100 years after Newton, Johann Wolfgang Goethe (1749-1832) examined the problems of colour and although his Theory of Colours was intended to attain «a more complete unity of physical knowledge» by including all branches of the natural sciences, Goethe approached the subject primarily to gain some knowledge of colours «from the point of view of art».
Ll7Vww. fwng8p1uwu.pages.dev/608fwng8p1uwu.pages.dev/505fwng8p1uwu.pages.dev/493fwng8p1uwu.pages.dev/89fwng8p1uwu.pages.dev/881fwng8p1uwu.pages.dev/495fwng8p1uwu.pages.dev/386fwng8p1uwu.pages.dev/363fwng8p1uwu.pages.dev/472fwng8p1uwu.pages.dev/627fwng8p1uwu.pages.dev/832fwng8p1uwu.pages.dev/244fwng8p1uwu.pages.dev/393fwng8p1uwu.pages.dev/700fwng8p1uwu.pages.dev/691
johann wolfgang von goethe color theory