Skip to ContentSkip to Navigation
About us Latest news News News articles

Hans Christian Ørsted. Natuurwetenschapper als estheticus

22 March 2012

PhD ceremony: Mr. J. Millekamp, 12.45 uur, Academiegebouw, Broerstraat 5, Groningen

Dissertation: Hans Christian Ørsted. Natuurwetenschapper als estheticus

Promotor(s): prof. A.M. Swanson

Faculty: Arts

The Danish scientist Hans Christian Ørsted (1777-1851) is most famous for his discovery of electromagnetism, a discovery that literally and irreversibly changed our world. In Denmark he is also known as a poet and essayist. Interestingly, his scientific and his aesthetic work are closely interrelated. This springs from his epistemology, in which the sciences and cultural and social knowledge areas form one coherent unity that may especially be known by means of experiments. Ørsted is the inventor of the ‘thought experiment’, a term and technique that is now widely used in sciences such as modern physics. Jan Millekamp’s thesis describes Ørsted’s development as a scientist and as an aesthetic. In 1796, for instance, he won the great prize for aesthetics of the University of Copenhagen with an essay on poetics, and a year later the same university awarded him the great prize for medicine for his important essay on the origin and function of amniotic fluid. Ørsted was intimately acquainted with the leading cultural personalities of his time in Denmark as well as in Norway and Sweden, while through his scientifically motivated travels - sometimes taking years - he was widely known in scientific and cultural circles throughout Western Europe. From a young age, as guidance in his scientific and cultural work, Ørsted adhered to the radical contention that not the atoms but the forces ought to form the fundamental basis of the study of spiritual and physical life.

Last modified:13 March 2020 01.00 a.m.
View this page in: Nederlands

More news

  • 10 December 2024

    Time will tell: what tree rings reveal about the past

    Ancient DNA analysis of bones, teeth, or plants can reveal family connections, population movements, and domestication pathways. Pınar Erdil tells more about it.

  • 25 November 2024

    Liekuut | Give young people a cultural hangout spot and a voice

    Young people know very well what they would like to see and hear culturally, but that is not always reflected in the programming of cultural institutions yet. According to Johan Kolsteeg, Assistant Professor of Art and board member of the Groningen...

  • 08 October 2024

    Tracking the tongue

    Thomas Tienkamp and Teja Rebernik explain how fundamental research on articulation could help explain speech disorders and may contribute to the recovery of people with speech disorders in the future.