To me Richard
Wagner will always be, above everyone else, the great tone poet!
Wagner will always be, above everyone else, the great tone poet!
Weininger - 1946 - Mind and Death of a Genius
He is
hungry for sensation, audience, applause. . . .
Hearty regards,
Rosa Weininger
LETTER XII
Budapest
May 15, 1939
Dear Doctor:
My father looked like Nietzsche.
On my brother's tomb my father placed this inscription: "This
stone marks the resting place of a young man whose spirit found
no peace in this world. When he had delivered the message of his
soul, he could no longer remain among the living. He betook him-
self to the place of death of one of the greatest of all men, the
Schwarzspanierhaus in Vienna, and there destroyed his mortal
body. "
Otto was five feet and eight inches in height. I do not have the
first edition of Vber die letzten Dinge, but I will try to find it. I
have only the second and sixth editions.
Rosa Weininger
LETTER XIII
11. 6. 1939
20 Maresfield Gardens
London N. W. 3
Tel: Hampstead 2002
Dear Colleague:
My delayed answer is due to a week-long illness which has pre-
vented me from writing. I shall gladly answer your questions. Yes,
I am the person who gave Probst this description of Weininger's
personality. Weininger was never my patient, but one of his friends
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? 208 Appendix
was. Through this means Weininger became acquainted with the
views on bisexuality which I had already applied in my analysis,
prompted by Fliess. He constructed his book about this idea. I do
not know the difference between . . . [undecipherable] and his
thesis. In the manuscript Otto Weininger gave me to read there
were no depreciatory words about the Jews and much less criticism
of women. He had also to a large extent given consideration to my
views on hysteria.
I am,
Sincerely yours,
Freud
LETTER XIV
Budapest
6-27-39
Dear Doctor:
I have two letters to thank you for. In answer I wish to inform
you as follows:
(1) Otto showed an interest in social problems, but no more
than other young men. He was a member of the Society for Social
Science.
(2) Our name always was Weininger, and we always were Jews.
(3) My grandparents were from Vienna, as were their parents
also.
(4) My mother was a beautiful and quiet wife. She had seven
children, of whom three died. She was only a housewife and mother
and had a gift for languages. She was overshadowed by the stronger
personality of her husband.
(5) My father was a craftsman in gold, silver, and porcelain. He
created several artistic pieces which have been acquired by Ameri-
cans. He was a great linguist and musician. He was strong in mind
and feeling, in expressions of divine goodness and unflinching sever-
ity, and he was feared by us all.
(6) As a father peerless, never to be equaled, he cared with the
greatest devotion for the lives and souls of his children. Through
him we became familiar with the most sublime beauty in the world
of art. He knew no moderation in his severity and criticism. He
was loved and feared by us all. . . . If we ever told a lie, he would
punish us at once. His demands upon us were enormous; if we did
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? LETTER WRITTEN BY FREUD, JUNE 11, 1939
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? 210
Appendix
not live up to them, he was mortally wounded. My father never had
an education. At the age of twenty-two he was a correspondent in
foreign languages in the banking house of Elias. Upon his marriage
at this time, he started his handicraft. Museums in London, Paris,
and Vienna exhibited a number of his creations. My father was
anti-Semitic although he thought as a Jew.
I am still searching for the first edition of Uber die letzten Dinge.
Cordially yours,
Rosa Weininger
LETTER XV
6-24-39
Dear Doctor:
The letter which was returned to you unopened came to me
today. The address was illegible. I owe you an answer, as I now
see I had forgotten to answer you previously.
(1) The frivolity of my paternal uncle consisted in deserting his
wife and two small children without any further care of the chil-
dren. My father never forgave him for this, and when my uncle
was lying on his deathbed at the age of forty, my father refused
his request to come and see him. But my father raised my uncle's
children and made them two good men, who up to this time have
lived in Vienna but now have fled to America.
(2) My uncle deserted his family for another woman who lived
in common-law relation with him. I did not know of any other
frivolity.
(3) No, Otto was not happy. A peculiar fellow? No, I do not
believe so. But he was a very hard worker. During nights, many
nights, most nights, he worked by the light of a small candle, and
beside him was a glass of milk which in the evening I brought to
his bare room. Certainly his mind was overworked, his body tired;
but remember, he was only twenty-two when he created his work.
Yours,
Rosa Boschan Weiningeb
LETTER XVI
6-29-39
Dear Doctor:
My paternal uncle was the youngest of five children. He died at
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? Appendix 211
the age of forty. He was a businessman, arid he was charming and
handsome.
There were no conflicts in my uncle's house. He deserted his wife
and children suddenly, without seeing them again.
My maternal aunts were orderly persons who died at an early
age. A maternal uncle had a miserable existence. I myself knew
only one aunt, who was a singer. About the one brother, I hear
that he was not honest.
I had thousands of letters from my father, who wrote me every
day, often three times a day.
Many thanks,
Rosa B. Weintnger
LETTER XVII
Zermatt
Dear Doctor:
(1) Otto was the second child. The first was Helene and she
died at the age of three of diphtheria. The second boy was Franz,
and he died at the age of fifteen as the result of an appendicitis
attack.
(2) My paternal uncle was thirty years old when he deserted his
wife. >
(3) His name was Friedrich.
(4) He died of pneumonia.
(5) Mathilde and Karoline are both my sisters. Karoline is the
youngest. She is forty years old and the most talented of us girls,
particularly philologically. I am now staying with her.
(6) The creations of which Otto spoke on the postcard sent to
me were pieces of poetry which I had written as a girl and which
he published in a Vienna periodical.
(7) The photo of my mother I sent to you four weeks ago, but
it seems that it has been lost and I will send you another when I
return home.
Yours,
Rosa B. Weintnger
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? 212
Appendix
LETTER XVIII
Dear Doctor:
Otto moved from home in 1901. 1 myself rented a room for him.
He changed rooms often. The reason for his moving was that there
were many children at home. Otto did not get the quiet he liked,
and his irregular life--the nights during which he worked--an-
noyed my father, and he advised Otto to find a room for himself.
Yours,
Rosa B. Weininger
LETTER XIX
Vienna
7-21-39
Dear Doctor:
Miss Meyer was a quite indifferent person, and Otto did not
know her. She was only an acquaintance of mine. She wanted to
know Otto.
Yours,
Rosa B. Weininger
LETTER XX
Budapest
7-27-39
Dear Doctor:
Miss Meyer asked me often to introduce her to Otto, but the
matter was not of much importance. At last she spent one hour
with him, and she wrote me, "I have been with Jesus Christ. " (I
still have the postcard. )
I do not know where this Miss Meyer is now.
Yours,
Rosa B. Weininger
<
LETTER XXI
Rena, Norway
7-29-39
Dear Doctor:
Knut Hamsun asked to be excused for his delay in replying to
your letter. If he had received a letter or greeting from Weininger,
Hamsun would have remembered it; but it did not happen. Hamsun
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? Appendix 213
has only--more than once--read his work, Sex and Character, and
each time he became annoyed at|Gjellerup's childish and superior
attitude.
Respectfully yours,
Kntjt Hamsun
[per] MH
LETTER XXII
Nerholz
8-11-39
Doctor David Abrahamsen:\
Hamsun regrets he has no remembrance of Weininger's visiting
him at this time.
Respectfully yours,
Maria Hamsun
LETTER XXIII
Budapest, January 24, 1940
My very dear Doctor:
. . . I sent you an enlargement of a portrait of my mother; it is,
regrettably, the only one I have. This picture shows my mother at
the time just after she had given birth to Otto. . . .
My mother was slim, delicate, small, a warm human being, a
thinking individual, a beautiful woman with beautiful hair--dark
hair, which even at her death was not gray. She was not egocentric;
she was a good mother, a good woman.
But in spite of all this the married life of my parents was not
peaceful. That was due to my father's strong personality, his sharp
criticism, and his great demands upon his family. We children let
Mother spoil us, we confided in her, but to us Father was the su-
preme judge.
Today, as a mature woman, I judge my parents' life in quite a
different light. I think that because of her many children, because
of her wonderful but difficult husband, my mother had a hard task
which she could manage only with the greatest mental and physical
difficulty. She was ill and suffered for years from bronchio-catarrh.
I am certain of one thing: with an average, ordinary husband, my
mother would undoubtedly have been a happy wife.
My father had, for Puritanical reasons, never deceived my mother;
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? 214 Appendix
Father and Mother lived a very erotic life. He loved her dearly as
a woman and she loved him, only him. But there were storms in
their life which darkened our youth.
Yours,
Rosa Boschan Weininger
LETTER XXIV
Bayreuth
August 20, 1902
Dear Rosa:
In the excitement of hearing The Flying Dutchman I could have
kissed both you and Richard had you been here. . . . Of course,
I have heard the Flying Dutchman played many times, but I have
never before experienced the toneful effects I heard today. It was
quite indescribable. I felt quite drunk when I left the Playhouse
(Festspielhaus), and only the worldly glitter of the dressed-up crowd
leaving the theater made me unfortunately, painfully sober. When
The Dutchman affects me in this way, what would I not feel listen-
ing to Parsifal, the playing of which I heard on the train (What a
prosaic place! ) without any prospect of ever reaching a complete
understanding of this wonderful masterpiece. . . .
To me Richard
Wagner will always be, above everyone else, the great tone poet!
How shall I enjoy Parsifal after hearing it only one time and with-
out any theoretical musical preparation? I would be very happy
if I could enjoy this as I did when I for the first time, thirty years
ago, heard Meistersinger, and twenty-seven years ago heard Tristan
in Munich.
I received your letter of yesterday, dear Rosa. No, I was" not
annoyed to hear that Otto had enjoyed Parsifal before I had. I
have from your earliest years educated you so that you should learn
only that which was beautiful and noble, and I acknowledge with
pleasure that Otto is an aesthetic human being. I heard very much
about his travels, which have filled me with satisfaction. But he
should have obeyed me in all things! I did not demand from you
blind obedience; seeing the facts yourself, you should have listened
to me, Otto particularly. I am afraid for his material future.
I will keep this letter until this evening. It is three o'clock in the
afternoon, and at four o'clock Parsifal begins; it will close at a
quarter to eleven.
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? Appendix 215
This is after Parsifal. If perhaps I wrote a little too much of
The Dutchman, I am now so overwhelmed I can hardly say a word.
I have been thrilled by the countless grandiose beauties of the
music and the performance of every single artist. In the first and
third acts there are long, wonderful passages. I have the feeling of
being a cheat to be part of a modern audience, sitting in a comfort-
able seat and letting others play for me, when the only thing one
should do is kneel down. . . . I go to bed, but for me that does
not mean to sleep. . . .
Your Father
CONDEMNATION
The artist always loves himself; the philosopher hates himself.
A glorious love is created in the artist by the least sign of love and
respect, while the philosopher as such is never loved. But when one
is misjudged and still loved, then one becomes hard, hard until
one is compassionate with oneself! All this self-examination is a
phenomenon typical of the self-hater.
That is the worst: not being able to love when one is loved and
knows one is loved, with hatred toward that bitter feeling of a de-
sire to love deep down in the heart. This petrifaction, this barren-
ness! An olive tree on the hardest granite! My soul cannot free
itself and enter into that of another who loves me!
The terrible existence of the Ego! It is true: an artist is congratu-
lated on his birthday, but a philosopher is condoled. The man who
fears to hear his name--how can he be happy in his existence?
If you say: "I love you"--then I have the thought: How little
you know me! Do you love me? Does anybody love me?
A philosopher: A house where the shutters are forever closed.
The sun may shine upon the house and perhaps heat it, but the
house does not open. Angry, sullen, bitter, it refuses the light. What
does it look like in the house? A wild, desperate activity, a slow,
terrifying realization in the dark, an eternal clearing out of things--
inside! Do not ask how it looks inside the house--but the light
shines on, and, amazed, it knocks on the door over and over again.
Yet the windows close ever tighter from within.
Orro Weiningeb
April 3, 1902
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? Index
Aberrant mentality in members of
Weininger family, 25
Abnormal and normal mind, problem
of distinguishing between, 152, 164
Abraham, Karl, 165
Aesthetic disguise, 191
Alexander the Great, 119
Alliteration, 173
Ambivalence, 21-22, 85, 175, 181,
187
Ambulatory schizophrenia, 192
Anal-eroticism, 175
Anal-sadistic traits, 17;
Animals, W's writings about, 169,
182; see also Dog
Anticipations preceding scientific con-
cepts, 112
Antimetaphysicist, W. an extreme, 4;
Antinomic traits, 79
Anti-Semitism, growth of, and political
influence, 28, 34 f. ; Hitler's hostil-
ity, 29; directed against Freud, 34;
Leopold Weininger's, 57; W's anti-
Semitic views, 57, 120 f. , 122, 132,
183 f. ; why he sought to deny Ju-
daism, 184; Unconscious root of,
184
Aphorisms, 69, 80, 81, 129, 160, 169,
174, 179, 182, 183 ff.
Appel, Wilhelm von, 121; quoted, 163
Archaic thinking, 169
Ascetic, defined, 129
Asceticism, 128 ff. , 177
Austria, political and economic condi-
tions, 27 ff.
Authors, 29, 31 f.
Autism of schizoid person, 257*
Autistic attitude, 190
Autoeroticism as root of narcissism,
Avenarius, Richard, 46, 112, 114
Beethoven, 142, 150; house where he
had died: W's suicide in, 4, 145 f. ,
157; W's love for music of, 51, 52;
mental-disease tendency, 193n
Benedict, contributor to Neue Freie
Press, 29
Berthold, A. , 43*1
Billroth, Theodore, 30
Biro, Paul, 95; cited, 58; quoted, 174
Bisexuality, concept of, 43, 110; effect
upon W. , 44; see also Sex
Blau, Karolina (Mrs. Solomon Wein-
inger), 6
Bloch, Ivan, 4R
Bluher, Hans, 83
Bodily structure, relation to mental
make-up, 162
Bonheur, Rosa, Strindberg on, 149
Brand (Ibsen), 99
Braumiiller, publisher of Sex and
Character, 124
Breuer, F. , 33
Bronte, Emily, 66; quoted, 68
Bumke, quoted, 15;
"Butterfly, The" (W. ), text, 63
Caesar, 119
Castration, feelings of, 178; deepest
unconscious root of anti-Semit1sm,
? ? 184
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? 2l8
Index
"Condemnation," see "Verdamnis"
Conference of Psychology, 19, 39
Consciousness, synonymous decency,
according to W. , 171
Cours de philosophic' positive
(Comte), 193d
Crime, symbols of, 166, 169, 170, 172
. Criminalistic, impulses, roots in re-
pressed sadistic tendencies, 177
Criminal traits, 129, 144, 160, 173,
189
Cruelty, 65, 176, 177, 189; see also
Sadism
Danube River, 26
Darwin, Charles, 3;, 112
Death, and the barking dog, W's ex-
perience of, 88 f. , 93, 96, 101, 172;
fear of death, 81, 88, 98, 187
Deiristic attitude, 190
Dementia, permanent: turn of hyster-
ical patient to, 154
Dichtung und Wahrheit (Goethe),
185
Dilthey, Wilhelm, 114
Disgust, originates in the sublimation
of homosexual components, 177
Doctors of Vienna, 30
Dog, barking, and death: W's experi-
ences of, 88 f. , 93, 96, 101, 172
Dostoyevsky, Fiodor, 32
Duel fought by W. , 18
Economic conditions, Austria, 29
Electors, classes, 28
Elektra (Strauss and Hoffmannsthal),
31
Eliot, George, 111
Emperor and Galilean (Ibsen), 142
Empirical science, attitudes toward, 4
Endocrine disturbances, theory con-
cerning, 1320
Engels, Friedrich, 51
Epilepsy, 160
Eros and Psyche, original title of Sex
and Character, 45, 158n
Eroticism distinguished from sexual-
ity, 119
Erweckung, Die (Ewald), 870; see
also Ewald, Oskar
Ethical-philosophical preoccupation of
W. , 55 ff. , 77 ff. , 86, 100
Ethics, defined by W. , 80; bases of:
connection with logic, 117
Etienne, contributor to Neue Freie
Presse, 29
Ewald, Oskar, pseudonym of Oskar
Friedlander, 40, 29, 44, 94, 14;;
quoted, 49, 56, 87, 123, 135, 141,
158; Die Erweckung, Sjn; letter
from, text, 203
Experience as foundation of knowl-
edge, 45 f. ; a steppingstone for W's
research work, 53
Fackel, Die, 122, 148, 153
Faderen (Strindberg), 122
Fall Otto Weininger, Der . . .
(Probst), 24,95; excerpts, 126,155,
161
? ? "Fall Otto Weininger, Der" (Stekel),
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? Index
Frey, Adelheid (Adele), 7; see Wein-
inger, Adelheid
Frey, Armand, 7
Frey, Josef, 7
Friedlander, Oskar, see Ewald, Oskar,
pseud.
Froken Julie (Strindberg), 122
Future, nature of the struggle in, 121
Gemeinniitzige Forschung, Die . , .
(Swoboda), 430
Genital glands, 106; effect on mental
development of inadequately devel-
oped, 154
Gerber, Arthur, 71, 125, 134, 152,
181; ed. W's Taschenbuch und
Briefe an einem Freund, 4, 90, 94,
197,199; gave manuscript to Ewald,
4*1; quoted, 38, 40, 49, 144; W's
letters to, with excerpts, 59, 60, 66,
69, 71, 74, 88, 89, 123, 124, 127,
137, 141, 142, 174; and analysis of,
72; family's demand that they break
off relations, 76; story of the crucial
passage in W's life, November,
1902, 90 ff. , 102; reasons why ac-
count may have been inaccurate, 94;
correspondence with Strindberg, 94,
149 ff. ; extent of his awareness of
W's mental condition, 95, 144
Germans, see Nazis
Gersthof, suburb of Vienna, 20; W.
has lodgings in, 91
Geschichte der Philosophic (Tchweg-
ler), 60
"Geschlechtseigentiimlichkeiten"
(Berthold), 430
Geschlecht und Character (W. ), see
Sex and Character
Geschlecht und Entarung (Mobiiis),
x39
"Geschlecht und Unbescheidenheit"
(Mobius), 137, 138
GUdet pa Solhaug (Ibsen), 176
Gjellerup, quoted, 125
Glaubiger, quoted by W. , 122
God, 143, 167, 183, 185, 187
Goethe, 88, 142, 157, 185; quoted,
117
Goldsmith's art: Leopold Weininger
a master of, 8
Graphology, 115
Grieg, Edvard H. , 52
"Grosses Buch von einem grossen
Menschen, Ein" (Appel), 121
Gruhle, Hans, 191
Griinwald, Elonore Magdalene (Mrs.
Josef Frey), 7
Guilt feelings: causes, 182, 183
Hallucinations, 101; imperative, 181
Hamlet (Shakespeare), 143
Hamsun, Knut, 53, 71, 74; false news
of his suicide: effect upon W. , 91,
96; letters from, texts, 212 f.
Happiness, W's vain search for, 60 ff. ,
76; his awareness of its lack, 68,
136 I. ; why possible for women, not
for men, 136
Hart, B. , 1440
? ? Hatred of own mother, 132
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? 220
Index
Ibsen, Henrik, 36, 09, 132, 142; W*s
admiration for, 53; his essay on, ;q,
65, 79 (excerpt, 176); quoted, 7411,
80, 99n; as a masochist and a sadist,
176
Id, 190
"Idolatry-Gynolatry . . . " (Strind-
berg),148
Impotence, feelings of, 178, 184
Individualistic intellectualism, 179
Insanity, W's interest in, and ideas
about, 171, 174, 182
Inspiration, 191
Institute for 'Experimental' Psychol-
ogy. 74 , ,
Intellectual capacity and talent of the
sexes compared, 116 f.
Introspection, as a research method in
psychology, 19, 39 f. ; W's resort to,
as weapon against ideas which op-
pressed him, 64 f. , 77, 86, 97, 171
Introversion, 165
Inversion, sexual, 108, 109
Israelitische Kultusgemeinde of
Vienna, 12, 200
James, William, 114
Jaspers, Karl, 19on, 19m; quoted, 156
Jesus Christ, see Christ
Jewish Congregation in Vienna, 57,
58,79
Jewish xeligion, deserted by Leopold
Weininger, 1on, 57; by two daugh-
ters, 12, 57; by Otto, 57 f. , 60
Jews, W's ancestry, 6, 7; position in
Austria, 28, 29, 34 f. ; live in family,
not as individuals, 83, 120; vicious
hatred in W's aphorisms concern-
ing, 184; see also Anti-Semitism
Jodl, Friedrich, 55; letter to, 24, 78,
15811; recommendation of Sex and
Character to publisher, 163
Jodl, Margaret, 163n
Joire, Paul M. J. , 39
K. , Miss, 125, 132
Kant, Immanuel, 45, 6on, 70, 78, 79,
86, 119, 168; phenomenon of white
cloud during burial of, 186
Kierkegaard, Soren, 36, 79ft, qqn
Kikiriki, cartoon-paper, 29
Klages, L. , 156
Klaren, Georg, Otto Weininger . . . .
95
Kleist, Heinrich von, 154
Knowledge, search for the conditions
of, 45 f.
Koht, Halvdan, qgn
Kraepelin, Emil, 109, 130
Kraus, Julius, 54; attack upon W. , 44
Kretschmer, Ernst, 1320, 162n
Kris, Ernst, igzn
Kritik der reinen Erfahrung (A vena-
rius), 46
Languages, parents' talent for, 9, 10;
W's, 15; his study of Norwegian, 71,
"Law of Sexual Attraction, 47,
107 ff. , 130
Letters about W. and his family,
? ? texts, 41 f. , 94, 122, 149 ff. , 201-1;
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? Index
221
Medical leaders and students, 30
Memory, 117
Men, general concepts of male and fe-
male: appeal to the arbitration of
anatomy, 104 ff. ; element of prosti-
tution in great leaders, 119; why
happiness not possible for, 136; see
also Sex
Menschliche Weltbegriff, Der, (Ave-
narius), 470
Mental disease, Freud's approach to
study and treatment of, 33
Mental exploration: introspection
(q. v. ) as method, 19, 39 f.
Mental process distinguished from de-
velopment of personality, 192
Messianic nature, W's belief in own,
97
"Metaphysics (W. ), 78
Meyer, Miss, W's interest in, 124, 127
Mnemonic disturbance, 101
Mobiiis, P. J. , accusations leveled at
W. in review of his book, 137; re-
sulting controversy, 138-40; quoted,
155, 194
Modern times, W. calls Jewish and
anarchistic, 121
Moon, eclipse, 185, 186n
Moral hypertrophy, 100/1
Moral philosophy and struggle of W. ,
57, 59, 77 ff. , 86, 100
Morphology and characterology, par-
allel between, 110
Mother, type described by Weininger,
11; his own mother the psycholog-
ical basis, 11, 13; his mother and
prostitute types, 72, 73, 89, 118; see
also Women
Mozart, 15, 52
Murder, W's impulses to, 65, 92, 93,
101, 154, 189; why love related to,
17S
Music, Leopold Weininger's love for,
and understanding of, 8, 15; W's,
15; his development influenced by
his appreciation, 52, 72; composers
he most loved, 52
Musset, Alfred de, 111
Napoleon I, 119
Narcissism, sexual life the root of, 25n
Narcissistic regression common to both
schizophrenia and manic-depressive
malady, 162
Nationalities in Austria, 27
Natural sciences, vital force in creating
new viewpoint, 35
Nazis, influence in Austria, 28, 29; in-
terpretation of Nietzsche, 36; use of
W's attacks upon Jews, 122
Neue Freie Presse, 29
Neurosis, difference between psychosis
and, 165
"New . . . Methods in the Study of
Psychology (Joire), 39
Newspapers, 29; reviews of Sex and
Character, 121
Nietzsche, Friedrich W. , 78, 127;
? ? quoted, 28; influence, 33, 35, 36, 37
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? 222
Index
Periodicals, 29; reviews of Sex and
Character, 121
Personality, dependence of action
upon whole, 36; development of,
distinguished from mental process,
192
Perverts, sexual, 108 f. , 1ll, 132a,
Pfeffer, Wilhelm, 108
Phallic cult, 133
Philosophers, masculine and feminine,
Philosophy, positivism a trend within,
35; influence of Nietzsche: a new
moral evaluation, 36; contradictions
created, 37; psychology impotent
without, 114
Physiognomy, 110
Pikante Blatter, 30
Plato, 86, 131, 133
Poems by W. , 129; texts, 21, 23, 62 f. ,
84
Poets, 31, 32
Political conditions, 27
Positivism, 35, 45
Press, see Newspapers
"Problem of Talent, The" (W. ).
? 8
Probst, Ferdinand, 186; Der Fall Otto
Weininger . . . , 24,95, (excerpts,
126, 155, 161)
Prostitute and mother types of women,
72, 89, 118; see also Women
Prostitution, element of, in great
leaders, 119
Protagoras, 4;
Protestant church, entered by W. , 58,
60, 79, 184
Psychic activity, evidence of primary
insufficiency of, 14m
Psychoanalysis, Vienna the cradle of,
32; the work of Freud, 33 f.
hungry for sensation, audience, applause. . . .
Hearty regards,
Rosa Weininger
LETTER XII
Budapest
May 15, 1939
Dear Doctor:
My father looked like Nietzsche.
On my brother's tomb my father placed this inscription: "This
stone marks the resting place of a young man whose spirit found
no peace in this world. When he had delivered the message of his
soul, he could no longer remain among the living. He betook him-
self to the place of death of one of the greatest of all men, the
Schwarzspanierhaus in Vienna, and there destroyed his mortal
body. "
Otto was five feet and eight inches in height. I do not have the
first edition of Vber die letzten Dinge, but I will try to find it. I
have only the second and sixth editions.
Rosa Weininger
LETTER XIII
11. 6. 1939
20 Maresfield Gardens
London N. W. 3
Tel: Hampstead 2002
Dear Colleague:
My delayed answer is due to a week-long illness which has pre-
vented me from writing. I shall gladly answer your questions. Yes,
I am the person who gave Probst this description of Weininger's
personality. Weininger was never my patient, but one of his friends
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? 208 Appendix
was. Through this means Weininger became acquainted with the
views on bisexuality which I had already applied in my analysis,
prompted by Fliess. He constructed his book about this idea. I do
not know the difference between . . . [undecipherable] and his
thesis. In the manuscript Otto Weininger gave me to read there
were no depreciatory words about the Jews and much less criticism
of women. He had also to a large extent given consideration to my
views on hysteria.
I am,
Sincerely yours,
Freud
LETTER XIV
Budapest
6-27-39
Dear Doctor:
I have two letters to thank you for. In answer I wish to inform
you as follows:
(1) Otto showed an interest in social problems, but no more
than other young men. He was a member of the Society for Social
Science.
(2) Our name always was Weininger, and we always were Jews.
(3) My grandparents were from Vienna, as were their parents
also.
(4) My mother was a beautiful and quiet wife. She had seven
children, of whom three died. She was only a housewife and mother
and had a gift for languages. She was overshadowed by the stronger
personality of her husband.
(5) My father was a craftsman in gold, silver, and porcelain. He
created several artistic pieces which have been acquired by Ameri-
cans. He was a great linguist and musician. He was strong in mind
and feeling, in expressions of divine goodness and unflinching sever-
ity, and he was feared by us all.
(6) As a father peerless, never to be equaled, he cared with the
greatest devotion for the lives and souls of his children. Through
him we became familiar with the most sublime beauty in the world
of art. He knew no moderation in his severity and criticism. He
was loved and feared by us all. . . . If we ever told a lie, he would
punish us at once. His demands upon us were enormous; if we did
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? LETTER WRITTEN BY FREUD, JUNE 11, 1939
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? 210
Appendix
not live up to them, he was mortally wounded. My father never had
an education. At the age of twenty-two he was a correspondent in
foreign languages in the banking house of Elias. Upon his marriage
at this time, he started his handicraft. Museums in London, Paris,
and Vienna exhibited a number of his creations. My father was
anti-Semitic although he thought as a Jew.
I am still searching for the first edition of Uber die letzten Dinge.
Cordially yours,
Rosa Weininger
LETTER XV
6-24-39
Dear Doctor:
The letter which was returned to you unopened came to me
today. The address was illegible. I owe you an answer, as I now
see I had forgotten to answer you previously.
(1) The frivolity of my paternal uncle consisted in deserting his
wife and two small children without any further care of the chil-
dren. My father never forgave him for this, and when my uncle
was lying on his deathbed at the age of forty, my father refused
his request to come and see him. But my father raised my uncle's
children and made them two good men, who up to this time have
lived in Vienna but now have fled to America.
(2) My uncle deserted his family for another woman who lived
in common-law relation with him. I did not know of any other
frivolity.
(3) No, Otto was not happy. A peculiar fellow? No, I do not
believe so. But he was a very hard worker. During nights, many
nights, most nights, he worked by the light of a small candle, and
beside him was a glass of milk which in the evening I brought to
his bare room. Certainly his mind was overworked, his body tired;
but remember, he was only twenty-two when he created his work.
Yours,
Rosa Boschan Weiningeb
LETTER XVI
6-29-39
Dear Doctor:
My paternal uncle was the youngest of five children. He died at
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? Appendix 211
the age of forty. He was a businessman, arid he was charming and
handsome.
There were no conflicts in my uncle's house. He deserted his wife
and children suddenly, without seeing them again.
My maternal aunts were orderly persons who died at an early
age. A maternal uncle had a miserable existence. I myself knew
only one aunt, who was a singer. About the one brother, I hear
that he was not honest.
I had thousands of letters from my father, who wrote me every
day, often three times a day.
Many thanks,
Rosa B. Weintnger
LETTER XVII
Zermatt
Dear Doctor:
(1) Otto was the second child. The first was Helene and she
died at the age of three of diphtheria. The second boy was Franz,
and he died at the age of fifteen as the result of an appendicitis
attack.
(2) My paternal uncle was thirty years old when he deserted his
wife. >
(3) His name was Friedrich.
(4) He died of pneumonia.
(5) Mathilde and Karoline are both my sisters. Karoline is the
youngest. She is forty years old and the most talented of us girls,
particularly philologically. I am now staying with her.
(6) The creations of which Otto spoke on the postcard sent to
me were pieces of poetry which I had written as a girl and which
he published in a Vienna periodical.
(7) The photo of my mother I sent to you four weeks ago, but
it seems that it has been lost and I will send you another when I
return home.
Yours,
Rosa B. Weintnger
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? 212
Appendix
LETTER XVIII
Dear Doctor:
Otto moved from home in 1901. 1 myself rented a room for him.
He changed rooms often. The reason for his moving was that there
were many children at home. Otto did not get the quiet he liked,
and his irregular life--the nights during which he worked--an-
noyed my father, and he advised Otto to find a room for himself.
Yours,
Rosa B. Weininger
LETTER XIX
Vienna
7-21-39
Dear Doctor:
Miss Meyer was a quite indifferent person, and Otto did not
know her. She was only an acquaintance of mine. She wanted to
know Otto.
Yours,
Rosa B. Weininger
LETTER XX
Budapest
7-27-39
Dear Doctor:
Miss Meyer asked me often to introduce her to Otto, but the
matter was not of much importance. At last she spent one hour
with him, and she wrote me, "I have been with Jesus Christ. " (I
still have the postcard. )
I do not know where this Miss Meyer is now.
Yours,
Rosa B. Weininger
<
LETTER XXI
Rena, Norway
7-29-39
Dear Doctor:
Knut Hamsun asked to be excused for his delay in replying to
your letter. If he had received a letter or greeting from Weininger,
Hamsun would have remembered it; but it did not happen. Hamsun
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? Appendix 213
has only--more than once--read his work, Sex and Character, and
each time he became annoyed at|Gjellerup's childish and superior
attitude.
Respectfully yours,
Kntjt Hamsun
[per] MH
LETTER XXII
Nerholz
8-11-39
Doctor David Abrahamsen:\
Hamsun regrets he has no remembrance of Weininger's visiting
him at this time.
Respectfully yours,
Maria Hamsun
LETTER XXIII
Budapest, January 24, 1940
My very dear Doctor:
. . . I sent you an enlargement of a portrait of my mother; it is,
regrettably, the only one I have. This picture shows my mother at
the time just after she had given birth to Otto. . . .
My mother was slim, delicate, small, a warm human being, a
thinking individual, a beautiful woman with beautiful hair--dark
hair, which even at her death was not gray. She was not egocentric;
she was a good mother, a good woman.
But in spite of all this the married life of my parents was not
peaceful. That was due to my father's strong personality, his sharp
criticism, and his great demands upon his family. We children let
Mother spoil us, we confided in her, but to us Father was the su-
preme judge.
Today, as a mature woman, I judge my parents' life in quite a
different light. I think that because of her many children, because
of her wonderful but difficult husband, my mother had a hard task
which she could manage only with the greatest mental and physical
difficulty. She was ill and suffered for years from bronchio-catarrh.
I am certain of one thing: with an average, ordinary husband, my
mother would undoubtedly have been a happy wife.
My father had, for Puritanical reasons, never deceived my mother;
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? 214 Appendix
Father and Mother lived a very erotic life. He loved her dearly as
a woman and she loved him, only him. But there were storms in
their life which darkened our youth.
Yours,
Rosa Boschan Weininger
LETTER XXIV
Bayreuth
August 20, 1902
Dear Rosa:
In the excitement of hearing The Flying Dutchman I could have
kissed both you and Richard had you been here. . . . Of course,
I have heard the Flying Dutchman played many times, but I have
never before experienced the toneful effects I heard today. It was
quite indescribable. I felt quite drunk when I left the Playhouse
(Festspielhaus), and only the worldly glitter of the dressed-up crowd
leaving the theater made me unfortunately, painfully sober. When
The Dutchman affects me in this way, what would I not feel listen-
ing to Parsifal, the playing of which I heard on the train (What a
prosaic place! ) without any prospect of ever reaching a complete
understanding of this wonderful masterpiece. . . .
To me Richard
Wagner will always be, above everyone else, the great tone poet!
How shall I enjoy Parsifal after hearing it only one time and with-
out any theoretical musical preparation? I would be very happy
if I could enjoy this as I did when I for the first time, thirty years
ago, heard Meistersinger, and twenty-seven years ago heard Tristan
in Munich.
I received your letter of yesterday, dear Rosa. No, I was" not
annoyed to hear that Otto had enjoyed Parsifal before I had. I
have from your earliest years educated you so that you should learn
only that which was beautiful and noble, and I acknowledge with
pleasure that Otto is an aesthetic human being. I heard very much
about his travels, which have filled me with satisfaction. But he
should have obeyed me in all things! I did not demand from you
blind obedience; seeing the facts yourself, you should have listened
to me, Otto particularly. I am afraid for his material future.
I will keep this letter until this evening. It is three o'clock in the
afternoon, and at four o'clock Parsifal begins; it will close at a
quarter to eleven.
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? Appendix 215
This is after Parsifal. If perhaps I wrote a little too much of
The Dutchman, I am now so overwhelmed I can hardly say a word.
I have been thrilled by the countless grandiose beauties of the
music and the performance of every single artist. In the first and
third acts there are long, wonderful passages. I have the feeling of
being a cheat to be part of a modern audience, sitting in a comfort-
able seat and letting others play for me, when the only thing one
should do is kneel down. . . . I go to bed, but for me that does
not mean to sleep. . . .
Your Father
CONDEMNATION
The artist always loves himself; the philosopher hates himself.
A glorious love is created in the artist by the least sign of love and
respect, while the philosopher as such is never loved. But when one
is misjudged and still loved, then one becomes hard, hard until
one is compassionate with oneself! All this self-examination is a
phenomenon typical of the self-hater.
That is the worst: not being able to love when one is loved and
knows one is loved, with hatred toward that bitter feeling of a de-
sire to love deep down in the heart. This petrifaction, this barren-
ness! An olive tree on the hardest granite! My soul cannot free
itself and enter into that of another who loves me!
The terrible existence of the Ego! It is true: an artist is congratu-
lated on his birthday, but a philosopher is condoled. The man who
fears to hear his name--how can he be happy in his existence?
If you say: "I love you"--then I have the thought: How little
you know me! Do you love me? Does anybody love me?
A philosopher: A house where the shutters are forever closed.
The sun may shine upon the house and perhaps heat it, but the
house does not open. Angry, sullen, bitter, it refuses the light. What
does it look like in the house? A wild, desperate activity, a slow,
terrifying realization in the dark, an eternal clearing out of things--
inside! Do not ask how it looks inside the house--but the light
shines on, and, amazed, it knocks on the door over and over again.
Yet the windows close ever tighter from within.
Orro Weiningeb
April 3, 1902
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? Index
Aberrant mentality in members of
Weininger family, 25
Abnormal and normal mind, problem
of distinguishing between, 152, 164
Abraham, Karl, 165
Aesthetic disguise, 191
Alexander the Great, 119
Alliteration, 173
Ambivalence, 21-22, 85, 175, 181,
187
Ambulatory schizophrenia, 192
Anal-eroticism, 175
Anal-sadistic traits, 17;
Animals, W's writings about, 169,
182; see also Dog
Anticipations preceding scientific con-
cepts, 112
Antimetaphysicist, W. an extreme, 4;
Antinomic traits, 79
Anti-Semitism, growth of, and political
influence, 28, 34 f. ; Hitler's hostil-
ity, 29; directed against Freud, 34;
Leopold Weininger's, 57; W's anti-
Semitic views, 57, 120 f. , 122, 132,
183 f. ; why he sought to deny Ju-
daism, 184; Unconscious root of,
184
Aphorisms, 69, 80, 81, 129, 160, 169,
174, 179, 182, 183 ff.
Appel, Wilhelm von, 121; quoted, 163
Archaic thinking, 169
Ascetic, defined, 129
Asceticism, 128 ff. , 177
Austria, political and economic condi-
tions, 27 ff.
Authors, 29, 31 f.
Autism of schizoid person, 257*
Autistic attitude, 190
Autoeroticism as root of narcissism,
Avenarius, Richard, 46, 112, 114
Beethoven, 142, 150; house where he
had died: W's suicide in, 4, 145 f. ,
157; W's love for music of, 51, 52;
mental-disease tendency, 193n
Benedict, contributor to Neue Freie
Press, 29
Berthold, A. , 43*1
Billroth, Theodore, 30
Biro, Paul, 95; cited, 58; quoted, 174
Bisexuality, concept of, 43, 110; effect
upon W. , 44; see also Sex
Blau, Karolina (Mrs. Solomon Wein-
inger), 6
Bloch, Ivan, 4R
Bluher, Hans, 83
Bodily structure, relation to mental
make-up, 162
Bonheur, Rosa, Strindberg on, 149
Brand (Ibsen), 99
Braumiiller, publisher of Sex and
Character, 124
Breuer, F. , 33
Bronte, Emily, 66; quoted, 68
Bumke, quoted, 15;
"Butterfly, The" (W. ), text, 63
Caesar, 119
Castration, feelings of, 178; deepest
unconscious root of anti-Semit1sm,
? ? 184
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? 2l8
Index
"Condemnation," see "Verdamnis"
Conference of Psychology, 19, 39
Consciousness, synonymous decency,
according to W. , 171
Cours de philosophic' positive
(Comte), 193d
Crime, symbols of, 166, 169, 170, 172
. Criminalistic, impulses, roots in re-
pressed sadistic tendencies, 177
Criminal traits, 129, 144, 160, 173,
189
Cruelty, 65, 176, 177, 189; see also
Sadism
Danube River, 26
Darwin, Charles, 3;, 112
Death, and the barking dog, W's ex-
perience of, 88 f. , 93, 96, 101, 172;
fear of death, 81, 88, 98, 187
Deiristic attitude, 190
Dementia, permanent: turn of hyster-
ical patient to, 154
Dichtung und Wahrheit (Goethe),
185
Dilthey, Wilhelm, 114
Disgust, originates in the sublimation
of homosexual components, 177
Doctors of Vienna, 30
Dog, barking, and death: W's experi-
ences of, 88 f. , 93, 96, 101, 172
Dostoyevsky, Fiodor, 32
Duel fought by W. , 18
Economic conditions, Austria, 29
Electors, classes, 28
Elektra (Strauss and Hoffmannsthal),
31
Eliot, George, 111
Emperor and Galilean (Ibsen), 142
Empirical science, attitudes toward, 4
Endocrine disturbances, theory con-
cerning, 1320
Engels, Friedrich, 51
Epilepsy, 160
Eros and Psyche, original title of Sex
and Character, 45, 158n
Eroticism distinguished from sexual-
ity, 119
Erweckung, Die (Ewald), 870; see
also Ewald, Oskar
Ethical-philosophical preoccupation of
W. , 55 ff. , 77 ff. , 86, 100
Ethics, defined by W. , 80; bases of:
connection with logic, 117
Etienne, contributor to Neue Freie
Presse, 29
Ewald, Oskar, pseudonym of Oskar
Friedlander, 40, 29, 44, 94, 14;;
quoted, 49, 56, 87, 123, 135, 141,
158; Die Erweckung, Sjn; letter
from, text, 203
Experience as foundation of knowl-
edge, 45 f. ; a steppingstone for W's
research work, 53
Fackel, Die, 122, 148, 153
Faderen (Strindberg), 122
Fall Otto Weininger, Der . . .
(Probst), 24,95; excerpts, 126,155,
161
? ? "Fall Otto Weininger, Der" (Stekel),
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? Index
Frey, Adelheid (Adele), 7; see Wein-
inger, Adelheid
Frey, Armand, 7
Frey, Josef, 7
Friedlander, Oskar, see Ewald, Oskar,
pseud.
Froken Julie (Strindberg), 122
Future, nature of the struggle in, 121
Gemeinniitzige Forschung, Die . , .
(Swoboda), 430
Genital glands, 106; effect on mental
development of inadequately devel-
oped, 154
Gerber, Arthur, 71, 125, 134, 152,
181; ed. W's Taschenbuch und
Briefe an einem Freund, 4, 90, 94,
197,199; gave manuscript to Ewald,
4*1; quoted, 38, 40, 49, 144; W's
letters to, with excerpts, 59, 60, 66,
69, 71, 74, 88, 89, 123, 124, 127,
137, 141, 142, 174; and analysis of,
72; family's demand that they break
off relations, 76; story of the crucial
passage in W's life, November,
1902, 90 ff. , 102; reasons why ac-
count may have been inaccurate, 94;
correspondence with Strindberg, 94,
149 ff. ; extent of his awareness of
W's mental condition, 95, 144
Germans, see Nazis
Gersthof, suburb of Vienna, 20; W.
has lodgings in, 91
Geschichte der Philosophic (Tchweg-
ler), 60
"Geschlechtseigentiimlichkeiten"
(Berthold), 430
Geschlecht und Character (W. ), see
Sex and Character
Geschlecht und Entarung (Mobiiis),
x39
"Geschlecht und Unbescheidenheit"
(Mobius), 137, 138
GUdet pa Solhaug (Ibsen), 176
Gjellerup, quoted, 125
Glaubiger, quoted by W. , 122
God, 143, 167, 183, 185, 187
Goethe, 88, 142, 157, 185; quoted,
117
Goldsmith's art: Leopold Weininger
a master of, 8
Graphology, 115
Grieg, Edvard H. , 52
"Grosses Buch von einem grossen
Menschen, Ein" (Appel), 121
Gruhle, Hans, 191
Griinwald, Elonore Magdalene (Mrs.
Josef Frey), 7
Guilt feelings: causes, 182, 183
Hallucinations, 101; imperative, 181
Hamlet (Shakespeare), 143
Hamsun, Knut, 53, 71, 74; false news
of his suicide: effect upon W. , 91,
96; letters from, texts, 212 f.
Happiness, W's vain search for, 60 ff. ,
76; his awareness of its lack, 68,
136 I. ; why possible for women, not
for men, 136
Hart, B. , 1440
? ? Hatred of own mother, 132
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? 220
Index
Ibsen, Henrik, 36, 09, 132, 142; W*s
admiration for, 53; his essay on, ;q,
65, 79 (excerpt, 176); quoted, 7411,
80, 99n; as a masochist and a sadist,
176
Id, 190
"Idolatry-Gynolatry . . . " (Strind-
berg),148
Impotence, feelings of, 178, 184
Individualistic intellectualism, 179
Insanity, W's interest in, and ideas
about, 171, 174, 182
Inspiration, 191
Institute for 'Experimental' Psychol-
ogy. 74 , ,
Intellectual capacity and talent of the
sexes compared, 116 f.
Introspection, as a research method in
psychology, 19, 39 f. ; W's resort to,
as weapon against ideas which op-
pressed him, 64 f. , 77, 86, 97, 171
Introversion, 165
Inversion, sexual, 108, 109
Israelitische Kultusgemeinde of
Vienna, 12, 200
James, William, 114
Jaspers, Karl, 19on, 19m; quoted, 156
Jesus Christ, see Christ
Jewish Congregation in Vienna, 57,
58,79
Jewish xeligion, deserted by Leopold
Weininger, 1on, 57; by two daugh-
ters, 12, 57; by Otto, 57 f. , 60
Jews, W's ancestry, 6, 7; position in
Austria, 28, 29, 34 f. ; live in family,
not as individuals, 83, 120; vicious
hatred in W's aphorisms concern-
ing, 184; see also Anti-Semitism
Jodl, Friedrich, 55; letter to, 24, 78,
15811; recommendation of Sex and
Character to publisher, 163
Jodl, Margaret, 163n
Joire, Paul M. J. , 39
K. , Miss, 125, 132
Kant, Immanuel, 45, 6on, 70, 78, 79,
86, 119, 168; phenomenon of white
cloud during burial of, 186
Kierkegaard, Soren, 36, 79ft, qqn
Kikiriki, cartoon-paper, 29
Klages, L. , 156
Klaren, Georg, Otto Weininger . . . .
95
Kleist, Heinrich von, 154
Knowledge, search for the conditions
of, 45 f.
Koht, Halvdan, qgn
Kraepelin, Emil, 109, 130
Kraus, Julius, 54; attack upon W. , 44
Kretschmer, Ernst, 1320, 162n
Kris, Ernst, igzn
Kritik der reinen Erfahrung (A vena-
rius), 46
Languages, parents' talent for, 9, 10;
W's, 15; his study of Norwegian, 71,
"Law of Sexual Attraction, 47,
107 ff. , 130
Letters about W. and his family,
? ? texts, 41 f. , 94, 122, 149 ff. , 201-1;
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? Index
221
Medical leaders and students, 30
Memory, 117
Men, general concepts of male and fe-
male: appeal to the arbitration of
anatomy, 104 ff. ; element of prosti-
tution in great leaders, 119; why
happiness not possible for, 136; see
also Sex
Menschliche Weltbegriff, Der, (Ave-
narius), 470
Mental disease, Freud's approach to
study and treatment of, 33
Mental exploration: introspection
(q. v. ) as method, 19, 39 f.
Mental process distinguished from de-
velopment of personality, 192
Messianic nature, W's belief in own,
97
"Metaphysics (W. ), 78
Meyer, Miss, W's interest in, 124, 127
Mnemonic disturbance, 101
Mobiiis, P. J. , accusations leveled at
W. in review of his book, 137; re-
sulting controversy, 138-40; quoted,
155, 194
Modern times, W. calls Jewish and
anarchistic, 121
Moon, eclipse, 185, 186n
Moral hypertrophy, 100/1
Moral philosophy and struggle of W. ,
57, 59, 77 ff. , 86, 100
Morphology and characterology, par-
allel between, 110
Mother, type described by Weininger,
11; his own mother the psycholog-
ical basis, 11, 13; his mother and
prostitute types, 72, 73, 89, 118; see
also Women
Mozart, 15, 52
Murder, W's impulses to, 65, 92, 93,
101, 154, 189; why love related to,
17S
Music, Leopold Weininger's love for,
and understanding of, 8, 15; W's,
15; his development influenced by
his appreciation, 52, 72; composers
he most loved, 52
Musset, Alfred de, 111
Napoleon I, 119
Narcissism, sexual life the root of, 25n
Narcissistic regression common to both
schizophrenia and manic-depressive
malady, 162
Nationalities in Austria, 27
Natural sciences, vital force in creating
new viewpoint, 35
Nazis, influence in Austria, 28, 29; in-
terpretation of Nietzsche, 36; use of
W's attacks upon Jews, 122
Neue Freie Presse, 29
Neurosis, difference between psychosis
and, 165
"New . . . Methods in the Study of
Psychology (Joire), 39
Newspapers, 29; reviews of Sex and
Character, 121
Nietzsche, Friedrich W. , 78, 127;
? ? quoted, 28; influence, 33, 35, 36, 37
Generated for (University of Chicago) on 2014-08-19 08:39 GMT / http://hdl. handle. net/2027/wu. 89038364857 Public Domain, Google-digitized / http://www. hathitrust. org/access_use#pd-google
? 222
Index
Periodicals, 29; reviews of Sex and
Character, 121
Personality, dependence of action
upon whole, 36; development of,
distinguished from mental process,
192
Perverts, sexual, 108 f. , 1ll, 132a,
Pfeffer, Wilhelm, 108
Phallic cult, 133
Philosophers, masculine and feminine,
Philosophy, positivism a trend within,
35; influence of Nietzsche: a new
moral evaluation, 36; contradictions
created, 37; psychology impotent
without, 114
Physiognomy, 110
Pikante Blatter, 30
Plato, 86, 131, 133
Poems by W. , 129; texts, 21, 23, 62 f. ,
84
Poets, 31, 32
Political conditions, 27
Positivism, 35, 45
Press, see Newspapers
"Problem of Talent, The" (W. ).
? 8
Probst, Ferdinand, 186; Der Fall Otto
Weininger . . . , 24,95, (excerpts,
126, 155, 161)
Prostitute and mother types of women,
72, 89, 118; see also Women
Prostitution, element of, in great
leaders, 119
Protagoras, 4;
Protestant church, entered by W. , 58,
60, 79, 184
Psychic activity, evidence of primary
insufficiency of, 14m
Psychoanalysis, Vienna the cradle of,
32; the work of Freud, 33 f.