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  1. Introduction.Joseph Grim Feinberg, Ivan Landa & Jan Mervart - 2021 - In Joseph Grim Feinberg, Ivan Landa & Jan Mervart (eds.), Karel Kosík and the Dialectics of the concrete. Boston: Brill.
     
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  2. Karel Kosík and the Dialectics of the concrete.Joseph Grim Feinberg, Ivan Landa & Jan Mervart (eds.) - 2021 - Boston: Brill.
    Karel Kosík (1926-2003) was one of the most remarkable Czech Marxist philosophers of the twentieth century. His reputation as a creative thinker is owed largely to his philosophical 'blockbuster' Dialectics of the Concrete, first published in Czechoslovakia in 1963. In reintroducing Kosík's philosophy to English-speaking readers, we show that Kosík's work is important not only as a leading intellectual document of the Prague Spring, but also as an original theoretical contribution with international impact that sheds light on the meaning of (...)
     
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  3.  8
    Imaginace a forma: mezi estetickým formalismem a filosofií emancipace: studie Josefu Zumrovi = Imagination and form: between aesthetic formalism and the philosophy of emancipation.Ivan Landa, Jan Mervart & Josef Zumr (eds.) - 2018 - Praha: Filosofia.
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  4. Josef Zumr-a gentleman of Czech philosophy.Jan Mervart - 2013 - Filosoficky Casopis 61 (2):281-284.
     
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  5. Karel Kosík as a public intellectual of the reform years.Jan Mervart - 2021 - In Joseph Grim Feinberg, Ivan Landa & Jan Mervart (eds.), Karel Kosík and the Dialectics of the concrete. Boston: Brill.
     
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  6.  14
    Marxism and existentialism in state socialist Czechoslovakia.Jiří Růžička & Jan Mervart - 2023 - Studies in East European Thought 75 (3):399-416.
    Existentialism became one of the most fashionable philosophical currents in postwar Czechoslovakia. Whereas the orthodox Marxism of the 1950s, following Lukács’s Marxism or existentialism?, hastily condemned existentialism as an offshoot of bourgeois idealism, Marxists of the 1960s viewed existentialism as a philosophical current that deserved, at the least, serious examination. During the subsequent era of Czechoslovak “real” socialism of the 1970s and 1980s, existentialism was, as a result, interpreted as one of the sources of the 1968 “counterrevolution.” This article maps (...)
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