German philosopher (1743-1819)
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36 objects attributed to Friedrich Heinrich Jacobi, held across European museums, libraries & archives · via Europeana
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Friedrich Heinrich Jacobi (/dʒəˈkoʊbi/; German: [jaˈkoːbi]; 25 January 1743 – 10 March 1819) was a German philosopher, writer and socialite. He is best known for popularizing the concept of nihilism, denigrating it as the necessary result of Enlightenment thought and the philosophical systems of Baruch Spinoza, Immanuel Kant, Johann Gottlieb Fichte and Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling.
Jacobi advocated Glaube (variously translated as faith or "belief") and Offenbarung (revelation) instead of speculative reason. According to one view, Jacobi can be seen to have anticipated present-day writers who criticize secular philosophy as relativistic and dangerous for religious faith. His aloofness from the Sturm and Drang movement was the basis of a brief friendship with Johann Wolfgang von Goethe.
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Most cited works
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5 total works indexed
· 2004 · cited 10,238x
· 2013 · cited 9,519x
· 2015 · cited 7,829x
· 2012 · cited 6,738x
· 2020 · cited 6,645x
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Friedrich Heinrich Jacobi’s works. 3.2
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Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).