- Georg Bernhard Bilfinger
Georg Bernhard Bilfinger (*
23 January ,1693 ; †18 February ,1750 ), German philosopher, mathematician and statesman, son of aLutheran minister, was born atCannstatt inWürttemberg .As a boy he showed great aptitude for study, and at first devoted himself to
theology , but under the influence of Christian Wolff's writings he took up mathematics and philosophy on the lines of Wolff andGottfried Leibniz . Returning to theology, he attempted to connect it with philosophy in a treatise, "Dilucidationes phiiosophicae, de deo, anima humana, mundo" (Tübingen, 1725, 1746, 1768). This work contains nothing original but giving a clear representation of Wolff's philosophy. It met with great success, and the author was appointed to the office of preacher at the castle ofTübingen and of reader in the school of theology.In 1721, after two years study under Wolff, he became professor of philosophy at Halle, and in 1724 professor of mathematics. His friends at Tübingen disapproved his new views, and in 1725, on Wolff's recommendation, he was invited by
Peter I of Russia to lecture inSaint Petersburg , where he was well received. His success in winning the prize of a thousand crowns offered for a dissertation on the cause ofgravity by theAcadémie des Sciences ofParis secured his return to his native land in 1731.In 1735, largely on account of his knowledge of military engineering,
Karl Alexander, Duke of Württemberg (reigned 1733-1737) made him aprivy councillor , but his hands were tied owing to the frivolous atmosphere of the court. On the death of the duke, however, he became a member of the Regency Council, and devoted himself with energy and success to the reorganization of the state. In the departments of education, state-religion, agriculture and commerce, his administration was uniformly successful, and he became in a real sense the head of the state. He died atStuttgart .After his return from
Imperial Russia , he won the highest respect at home and abroad, andFrederick II of Prussia is recorded to have said of him, He was a great man whom I shall ever remember with admiration.Beside the "Dilucidationes", he wrote "De harmonia animi et corporis humani commentatio" (Frankfurt and Leipzig, 1735; Tübingen, 1741); "De origine et permissione mali" (1724), an account of the Leibnitzian theodicy.
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