In the context of the intellectual crisis of European culture in the 1920-1930s, parallel to Werner Jaeger's concept of "the third humanism," an original and sharp interpretation of this idea emerged, belonging to the German philosopher and educator Eduard Spranger (1882–1963). While Jaeger saw salvation in returning to the ancient ideal of paideia as a formative force, Spranger subjected classical humanism to radical critique and proposed his own anthropologically grounded version of "the third humanism," addressed to the challenges of modernity.
Spranger, one of the leading representatives of the philosophy of life and Geisteswissenschaftliche Pädagogik (pedagogy based on the sciences of the spirit), formulated a harsh diagnosis in his work "Philosophy of Youth" (1924) and other texts. In his view, the "second" or neohumanist ideal of the 18th–19th centuries had degenerated into a formal, "museum" attitude towards antiquity by the beginning of the 20th century. Classical culture had become a collection of dead models for imitation, an aesthetized canon devoid of vitality. Teaching ancient languages had become an end in itself, a rhetorical exercise disconnected from the real problems of the emerging individual. This "museum humanism" proved helpless in the face of nihilism, technocratic thinking, and social upheavals following World War I.
Spranger's answer was "the third humanism," which was supposed to overcome the alienation between cultural heritage and life. Its core was not the reconstruction of the ancient canon, but pedagogical anthropology oriented towards the development of internal, inherent "spiritual forms" (seelische Strukturen). Spranger distinguished six main ideal types of personality (theoretical, economic, aesthetic, social, political, religious), each of which possesses a unique way of relating to the world. The task of education is not to impose a single model (an ancient hero or a scholar), but to identify and cultivate the dominant spiritual form in a particular young person, to help him acquire his internal regularity and value orientation.
Thus, Spranger's third humanism is a humanism of becoming, not of a model. Ancient heritage (like any other) should serve not as an example for copying, but as a catalyst for internal experience, material for dialogue that helps the young individual to become aware of and formulate his own life values. The key figure becomes not the harmonious Hellenic, but the "active person" capable of spiritual creation and responsible historical action in his unique life situation.
Spranger reinterprets the very process of education. It is not the transmission of a sum of knowledge, but a "meeting" of the developing subjectivity of the student with the "objective spirit" — the world of cultural values embodied in language, art, religion, law. The teacher acts not as a transmitter of information, but as a "guide" on this path of meeting, helping the student to experience and internalize cultural values as personally significant. An interesting fact: Spranger had a significant impact on the reform of the German school system in the Weimar Republic, where an attempt was made to overcome verbalism through the introduction of the so-called "labor school," emphasizing holistic experience and connection with life, which was a practical consequence of his ideas.
While Jaeger saw antiquity as an ontological norm (the ideal of paideia) that needed to be revitalized, Spranger saw it (and any great culture) as one of the powerful languages of the "objective spirit," with which modern self-consciousness is born in dialogue. Jaeger was a classicist philologist, striving to update the discipline. Spranger was a philosopher and educator, striving to update the individual through pedagogy.
The historical fate of Spranger's ideas is dramatic. With the rise of the Nazis to power, his emphasis on individual spiritual development and openness to world culture came into conflict with the totalitarian ideology of racial collectivism. Although he tried to find a modus vivendi with the regime, his humanistic pedagogy was marginalized. After the war, his ideas influenced the restoration of the German education system on humanistic principles.
Edward Spranger's third humanism can be read today as a foreshadowing of key pedagogical trends: the shift of focus from the acquisition of the canon to the development of the individual, the value of an individual educational trajectory, understanding education as a dialogue of cultures and value self-determination. His protest against the "museum" and formal approach to culture sounds surprisingly modern in an era when knowledge often turns into information for testing, and cultural heritage into an object of tourist consumption. Spranger reminds us that true humanism is born not from repeating the past, but from a courageous encounter of the living, becoming human spirit with the challenges of its time, for which classics is not the final point, but one of the deepest interlocutors.
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