Everything about Georg Christoph Lichtenberg totally explained
Georg Christoph Lichtenberg (
1 July 1742 –
24 February 1799) was a
German scientist,
satirist and
Anglophile. As a scientist, he was the first to hold a professorship explicitly dedicated to
experimental physics in Germany. Today, he's remembered for his notebooks published posthumously, which he himself called "waste books", using the
English bookkeeping term.
Life
Lichtenberg was the youngest of seventeen children of
pastor Johann Conrad Lichtenberg. His father, ascending through the ranks of the church hierarchy, eventually became superintendent for
Darmstadt. Unusually for a priest in those times, he seems to have possessed a fair amount of scientific knowledge. Georg Christoph Lichtenberg was educated at his parent's house until ten years of age, when he joined the
Lateinschule in Darmstadt. His intelligence and wit became obvious at a very early age. He wanted to study mathematics, but his family couldn't 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
Göttingen University, where in 1769 he became
extraordinary professor of
physics, and six years later
ordinary professor. He held this post till his death.
Lichtenberg became a
hunchback owing to a malformation of the
spine. This left him unusually short, even by eighteenth-century standards. Over time this malformation grew worse, ultimately affecting even his breathing.
One of the first scientists to introduce
experiments with apparatus in their lectures, Lichtenberg was a most popular and respected figure in the European intellectual circles of his time. He maintained good relations with most of the great figures of that era, including
Goethe and
Kant. In 1784
Alessandro Volta visited Göttingen especially to see the man and his experiments. The eminent mathematician
Karl Friedrich Gauss was one of the hearers of his lectures. In 1793 he was elected a member of the
Royal Society.
As a physicist, today he's remembered for his investigations in
electricity, for discovering branching discharge patterns on
dielectrics now called
Lichtenberg figures. In
1777, he built a large
Electrophorus in order to generate
static electricity through
induction. With it, he discovered the basic principle of modern
Xerography copy machine
technology. This discovery was also the forerunner of modern day
Plasma Physics. By discharging a high
voltage point near an
insulator, he was able to record the resulting radial pattern in fixed dust. The Lichtenberg figures are considered today to be examples of
fractals.
He was one of the first to introduce
Benjamin Franklin's lightning rod to Germany by installing such devices to his house in Göttingen and his garden sheds. He also proposed the standardized paper size system used all over the world today (except in the
US and
Canada), known as
ISO 216, which has A4 as the most commonly used size.
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 became a well-known Anglophile after the visits.
He had many romances. Most of the women were from poor families. In 1777 he met Maria Stechard, then aged 13, who lived with the professor permanently after 1780. She died in 1782. In the following year he met the 22-year-old Margarethe Kellner. He married her in 1789, in order to give her a
pension, as he thought he was to die soon. She gave him six children, and outlived him by 49 years.
Lichtenberg was prone to
procrastination. He failed to launch the first ever
hydrogen balloon, and although he always dreamed of writing a novel à la
Fielding's
Tom Jones, he never finished more than a few pages. He died at the age of 56, after a short illness.
Waste books
The "waste books" (Lichtenberg rendered it roughly as
Sudelbücher in
German) are the notebooks he kept from his student days until the end of his life. Each volume was accorded a letter of the alphabet from A, which begun 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. Since the initial publications, however, notebooks G and H, and most of notebook K, were destroyed or disappeared. Those missing parts are believed to contain sensitive materials. The manuscripts of the remaining notebooks are now preserved in Göttingen University.
The notebooks contain quotations that struck Lichtenberg, titles of books to read, autobiographical sketches, and short or long reflections. It is those reflections that help Lichtenberg earn his posthumous fame. Today he's regarded as one of the best
aphorists in the Western intellectual history.
Some scholars have attempted to distil a system of thought out of Lichtenberg's scattered musings. However, Lichtenberg wasn't a professional philosopher, and had no need to present, or to have, any consistent philosophy.
The waste books nevertheless reveal a critical and analytical way of thinking and emphasize 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: waste book JII/1602)
The reflections also include keen observations on human nature, à la the 17th-century French moralists.
Schopenhauer admired Lichtenberg for what he'd written in his notebooks greatly. He called Lichtenberg one of those who "think ... for their own instruction", who are "genuine
thinkers for themselves in both senses of the words".Other admirers of Lichtenberg's notebooks include
Nietzsche,
Freud and
Wittgenstein. Lichtenberg isn't 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." The Chinese scholar and wit
Qian Zhongshu quotes the
Waste books in his works several times. A crater on the
Moon,
Crater Lichtenberg, has been named in his honour.
Other works
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.
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.
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 had followed. For many years, the
Anfangsgründe remained the standard textbook for physics in German.
He contributed to the
Göttinger Taschen Calender from 1778 onwards, and to the
Göttingisches Magazin der Wissenschaften und Literatur, which he edited for three years (1780-1782) with
J. G. A. Forster. The
Göttinger Taschen Calendar, 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 contests quackery and superstition. In the spirit of enlightenment, he strives to educate the common people to use logic, wit and the power of their own senses.
Based on his visits to England, his
Briefe aus England, with admirable descriptions of
Garrick's acting, are the most attractive of his writings published during his lifetime. He also published in 1794-1799 an
Ausführliche Erklärung der Hogarthischen Kupferstiche in which he described the satirical details in
William Hogarth's prints.
Freud (in his "Why War?" letter to Einstein) mentions Lichtenberg's invention of a "Compass of Motives" in a discussion on the combination of human compounded motives and quotes 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'."
Selected bibliography
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 Lichtenberg Reader, 1959 (trans. and ed. by Franz H. Mautner and Henry Hatfield)
- The World of Hogarth. Lichtenberg's Commentaries on Hogarth's Engravings, 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, 1990 (trans. with an introduction and notes by R. J. Hollingdale), ISBN 0-14-044519-6, reprinted as The Waste Books, 2000
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