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Karl Friedrich Köppen

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Karl Friedrich Köppen (26 April 1808 – 26 April 1863) was a German teacher and political journalist. He was one of the Young Hegelians.

Life

Köppen was from a born in a pastor's family in Altmark. He studied theology at the University of Berlin from 1827 to 1831, but later turned to religio-critical Hegelianism. After his studies and military service in 1833, he taught at the secondary school Dorotheenstädtischer. In 1837, he met Karl Marx, with whom he developed a close friendship. In 1840 he became one of the most active associates of Arnold Ruge and published Hallischen Jahrbücher (1841: Deutsche Jahrbücher). He wrote many reviews on political and scientific literature. Contemporary journalistic practice has been by strongly influenced his opinions reviews. He thus began a renewal of the Enlightenment as Köppen's criticism of classical literature, idealist philosophy and Romanticism. Köppen's views were deeply indebted to Karl Marx and he dedicated his book Frederick the Great and his Opponents to Marx.[1]

He died in Berlin.

Works

  • Frederick the Great and his Opponents (Berlin 1840), ISBN 1-161-25072-7
  • To celebrate the accession of Frederick II (Hallische Yearbooks of Science and Arts . No. 147 of 19 June 1840, Sp 1169ff)
  • Selected writings. 2 volumes, Akademie Verlag, Berlin 2003, ISBN 3-05-003625-7

References

  1. ^ (2000) Foster, John Bellamy, Marx's Ecology, p 51.