Karl Becker (philologist)

This article is about the German philologist. For other people named Carl or Karl Becker, see Carl Becker (disambiguation).
Karl Ferdinand Becker

Karl Ferdinand Becker (14 April 1775 Lieser (Mosel) – 4 September 1849 Offenbach am Main) was a German physician, educationalist, and philologist. He wrote a German grammar. His deductive approach to comparative philology was later discredited.

Biography

He was educated at Hildesheim, and then taught there from 1794 to 1799. He then studied medicine at the University of Göttingen, became a physician at Offenbach in 1815, and was a surgeon in the army. In 1823, he opened a small private school in Offenbach.

Philological research

His work as an instructor led him to make researches in philology, which for a time met with considerable recognition. His view was that all languages are subject to certain logical and philosophical principles, and that thus a science of comparative philology might be arrived at by a process of deduction. This method was later largely discredited by the investigations of Jakob Grimm and others, whereby comparative philology is based on principles of history and ethnology and is attained inductively.

Becker is also known for promoting the theory that there are only three grammatical relations present in language (the predicative, attributive and objective relations),[1] a theory which is still used by contemporary linguists.[2]

Works

His grammars and manuals on the German language went through many editions.

Literature

References

  1. Becker, Karl Ferdinand (1830). A Grammar of the German Language. London: John Murray, Albernarle Street. p. 10.
  2. Goldenberg, Gideon (2013). Semitic Languages: Features, Structures, Relations, Processes. Oxford University Press. p. 142.
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