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Paperback

The Russian Idea

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In this powerful, moving book, first published in 1946, Berdyaev is not so interested in the empirical details of Russian history as he is in the thought of the Creator about Russia. The Russian idea is thus a mystical notion. Religion and philosophy–not economics or politics–determine history and society.

Berdyaev begins his story in the nineteenth century, tracing the lineage of such powerful artists and thinkers as Chaadev, Khomyakov, Kireevksy, Leontyev, Aksakov, Hertzen, and Bakunin, all of whom struggled to integrate the polarities of East and West, spirit and matter, and male and female in the Russian soul. That soul, however, is so immense, boundless, and vague that it is incapable of settling for the halfway kingdom of culture. Demanding all or nothing–alternately apocalyptic and nihilistic–Russians strove to justify culture and discover Russia’s mystical mission.

Impatient with the slow pace of history, distrusting all authority, and yet haunted by a vision of unity, thinkers such as Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, Federov, and Solovyov created an original and vital religious philosophy that culminated in the Russian renaissance at the beginning of the twentieth century. The fruit of these great figures–of whom Berdyaev was one (others included Florensky, Bulgakov, Rozanov, Merezhkovsky, Blok, and Bely)–was cut short by the 1917 Revolution.

More recently, their works have been available in self-published (Samizdat) editions. A great philosophical and spiritual rebirth was occurring underground. Now they are available again in this book, which is essential reading for an understanding of the new Russia.

C O N T E N T S

Introduction by Christopher Bamford

  1. Definition of the Russian National Type 2. The Crucial Importance of the Problem of the Philosophy of History 3. The Problem of the Clash between Personality and World Harmony 4. The Problem of Humanism 5. The Social Color of Russian Thought 6. The Question of the Justification of Culture 7. Authority and the State 8. The Determining Significance of the Religious Theme 9. The Eschatological and Prophetic Character of Russian Thought 10. Summing up of Russian, Nineteenth-Century Thought
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MORE INFO
Format
Paperback
Publisher
SteinerBooks, Inc
Country
United States
Date
1 May 1992
Pages
288
ISBN
9780940262492

In this powerful, moving book, first published in 1946, Berdyaev is not so interested in the empirical details of Russian history as he is in the thought of the Creator about Russia. The Russian idea is thus a mystical notion. Religion and philosophy–not economics or politics–determine history and society.

Berdyaev begins his story in the nineteenth century, tracing the lineage of such powerful artists and thinkers as Chaadev, Khomyakov, Kireevksy, Leontyev, Aksakov, Hertzen, and Bakunin, all of whom struggled to integrate the polarities of East and West, spirit and matter, and male and female in the Russian soul. That soul, however, is so immense, boundless, and vague that it is incapable of settling for the halfway kingdom of culture. Demanding all or nothing–alternately apocalyptic and nihilistic–Russians strove to justify culture and discover Russia’s mystical mission.

Impatient with the slow pace of history, distrusting all authority, and yet haunted by a vision of unity, thinkers such as Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, Federov, and Solovyov created an original and vital religious philosophy that culminated in the Russian renaissance at the beginning of the twentieth century. The fruit of these great figures–of whom Berdyaev was one (others included Florensky, Bulgakov, Rozanov, Merezhkovsky, Blok, and Bely)–was cut short by the 1917 Revolution.

More recently, their works have been available in self-published (Samizdat) editions. A great philosophical and spiritual rebirth was occurring underground. Now they are available again in this book, which is essential reading for an understanding of the new Russia.

C O N T E N T S

Introduction by Christopher Bamford

  1. Definition of the Russian National Type 2. The Crucial Importance of the Problem of the Philosophy of History 3. The Problem of the Clash between Personality and World Harmony 4. The Problem of Humanism 5. The Social Color of Russian Thought 6. The Question of the Justification of Culture 7. Authority and the State 8. The Determining Significance of the Religious Theme 9. The Eschatological and Prophetic Character of Russian Thought 10. Summing up of Russian, Nineteenth-Century Thought
Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
SteinerBooks, Inc
Country
United States
Date
1 May 1992
Pages
288
ISBN
9780940262492