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Alexander L. Dobrokhotov [4]Alexander Dobrokhotov [1]
  1.  2
    Aza A. Takho-Godi’s contribution to the history of ideas and concepts.Alexander L. Dobrokhotov - 2023 - Studies in East European Thought 75 (1):1-8.
    The investigations of Aza A. Takho-Godi, devoted to the evolution of concepts and terms in European culture, were ahead of their time and, as it turns out today, paved the way for historical semantics, which turned out to be a kind of independent version of the “history of concepts”: a direction of humanitarian thought aimed at identifying cultural, social, and political functions concepts in their historical dynamics and in relation to a wide field of cultural interactions of a particular era. (...)
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  2.  18
    “Mystical Antinomism.” Losev’s Assessments and Interpretations of Goethe.Alexander L. Dobrokhotov - 2018 - Russian Studies in Philosophy 56 (6):467-476.
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  3.  19
    The spiritual meaning of war in the philosophy of the Russian silver age.Alexander L. Dobrokhotov - 2014 - Studies in East European Thought 66 (1-2):69-76.
    The First World War forced the Russian intelligentsia to rethink its values—values that had been constructed in the nineteenth century. Distancing itself from pacifism and cultural relativism, it began to search for a moral meaning to the war that broke out in 1914—i.e. to defend the war as morally right and having a higher spiritual purpose. Russian philosophers were central to these debates, as they tried to interpret the war, and the relationship between war and peace, from a metaphysical point (...)
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  4.  12
    What the Russian symbolists heard in the “music of revolution”: philosophical implications.Alexander L. Dobrokhotov - 2017 - Studies in East European Thought 69 (4):287-304.
    The article is dedicated to the philosophical reaction by several Russian symbolists to the revolution of 1917. It demonstrates the “re-grouping” of Silver Age symbolism, which laid bare the underlying differences in its value foundations. The article considers this refracted unity in the ideational world of symbolism, in the journalistic writings of Vjacheslav Ivanov, Alexander Blok, Andrej Bely, and Maximilian Voloshin.
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