System of Transcendental Idealism (German: System des transcendentalen Idealismus) is a book by Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling published in 1800.
Joseph Stalin | Joseph Conrad | Friedrich Nietzsche | Saint Joseph | Joseph Haydn | Joseph Beuys | Joseph | Friedrich Schiller | Wilhelm II, German Emperor | Joseph Goebbels | Joseph II, Holy Roman Emperor | Joseph Barbera | Joseph Chamberlain | Joseph Brodsky | Franz Joseph I of Austria | Joseph Henry Blackburne | Joseph Banks | Joseph McCarthy | Wilhelm II | Joseph II | Joseph Campbell | Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat | Friedrich Engels | Wilhelm Reich | Joseph Priestley | Joseph Bonaparte | Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz | Joseph Pulitzer | Carl Friedrich Gauss | Karl Friedrich Schinkel |
Grant views Plato and Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling as his major allies among classic philosophical figures, and generally opposes both Aristotle and Kant for what he sees as their tendency to reduce reality to its expressibility for humans.
Johannes' inclination towards the humanities stemmed from his father, who had befriended the likes of Henrik Steffens, Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling and Friedrich Leopold zu Stolberg-Stolberg and also converted to Catholicism.
After finishing his studies in the gymnasia at Munich and Landshut, he studied first jurisprudence and then history at the University of Munich under Guido Görres, Ignaz von Döllinger and especially Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling, and received his degree in 1831 on presenting the dissertation "Ueber die Anfänge der griechischen Geschichte" About the Beginnings of Greek History.
Under his influence Morozova developed a strong interest in philosophy (Hermann Lotze, Immanuel Kant, Vladimir Solovyov, Shelling).
With his emphasis upon history, Maksymovych approached the views of Baader and Hegel as well as Schelling.
In this context, Debono reveals his dislike of philosophical materialism, particularly that proposed by Spinoza, Schelling and Cousin.
At length he went to Berlin (1844), where he entered the university, attending particularly the lectures of Schelling and Althaus.