Husserl’s Students

Dietrich von Hildebrand and Edith Stein: Husserl’s Students

by dr. alice von hildebrand
roman catholic books, 52 pages, $5.90

Dietrich von Hildebrand and
Edith Stein were born on the same day, October 12, just two years apart (Dietrich
in 1889, Edith in 1891), and there the similarities ended—for a while.

Dietrich was born into a
prominent and artistically-gifted family—son of the famous German sculptor
Adolf von Hildebrand—amid what he called “the superabundant love of my mother,
and all of my five sisters.” Edith, in contrast, lost her working-class father
when she was just two, and had more challenging relationships with her siblings,
as she reveals in her autobiography, Life
in a Jewish Family
. But Edith’s heroic
mother kept the family business prosperous and made certain that her children
were well-provided for and learned about their Jewish faith and heritage.

Dietrich’s sense of the
supernatural came early and unexpectedly. When he was just five, Dietrich’s
sister, Bertele, reflecting upon the lapsed Christianity of her parents, told
her brother, “Mama said at supper tonight that Christ was a very good man, but
just a man like all of us; there was nothing divine about Him.”

To Bertele’s astonishment, writes
Alice von Hildebrand in her fine joint biography of the two, “the boy jumped up
in his pajamas, stretched out his little hand, and said to her solemnly: ‘Bertele,
I swear to you that Christ is God
!’”

Reflecting that belief,
Dietrich’s mother often found the youngster prostrate in front of a reproduction
of Christ by Donatello. Even as a child, Alice comments, Dietrich “felt that
adoration is the adequate religious posture.” The love for beauty that
Dietrich’s parents had instilled in him led, providentially, to the author of
all beauty.

Edith’s religious journey was
more circuitous. After attending synagogue with her mother for years, Edith fell
away from God and religion altogether. Susceptible to bouts of despair (at one
point even welcoming visions of being run over by a bus), her love for
philosophy rescued her: It reopened her interest in religion and questions
about ultimate meaning and existence.

What eventually brought these
two together was phenomenology: Both became students of Edmund Husserl and devotees
of his Logical Investigations. While
German philosophers tended toward various forms of nihilism after Kant, “it was
Husserl’s great merit,” wrote Hilda Graef, Stein’s
biographer
, “to have dispelled these mists of relativistic agnosticism by
reaffirming the two old truths: the existence of objective truth and the
existence of a knowable world in which we live.”

Dietrich and Edith both found
in Husserl not only a refutation of modern skepticism, but a convincing
alternative. “It was for me like experiencing a sunrise,” wrote Dietrich.
Husserl had demonstrated “that the human mind could attain absolute certainty.”

Edith, for her part, would
apply Husserl’s methodology to her own writings and search for truth, now guided
by a new foundation. Their attraction to phenomenology would foreshadow its influence
on numerous other Catholic thinkers, not least the future pope and saint, Karol
Wojtyla.

Among the movement’s original
leaders was Max Scheler (subject of Wojtyla’s second dissertation), who
articulated the truths of Christian revelation and helped moved Dietrich and
Edith toward Catholicism. Scheler told Dietrich that a mark of the Church’s
truth was that it produced saints.

But it was Adolf Reinach, Husserl’s
assistant, who most directly influenced the two.

Unlike Husserl, who later
drifted toward idealism—the very philosophy he had critiqued so well in Logical
Investigations
—Reinach retained
Husserl’s most important insights, and became a Christian. His early and tragic
death in World War I left behind a young and devout widow, and affected Edith
deeply: “This was my first encounter with the Cross and the divine power it
imparts to those who bear it—it was the moment my unbelief collapsed and Christ
began to shine his light on me—Christ in the mystery of the Cross.”

During one of the two
occasions that their paths directly crossed, Dietrich and Edith met briefly at
Reinach’s funeral, jointly mourning their great friend and mentor.

By 1914, Dietrich had become
a Catholic, marking the final destination of his spiritual
progression
. Edith would formally convert in 1922 after reading the Life of St. Teresa of Avila. When she finally laid down
the book, she said to herself, “This is the Truth.”

These were not decisions
without cost. Every time Dietrich wrote about Catholic themes—like martyrdom,
purity, or the holiness of the saints—his secular colleagues accused him of
“Catholic propaganda.” Edith suffered because her loving mother could not
understand why her daughter was abandoning her Jewish heritage, even as Edith
believed she was deepening it by entering the Church.

Dietrich described his faith in
“The New World of Christianity,” an essay that expanded into his spiritual
classic, Transformation
in Christ
—written at a time when
his life was being threatened by the Nazis. Later, concerned about the terrible
loss of faith, he delayed writing The
Nature of Love
to combat errors affecting
the post-Conciliar Church.

Edith left the secular world
to teach at a Catholic institution and eventually entered the Discalced
Carmelites. Even as the Nazis closed in on her community—first in Germany, then
in the Netherlands—she was able to complete her masterpiece, Finite
and Eternal Being
(synthesizing
the work of Aquinas and Husserl), and a major work on mystical theology, The
Science of the Cross
.

Edith’s writings were, like
Dietrich’s, grounded in prayer, and she prayed not only for herself but for
others. Upon learning that Husserl had fallen gravely ill, she prayed for him, and
was moved to learn that his last moments were spent with Sr. Adelgundis
Jaegerschmid, another former student of his.

In 1942, Edith, on account of
her Jewish heritage and in retaliation for the Dutch bishops’ protest against
the Nazi persecution of Jews, was deported to Auschwitz with her sister Rosa,
who had also converted and entered the convent.

According to those who last
saw her, Edith was fearless in the face of death, and compassionate to all
those around her. She bore her own cross willingly, and awaited her Redeemer
with serenity and courage. Edith has since been canonized as Sr. Teresa Benedicta of the Cross.

Dietrich, whom Hitler tried to
assassinate, escaped to America, where he taught and wrote for nearly forty
years. Having died in much more peaceful surroundings, he “left this world,”
writes Alice, “longing for the Face to Face which God grants those who love
Him.”

Both are remembered as
philosophers whose quest for truth led to an unreserved love for God.

William Doino Jr. is a contributor to Inside the Vatican magazine, among many other publications, and writes often about religion, history and politics. He contributed an extensive bibliography of works on Pius XII to The Pius War: Responses to the Critics of Pius XII. His previous articles can be found here.

Become a fan of First Things on Facebook, subscribe to First Things via RSS, and follow First Things on Twitter.

Next
YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE

Pope Leo and Traditionis Custodes

Joseph Shaw

Not long after Traditionis Custodes was published in 2021, I flew to Rome in my official capacity…

Paul’s Ethnic Gospel

James R. Wood

Grace, not race”—so goes the tidy maxim by which many modern interpreters characterize Paul’s gospel. In this…

The Future of Catholic Theology

Thomas Joseph White

About ten years ago I found myself in China teaching a weeklong philosophy seminar on the thought…