
Publication details
Publisher: Springer
Place: Berlin
Year: 2018
Pages: 11-24
Series: Women in the History of Philosophy and Sciences
ISBN (Paperback): 9783319975917
Full citation:
, "Gerda Walther", in: Gerda Walther's phenomenology of sociality, psychology, and religion, Berlin, Springer, 2018


Gerda Walther
searching for the sense of things, following the traces of lived experiences
pp. 11-24
in: Antonio Calcagno (ed), Gerda Walther's phenomenology of sociality, psychology, and religion, Berlin, Springer, 2018Abstract
Gerda Walther’s life and thought can be grasped through her various interests, including human community, the paranormal, and mysticism. These seemingly divergent topics are held together through her use of Edmund Husserl’s phenomenological method. Tracing the flow of lived experience back to its point of origin, Walther distinguishes different “spheres” constitutive of the fundamental human essence (namely, the vital-bodily, the feelings of the psyche, and the sphere of the spirit, which is marked by a spiritual, personal core). Her analysis makes evident a background or embedment that lies behind the I, from which lived experiences arise. This “background” life of the I is essential not only to describe experiences like telepathy but also to grasp communal and mystical phenomena. The I-center is always necessary for lived experience to be actualized
Cited authors
Publication details
Publisher: Springer
Place: Berlin
Year: 2018
Pages: 11-24
Series: Women in the History of Philosophy and Sciences
ISBN (Paperback): 9783319975917
Full citation:
, "Gerda Walther", in: Gerda Walther's phenomenology of sociality, psychology, and religion, Berlin, Springer, 2018