doubt it was precisely this that Schopenhauer appreciated. He also shared, to a marked degree, Sterne's delight in ridiculing pedantry.

  11. ^ Voskuhl, Adelheid (2013). Androids in the Enlightenment: Mechanics, Artisans, and Cultures of the Self. University of Chicago Press. p. 78.
  12. ^ Harris, William Snow (1867), A Treatise on Frictional Electricity in Theory and Practice, London: Virtue & Co., p.86
  13. ^ In one of his letters dated 25 October 1786 to Johann Beckmann.
  14. ^ Teichmann, J. Point defects and Ionic Crystals: Color Centers as the Key to Imperfection, part 1, (1992), pp. 236-69; in Hoddeson et al. eds. (1992)

References edit

  • Bloch, K (1953), "Medical remarks in Georg Christoph Lichtenberg's writings.", Die Medizinische, vol. 29–30 (published 25 July 1953), pp. 960–1, PMID 13086258
  • Gresky, W (1978), "2 letters by the Bernese Professor Johann Georg Tralles to Georg Christoph Lichtenberg (1786)", Gesnerus, vol. 35, no. 1–2, pp. 87–106, PMID 352823
  • Grupe, G (1984), "Identification of the skeleton of Georg Christoph Lichtenberg", Anthropologischer Anzeiger; Bericht über die Biologisch-anthropologische Literatur, vol. 42, no. 1 (published March 1984), pp. 1–9, PMID 6372678
  • Eulner, H H (1982), "Zur Geschichte der Meeresheilkunde: Georg Christoph Lichtenberg und das Seebad Cuxhaven", Medizinhistorisches Journal, vol. 17, no. 1–2, pp. 115–28, PMID 11611016
  • Øksenholt, Svein (1963). Thoughts Concerning Education in the Works of Georg Christoph Lichtenberg: An Introductory Study in Comparative Education, Martinus Nijhoff.
  • Tomlinson, C (1992), "G. C. Lichtenberg: dreams, jokes, and the unconscious in eighteenth-century Germany", Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association, vol. 40, no. 3, pp. 761–99, doi:10.1177/000306519204000305, PMID 1401720, S2CID 46322856
  • Gilman, D. C.; Peck, H. T.; Colby, F. M., eds. (1905). "Lichtenberg, Georg Christoph" . New International Encyclopedia (1st ed.). New York: Dodd, Mead.

Further reading edit

  • Buechler, Ralph Wolfgang (1988). Science, Satire and Wit: The Essays of Georg Christoph Lichtenberg, University of Wisconsin-Madison.
  • Katritzky, Linde (1995). "Coleridge's Links with Leading Men of Science," Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London, Vol. 49, No. 2.
  • Mautner, Franz H. and Miller Jr., Franklin (1952). "Remarks on G. C. Lichtenberg, Humanist-Scientist," Isis, Vol. 43, No. 3.
  • Milch, Werner J. (1942). "Georg Christoph Lichtenberg: On the Occasion of the Two Hundredth Anniversary of His Birth, 9 July 1942," The Modern Language Review, Vol. 37, No. 3.
  • Sanke, Jean M. (1999). Georg Christoph Lichtenberg: A Critical Bibliography of Research and Criticism, 1948–1996, Purdue University.
  • J. P. Stern (1959). Lichtenberg: A Doctrine of Scattered Occasions; Reconstructed from his Aphorisms and Reflections, Indiana University Press.

External links edit

  • The Lichtenberg Society lichtenberg-gesellschaft.de
  • Works by or about Georg Christoph Lichtenberg at Internet Archive
  • Works by Georg Christoph Lichtenberg at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • "Lichtenberg, Georg Christoph" . Encyclopedia Americana. 1920.
  • Petri Liukkonen. "Georg Christoph Lichtenberg". Books and Writers.
  • Original Lichtenberg texts Projekt Gutenberg, spiegel.de
  • New Criterion, 20 May 2002
  • Clive James Georg Christoph Lichtenberg: Lessons on how to write 2 March 2007, Slate.com
  • umich.edu
  • Jürgen Teichmann Georg Christoph Lichtenberg : Experimental Physics from the Spirit of Aphorism (PDF) January 2000 pp 229–244, chapter, in: K. von Meyenn: Die großen Physiker, 2 volumes, München, Beck, ppp.unipv.it

georg, christoph, lichtenberg, july, 1742, february, 1799, german, physicist, satirist, anglophile, scientist, first, hold, professorship, explicitly, dedicated, experimental, physics, germany, remembered, posthumously, published, notebooks, which, himself, ca. Georg Christoph Lichtenberg 1 July 1742 24 February 1799 was a German physicist satirist and Anglophile As a scientist he was the first to hold a professorship explicitly dedicated to experimental physics in Germany He is remembered for his posthumously published notebooks which he himself called Sudelbucher de a description modelled on the English bookkeeping term waste books or scrapbooks 2 and for his discovery of tree like electrical discharge patterns now called Lichtenberg figures Georg Christoph LichtenbergGeorg Christoph LichtenbergBorn 1742 07 01 1 July 1742Ober Ramstadt near Darmstadt Landgraviate of Hesse Darmstadt Holy Roman EmpireDied24 February 1799 1799 02 24 aged 56 Gottingen Electorate of Hanover Holy Roman EmpireNationalityGermanAlma materUniversity of Gottingen 1763 67 1 Scientific careerFieldsScientist satirist and aphoristDoctoral advisorAbraham Gotthelf KastnerDoctoral studentsHeinrich Wilhelm BrandesJohann Tobias MayerErnst Chladni Contents 1 Life 1 1 Personal life 1 2 Brothers and sisters 2 Scrap books 3 Other works 4 Legacy 5 Selected bibliography 6 Notes 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksLife editGeorg Christoph Lichtenberg was born in Ober Ramstadt near Darmstadt Landgraviate of Hesse Darmstadt the youngest of 17 children His father Johann Conrad Lichtenberg 1689 1751 was a pastor ascending through the ranks of the church hierarchy who eventually became superintendent for Darmstadt Unusually for a clergyman in those times he seems to have possessed a fair amount of scientific knowledge Lichtenberg was educated at his parents house until 10 years old when he joined the Lateinschule in Darmstadt His intelligence became obvious at a very early age He wanted to study mathematics but his family could not afford to pay for lessons In 1762 his mother applied to Ludwig VIII Landgrave of Hesse Darmstadt who granted sufficient funds In 1763 Lichtenberg entered the University of Gottingen In 1769 he became extraordinary professor of physics and six years later ordinary professor He held this post till his death Invited by his students he visited England twice from Easter to early Summer 1770 and from August 1774 to Christmas 1775 where he was received cordially by George III and Queen Charlotte He led the King through the royal observatory in Richmond upon which the king proposed that he become professor of philosophy He also met with participants of Cook s voyages Great Britain impressed him and he subsequently became a well known Anglophile One of the first scientists to introduce experiments with apparatus in their lectures Lichtenberg was a popular and respected figure in contemporary European intellectual circles He was one of the first to introduce Benjamin Franklin s lightning rod to Germany by installing such devices in his house and garden sheds He maintained relations with most of the great figures of that era including Goethe and Kant In 1784 Alessandro Volta visited Gottingen especially to see him and his experiments Mathematician Karl Friedrich Gauss sat in on his lectures In 1793 he was elected a member of the Royal Society Lichtenberg was prone to procrastination He failed to launch the first hydrogen balloon He always dreamed of writing a novel a la Fielding s Tom Jones but never finished more than a few pages Lichtenberg became a hunchback as a child owing to a malformation of his spine suffered from a fall This left him unusually short even by 18th century standards Over time this malformation grew worse ultimately affecting his breathing Personal life edit In 1777 he met Maria Stechard then aged 13 who lived with the professor permanently after 1780 She died in 1782 Their relationship was made into a novel by Gert Hofmann which was translated by his son Michael Hofmann into English with the title Lichtenberg and the Little Flower Girl In 1783 the following year Lichtenberg met Margarethe Kellner 1768 1848 He married her in 1789 to give her a pension as he thought he was to die soon They had six children and she outlived him by 49 years In 1799 Lichtenberg died in Gottingen after a short illness at the age of 56 nbsp Lichtenberg s monument at the marketplace in Gottingen Brothers and sisters edit At Georg Christoph Lichtenberg was 17 brothers and sisters most of whom died in infancy Klara Sophie Lichtenberg 1718 1780 Gottlieb Christoph Lichtenberg 1724 1756 Christian Friedrich Lichtenberg 1734 1790 Ludwig Christian Lichtenberg de 1737 1812 Scrap books editThe scrapbooks Sudelbucher in German are notebooks in the tradition of commonplace books or waste books 3 which Lichtenberg kept from his student days until the end of his life Each volume was accorded a letter of the alphabet from A which began in 1765 to L which broke off at Lichtenberg s death in 1799 These notebooks first became known to the world after the man s death when the first and second editions of Lichtenbergs Vermischte Schriften 1800 06 and 1844 53 were published by his sons and brothers After the initial publications however notebooks G and H and most of notebook K were destroyed or disappeared Those missing parts are believed to have contained sensitive materials The manuscripts of the remaining notebooks are preserved in Gottingen University The notebooks contain quotations of passages that struck Lichtenberg titles of books to read autobiographical sketches and short or long reflections including keen observations on human nature in the manner of the 17th century French moralists Those reflections helped him earn his posthumous fame as one of the best aphorists in Western intellectual history Some scholars have attempted to distill a system of thought of Lichtenberg s scattered musings but he was not a professional philosopher and had no need to present or to conceive a consistent philosophy The scrapbooks reveal a critical and analytical way of thinking and emphasis on experimental evidence in physics through which he became one of the early founders and advocates of modern scientific methodology The more experience and experiments are accumulated during the exploration of nature the more faltering its theories become It is always good though not to abandon them instantly For every hypothesis which used to be good at least serves the purpose of duly summarizing and keeping all phenomena until its own time One should lay down the conflicting experience separately until it has accumulated sufficiently to justify the efforts necessary to edifice a new theory Lichtenberg scrapbook JII 1602 Lichtenberg an atheist satirized religion saying I thank the Lord a thousand times for having made me become an atheist 4 Arthur Schopenhauer admired Lichtenberg greatly for what he had written in his notebooks He called him one of those who think for their own instruction who are genuine thinkers for themselves in both senses of the words 5 Other admirers of Lichtenberg s notebooks include Friedrich Nietzsche Sigmund Freud Ludwig Wittgenstein and Jacques Barzun 6 Sigmund Freud in his Why War letter to Albert Einstein mentioned Lichtenberg s invention of a Compass of Motives in a discussion on the combination of human compounded motives and quoted him as saying The motives that lead us to do anything might be arranged like the thirty two winds and might be given names on the same pattern for instance food food fame or fame fame food Lichtenberg is not read by many outside Germany Leo Tolstoy held Lichtenberg s writings in high esteem expressing his perplexity of why the Germans of the present day neglect this writer so much 7 The Chinese scholar and wit Qian Zhongshu quotes the Scrapbooks in his works several times 8 Other works editAs a satirist Lichtenberg takes high rank among the German writers of the 18th century His biting wit involved him in many controversies with well known contemporaries such as the Swiss physiognomist Johann Kaspar Lavater whose science of physiognomy he ridiculed and Johann Heinrich Voss whose views on Greek pronunciation called forth a powerful satire Uber die Pronunciation der Schopse des alten Griechenlandes 9 For Laurence Sterne s wit on the bigotry of the clergy in his novel Tristram Shandy Lichtenberg condemned him as a scandalum ecclesiae a scandal for the Church 10 In 1777 Lichtenberg opposed the apparent misrepresentation of science by Jacob Philadelphia Lichtenberg considered him to be a magician not a physicist and created a satirical poster that was intended to prevent Philadelphia from performing his exhibition in Gottingen The placard called Lichtenberg s Avertissement described extravagant and miraculous tricks that were to be performed As a result Philadelphia left the city without a performance Based on his visits to England his Briefe aus England with admirable descriptions of David Garrick s acting are the most attractive of his writings published during his lifetime From 1778 onward Lichtenberg published the Gottinger Taschen Calender and contributed to the Gottingisches Magazin der Wissenschaften und Literatur which he edited for three years 1780 1782 with J G A Forster The Gottinger Taschen Calender beside being a usual Calendar for everyday usage contained not only short writings on natural phenomena and new scientific discoveries which would be termed popular science today but also essays in which he contested quackery and superstition It also contained attacks on the Sturm und Drang writers In the spirit of the Age of Enlightenment he strove to educate the common people to use logic wit and the power of their own senses 11 In 1784 he took over the publication of the textbook Anfangsgrunde der Naturlehre Foundations of the Natural Sciences from his friend and colleague Johann Christian Erxleben upon his premature death in 1777 Until 1794 three further editions followed which for many years remained the standard textbook for physics in German From 1794 to 1799 he published an Ausfuhrliche Erklarung der Hogarthischen Kupferstiche in which he described the satirical details in William Hogarth s prints Legacy editAs a physicist Lichtenberg is remembered for his investigations in electricity for discovering branching discharge patterns on dielectrics now called Lichtenberg figures In 1777 he built a large electrophorus to generate static electricity through induction 12 One of the largest made it was 2 metres 6 ft 7 in in diameter and could produce 38 centimetre 15 in sparks With it he discovered the basic principle of modern xerography copy machine technology By discharging a high voltage point near an insulator he was able to record strange tree like patterns in fixed dust These Lichtenberg figures are considered today to be examples of fractals A crater on the Moon is named Lichtenberg in his honour His life and works are fictionalized in French novelist Pierre Senges s Fragments de Lichtenberg 2008 English translation 2017 He proposed the standardized paper size system used globally today except in Canada and the US defined by ISO 216 which has A4 as the most commonly used size 13 Robert Wichard Pohl a 20th century successor of Lichtenberg in Gottingen and one of the founders of solid state physics used a similar research programme in which the experiment was an essential part of narrating scientific knowledge 14 Selected bibliography editWorks published during his lifetime Briefe aus England 1776 78 Uber Physiognomik wider die Physiognomen 1778 Gottingisches Magazin der Wissenschaften und Litteratur 1780 85 ed by Georg Christoph Lichtenberg and Georg Forster Uber die Pronunciation der Schopse des alten Griechenlandes 1782 Ausfuhrliche Erklarung der Hogarthischen Kupferstiche 1794 1799 Complete works in German Schriften und Briefe 1968 72 4 vols ed by Wolfgang Promies English translations The Reflections of Lichtenberg Swan Sonnenschein 1908 selected and translated by Norman Alliston Lichtenberg s Visits to England as Described in his Letters and Diaries Oxford The Clarendon Press 1938 trans and ed by Margaret L Mare and W H Quarrell The Lichtenberg Reader Beacon Press 1959 trans and ed by Franz H Mautner and Henry Hatfield The World of Hogarth Lichtenberg s Commentaries on Hogarth s Engravings Houghton Mifflin Company 1966 trans by Innes and Gustav Herdan Hogarth on High Life The Marriage a la Mode Series from Georg Christoph Lichtenberg s Commentaries 1970 trans and ed by Arthur S Wensinger and W B Coley Aphorisms Penguin 1990 trans with an introduction and notes by R J Hollingdale ISBN 0 14 044519 6 reprinted as The Waste Books 2000 ISBN 978 0 940322 50 9 Lichtenberg Aphorisms amp Letters Johnathan Cape 1969 trans and ed by Franz H Mautner and Henry Hatfield SBN 224 61286 7 G C Lichtenberg Philosophical Writings trans and ed by Steven Tester Albany State University of New York Press 2012 Notes edit Oksenholt 1963 ch 1 Lichtenberg explained the purpose of his scrapbook in his notebook E Die Kaufleute haben ihr Waste book Sudelbuch Klitterbuch glaube ich im deutschen darin tragen sie von Tag zu Tag alles ein was sie verkaufen und kaufen alles durch einander ohne Ordnung aus diesem wird es in das Journal getragen wo alles mehr systematisch steht Dieses verdient von den Gelehrten nachgeahmt zu werden Erst ein Buch worin ich alles einschreibe so wie ich es sehe oder wie es mir meine Gedancken eingeben alsdann kan dieses wieder in ein anderes getragen werden wo die Materien mehr abgesondert und geordnet sind Tradesmen have their scrapbook scrawl book composition book I think in German in which they enter from day to day everything they buy and sell everything all mixed up without any order to it from there it is transferred to the day book where everything appears in more systematic fashion This deserves to be imitated by scholars First a book where I write down everything as I see it or as my thoughts put it before me later this can be transcribed into another where the materials are more distinguished and ordered Lichtenberg Georg Christoph SudelbucherVolume 1 p 352 Waste Books E 252 1765 1770 Arthur Schopenhauer trans R J Hollingdale Essays and Arphorisms Harmondsworth Penguin Books 1970 p 93 Barzun dedicated a chapter to the Forgotten Troop of intellectuals who reoriented the world in 1775 1815 among whom Lichtenberg was the most grievous omission from modern memory From Dawn to Decadence 500 Years of Western Cultural Life Harper Collins 2000 p 439 For Lichtenberg s influences on German writers see Dieter Lamping Lichtenbergs literarisches Nachleben Gottingen Vandenhoeck amp Ruprecht 1992 Carl Brinitzer trans Bernard Smith A Reasonable Rebel New York Macmillan 1960 p 194 For example in his essay Zhongguo Shi Yu Zhongguo Hua Archived 28 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine 中国诗与中国画 Chinese poetry and Chinese paintings nbsp One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Lichtenberg Georg Christoph Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press Bridgwater Patrick 1988 Arthur Schopenhauer s English schooling pp 352 3 Not only are the two longest chapters in the novel Trim s sermon and Slawkenbergius s tale concerned with the bigotry of the orthodox clergy but even more significantly the whole novel which breathes tolerance is implicitly concerned with the same thing And the bigotry of the orthodox Anglican clergy was as much Schopenhauer s hobby horse as the arts of fortification were Uncle Toby s He was obsessed by it as his vitriolic comments on Samuel Johnson and on the Anglican clergy show Lichtenberg condemned Sterne as a scandalum ecclesiae no doubt it was precisely this that Schopenhauer appreciated He also shared to a marked degree Sterne s delight in ridiculing pedantry Voskuhl Adelheid 2013 Androids in the Enlightenment Mechanics Artisans and Cultures of the Self University of Chicago Press p 78 Harris William Snow 1867 A Treatise on Frictional Electricity in Theory and Practice London Virtue amp Co p 86 In one of his letters dated 25 October 1786 to Johann Beckmann Teichmann J Point defects and Ionic Crystals Color Centers as the Key to Imperfection part 1 1992 pp 236 69 in Hoddeson et al eds 1992 References editBloch K 1953 Medical remarks in Georg Christoph Lichtenberg s writings Die Medizinische vol 29 30 published 25 July 1953 pp 960 1 PMID 13086258 Gresky W 1978 2 letters by the Bernese Professor Johann Georg Tralles to Georg Christoph Lichtenberg 1786 Gesnerus vol 35 no 1 2 pp 87 106 PMID 352823 Grupe G 1984 Identification of the skeleton of Georg Christoph Lichtenberg Anthropologischer Anzeiger Bericht uber die Biologisch anthropologische Literatur vol 42 no 1 published March 1984 pp 1 9 PMID 6372678 Eulner H H 1982 Zur Geschichte der Meeresheilkunde Georg Christoph Lichtenberg und das Seebad Cuxhaven Medizinhistorisches Journal vol 17 no 1 2 pp 115 28 PMID 11611016 Oksenholt Svein 1963 Thoughts Concerning Education in the Works of Georg Christoph Lichtenberg An Introductory Study in Comparative Education Martinus Nijhoff Tomlinson C 1992 G C Lichtenberg dreams jokes and the unconscious in eighteenth century Germany Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association vol 40 no 3 pp 761 99 doi 10 1177 000306519204000305 PMID 1401720 S2CID 46322856 Gilman D C Peck H T Colby F M eds 1905 Lichtenberg Georg Christoph New International Encyclopedia 1st ed New York Dodd Mead Further reading editBuechler Ralph Wolfgang 1988 Science Satire and Wit The Essays of Georg Christoph Lichtenberg University of Wisconsin Madison Katritzky Linde 1995 Coleridge s Links with Leading Men of Science Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London Vol 49 No 2 Mautner Franz H and Miller Jr Franklin 1952 Remarks on G C Lichtenberg Humanist Scientist Isis Vol 43 No 3 Milch Werner J 1942 Georg Christoph Lichtenberg On the Occasion of the Two Hundredth Anniversary of His Birth 9 July 1942 The Modern Language Review Vol 37 No 3 Sanke Jean M 1999 Georg Christoph Lichtenberg A Critical Bibliography of Research and Criticism 1948 1996 Purdue University J P Stern 1959 Lichtenberg A Doctrine of Scattered Occasions Reconstructed from his Aphorisms and Reflections Indiana University Press External links editGeorg Christoph Lichtenberg at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource The Lichtenberg Society lichtenberg gesellschaft de Works by or about Georg Christoph Lichtenberg at Internet Archive Works by Georg Christoph Lichtenberg at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Lichtenberg Georg Christoph Encyclopedia Americana 1920 Petri Liukkonen Georg Christoph Lichtenberg Books and Writers Original Lichtenberg texts Projekt Gutenberg spiegel de Book review G C Lichtenberg a spy on humanity New Criterion 20 May 2002 Clive James Georg Christoph Lichtenberg Lessons on how to write 2 March 2007 Slate com Book review Aphorisms by Georg Christoph Lichtenberg umich edu Jurgen Teichmann Georg Christoph Lichtenberg Experimental Physics from the Spirit of Aphorism PDF January 2000 pp 229 244 chapter in K von Meyenn Die grossen Physiker 2 volumes Munchen Beck ppp unipv it Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Georg Christoph Lichtenberg amp oldid 1213490690, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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