Tags
Tag: "Russian philosophy"
Letters
Russian Responses • The Sartre Continues • A Dream Letter • Autonomous Writing • Missing Virtues • Good Breeding? • Revisions And Improvements • Deductive Inductive Reasoning • Infinite Ignorance • Open Ended
[Issue 55: May/June 2006: Letters]
“What is to be Done?”
Anna Arutunyan on the lack of agency in contemporary Russia.
[Issue 54: February/March 2006: Philosophy in Russia]
Lesley Chamberlain
Lesley Chamberlain is the author of Motherland, a book about the history of Russian philosophy from the 19th century onwards, and has another book on the subject coming out soon. Rick Lewis asked her about her books and about Russia’s philosophical past.
[Issue 54: February/March 2006: Interview]
Sociological Reflections on Contemporary Moscow
Tim Delaney shares some observations from his trip to Moscow for the 4th Congress of Philosophy.
[Issue 54: February/March 2006: Philosophy in Russia]
Tolstoy’s Theory of Nonviolence
Academician Abdusalam A. Guseinov on pacificism and the perspective of the infinite beginning.
[Issue 54: February/March 2006: Philosophy in Russia]
The Fourth Russian Philosophy Congress
So what are the problems that interest Russian thinkers today? Anna Kostikova and Elena Kosilova answer this question with a roundup of the topics discussed at the biggest gathering of Russian philosophers in history.
[Issue 54: February/March 2006: Philosophy in Russia]
Russian Thoughts
by Rick Lewis
[Issue 54: February/March 2006: Editorial]
An American in Moscow
Tim Madigan reports from the 4th Russian Congress of Philosophy.
[Issue 54: February/March 2006: Philosophy in Russia]
Modern Communication, Culture & Philosophy
Vladimir Mironov on semiotics and postmodernism in a shrinking world.
[Issue 54: February/March 2006: Philosophy in Russia]
Models of Moral Activity
Alexander Razin considers why people act morally (when they do).
[Issue 54: February/March 2006: Philosophy in Russia]
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