August Wilhelm Hupel Explained

August Wilhelm Hupel
Birth Date:25 February 1737
Birth Place:Buttelstedt, present-day Germany
Death Date:7 February 1819 (aged 82)
Death Place:Paide, present-day Estonia
Nationality:German
Fields:Linguistics

August Wilhelm Hupel (in Buttelstedt near Weimar  - in Paide) was a Baltic German publicist, estophile and linguist.

In 1766–1767, he translated for Lühhike öppetus, the first Estonian language periodical publication, edited by Peter Ernst Wilde. In 1771, he published a medical textbook, Arsti ramat nende juhhatamisseks kes tahtvad többed ärra-arvada ning parrandada (Estonian for Manual of medical diagnostics and healthcare, literally Doctor's book to instruct those who want to guess and repair ailments).

In 1780, Hupel completed a treatise on Estonian grammar, Ehstnische Sprachlehre für beide Hauptdialekte, den revalschen und den dörptschen, nebst einem vollständigen Wörterbuch. First printing of the included dictionary contained around 17,000 words and description of their morphology. The second printing, printed in 1820, had grown to around 20,000 words.

Hupel was a materialist but argued for the existence of an immortal soul. He argued that the soul is composed of "subtle" ether-like type of matter.[1]

Selected publications

References

Notes and References

  1. Wunderlich, Falk. 2016. The "Subtle" Materialism of August Wilhelm Hupel. Quaestio: Journal of the History of Metaphysics. 16. 147–165. 10.1484/J.QUAESTIO.5.112339.