Abstract
Johann Joachim Winckelmann (1717–68) was not a philosopher. In fact,
Winckelmann had a strong interest in distancing himself from academic
philosophy as he knew it. As Goethe reports, Winckelmann “complained
bitterly about the philosophers of his time and about their extensive
influence.” Still less was Winckelmann a Kantian philosopher; the first
edition of Immanuel Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason did not appear until
1781, thirteen years after the fifty-year-old Winckelmann was shockingly
murdered in Trieste. Nevertheless, many of Winckelmann’s ideas were
philosophically rich and suggestive and interestingly relevant to the
philosophical problems that were later to be addressed by Kant and his
philosophical contemporaries. It is no wonder, then, that Winckelmann’s
influence can be detected in the works of some of the most important
philosophically oriented thinkers of Germany in the late eighteenth and
early nineteenth centuries. In addition to Kant himself, these thinkers
included Gotthold Ephraim Lessing (1729–81), Johann Gottfried von
Herder (1744–1803), Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749–1832),
Friedrich Schiller (1759–1805), Friedrich Hölderlin (1770–1843), Friedrich
Wilhelm Joseph Schelling (1775–1854), and Georg Wilhelm Friedrich
Hegel (1770–1831).