Russian Philosophy of History and Literature

 
PIIS004287440001154-4-1
DOI10.31857/S004287440001154-4
Publication type Article
Status Published
Authors
Occupation: Chief Recearch Fellow, Head of Department of Philosophy of Culture
Affiliation: Institute of Philosophy of RAS
Journal nameVoprosy filosofii
EditionIssue 10
Pages116-127
Abstract

Russian philosophy of history organically combines two principles: scientific – historical and sociological and artistic – philosophizing literature. These principles were present in it both in the pre- and post-revolutionary past, and during its "second birth", since the late 1980s. However, up to now, with rare exceptions, the meanings and values of "artistic philosophy" in the development of Russian philosophy of history are not taken into account, and its significance is not recognized. This fact is explained by the absence in many domestic researchers of taste and ability to work with the results of sensual and emotional mastery of reality, the fact that S.L. Frank called the "national spirit", and sometimes – in the elementary superficial knowledge (ignorance) of domestic philosophizing prose and poetry. Meanwhile, "artistic philosophy" fills with deep meaning, makes us experience what I call the constants of Russian social being and consciousness, helps to better understand not only the past and the present, but also the desired tomorrow.

Keywordsphilosophy of culture, constants, history, literature, society, people, power, culture
Publication date23.11.2018
Cite   Download pdf To download PDF you should sign in
Размещенный ниже текст является ознакомительной версией и может не соответствовать печатной

views: 2129

Readers community rating: votes 0

1. Basinsky, Pavel (2011) Passion for Maxim. Gorky: 9 Days after Death, AST, Astrel, Moscow.

2. Bibikhin, Vladimir V. (2012) Property. Philosophy of the own, Nauka, St. Petersburg (in Russian).

3. Bykov, Dmitry (2009) Was Gorky? AST, Moscow (in Russian).

4. Gasparov, Mikhail (2012) Philology as Moral, Fortuna El, Moscow (in Russian).

5. Niñkolsky, Sergey A. (2011) ‘Dostoevsky and the Phenomenon of “Underground” Person’, Voprosy Filosofii, Vol. 12 (2011), pp. 77–87 (in Russian).

6. Niñkosky, Sergey A., ed. (2017) Shalamov’s Train. The Problems of Russian Identity, Golos, Moscow (in Russian).

7. Niñkolsky, Sergey A. (2017) Empire and Culture. The Philosophical and Literary Understanding of October, IFRAN, Moscow (in Russian).

8. North, Douglass C. (1990) Institutions, Institutional Change and Economic Performance, University Press, Cambridge (Russian translation).

9. North, Douglass C. (2005) Understanding the Process of Economic Change, Princeton University Press (Russian translation).

Система Orphus

Loading...
Up