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  1. Johann Friedrich Herbart (born May 4, 1776, Oldenburg—died Aug. 14, 1841, Göttingen, Hanover) was a German philosopher and educator, who led the renewed 19th-century interest in Realism and is considered among the founders of modern scientific pedagogy.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  2. Dec 8, 2015 · Johann Friedrich Herbart (1776–1841) is known today mainly as a founding figure of modern psychology and educational theory. But these were only parts of a much grander philosophical project, and it was as a philosopher of the first rank that his contemporaries saw him.

  3. German philosopher Johann Friedrich Herbart is the founder of the pedagogical theory that bears his name, which eventually laid the groundwork for teacher education as a university enterprise in the United States and elsewhere.

  4. Johann Friedrich Herbart (German: [ˈhɛʁbaʁt]; 4 May 1776 – 14 August 1841) was a German philosopher, psychologist and founder of pedagogy as an academic discipline. Herbart is now remembered amongst the post-Kantian philosophers mostly as making the greatest contrast to Hegel—in particular in relation to aesthetics.

  5. It was Herbart’s goal to mathematically express the relationships among the apperceptive mass, the limen, and the conflict among ideas. Thus, Herbart can be considered as one of the first mathematical psychologists. But he became much more prominent with regard to his educational psychology.

    • seel@ezw.uni-freiburg.de
  6. Jan 11, 2023 · Its subject—Johann Friedrich Herbart (1776–1841)—has been, heretofore, utterly lost to academic philosophy. This, the first English language publication in decades, and the only one in English to give full prominence to his philosophy, is truly a major accomplishment.

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  8. Johann Friedrich Herbart, the German philosopher, psychologist, and educational theorist, was born in Oldenburg; he entered the University of Jena in 1794. Although he studied under Johann Gottlieb Fichte, Herbart was unable to accept Fichte's view of the ego and its psychology, and in reaction he laid the basis for his own metaphysical and ...

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