Karl Jaspers

German philosopher
in full Karl Theodor Jaspers
born Feb. 23, 1883, Oldenburg, Ger.
died Feb. 26, 1969, Basel, Switz.
Main
German philosopher, one of the most important
Existentialists in Germany, who approached the subject from
man’s direct concern with his own existence. In his later
work, as a reaction to the disruptions of Nazi rule in
Germany and World War II, he searched for a new unity of
thinking that he called world philosophy.
Early life and education
Jaspers was the oldest of the three children of Karl Wilhelm
Jaspers and Henriette Tantzen. His ancestors on both sides
were peasants, merchants, and pastors who had lived in
northern Germany for generations. His father, a lawyer, was
a high constable of the district and eventually a director
of a bank.
Jaspers was delicate and sickly in his childhood. As a
consequence of his numerous childhood diseases, he developed
bronchiectasis (a chronic dilation of the bronchial tubes)
during his adolescent years, and this condition led to
cardiac decompensation (the inability of the heart to
maintain adequate circulation). These ailments were a severe
handicap throughout his adult life.
Jaspers entered the University of Heidelberg in 1901,
enrolling in the faculty of law; in the following year he
moved to Munich, where he continued his studies of law, but
without much enthusiasm. He spent the next six years
studying medicine at the Universities of Berlin, Göttingen,
and Heidelberg. After he completed his state examination to
practice medicine in 1908, he wrote his dissertation Heimweh
und Verbrechen (“Nostalgia and Crime”). In February 1909 he
was registered as a doctor. He had already become acquainted
with his future wife, Gertrud Mayer, during his student
years, and he married her in 1910.
Research in clinical psychiatry
In 1909 Jaspers became a volunteer research assistant at the
University of Heidelberg psychiatric clinic, a position he
held until 1915. The clinic was headed by the renowned
neuropathologist Franz Nissl, who had assembled under him an
excellent team of assistants. Because of his desire to learn
psychiatry in his own way without being regimented into any
particular pattern of thought by his teachers, Jaspers
elected to work in his own time, at his own pace, and with
patients in whom he was particularly interested. This was
granted to him only because he agreed to work without a
salary.
When Jaspers started his research work, clinical
psychiatry was considered to be empirically based but
lacking any underlying systematic framework of knowledge. It
dealt with different aspects of the human organism as they
might affect the behaviour of human beings suffering from
mental illness. These aspects ranged from anatomical,
physiological, and genetic to neurological, psychological,
and sociological influences. A study of these aspects opened
the way to an understanding and explanation of human
behaviour. Diagnosis was of paramount importance; therapy
was largely neglected. Aware of this situation, Jaspers
realized the conditions that were required in order to
establish psychopathology as a science: a language had to be
found that, on the basis of previously conducted research,
was capable of describing the symptoms of disease well
enough to facilitate positive recognition in other cases;
and various methods appropriate to the different spheres of
psychiatry had to be worked out.
Jaspers tried to bring the methods of Phenomenology—the
direct investigation and description of phenomena as
consciously experienced, without theories about their causal
explanation—into the field of clinical psychiatry. These
efforts soon bore fruit, and his reputation as a researcher
in the forefront of new developments in psychiatry was
established. In 1911, when he was only 28 years old, he was
requested by Ferdinand Springer, a well-known publisher, to
write a textbook on psychopathology; he completed the
Allgemeine Psychopathologie (General Psychopathology, 1965)
two years later. The work was distinguished by its critical
approach to the various methods available for the study of
psychiatry and by its attempt to synthesize these methods
into a cohesive whole.
Transition to philosophy
In 1913 Jaspers, by virtue of his status in the field of
psychology, entered the philosophical faculty—which included
a department of psychology—of the University of Heidelberg.
His academic advance in the university was rapid. In 1916 he
was appointed assistant professor in psychology; in 1920
assistant professor in philosophy; in 1921 professor in
philosophy; and in 1922 he took over the second chair in
that field. The transition from medicine to philosophy was
due in part to the fact that, while the medical faculty was
fully staffed, the philosophical faculty needed an empirical
psychologist. But the transition also corresponded to
Jaspers’ intellectual development.
In 1919 Jaspers published some of his lectures, entitled
Psychologie der Weltanschauungen (“Psychology of World
Views”). He did not intend to present a philosophical work
but rather one aimed at demarcating the limits of a
psychological understanding of man. Nevertheless, this work
touched on the border of philosophy. In it were foreshadowed
all of the basic themes that were fully developed later in
Jaspers’ major philosophical works. By investigating the
legitimate boundaries of philosophical knowledge, Jaspers
tried to clarify the relationship of philosophy to science.
Science appeared to him as knowledge of facts that are
obtained by means of scholarly methodological principles and
that are apodictically certain and universally valid.
Following Max Weber, a sociologist and historian, he
asserted that scientific principles also applied to both the
social and humanistic sciences. In contrast to science,
Jaspers considered philosophy to be a subjective
interpretation of Being, which—although prophetically
inspired—attempted to postulate norms of value and
principles of life as universally valid. As Jaspers’
understanding of philosophy deepened, he gradually discarded
his belief in the role of a prophetic vision in philosophy.
He bent all his energies toward the development of a
philosophy that would be independent of science but that
would not become a substitute for religious beliefs. Though
the resulting system presupposed science, it passed beyond
the boundaries of science in an effort to illuminate the
totality of man’s existence. For Jaspers man’s existence
meant not mere being-in-the-world but rather man’s freedom
of being. The idea of being oneself signified for Jaspers
the potentiality to realize one’s freedom of being in the
world. Thus, the task of philosophy was to appeal to the
freedom of the individual as the subject who thinks and
exists and to focus on man’s existence as the centre of all
reality.
The elaboration of these germinal ideas occupied Jasper’s
thought from 1920 to 1930. During this decade his
brother-in-law, Ernst Mayer, himself a philosopher of
repute, worked with him. During these years he also enjoyed
the friendship of Martin Heidegger. Somewhat later, this
friendship broke up because of Heidegger’s entry into the
National Socialist Party.
In the early years of the 1930s the fruits of his
intellectual labour became evident: in 1931 Die geistige
Situation der Zeit (Man in the Modern Age, 1933) was
published; in 1932 the three volumes of Philosophie
(Philosophy, 1969) appeared—perhaps the most systematic
presentation of Existential philosophy in the German
language. A book on Max Weber also appeared in 1932.
Conflict with the Nazi authorities
When Hitler came into power in 1933, Jaspers was taken by
surprise, as he had not taken National Socialism seriously.
He thought that this movement would destroy itself from
within, thus leading to a reorganization and liberation by
the other political forces active at the time. These
expectations, however, did not materialize. Because his wife
was Jewish, Jaspers qualified as an enemy of the state. From
1933 he was excluded from the higher councils of the
university but was allowed to teach and publish. In 1935 the
first part of his future work on logic, entitled Vernunft
und Existenz (Reason and Existenz, 1955), appeared; in 1936
a book on Nietzsche; in 1937 an essay on Descartes; in 1938
a further work preliminary to his logic, entitled
Existenzphilosophie (Philosophy of Existence, 1971). Unlike
many other famous intellectuals of that time, he was not
prepared to make any concessions to the doctrines of
National Socialism. Consequently, a series of decrees were
promulgated against him, including removal from his
professorship and a total ban on any further publication.
These measures effectively barred him from carrying on his
work in Germany.
Friends tried to assist him to emigrate to another
country. Permission was finally granted to him in 1942 to go
to Switzerland, but a condition was imposed by the Nazis
that required his wife to remain behind in Germany. He
refused to accept this condition and decided to stay with
his wife, notwithstanding the dangers. It became necessary
for his friends to hide his wife. Both of them had decided,
in case of an arrest, to commit suicide. In 1945 he was told
by a reliable source that his deportation was scheduled to
take place on April 14. On March 30, however, Heidelberg was
occupied by the Americans.
Disillusioned by the events of these years, Jaspers
withdrew more and more into himself. He revised the General
Psychopathology in an effort to make it represent the high
point of a free but responsible search for knowledge of man,
as distinct from science, which had betrayed man. He also
completed his work on logic, Von der Wahrheit (“Of Truth”),
the first part of which was intended to throw the light of
reason on the irrational teachings of the times. These works
appeared in print in 1946 and 1947.
Postwar development of thought
After the capitulation of Germany, Jaspers saw himself
confronted with the tasks of rebuilding the university and
helping to bring about a moral and political rebirth of the
people. He dedicated all of his energies in the postwar
years toward the accomplishment of these two tasks. He also
represented the interests of the university to the military
powers. He gathered his thoughts on how the universities
could best be rebuilt in his work Die Idee der Universität
(1946; The Idea of the University, 1959). He called for a
complete de-Nazification of the teaching staff, but this
proved to be impossible because the number of professors who
had never compromised with the Nazis was too small. It was
only gradually that the autonomous university of the
pre-Nazi years could once again assert itself in Germany.
Jaspers felt that an acknowledgment of national guilt was a
necessary condition for the moral and political rebirth of
Germany. In one of his best political works, Die Schuldfrage
(1946; The Question of German Guilt, 1947), he stated that
whoever had participated actively in the preparation or
execution of war crimes and crimes against humanity was
morally guilty. Those, however, who passively tolerated
these happenings because they did not want to become victims
of Nazism were only politically responsible. In this
respect, all survivors of this era bore the same
responsibility and shared a collective guilt. He felt that
the fact that no one could escape this collective guilt and
responsibility might enable the German people to transform
their society from its state of collapse into a more highly
developed and morally responsible democracy. The fact that
these ideas attracted hardly any attention was a further
disappointment to Jaspers. In the spring of 1948 he accepted
a professorship in philosophy in Basel, Switz. In spite of
the apparent neglect of Jaspers’ ideas of a moral
regeneration of the German people, his departure for Basel
was regarded as a betrayal by many of the German people.
Jaspers himself hoped to find there a peace of mind that
might enable him to work through and revise once again his
whole approach to the entire field of philosophy.
This revision was guided mainly by the conviction that
modern technology in the sphere of communication and warfare
had made it imperative for mankind to strive for world
unity. This new development in his thinking was defined by
him as world philosophy, and its primary task was the
creation of a mode of thinking that could contribute to the
possibility of a free world order. The transition from
existence philosophy to world philosophy was based on his
belief that a different kind of logic would make it possible
for free communication to exist among all mankind. His
thought was expressed in Der philosophische Glaube (1948;
The Perennial Scope of Philosophy, 1949) and Der
philosophische Glaube angesichts der Offenbarung (1962;
Philosophical Faith and Revelation, 1967). Since all thought
in its essence rests on beliefs, he reasoned, the task
confronting man is to free philosophical thinking from all
attachments to the transient objects of this world. To
replace previous objectifications of all metaphysical and
religious systems, Jaspers introduced the concept of the
cipher. This was a philosophical abstraction that could
represent all systems, provided that they entered into
communication with one another by means of the cipher. In
other words, the concept of the cipher enabled a common
ground to be shared by all of the various systems of
thought, thus leading to a far greater tolerance than had
ever before been possible. A world history of philosophy,
entitled Die grossen Philosophen (1957; The Great
Philosophers, 2 vol., 1962, 1966), had as its aim to
investigate to what extent all past thought could become
communicable.
Jaspers also undertook to write a universal history of
the world, called Vom Ursprung und Ziel der Geschichte
(1949; The Origin and Goal of History, 1953). At the centre
of history is the axial period (from 800 to 200 bc), during
which time all the fundamental creations that underlie man’s
current civilization came into being. Following from the
insights that came to him in preparing this work, he was led
to realize the possibility of a political unity of the world
in a 1958 work called Die Atombombe und die Zukunft des
Menschen (The Future of Mankind, 1961). The aim of this
political world union would not be absolute sovereignty but
rather world confederation, in which the various entities
could live and communicate in freedom and peace.
Under the influence of these ideas, Jaspers closely
observed, during the latter years of his life, both world
politics and the politics of Germany. When the efforts
toward democracy in Germany appeared to him to turn more and
more into a national oligarchy of parties, he wrote a bitter
attack on these tendencies in Wohin treibt die
Bundesrepublik? (1966; The Future of Germany, 1967). This
book caused much annoyance among West German politicians of
all shades. Jaspers, in turn, reacted to their unfair
reception by returning his German passport in 1967 and
taking out Swiss citizenship.
At the time of his death in 1969, Jaspers had published
30 books. In addition, he had left 30,000 handwritten pages,
as well as a large and important correspondence.
Hans Saner