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  1. The Kantian origins of Sergei Rubinstein's theory of moral improvement.Nina A. Dmitrieva - 2021 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 55 (6):1126-1141.
    Journal of Philosophy of Education, EarlyView.
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  • Vivos Voco. Post-war Correspondence between Sergey Hessen and Ivan Lapshin: Year 1946.Nina A. Dmitrieva - 2023 - Kantian Journal 42 (4):178-199.
    The letters of S. I. Hessen and I. I. Lapshin, two Russian Neo-Kantian philosophers, were written in the early post-war years. These letters bear witness to the later period in the life and work of their authors, a period of hardship, tragic losses and hopes. Both philosophers were deeply embedded in the intellectual landscape of Russian emigration. They were also known and valued by their peers in the countries that gave them refuge, Poland and Czechoslovakia, where they not only published (...)
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  • Sobornost and Totality in Georges Gurvitch's Social Law Doctrine.Mikhail Yu Zagirnyak - 2021 - RUDN Journal of Philosophy 25 (1):130-138.
    Georges Gurvitch, from the 1920s to the end of his life, was solving the problem of combining unity and plurality in the justification of society. He believed that individualism and collectivism represented social processes in a limited way because they were based on the preconception that the binding power of law derives respectively from a private or corporate actor's will. Gurvitch contrasted individual law with the social one, which was intended to overcome the opposition between individualism and collectivism. Social law (...)
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  • Reception of Emil Lask’s philosophy in Russia.Leonid Kornilaev - 2023 - Studies in East European Thought 75 (3):505-524.
    The acquaintance with significant philosophical doctrines emerging in the West has been a systematic process in the leading Russian-language philosophical journals, collections of articles, monographs and translations. Practically all the most important Western philosophical doctrines have been subjected to scrutiny by Russian philosophers. One of the most vivid Neo-Kantian projects of the early twentieth century, Emil Lask’s Logic of Philosophy, has not gone unnoticed either. Reaction to Lask’s works were far from being homogeneous. His project received several different evaluations, including (...)
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