Born Frankfurt A.M., August 28, 1749. Poet, dramatist, scientist,
traveler, state minister, etc., author of Faust, Wilhelm Meister,
and many other works. Died in Weimar, March 22, 1832. In August
1781 the Grand Duchess Amalia of Saxe-Weimar founded the Tiefurter
Journal, the Journal of Tiefurt, to which Goethe contributed at her
invitation. When Rudolf Steiner was active as editor of the natural
scientific writings of Goethe at the Goethe-Schiller Archives in Weimar,
he published proof that the Fragment uber die Natur, The Fragment
concerning Nature, which had appeared in the Journal of Tiefurt was
definitely to be attributed to Goethe (Schriften der Goethe-Gesellschaft,
Publications of the Goethe Society, ed. by Bernhard Suphan, Weimar, Vol.
VII, 1892, article by Rudolf Steiner). Thus, just 110 years after the
Fragment had appeared, Rudolf Steiner showed its importance and its
relationship to Goethe's work. In the edition of Goethe's works published
by Prof. Joseph Kurschner (1853-1902) (the volumes of Goethe's natural
scientific writings edited by Rudolf Steiner), the Fragment appears at
the beginning of the essays On Natural Science in General,
Vol. XXXIV, p. 1. The Fragment appeared in an English translation with
notes by George Adams under the title, Nature An Essay in Aphorisms,
Anthroposophical Quarterly, London, Vol. VII, No. 1, Easter, 1932, pp.
2-5. In his Goethe's Conception of the World, Rudolf Steiner describes
this Fragment as the essay in which the seeds of the later Goethean
world-conception are already to be found. What is here expressed as dim
feeling, later developed into clear, definite thought. In similar vein,
George Witkowski in his well-known biography of Goethe (Leipzig, 1899)
describes this Fragment as the seed from which came all of Goethe's
great thoughts about nature.
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