Dr. Felix Weltsch

How are you related to Dr. Felix Weltsch?

Connect to the World Family Tree to find out

Share your family tree and photos with the people you know and love

  • Build your family tree online
  • Share photos and videos
  • Smart Matching™ technology
  • Free!

Dr. Felix Weltsch

Birthdate:
Birthplace: 438/I, Prague, Hlavní město Praha, Hlavní město Praha, Czech Republic
Death: November 09, 1964 (80)
Jerusalem, Israel
Immediate Family:

Son of Heinrich Weltsch and Louise Weltsch
Husband of Irma Sara Weltsch
Father of Ruth Sara Gorenstein
Brother of Ing. William Willy Weltsch; Elisabeth (Betta) Riedl and Paul Weltsch

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Dr. Felix Weltsch

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Felix_Weltsch

Felix Weltsch, Dr. jur et phil. (October 6, 1884, Prague – November 9, 1964, Jerusalem), was a German-speaking Jewish librarian, philosopher, author, editor, publisher and journalist. A close friend of Max Brod and Franz Kafka, he was one of the most important Zionists in Bohemia.

Contents [show] Life[edit] Born in Prague (then in Austria-Hungary), Weltsch studied Law and Philosophy at the Charles University. He lived and worked in Prague until 15 March 1939, and left the city with Max Brod and his family on the last train out of Czechoslovakia. In Palestine, he worked as a librarian in Jerusalem until his death in 1964.

He had one daughter, Ruth Weltsch (1920–1991), with his wife Irma Herz (1892–1969). They married in August 1914. The publisher, journalist and important Zionist Robert Weltsch was Felix Weltsch's cousin and the pianist Alice Herz-Sommer was his sister-in-law.

Influence[edit] Weltsch's works around deal with the subjects of Ethics, Politics and Philosophy. For his ethical and political publications Weltsch received the Ruppin-Prize from the city of Haifa in 1952. His most important work was the Jewish-Zionist weekly paper Selbstwehr (self-defense), which he led from 1919 until 1938. With this work and hundreds of articles he became one of the most important personalities in Jewish life next to Martin Buber, Chaim Weizmann and Hugo Bergmann, his early school friend.

Weltsch wrote remarkable essays on philosophers like Henri Bergson and Christian von Ehrenfels, who was the most influential teacher for Weltsch. This was in so far unusual, as most of Weltsch's colleagues and student friends were more following the ideas of Franz Brentano. But people like Bergman and Martin Buber called him a self-thinking, independent philosopher. His influence and help to many others was great, but his role as a cultural consultant is not known to many also due to his shyness. The friendship to Kafka lasted 20 years, and the friendship to Max Brod lasted 75 years from the Piarist school in Prague to Weltschs death in 1964.

Works[edit] Anschauung und Begriff, 1913 (Co-author, Max Brod) Organische Demokratie, 1918 Gnade und Freiheit. Untersuchungen zum Problem des schöpferischen Willens in Religion und Ethik, Munich 1920 Nationalismus und Judentum, Berlin 1920 Zionismus als Weltanschauung, Jerusalem 1925 (Co-author, Max Brod) Judenfrage und Zionismus, 1929 Antisemitismus als Völkerhysterie, 1931 Thesen des Nationalhumanismus, 1934 Das Rätsel des Lachens, 1935 Das Wagnis der Mitte, 1937 Die Dialektik des Leidens (Ha-Di’alektikah shel ha-Sevel), 1944 Natur, Moral und Politik (Teva, Musar u-Mediniyyut), 1950 Religion und Humor im Leben und Werk Franz Kafkas, 1957

Marriage record: PRAHA 2710 O 1914 (i) (34/50)

view all

Dr. Felix Weltsch's Timeline

1884
October 6, 1884
438/I, Prague, Hlavní město Praha, Hlavní město Praha, Czech Republic
1920
1920
1964
November 9, 1964
Age 80
Jerusalem, Israel