The question of German guilt

117 pages

English language

Published Jan. 30, 2000 by Fordham University Press.

ISBN:
9780823220687
OCLC Number:
50615978

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Shortly after the Nazi government fell, a philosophy professor at Heidelberg University lectured on a subject that burned the consciousness and conscience of thinking Germans. “Are the German people guilty?” These lectures by Karl Jaspers, an outstanding European philosopher, attracted wide attention among German intellectuals and students; they seemed to offer a path to sanity and morality in a disordered world.

Jaspers, a life-long liberal, attempted in this book to discuss rationally a problem that had thus far evoked only heat and fury. Neither an evasive apology nor a wholesome condemnation, his book distinguished between types of guilt and degrees of responsibility. He listed four categories of criminal guilt (the commitment of overt acts), political guilt (the degree of political acquiescence in the Nazi regime), moral guilt (a matter of private judgment among one’s friends), and metaphysical guilt (a universally shared responsibility of those who chose to remain alive rather …

5 editions

Subjects

  • National socialism
  • World War, 1939-1945 -- Germany
  • World War, 1939-1945 -- Atrocities
  • Antisemitism -- Germany -- History -- 20th century
  • Germany -- History -- Philosophy