Johann Georg Hamann Quotes

Johann Georg Hamann was a German philosopher, whose work was used by his student J. G. Herder as a main support of the Sturm und Drang movement, and associated by historian of ideas Isaiah Berlin with the Counter-Enlightenment. However, recent scholarship such as that by theologian Oswald Bayer places Hamann into a more nebulous category of theologian and philologist; he views him as less the proto-Romantic that Herder presented, and more a premodern-postmodern thinker who brought the consequences of Lutheran theology to bear upon the burgeoning Enlightenment and especially in reaction to Kant. Goethe and Kierkegaard were among those who considered him to be the finest mind of his time.

✵ 27. August 1730 – 21. June 1788
Johann Georg Hamann photo
Johann Georg Hamann: 13   quotes 2   likes

Famous Johann Georg Hamann Quotes

“Through a vicious circle of pure reason skepsis itself becomes dogma.”

Briefwechsel, ed. Arthur Henkel (1955-1975), vol. V, p. 432.

“Poetry is the mother-tongue of the human race.”

Sämtliche Werken, ed. Josef Nadler (Vienna: Verlag Herder, 1949-1957), vol. II, p. 197.

Johann Georg Hamann Quotes about understanding

“Let us assume that we invited an unknown person to a game of cards. If this person answered us, “I don’t play,” we would either interpret this to mean that he did not understand the game, or that he had an aversion to it which arose from economic, ethical, or other reasons. Let us imagine, however, that an honorable man, who was known to possess every possible skill in the game, and who was well versed in its rules and its forbidden tricks, but who could like a game and participate in it only when it was an innocent pastime, were invited into a company of clever swindlers, who were known as good players and to whom he was equal on both scores, to join them in a game. If he said, “I do not play,” we would have to join him in looking the people with whom he was talking straight in the face, and would be able to supplement his words as follows: “I don’t play, that is, with people such as you, who break the rules of the game, and rob it of its pleasure. If you offer to play a game, our mutual agreement, then, is that we recognize the capriciousness of chance as our master; and you call the science of your nimble fingers chance, and I must accept it as such, it I will, or run the risk of insulting you or choose the shame of imitating you.” … The opinion of Socrates can be summarized in these blunt words, when he said to the Sophists, the leaned men of his time, “I know nothing.””

Therefore these words were a thorn in their eyes and a scourge on their backs.
Socratic Memorabilia, J. Flaherty, trans. (Baltimore: 1967), pp. 165-167.

Johann Georg Hamann Quotes

Similar authors

Immanuel Kant photo
Immanuel Kant 200
German philosopher
Johann Gottfried Herder photo
Johann Gottfried Herder 18
German philosopher, theologian, poet, and literary critic
Friedrich Schiller photo
Friedrich Schiller 111
German poet, philosopher, historian, and playwright
Baron d'Holbach photo
Baron d'Holbach 9
French-German author, philosopher, encyclopedist
Gottfried Leibniz photo
Gottfried Leibniz 29
German mathematician and philosopher
Gotthold Ephraim Lessing photo
Gotthold Ephraim Lessing 18
writer, philosopher, publicist, and art critic
Novalis photo
Novalis 102
German poet and writer
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe photo
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe 185
German writer, artist, and politician
Matthias Claudius photo
Matthias Claudius 1
German poet
Claude Adrien Helvétius photo
Claude Adrien Helvétius 8
French philosopher