Olga Plümacher | |
Birth Name: | Olga Marie Pauline Hünerwadel |
Birth Date: | 27 May 1839 |
Birth Place: | Tsaritsyn, Russia |
Death Date: | (aged 56) |
Death Place: | Beersheba Springs, Tennessee, U.S. |
Spouse: | Eugene Hermann Plümacher |
Children: | 2 |
Era: | 19th-century philosophy |
Region: | Western philosophy |
School Tradition: | Post-Schopenhauerian pessimism |
Thesis1 Title: | and |
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Thesis1 Url: | and |
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Thesis1 Year: | and |
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Doctoral Advisors: | )--> |
Olga Marie Pauline Plümacher (née Hünerwadel; 27 May 1839 –) was a Russian-born Swiss-American philosopher and scholar. She engaged with the philosophies of the German philosophers Arthur Schopenhauer and Eduard von Hartmann, and published three books which contributed to the pessimism controversy in Germany. Her book on the history of philosophical pessimism, Der Pessimismus in Vergangenheit und Gegenwart ("Pessimism in the Past and Present") was influential on Friedrich Nietzsche and Samuel Beckett.
Olga Marie Pauline Hünerwadel was born on 27 May 1839, in Tsaritsyn, Russia.[1] She was the daughter of Gottlieb Samuel Hünerwadel, a former officer in France under Napoleon, and Adelheid Hünerwadel (his cousin).[2] The family moved to Switzerland where her father managed a steel plant and later retired to Zürich, Switzerland, where Plümacher grew up. She married a German, Eugene Hermann Plümacher, who later worked as U.S. Consul to Venezuela;[3] they had two children. Plümacher had no formal university education.[4]
Plümacher was friends with a former classmate,[5] who was the mother of the German playwright Frank Wedekind and introduced him to the philosophies of Arthur Schopenhauer and Eduard von Hartmann, of whom Plümacher was a devotee; she has been described as Wedekind's "philosophical aunt".[6] [7]
Plümacher later emigrated with her family to the United States and lived in Beersheba Springs, Tennessee, where she published three books in Germany that engaged with the philosophies of Schopenhauer and Von Hartmann: Der Kampf um's Unbewusste ("The Battle for the Unconscious"), Zwei Individualisten der Schopenhauer'schen Schule ("Two Individualists of the Schopenhauer School"), and Der Pessimismus in Vergangenheit und Gegenwart ("Pessimism in the Past and Present"). These works made Plümacher a significant figure within the pessimism controversy in Germany.[8] Der Pessimismus in Vergangenheit und Gegenwart was influential on Friedrich Nietzsche, whose personal copy he annotated throughout.[9]
Plümacher also published several articles on psychology, philosophy and metaphysics in several German journals. Additionally, she published an article on Von Hartmann in English, in the Oxford journal Mind.[10]
Plümacher died on an unspecified date around 15 June 1895, and was buried in the Armfield Cemetery in Beersheba Springs; she was 56 years old.
Samuel Beckett first read Der Pessimismus in Vergangenheit und Gegenwart around 1938; his intense interest in the book led him to heavily annotate it throughout and add in blank pages for additional notes.[11]
Plümacher has been compared to Agnes Taubert, another largely forgotten German female philosopher who also played large part in the pessimism controversy,[12] as well as the German-American philosopher Amelie J. Hathaway.[13]
Rolf Kieser, a professor of German at the State University of New York, published a biography of Plümacher in 1990, Olga Plümacher-Hünerwadel, eine gelehrte Frau des neunzehnten Jahrhunderts.
Plümacher was included in the 2022 issue of the British Journal for the History of Philosophy, titled "Lost Voices: Women in Philosophy 1870-1970".[14]