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  1. Dostoevsky’s non-coincident self: The subject of judgment in the Brothers karamazov.Джин Чанг - 2017 - Докса 2.
    The article deals with the fundamental complexity and controversy of the non-coincident self concept in the Dostoevsky“s novel “Brothers Karamazov”. Theoretical and philosophical investigation of the subject of judgment“s category is proposed. One of the guiding conceptual frameworks for the novel then is an articulation of true judgment: the possibility of sitting in judgment on the other, and the nature of the subject who is being judged. It is emphasized that the novel’s dominant man under judgment is Dmitri Karamazov. The (...)
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  • Il’enkov’s Hegel.David Bakhurst - 2013 - Studies in East European Thought 65 (3):271-285.
    This paper examines Hegel’s place in the philosophy of Eval’d Il’enkov (1924–1979). Hegel’s ideas had a huge impact on Il’enkov’s conception of the nature of philosophy and of the philosopher’s mission, and they formed the core of his distinctive account of thought and its place in nature. At the same time, Il’enkov was victimized for his “Hegelianism” throughout his career, from the time he was sacked from Moscow State University in 1955 to the ideological criticisms that preceded his death in (...)
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  • Slavophile religious thought and the dilemma of Russian modernity, 1830–1860*: Patrick Lally Michelson.Patrick Lally Michelson - 2010 - Modern Intellectual History 7 (2):239-267.
    Russian public opinion in the first half of the nineteenth century was buffeted by a complex of cultural, psychological, and historiosophical dilemmas that destabilized many conventions about Russia's place in universal history. This article examines one response to these dilemmas: the Slavophile reconfiguration of Eastern Christianity as a modern religion of theocentric freedom and moral progress. Drawing upon methods of contextual analysis, the article challenges the usual scholarly treatment of Slavophile religious thought as a vehicle to address extrahistorical concerns by (...)
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