Results for ' Bogochelovechestvo '

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  1. Bogochelovechestvo v russkoĭ religioznoĭ filosofii: seredina XIX-nachalo XX vv.: monografii︠a︡.L. K. Nagornai︠a︡ - 1994 - Barnaul: Izd-vo Altaĭskogo gos. universiteta.
     
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  2. "I︠A︡ skazal, vy--bogi--": religioznoe techenie v osvoboditelʹnom dvizhenii 70-kh gg. XIX v. v Rossii, ("bogochelovechestvo").K. A. Solovʹev - 1999 - Moskva: [S.N.].
     
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    A short story about the übermensch: Vladimir solov'ëv's interpretation of and response to Nietzsche's übermensch.Nel Grillaert - 2003 - Studies in East European Thought 55 (2):157-184.
    From the 1890s on, the atheist philosopher F. Nietzsche exerted a profound and enduring impact on Russian religious, cultural, and social reality. The religious philosopher V.S. Solov'ëv perceived Nietzsche's thought as an actual threat to Russian religious consciousness and his own anthropological ideal of Divine Humanity. He was especially preoccupied with the idea of the Übermensch since sometwo decades before the Nietzschean Übermensch was popularized in Russia, Solov'ëv had already developed his own interpretation of the sverkhchelovek.
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    Evgenii Trubetskoi: icon and philosophy.Teresa Obolevitch & Randall Allen Poole (eds.) - 2021 - Eugene, Oregon: Pickwick Publications.
    Prince Evgenii Trubetskoi, one of Russia’s great philosophers, exemplified what was best in the Russian religious-philosophical tradition. His lifelong pursuit was “integral knowledge.” This ideal affirmed that faith was integral to reason and that inner experience, and not just external sensory experience, offered truthful testimony to the nature of reality—precisely contrary to the reductive positivism and scientism of Trubetskoi’s day and ours. Following Vladimir Soloviev he developed the concept of Bogochelovechestvo —the free human realization of the divine principle in (...)
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