A Manual for the Freest Spirits

On Free Will, Religion, Metaphysics, and Feminism

Helene Druskowitz author Luka Boršić translator Ivana Skuhala Karasman translator Luka Boršić editor Ivana Skuhala Karasman editor

Format:Paperback

Publisher:De Gruyter

Published:15th Dec '25

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

A Manual for the Freest Spirits cover

Helene Druskowitz (1856–1918) was the first German-speaking women to acquire a PhD in philosophy. She explored free will, religion, metaphysics, and feminism. In the four small books presented in this volume, she discusses previous attempts to replace religion (esp. Comte, Mill, Feuerbach, Lange, Nietzsche, Duboc, Düring, and Salter), advocates replacing religion with knowledge-based worldviews, proposes a dualism between matter and transcendent reality, and argues for moral responsibility without free will.

The paperback edition includes the English translations and a comprehensive introduction. The hardcover edition, which includes the English translations, a comprehensive introduction, and the German text, is available here:

As a radical feminist, Druskowitz advocated for gender segregation and women-led societal reform, even proposing human extinction as a moral imperative. Her ideas on male dominance and environmental degradation anticipated later eco-feminist thought. Though not widely recognized in her time, Druskowitz’s work offers valuable insights into feminist philosophy, eco-feminism, and discussions on free will and criticisms of religion, providing historical context for these ideas’ evolution in the 20th and 21st centuries.

ISBN: 9783119148658

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 280g

182 pages