Johann Adam Bergk

Johann Adam Bergk (1769 – 1834, Leipzig) was a German philosopher and publicist.[1]

Bergk was professor of philosophy and jurisprudence at the University of Leipzig. A Kantian, he defended the French revolution in his Untersuchungen aus dem Natur-, Staats- und Völkerrechte (1796) and translated Beccaria into German.

During the Napoleonic occupation of Saxony he frequently came into conflict with the French censorship, e.g. his journal "Der europäische Aufseher" (i.e. The European Guard) was banned.[2]

He was the father of the philologist Theodor Bergk.

Quotation

Works

References

  1. Schmidt, James (2006), "Bergk, Johann Adam", in Haakonssen, Knud, The Cambridge History of Eighteenth-Century Philosophy, 2, Cambridge University Press, p. 1148
  2. Helge Buttkereit, Zensur und Öffentlichkeit in Leipzig 1806-1813 (= Kommunikationsgeschichte, 28), Münster 2009, pp. 111.

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