Ansbacher was born in
Frankfurt am Main,
German Empire. After completing high school he worked in a brokerage firm. He immigrated to the U.S. via
steamer, working as a dishwasher. Upon arrival in
New York City he resumed his career in the financial business and attended evening lectures by
Alfred Adler. At one point he went to see Adler for a personal consultation concerning his unhappiness over his work and over the termination of a recent relationship. Adler encouraged him to enroll in graduate school. He attended seminars in Adler's home, sparking his interest in
psychology. Through Adler, he met Rowena Ripin, who had her doctoral degree from the
University of Vienna. They were married a year later. Although he had no bachelor's degree, Ansbacher was admitted to the doctoral program at
Columbia University. He wrote his doctoral dissertation on the perception of number as affected by the monetary value of objects, under R.S. Woodward, graduating in 1937. This work concerning the importance of context was cited in the 1939
American Psychological Association Presidential Address. Ansbacher served on the faculty of
Brown University from 1940 through 1943, and worked for Walter S. Hunter as an editor for
Psychological Abstracts. Following this, he worked for the
Office of War Information writing air-drop leaflets to convince German soldiers to give up the war effort. In addition, he wrote some papers on German
military psychology. He came to the
University of Vermont at Burlington (UVM) in 1947. In 1958, Heinz Ansbacher took over the editorship of
The Individual Psychology News and renamed the periodical the
Journal of Individual Psychology - much to the satisfaction of Adlerians outside the USA. Under his editorship, which continued until 1974, the journal maintained high academic standards and was devoted to "a
holistic,
phenomenological,
teleological,
field theoretical, and socially oriented approach to psychology and related fields" endeavoring to "continue the tradition of Alfred Adler's Individual Psychology". ==Works and honors==