Karl Jaspers
Jaspers, Karl (1883-1969), German philosopher, one of the originators
of existentialism, whose work influenced modern theology and psychiatry as well
as philosophy.
Jaspers was born in Oldenburg on February 23, 1883. He studied law and
medicine and received his M.D. from the University of Heidelberg. He
taught psychiatry at Heidelberg University from 1916, turned to philosophy,
and held the chair of philosophy until 1937. During most of the Nazi
period Jaspers, whose wife was Jewish and who refused to make any concessions
to the Nazi authorities, was prevented from teaching. In 1948 he accepted
a professorship in philosophy at Basel, Switzerland. In his first major work, General Psychopathology (1913; trans. 1963),
Jaspers criticized the scientific pretensions of psychotherapy as misleading
and deterministic. He then published Psychologie der Weltanschauungen
(Psychology of World Views, 1919), a work particularly important for
cataloging various possible attitudes toward life. Jaspers's major work in three volumes, Philosophie (1932; Philosophy,
1969), gives his view of the history of philosophy and introduces his
major themes. Jaspers identified philosophy with philosophical thinking
itself, not with any particular set of conclusions. His philosophy is
an effort to explore and describe the margins and limits of experience.
He used the term das Umgreifende (“the encompassing”) to
refer to the ultimate limits of being, the indefinite horizon in which
all subjective and objective experience is possible, but which can never
be rationally apprehended. Another important work is Existenzphilosophie
(1938; Philosophy and Existence, 1971). The term Existenz designates
the indefinable experience of freedom and possibility that constitutes
the authentic being of individuals who become aware of the encompassing
by confronting such limit-situations as chance, suffering, conflict,
guilt, and death. Jaspers also wrote extensively on the threat to human
freedom posed by modern science and modern economic and political institutions.
Among his political works is The Question of German Guilt (1946; trans.
1947). Jaspers died in Basel, on February 20, 1969. His correspondence (1926-69),
with the German-born American philosopher Hannah Arendt, was published
in English in 1992. Contributed By:
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