Dietrich von Hildebrand

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Dietrich von Hildebrand
Dietrich von Hildebrand.jpg
Born(1889-10-12)12 October 1889
Florence, Italy
Died26 January 1977(1977-01-26) (aged 87)
New Rochelle, New York, United States
Alma materUniversity of Munich
University of Göttingen
EraContemporary philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
School
Main interests

Dietrich Richard Alfred von Hildebrand (12 October 1889 – 26 January 1977) was a German Roman Catholic philosopher and theologian.

Hildebrand was called "the twentieth-century Doctor of the Church"[1] by Pope Pius XII. Pope John Paul II also greatly admired the work of Hildebrand, remarking once to his widow, Alice von Hildebrand, "Your husband is one of the great ethicists of the twentieth century." Benedict XVI also has a particular admiration and regard for Hildebrand, whom he knew as a young priest in Munich. The degree of Pope Benedict's esteem is expressed in one of his statements about Hildebrand: "When the intellectual history of the Catholic Church in the twentieth century is written, the name of Dietrich von Hildebrand will be most prominent among the figures of our time."

A vocal critic of the changes in the church brought by the Second Vatican Council, Hildebrand became vice director of Luigi Villa's Chiesa viva ("Living Church")[2] and especially resented the new liturgy: "Truly, if one of the devils in C. S. Lewis's The Screwtape Letters had been entrusted with the ruin of the liturgy, he could not have done it better."[3]

Biography[edit]

Born and raised in Florence, in the Kingdom of Italy, Hildebrand grew up in a German household, the son of sculptor Adolf von Hildebrand and Irene Schäuffelen, who lived in a former Minim friary. He received his early education from private tutors. Although raised in a home without religion, Hildebrand developed a deep belief in Jesus at a very young age.[4]

Sent to Munich at the age of fifteen for his Abitur, Hildebrand enrolled at the University of Munich two years later, where he joined a circle of students who first followed the philosopher Theodor Lipps but soon were swayed by the teachings of Edmund Husserl. Through this circle he came to know Max Scheler. Because of Scheler's writings Hildebrand converted to Catholicism in 1914. In 1909 he attended the University of Göttingen, where he completed his doctorate in philosophy under Husserl and Adolf Reinach, whom he later credited with shaping his own philosophical system.[4]

In 1912, he married Margaret Denck, and with her had one child, Franz.

In 1913 Hildebrand went to Rome to attend the First Communion of one of his sisters, in a ceremony held in the Catacombs of Callixtus. The following year he and his wife were received into the Catholic Church. Upon the outbreak of the First World War Hildebrand was drafted into service as a physician's assistant in Munich, serving as a kind of surgical nurse.[4]

Hildebrand published his first book, Die Idee der Sittlichen Handlung, in 1916, and two years later, after the war had ended, was given a teaching position at the University of Munich, eventually gaining an assistant professorship there in 1924. By then he had published another work, Sittlichkeit und Ethische Werterkenntniss (1921).[4]

When Hitler came to power in 1933 Hildebrand, a vocal opponent of Hitler and Nazism, fled Germany, going first to Italy, and then to Vienna. There, with the support of the Austrian Chancellor Engelbert Dollfuss, he founded and edited an anti-Nazi weekly paper, Der Christliche Ständestaat ("The Christian Corporative State"). For this, he was sentenced to death in absentia by the Nazis.

Hildebrand was once again forced to flee when Hitler annexed Austria in 1938. He spent eleven months in Switzerland, near Fribourg. He then moved to Fiac in France, near Toulouse, where he taught at the Catholic University of Toulouse. When the Nazis invaded France in 1940 he went into hiding; after many hardships, and the heroic assistance of Frenchmen, including Edmond Michelet and the American journalist Varian Fry, he was able to escape to Portugal with his wife, their son Franz, and their daughter-in-law. From there they travelled by ship to Brazil and then on to New York City, arriving in 1940. There he taught philosophy at the Jesuit Fordham University on Rose Hill in the Bronx where he then mentored renowned Catholic author and philosophy professor Ronda Chervin.[5]

Hildebrand's wife Alice revealed that Bella Dodd, a friend of the Hildebrands who reverted to Catholicism in April 1952, had confessed privately to them and also publicly at a conference in Orange, California that she had assisted with a communist infiltration of Catholic seminaries.[6]

Hildebrand retired from teaching in 1960, spending the remaining years of his life writing dozens of books in both German and English. He was a founder of Una Voce America. In 1957 his wife of forty-five years died, and in 1959 he married Alice M. Jourdain, also a philosopher and theologian who was a student of his at Fordham University.[6]

Hildebrand died in New Rochelle, New York in 1977, after a long struggle with a heart condition.

Partial bibliography[edit]

  • Marriage: The Mystery of Faithful Love (1929)
  • Metaphysics of Community (1930)
  • In Defense of Purity: An Analysis of the Catholic Ideals of Purity and Virginity (Longmans, Green and Co., 1931)
  • Actual Questions in the Light of Eternity (1931)
  • The Essence of Philosophical Research and Knowledge (1934)
  • Liturgy and Personality (Longmans, 1943)
  • Transformation in Christ (Longmans, 1948)
  • Fundamental Moral Attitudes (Longmans, 1950)
  • Christian Ethics (McKay, 1952)
  • The New Tower of Babel (P. J. Kenedy, 1953)
  • Ethics (Franciscan Herald Press, 1953)
  • True Morality and Its Counterfeits, with Alice M. Jourdain (McKay, 1955)
  • Graven Images: Substitutes for True Morality, with Alice M. Jourdain (McKay, 1957)
  • Mozart, Beethoven, Schubert (J. Habbel, 1961)
  • Not as the World Gives; St. Francis' Message to Laymen Today" (Franciscan Herald Press, 1963)
  • The art of living, with Alice von Hildebrand (Franciscan Herald Press, 1965)
  • Man and Woman: Love & the Meaning of Intimacy, (Franciscan Herald Press, 1966)
  • Morality and Situation Ethics, (Franciscan Herald Press, 1966)
  • Love, Marriage, and the Catholic Conscience: Understanding the Church's Teachings on Birth Control
  • The Trojan Horse in the City of God: The Catholic Crisis Explained (Franciscan Herald Press, 1967)
  • The encyclical Humanae vitae, a sign of contradiction; an essay on birth control and Catholic conscience, (Franciscan Herald Press, 1969)
  • Villa, Luigi, ed. (1971). "Moratorium With The Devil" (PDF). Chiesa viva. Brescia (4): 4–5. Retrieved 2018-07-01. – Via Star of the Stormy Sea (Quarterly newsletter). Oconomowoc: The Apostolate of Our Lady of Good Success. 2014. pp. 14–16.
  • Celibacy and the crisis of faith, (Franciscan Herald Press, 1971)
  • What is Philosophy? (Franciscan Herald Press, 1973)
  • The Devastated Vineyard (1973)
  • Jaws of Death: Gate of Heaven (1976)
  • The Heart: an Analysis of Human and Divine Affectivity, (Franciscan Herald Press, 1977)
  • Making Christ's Peace a Part of Your Life
  • Humility: Wellspring of Virtue
  • The Nature of Love (St. Augustine´s Press, 2010)

References[edit]

  1. ^ Trojan Horse in the City of God. Sophia Press Institute. 1993. p. 269.
  2. ^ Heckenkamp, Kathleen (2014). "In Defense of Fr. Luigi Villa" (PDF). Star of the Stormy Sea (Quarterly newsletter). Oconomowoc: The Apostolate of Our Lady of Good Success. pp. 2–5. Retrieved 2018-07-01.
  3. ^ Hildebrand, Dietrich von (1973). Der verwüstete Weinberg (in German). Regensburg: Habbel.
  4. ^ a b c d "Dietrich von Hildebrand (1889-1977)". CatholicAuthors.com. Retrieved 26 December 2012.
  5. ^ "Ronda Chervin". hildebrandproject.org. Retrieved 12 April 2018.
  6. ^ a b The Vortex—Infiltration! (YouTube video). Church Militant. January 29, 2016. Retrieved April 14, 2018.

Sources[edit]

  • Alice von Hildebrand, The Soul of a Lion, a biography (Ignatius Press, 2000, ISBN 0-89870-801-X)

External links[edit]