![Karl Jaspers](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly91cGxvYWQud2lraW1lZGlhLm9yZy93aWtpcGVkaWEvY29tbW9ucy90aHVtYi8xLzFlL0thcmxfSmFzcGVyc18xOTQ2LmpwZy8xNjAwcHgtS2FybF9KYXNwZXJzXzE5NDYuanBn.jpg )
Karl Theodor Jaspers (/ˈjæspərz/; German: [kaʁl ˈjaspɐs] ; 23 February 1883 – 26 February 1969) was a German-Swiss psychiatrist and philosopher who had a strong influence on modern theology, psychiatry, and philosophy. His 1913 work General Psychopathology influenced many later diagnostic criteria, and argued for a distinction between "primary" and "secondary" delusions.
Karl Jaspers | |
---|---|
![]() Jaspers in 1946 | |
Born | Karl Theodor Jaspers 23 February 1883 Oldenburg, Grand Duchy of Oldenburg, German Empire |
Died | 26 February 1969 Basel, Basel-Stadt, Switzerland | (aged 86)
Education | University of Heidelberg (MD, 1908) |
Spouse | Gertrud Mayer (m. 1910) |
Era | 20th-century philosophy |
Region | Western philosophy |
School | Neo-Kantianism (early) Existentialism (late) Existential phenomenology (late) |
Main interests | Psychiatry, theology, philosophy of history |
Notable ideas | Axial Age; coining the term Existenzphilosophie; Dasein and Existenz as the two states of being, subject–object split (Subjekt-Objekt-Spaltung); theory of communicative transcendence, limit situation |
After being trained in and practising psychiatry, Jaspers turned to philosophical inquiry and attempted to develop an innovative philosophical system. He was often viewed as a major exponent of existentialism in Germany, though he did not accept the label.
Life
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpODNMemN3TDB0aGNteGZTbUZ6Y0dWeWMxOHhPVEV3TG1wd1p5OHlNakJ3ZUMxTFlYSnNYMHBoYzNCbGNuTmZNVGt4TUM1cWNHYz0uanBn.jpg)
Jaspers was born in Oldenburg in 1883 to a mother from a local farming community, and a jurist father. He showed an early interest in philosophy, but his father's experience with the legal system influenced his decision to study law at Heidelberg University. Jaspers first studied law in Heidelberg and later in Munich for three semesters. It soon became clear that Jaspers did not particularly enjoy law, and he switched to studying medicine in 1902 with a thesis about criminology. In 1910 he married Gertrud Mayer (1879–1974), the sister of his close friends Gustav Mayer and Ernst Mayer.[citation needed]
Jaspers earned his medical doctorate from the Heidelberg University medical school in 1908 and began work at a psychiatric hospital in Heidelberg under Franz Nissl, the successor of Emil Kraepelin and Karl Bonhoeffer, and Karl Wilmans. Jaspers became dissatisfied with the way the medical community of the time approached the study of mental illness and gave himself the task of improving the psychiatric approach. In 1913 Jaspers habilitated at the philosophical faculty of the Heidelberg University and gained there in 1914 a post as a psychology teacher. The post later became a permanent philosophical one, and Jaspers never returned to clinical practice. During this time Jaspers was a close friend of the Weber family (Max Weber also having held a professorship at Heidelberg).
In 1921, at the age of 38, Jaspers turned from psychology to philosophy, expanding on themes he had developed in his psychiatric works. He became a well-known philosopher across Germany and Europe.
After the Nazi seizure of power in 1933, Jaspers was considered to have a "Jewish taint" (jüdische Versippung, in the jargon of the time) due to his Jewish wife, Gertrude Mayer, and was forced to retire from teaching in 1937. In 1938 he fell under a publication ban as well. Many of his long-time friends stood by him, however, and he was able to continue his studies and research without being totally isolated. But he and his wife were under constant threat of removal to a concentration camp until 30 March 1945, when Heidelberg was occupied by American troops.
In 1948 Jaspers moved to the University of Basel in Switzerland. In 1963 he was awarded the honorary citizenship of the city of Oldenburg in recognition of his outstanding scientific achievements and services to occidental culture. He remained prominent in the philosophical community and became a naturalized citizen of Switzerland living in Basel until his death on his wife's 90th birthday in 1969.
Contributions to psychiatry
Jaspers's dissatisfaction with the popular understanding of mental illness led him to question both the diagnostic criteria and the methods of clinical psychiatry. He published a paper in 1910 in which he addressed the problem of whether paranoia was an aspect of personality or the result of biological changes. Although it did not broach new ideas, this article introduced a rather unusual method of study, at least according to the norms then prevalent. Not unlike Freud, Jaspers studied patients in detail, giving biographical information about the patients as well as notes on how the patients themselves felt about their symptoms. This has become known as the biographical method and now forms a mainstay of psychiatric and above all psychotherapeutic practice.[citation needed]
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpODBMelJoTDBwaGMzQmxjbk1sTWtOZlMyRnliRjh4T1RFekxtcHdaeTh5TWpCd2VDMUtZWE53WlhKekpUSkRYMHRoY214Zk1Ua3hNeTVxY0djPS5qcGc=.jpg)
Jaspers set down his views on mental illness in a book which he published in 1913, General Psychopathology. This work has become a classic in the psychiatric literature and many modern diagnostic criteria stem from ideas found within it. One of Jaspers's central tenets was that psychiatrists should diagnose symptoms of mental illness (particularly of psychosis) by their form rather than by their content. For example, in diagnosing a hallucination, it is more important to note that a person experiences visual phenomena when no sensory stimuli account for them than to note what the patient sees. What the patient sees is the "content", but the discrepancy between visual perception and objective reality is the "form".[citation needed]
Jaspers thought that psychiatrists could diagnose delusions in the same way. He argued that clinicians should not consider a belief delusional based on the content of the belief, but only based on the way in which a patient holds such a belief. (See delusion for further discussion.) Jaspers also distinguished between primary and secondary delusions. He defined primary delusions as autochthonous, meaning that they arise without apparent cause, appearing incomprehensible in terms of a normal mental process. (This is a slightly different use of the word autochthonous than the ordinary medical or sociological use as a synonym for indigenous.) Secondary delusions, on the other hand, he defined as those influenced by the person's background, current situation or mental state.
Jaspers considered primary delusions to be ultimately "un-understandable" since he believed no coherent reasoning process existed behind their formation. This view has caused some controversy, and the likes of R. D. Laing and Richard Bentall (1999, p. 133–135) have criticised it, stressing that this stance can lead therapists into the complacency of assuming that because they do not understand a patient, the patient is deluded and further investigation on the part of the therapist will have no effect. For instance, Huub Engels (2009) argues that schizophrenic disordered speech may be understandable, just as Emil Kraepelin's dream speech is understandable.
Contributions to philosophy and theology
Most commentators associate Jaspers with the philosophy of existentialism, in part because he draws largely upon the existentialist roots of Nietzsche and Kierkegaard, and in part because the theme of individual freedom permeates his work. In Philosophy (3 vols, 1932), Jaspers gave his view of the history of philosophy and introduced his major themes. Beginning with modern science and empiricism, Jaspers points out that as people question reality, they confront borders that an empirical (or scientific) method simply cannot transcend. At this point, the individual faces a choice: sink into despair and resignation, or take a leap of faith toward what Jaspers calls Transcendence. In making this leap, individuals confront their own limitless freedom, which Jaspers calls Existenz, and can finally experience authentic existence.[citation needed]
Transcendence (paired with the term The Encompassing in later works) is, for Jaspers, that which exists beyond the world of time and space. Jaspers's formulation of Transcendence as ultimate non-objectivity (or no-thing-ness) has led many philosophers to argue that ultimately, Jaspers became a monist, though Jaspers himself continually stressed the necessity of recognizing the validity of the concepts both of subjectivity and of objectivity.[citation needed]
Although he rejected explicit religious doctrines, including the notion of a personal God, Jaspers influenced contemporary theology through his philosophy of transcendence and the limits of human experience. Mystic Christian traditions influenced Jaspers himself tremendously, particularly those of Meister Eckhart and of Nicholas of Cusa. He also took an active interest in Eastern philosophies, particularly Buddhism, and developed the theory of an Axial Age, a period of substantial philosophical and religious development. Jaspers also entered public debates with Rudolf Bultmann, wherein Jaspers roundly criticized Bultmann's "demythologizing" of Christianity.
Jaspers wrote extensively on the threat to human freedom posed by modern science and modern economic and political institutions. During World War II, he had to abandon his teaching post because his wife was Jewish. After the war, he resumed his teaching position, and in his work The Question of German Guilt he unabashedly examined the culpability of Germany as a whole in the atrocities of Hitler's Third Reich.
The following quote about the Second World War and its atrocities was used at the end of the sixth episode of the BBC documentary series The Nazis: A Warning from History: "That which has happened is a warning. To forget it is guilt. It must be continually remembered. It was possible for this to happen, and it remains possible for it to happen again at any minute. Only in knowledge can it be prevented."
Jaspers's major works, lengthy and detailed, can seem daunting in their complexity. His last great attempt at a systematic philosophy of Existenz – Von der Wahrheit (On Truth) – has not yet appeared in English. However, he also wrote shorter works, most notably Philosophy Is for Everyman. The two major proponents of phenomenological hermeneutics, namely Paul Ricœur (a student of Jaspers) and Hans-Georg Gadamer (Jaspers's successor at Heidelberg), both display Jaspers's influence in their works.
Political views
Jaspers identified with the liberal political philosophy of Max Weber, although he rejected Weber's nationalism. He valued humanism and cosmopolitanism and, influenced by Immanuel Kant, advocated an international federation of states with shared constitutions, laws, and international courts. He strongly opposed totalitarian despotism and warned about the increasing tendency towards technocracy, or a regime that regards humans as mere instruments of science or of ideological goals. He was also sceptical of majoritarian democracy. Thus, he supported a form of governance that guaranteed individual freedom and limited government, and shared Weber's belief that democracy needed to be guided by an intellectual elite. His views were seen as anti-communist.
Influences
Jaspers held Kierkegaard and Nietzsche to be two of the most important figures in post-Kantian philosophy. In his compilation, The Great Philosophers (Die großen Philosophen), he wrote: "I approach the presentation of Kierkegaard with some trepidation. Next to Nietzsche, or rather, prior to Nietzsche, I consider him to be the most important thinker of our post-Kantian age. With Goethe and Hegel, an epoch had reached its conclusion, and our prevalent way of thinking – that is, the positivistic, natural-scientific one – cannot really be considered as philosophy." Jaspers also questions whether the two philosophers could be taught. For Kierkegaard, at least, Jaspers felt that Kierkegaard's whole method of indirect communication precludes any attempts to properly expound his thought into any sort of systematic teaching.
Though Jaspers was certainly indebted to Kierkegaard and Nietzsche, he also owes much to Kant and Plato. Walter Kaufmann argues in From Shakespeare to Existentialism that, though Jaspers was certainly indebted to Kierkegaard and Nietzsche, he was closest to Kant's philosophy:
Jaspers is too often seen as the heir of Nietzsche and Kierkegaard to whom he is in many ways less close than to Kant ... the Kantian antinomies and Kant's concern with the realm of decision, freedom, and faith have become exemplary for Jaspers. And even as Kant "had to do away with knowledge to make room for faith," Jaspers values Nietzsche in large measure because he thinks that Nietzsche did away with knowledge, thus making room for Jaspers' "philosophic faith".
In his essay "On My Philosophy", Jaspers states: "While I was still at school Spinoza was the first. Kant then became the philosopher for me and has remained so ... Nietzsche gained importance for me only late as the magnificent revelation of nihilism and the task of overcoming it." Jaspers is also indebted to his contemporaries, such as Heinrich Blücher, from whom he borrowed the term, "the anti-political principle" to describe totalitarianism's destruction of a space of resistance.
Selected bibliography
- Original German
- Psychologie der Weltanschauungen
- Nikolaus Cusanus
- Translations
- The Question of German Guilt - New York: Dial Press, 1947
- Philosophy of Existence – ISBN 0-8122-1010-7, University of Pennsylvania Press, 1971
- Strindberg and Van Gogh: An Attempt of a Pathographic Analysis with Reference to Parallel Cases of Swedenborg and Holderlin – ISBN 0-8165-0608-6
- Reason and Existenz – ISBN 0-87462-611-0
- Way to Wisdom – ISBN 0-300-00134-7
- Socrates, Buddha, Confucius, Jesus – ISBN 0-15-683580-0
- Philosophy Is for Everyman
- Man in the Modern Age
- (1949; English translation: 1953)
- Nietzsche: An Introduction to the Understanding of His Philosophical Activity – ISBN 0-8018-5779-1, Johns Hopkins University Press, 1997 (University of Arizona Press, 1965)
- Jaspers, Karl (1953). The Origin and Goal of History. translated by Michael Bullock. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
- Jaspers, Karl (1955). Reason and Existenz. translated by William Earle. New York: Noonday Press.
- Jaspers, Karl (1958). The Future of Mankind. translated by E. B. Ashton. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
- Jaspers, Karl (1997). General Psychopathology – Volumes 1 & 2. translated by J. Hoenig and Marian W. Hamilton. Baltimore and London: Johns Hopkins University Press.
See also
- Definitions of philosophy
References
- Thornhill, Chris; Miron, Ronny (2022), "Karl Jaspers", in Zalta, Edward N. (ed.), The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Spring 2022 ed.), Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University, retrieved 16 July 2022.
- Ernesto Spinelli (2007). Practising Existential Psychotherapy: The Relational World, Sage, p. 52: "Karl Jaspers can be considered to be among the earliest direct attempts to apply existential phenomenology to psychotherapy".
- Gertrud Jaspers (Mayer) Geni
- "Duden | Karl | Rechtschreibung, Bedeutung, Definition". Duden (in German). Retrieved 22 October 2018.
Kạrl
- "Duden | Jaspers | Rechtschreibung, Bedeutung, Definition". Duden (in German). Archived from the original on 22 October 2018. Retrieved 22 October 2018.
Jạspers
- Lewis, T.T. (2019). "Karl Jaspers". Salem Press Biographical Encyclopedia. Retrieved 30 January 2020.
- Radkau, Joachim (1995). Max Weber: A Biography. Polity Press. ISBN 978-0745683423. p. 29.
- Wolfgang U. Eckart, Volker Sellin, Eike Wolgast: Die Universität Heidelberg im Nationalsozialismus. Springer-Verlag, 2006, p. 339.
- "1963: Prof. Dr. Dr. h.c. Karl Jaspers". Stadt Oldenburg (in German). Oldenburg. Archived from the original on 23 October 2017.
- See Myth and Christianity: An Inquiry into the Possibility of Religion without Myth – a debate between Jaspers and Bultmann, The Noonday Press, New York, 1958.
- Celinscak, Mark (2015). Distance from the Belsen Heap: Allied Forces and the Liberation of a Concentration Camp. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-1-4426-1570-0.
- Jones, Ian (26 August 2000). "The Nazis: A Warning from History". Off the Telly. Archived from the original on 23 November 2011. Retrieved 10 June 2013.
- Schilpp, Paul Arthur, ed. (1977). The Philosophy of Karl Jaspers. Open Court Publishing Company. pp. 57–58.
- Carter, April (2013). The Political Theory of Global Citizenship. Routledge. pp. 147–148.
- Blanchot, Maurice (1997) [1964]. "Apocalypse is disappointing." Friendship. Translated by Rottenberg. Stanford University Press. pp. 101–108. ISBN 0804727597.
- Jaspers, Karl (1962). The Great Philosophers, Volume 4: The Disturbers: Descartes, Lessing, Kierkegaard, Nietzsche. Philosophers in Other Realms: Einstein, Weber, Marx. New York: Harcourt, Brace & World. p. 191. ISBN 9780151369430.
- Kaufmann, Walter A. (1980) From Shakespeare to Existentialism: An Original Study, Princeton University Press. ISBN 0691013675. p. 285.
- Jaspers, Karl (1941). "On My Philosophy".
- Hans Mommsen, "Interpretation of the Holocaust as a Challenge to Human Existence", in Arendt in Jerusalem, ed. Ascheim, p. 227.
Further reading
- Claudio Fiorillo, Fragilità della verità e comunicazione. La via ermeneutica di Karl Jaspers, ISBN 978-8-87999-463-7 Rome, Ed. Aracne, 2003.
- Azurmendi, Joxe: "Bakearen inguruko diskurtsoaren jasangaitza" about Die Schuldfrage (Jaspers, 1946) in Barkamena, kondena, tortura, Donostia, Elkar: 2012 ISBN 978-84-9027-007-3
- Engels, Huub (2009). Emil Kraepelins Traumsprache: erklären und verstehen. In Dietrich von Engelhardt und Horst-Jürgen Gerigk (ed.). Karl Jaspers im Schnittpunkt von Zeitgeschichte, Psychopathologie, Literatur und Film. p. 331-43. ISBN 978-3-86809-018-5 Heidelberg: Mattes Verlag.
- Miron, Ronny, Karl Jaspers: From Selfhood to Being. Amsterdam/New York, NY, Rodopi: 2012
- Wallraff, Charles F., Karl Jaspers - An Introduction to His Philosophy., ISBN 0-691-07164-0 Princeton, NJ, Princeton University Press: 1970.
- Xavier Tilliette, Karl Jaspers, Aubier, coll. « Théologie », 1960
External links
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2Wlc0dmRHaDFiV0l2TkM4MFlTOURiMjF0YjI1ekxXeHZaMjh1YzNabkx6TXdjSGd0UTI5dGJXOXVjeTFzYjJkdkxuTjJaeTV3Ym1jPS5wbmc=.png)
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpOW1MMlpoTDFkcGEybHhkVzkwWlMxc2IyZHZMbk4yWnk4ek5IQjRMVmRwYTJseGRXOTBaUzFzYjJkdkxuTjJaeTV3Ym1jPS5wbmc=.png)
- Publications by and about Karl Jaspers in the catalogue Helveticat of the Swiss National Library
- Existential Primer: Karl Jaspers
- Bibliografia di Karl Jaspers ed. by Claudio Fiorillo in Dialegesthai
- Current scholarly research on Jaspers (in English) is organized by the Karl Jaspers Society of North America and published in Existenz.
- Translation into English of Jaspers's 1958 peace prize acceptance speech Truth, Freedom, and Peace.
- The Philosophy Of Karl Jaspers edited by Paul Arthur Schilpp 1957
- Newspaper clippings about Karl Jaspers in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW
- Karl Jaspers: Philosopher of Otherness at the New Acropolis Online Library
Karl Theodor Jaspers ˈ j ae s p er z German kaʁl ˈjaspɐs 23 February 1883 26 February 1969 was a German Swiss psychiatrist and philosopher who had a strong influence on modern theology psychiatry and philosophy His 1913 work General Psychopathology influenced many later diagnostic criteria and argued for a distinction between primary and secondary delusions Karl JaspersJaspers in 1946BornKarl Theodor Jaspers 1883 02 23 23 February 1883 Oldenburg Grand Duchy of Oldenburg German EmpireDied26 February 1969 1969 02 26 aged 86 Basel Basel Stadt SwitzerlandEducationUniversity of Heidelberg MD 1908 SpouseGertrud Mayer m 1910 wbr Era20th century philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolNeo Kantianism early Existentialism late Existential phenomenology late Main interestsPsychiatry theology philosophy of historyNotable ideasAxial Age coining the term Existenzphilosophie Dasein and Existenz as the two states of being subject object split Subjekt Objekt Spaltung theory of communicative transcendence limit situation After being trained in and practising psychiatry Jaspers turned to philosophical inquiry and attempted to develop an innovative philosophical system He was often viewed as a major exponent of existentialism in Germany though he did not accept the label LifeKarl Jaspers in 1910 Jaspers was born in Oldenburg in 1883 to a mother from a local farming community and a jurist father He showed an early interest in philosophy but his father s experience with the legal system influenced his decision to study law at Heidelberg University Jaspers first studied law in Heidelberg and later in Munich for three semesters It soon became clear that Jaspers did not particularly enjoy law and he switched to studying medicine in 1902 with a thesis about criminology In 1910 he married Gertrud Mayer 1879 1974 the sister of his close friends Gustav Mayer and Ernst Mayer citation needed Jaspers earned his medical doctorate from the Heidelberg University medical school in 1908 and began work at a psychiatric hospital in Heidelberg under Franz Nissl the successor of Emil Kraepelin and Karl Bonhoeffer and Karl Wilmans Jaspers became dissatisfied with the way the medical community of the time approached the study of mental illness and gave himself the task of improving the psychiatric approach In 1913 Jaspers habilitated at the philosophical faculty of the Heidelberg University and gained there in 1914 a post as a psychology teacher The post later became a permanent philosophical one and Jaspers never returned to clinical practice During this time Jaspers was a close friend of the Weber family Max Weber also having held a professorship at Heidelberg In 1921 at the age of 38 Jaspers turned from psychology to philosophy expanding on themes he had developed in his psychiatric works He became a well known philosopher across Germany and Europe After the Nazi seizure of power in 1933 Jaspers was considered to have a Jewish taint judische Versippung in the jargon of the time due to his Jewish wife Gertrude Mayer and was forced to retire from teaching in 1937 In 1938 he fell under a publication ban as well Many of his long time friends stood by him however and he was able to continue his studies and research without being totally isolated But he and his wife were under constant threat of removal to a concentration camp until 30 March 1945 when Heidelberg was occupied by American troops In 1948 Jaspers moved to the University of Basel in Switzerland In 1963 he was awarded the honorary citizenship of the city of Oldenburg in recognition of his outstanding scientific achievements and services to occidental culture He remained prominent in the philosophical community and became a naturalized citizen of Switzerland living in Basel until his death on his wife s 90th birthday in 1969 Contributions to psychiatryJaspers s dissatisfaction with the popular understanding of mental illness led him to question both the diagnostic criteria and the methods of clinical psychiatry He published a paper in 1910 in which he addressed the problem of whether paranoia was an aspect of personality or the result of biological changes Although it did not broach new ideas this article introduced a rather unusual method of study at least according to the norms then prevalent Not unlike Freud Jaspers studied patients in detail giving biographical information about the patients as well as notes on how the patients themselves felt about their symptoms This has become known as the biographical method and now forms a mainstay of psychiatric and above all psychotherapeutic practice citation needed Karl Jaspers Allgemeine Psychopathologie first print 1913 Jaspers set down his views on mental illness in a book which he published in 1913 General Psychopathology This work has become a classic in the psychiatric literature and many modern diagnostic criteria stem from ideas found within it One of Jaspers s central tenets was that psychiatrists should diagnose symptoms of mental illness particularly of psychosis by their form rather than by their content For example in diagnosing a hallucination it is more important to note that a person experiences visual phenomena when no sensory stimuli account for them than to note what the patient sees What the patient sees is the content but the discrepancy between visual perception and objective reality is the form citation needed Jaspers thought that psychiatrists could diagnose delusions in the same way He argued that clinicians should not consider a belief delusional based on the content of the belief but only based on the way in which a patient holds such a belief See delusion for further discussion Jaspers also distinguished between primary and secondary delusions He defined primary delusions as autochthonous meaning that they arise without apparent cause appearing incomprehensible in terms of a normal mental process This is a slightly different use of the word autochthonous than the ordinary medical or sociological use as a synonym for indigenous Secondary delusions on the other hand he defined as those influenced by the person s background current situation or mental state Jaspers considered primary delusions to be ultimately un understandable since he believed no coherent reasoning process existed behind their formation This view has caused some controversy and the likes of R D Laing and Richard Bentall 1999 p 133 135 have criticised it stressing that this stance can lead therapists into the complacency of assuming that because they do not understand a patient the patient is deluded and further investigation on the part of the therapist will have no effect For instance Huub Engels 2009 argues that schizophrenic disordered speech may be understandable just as Emil Kraepelin s dream speech is understandable Contributions to philosophy and theologyMost commentators associate Jaspers with the philosophy of existentialism in part because he draws largely upon the existentialist roots of Nietzsche and Kierkegaard and in part because the theme of individual freedom permeates his work In Philosophy 3 vols 1932 Jaspers gave his view of the history of philosophy and introduced his major themes Beginning with modern science and empiricism Jaspers points out that as people question reality they confront borders that an empirical or scientific method simply cannot transcend At this point the individual faces a choice sink into despair and resignation or take a leap of faith toward what Jaspers calls Transcendence In making this leap individuals confront their own limitless freedom which Jaspers calls Existenz and can finally experience authentic existence citation needed Transcendence paired with the term The Encompassing in later works is for Jaspers that which exists beyond the world of time and space Jaspers s formulation of Transcendence as ultimate non objectivity or no thing ness has led many philosophers to argue that ultimately Jaspers became a monist though Jaspers himself continually stressed the necessity of recognizing the validity of the concepts both of subjectivity and of objectivity citation needed Although he rejected explicit religious doctrines including the notion of a personal God Jaspers influenced contemporary theology through his philosophy of transcendence and the limits of human experience Mystic Christian traditions influenced Jaspers himself tremendously particularly those of Meister Eckhart and of Nicholas of Cusa He also took an active interest in Eastern philosophies particularly Buddhism and developed the theory of an Axial Age a period of substantial philosophical and religious development Jaspers also entered public debates with Rudolf Bultmann wherein Jaspers roundly criticized Bultmann s demythologizing of Christianity Jaspers wrote extensively on the threat to human freedom posed by modern science and modern economic and political institutions During World War II he had to abandon his teaching post because his wife was Jewish After the war he resumed his teaching position and in his work The Question of German Guilt he unabashedly examined the culpability of Germany as a whole in the atrocities of Hitler s Third Reich The following quote about the Second World War and its atrocities was used at the end of the sixth episode of the BBC documentary series The Nazis A Warning from History That which has happened is a warning To forget it is guilt It must be continually remembered It was possible for this to happen and it remains possible for it to happen again at any minute Only in knowledge can it be prevented Jaspers s major works lengthy and detailed can seem daunting in their complexity His last great attempt at a systematic philosophy of Existenz Von der Wahrheit On Truth has not yet appeared in English However he also wrote shorter works most notably Philosophy Is for Everyman The two major proponents of phenomenological hermeneutics namely Paul Ricœur a student of Jaspers and Hans Georg Gadamer Jaspers s successor at Heidelberg both display Jaspers s influence in their works Political viewsJaspers identified with the liberal political philosophy of Max Weber although he rejected Weber s nationalism He valued humanism and cosmopolitanism and influenced by Immanuel Kant advocated an international federation of states with shared constitutions laws and international courts He strongly opposed totalitarian despotism and warned about the increasing tendency towards technocracy or a regime that regards humans as mere instruments of science or of ideological goals He was also sceptical of majoritarian democracy Thus he supported a form of governance that guaranteed individual freedom and limited government and shared Weber s belief that democracy needed to be guided by an intellectual elite His views were seen as anti communist InfluencesJaspers held Kierkegaard and Nietzsche to be two of the most important figures in post Kantian philosophy In his compilation The Great Philosophers Die grossen Philosophen he wrote I approach the presentation of Kierkegaard with some trepidation Next to Nietzsche or rather prior to Nietzsche I consider him to be the most important thinker of our post Kantian age With Goethe and Hegel an epoch had reached its conclusion and our prevalent way of thinking that is the positivistic natural scientific one cannot really be considered as philosophy Jaspers also questions whether the two philosophers could be taught For Kierkegaard at least Jaspers felt that Kierkegaard s whole method of indirect communication precludes any attempts to properly expound his thought into any sort of systematic teaching Though Jaspers was certainly indebted to Kierkegaard and Nietzsche he also owes much to Kant and Plato Walter Kaufmann argues in From Shakespeare to Existentialism that though Jaspers was certainly indebted to Kierkegaard and Nietzsche he was closest to Kant s philosophy Jaspers is too often seen as the heir of Nietzsche and Kierkegaard to whom he is in many ways less close than to Kant the Kantian antinomies and Kant s concern with the realm of decision freedom and faith have become exemplary for Jaspers And even as Kant had to do away with knowledge to make room for faith Jaspers values Nietzsche in large measure because he thinks that Nietzsche did away with knowledge thus making room for Jaspers philosophic faith In his essay On My Philosophy Jaspers states While I was still at school Spinoza was the first Kant then became the philosopher for me and has remained so Nietzsche gained importance for me only late as the magnificent revelation of nihilism and the task of overcoming it Jaspers is also indebted to his contemporaries such as Heinrich Blucher from whom he borrowed the term the anti political principle to describe totalitarianism s destruction of a space of resistance Selected bibliographyOriginal GermanPsychologie der Weltanschauungen Nikolaus CusanusTranslationsThe Question of German Guilt New York Dial Press 1947 Philosophy of Existence ISBN 0 8122 1010 7 University of Pennsylvania Press 1971 Strindberg and Van Gogh An Attempt of a Pathographic Analysis with Reference to Parallel Cases of Swedenborg and Holderlin ISBN 0 8165 0608 6 Reason and Existenz ISBN 0 87462 611 0 Way to Wisdom ISBN 0 300 00134 7 Socrates Buddha Confucius Jesus ISBN 0 15 683580 0 Philosophy Is for Everyman Man in the Modern Age 1949 English translation 1953 Nietzsche An Introduction to the Understanding of His Philosophical Activity ISBN 0 8018 5779 1 Johns Hopkins University Press 1997 University of Arizona Press 1965 Jaspers Karl 1953 The Origin and Goal of History translated by Michael Bullock New Haven CT Yale University Press Jaspers Karl 1955 Reason and Existenz translated by William Earle New York Noonday Press Jaspers Karl 1958 The Future of Mankind translated by E B Ashton Chicago University of Chicago Press Jaspers Karl 1997 General Psychopathology Volumes 1 amp 2 translated by J Hoenig and Marian W Hamilton Baltimore and London Johns Hopkins University Press See alsoDefinitions of philosophyReferencesThornhill Chris Miron Ronny 2022 Karl Jaspers in Zalta Edward N ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Spring 2022 ed Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University retrieved 16 July 2022 Ernesto Spinelli 2007 Practising Existential Psychotherapy The Relational World Sage p 52 Karl Jaspers can be considered to be among the earliest direct attempts to apply existential phenomenology to psychotherapy Gertrud Jaspers Mayer Geni Duden Karl Rechtschreibung Bedeutung Definition Duden in German Retrieved 22 October 2018 Kạrl Duden Jaspers Rechtschreibung Bedeutung Definition Duden in German Archived from the original on 22 October 2018 Retrieved 22 October 2018 Jạspers Lewis T T 2019 Karl Jaspers Salem Press Biographical Encyclopedia Retrieved 30 January 2020 Radkau Joachim 1995 Max Weber A Biography Polity Press ISBN 978 0745683423 p 29 Wolfgang U Eckart Volker Sellin Eike Wolgast Die Universitat Heidelberg im Nationalsozialismus Springer Verlag 2006 p 339 1963 Prof Dr Dr h c Karl Jaspers Stadt Oldenburg in German Oldenburg Archived from the original on 23 October 2017 See Myth and Christianity An Inquiry into the Possibility of Religion without Myth a debate between Jaspers and Bultmann The Noonday Press New York 1958 Celinscak Mark 2015 Distance from the Belsen Heap Allied Forces and the Liberation of a Concentration Camp Toronto University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 1 4426 1570 0 Jones Ian 26 August 2000 The Nazis A Warning from History Off the Telly Archived from the original on 23 November 2011 Retrieved 10 June 2013 Schilpp Paul Arthur ed 1977 The Philosophy of Karl Jaspers Open Court Publishing Company pp 57 58 Carter April 2013 The Political Theory of Global Citizenship Routledge pp 147 148 Blanchot Maurice 1997 1964 Apocalypse is disappointing Friendship Translated by Rottenberg Stanford University Press pp 101 108 ISBN 0804727597 Jaspers Karl 1962 The Great Philosophers Volume 4 The Disturbers Descartes Lessing Kierkegaard Nietzsche Philosophers in Other Realms Einstein Weber Marx New York Harcourt Brace amp World p 191 ISBN 9780151369430 Kaufmann Walter A 1980 From Shakespeare to Existentialism An Original Study Princeton University Press ISBN 0691013675 p 285 Jaspers Karl 1941 On My Philosophy Hans Mommsen Interpretation of the Holocaust as a Challenge to Human Existence in Arendt in Jerusalem ed Ascheim p 227 Further readingClaudio Fiorillo Fragilita della verita e comunicazione La via ermeneutica di Karl Jaspers ISBN 978 8 87999 463 7 Rome Ed Aracne 2003 Azurmendi Joxe Bakearen inguruko diskurtsoaren jasangaitza about Die Schuldfrage Jaspers 1946 in Barkamena kondena tortura Donostia Elkar 2012 ISBN 978 84 9027 007 3 Engels Huub 2009 Emil Kraepelins Traumsprache erklaren und verstehen In Dietrich von Engelhardt und Horst Jurgen Gerigk ed Karl Jaspers im Schnittpunkt von Zeitgeschichte Psychopathologie Literatur und Film p 331 43 ISBN 978 3 86809 018 5 Heidelberg Mattes Verlag Miron Ronny Karl Jaspers From Selfhood to Being Amsterdam New York NY Rodopi 2012 Wallraff Charles F Karl Jaspers An Introduction to His Philosophy ISBN 0 691 07164 0 Princeton NJ Princeton University Press 1970 Xavier Tilliette Karl Jaspers Aubier coll Theologie 1960External linksWikimedia Commons has media related to Karl Jaspers Wikiquote has quotations related to Karl Jaspers Publications by and about Karl Jaspers in the catalogue Helveticat of the Swiss National Library Existential Primer Karl Jaspers Bibliografia di Karl Jaspers ed by Claudio Fiorillo in Dialegesthai Current scholarly research on Jaspers in English is organized by the Karl Jaspers Society of North America and published in Existenz Translation into English of Jaspers s 1958 peace prize acceptance speech Truth Freedom and Peace The Philosophy Of Karl Jaspers edited by Paul Arthur Schilpp 1957 Newspaper clippings about Karl Jaspers in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW Karl Jaspers Philosopher of Otherness at the New Acropolis Online Library