

Dr. Jaap van der Wal
Dr. Jaap van der Wal, M.D., Ph.D. is a Dutch medical doctor, anatomist, and embryologist known for his innovative and phenomenological approach to human development and morphology. He trained as a medical doctor and completed his medical education in 1973, after which he specialized in functional anatomy, particularly focusing on the architecture of connective tissue (fascia) and proprioception. Over the course of his academic career, Dr. van der Wal served as associate professor of Anatomy and Embryology at Maastricht University in the Netherlands, where he taught and conducted research until his retirement in 2012.
Dr. van der Wal’s work bridges traditional science with a more holistic and philosophical perspective. He is particularly recognised for applying dynamic morphology and Goethean phenomenology to the study of the human embryo, viewing embryological development not merely as a mechanical process but as a dynamic, expressive, and meaningful unfolding of human form. This perspective sees the body as a living, temporal process rather than a static structure.
Throughout his career, Dr. van der Wal has also lectured widely on topics such as medical anthropology, the philosophy of science, and the intersection of embryology with consciousness and human existence. His work has influenced fields including craniosacral therapy, osteopathy, polarity therapy, prenatal psychology, and trauma therapy. Since retirement, he has devoted his time to the international educational project “Embryo in Motion”, teaching his approach—sometimes referred to as “Embryosophy”—through workshops, courses, and lectures across Europe and the United States.
In addition to teaching, Dr. van der Wal has contributed to literature on dynamic morphology and embryology, emphasising how a deeper understanding of developmental form can enrich both scientific and spiritual perspectives on what it means to be human.