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Edith Stein

Edith Stein (religious name Saint Teresia Benedicta a Cruce OCD; also known as Saint Teresa Benedicta of the Cross or Saint Edith Stein; 12 October 1891 – 9 August 1942) was a German Jewish philosopher who converted to Christianity and became a Discalced Carmelite nun. She is canonized as a martyr and saint of the Catholic Church; she is also one of six patron saints of Europe.


Edith Stein

Teresia Benedicta a Cruce in 1938–39
Born(1891-10-12)12 October 1891
Breslau, German Empire
(now Wrocław, Poland)
Died9 August 1942(1942-08-09) (aged 50)
Cause of deathExecution by poisonous gas
NationalityGerman
EducationSchlesische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität
University of Göttingen
University of Freiburg (PhD, 1916)
Notable work
  • On the Problem of Empathy
  • Finite and Eternal Being
  • Philosophy of Psychology and the Humanities
  • The Science of the Cross
Era20th-century philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
SchoolContinental philosophy
Phenomenology
Thomism
Carmelite spirituality
InstitutionsUniversity of Freiburg (1916–1918)
ThesisDas Einfühlungsproblem in seiner historischen Entwicklung und in phänomenologischer Betrachtung (The Empathy Problem as it Developed Historically and Considered Phenomenologically) (1916)
Doctoral advisorEdmund Husserl
Main interests
Metaphysics, phenomenology, philosophy of mind and epistemology
Notable ideas

She was born into an observant Jewish family, but had become an agnostic by her teenage years. Moved by the tragedies of World War I, in 1915, she took lessons to become a nursing assistant and worked in an infectious diseases hospital. After completing her doctoral thesis at the University of Freiburg in 1916, she obtained an assistantship there.

From reading the life of the reformer of the Carmelite Order, Saint Teresa of Ávila,[5] Edith Stein was drawn to the Christian faith. She was baptized on 1 January 1922 into the Catholic Church. At that point, she wanted to become a Discalced Carmelite nun but was dissuaded by her spiritual mentor, the abbot of Beuron Archabbey. She then taught at a Catholic school of education in Speyer. As a result of the requirement of an "Aryan certificate" for civil servants promulgated by the Nazi government in April 1933 as part of its Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service, she had to quit her teaching position.

Edith Stein was admitted as a postulant to the Discalced Carmelite monastery in Cologne on 14 October, on the first vespers of the feast of Saint Teresa of Ávila, and received the religious habit as a novice in April 1934, taking the religious name Teresia Benedicta a Cruce (Teresia in remembrance of Saint Teresa of Ávila, Benedicta in honour of Saint Benedict of Nursia). She made her temporary vows on 21 April 1935, and her perpetual vows on 21 April 1938.

The same year, Teresa Benedicta a Cruce and her biological sister Rosa, by then also a convert and an extern (tertiary of the Order, who would handle the community's needs outside the monastery), were sent to the Carmelite monastery in Echt, Netherlands, for their safety. In response to the pastoral letter from the Dutch bishops on July 26, 1942, in which they made the treatment of the Jews by the Nazis a central theme, all baptized Catholics of Jewish origin (according to police reports, 244 people) were arrested by the Gestapo on the following Sunday, 2 August 1942. They were sent to the Auschwitz concentration camp, where they were murdered in a gas chamber on 9 August 1942.

Early life

 
Icon in Bad Bergzabern. The scroll shows a quote from her works: "The innermost essence of love is self-offering. The entryway to all things is the Cross"

Edith Stein was born in Breslau (now Wrocław, Poland), Lower Silesia, into an observant Jewish family. She was the youngest of 11 children and was born on Yom Kippur, the holiest day of the Hebrew calendar; these facts combined to make her a favorite of her mother.[6] She was a very gifted child who enjoyed learning, in a home where her mother encouraged critical thinking, and she greatly admired her mother's strong religious faith. By her teenage years, however, Stein had become an agnostic.

Though her father died while she was young, her widowed mother was determined to give her children a thorough education and consequently sent Edith to study at the Schlesische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität in Breslau. At age 19, Stein moved with her family to Breslau to a house bought by her mother, which she later described in her Autobiography. Today, Edith Stein House hosts a museum dedicated to the history of the Stein family.

Academic career

In April 1913, Stein arrived at the University of Göttingen in order to study for the summer semester with Edmund Husserl. By the end of the summer, she had decided to pursue her doctoral degree in philosophy under Husserl and chose empathy as her thesis topic. Her studies were interrupted in July 1914 because of the outbreak of World War I. She then served as a volunteer wartime Red Cross nurse in an infectious diseases hospital at Mährisch Weißkirchen in 1915. In 1916, Stein moved to the University of Freiburg in order to complete her dissertation on Empathy.[7][8] Shortly before receiving her degree from Freiburg she agreed to become Husserl's assistant there. Her dissertation entitled Das Einfühlungsproblem in seiner historischen Entwicklung und in phänomenologischer Betrachtung[9] (The Empathy Problem as it Developed Historically and Considered Phenomenologically)[10][a] was awarded a doctorate in philosophy with the summa cum laude honor.[b] Stein then became a member of the faculty at Freiburg, where she worked until 1918 as a teaching assistant to Husserl, who had transferred to that institution.[10] The University of Göttingen rejected her habilitation thesis in 1919.[10] Although Stein passed her doctoral examination with distinction, her attempts to habilitate failed due to the fact that Stein was a woman.[10]

Her rejected habilitation thesis, Beiträge zur philosophischen Begründung der Psychologie und der Geisteswissenschaften[13] (Contributions to the Philosophical Foundations of Psychology and the Human Sciences), was published in the Jahrbuch für Philosophie und phänomenologische Forschung in 1922.[10] She is categorized as a realistic phenomenologist.[14]

While Stein had earlier contacts with Catholicism, it was her reading of the autobiography of the mystic Teresa of Ávila during summer holidays in Bad Bergzabern in 1921 that prompted her conversion and eventually the desire to seek the life of a Discalced Carmelite. Baptized on 1 January 1922, and dissuaded by her spiritual advisers from immediately seeking entry to the enclosed and hidden life of a Carmelite nun, Stein obtained a position to teach at the Dominican nuns' school in Speyer from 1923 to 1931. While there, Stein translated Thomas Aquinas' De Veritate (Of Truth) into German, familiarized herself with Catholic philosophy in general and tried to bridge the phenomenology of her former teacher, Husserl, to Thomism. She visited Husserl and Heidegger at Freiburg in April 1929, the same month that Heidegger gave a speech to Husserl on his 70th birthday. In 1932 she became a lecturer at the Catholic Church-affiliated Institute for Scientific Pedagogy in Münster, but antisemitic legislation passed by the Nazi government forced her to resign the post in 1933. In a letter to Pope Pius XI, she denounced the Nazi regime and asked the Pope to openly denounce the regime "to put a stop to this abuse of Christ's name."

As a child of the Jewish people who, by the grace of God, for the past eleven years has also been a child of the Catholic Church, I dare to speak to the Father of Christianity about that which oppresses millions of Germans. For weeks we have seen deeds perpetrated in Germany which mock any sense of justice and humanity, not to mention love of neighbor. For years the leaders of National Socialism have been preaching hatred of the Jews. … But the responsibility must fall, after all, on those who brought them to this point and it also falls on those who keep silent in the face of such happenings. Everything that happened and continues to happen on a daily basis originates with a government that calls itself 'Christian'. For weeks not only Jews but also thousands of faithful Catholics in Germany, and, I believe, all over the world, have been waiting and hoping for the Church of Christ to raise its voice to put a stop to this abuse of Christ's name. Is not this idolization of race and governmental power which is being pounded into the public consciousness by the radio open heresy? Isn't the effort to destroy Jewish blood an abuse of the holiest humanity of our Savior, of the most blessed Virgin and the apostles? Is not all this diametrically opposed to the conduct of our Lord and Savior, who, even on the cross, still prayed for his persecutors? And isn't this a black mark on the record of this Holy Year which was intended to be a year of peace and reconciliation? We all, who are faithful children of the Church and who see the conditions in Germany with open eyes, fear the worst for the prestige of the Church, if the silence continues any longer.

Her letter received no answer, and it is not known for certain whether the Pope ever saw it.[15] However, in 1937 the Pope issued an encyclical written in German, Mit brennender Sorge (according to its German first words, lit. "With deep anxiety"[16]), in which he criticized Nazism, listed violations of the Concordat between Germany and the Church of 1933, and condemned antisemitism.

Discalced Carmelite nun and martyr

Stein entered the Discalced Carmelite monastery St. Maria vom Frieden (Our Lady of Peace) in Cologne-Lindenthal in October 1933 and took the religious name Teresia Benedicta a Cruce (Teresa Benedicta of the Cross). In Cologne she wrote her metaphysical book Endliches und ewiges Sein (Finite and Eternal Being), which attempted to combine the philosophies of St. Thomas Aquinas, Duns Scotus and Husserl.

To avoid the growing Nazi threat, the Order transferred Edith and her sister, Rosa, who was also a convert and an extern sister of the Carmel, to the Discalced Carmelite monastery in Echt, Netherlands. There she wrote Studie über Joannes a Cruce: Kreuzeswissenschaft ("Studies on John of the Cross: The Science of the Cross"). In her testament of 9 June 1939[17] she wrote:

I beg the Lord to take my life and my death … for all concerns of the sacred hearts of Jesus and Mary and the holy church, especially for the preservation of our holy order, in particular the Carmelite monasteries of Cologne and Echt, as atonement for the unbelief of the Jewish People, and that the Lord will be received by his own people and his kingdom shall come in glory, for the salvation of Germany and the peace of the world, at last for my loved ones, living or dead, and for all God gave to me: that none of them shall go astray.

Stein's move to Echt prompted her to be more devout and even more observant of the Carmelite rule. After having her teaching position revoked by the implementation of the Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service, Stein quickly eased back into the role of instructor at the convent in Echt, teaching both fellow sisters and students within the community Latin and philosophy.[18]

Even prior to the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands, Stein believed she would not survive the war, going so far as to write the Prioress to request her permission to "allow [Stein] to offer [her]self to the heart of Jesus as a sacrifice of atonement for true peace" and made a will. Her fellow sisters would later recount how Stein began "quietly training herself for life in a concentration camp, by enduring cold and hunger" after the Nazi invasion of the Netherlands in May 1940.[18]

Ultimately, she would not be safe in the Netherlands. The Dutch Bishops' Conference had a public statement read in all churches across the nation on 20 July 1942 condemning Nazi racism. In a retaliatory response on 26 July 1942 the Reichskommissar of the Netherlands, Arthur Seyss-Inquart, ordered the arrest of all Jewish converts who had previously been spared. Along with two hundred and forty-three baptized Jews living in the Netherlands, Stein was arrested by the SS on 2 August 1942. Stein and her sister Rosa were imprisoned at the concentration camps of Amersfoort and Westerbork before being deported to Auschwitz. A Dutch official at Westerbork was so impressed by her sense of faith and calm,[19] he offered her an escape plan. Stein vehemently refused his assistance, stating: "If somebody intervened at this point and took away [her] chance to share in the fate of [her] brothers and sisters, that would be utter annihilation."[18]

On 7 August 1942, early in the morning, 987 Jews were deported to the Auschwitz concentration camp. It was probably on 9 August that Sister Teresa Benedicta of the Cross, her sister Rosa, and many more Jewish people were killed in a gas chamber.[6][20]

Philosophy

Stein's development as a philosopher is frequently divided into three periods: an early, phenomenological (1916-25), a middle, comparative (1925-33) and a late, Christian (1935-42). In reality the same factors work themselves out throughout her work and propels it forward: 1. a profound understanding of and commitment to the phenomenological method as taught by Husserl and Reinach; 2. a deep sense of responsibility to the other for what we believe and 3. an acceptance of my own inability to form a complete, meaningful worldview without divine assistance. The three periods are best understood as stages of integration of these three factors, with Stein's baptism New Year's Day 1922, marking a decisive step on the way and her entering Carmel 14 October 1933 marking another.

The early phenomenological period (1916-25)

Stein's dissertation on empathy was according to her own account an attempt to fill a gap in Husserl's work. In her autobiographical Life in a Jewish Family, she recalled that he took empathy to be the crucial act in which intersubjectivity was established, but nowhere detailed exactly what was meant by it. She therefore wanted to undertake this task and thereby clarify this crucial idea for the development of the phenomenological movement. While working as Husserl's assistant (1916-18) she edited Husserl's manuscripts of what was later to be published as Ideas II and III, and in the process came to understand the extraordinary importance this act has for our constitution of the intersubjective world, and in particular for the objects studied by psychology and the humanities. When she resigned from her position as Husserl's assistant, the phenomenological constitution of those objects: the psyche and the spirit, it was thus the first work she undertook. The result was the two treatises of Philosophy of Psychology and the Humanities, published in Husserl's Jahrbuch 1922: Psychic Causality and Individual and Community. From this period also dates Introduction to Philosophy, An Investigation Concerning the State, and very importantly Freedom and Grace.

The middle comparative period (1925-33)

Encouraged to study and compare Thomas Aquinas' philosophy with that of the phenomenological movement, Stein embarked on a translation project of Aquinas' De Veritate, which was to be published in two volumes in 1932. The work, which translates Aquinas' way of thinking into a modern German idiom and restyles it as a contemporary academic treatise, occasioned that Stein engaged with Aquinas' thought as a phenomenologist, i.e. as someone interested in the matters discussed by Aquinas, as distinct from providing an interpretation of Aquinas' thought or writing in prolongation of it as a thomist. The most important works from this period are 'Husserl and Aquinas: A Comparison', in which she discusses the differing methodologies of Husserl and Aquinas and accounts for their differences, Potency and Act, in which she attempts a phenomenological investigation of 'potency' and 'act' and the twin work of anthropology: The Structure of the Human Person. Philosophical Anthropology and What is the Human Being? Theological Anthropology (the second volume remains a highly developed draft rather than a completed work, since Stein's lectures were canceled in 1933). During this period she also lectures on women's education and vocation and on education in general to very large audiences and to great acclaim. In these lectures, published in ESGA 13 and ESGA 16, she works out for herself the important questions concerning social type and essence, which find a fuller development in The Structure of the Human Person.

The later Christian period (1934-42)

The first task Stein was assigned in the monastery was the writing of her incomplete autobiography, Life in a Jewish Family, a confession of her life as much as an apology in the literal sense for being of Jewish descent. Her next assignment was to prepare Potency and Act for publication, a task she accomplished by writing a new book: Finite and Eternal Being – An Ascent to the Meaning of Being. This work proposed a phenomenological doctrine of being (Seinslehre), which knows itself to be Christian, i.e. as taking Christian Revelation to contribute towards the view of the world in which it looks for and finds the meaning of being in being's unfolding. Stein also worked on Dionysius the Areopagite, translating his works into German and writing (for him) a work supposed to be lost on symbolic theology. Stein's final work, the Science of the Cross, was a commentary on St. John of the Cross, which developed the specifically Carmelite understanding of the depths of the soul, already of interest to Stein in her early work.

Legacy and veneration


Teresia Benedicta a Cruce

 
Virgin and martyr
Venerated inCatholic Church
Anglican Communion
Beatified1 May 1987, Cologne, Germany by Pope John Paul II
Canonized11 October 1998, Vatican City by Pope John Paul II
Feast9 August
AttributesDiscalced Carmelite nun's habit (sometimes with a Yellow badge), cross, a book or scroll with Hebrew letters, burning bush, martyr's palm
PatronageEurope; loss of parents; converted Jews; martyrs;
World Youth Day[21]

Teresa Benedicta of the Cross was beatified as a martyr on 1 May 1987 in Cologne, Germany, by Pope John Paul II and then canonized by him 11 years later on 11 October 1998 in Rome. The miracle that was the basis for her canonization is the cure of Benedicta McCarthy, a little girl who had swallowed a large amount of paracetamol (acetaminophen), which causes hepatic necrosis. The young girl's father, Emmanuel Charles McCarthy, a priest of the Melkite Greek Catholic Church, immediately called together relatives and prayed for Teresa's intercession.[22] Shortly thereafter the nurses in the intensive care unit saw her sit up, completely healthy. Ronald Kleinman, a pediatric specialist at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston who treated the girl, testified about her recovery to Church tribunals, stating: "I was willing to say that it was miraculous."[22] McCarthy would later attend Sr. Teresa Benedicta's canonization.

Teresa Benedicta of the Cross is one of the six patron saints of Europe, together with Benedict of Nursia, Cyril and Methodius, Bridget of Sweden, and Catherine of Siena.

Today there are many schools named in tribute to her, for example in her hometown, Lubliniec, Poland [23] Darmstadt, Germany,[24] Hengelo, Netherlands,[25] and Mississauga, Ontario, Canada.[26] Also named for her are a women's dormitory at the University of Tübingen[27] and a classroom building at The College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Massachusetts.

Lubliniec in Poland hosts Edith Stein Museum (Muzeum Pro Memoria Edith Stein) localised on the first floor of the Courant family house (Edith Stein's grandparents' family home). Wroclaw hosts a museum called Edith Stein House localised in the house Edith's mother bought for the family in 1919 on the street then called Michaelisstrasse 38 (today Nowowiejska 38).

In Vienna, the Edith-Stein-Haus at Ebendorferstraße 8 is the main location of the Catholic University Chaplaincy and the university pastoral care of the Archdiocese of Vienna. In the spirit of Karl Strobl's model of the "Catholic Student House", the house is also home to a chapel consecrated to Edith Stein as well as a dormitory for about 90 students.[28]

The philosopher Alasdair MacIntyre published a book in 2006 titled Edith Stein: A Philosophical Prologue, 1913–1922, in which he contrasted her living of her own personal philosophy with Martin Heidegger, whose actions during the Nazi era, according to MacIntyre, suggested a "bifurcation of personality."[29]

Playwright Arthur Giron wrote Edith Stein, a play that was inspired by Stein's life. It was produced at the Pittsburgh Public Theater in 1988.[30]

In 1988, Edith Stein was pictured on a German postage stamp with Rupert Mayer SJ in honor of their beatification.

In 1995, Hungarian film director Márta Mészáros made a movie about the life and death of Edith Stein with the title A hetedik szoba (The Seventh Room/Chamber), starring Maia Morgenstern.

In 1999, a memorial statue by German sculptor Bert Gerresheim was dedicated in Cologne, Germany. The statue comprises three different views of Stein reflecting her Jewish and Christian faith, and a pile of empty shoes representing the victims of the holocaust.

In 2007, Stein's life and work was dramatised in the novel Winter Under Water (Picador, London) by author James Hopkin.[31]

In 2008, the first Stolperstein (Polish: kamienie pamięci) that was ever laid in Poland was placed near Edith Stein's childhood home at 38 ul. Nowowiejska (formerly the Michaelisstraße) in Wrocław. Other Stolpersteine for her are in Cologne (several) and Freiburg.

In 2009, her bust was installed at the Walhalla Memorial near Regensburg, Germany. In June 2009 the International Association for the Study of the Philosophy of Edith Stein (IASPES) was founded, and held its first international conference at Maynooth University, Ireland, in order to advance the philosophical writings of Stein.[32]

On 6 June 2014, the 70th anniversary of D-Day, a bell dedicated to her was named by Prince Charles at Bayeux Cathedral.

Also in 2014, the book Edith Stein and Regina Jonas: Religious Visionaries in the Time of the Death Camps, by Emily Leah Silverman, was published.

In 2022, Stein was officially added to the Episcopal Church liturgical calendar with a feast day on 9 August.[33]

Controversy as to the cause of her murder

The beatification of St. Teresa Benedicta as a martyr generated criticism. Critics argued that she was murdered because she was Jewish by birth, rather than for her Christian faith,[34] and that, in the words of Daniel Polish, the beatification seemed to "carry the tacit message encouraging conversionary activities" because "official discussion of the beatification seemed to make a point of conjoining Stein's Catholic faith with her death with 'fellow Jews' in Auschwitz."[35][36] The position of the Catholic Church is that St. Teresa Benedicta also died because of the Dutch episcopacy's public condemnation of Nazi racism in 1942; in other words, that she died because of the moral teaching of the Church and is thus a true martyr.[6][37]

Gallery

Bibliography

For a detailed chronology of Stein's writings see IASPES' website.

Primary literature

In German

  • 1917, Zum Problem der Einfühlung Halle: Buchdruckerei des Waisenhauses. (Doctoral Thesis).
  • 1916-1220, Einführung in die Philosophie, lectures taught at a proseminar in Freiburg in 1916-1918 and, later, privately in Breslau in Edith Stein House in 1920[38]
  • 1921, Freiheit und Gnade. This work has for years been wrongly identified and quoted as Die ontische Struktur der Person und ihre erkenntnistheoretische Problematik, a title that appeared in print after WWII due to an incorrect connection between title page and work.[39][40]
  • 1922, Beiträge zur philosophischen Begründung der Psychologie und der Geisteswissenschaften, in Jahrbuch für Philosophie und phänomenologische Forschung 5, Halle: Max Niemeyer, 1-284.
  • 1924, Was ist Phänomenologie?
  • 1924, Was ist Philosophie? Ein Gespräch zwischen Edmund Husserl und Thomas von Aquino
  • 1925, Eine Untersuchung über den Staat, in Jahrbuch für Philosophie und phänomenologische Forschung 7, Halle: Max Niemeyer, 1-123.
  • 1929, Husserls Phänomenologie und die Philosophie des heiligen Thomas von Aquino. Versuch einer Gegenüberstellung, in Festschrift Edmund Husserl zum 70. Geburtstag gewidmet, (Jahrbuch für Philosophie und phänomenologische Forschung 10), Ergänzungsband, Halle: Max Niemeyer, 315–338.
  • 1930/1931, Die weltanschauliche Bedeutung der Phänomenologie
  • 1931, Potenz und Akt. Studien zu einer Philosophie des Seins
  • 1932, Der Aufbau der menschlichen Person. Vorlesung zur philosophischen Anthropologie
  • 1933, Was ist der Mensch? Theologische Anthropologie. Das Menschenbild unseres Glaubens
  • 1928-1933, Die Frau. Fragestellungen und Reflexionen
  • 1935/1936, Endliches und ewiges Sein. Versuch eines Aufstiegs zum Sinn des Seins, written with two supplements:
    • Die Seelenburg zu Endliches und ewiges Sein
    • Martin Heidegger’s Existenzphilosophie
  • 1940/1941, Wege der Gotteserkenntnis. Studie zu Dionysius Areopagita
  • 1941/1942, Kreuzeswissenschaft. Studie über Johannes vom Kreuz
  • 1962, Welt und Person (posthumous publication)

Contemporary critical edition

(Edith Stein Gesamtausgabe, Herder 2000-2020) with English and Polish translations available[41]

  • ESGA 1: Stein E., Aus dem Leben einer jüdischen Familie und weitere autobiographische Beiträge, Herder, Freiburg 2002.
    1. English translation: CWES 1: Life in a Jewish Family: Her Unfinished Autobiographical Account, trans. Josephine Koeppel in: The Collected Works of Edith Stein. Volume 1, ICS Publications, Washington D.C. 1986;
    2. Polish translation: ESGA PL 1: Dzieje pewnej rodziny żydowskiej, trans. Immakulata J. Adamska, Wydawnictwo Karmelitów Bosych, Cracow 2005.
  • ESGA 2: Stein E., Selbstbildnis in Briefen I. Erster Teil 1916-1933, Herder, Freiburg 2000.
    1. English translation: CWES 5: Self-portrait in Letters 1916-1942, trans. Josephine Koeppel in: The Collected Works of Edith Stein. Volume 1, ICS Publications, Washington D.C. 1993.
    2. Polish translation: Autoportret z listów I, trans. Immakulata J. Adamska, Anna Talarek, Wydawnictwo Karmelitów Bosych, Cracow 2003.
  • ESGA 3: Stein E., Selbstbildnis in Briefen II. Zweiter Teil 1933-1942, Herder, Freiburg 2000.
    1. Polish translation: ESGA PL 3: Autoportret z listów II, trans. Immakulata J. Adamska, Anna Talarek, Wydawnictwo Karmelitów Bosych, Cracow 2003.
  • ESGA 4: Stein E., Selbstbildnis in Briefen III. Briefe an Roman Ingarden, Herder, Freiburg 2005.
    1. English translation: CWES 12: Self-Portrait in Letters, trans. Hugh Candler Hunt, ICS Publications, Washington D.C. 2001.
    2. Polish translation ESGA PL 4: Autoportret z listów. Cz. 3. Listy do Romana Ingardena trans. Małgorzata Klentak-Zabłocka, Andrzej Wajs, Wydawnictwo Karmelitów Bosych, Cracow 2003; an older Polish translation: PL 4: Spór o prawdę istnienia. Listy Edith Stein do Romana Ingardena, trans. Małgorzata Klentak-Zabłocka, Andrzej Wajs, Wydawnictwo M, Warsaw 1994.
  • ESGA 5: Stein E., Zum Problem der Einfühlung, Herder, Freiburg-Basel-Wien 2008.
    1. English translation: CWES 3: On the problem of empathy, trans. Waltraut Stein, ICS Publications, Washington D.C. 1989.
    2. Polish translation: O zagadnieniu wczucia, trans. Danuta Gierulanka, Jerzy F. Gierula, Znak, Cracow 1988.
  • ESGA 6: Stein E., Beiträge zur philosophischen Begründung der Psychologie und der Geisteswissenschaften, Herder, Freiburg-Basel-Wien 2010.
    1. English translation: CWES 7: Philosophy of Psychology and the Humanities, trans. Mary Catharine Baseheart, Marianne Sawicki, ICS Publications, Washington D.C. 2000;
    2. Polish translation: ESGA PL 6: Filozofia psychologii i humanistyki, trans. Piotr Janik SJ, Marcin Baran SJ, Jolanta Gaca, Wydawnictwo Karmelitów Bosych, Cracow 2016.
  • ESGA 7: Stein E., Eine Untersuchung über den Staat, Herder, Freiburg-Basel-Wien 2006.
    1. English translation: CWES 10: An Investigation Concerning the State, trans. Marianne Sawicki, ICS Publication, Washington D.C. 2006.
  • ESGA 8: Stein E., Einführung in die Philosophie, Herder, Freiburg-Basel-Wien 2004.
    1. No translation is available.
  • ESGA 9: Stein E., ‘Freiheit und Gnade’ und weitere Beiträge zu Phänomenologie und Ontologie, Herder, Freiburg-Basel-Wien 2014.
    1. English translation: CWES 8: Husserl and Aquinas. A Comparison, in: CWES 8: Knowledge and Faith, trans. Walter Redmond, ICS Publications, Washington D.C. 2000, pp. 1-64. Older translation is available in: M. C. Baseheart, Person in the World: Introduction to the Philosophy of Edith Stein, Kluwer, Dordrecht 1997, pp. 129-144, transl. by M. C. Baseheart.
    2. Polish translation of Was Ist Philosophie? Ein Gespräch zwischen Edmund Husserl und Thomas von Aquino is Co to jest filozofia? Rozmowa między Edmundem Husserlem a Tomaszem z Akwinu, in: PL 9: Światło rozumu i wiary. Duchowa droga Edyty Stein św. Teresy Benedykty od Krzyża, Totaldruk, Poznań 2002, pp. 29-77.
  • ESGA 10: Stein E., Potenz und Akt. Studien zu einer Philosophie des Seins, Herder, Freiburg-Basel-Wien 2005.
    1. English translation: CWES 11: Potency and Act, Studies Toward a Philosophy of Being, trans. Walter Redmond, ICS Publications, Washington D.C. 2009.
  • ESGA 11/12: Stein E., Endliches und ewiges Sein. Versuch eines Aufstiegs zum Sinn des Seins. Anhang: Martin Heideggers Existenzphilosophie. Die Seelenburg, Herder, Freiburg-Basel-Wien 2006.
    1. English translation: CWES 9: Finite and eternal being, trans. K. F. Reinhardt, ICS Publications, Washington D.C. 2002.
    2. Polish translation: PL 11/12a: Byt skończony a byt wieczny, trans. Immakulata J. Adamska OCD, W drodze, Poznań 1995. The appendixes (Die Seelenburg and Martin Heideggers Existenzphilosophie) are translated in: PL 11/12b: Twierdza duchowa, trans. Immakulata J. Adamska, Zysk i S-ka, Poznań 2006, 93-122 and 135-203.
  • ESGA 13: Stein E., Die Frau. Fragestellungen und Reflexionen, Freiburg-Basel-Wien 2000, Herder.
    1. English translation: CWES 2: The Collected Works of Edith Stein. Volume II. Essays on Woman, trans. F. M. Oben, Washington D.C. 1996, ICS Publications.
    2. Polish translation: ESGA PL 13: Kobieta. Pytania i refleksje, trans. Wiesław Szymona, Wydawnictwo Karmelitów Bosych, Cracow 2015.
  • ESGA 14: Stein E., Der Aufbau der menschlichen Person. Vorlesung zum philosophischen Anthropologie, Freiburg-Basel-Wien 1994, Herder, Freiburg 2004.
    1. Polish translation: ESGA PL 14: Budowa osoby ludzkiej. Wykład z antropologii filozoficznej, trans. Grzegorz Sowinski, Wydawnictwo Karmelitów Bosych, Cracow 2015.
    2. Italian translation: La struttura della persona umana, trans. L. Gelber-M. Linssen, M. d’Ambra, Città Nuova, Rome 2000.
  • ESGA 15: Stein E., Was is der Mensch? Theologische Anthropologie, Freiburg-Basel-Wien 2005, Herder.
    1. Polish translation: ESGA PL 15: Czym jest człowiek? Antropologia teologiczna, trans. Grzegorz Sowinski, Wydawnictwo Karmelitów Bosych, Cracow 2012.
  • ESGA 16: Stein E., Bildung und Entfaltung der Individualität. Beiträge zum christlichen Erziehungsauftrag, Herder, Freiburg-Basel-Wien 2001.
  • ESGA 17: Stein E., Wege der Gotteserkenntnis. Studie zu Dionysius Areopagita und Übersetzung seiner Werke, Herder, Freiburg-Basel-Wien 2013.
    1. Polish translation: Drogi poznania Boga: studium o Dionizym Areopagicie i przekład jego dzieł, trans. Grzegorz Sowinski, Wydawnictwo Karmelitów Bosych, Cracow 2006.
  • ESGA 18: Kreuzeswissenschaft. Studie über Johannes vom Kreuz, Herder, Freiburg-Basel-Wien 2003.
    1. English translation: CWES 6: The Science of the Cross, trans. Josephine Koeppel, ICS Publications, Washington D.C. 2002;
    2. Polish translation: Wiedza Krzyża. Studium o św. Janie od Krzyża, trans. Immakulata J. Adamska, Grzegorz Sowinski, Wydawnictwo Karmelitów Bosych, Cracow 2013.
  • ESGA 19: Geistliche Texte I, Freiburg-Basel-Wien 2009, Herder.
    1. English translation: The Hidden Life: Essays, Meditations, Spiritual Texts, trans. Waltraut Stein in: The Collected Works of Edith Stein. Volume IV, ICS Publications, Washington D.C. 2014.
  • ESGA 20: Geistliche Texte II, Freiburg-Basel-Wien 2007, Herder.
    1. English translation: ESGA EN 4: The Hidden Life: Essays, Meditations, Spiritual Texts, trans. Waltraut Stein in: The Collected Works of Edith Stein. Volume IV, ICS Publications, Washington D.C. 2014.
  • ESGA 21: Übersetzung von John Henry Newman, Die Idee der Universität, Freiburg-Basel-Wien 2014, Herder.
  • ESGA 22: Übersetzung von John Henry Newman, Briefe und Texte zur ersten Lebenshälfte (1801–1846), Freiburg-Basel-Wien 2004, Herder.
  • ESGA 23: Übersetzung: Des Hl. Thomas von Aquino Untersuchungen über die Wahrheit - Quaestiones disputatae de veritate 1, Freiburg-Basel-Wien 2014, Herder.
  • ESGA 24: Übersetzung: Des Hl. Thomas von Aquino Untersuchungen über die Wahrheit - Quaestiones disputatae de veritate 2, Freiburg-Basel-Wien 2002, Herder.
  • ESGA 25: Übersetzung von Alexandre Koyré, Descartes und die Scholastik, Freiburg-Basel-Wien 2008, Herder.
  • ESGA 26: Übersetzung: Thomas von Aquin, Über das Seiende und das Wesen - De ente et essentia - mit den Roland-Gosselin-Exzerpten. Eingeführt und bearbeitet von Andreas Speer und Francesco Valerio Tommasi, Freiburg-Basel-Wien 2008, Herder.
  • ESGA 27: Miscellanea thomistica, Freiburg-Basel-Wien 2013, Herder.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Parts II–IV of the dissertation were published under the title Zum Problem der Einfühlung (On the Problem of Empathy) in 1917.[11]
  2. ^ In his 2007 M.A. thesis, "The Philosophical Contributions of Edith Stein",[12] John C. Wilhelmsson argues that Stein influenced the work of Husserl significantly during this period.

References

  1. ^ a b Ferreira, Danilo Souza (2018). "EMPATHY: An intellectual history of Edith Stein 1891-1942". Academia.edu. Instituto de Ciências Humanas e Sociais/UFOP. Retrieved 11 August 2022.
  2. ^ "Edith Stein" at EWTN.com.
  3. ^ "The Science of the Cross (CWES, vol. 6)". ICS Publications.
  4. ^ Oben, Freda Mary (2001). The Life and Thought of St. Edith Stein. ISBN 9780818908460. John Paul II. In his philosophical work, he clearly shows the influence of Edith Stein
  5. ^ Teresa de Ávila, Libro de la vida
  6. ^ a b c "Teresa Benedict of the Cross Edith Stein". Vatican News Service.
  7. ^ Elisa Magrì, Dermot Moran (eds.), Empathy, Sociality, and Personhood: Essays on Edith Stein's Phenomenological Investigations, Springer, 2018, p. 12.
  8. ^ Stein, Edith, Saint, 1891-1942 (1989). On the problem of empathy (Third Revised ed.). Washington, D.C. ISBN 0-935216-11-1. OCLC 19324020.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  9. ^ Edith Stein – History of Women Philosophers and Scientists
  10. ^ a b c d e Thomas Szanto, Dermot Moran. "Edith Stein". In Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  11. ^ M. Sawicki (2013). Body, Text, and Science: The Literacy of Investigative Practices and the Phenomenology of Edith Stein. Springer. p. 90. ISBN 978-9401139793.
  12. ^ Wilhelmsson, John Christopher, "The philosophical contributions of Edith Stein" (2007). Master's Thesis.
  13. ^ Lebech, Mette. "Study Guide to Edith Stein's Philosophy of Psychology and the Humanities" (PDF). Faculty of Philosophy, NUIM, Maynooth. Archived (PDF) from the original on 10 October 2022.
  14. ^ Cibangu, Sylvain K.; Hepworth, Mark (April 2016). "The uses of phenomenology and phenomenography: A critical review". Library & Information Science Research. 38 (2): 150. doi:10.1016/j.lisr.2016.05.001.
  15. ^ Popham, Peter (21 February 2003). "This Europe: Letters reveal Auschwitz victim's plea to Pope Pius XI". The Independent. London. Retrieved 21 February 2003.
  16. ^ "Mit Brennender Sorge (March 14, 1937) | PIUS XI".
  17. ^ "This Day in Jewish History / Pope announces beatification of Jewish convert". Haaretz.
  18. ^ a b c Mosley, J. (2006). The Ultimate Sacrifice. In Edith Stein: Modern Saint and Martyr (pp. 43-52). Mahwah, N.J.: HiddenSpring.
  19. ^ Garcia, Laura (6 June 1997). . Catholic Education Resource Center. Archived from the original on 12 March 2015. Retrieved 3 December 2014.
  20. ^ Scaperlanda, María Ruiz (2001). Edith Stein: St. Teresa Benedicta of the Cross. Huntington, Indiana: Our Sunday Visitor Press. p. 154.
  21. ^ "Patron Saints Index: Saint Teresa Benedicta of the Cross" 22 February 2007 at the Wayback Machine Accessed 26 January 2007.
  22. ^ a b "Jewish-born nun gassed by Nazis is declared saint; Prayer to Edith Stein sparked tot's 'miraculous' recovery". Toronto Star. 24 May 1997. pp. A22.
  23. ^ "Edith Stein School". from the original on 25 April 2021.
  24. ^ "Edith-Stein-Schule Darmstadt". Ess-darmstadt.de. 4 December 2012. Retrieved 26 December 2012.
  25. ^ "Edith Stein College - VWO". Edith Stein College.
  26. ^ "St. Edith Stein Elementary School". Dpcdsb.org. Retrieved 26 December 2012.
  27. ^ . Edith-stein-heim.de. Archived from the original on 13 November 2007. Retrieved 26 December 2012.
  28. ^ www.khg.wien https://www.khg.wien/unit/khg/ueberuns/standorte/editsteinhaus. Retrieved 24 September 2022. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  29. ^ MacIntyre, Alasdair C. (2006). Edith Stein: A Philosophical Prologue, 1913–1922. Lanham, Md: Rowman and Littlefield. p. 5. ISBN 9780742559530.
  30. ^ "Edith Stein | Samuel French". samuelfrench.com.
  31. ^ Tague, John (28 January 2007). "Winter Under Water, by James Hopkin". The Independent. Retrieved 15 August 2020.
  32. ^ "The International Association for the Study of the Philosophy of Edith Stein". edithsteincircle.com. Edith Stein Circle.
  33. ^ "General Convention Virtual Binder". www.vbinder.net. Retrieved 22 July 2022.
  34. ^ Abraham Foxman, Leon Klenicki (October 1998). "The Canonization of Edith Stein: An Unnecessary Problem" 25 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine, Anti-Defamation League.
  35. ^ Cargas, Harry James (ed.) (1994). The Unnecessary Problem of Edith Stein. Studies in the Shoah. Vol. IV. University Press of America. {{cite book}}: |first1= has generic name (help)
  36. ^ Thomas A. Idinopulos (Spring 1998). "The Unnecessary Problem of Edith Stein". Journal of Ecumenical Studies.
  37. ^ . Vatican.va. Archived from the original on 29 November 2012. Retrieved 26 December 2012.
  38. ^ Guerrero van der Meijden, Jadwiga (2019). Person and Dignity in Edith Stein's Writings. Investigated in Comparison to the Writings of the Doctors of the Church and the Magisterial Documents of the Catholic Church. Boston-Berlin: De Gruyter. p. 53. ISBN 978-3-11-065942-9.
  39. ^ Guerrero van der Meijden, Jadwiga (2019). Person and Dignity in Edith Stein's Writings. Investigated in Comparison to the Writings of the Doctors of the Church and the Magisterial Documents of the Catholic Church. Boston-Berlin: De Gruyter. p. 54. ISBN 978-3-11-065942-9.
  40. ^ Wulf, Claudia Mariele (2003). B. Beckmann-Zöller; H. B. Gerl-Falkovitz (eds.). Rekonstruktion und Neudatierung einiger früher Werke Edith Steins. Würzburg. pp. 249–268.
  41. ^ Guerrero van der Meijden, Jadwiga (2019). Person and Dignity in Edith Stein's Writings. Investigated in Comparison to the Writings of the Doctors of the Church and the Magisterial Documents of the Catholic Church. Boston-Berlin. pp. 347–349. ISBN 978-3-11-065942-9.

Further reading

  • Berkman, Joyce A., ed. (2006). Contemplating Edith Stein. University of Notre Dame Press.
  • Borden, Sarah R. (2003). Edith Stein (Outstanding Christian Thinkers). Continuum.
  • Calcagno, Antonio (2007). The Philosophy of Edith Stein. Duquesne University Press.
  • Lebech, Mette (Winter 2011). "Why Do We Need the Philosophy of Edith Stein?" (PDF). Communio. 38: 682–727. (PDF) from the original on 1 July 2016.
  • Lebech, Mette (2015). The Philosophy of Edith Stein: From Phenomenology to Metaphysics. Peter Lang.
  • MacIntyre, Alasdair C. (2006). Edith Stein: A Philosophical Prologue, 1913–1922. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.
  • Maskulak, Marian, ed. 2016. Edith Stein: Selected Writings. New York: Paulist Press.
  • Posselt, Teresia Renata (1952). Edith Stein: The Life of a Philosopher and Carmelite. Sheed and Ward.
  • Sawicki, Marianne (1997). Body, Text and Science: The Literacy of Investigative Practices and the Phenomenology of Edith Stein. Dordrecht: Kluwer.
  • Sogos Wiquel, Giorgia. "L'incontro di due anime nella figura di Edith Stein". Toscana Ebraica. Bimestrale di Notizie e Cultura Ebraica. Firenze: Nova Arti Grafiche.

External links

  • International Association for the Study of the Philosophy of Edith Stein (IASPES)
  • Thomas Szanto, Dermot Moran. "Edith Stein". In Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  • Index of Saints
  • Edith-Stein homepage of the Diocese of Speyer
  • Associazione Italiana Edith Stein onlus
  • Essays by Edith Stein at Quotidiana.org
  • Official Edith Stein foundation in The Netherlands
  • Edith Stein Biography - Emir-Stein Center

edith, stein, religious, name, saint, teresia, benedicta, cruce, also, known, saint, teresa, benedicta, cross, saint, october, 1891, august, 1942, german, jewish, philosopher, converted, christianity, became, discalced, carmelite, canonized, martyr, saint, cat. Edith Stein religious name Saint Teresia Benedicta a Cruce OCD also known as Saint Teresa Benedicta of the Cross or Saint Edith Stein 12 October 1891 9 August 1942 was a German Jewish philosopher who converted to Christianity and became a Discalced Carmelite nun She is canonized as a martyr and saint of the Catholic Church she is also one of six patron saints of Europe SaintEdith SteinOCDTeresia Benedicta a Cruce in 1938 39Born 1891 10 12 12 October 1891Breslau German Empire now Wroclaw Poland Died9 August 1942 1942 08 09 aged 50 Auschwitz Birkenau Gau Upper Silesia German occupied PolandCause of deathExecution by poisonous gasNationalityGermanEducationSchlesische Friedrich Wilhelms UniversitatUniversity of GottingenUniversity of Freiburg PhD 1916 Notable workOn the Problem of EmpathyFinite and Eternal BeingPhilosophy of Psychology and the HumanitiesThe Science of the CrossEra20th century philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolContinental philosophyPhenomenologyThomismCarmelite spiritualityInstitutionsUniversity of Freiburg 1916 1918 ThesisDas Einfuhlungsproblem in seiner historischen Entwicklung und in phanomenologischer Betrachtung The Empathy Problem as it Developed Historically and Considered Phenomenologically 1916 Doctoral advisorEdmund HusserlMain interestsMetaphysics phenomenology philosophy of mind and epistemologyNotable ideasSpirituality of the Christian womanPhenomenological empathyInfluences Edmund Husserl Adolf Reinach Max Lehmann 1 Martin Heidegger Roman Ingarden Jean Hering Richard Honigswald 1 Oswald Kulpe Max Scheler 2 New Testament Thomas Aquinas John Henry Newman Ignatius of Loyola Teresa of Avila John of the Cross 3 Erich PrzywaraInfluenced Edmund Husserl Hedwig Conrad Martius Martin Heidegger Emerita Quito Roman Ingarden Gerda Walther Erich Przywara Karol Wojtyla 4 Adolf Reinach Alasdair MacIntyre Anselm Min Dermot MoranShe was born into an observant Jewish family but had become an agnostic by her teenage years Moved by the tragedies of World War I in 1915 she took lessons to become a nursing assistant and worked in an infectious diseases hospital After completing her doctoral thesis at the University of Freiburg in 1916 she obtained an assistantship there From reading the life of the reformer of the Carmelite Order Saint Teresa of Avila 5 Edith Stein was drawn to the Christian faith She was baptized on 1 January 1922 into the Catholic Church At that point she wanted to become a Discalced Carmelite nun but was dissuaded by her spiritual mentor the abbot of Beuron Archabbey She then taught at a Catholic school of education in Speyer As a result of the requirement of an Aryan certificate for civil servants promulgated by the Nazi government in April 1933 as part of its Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service she had to quit her teaching position Edith Stein was admitted as a postulant to the Discalced Carmelite monastery in Cologne on 14 October on the first vespers of the feast of Saint Teresa of Avila and received the religious habit as a novice in April 1934 taking the religious name Teresia Benedicta a Cruce Teresia in remembrance of Saint Teresa of Avila Benedicta in honour of Saint Benedict of Nursia She made her temporary vows on 21 April 1935 and her perpetual vows on 21 April 1938 The same year Teresa Benedicta a Cruce and her biological sister Rosa by then also a convert and an extern tertiary of the Order who would handle the community s needs outside the monastery were sent to the Carmelite monastery in Echt Netherlands for their safety In response to the pastoral letter from the Dutch bishops on July 26 1942 in which they made the treatment of the Jews by the Nazis a central theme all baptized Catholics of Jewish origin according to police reports 244 people were arrested by the Gestapo on the following Sunday 2 August 1942 They were sent to the Auschwitz concentration camp where they were murdered in a gas chamber on 9 August 1942 Contents 1 Early life 2 Academic career 3 Discalced Carmelite nun and martyr 4 Philosophy 4 1 The early phenomenological period 1916 25 4 2 The middle comparative period 1925 33 4 3 The later Christian period 1934 42 5 Legacy and veneration 6 Controversy as to the cause of her murder 7 Gallery 8 Bibliography 8 1 Primary literature 8 1 1 In German 8 1 2 Contemporary critical edition 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksEarly life Edit Icon in Bad Bergzabern The scroll shows a quote from her works The innermost essence of love is self offering The entryway to all things is the Cross Edith Stein was born in Breslau now Wroclaw Poland Lower Silesia into an observant Jewish family She was the youngest of 11 children and was born on Yom Kippur the holiest day of the Hebrew calendar these facts combined to make her a favorite of her mother 6 She was a very gifted child who enjoyed learning in a home where her mother encouraged critical thinking and she greatly admired her mother s strong religious faith By her teenage years however Stein had become an agnostic Though her father died while she was young her widowed mother was determined to give her children a thorough education and consequently sent Edith to study at the Schlesische Friedrich Wilhelms Universitat in Breslau At age 19 Stein moved with her family to Breslau to a house bought by her mother which she later described in her Autobiography Today Edith Stein House hosts a museum dedicated to the history of the Stein family Academic career EditIn April 1913 Stein arrived at the University of Gottingen in order to study for the summer semester with Edmund Husserl By the end of the summer she had decided to pursue her doctoral degree in philosophy under Husserl and chose empathy as her thesis topic Her studies were interrupted in July 1914 because of the outbreak of World War I She then served as a volunteer wartime Red Cross nurse in an infectious diseases hospital at Mahrisch Weisskirchen in 1915 In 1916 Stein moved to the University of Freiburg in order to complete her dissertation on Empathy 7 8 Shortly before receiving her degree from Freiburg she agreed to become Husserl s assistant there Her dissertation entitled Das Einfuhlungsproblem in seiner historischen Entwicklung und in phanomenologischer Betrachtung 9 The Empathy Problem as it Developed Historically and Considered Phenomenologically 10 a was awarded a doctorate in philosophy with the summa cum laude honor b Stein then became a member of the faculty at Freiburg where she worked until 1918 as a teaching assistant to Husserl who had transferred to that institution 10 The University of Gottingen rejected her habilitation thesis in 1919 10 Although Stein passed her doctoral examination with distinction her attempts to habilitate failed due to the fact that Stein was a woman 10 Her rejected habilitation thesis Beitrage zur philosophischen Begrundung der Psychologie und der Geisteswissenschaften 13 Contributions to the Philosophical Foundations of Psychology and the Human Sciences was published in the Jahrbuch fur Philosophie und phanomenologische Forschung in 1922 10 She is categorized as a realistic phenomenologist 14 While Stein had earlier contacts with Catholicism it was her reading of the autobiography of the mystic Teresa of Avila during summer holidays in Bad Bergzabern in 1921 that prompted her conversion and eventually the desire to seek the life of a Discalced Carmelite Baptized on 1 January 1922 and dissuaded by her spiritual advisers from immediately seeking entry to the enclosed and hidden life of a Carmelite nun Stein obtained a position to teach at the Dominican nuns school in Speyer from 1923 to 1931 While there Stein translated Thomas Aquinas De Veritate Of Truth into German familiarized herself with Catholic philosophy in general and tried to bridge the phenomenology of her former teacher Husserl to Thomism She visited Husserl and Heidegger at Freiburg in April 1929 the same month that Heidegger gave a speech to Husserl on his 70th birthday In 1932 she became a lecturer at the Catholic Church affiliated Institute for Scientific Pedagogy in Munster but antisemitic legislation passed by the Nazi government forced her to resign the post in 1933 In a letter to Pope Pius XI she denounced the Nazi regime and asked the Pope to openly denounce the regime to put a stop to this abuse of Christ s name As a child of the Jewish people who by the grace of God for the past eleven years has also been a child of the Catholic Church I dare to speak to the Father of Christianity about that which oppresses millions of Germans For weeks we have seen deeds perpetrated in Germany which mock any sense of justice and humanity not to mention love of neighbor For years the leaders of National Socialism have been preaching hatred of the Jews But the responsibility must fall after all on those who brought them to this point and it also falls on those who keep silent in the face of such happenings Everything that happened and continues to happen on a daily basis originates with a government that calls itself Christian For weeks not only Jews but also thousands of faithful Catholics in Germany and I believe all over the world have been waiting and hoping for the Church of Christ to raise its voice to put a stop to this abuse of Christ s name Is not this idolization of race and governmental power which is being pounded into the public consciousness by the radio open heresy Isn t the effort to destroy Jewish blood an abuse of the holiest humanity of our Savior of the most blessed Virgin and the apostles Is not all this diametrically opposed to the conduct of our Lord and Savior who even on the cross still prayed for his persecutors And isn t this a black mark on the record of this Holy Year which was intended to be a year of peace and reconciliation We all who are faithful children of the Church and who see the conditions in Germany with open eyes fear the worst for the prestige of the Church if the silence continues any longer Her letter received no answer and it is not known for certain whether the Pope ever saw it 15 However in 1937 the Pope issued an encyclical written in German Mit brennender Sorge according to its German first words lit With deep anxiety 16 in which he criticized Nazism listed violations of the Concordat between Germany and the Church of 1933 and condemned antisemitism Discalced Carmelite nun and martyr EditStein entered the Discalced Carmelite monastery St Maria vom Frieden Our Lady of Peace in Cologne Lindenthal in October 1933 and took the religious name Teresia Benedicta a Cruce Teresa Benedicta of the Cross In Cologne she wrote her metaphysical book Endliches und ewiges Sein Finite and Eternal Being which attempted to combine the philosophies of St Thomas Aquinas Duns Scotus and Husserl To avoid the growing Nazi threat the Order transferred Edith and her sister Rosa who was also a convert and an extern sister of the Carmel to the Discalced Carmelite monastery in Echt Netherlands There she wrote Studie uber Joannes a Cruce Kreuzeswissenschaft Studies on John of the Cross The Science of the Cross In her testament of 9 June 1939 17 she wrote I beg the Lord to take my life and my death for all concerns of the sacred hearts of Jesus and Mary and the holy church especially for the preservation of our holy order in particular the Carmelite monasteries of Cologne and Echt as atonement for the unbelief of the Jewish People and that the Lord will be received by his own people and his kingdom shall come in glory for the salvation of Germany and the peace of the world at last for my loved ones living or dead and for all God gave to me that none of them shall go astray Stein s move to Echt prompted her to be more devout and even more observant of the Carmelite rule After having her teaching position revoked by the implementation of the Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service Stein quickly eased back into the role of instructor at the convent in Echt teaching both fellow sisters and students within the community Latin and philosophy 18 Even prior to the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands Stein believed she would not survive the war going so far as to write the Prioress to request her permission to allow Stein to offer her self to the heart of Jesus as a sacrifice of atonement for true peace and made a will Her fellow sisters would later recount how Stein began quietly training herself for life in a concentration camp by enduring cold and hunger after the Nazi invasion of the Netherlands in May 1940 18 Ultimately she would not be safe in the Netherlands The Dutch Bishops Conference had a public statement read in all churches across the nation on 20 July 1942 condemning Nazi racism In a retaliatory response on 26 July 1942 the Reichskommissar of the Netherlands Arthur Seyss Inquart ordered the arrest of all Jewish converts who had previously been spared Along with two hundred and forty three baptized Jews living in the Netherlands Stein was arrested by the SS on 2 August 1942 Stein and her sister Rosa were imprisoned at the concentration camps of Amersfoort and Westerbork before being deported to Auschwitz A Dutch official at Westerbork was so impressed by her sense of faith and calm 19 he offered her an escape plan Stein vehemently refused his assistance stating If somebody intervened at this point and took away her chance to share in the fate of her brothers and sisters that would be utter annihilation 18 On 7 August 1942 early in the morning 987 Jews were deported to the Auschwitz concentration camp It was probably on 9 August that Sister Teresa Benedicta of the Cross her sister Rosa and many more Jewish people were killed in a gas chamber 6 20 Philosophy EditStein s development as a philosopher is frequently divided into three periods an early phenomenological 1916 25 a middle comparative 1925 33 and a late Christian 1935 42 In reality the same factors work themselves out throughout her work and propels it forward 1 a profound understanding of and commitment to the phenomenological method as taught by Husserl and Reinach 2 a deep sense of responsibility to the other for what we believe and 3 an acceptance of my own inability to form a complete meaningful worldview without divine assistance The three periods are best understood as stages of integration of these three factors with Stein s baptism New Year s Day 1922 marking a decisive step on the way and her entering Carmel 14 October 1933 marking another The early phenomenological period 1916 25 Edit Stein s dissertation on empathy was according to her own account an attempt to fill a gap in Husserl s work In her autobiographical Life in a Jewish Family she recalled that he took empathy to be the crucial act in which intersubjectivity was established but nowhere detailed exactly what was meant by it She therefore wanted to undertake this task and thereby clarify this crucial idea for the development of the phenomenological movement While working as Husserl s assistant 1916 18 she edited Husserl s manuscripts of what was later to be published as Ideas II and III and in the process came to understand the extraordinary importance this act has for our constitution of the intersubjective world and in particular for the objects studied by psychology and the humanities When she resigned from her position as Husserl s assistant the phenomenological constitution of those objects the psyche and the spirit it was thus the first work she undertook The result was the two treatises of Philosophy of Psychology and the Humanities published in Husserl s Jahrbuch 1922 Psychic Causality and Individual and Community From this period also dates Introduction to Philosophy An Investigation Concerning the State and very importantly Freedom and Grace The middle comparative period 1925 33 Edit Encouraged to study and compare Thomas Aquinas philosophy with that of the phenomenological movement Stein embarked on a translation project of Aquinas De Veritate which was to be published in two volumes in 1932 The work which translates Aquinas way of thinking into a modern German idiom and restyles it as a contemporary academic treatise occasioned that Stein engaged with Aquinas thought as a phenomenologist i e as someone interested in the matters discussed by Aquinas as distinct from providing an interpretation of Aquinas thought or writing in prolongation of it as a thomist The most important works from this period are Husserl and Aquinas A Comparison in which she discusses the differing methodologies of Husserl and Aquinas and accounts for their differences Potency and Act in which she attempts a phenomenological investigation of potency and act and the twin work of anthropology The Structure of the Human Person Philosophical Anthropology and What is the Human Being Theological Anthropology the second volume remains a highly developed draft rather than a completed work since Stein s lectures were canceled in 1933 During this period she also lectures on women s education and vocation and on education in general to very large audiences and to great acclaim In these lectures published in ESGA 13 and ESGA 16 she works out for herself the important questions concerning social type and essence which find a fuller development in The Structure of the Human Person The later Christian period 1934 42 Edit The first task Stein was assigned in the monastery was the writing of her incomplete autobiography Life in a Jewish Family a confession of her life as much as an apology in the literal sense for being of Jewish descent Her next assignment was to prepare Potency and Act for publication a task she accomplished by writing a new book Finite and Eternal Being An Ascent to the Meaning of Being This work proposed a phenomenological doctrine of being Seinslehre which knows itself to be Christian i e as taking Christian Revelation to contribute towards the view of the world in which it looks for and finds the meaning of being in being s unfolding Stein also worked on Dionysius the Areopagite translating his works into German and writing for him a work supposed to be lost on symbolic theology Stein s final work the Science of the Cross was a commentary on St John of the Cross which developed the specifically Carmelite understanding of the depths of the soul already of interest to Stein in her early work Legacy and veneration EditSaintTeresia Benedicta a CruceOCD Virgin and martyrVenerated inCatholic ChurchAnglican CommunionBeatified1 May 1987 Cologne Germany by Pope John Paul IICanonized11 October 1998 Vatican City by Pope John Paul IIFeast9 AugustAttributesDiscalced Carmelite nun s habit sometimes with a Yellow badge cross a book or scroll with Hebrew letters burning bush martyr s palmPatronageEurope loss of parents converted Jews martyrs World Youth Day 21 Teresa Benedicta of the Cross was beatified as a martyr on 1 May 1987 in Cologne Germany by Pope John Paul II and then canonized by him 11 years later on 11 October 1998 in Rome The miracle that was the basis for her canonization is the cure of Benedicta McCarthy a little girl who had swallowed a large amount of paracetamol acetaminophen which causes hepatic necrosis The young girl s father Emmanuel Charles McCarthy a priest of the Melkite Greek Catholic Church immediately called together relatives and prayed for Teresa s intercession 22 Shortly thereafter the nurses in the intensive care unit saw her sit up completely healthy Ronald Kleinman a pediatric specialist at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston who treated the girl testified about her recovery to Church tribunals stating I was willing to say that it was miraculous 22 McCarthy would later attend Sr Teresa Benedicta s canonization Teresa Benedicta of the Cross is one of the six patron saints of Europe together with Benedict of Nursia Cyril and Methodius Bridget of Sweden and Catherine of Siena Today there are many schools named in tribute to her for example in her hometown Lubliniec Poland 23 Darmstadt Germany 24 Hengelo Netherlands 25 and Mississauga Ontario Canada 26 Also named for her are a women s dormitory at the University of Tubingen 27 and a classroom building at The College of the Holy Cross in Worcester Massachusetts Lubliniec in Poland hosts Edith Stein Museum Muzeum Pro Memoria Edith Stein localised on the first floor of the Courant family house Edith Stein s grandparents family home Wroclaw hosts a museum called Edith Stein House localised in the house Edith s mother bought for the family in 1919 on the street then called Michaelisstrasse 38 today Nowowiejska 38 In Vienna the Edith Stein Haus at Ebendorferstrasse 8 is the main location of the Catholic University Chaplaincy and the university pastoral care of the Archdiocese of Vienna In the spirit of Karl Strobl s model of the Catholic Student House the house is also home to a chapel consecrated to Edith Stein as well as a dormitory for about 90 students 28 The philosopher Alasdair MacIntyre published a book in 2006 titled Edith Stein A Philosophical Prologue 1913 1922 in which he contrasted her living of her own personal philosophy with Martin Heidegger whose actions during the Nazi era according to MacIntyre suggested a bifurcation of personality 29 Playwright Arthur Giron wrote Edith Stein a play that was inspired by Stein s life It was produced at the Pittsburgh Public Theater in 1988 30 In 1988 Edith Stein was pictured on a German postage stamp with Rupert Mayer SJ in honor of their beatification In 1995 Hungarian film director Marta Meszaros made a movie about the life and death of Edith Stein with the title A hetedik szoba The Seventh Room Chamber starring Maia Morgenstern In 1999 a memorial statue by German sculptor Bert Gerresheim was dedicated in Cologne Germany The statue comprises three different views of Stein reflecting her Jewish and Christian faith and a pile of empty shoes representing the victims of the holocaust In 2007 Stein s life and work was dramatised in the novel Winter Under Water Picador London by author James Hopkin 31 In 2008 the first Stolperstein Polish kamienie pamieci that was ever laid in Poland was placed near Edith Stein s childhood home at 38 ul Nowowiejska formerly the Michaelisstrasse in Wroclaw Other Stolpersteine for her are in Cologne several and Freiburg In 2009 her bust was installed at the Walhalla Memorial near Regensburg Germany In June 2009 the International Association for the Study of the Philosophy of Edith Stein IASPES was founded and held its first international conference at Maynooth University Ireland in order to advance the philosophical writings of Stein 32 On 6 June 2014 the 70th anniversary of D Day a bell dedicated to her was named by Prince Charles at Bayeux Cathedral Also in 2014 the book Edith Stein and Regina Jonas Religious Visionaries in the Time of the Death Camps by Emily Leah Silverman was published In 2022 Stein was officially added to the Episcopal Church liturgical calendar with a feast day on 9 August 33 Controversy as to the cause of her murder EditThe beatification of St Teresa Benedicta as a martyr generated criticism Critics argued that she was murdered because she was Jewish by birth rather than for her Christian faith 34 and that in the words of Daniel Polish the beatification seemed to carry the tacit message encouraging conversionary activities because official discussion of the beatification seemed to make a point of conjoining Stein s Catholic faith with her death with fellow Jews in Auschwitz 35 36 The position of the Catholic Church is that St Teresa Benedicta also died because of the Dutch episcopacy s public condemnation of Nazi racism in 1942 in other words that she died because of the moral teaching of the Church and is thus a true martyr 6 37 Gallery Edit Memorial to Edith Stein in Stella Maris Monastery Haifa Israel The Martyrdom of Edith Stein depicted in a stained glass work by Alois Plum in Kassel Germany Memorial to Edith Stein in Prague Czech Republic Edith Stein in a relief by Heinrich Schreiber in the Church of Our Lady in Wittenberg Germany Sculpture near her baptismal church in Bad Bergzabern Stolperstein for Edith Stein at the location of the former Carmelite monastery in Koln LindenthalBibliography EditFor a detailed chronology of Stein s writings see IASPES website Primary literature Edit In German Edit 1917 Zum Problem der Einfuhlung Halle Buchdruckerei des Waisenhauses Doctoral Thesis 1916 1220 Einfuhrung in die Philosophie lectures taught at a proseminar in Freiburg in 1916 1918 and later privately in Breslau in Edith Stein House in 1920 38 1921 Freiheit und Gnade This work has for years been wrongly identified and quoted as Die ontische Struktur der Person und ihre erkenntnistheoretische Problematik a title that appeared in print after WWII due to an incorrect connection between title page and work 39 40 1922 Beitrage zur philosophischen Begrundung der Psychologie und der Geisteswissenschaften in Jahrbuch fur Philosophie und phanomenologische Forschung 5 Halle Max Niemeyer 1 284 1924 Was ist Phanomenologie 1924 Was ist Philosophie Ein Gesprach zwischen Edmund Husserl und Thomas von Aquino 1925 Eine Untersuchung uber den Staat in Jahrbuch fur Philosophie und phanomenologische Forschung 7 Halle Max Niemeyer 1 123 1929 Husserls Phanomenologie und die Philosophie des heiligen Thomas von Aquino Versuch einer Gegenuberstellung in Festschrift Edmund Husserl zum 70 Geburtstag gewidmet Jahrbuch fur Philosophie und phanomenologische Forschung 10 Erganzungsband Halle Max Niemeyer 315 338 1930 1931 Die weltanschauliche Bedeutung der Phanomenologie 1931 Potenz und Akt Studien zu einer Philosophie des Seins 1932 Der Aufbau der menschlichen Person Vorlesung zur philosophischen Anthropologie 1933 Was ist der Mensch Theologische Anthropologie Das Menschenbild unseres Glaubens 1928 1933 Die Frau Fragestellungen und Reflexionen 1935 1936 Endliches und ewiges Sein Versuch eines Aufstiegs zum Sinn des Seins written with two supplements Die Seelenburg zu Endliches und ewiges Sein Martin Heidegger s Existenzphilosophie 1940 1941 Wege der Gotteserkenntnis Studie zu Dionysius Areopagita 1941 1942 Kreuzeswissenschaft Studie uber Johannes vom Kreuz 1962 Welt und Person posthumous publication Contemporary critical edition Edit Edith Stein Gesamtausgabe Herder 2000 2020 with English and Polish translations available 41 ESGA 1 Stein E Aus dem Leben einer judischen Familie und weitere autobiographische Beitrage Herder Freiburg 2002 English translation CWES 1 Life in a Jewish Family Her Unfinished Autobiographical Account trans Josephine Koeppel in The Collected Works of Edith Stein Volume 1 ICS Publications Washington D C 1986 Polish translation ESGA PL 1 Dzieje pewnej rodziny zydowskiej trans Immakulata J Adamska Wydawnictwo Karmelitow Bosych Cracow 2005 ESGA 2 Stein E Selbstbildnis in Briefen I Erster Teil 1916 1933 Herder Freiburg 2000 English translation CWES 5 Self portrait in Letters 1916 1942 trans Josephine Koeppel in The Collected Works of Edith Stein Volume 1 ICS Publications Washington D C 1993 Polish translation Autoportret z listow I trans Immakulata J Adamska Anna Talarek Wydawnictwo Karmelitow Bosych Cracow 2003 ESGA 3 Stein E Selbstbildnis in Briefen II Zweiter Teil 1933 1942 Herder Freiburg 2000 Polish translation ESGA PL 3 Autoportret z listow II trans Immakulata J Adamska Anna Talarek Wydawnictwo Karmelitow Bosych Cracow 2003 ESGA 4 Stein E Selbstbildnis in Briefen III Briefe an Roman Ingarden Herder Freiburg 2005 English translation CWES 12 Self Portrait in Letters trans Hugh Candler Hunt ICS Publications Washington D C 2001 Polish translation ESGA PL 4 Autoportret z listow Cz 3 Listy do Romana Ingardena trans Malgorzata Klentak Zablocka Andrzej Wajs Wydawnictwo Karmelitow Bosych Cracow 2003 an older Polish translation PL 4 Spor o prawde istnienia Listy Edith Stein do Romana Ingardena trans Malgorzata Klentak Zablocka Andrzej Wajs Wydawnictwo M Warsaw 1994 ESGA 5 Stein E Zum Problem der Einfuhlung Herder Freiburg Basel Wien 2008 English translation CWES 3 On the problem of empathy trans Waltraut Stein ICS Publications Washington D C 1989 Polish translation O zagadnieniu wczucia trans Danuta Gierulanka Jerzy F Gierula Znak Cracow 1988 ESGA 6 Stein E Beitrage zur philosophischen Begrundung der Psychologie und der Geisteswissenschaften Herder Freiburg Basel Wien 2010 English translation CWES 7 Philosophy of Psychology and the Humanities trans Mary Catharine Baseheart Marianne Sawicki ICS Publications Washington D C 2000 Polish translation ESGA PL 6 Filozofia psychologii i humanistyki trans Piotr Janik SJ Marcin Baran SJ Jolanta Gaca Wydawnictwo Karmelitow Bosych Cracow 2016 ESGA 7 Stein E Eine Untersuchung uber den Staat Herder Freiburg Basel Wien 2006 English translation CWES 10 An Investigation Concerning the State trans Marianne Sawicki ICS Publication Washington D C 2006 ESGA 8 Stein E Einfuhrung in die Philosophie Herder Freiburg Basel Wien 2004 No translation is available ESGA 9 Stein E Freiheit und Gnade und weitere Beitrage zu Phanomenologie und Ontologie Herder Freiburg Basel Wien 2014 English translation CWES 8 Husserl and Aquinas A Comparison in CWES 8 Knowledge and Faith trans Walter Redmond ICS Publications Washington D C 2000 pp 1 64 Older translation is available in M C Baseheart Person in the World Introduction to the Philosophy of Edith Stein Kluwer Dordrecht 1997 pp 129 144 transl by M C Baseheart Polish translation of Was Ist Philosophie Ein Gesprach zwischen Edmund Husserl und Thomas von Aquino is Co to jest filozofia Rozmowa miedzy Edmundem Husserlem a Tomaszem z Akwinu in PL 9 Swiatlo rozumu i wiary Duchowa droga Edyty Stein sw Teresy Benedykty od Krzyza Totaldruk Poznan 2002 pp 29 77 ESGA 10 Stein E Potenz und Akt Studien zu einer Philosophie des Seins Herder Freiburg Basel Wien 2005 English translation CWES 11 Potency and Act Studies Toward a Philosophy of Being trans Walter Redmond ICS Publications Washington D C 2009 ESGA 11 12 Stein E Endliches und ewiges Sein Versuch eines Aufstiegs zum Sinn des Seins Anhang Martin Heideggers Existenzphilosophie Die Seelenburg Herder Freiburg Basel Wien 2006 English translation CWES 9 Finite and eternal being trans K F Reinhardt ICS Publications Washington D C 2002 Polish translation PL 11 12a Byt skonczony a byt wieczny trans Immakulata J Adamska OCD W drodze Poznan 1995 The appendixes Die Seelenburg and Martin Heideggers Existenzphilosophie are translated in PL 11 12b Twierdza duchowa trans Immakulata J Adamska Zysk i S ka Poznan 2006 93 122 and 135 203 ESGA 13 Stein E Die Frau Fragestellungen und Reflexionen Freiburg Basel Wien 2000 Herder English translation CWES 2 The Collected Works of Edith Stein Volume II Essays on Woman trans F M Oben Washington D C 1996 ICS Publications Polish translation ESGA PL 13 Kobieta Pytania i refleksje trans Wieslaw Szymona Wydawnictwo Karmelitow Bosych Cracow 2015 ESGA 14 Stein E Der Aufbau der menschlichen Person Vorlesung zum philosophischen Anthropologie Freiburg Basel Wien 1994 Herder Freiburg 2004 Polish translation ESGA PL 14 Budowa osoby ludzkiej Wyklad z antropologii filozoficznej trans Grzegorz Sowinski Wydawnictwo Karmelitow Bosych Cracow 2015 Italian translation La struttura della persona umana trans L Gelber M Linssen M d Ambra Citta Nuova Rome 2000 ESGA 15 Stein E Was is der Mensch Theologische Anthropologie Freiburg Basel Wien 2005 Herder Polish translation ESGA PL 15 Czym jest czlowiek Antropologia teologiczna trans Grzegorz Sowinski Wydawnictwo Karmelitow Bosych Cracow 2012 ESGA 16 Stein E Bildung und Entfaltung der Individualitat Beitrage zum christlichen Erziehungsauftrag Herder Freiburg Basel Wien 2001 ESGA 17 Stein E Wege der Gotteserkenntnis Studie zu Dionysius Areopagita und Ubersetzung seiner Werke Herder Freiburg Basel Wien 2013 Polish translation Drogi poznania Boga studium o Dionizym Areopagicie i przeklad jego dziel trans Grzegorz Sowinski Wydawnictwo Karmelitow Bosych Cracow 2006 ESGA 18 Kreuzeswissenschaft Studie uber Johannes vom Kreuz Herder Freiburg Basel Wien 2003 English translation CWES 6 The Science of the Cross trans Josephine Koeppel ICS Publications Washington D C 2002 Polish translation Wiedza Krzyza Studium o sw Janie od Krzyza trans Immakulata J Adamska Grzegorz Sowinski Wydawnictwo Karmelitow Bosych Cracow 2013 ESGA 19 Geistliche Texte I Freiburg Basel Wien 2009 Herder English translation The Hidden Life Essays Meditations Spiritual Texts trans Waltraut Stein in The Collected Works of Edith Stein Volume IV ICS Publications Washington D C 2014 ESGA 20 Geistliche Texte II Freiburg Basel Wien 2007 Herder English translation ESGA EN 4 The Hidden Life Essays Meditations Spiritual Texts trans Waltraut Stein in The Collected Works of Edith Stein Volume IV ICS Publications Washington D C 2014 ESGA 21 Ubersetzung von John Henry Newman Die Idee der Universitat Freiburg Basel Wien 2014 Herder ESGA 22 Ubersetzung von John Henry Newman Briefe und Texte zur ersten Lebenshalfte 1801 1846 Freiburg Basel Wien 2004 Herder ESGA 23 Ubersetzung Des Hl Thomas von Aquino Untersuchungen uber die Wahrheit Quaestiones disputatae de veritate 1 Freiburg Basel Wien 2014 Herder ESGA 24 Ubersetzung Des Hl Thomas von Aquino Untersuchungen uber die Wahrheit Quaestiones disputatae de veritate 2 Freiburg Basel Wien 2002 Herder ESGA 25 Ubersetzung von Alexandre Koyre Descartes und die Scholastik Freiburg Basel Wien 2008 Herder ESGA 26 Ubersetzung Thomas von Aquin Uber das Seiende und das Wesen De ente et essentia mit den Roland Gosselin Exzerpten Eingefuhrt und bearbeitet von Andreas Speer und Francesco Valerio Tommasi Freiburg Basel Wien 2008 Herder ESGA 27 Miscellanea thomistica Freiburg Basel Wien 2013 Herder See also EditSt Teresa Benedicta of the Cross OCD patron saint archiveNotes Edit Parts II IV of the dissertation were published under the title Zum Problem der Einfuhlung On the Problem of Empathy in 1917 11 In his 2007 M A thesis The Philosophical Contributions of Edith Stein 12 John C Wilhelmsson argues that Stein influenced the work of Husserl significantly during this period References Edit a b Ferreira Danilo Souza 2018 EMPATHY An intellectual history of Edith Stein 1891 1942 Academia edu Instituto de Ciencias Humanas e Sociais UFOP Retrieved 11 August 2022 Edith Stein at EWTN com The Science of the Cross CWES vol 6 ICS Publications Oben Freda Mary 2001 The Life and Thought of St Edith Stein ISBN 9780818908460 John Paul II In his philosophical work he clearly shows the influence of Edith Stein Teresa de Avila Libro de la vida a b c Teresa Benedict of the Cross Edith Stein Vatican News Service Elisa Magri Dermot Moran eds Empathy Sociality and Personhood Essays on Edith Stein s Phenomenological Investigations Springer 2018 p 12 Stein Edith Saint 1891 1942 1989 On the problem of empathy Third Revised ed Washington D C ISBN 0 935216 11 1 OCLC 19324020 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Edith Stein History of Women Philosophers and Scientists a b c d e Thomas Szanto Dermot Moran Edith Stein In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy M Sawicki 2013 Body Text and Science The Literacy of Investigative Practices and the Phenomenology of Edith Stein Springer p 90 ISBN 978 9401139793 Wilhelmsson John Christopher The philosophical contributions of Edith Stein 2007 Master s Thesis Lebech Mette Study Guide to Edith Stein s Philosophy of Psychology and the Humanities PDF Faculty of Philosophy NUIM Maynooth Archived PDF from the original on 10 October 2022 Cibangu Sylvain K Hepworth Mark April 2016 The uses of phenomenology and phenomenography A critical review Library amp Information Science Research 38 2 150 doi 10 1016 j lisr 2016 05 001 Popham Peter 21 February 2003 This Europe Letters reveal Auschwitz victim s plea to Pope Pius XI The Independent London Retrieved 21 February 2003 Mit Brennender Sorge March 14 1937 PIUS XI This Day in Jewish History Pope announces beatification of Jewish convert Haaretz a b c Mosley J 2006 The Ultimate Sacrifice In Edith Stein Modern Saint and Martyr pp 43 52 Mahwah N J HiddenSpring Garcia Laura 6 June 1997 Edith Stein Convert Nun Martyr Catholic Education Resource Center Archived from the original on 12 March 2015 Retrieved 3 December 2014 Scaperlanda Maria Ruiz 2001 Edith Stein St Teresa Benedicta of the Cross Huntington Indiana Our Sunday Visitor Press p 154 Patron Saints Index Saint Teresa Benedicta of the Cross Archived 22 February 2007 at the Wayback Machine Accessed 26 January 2007 a b Jewish born nun gassed by Nazis is declared saint Prayer to Edith Stein sparked tot s miraculous recovery Toronto Star 24 May 1997 pp A22 Edith Stein School Archived from the original on 25 April 2021 Edith Stein Schule Darmstadt Ess darmstadt de 4 December 2012 Retrieved 26 December 2012 Edith Stein College VWO Edith Stein College St Edith Stein Elementary School Dpcdsb org Retrieved 26 December 2012 Edith Stein Studentinnen Wohnheim Edith stein heim de Archived from the original on 13 November 2007 Retrieved 26 December 2012 www khg wien https www khg wien unit khg ueberuns standorte editsteinhaus Retrieved 24 September 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help MacIntyre Alasdair C 2006 Edith Stein A Philosophical Prologue 1913 1922 Lanham Md Rowman and Littlefield p 5 ISBN 9780742559530 Edith Stein Samuel French samuelfrench com Tague John 28 January 2007 Winter Under Water by James Hopkin The Independent Retrieved 15 August 2020 The International Association for the Study of the Philosophy of Edith Stein edithsteincircle com Edith Stein Circle General Convention Virtual Binder www vbinder net Retrieved 22 July 2022 Abraham Foxman Leon Klenicki October 1998 The Canonization of Edith Stein An Unnecessary Problem Archived 25 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine Anti Defamation League Cargas Harry James ed 1994 The Unnecessary Problem of Edith Stein Studies in the Shoah Vol IV University Press of America a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a first1 has generic name help Thomas A Idinopulos Spring 1998 The Unnecessary Problem of Edith Stein Journal of Ecumenical Studies Canonization Homily Vatican va Archived from the original on 29 November 2012 Retrieved 26 December 2012 Guerrero van der Meijden Jadwiga 2019 Person and Dignity in Edith Stein s Writings Investigated in Comparison to the Writings of the Doctors of the Church and the Magisterial Documents of the Catholic Church Boston Berlin De Gruyter p 53 ISBN 978 3 11 065942 9 Guerrero van der Meijden Jadwiga 2019 Person and Dignity in Edith Stein s Writings Investigated in Comparison to the Writings of the Doctors of the Church and the Magisterial Documents of the Catholic Church Boston Berlin De Gruyter p 54 ISBN 978 3 11 065942 9 Wulf Claudia Mariele 2003 B Beckmann Zoller H B Gerl Falkovitz eds Rekonstruktion und Neudatierung einiger fruher Werke Edith Steins Wurzburg pp 249 268 Guerrero van der Meijden Jadwiga 2019 Person and Dignity in Edith Stein s Writings Investigated in Comparison to the Writings of the Doctors of the Church and the Magisterial Documents of the Catholic Church Boston Berlin pp 347 349 ISBN 978 3 11 065942 9 Further reading EditBerkman Joyce A ed 2006 Contemplating Edith Stein University of Notre Dame Press Borden Sarah R 2003 Edith Stein Outstanding Christian Thinkers Continuum Calcagno Antonio 2007 The Philosophy of Edith Stein Duquesne University Press Lebech Mette Winter 2011 Why Do We Need the Philosophy of Edith Stein PDF Communio 38 682 727 Archived PDF from the original on 1 July 2016 Lebech Mette 2015 The Philosophy of Edith Stein From Phenomenology to Metaphysics Peter Lang MacIntyre Alasdair C 2006 Edith Stein A Philosophical Prologue 1913 1922 Lanham MD Rowman amp Littlefield Maskulak Marian ed 2016 Edith Stein Selected Writings New York Paulist Press Posselt Teresia Renata 1952 Edith Stein The Life of a Philosopher and Carmelite Sheed and Ward Sawicki Marianne 1997 Body Text and Science The Literacy of Investigative Practices and the Phenomenology of Edith Stein Dordrecht Kluwer Sogos Wiquel Giorgia L incontro di due anime nella figura di Edith Stein Toscana Ebraica Bimestrale di Notizie e Cultura Ebraica Firenze Nova Arti Grafiche External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Edith Stein Wikiquote has quotations related to Edith Stein Biography portal Judaism portal Saints portal Catholicism portalInternational Association for the Study of the Philosophy of Edith Stein IASPES Thomas Szanto Dermot Moran Edith Stein In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Index of Saints Edith Stein homepage of the Diocese of Speyer Institute of Philosophy Edith Stein Associazione Italiana Edith Stein onlus Essays by Edith Stein at Quotidiana org Letter of Saint Edith Stein to Pope Pius XI in 1933 Official Edith Stein foundation in The Netherlands Edith Stein Biography Emir Stein Center Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Edith Stein amp oldid 1140677858, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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