Johann Friedemann Schneider

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Johann Friedemann Schneider (also: Scheinder ; * December 12, 1669 in Kranichfeld ; † April 15, 1733 in Halle (Saale) ) was a German logician and lawyer.

Life

Nothing is known about Schneider's first years of life. In 1696 he had already completed his master's degree at the University of Halle . He focused on studying law and was previously an adjunct in the Faculty of Philosophy in 1700 . In 1703 he received his doctorate in law, in the same year received an extraordinary professorship at the law faculty and in 1705 a full professorship in logic and metaphysics . He received the title of court counselor and was prorector of the Halle University in 1715 and 1725 .

family

Schneider had been married four times. His first marriage was in 1703 with Hedwig Sophia († July 17, 1708), the daughter of Professor Christoph Cellarius . His second marriage was with Anne Sophia Mock († December 18, 1724). After her death in 1725 he married Christine Elisabeth († March 19, 1727), the daughter of the Halle pastor at the Church of Our Lady Johann Georg Franck . This marriage did not last long either, so that he married the daughter of a Müntz holder in Magdeburg in his fourth marriage. Except for one daughter from his second marriage, his children all died prematurely.

Selection of works

  1. Processus disputandi. Hall 1718
  2. Fundamenta philosophiae moralis. Hall 1721
  3. Fundamenta philosophiae rationalis. Hall 1708, 1737
  4. Oratio de forma reipublicae literariae. Hall 1726
  5. Disp. De religione expert imperii. Hall 1696
  6. Disp. De domino eminent. Hall 1697
  7. Disp. De legali hypothecae bonorum in bonis parentum.
  8. Disp. De norma actuum moralium. Hall 1698
  9. Disp. Icon atheorum. Hall 1698
  10. Disp. Icon Entheorum ex lumine naturali. Hall 1700
  11. Disp. De moderamine inconsultae vocis. Hall 1700
  12. Disp. Princeps monopola. Hall 1700
  13. Disp. Definibus jurisprudentiae naturalis regendis. Hall 1700
  14. Disp. De ordine focminarum equestri. Hall 1701, 1714
  15. Disp. De otiosa morum seientia. Hall 1701
  16. Disp. De morte loco jurisjurandi. Hall 1703
  17. Disp. De brutorum religione. Hall 1702
  18. Disp. De illicita contra principem vitae defensione. Hall 1702
  19. Disp. De jure imaginum. Hall 1703
  20. Disp. De collisione famae & conscientiae. Hall 1704
  21. Disp. De turbatione jurisdictionis. Hall 1704
  22. Disp. Crimine gratiae. Hall 1704
  23. Disp. De testimonio Principis. Hall 1704
  24. Disp. De successione legitimentorum in feudis. Hall 1706
  25. Disp. De promotionibus per salterum. Hall 1706
  26. Disp. De Logica non otiosa. Hall 1707
  27. Disp. De murmuratione praescriptionem impediente. Hall 1704
  28. Disp. De propagatione philosopiae sub contemtu. Hall 1708
  29. Disp. De incompetentia gumentandi methodis veterum ac recentiorum philosophorum. Hall 1706
  30. Disp. De emendatione animae non ab intellectu, sed a voluntate inchoanda. Hall 1711
  31. Disp. De permutatione captivorum. Hall 1713
  32. Disp. De credulitate. Hall 1714
  33. Disp. De jure praeventionis circa venationem. Hall 1715
  34. Disp. De forma reipublicae literariae. Hall 1717
  35. Disp. De Philosophis non negligenda. Hall 1717
  36. Disp. An lachrymae sint fignum triftitiae. Hall 1717
  37. Disp. De philosophia silentii. Hall 1717
  38. Disp. De praejudiciis in jurisprudentia fugendis. Hall 1717
  39. Disp. De variis argumentandi methodis veterum ac recentiorum philosophorum. Hall 1717
  40. Disp. De genuinis philosophiae principiis secundum characteres suos dignoscendis. Hall 1719
  41. Disp. Crimine fidei secundum vera juris nat. & Gentium principia. Hall 1720
  42. Disp. De vertutibus intelloctualibus philosophiae rationali vindicandis. Hall 1720
  43. Disp. De domino rei legate ipso jure transeunte. Hall 1720
  44. Disp. De restitutzione brevi manu adversus lapsum fatalium in processu civili. Hall 1721
  45. Disp. De fide perfidis servanda. Hall 1723
  46. Disp. De probanda exceptione fspolii per delationem Juramenti. Hall 1724
  47. Disp. De conventione clericorum in foro laicorum. Hall 1725

literature

  • Schneider, Johann Friedemann. In: Johann Heinrich Zedler : Large complete universal lexicon of all sciences and arts . Volume 35, Leipzig 1743, columns 554-556.
  • Christian Gottlieb Jöcher : Compendioses learned lexicon: Therein the scholars of all classes as well as male and female, who lived from the beginning of the world to the present day, and made themselves known to the learned world after their birth, death, writing, life and remarkable stories from the most credible scribes based on the design of Blessed D. Joh. Burckh. Menckens can be described in alphabetical order. Leipzig, Vol. 4. Col. 312
  • Johann Christoph von Dreyhaupt : Pagus Neletizi et Nudzici, or detailed diplomatic-historical description of the former primacy and Ertz-Stifft, but now secularized by the Duchy of Magdeburg, which belongs to the Duchy of Magdeburg, and of all the cities, palaces, offices, Manors, aristocratic families, churches, monasteries, parishes and villages, especially the cities of Halle, Neumarckt, Glaucha, Wettin, Löbegün, Cönnern and Alsleben; From Actis publicis and credible ... news, collected diligently, reinforced with many unprinted documents, adorned with copperplate engravings and abstracts, and provided with the necessary registers. Emanuel Schneider, Halle 1749/50, 2nd vol. P. 712
  • Max Wundt: The German School Philosophy in the Age of Enlightenment. Georg Olms, Tübingen 1945, 2nd edition 1992, ISBN 3-487-00765-7 , p. 107

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