Page:Goethe and Schiller's Xenions (IA goetheschillersx00goetiala).pdf/187

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Pages 94 and 102, Note 14.—Schiller renders "Hades" by "Hell" which here retains the classical meaning and does not imply the idea of punishment.

Page 104, Note 15.—Karl Leonard Reinhold (born in Vienna October 26, 1758) was educated as a Jesuit and became professor of philosophy in the Jesuit college of the Barnabites, but renounced the faith of his youth in 1783 and left Vienna for Weimar, where he married the daughter of the poet Wieland. He became professor of philosophy at the University of Jena in 1787 and 1794 in Kiel, where he died April 10, 1823. He was a Kantian and wrote much on Kantian philosophy.

Page 112, Note 16.—Very good as a general criticism. Goethe, however, was on the wrong track, in directing this distich against Newton's theory of color.

Page 116, Note 17.—Kant called his philosophy transcendental idealism, and his followers insisted upon the importance of transcendentalism. They were opposed by naturalists, who scorned theory and insisted on the facts of experience.

For the meaning of the word "transcendental" see the translator's Fundamental Problems, p. 30 et passim, and Primer of Philosophy, p. 66. "Transcendent" means what transcends human knowledge, i. e., what is unknowable, but "transcendental" is in Kantian terminology non-sensory or formal knowledge such as pure logic and arithmetic,