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Abdusalam A. Guseinov [8]Abdusalam Guseinov [1]
  1.  42
    Philosophy in Russia: History and Present State.Abdusalam A. Guseinov & Vladislav A. Lektorsky - 2009 - Diogenes 56 (2-3):3-23.
    This paper sketches an historical outline of philosophy in Russia from the modern era to present time. It describes the main philosophical trends that characterized the ‘Silver Age’ in pre-revolutionary Russia (Cosmism, religious philosophy and early Marxist philosophy), and draws some lines of continuity both with Marxist and pre-Marxist philosophy. It studies the internal evolution and organization of Soviet official philosophical thought, and describes the main features the philosophical Renaissance that took place in the Soviet Union in the second half (...)
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  2.  5
    Trotsky's Ethics.Abdusalam A. Guseinov - 2014 - Russian Studies in Philosophy 52 (3):73-94.
  3.  66
    Can Violence Be Morally Justified?Abdusalam A. Guseinov - 2007 - The Proceedings of the Twenty-First World Congress of Philosophy 13:227-238.
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  4.  2
    Morality as the Limit of Rationality.Abdusalam A. Guseinov - 2014 - Russian Studies in Philosophy 52 (3):18-38.
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  5.  8
    Negative Ethics.Abdusalam A. Guseinov - 2014 - Russian Studies in Philosophy 52 (3):56-72.
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  6.  14
    The Golden Rule of Morality.Abdusalam A. Guseinov - 2014 - Russian Studies in Philosophy 52 (3):39-55.
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  7.  19
    Tolstoy’s Theory of Nonviolence.Abdusalam Guseinov - 2006 - Philosophy Now 54:14-15.
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  8.  14
    What Kant Said, or Why Is It Impermissible to Lie for the Sake of Good?Abdusalam A. Guseinov - 2009 - Russian Studies in Philosophy 48 (3):26-47.
    The article stresses the consistency and agreement between Kant's categorical claim about impermissibility of lying and his moral philosophy. Rejecting the case-study approach to Kant's essay, the author treats it as a most appropriate illustration of the ethics of duty, seeing in the forbiddance of lying a necessary consequence of Kant's absolutist ethical. As a solution to some practical situations allegedly allowing ethical dishonesty, the author proposes to consider the norm "Do not lie" as a categorical requirement in the realm (...)
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