German romanticism
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German romanticism had a strong influence on the developing of German science in the early nineteenth-century. Romanticism was the opposite of scientific rationality yet had a formative influence on many German scientists, who were aware of the arguments and discussions in the romantic movement and who developed their ideas in opposition to those arguments, as an answer to those arguments, or on some other basis influenced by the fact that the romantic movement was so powerful at the end of the eighteenth century. The Romantic movement affected all the arts and was a break from the classical traditions that preceded it. Changes in the styles of artistic expression throughout history have reflected not only developments in materials and shifting patters within the art world itself but have also reflected changing circumstances in society at large, including political changes, historical movements, altered social conditions, changed economic circumstances, shifts in religious thinking, and so on. In the nineteenth century, the prevailing artistic style for the first part of the century was romanticism, an art based on a form of "disorder," but a disorder seen as the emblem of the unfettered processes of the imagination. Romanticism was the heir to the spirit of the French Revolution, a spirit of freedom and self-determination manifested artistically as freedom of expression. It contrasts sharply with the controlled and ordered world of classicism in the Renaissance perio
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Some common words found in the essay are:
, Liszt Romanticism, French Revolution, German Natural, Runge Romantic, Italy Austria, Natural Science, Indeed Helmholtz, Kant Fichte, Naturphilosphie Schelling, natural science, nineteenth century, romantic movement, york harry, french revolution, art world, german science, german romanticism, york harry abrams, harry abrams,
Approximate Word count = 838
Approximate Pages = 3 (250 words per page)
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