Since its inception many eminent scientists published there – apart from Leibniz, e.g., Jakob Bernoulli, Humphry Ditton, Leonhard Euler, Ehrenfried Walther von Tschirnhaus, Pierre-Simon Laplace and Jérôme Lalande but also humanists and philosophers as Veit Ludwig von Seckendorff, Stephan Bergler, Christian Thomasius and Christian Wolff.
Subsequently, in Hamburg, he assisted the major bibliographer Johann Albert Fabricius in the production of his Bibliotheca Graeca and his edition of Sextus Empiricus.
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In addition to writing numerous articles for the Leipzig Acta Eruditorum, Bergler edited the editio princeps of the Byzantine historiographer Genesius (1733), and the letters of Alciphron (1715), which contained 75 letters published for the first time.
Stephan Moccio | Stephan Elliott | Martin Stephan | Stephan Pastis | Stephan Marks | Stephan Kekulé von Stradonitz | Stephan Engels | Stephan Eicher | Stephan Weidner | Stephan Thernstrom | Stephan Schreck | Stephan Noller | Stephan Körner | Stephan Kaschendorf | Stephan Hermlin | Stéphan Grégoire | Stephan Collishaw | Stephan Andersen | Stephan A. Hoeller | Stephan | Édouard Stephan | Doug Stephan | St. Stephan's Cathedral | Stephan Winkelmann | Stephan Van Dam | Stéphan Tremblay | Stephan Swanepoel | Stephan's Quintet | Stephan Sinding | Stephan Said |