Johann Gottlieb Fichte's Conception of the Science of Knowledge Generally, ( Ueber den Begriff der Wissenschaftslehre oder der sogenannten Philosophie) was originally published in 1794. This edition is the English language translation by Adolph Ernst Kroeger from 1868. The work is of science of epistemology and its laws.
Johann Gottlieb Fichte was a German philosopher. He was one of the founding figures of the philosophical movement known as German idealism, a movement that developed from the theoretical and ethical writings of Immanuel Kant. Fichte is often perceived as a figure whose philosophy forms a bridge between the ideas of Kant and the German Idealist Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel. Recently, philosophers and scholars have begun to appreciate Fichte as an important philosopher in his own right due to his original insights into the nature of self-consciousness or self-awareness. Like Descartes and Kant before him, the problem of subjectivity and consciousness motivated much of his philosophical rumination. Fichte also wrote political philosophy, and is thought of by some as the father of German nationalism. His son, Immanuel Hermann Fichte, was also a renowned philosopher.