Strong emotion (3) Anyone who reads "sorrowful sorrow" by John Wolfgang von Goethe will soon feel the hero's emotional strength. Guessing about his life is truly unique, especially in the case of contemporary life, without particular notice. Perhaps this is one reason why his great emotions resonate with the reader. Wit's spiritual condition seems to be incredibly alive at some point, but it seems helpless at other times.
Abstract: In this article we will explore "subtle empiricism" proposed by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. Goethe's scientific research provides another epistemology for traditional science. The author discusses the way that Goethe knows. Particular emphasis is placed on the process, form and participation of the epistemology expressed by Goethe. I introduced Goethe's scientific methodology and explored its application and its significance. Goethe's "Zalte Empirie" - his subtle empiricism - legalizes and organizes the role of imagination, intuition, and inspiration in science. It may make a significant contribution to the emerging participatory and holistic worldview and provide knowledge that is compatible with nature. In this article we will explore its methods and reasons.
Goethe's empiricism provides another complementary epistemology for traditional scientific practice and its potential dualism and rationalistic epistemology that separate observers and observers. Goethe has adopted an epistemology that can be called conscious process participation. This epistemology focuses on processes and relationships and enables intuitive understanding of the world's direct knowledge. It focuses on the phenomenon itself, between space and time, and those dynamic relations between observer and observer. Goethe acknowledged that the observer is a participant. His work at Heisenberg and the works of other great physicists at the beginning of the 20th century were announced a century ago to reveal the basic connection of the material world.
Again, I was wondering if knowledge of Goethe's research had influenced Heisenberg's insight into the physics of the 20th century. Considering that he lived in the 18th and 19th centuries, Goethe's epistemology and deep insight into the natural world was an amazing and almost predictive vision. As long as we use a healthy sense, humans are the most powerful and accurate physical tools available; it is the greatest demise of new physics, and people will try to understand them using experimental tools . Naturally it is to limit her goals to prove that it can be achieved. "