Geschlecht und Charakter: Eine prinzipielle Untersuchung by Otto Weininger

(24 User reviews)   5446
Weininger, Otto, 1880-1903 Weininger, Otto, 1880-1903
German
Ever read a book that makes you angry, confused, and weirdly fascinated all at once? That's 'Sex and Character' for you. Written by a 23-year-old genius in 1903, it's one of the most infamous books you've never heard of. It claims to solve the 'woman question' with a brutal, pseudo-scientific theory that women are essentially soulless and immoral. It's shockingly misogynistic, but it was also weirdly influential on thinkers from Freud to Wittgenstein. Reading it feels like watching a brilliant mind drive itself off a cliff. It's not a good book, but it's a fascinating historical artifact of a terrible, dangerous idea.
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Let's be clear from the start: this is not a storybook. There are no characters or plot in the usual sense. Instead, it's a dense philosophical and psychological argument. Otto Weininger, a young man barely out of university, tries to build a grand theory of everything based on gender. He argues that all people are a mix of 'masculine' and 'feminine' principles. The masculine side represents genius, morality, logic, and the soul. The feminine side? He links it to sexuality, passivity, a lack of a true self, and amorality. His conclusion is that 'Woman,' as a concept, is mostly this negative principle, while 'Man' strives for the higher, spiritual ideal.

Why You Should Read It

You don't read this to agree with it. You read it to understand a dark corner of intellectual history. It's like a case study in how prejudice can dress itself up in academic language. Weininger wasn't a simple bigot; he was deeply troubled, wrestling with his own sexuality and Jewish identity (the book has awful antisemitic sections too). Seeing how his personal torment got twisted into a 'scientific' system is chilling. It shows how even smart people can build entire worlds of thought on rotten foundations. It makes you question other 'obvious' truths we accept today.

Final Verdict

This book is a tough, unpleasant read, and I can't recommend it for casual enjoyment. It's for the intellectually curious who want to see the roots of modern misogyny and understand why some terrible ideas persist. It's for students of history, philosophy, or gender studies who need to confront the source material. Think of it as a warning label from the past, written in dense German philosophy. If you're up for a challenging, often infuriating look at a forgotten but influential text, proceed with caution. For everyone else, a summary will probably suffice.



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Anthony Davis
1 year ago

The index links actually work, which is rare!

Charles Lopez
8 months ago

Essential reading for students of this field.

Richard Hernandez
3 weeks ago

Enjoyed every page.

Melissa Rodriguez
1 week ago

As someone who reads a lot, the flow of the text seems very fluid. A valuable addition to my collection.

Emma Young
7 months ago

I had low expectations initially, however the clarity of the writing makes this accessible. Absolutely essential reading.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (24 User reviews )

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