She studied under the prominent Polish philosopher and logician Kazimierz Twardowski and was a member of the Lvov-Warsaw School.
[5] Due to their race as Polish Jews, Ginsberg, her husband, and son were killed by the Nazis at the Lvov ghetto.
[7][8] Ginsberg's dissertation, On the Concepts of Existential Dependence and Independence, was published in 1931 during the anniversary of the Polish Philosophical Society.
[8] Ginsberg also participated in Roman Ingarden's attempt to establish a phenomenological circle at Lvov.
Later, her ideas on existential dependence and other connected concepts have been applied by other theorists in the field of psychology.